zayn
Part I.
God,
I am speaking to you from a place
that looks suspiciously like heaven
if heaven were designed by someone
who misunderstood restraint.
The clouds here wear silk.
The angels smoke memory like opium.
And I
I kneel in the middle of it all,
a man stitched together
from contradictions and longing.
I have sinned,
or so they tell me.
Not with violence,
not with greed,
but with the soft catastrophe
of loving men
the way poets love their own ruin.
I prayed, once,
with the desperation of a chandelier
begging not to fall.
I asked you to unmake me,
to sand down the edges of my desire
until I became smooth,
acceptable,
holy in the way pamphlets define holiness.
But every morning
I woke up still myself
a man whose heart beats
in the direction of other men,
a compass that refuses
to point north.
I tried to change.
God, I tried with the theatrics
of a saint auditioning for martyrdom.
I hurt people along the way
women who mistook my gentleness
for promise,
men who mistook my fear
for rejection,
myself most of all.
I bruised my own soul
with the elegance of a velvet whip, punishing myself
for a crime
I never committed.