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The
following piece, which originally ran in Gin
Bender Poetry Review in 2006, lives up to Dan Masterson's quote with its carefully-chosen language, metaphoric subjectivity, contrasted with
a "we've-all-been-there" visceralism that lingers in the mind:
What We Are
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irresistible until you taste blood,
and even then,
one last pull and the last
translucent slip is free.
The blood rises, nerve endings
tickling the air like
exposed wires.
More and more, this is how I feel
All that's dead we're peeling
back,
the layers of ex-husband,
ex-wife, parents,the word "sheep" or
"click"
or "pie", perhaps--that
brings
another word cracked
like a leather belt,
like a branch in a blizzard.
We try, but the
n we pull back,
let the scar form, that
toughened bit of leather
that next time
will take a knife,
more than plucking at least.
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Her first chapbook, That’s the Way the Music Sounds (Finishing Line Press) appeared in 2008, followed by Talking to the Mirror (The Last Automat Press, 2010). She also co-edited a collection of essays on the state of women’s justice in patriarchal society across language, religion, war, sex trafficking, and medicine titled (Re)Interpretations: The Shapes of Justice in Women’s Experience (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009).
Laurel and her husband live in Connecticut and
Vermont. An avid Tweeter (@laurelwriter49), she also posts on Facebook; find out more at her website, LaurelPeterson.com.