Prodigal Daughter

Every day is yesterday 
& like the loneliness 
of water, I have always 
existed. My body brackets
a quiver in a world that doesn’t 
love us. Despite the tyrants, 
the “I” is forever 
insatiable. Alone in Spain once, 
I ran out of money & 
for days ate nothing
but eggs. The bad life
my mother would say. & yet
I was resplendent, found a music
that confronted the self 
with the self. I have always
found ways to violate 
my own body—cocaine until
the heart thickened. Wasteful, 
prodigal, a slut to my whims, 
& my grandmother
so poor she couldn’t feed
her chickens. Today & yesterday 
& tomorrow & the day after, 
the hours viscous, the hours 
vicious. This is what it’s come to. 
A Mexican cackles next door—
& what’s more stunning? The lesson
is beauty replicates itself. 
& you, my speck, a replication
of the beloved. 100 brain cells
per minute. Forgive me, 
I don’t know the science of it, only
the smell of meat that sends me
gagging to the toilet. How can I
do this? How can I ask you 
to be kind in a world that isn’t?
More Poems by Erika L. Sánchez