I’ve
got my finger on the trigger—
by
Andrena Zawinski
I’m taking
aim
at the
teen stalker who left unwrapped Trojans
for my
mother to find in my Sherpa pockets /
taking aim
at the old
boyfriend who dumped Guinness on my head
in a bar
in the middle of winter and stole my peacoat.
I‘m
looking down the barrel
at a rock
band all star who shoved himself into me
then
zipping up said this was about winning - he won /
looking
down the barrel
at my
ex-husband who grabbed me from behind
at lunch
time then blamed me he fell asleep at his job.
I’m
staring through the crosshair
at the cop
who wanted to trade a bj for not taking me
to #1
Station for walking home at night past curfew /
staring
through the crosshair
at the
lifeguard who lifted me onto a bed
raised
like an altar with his wingman watching
after
dosing my iced tea with a Roofy.
I am
breathing hard.
My heart
is pounding.
My arm has
steadied.
I have
cocked the hammer.
My eye is
on the target
for all my
sisters grabbed and groped /
fingered
and beaten / raped and murdered /
who suffer
daily affronts and shamings
in offices
/ on elevators / on trains / in streets
just
trying to get home.
I am
looking at you
who have
dared to say
as a woman
tells the truth about her life
that she’s
just overreacting or hysterical.
I am ready
to press
my finger to the metal.
This is
not a metaphor.
This is
righteous indignation.
This is a
wound that bleeds
and pulses
with pain.
* * * * *
" I’ve got my finger on the trigger—" was
previously published in Raven
Chronicles' Journal, Vol. 25, and appeared as I’ve got my finger
on the trigger, too (in conversation with Jan Beatty’s “Shooter”), Seattle, WA
2017.
Andrena
Zawinski is a veteran educator and activist poet whose work has received
accolades for lyricism, form, spirituality, and social concern. Her latest
collection is Landings. She has two
previous award winning books: Something
About
and Traveling
in Reflected Light. She runs the San
Francisco Bay Area Women’s Poetry Salon and is Features Editor at
PoetryMagazine.com. Her poems, “When Paris Was a Woman” and “Never the Right
Recipe” previously appeared at Writing in a Woman’s Voice.
No comments:
Post a Comment