Poetry
Fall
2023

if I have an addiction to water, know that it’s hereditary

i was baptized so many times, my family
must not have understood its action as rebirth.
instead: accumulation. each time we broke

a new surface, raining holiness from drenched
hair, we carried with us another layer—our hearts an orchard
of candied apples rather than something cleansed

and made new. now, everything is a baptism
i never asked for.
my face is born again

with micellar water each morning.
orzo noodles bob like so many submerged
heads in the boil of my saucepan. every carwash

feels like drowning, thrashing, waiting for a god
i don’t believe in to let me breathe.
what i didn’t know

then, back when my mother glazed
us with the blessing of each priest and pastor,
with the reborn waves of the gulf coast

and every drink she could swallow,
is that water is beautiful
because it erodes

and she was so desperate to feel saved.