the foundation has buckled dramatically, resting unevenly, so
we stand
on entirely different floors now.
a split-
level
home,
in a truer sense of the term,
that divides our space,
our experience,
our lives, and
our identity.
the warped and fractured wood
where once sat our father's favorite chair — an
impossibly white recliner with stitchings of blue, now stained red and meant for distraction, not necessarily relaxation —
creaks under our weight.
we disposed of the seat entirely, but the floor still holds that space — deeply pressed into the grain of the boards — for the return of legs hellbent on stagnation. should we replace it with another chair to sit, distract, and let our joints rest? perhaps a table to hold all of our material belongings?
or shall we leave the reminder open and bare, like scars playing an elegy
to the way things used to be?
the house designed to keep us in place,
keep us working,
keep us quelled,
keep us resting,
keep us inactive,
works best the more impossible a repair seems.
it doesn't matter how terribly drywall and supports crash down around us; what matters is the answer to one single question: "but did you die?"
some might go so far as to show us what renovation could look like under the most harrowing of conditions.
which is essentially just showing us what loss looks like without the act of replacing.
this is familiar to us already
it's:
dismantling.
destruction.
demolishing.
sometimes it's even
remodeling the old,
but never rebuilding new.
let me remind us all now, though:
salvaging a caving roof, crumbling around us, ensures we will never feel at ease.
even if we reinforce it, that band-aid is doomed to leak and
wreak havoc.
a buckling foundation will collapse, no matter how many bricks we replace; no matter how far back we trace the horizontal cracks, looking doesn't solve it.
water will continue to come, no matter how many buckets we situate; no matter the degree we install our downspouts and gutters; no matter how many prayers we sing to make the rains cease.
a report is made showing the leaks, the mildew, the lack of integrity;
a report is made that may even show how to slow them.
but
the report will never show the key to a pristine house.
the report must make you think you can achieve it
with useless tips and jazzy tricks, but not structural change.
the report will lie.
the report is not peer-reviewed and subject to change.
our old man may have been able to play-pretend, sitting back, kicking his feet up, and drinking his good ol' american beer, but
we inherited this dilapidated house.
the one with furniture stained,
floors sinking,
mold forming,
load-bearing beams cracked,
water filling, and
shingles falling. it's
a dying house.
once bright and hopeful walls now look pallid and sick. a cancer has crept through the entire facade.
windows that once let in light now show only years of dust and grime collected around the frame. the pane has turned a shaded grey, almost tinted, with concentrated dirt in the tiny ruptures filling the glass. these fractures spider out, reaching, begging for a sash that can barely hold the glass in place.
we have no prospects for new infrastructure right now,
no surplus of new building materials,
no chance of moving either.
we've got to use and make do with what we've got,
but i'll be honest, for most of us,
that's not a lot.
what we've got is this
broken home that we assumed,
and now
we've got to learn how to fix it.
About the Creator
kp
I am a non-binary, trans-masc writer. I work to dismantle internalized structures of oppression, such as the gender binary, class, and race. My writing is personal but anecdotally points to a larger political picture of systemic injustice.
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Comments (11)
The standing on different floors made me see the crack happening in real time. Very vivid. The recliner. Your thoughts about it's comfort. Wow. I am blown away. We inherited a collapsing house. Indeed we did. Your vulnerability at the end speak to us like no other way could. You surrendered. You called it out like it is. And all that is left now, is the vision of what has happened. What once was. Outstanding work Katelyn. Every time I read your work there's something to learn, something to feel. I come away more different and more real. 🤗❤️🖤
I feel this so much. Wonderful visuals.
It really does feel like the house is falling apart around us these days. Great poem, kp.
I don't know how to comment, just sitting here with you.
we always find a way tho. maybe not our generation, but planting seeds always lead to life.
What an apt metaphor for the times we're living in. I wish that I could offer words of encouragement, but I don't know how to fix it or live in it, either. But you've captured my feelings exactly. Excellent poem, kp.
It can make us feel like we're drowning if we allow it. Great poem, kp.
as long as we are learning from that brokenness...not repeating. this is very difficult and your poem reflects so much emotion...(he gave us a broken house, and I don't know how to fix it) wow
Very impactful poem!
A feeling shared by so many, and still no good answers to fix it, at least no easy answers. A great piece with well considered metaphor 👏👏🖤
The imagery you used was really impactful to me - especially “a split level home.” ive been feeling so fractured and split apart from community- like we’re on different floors. Also the imagery of a house falling apart and too overwhelming to fix. Sometimes, demolition is the start of rebuilding.