primordial hunger
Mykala Gray
i have a hunger that isn’t mine.
it’s something primal in my soul,
tangible in my hands,
staining my flesh a deep scarlett.
i suspect these urges in my gut
are something ancestral,
from women whose hunger
was not allowed to be theirs-
was told it cannot be theirs,
and were forced to push that hunger
down, deep down,
under bruised eyes and burnt hands.
when her hunger was secondary to
his hunger
and to the children he wanted,
but whose hunger does not matter to him.
a selfish man and a selfless mother.
i have a hunger that isn’t mine
but belongs to generations of forgottens.
a hunger not for food,
or any other sustenance,
but for revenge.
revenge for women burned
and women hanged.
for women beaten and buried.
for the women we know of
and the ones we don’t-
for the names that will be remembered
and the ones that will remain
nameless.
i have a hunger,
and so i will eat first,
for all of the women
who waited
until her lazy husband
and her ungrateful children have eaten,
waited until her food
ran cold by the time she dished it up.
and i will write
under my own name,
for all of the women
who took on male pseudonyms
or worse-
had their work stolen
and published by their husband,
giving him all of the credit
and her
none.
this hunger is not mine,
but i will make it ours.
