Lifted into my scar
for a moment by a random touch,
I’m raised from sleep
into the pain I once felt.
Settling there for now,
I tolerate it well enough;
if there’s one platform
I understand, it’s this one.
Like a body before
the burying times,
I’m laid out upon this scaffold
to decay and dream.
All this merely from touching
a thick white line on my body
that I barely think of
most of the time.
When I think of how I got it
and what I had to do to survive it,
I’m curiously unafraid
of the memory.
It’s not comfortable, exactly,
but it’s not a horrible thing either;
most days I can ignore it
because no one can see it.
But there are those nights
when I’m not alone
and I have to explain it
to someone.
Later, I awaken
thinking of the story,
reliving its plot and characters,
its surprise ending.
It is not horrible
but not comfortable to do this;
to consider what I learned in blood,
what I gained, what I lost.
Only in intimacy can I explain it
well enough to recall its lessons,
so to rise into the scar and dream again
is why I’m driven to this.
Exposed and naked in the myth each time
it happens, I become the once-injured party
and take another chance to touch
the scar that underlines my healing.
I only visit it now and then
to show how far I’ve come,
how comfortable I am, how not horrified
I am to harbor such a ghost within.