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When I Cross Myself by Loukia Borrell

When my framework between right and wrong

splinters, I cross myself for willing the return

of those indelicate nights with you in my apartment,

of knowing the wrong as you removed your

wedding band, of not caring to do right, of

watching and laughing as it dropped to the carpet

and on the way down, taking with it whatever

could have stopped me. I cross myself then.

I cross myself for long Sundays that have not arrived,

for the defiant, misbehaving housewife I have become,

for the husband who loves me more than I do him,

for the boyfriends I want as side hustles, for the defiance

that burns me down while I make casseroles and fold

laundry. For the annoyance I feel when I see myself

naked and can’t get a good enough pose to send nudes.

Long before this, I crossed myself in utero, praying

my mother would not abort me, that she would let me

come home to my father and older brother, that she

will not be possessed by demons, so I could grow,

and permit me to return, again, when I lost jobs

and that she does not make fun of me for the men

who left me. I cross myself on these occasions, too.

I cross myself in dreams. In these, my life has

unraveled and there is no one to look after me in

death, where I rest in the box and avoid the sharp

corners of the life I lived, sorry, for all of it.