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I look at myself in the mirror after gaining 50 pounds
Saida Agostini | Poetry
my body is a shameful wonder
I’ve spent months hiding from it
dashing from mirrors I touch my hips
and don’t think of lovers but rather
the feel of tightness or compression
grasp my belly observe an eruption
of darkening dimples
I can’t remember a time I lived
in my body without apology
for its breadth my thighs peeking below
their own impatient country at dinner
with friends last night I said laughingly
I want the world to want me
and know in this moment I dare anyone
to turn away from this fat budding marvel
I crave pleasure a crescendo
that holds the root of me sweating and real
my fat a jubilation god let me know worship
god give me desire god
let me drown in it the funk heat of wanting
another woman’s eyes trained on me
remembering the possibility of my flesh
let me know that in the hot hours of a summer
morning someone lays staring at a closed ceiling
thinking not of food drink or taxes
but just of me their god their ax
their cudgel their kink my unending bounty
Saida Agostini is a queer Afro-Guyanese poet whose work explores how Black folks harness mythology to enter the fantastic. Her work is featured or forthcoming in Diode Journal of Poetry, Academy of American Poets’ Poem a Day, Poet Lore, Plume, amongst others. Saida’s work can be found in several anthologies, including Not Without Our Laughter: Poems of Humor, Sexuality and Joy. Her full length collection let the dead in was released by Alan Squire Publishing (March 2022). A Cave Canem Graduate Fellow, Saida is a Best of the Net Finalist. She lives online at www.saidaagostini.com.