Revolutionaries

Poetry: Celine Choi

We burned off our fingerprints on the
kitchen stove. We were in a secret covenant

involving blue eyed blonde haired idolatry
and hated ourselves for it. We grew up

to fill the clichés expected by a white girl who
just doesn’t understand who’s name begins with

A and ends with Of The Free. Our lunch boxes we
abandoned on the playground just like the tongue

and touch of our mothers and their mothers.
We take a long time, sometimes forever

to regrow our ashed whorls and arches.
To go to the lost and found and find mother’s

kimbap has been rolled into a full circle that
we come to as we march towards this Justice

For All that escapes our lips at approximately eight AM on
weekdays. We hate to make food a metaphor

for ourselves, our duties, but I just need to know
I can find my way back.

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