Who
She Saw
(Narrative Poem)
Lived
a weeping girl within
She
lived with every single doubt
When she was young she was taught to love her skin
But as she got older that love grew real thin
Her skin wasn’t pretty and bright
When she got older someone told her “her skin was
dark as sin in daylight”
Her hair was coarse and nappy
Plump and big were her lips
Wide and thick were her hips
It showed her everything she lacked
Flawless hair, light skin, and being another race
She didn’t like her body or face
Wish I could tell you that this girl was set free
Because of what people in society say
That was the message I felt I conveyed
In front of my family I just smiled
They didn’t know that I thought black was foul
I scrubbed roughly to try to get it off
Yes it was an affirmative
I would always stay
I wonder why God made me this way
Every time I tried it never would come off I just
would sigh then cough.
Because of what people would say
They picked on me everyday
And I just wanted to run away
I was scared to tell, it hurt to have to repeat the
thing they would say
The scars on my arm came from the racial storm
Day after day more of them would form
Each
time jabbing deeper in my unwanted dark skin
I kept it all inside
Buried it all just tried to hide
It was too much for me to keep
So I just continued to weep
Needing someone to sprinkle water on me before I
died
In my head I knew slavery had ended back then
But I had become a victim of slavery because of what
I had called my ugly skin
All
because of being black wasn’t perceived to well
And
yes I did try
It
was my great position
They help me find my place in this world
And they stop the horrible wind that had whirled
They told me I was beautiful and I tried believed it
Until this day I still struggle to receive it
Because for that person I will have a mouth full
Will no longer pull me
I have grown to love my skin fully
I cried because of the societal lies
When you say "Her skin is to black..." make sure you use the right too. besides that your poem is flawless. I had no idea that's how some African American females felt, this really touches me :)
ReplyDeleteThank Jade!! I'm thankful that you noticed that mistake so I can go and fix it! thanks it means a lot!
ReplyDeleteI really like your poem because as i was reading it i was picturing the girl that you were talking about. Also you explained everything well in your poem and had good imagery. I like how you used different colors also in your poem because it helped the poem flow better. Good job! i reall like your poem.
ReplyDeleteThank you Eva for your comment. It helps me to make sure people are understanding the reasoning behind my blog.
ReplyDelete