• I keep the verse where it hurts,
    like a tongue to a chipped tooth—
    not to savor,
    not to show anyone,
    only because it is there
    and will not stop being there.

    A woman said,
    have a nice day,
    air shaped into decency,
    the kind you give a cashier,
    a stranger at a door,
    someone you do not know well enough
    to hate.

    She said she wasn’t mad.
    The air did not change.
    Nothing corrected itself.

    And still the mouth that heard her
    found its word—
    bitch—
    quick as a reflex
    that pretends to be a thought.

    I keep seeing the seconds between them,
    that narrow place
    where a life can turn
    and doesn’t—
    where I keep imagining
    my hands.

    I don’t want her to become a sign.
    I don’t want to lift her
    like a clean cloth
    for people who want clean stories.
    She was not a lesson.
    She was not a banner.
    She spoke,
    and then she did not.

    After, I picture the procedural calm:
    uniformed patience,
    radio language
    that means nothing and means: now.
    My chest fills with iron.

    Anger comes like that—
    not eloquence,
    just weight,
    a blunt thing in the body
    looking for permission.

    And there is another hunger:
    the sweetness of return,
    the quick sugar-rush
    that tells the blood:
    now.

    But safety was not offered.
    No one promised it.

    I say: turn the other cheek,
    and my jaw tightens,
    hinged to bone.

    Cheek:
    the soft side of the face
    that admits it can be struck.
    A tenderness offered
    without agreement.
    A part of me
    not built for speech.

    To turn it
    is not to forget.
    It is not to bless the harm.
    It is to do something unbearable
    with the need to answer back.

    Sometimes I think turning
    is only this:
    moving the wound inward
    so it doesn’t ricochet
    into the next body.

    Sometimes I hear
    how proud that sounds—
    as if refusal
    wanted an audience
    even in the dark.

    So I watch myself.
    I watch how grief
    tries to become permission—
    how quickly the world
    acquires a face
    I can imagine striking.

    This is the interior violence:
    the wrenching back
    of the hand that wants to clench,
    the swallowing of the word
    that would make a weapon of the mouth,
    the breaking—slow—
    of the relief
    of becoming what I condemn.

    There are mornings I wake
    already holding a stone
    in the fist of my imagination.

    And then I stand again
    in my small room—
    no crowd,
    no clean story—
    and ask for help
    with the humiliating request
    to remain unviolent.

    Not numb.
    Not shining.
    Only this narrow work:
    to keep my soul
    from taking the shape
    of what I fear.

    If I do not turn my cheek—
    if I do not turn it inward,
    toward the blow I want to throw—
    I will become
    what I am naming.

    Another shot.
    Another body.
    Another day that is not nice,
    made by my own hand.

    So I practice
    a severe gentleness—
    not surrender,
    not spectacle,
    the one place
    I can keep the world
    from multiplying inside me.

    Have a nice day,
    I whisper—
    not to bless the gun,
    not to absolve the arm,
    but to keep my own mouth
    from learning
    the killer’s word.