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Poetry & Art

Survivor.

*Content Warning: This piece contains references to sexual assault, which may be triggering to some. 

It’s Spring.

I look in the mirror

Black mascara has dripped from my eyes

Painting my rosy cheeks gray.

My pink lipstick is smeared

Across the bottom of my face,

Like the Joker’s smile.

But I am not smiling.

 

He lays asleep in bed

Snoring soundly.

Like a baby who’s stomach

Is fully satisfied.

Next to him – beads.

Red, white, and pink.

Spread across the bed like confetti.

 

I touch my neck and realize that the confetti

Is my necklace he broke

While pressing his body into mine.

As I quietly sobbed,

“Stop. Please stop.”

 

The next morning,

I lay on my couch

In the same clothes he took off my body with such ease

But now feel like they have been duct-taped to my skin.

I lay catatonic, asking myself

“Why me?”

“What did I do?”

“Is this just a nightmare?”

I pinch my arm over and over again,

Trying to wake myself from what must be a nightmare

But as my skin turns yellow and brown,

I realize that I am awake.

 

I tell a friend the next day.

She tells me that I am a “survivor”.

And that this “wasn’t my fault”

But in the same breath asks,

Why I “don’t report” and

What I was wearing.

In her words I feel more victim than survivor.

Will I ever feel like a survivor?

 

It’s Thanksgiving dinner,

And as we sit to thank God

For the blessings he gave us this year

My mom touches my neck and asks,

“Where is the pink, red, and white necklace I gave you?”

My body shivers.

My blood turns cold.

And all my eyes can see

Is confetti.

I excuse myself to the bathroom

To lie on the tile floor

And shake until my lungs feel like they can breathe again.

I miss the prayer,

But there is nothing about this year that I want to thank God for.

I lay on the icy tile floor that feels

As cold as my blood

Wondering, if he thanked God for his year.

 

It’s New Year’s Eve,

And my boyfriend leans in

To kiss my pink lips

As the sparkly ball welcomes in all things new.

I want something new.

But as the screen glitters with celebration

And confetti falls from the ceiling,

I only see you.

When will I stop seeing you?

Quickly,

His lips taste like yours

And I feel like your body is

Once again collapsing my lungs.

It is everything I can do not to push my lover away.

 

Will I ever feel like I survived you?

 

It’s Spring again.

I see a woman walking towards me.

Her rosy cheeks stained gray

From her mascara

And her pink lipstick smeared across

The bottom of her face.

When our eyes meet,

She collapses into my arms.

I hold her as saltwater runs from her eyes,

And down my arms.

Her body icy,

Her lungs gasping for air in between sobs.

With my arms protecting her,

I tell her

“This is not your fault.”

“You did not cause this.”

“You are alive”

And it is here, that I realize

I have survived.

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by Rachel Overvoll

Rachel is the author of the best-selling memoir, Finding Feminism which depicts her upbringing in fundamentalist Evangelical Christianity and how she broke free. Since leaving the church in her early twenties, Rachel graduated with a BS in Tourism Management from Indiana University. After college, she began a career in sales, enabling her to travel throughout the country. She has actively worked for women's rights, volunteering with various domestic and sexual violence organizations, including "Project PAVE" in Denver. Rachel has also facilitated conversations around religion, feminism, body positivity, and privilege in her community. Since leaving religion, Rachel has considered the open roads her church. She lives in Denver with her rescue dog, Daisy.


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