“Grit” by Claire Gordon

Poetry Pause is the League of Canadian Poets’ daily poetry dispatch. Read “Grit” by Claire Gordon.


Grit

By Claire Gordon

He told me it takes about

twenty-eight days to set

four weeks to recover

from fixation

I screed off

deleterious solids

investigate

the mechanical strength

of my dependence

I spread smooth

excess layers

to reveal a planed surface

bubbling with durability

compressed

exterior insulates

resists fire

the whole house

can burn down

but cement will remain

it takes twenty-eight days to set

and my hands

toughen and get rougher

my skin is cracked

microtears catch

on nearly everything

an unwanted adhesive

this sheath becomes

increasingly shriveled

and unlovely

like wrinkled linen

crumpled and tossed

to the back of my closet.


Copyright © Claire Gordon

Previously published Sea & Cedar Magazine.

Claire is an emerging West Coast writer. She is a settler of Celtic, French, and Eastern European ancestry. Her history working in the backcountry of Provincial Parks sparked an ecofeminist attention, which led to her meditations on human interaction with the land through narrative and documentary poetics. Claire’s previous work has appeared in Sea & Cedar Magazine and Portal Magazine.


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