Sometimes, whenever my mother gets mad at me
she sits on the floor, unties her head gear, disintegrates herself
and becomes many stories
I pick one piece of her and read her scars:
when I got pregnant with you
my father and mother disowned me
and locked the youth server that poured his seed in me—your father—up in the police station
when he came out, he fled the town without completing his service.
I fling the piece but there is no use,
it has already settled in my stomach.
I am a loose thing, other children
bring happiness and joy but I didn’t
a child born out of wedlock
is only the shameful product of a man stealing what is not (yet) his
from a wayward woman who lets him
shame is like cashew juice; something that stains you
and never comes off;
when I was only seven
a big man came to visit my mother in our house
before he came, she warned me sternly, pulling her ear—
be quiet. do not make a sound.
Later that day, as I sat quietly in my room,
I saw a big rat come out of nowhere
I managed to keep my reaction to a squeal,
I heard his big man voice—who’s that?—my mother answered, “it’s from the next house.”
After he left,
my mother came to me. She pulled my ears and spanked me so hard,
I sent a curse to my father wherever he was.
But that was when she was younger,
when she could still pull ears, when she still had big men flocking after her. These days,
my mother just intentionally forgets me in the passage leading to the home of god.
Illegitimate children have no place here, the pastor says.
© Omotoyosi Salami
Omotoyosi Salami is a young, budding writer and poet from Nigeria who is fascinated with Yoruba traditions and history. When she’s not writing, she is most definitely reading or taking a nap. Some of her poetry have been published in online journals and magazines such as Kalahari Review, Brittle Paper, MerakMag, and Mojave Heart Review. She is on Twitter as @yorubasnflwr and her Medium site is www.medium.com/@yorubasnflwr.