April 22nd, 2022
Migraines
by S. Marie Watkins
Migraines
Split neck th(robbing)
to temples and eyes, pain makes
its presence kn(own)
once I learn what normal could be.
I wish I’d feel (screwd)rivers
in homemade lobotomies –
frontal lobe
s / c r a m / b l e d.
Faces melt into s(wirl)ing
messes, hiding truths
in toxic light. Roots from the Mighty
Migraine
pull at my skull,
seep th(rough) my vertebrae
tie knots around my stomach,
(wreck)ing plans
and blurring dates –
erasing language from my lips.
I beg for sleep
with (tear)s stabbing splinters
of color into my superior rectus
muscle. So tell me again,
doctors, please,
how I exaggerated my (head)aches
when migraines sleep
within me.
S. Marie Watkins reads “Migraines”:
S Marie Watkins is a poet from Lake Tahoe, California. They hold a BFA in creative writing from Sierra Nevada University and often write about mental health, family trauma, domestic violence, and environmental activism. They have been featured in various journals including The Oakland Arts Review, Frost Meadow Review, and Plants & People: An Anthology of Environmental Artists. They spend their free time wandering the Tahoe National Forest with their seven-pound hell hound, Ladybird. Check out more at https://smwm99.wixsite.com/smariewatkins or on twitter: @smariewatkins; instagram: @s.marie_watkins; and facebook: s.marie_watkins