
the word of god



VegetableRumors™️ text emojis. Just, you know, in case you needed that. Anyways I have to distract myself with something else before I do my homework now.
€B þ ) Ambiguous Gourdfriend
( 8 P ) Larold the cucumber
{( 8 o ) Type A the tomato
£( 3 0 ) suave peach
<%%_8_[)____) uptight asparagus
<%8_\)__) anxious tiny asparagus
( : • ) peas of sarcasm
==8_•____) a leek of some repute
=)}B{þ ) Elder Grape the Unraisined
My mother told me
that God is the potter
and I am a cup
but I’m trying to
become a plate
but what she
doesn’t understand
is that I was
never meant
to be so simple
and utilitarian
in the first place
and it’s much
more likely that
I’m an abstract sculpture
out of precious metal clay
and this is my trial by fire
in the kiln of cruel expectations
burning away impurities
and anything less
than what I need
to be pure sterling.
I know that I’m not supposed to talk about being crazy.
I know that I’m not supposed to talk about my family.
Or politics.
Or religion.
Or suicide.
I know for damn sure I’m not supposed to talk about my gender and sexuality.
A bunch of anonymous people know I’m not supposed to talk about my alcoholism.
Or my autism.
Or my PTSD.
These are things people get judged for.
These are the things that cause family members to turn into black sheep.
Some black sheep come by it honestly, just melanin, all natural.
But most are stained that way by the vile oily sludge of judgement.
I know these things make people uncomfortable.
You think I don’t know that?
I’ve always known.
I think a little discomfort is a small price to pay, to relieve some sheep of their Sludgement Day.
I remember frantically scrabbling around the house, looking for a bible. I was at a low point and looking for some words of wisdom, or perhaps salvation, in my final hours. I’ve had a lot of final hours and conversations with guns, little blocks of invincibility where you are prepared to die and nothing can hurt you but yourself. This time, I needed God.
I saw a bible atop a pile of clutter and checked it. There were several pages of notes about horse training, and then nothing.
Boxes of books were in another room. I had my husband help me stack and re-stack the boxes as I looked through each in turn. I found another one.
This one had a few meager sketches from a multicolored pencil in it. Otherwise, it was blank.
The house was torn apart for a renovating project. That giant bookshelf in the middle of the destruction zone, covered in towels and plaster dust. I lifted up a wrinkled sheet and thumbed along the dusty spines. I found a bible.
I opened it. Blank, every page blank.
Not again.
I could not find a single real bible in the apartment. The place was littered with fake ones from my sister, she used to work for a publisher and she’d commandeer the binding sample copies whenever she could. They make great gifts.
I once gave one to a friend of mine who is a professor of anthropology, and his eyes positively sparkled. “It’s like, it’s so beautiful. I don’t even know what I want to do with it, there’s so many possibilities, it’s just pregnant with promise.”
I laughed and took a swallow of my craft beer. “I’m sure you’ll think of something good.”
And then here I was, searching desperately for the word of god and not finding it.
Seems to be a metaphor for my relationship with religion. I seek for something real, tangible, and useful to grasp hold of, and every time I think I’ve found it, it ends up being empty.
I never did find a bible that day. But I did borrow one later. The promise of it was good enough to get me through the night, and that was good enough for that night.