We have made love over the cordless phone,
pretending that 'hello' was our safe word,
still wrapped in gratitude for our distance;
we haven't graduated to real steel handcuffs, yet.
Our mouths have found ways to be more intimate
than our fingertips.
His lips have touched me
where not even my mother has thought to caress.
His tongue strokes a part of me
more near than my sex,
And more worn than my gender.
I have whispered away my virginity,
bedding his past reluctantly,
because pre-pubescent trauma is far harder
to love than his rough hips,
Bible Belt slung low and loose,
Almost too far South;
almost scandalous.
My mother thinks I'm lonely,
because boys side by side
cast brotherly shadows.
She misses hip huggers hugging unowned hips
and indirect kisses on melting chocolate bars
smeared across our lips and fingertips.
Her generation never laid down paper
for bedding, or passed pelvic rocking rhythm
through poems, she doesn't
understand hand holding
through words, and to her,
a comma is just punctuation
and never makes her
gasp.
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