*I am a Poet

I am a poet. 
Of course I speak my truth.
Of course I will tell you
the way I came out ass first,
cord wrapped around my neck, 
lump on my throat to testify
nothing ever is ever easy.

I am a poet.
Of course I will read 
between every line. But I’ll read
the sentences slowly and even your face,
wrinkled and raging because you are
nothing but a molding peach of a man 
who deserves to be read out loud,
and how else can I get a word in edgewise
to tell you what I really think? 

I am a poet.
Of course I will listen
to whatever speaks around me
until I decide what caused me to hear you,
what reached in to stroke 
my remoteness and feeling so alone.

I am a poet.
Of course I will dive head first into darkness
only to emerge in the sun because how else 
can I learn who it is that I am 
and what I believe on the other side?

I am a poet.
Of course I will sense what’s wrong
because you didn’t see through my eyes 
(the ones he called “pensive” in a handwritten note)
the man with the girls on his lap,
saying she had a “bony butt,”
and a record playing backwards
that said nothing about Satan
I could ever hear. 

I am a poet.
Of course I will watch
like a sharp-shinned hawk 
the everything I see
and write it down in a notebook
because Harriet the Spy was my hero,
and no one should have stolen her diary. 

I am a poet. 
Of course I will cry
when I hear the highest notes hit
or the wails of my unsoothable baby
and this is not a mood disorder, thank you –
it’s hormones and men amok. 

I am a poet. 
Of course I will remember
what it is you said when you 
actually said something important 
or something that made sense to me.
Context is king, and keywords 
were always my friends. 

I am a poet.
Of course I will tell you
which wounds hurt the most
and which will hardly bother me
because this life is too short
to bother with petty and you
are wasting my time. 

I am a poet.
Of course I will gather 
nuts and berries around me,
pick up shiny things and shells,
put them in front of me
to remind me of what is beautiful. 

I am a poet. 
Of course I will think everything’s plural
and nothing is black and white,
or even a shade of grey - more 
like a spectrum not even 
a color wheel captures.

I am a poet.
Of course I have tattoos
and earrings and beads and even audacious 
wraps, because nothing is rarer 
than the thrill of artists unhinged
sharing their version of beauty. 

I am a poet.
Of course I will question
just about everything, starting 
with life and death, then starting
all over again. Did you think 
I’d just take your word? 

I am a poet.
Of course I will sing 
and dance awkwardly in my living room
and sometimes in the grocery store, too,
because a journey without joy 
is no journey at all, and innocent 
laughter can be so very rare. 

I am a poet. 
Of course I will learn
the hard way sometimes, 
and other times on the first try,
meandering through muck
and coming out clean,
bathed in the showers of springtime. 

I am a poet.
Of course I will live in a world of my own,
envisioning something better
than you could ever build alone.
Because I am a poet, forged of iron and light,
and I was made to last.

Copyright 2024, Katherine Mercurio Gotthardt, all rights reserved 

*Dedicated to all the creatives out there. Thank you to my poetic friends on Threads for inspiring this poem with their own statements of truth. Thank you @aplantedpoet for reminding me I am iron and light. #CreativesUnite 

Katherine Gotthardt

Katherine Mercurio Gotthardt, M.Ed., writing concentration, hails from Virginia. She considers herself a writer by nature and by trade, having begun writing for fun as soon as her mother helped teach her to read. An active part of the literary community, Katherine was a past-president and a founding member of Write by the Rails (WbtR), the Prince William Chapter of the Virginia Writers Club. Katherine has been a Prince William County Poet Laureate nominee and was the winner of Inside Nova’s 2019 and 2020 Best of Prince William award in the category of author. Her poetry and prose book Get Happy, Dammit: Staying Inspired and Motivated in an Often-Unhappy World received a Silver Award from the Nonfiction Authors Association. Katherine's children’s book, A Crane Named Steve, hit number one in its category on Amazon in 2019. Katherine then took first place in the free verse category of Loudoun County Library Foundation’s 2020 Rhyme On poetry contest for her piece "Discussion Topic." The Prince William Arts Council and Poet Laureate Circle awarded her the 2020 Outstanding Poetry Project Award for her leadership in Write by the Rails' Poems Around Town poetry installation. In 2021 Katherine earned second place for "Aftermath" in a Poetry Society of Virginia national contest and the regional Seefeldt Award for Arts Excellence in the category of Individual Artist. She won first place in the Virginia Writers Club statewide Golden Nib contest in the poetry category for her poem "Kayak." Katherine was recognized as a PW Perspective 2021 DMV Best Business award winner in the category of author. In April 2023, Katherine’s poem “Now Entering Manassas” was the winner of Manassas, Virginia's adult “time capsule” poetry contest. Katherine read her poem at the 150th anniversary celebration, the translated version by Jorge de Villasante was read in Spanish by Bianca Menendez, her poem was published in Neighbors of Historic Manassas magazine, and it was included in the city’s time capsule. While Katherine is well-known for her poetry, she also has established a solid reputation for writing articles, columns and short fiction. She is published in dozens of journals and anthologies and has authored 12 books: Poems from the Battlefield, Furbily-Furld Takes on the World, Approaching Felonias Park, Weaker Than Water, Bury Me Under a Lilac, Late April, A Crane Named Steve, Get Happy, Dammit, D.C. Ekphrastic: Crisis of Faith, Thirty Years of Cardinals Calling, Get Happier, Dammit and We All Might Be Witches. She uses proceeds from her books to support giving back initiatives.
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