Honorable Mention for the 2021 Small Orange Emerging Woman Poet Honor
PORTRAIT OF THE ONLY CHILD AS BAD PENNY
The therapist listens to my autobiography and says
you are very resilient. Let me live up to that. The zodiac
gives me a poisonous tail and a hole in the ground
to keep my soft insides soft—let me be
as formidable, as balanced as all that. A bad tattoo
of a good idea: serpent destroying herself
back to life, let me satellite my head a little
to drink up one last punchline, a final squawk.
In deep winter, let me be the squirrel scrambling
up the jack pine and the snow sparkling down as it tries.
Give me a chance to come back again, weed that looks
like a flower that looks like a weed, insisting between
the brick pavers: I belong. Let me be the bad penny,
bronzed to oblivion, just north of worthless, tossed
on a nightstand. God, rid me of this loneliness. Multiply
me. Give me as much of myself as you can.
Born and raised in the Midwest, Caitlin Cowan’s poetry, fiction, and nonfiction has appeared in The Rumpus, New Ohio Review, Missouri Review, Denver Quarterly, SmokeLong Quarterly, Rappahannock Review, and elsewhere. She holds a Ph.D. in English and has taught writing at the University of North Texas, Texas Woman’s University, and Interlochen Center for the Arts. She currently serves as the Development Coordinator and Chair of Creative Writing at Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp. In her spare time, she writes about poetry and popular culture at PopPoetry. She lives on the west coast of Michigan with her partner and their two mischievous cats. Find her at caitlincowan.com.