4.27.2025

learning how to mean, how in the mean world to be

I came awake in kindergarten, 
under the letter K chalked neat 
on a field-green placard leaned 
 
on the blackboard's top edge. They'd caged me 
in a metal desk—the dull word writ 
to show K's sound. But K meant kick and kill 
 
when a boy I'd kissed drew me 
as a whiskered troll in art. On my sheet, 
the puffy clouds I made to keep rain in 
 
let torrents dagger loose. "Screw those 
who color in the lines," my mom had preached, 
words I shared that landed me on a short chair 
 
facing the corner's empty Sheetrock page. Craning up, 
I found my K high above. 
You'll have to grow to here, its silence said. 
 
And in the surrounding alphabet, my whole life hid— 
names of my beloveds, sacred vows I'd break. 
With my pencil stub applied to wall, 
 
I moved around the loops and vectors, 
Z to A, learning how to mean, how 
in the mean world to be. 
 
But while I worked, the room around me 
began to smudge—like a charcoal sketch my mom 
was rubbing with her thumb. Then 
 
the instant went, the month, and every season 
smeared, till with a wrenching arm tug 
I was here, grown, but still bent 
 
to set down words before the black eraser 
swipes our moment into cloud, dispersing all 
to zip. And when I blunder in the valley 
 
of the shadow of blank about to break 
in half, my being leans against my spinal K, 
which props me up, broomstick straight, 
 
a strong bone in the crypt of flesh I am. 
 
[Mary Karr {1955- }, 'Revelations in the Key of K', from Sinners Welcome: Poems]

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