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To Speak with a Wrench for a Tongue
I don’t know how to put this into words.
Words were never easy, slippery things with too many faces
All smiles and eyes and heaving breaths
Some would say too human for a mind like mine.
Each cry for help is met with a reminder
That instead of blood, I click with gears
Stared at, so alien,
My oily flesh and oily heart
Words spoken in code, I am told I have a wrench for a tongue.
Better a wrench for a tongue than for a fist, right?
Even in jest
I am never told my tongue is a dancer.
Never eloquent, never sickly sweet
As the honey-tipped barbs spoken behind my back,
I am told I have no spine.
I am all exoskeleton,
Yet another reminder
To them I am not human.
I should be more than that, shouldn’t I?
For human is just a word
And words are simply spoken
Never beaten into people to make solutions
Of problems I am told never did exist.
I wish I knew how people tick.
They tell me I am the one with gears
The one with oil-hearts and a swollen-stone mind
Rigid in its checkerboard simplicity.
I am told I am not justice
For justice is blind, and I,
I see too much.
For clockwork eyes see time clearly
Instead of eyes of flesh and blood
Who see the world through water.
I would ask how one could see
If one were drowning
How they would breathe in the night sky
Without metal lungs
Wings for hair, and hardened tongues.
I am told I am not beautiful.
No machine is deemed a masterpiece for clicking along
To an industrial, immortalised tempo.
I wish to dance
But metal, however rigid it may be
Makes my legs unstable.
If I have an oily heart, how can I love?
They laugh and tell me I am wrong
Delusional, as a stone-minded man must be
For I am not a man, and I must not love
For then I am not machine.
I don’t know how to put this into words,
For words are simple, hard and jaded
Pawns, actors on a stage of black and white.
They tell me I am not right, but they,
They have never spoken with metal lungs
They have never seen the dreams
Of a heartless man
I say they have heard the clicking
Of a wrench-less tongue.
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