In a Weigh Down Workshop once
I was taught to recognize true signs
of hunger.
They taught me
to stave off those feelings—
with a half glass of juice and a little prayer.
They said what I felt was
spiritual hunger, that I must learn to be fed
with spiritual food.
I lost thirty-six pounds.
————-—*
You say your nerves are shot.
You say you have a migraine.
Let’s plod on. Together,
let’s drag this dark barge of stories,
feel the heft
on our shoulders
and domesticated backs.
————-—*
Throughout history,
women have starved. And made up for it
with visions of divine ecstasy.
Pierced through by a golden arrow
of desire, Saint Teresa’s rapture
is carved in stone.
Saint Francesca Romana burned
her genitals with hot pork fat.
————-—*
I didn’t plan it—the way
my white dress clung to my body
as I rose from the water
and walked
dripping down the aisle—preteen bride
of Christ. I left
wet footprints on the worn red carpet
of that small church—
the pews of parents,
those terrifying girls.
Lesley-Anne Evans is an Irish-Canadian poet and an MA candidate in poetry at the Seamus Heaney Centre, Queen’s University, Belfast. Her work appears in Poetry Ireland Review, Letters (Yale Divinity School), Event, CV2, and elsewhere. Mute Swan (St. Thomas) is her first collection. www.laevans.ca
Photo by Yuheng Ouyang on Unsplash


