A Dowager Reflects Kindly
Carrie Chang
Something I should say to mommy,
I am not emotional enough,
I should keep her jade rings
singing, and eat all
The roast boeuf boeuf,
Something I should say
About the old days, about
The house in the dust court,
Where rainbows visited highways
And nostalgia was retort,
And sister’s Klee’s a sentimental
Head of privilege that’s a tessellated
Turf, and father just a ray of light
That’s a superannuated nerd,
Why fight the Chinglish
Seeping into your overbite,
And the things you’ve overheard?
Those days before karma made
A Froddo out of everyone
And we ate mac and cheese
Instead of cha-sui buns,
one Summer I peered into the mirror
And thought I looked
Like the dowager, chilled,
Never knowing I resembled
You sideways, but that
Was before I got damn
Ill, speaking of it now
Makes me giddy, it
Wasn’t always that fun
Or escapist, kiddie
Carrie Chang is the self-published author of Two Shades of Regret, Laundromat, If Gretel Were Chinese, and Fairytale Origami. She resides in the Bay Area, enjoys the taste of ornamental jellyfish and dragon cider, and is the editor of this fine journal, which is in its fifth year.