JENNY SADRE-ORAFAI.July 2025


JENNY SADRE-ORAFAI

Photo by Jeff Sirkin


 

ELSEWHERE

Her insistent yellow kitchen follows.

Honeysuckle straws on my back,

on my shoulders from leaning

against the wall—me in the edges.

The sour sun I drew every year. The same

rays, alternating short and long.

An easy pattern. The same sun

my mom told me not to stare

into. The one that baked

me inside a strapless bikini.

A belt at the waist.

Canned hairspray back to liquid.

I stayed out for the college boy

across the street. Yellow hair.

He burned. He told me legends

like The Jawbreaker,

that my friends and I had

to put our hands on. No one

told us splaying ourselves

on driveways would hurt us.

The yellow Slow Down sign

someone tagged.

The cat that looked yellow

if you were far enough away.

The daffodil a skater I had a crush on

picked from the high school yard

for me. I didn’t press it into a book.

It’s stuck in my hand still. My hand

in the first-row seat of the yellow

bus because I liked talking

to Jamie, the driver, who chewed

and spit dip and moved the bus through

little and big roads. The roses I hunt

for my mom, The Yellow Rose

of Texas. Bluebonnet country.

The Texas flag. The rodeo with

a pastel pop princess. Violence

I couldn’t see. The animals.

The Icee inside a souvenir

cup. The smell of animals.

The singer’s mouth too close

to the microphone. I couldn’t understand

why the sun wasn’t there lighting up

the animals. I ask for lemons

at restaurants. Yellow highlighter swallows

my books. Everything is important.

I shouldn’t forget any of it.

 

 

| top |

*** ** ***

 

I’VE BEEN BURNED BY THE LIGHT

Before I knew joking could be flirting.

Before I knew more about plants.

Before I lost the clean backyard pool.

Before I knew to hold my breath above a jump.

He told me ear wax would keep soda from

bubbling over. He told me to try it.

He walked into the pool, and the steps lit

him up. I didn’t know what to believe.

I told her the camera flash was lightning.

I’m sure someone’s said it.

I say burn it all down more than before

I was a teenager and carried a lighter

in my pocket. I didn’t smoke. She told me

she likes it when people wear stickers

on their faces—buildings with chipped ledges.

She talks about her feelings without metaphor,

without coffee and confrontation. She’s moss or fern.

She has a therapist. She puts in the work.

She has good posture—an apple on her head.

She works on it. I don’t admit I’m an empty spigot.

Lying gets easier. Believing gets harder.

Her questions remind me I don’t know

what I’m doing. I’m tracing over facts.

 

 

| top |

*** ** ***

 

THE BODY AGAIN

I memorized all the bones

for school. I loved saying

phalanges, metatarsals, carpals.

A doctor says which bone

you broke. I know the bones

around it: radius, ulna.

I teach my chin to lift, my eyes

to see into faces, into mouths,

the mandible. Song for the doctor:

my grandmother without calcium.

Her husband, calcium in the blood.

Their son, titanium knees.

People want to know about the screws

holding you together. Give me your ear,

the bones I got wrong: malleus, incus, stapes.

 

 

| top |

*** ** ***

 

E-MAILS WITH SUBJECT LINES LIKE FEEL ALIVE IN A NEW DRESS

The dress is tall, vaporous. A stifled yawn.

It will be pulled by the hard corners

of the house. The dogs will think

it’s a shadow or maybe light.

You left this behind. Did something catch your eye?

I shook my head yes. The package on a map.

The dress, another stent. I’m in the mood for living.

I’m waiting to look alive, to have my living catch up.

 

 

| top |

*** ** ***

 

IT WAS SUMMER

I tipped garbage

bins brimmed with

still water. Most of

the mosquitos dead-gone.

The flower bed finally opening.

Everyone gets hurt.

The porch flooded

with their flying. I heard

dew draping onto grass.

I walked inside a morning.

My body barer than

afternoon, I held out

my forearms. I said

I wouldn’t slap death

into them. My blood,

strawberries with

their caps bitten off.

 

 

| top |

*** ** ***

 

CHILDCARE

We joked that the cyst was my twin. I was carrying

another version of me, one I don’t listen to. Kicking me,

she asked, why won’t she listen to me? My twin and her temper.

A student masseuse touched my back when I was 21.

He said he’d work around it. I asked the dermatologist

to see the cyst after she was removed. Was she still mad?

Things would sound different now. The dermatologist told me

it was okay that I was nervous. I explained that wasn’t it.

I wanted to understand my sister, a shrunken heart, a splotch

on gauze. Now you can wear backless dresses. An answer

to no one’s question. We won’t send it off. We know what it is.

 

 

| top |

*** ** ***

 

BLIGHT EXQUISITE

I scan plants on walks. I have a garden that doesn’t belong to me.

I document my property before storms. Just in case.

The film developer saw my smile before I did. Double memory.

I was smiling for myself while other campers ate lunch.

My growing zigzagged teeth I can fix with an app now.

I can close my mouth.

The neighbor, who sings with Billy Joel inside his house,

told us our heavy tree was dying. Who lets his boys play outside

in winter. Who makes scrap metal art in his backyard, near our tree.

Who must have been keeping an eye on it.

We had it cut down, one foot at a time. Pieces dumped from the sky.

Not enough rope to bring its body to the ground. The house flinched.

The disease looks like it’s still here, like it took over what’s left.

When I look in the mirror, I don’t smile. I size myself up. I’m looking

for a fight. If I could just straighten these teeth out.

 

 

| top |


JENNY SADRE-ORAFAI


Jenny Sadre-Orafai
is the author of Paper Cotton Leather, Malak, and Dear Outsiders and co-author of Book of Levitations. Her prose has appeared in The Rumpus, Fourteen Hills, The Los Angeles Review, and others. She co-founded and co-edits Josephine Quarterly and teaches and mentors creative writers.

 

To download a printable PDF version of this page, click here.

 

 

| top |


July 2025.JENNY SADRE-ORAFAI