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Mia Leonin – “Self Portrait as an Innocent Bystander”

This month’s Versed in Florida is with Miami poet Mia Leonin. She teaches creative writing at the University of Miami. She has published poetry and creative nonfiction in numerous journals and reviews. She writes about Spanish-language theater and culture for the Miami Herald, New Times, and other publications. Leonin is the author of three poetry collections and a memoir called Havana and Other Missing Fathers. She tells WGCU’s Amy Tardif her latest collection called, Chance Born, plays on the idea of chance as in “luck” and chance as in “accident”.

Self-portrait as an Innocent Bystander

I am not Jewel Howard         

who ate pickles from a jar on her grandmother’s front porch,

                                       who giggled pickle juice down the front of her dress.

I am not Jewel Howard

who scrunched up her face against the scratchy skin of the leg

she clung to when it was time to go home with mother.

I’m not three-year old Jewel Howard

who complained of a stomachache and back pain, Jewel,

who grew listless, then vomited.

I’m not the family friend

who saw Jewel “flopping around” on the floor

and begged Jewel’s mother to take her to the hospital.

I’m not the medical examiner            

who called the lacerations to Jewel’s liver

the result of homicidal violence.

I’m not the social services worker

who, at the time of Jewel’s death, was investigating the family

for an “unrelated injury.” 

I’m not Jewel’s six-month old little sister

now in protective custody.

I’m not the Miami Herald reader who commented:

More stories about dirty, dark, unwanted babies and children?

I rather hear about rich people and stars!

I’m not the pair of glasses

smashed beneath the wheel of the ambulance

as it drove off with Jewel’s unresponsive body.

I’m not the single lens whose crack

began with a sudden impact to the center, then splintered outward,

                                       the smashed up lens, an explosion or a shooting star.

I am not Jewel Howard

her grandmother

 

her mother

 

the family friend

 

the medical examiner

 

the social worker

 

the little sister

 

       the Herald reader

 

            the glasses

 

or the lens.

I’m the person who scrawls the breeze

that tightens its noose around her last breath.

I scribble the guardian ad litem whose statistic

slinks off on a coffee break.

I write the quiver in the hound’s belly

as it sniffs the crime scene.

I try to nuzzle the unknowable, to thaw

the unthinkable loss

of Jewel, the glint of light in every corner, the uncut stone

stomped into the earth by a familiar shoe.

I’m a useless metaphor maker             a futile reacher beyond the be

yonder.

I am not,

and Jewel is.