Wednesday, February 25, 2015 // The Statement 4B Wednesday, February 25, 2015 // The Statement 5B When the men hoot and holler It’s not because you’ve done something. Flowers do nothing to be picked Except be there and beautiful. Grow where you will And bury your roots deep Like a spiked weed. Don’t wish you looked like one. It’s not because you’ve done something. Living shouldn’t be this hard. A bitter bunch of pennies sit on the back of my tongue, Each time your fist makes love to my eye. We always begin with a dance of words. The battered goat in the basement of our love Limps into light, All matted fur and tattered ears. You create the creatures in the corner That crawl up my spine. I force you to feel like you are falling from the 35th floor. Nightmares and fears: Weapons best wielded by the ones we trust most. Our words have weight behind them, Then we put our weight behind them. Strange flowers, the prints of knuckle on flesh. Strange paint. A math teacher once told me that Architects are considered geniuses for close following of a form to it’s function That when the form of an object is suited perfectly to its function, We are left with inherent beauty. And it’s got me wondering If the number of hearts I break Exceeds the number of times I trip over my own feet Does that deem my form My architecture, Inherently beautiful? If I conduct my body like a well oiled machine With grace and maximized efficiency, Am I the product of some architectural genius? Because if my form followed function I’d have hips just wide enough for you to paint on And above that, A sliced piece of cedar bark Cascading curls would serve their purpose Of driving lovers to dizzying insanity. I’m no mathematician nor a masterpiece But they say that when your form follows its function With empty spaces to be filled And smooth surfaces to run fingertips across All things reflective and light You’ll have beauty like bridges unbroken And towers tall and thin. or blonde haired blue eyes i am yellow in the wrong places they call it gold on hair but for skin it’s a sickness. in english to be beautiful is not black hair trying to soak up sun while avoiding its rays on your skin. being dark is only cool when it doesn’t remind people of how they used your culture to build their houses and towns. your boyfriend’s mom sees you and tells him that she looks full of herself because you’re not allowed to be proud of yourself when you’re not beautiful only full of too many years avoiding mirrors gulping up shame and pretending. one phrase eavesdropped becomes a mantra boys will never like asians when they can have some blonde chick. layers of make up and forced confidence will only get you as far as cute or exotic people don’t remark on my beauty but on my height my skinniness or how i (kind of) look like my mother huge nose small slanted eyes skin with holes looking at my reflection is a girl who learned from day one she was the opposite of blonde haired and blue eyed, ugly. For Sale 2.7 Acres Vacant but there are trees Johnny knew of the angry nights in pool rooms, when his father whirled like an eight ball spinning above the socket. A shiver of movement, and the game was over. He saw the muscles rippling as the man rustled his morning paper, the flash of gritted teeth as he pushed the lawn mower through the sticky pit of summer. His strength was his skin, worn into like the habit of flinching at a firing gun. The same thick blood raced through his son. While the house quivered under his father’s footsteps, Johnny would run. Dashing in the dewy mornings, guided by starlight and his own breath, around wispy fields and sunken sidewalks and unmarked rivers, their names scrubbed off of maps. He would sit at a school desk, sneakers tied, legs wiggling too much to concentrate on combustion reactions. Boom. At the bell, he was a hamster in a wheel, treading on rubber until the coach told him, Go home, Johnny Boy. Desire bubbled from his tremendous lungs at supper, burning a hole through the tablecloth, deep in the wood. He would walk dutifully to bed, only to slip out of his sheets — a blurred bandit. The day of the race came. Johnny broke the news like eggs over breakfast with his father. I’m busy today, Son the man said. And that day, outside, the defeated man pushed the lawn mower over the dying grass. It was his third week without work. He was listening. The chorus of voices rose up, over the bushes, through the thick, wet air. A roar. by Hailey Middlebrook, LSA junior, Daily Arts Writer THE RUNNER DISRESPECT by Jean-Pierre Seguin, LSA senior AN OPEN FIST by Carolyn Darr, LSA senior FOR LUCY by Alexis Springer, LSA senior ARCHITECTURE LESSON by Maria Robins-Somerville, LSA sophomore BEAUTIFUL by San Pham, LSA junior ILLUSTRATIONS BY LUNA ANNA ARCHEY