liezel graham

author | poet | thread artist

I am a storyteller and a poet.

I use words and thread, pencil and needle, paper and fabric.

my work is an ongoing conversation with myself.

  • you can wear a pair of shoes out
    or a life
    by walking the same road, over and over

    just like words, perhaps
    by getting to the end
    and not realising it is the end, you turn to the left instead
    listening to the small voice of your life
    still wanting to be your old life

    and you don’t give up, do you?

    perhaps you have told yourself,

    well, it’s not so bad, at least i know which way to go
    now

    and then you don’t, because
    you have always known which way you are going

    and really, it’s far better to get lost
    and to stay there

    so, instead of letting go

    looking down
    you search for something else to strap onto your feet

    things are failing, letting you down

    listen!

    all your days are weeping, your years are too afraid to hope
    that things might change, might fit into your hands
    differently, this time

    perhaps you have told yourself that all you need
    is something sturdy, less glamour
    less hope
    a little less red, Dorothy, will see you through
    don’t you know that some roads are hard work
    and ruby shoes are not for the likes of you

    a life has to fit into its box, and you
    do not get to choose, do not get to ask
    for the way out, for the path
    that leads to a spacious place
    a clearing
    where the water sings to the moon
    and the long grass
    answers

    i have given up on shoes many times before
    it’s easy when you know how to walk
    better if you know how to run
    close to the earth, near to the sky
    where the hidden, green world
    is pregnant with everything you cannot hold
    cannot own

    perhaps you should just walk barefoot

    i do it all the time, but i must add
    that i grew up a little feral, a little wild
    i still eat my life from the inside out
    using my bare hands

    but also, i know the taste of
    holy
    i know that feet need to feel the earth, need to know
    the shape of each stone
    sharp
    as it presses into the arch of
    everything
    that keeps me standing

    and i know that i have told you to always look up
    it’s true

    don’t stop

    that’s where the soft-winged things live
    where they fold themselves gently
    like mothers
    over little cups filled with tears

    all the ways in which i have prayed without once using my mouth

    it’s true, and i have told you so many things
    but please do not think that i hold your map

    you do, and you might have to unfold it, wrap it
    around your shoulders

    or rip it up into a million mustard seeds
    because what you need now, is a thing called
    courage

    and maps don’t always go so well with this

    before you leave, before you let your toes sink deep into the earth
    isn’t it wonderous how mud can hold you

    such a holy thing, mud

    did you know this?
    sometimes you need to go back, need to ask for more

    need to ask

    once isn’t always enough to fix what is broken
    what has stopped working

    sometimes you need to be reminded, need to be given
    a small sparrow breathing bravely in your hands

    know this

    that all of us need to be held
    sometimes
    perhaps a little loosely
    perhaps so tight
    that fear will unlearn itself, curling back
    into its bones, stretching into a new shape
    until it falls asleep in the light

    may i give you a little pebble to keep in your pocket?
    if you let it, it can slay a giant

    one of the hardest words to say, is very tiny
    almost always
    falling
    from the mouth like this,

    ‘i am fine, really’

    when this happens, pick it up
    and put it far back
    onto the moist pink of your tongue
    let it dissolve there

    do not set it free until it looks like this,

    ‘help’.

    — how to read between your own lines

    © Liezel Graham 2021.

    Image by Anastasiia Balandina, on Unsplash.