Too Many I’s And Yet Not


An Abecedarian

An alphabet of fear, I was born a

breach baby, first

child.  Only 

doll — a barbie with weak joints. You are

easy, the first boy I spilled my tongue to said. You’re 

fast, said the next.

Go to your room, my mother said, no


halter tops for you, no house keys, take some extra

ice-cream. Stop crying, not me, your dad will be mad. 

I was i & shortsighted eye, thick spectacles i, bad-postured, not an 

inch between my chin and answer sheets 

i despised geography, 195 countries, and I in my 150 sq. feet

I prayed to my mother’s god in the shower for permission

just for a weekend trip. And the forever-first-ranker me

kept cracking

little keys on

maps of what ma & pa fight about.

Nobody knew the pimple-squeezing language I spoke at night, I was

one corner room with grey

peeling paint


quiet with my feet, hands quite 

restless. I stole once, a

sleeping pill from mum’s vanity case. If they 

taught me as much about family as about faraway wars, I’d

understand how happiness too can be an unknown

violence.



What is a family? war warer warest or

x = (arranged marriage) / [(compromise) - (ma’s prayer beads) - (pa’s anger) + (Sunday cartoons)], or when

you know the word love but not its correct usage such that even its mention makes you

zig and zag away from your own first person.



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About the author

Preeti Vangani is a poet & personal essayist. She is the author of Mother Tongue Apologize (RLFPA Editions), her first book of poems (winner of RL India Poetry Prize). Her work has been published in BOAAT, Gulf Coast, and Threepenny Review, among other journals. She is the Poetry Editor for Glass, a Poet Mentor at Youth Speaks, and holds an MFA (Writing) from University of San Francisco.