I dream of this, the weight,
a tortoise shell on my back, a heavy hull.
Did I choose its protection? I was asleep.
No one ever said, “You can drop it now” or
“It’s safe to drop that, you’ll be ok.”
Maybe the shell did protect me at one time
when I needed armor.
Maybe it isolated me for reasons
I do not know or understand.
It was heavy and hard to balance.
When I woke up, I could feel its weight.
I can still feel it, like a ghost,
like an arm or leg amputated.
Somehow it still signals my brain,
“Protect yourself.”
Maybe my mother put this shell on me before she left me.
Maybe I inherited it, like a talisman.
Maybe the shell was what women in my family wore to survive.
All I know is I was born with it.
© 2010 Trace A. DeMeyer
An exciting blog about all things adoptee-related - in particular American Indian adoptees who are called Lost Children and Split Feathers. This blog is updated regularly by journalist-adoptee Trace A. DeMeyer, author of ONE SMALL SACRIFICE: A Memoir, Lost Children of the Indian Adoption Projects and the new book Split Feathers: Two Worlds with Patricia Berdan Cotter-Busbee. The only way we can change history is to write it ourselves..... USE THE GOOGLE TOOLBAR (below) to search topics...

