Wednesday, January 19, 2022

"WHEN I SEE MYSELF...I WONDER WHAT'S INSIDE."

Big Black Pig

By Juan Fernando Viollagomez

(From The Acentos Review)

All the things my mother couldn’t have
I fit into my mouth.

Spoon by spoon,
the beans and corn, her
father’s death
the town ignored,
the homemade
feasts cooked
with dented cans of
meat and greens picked
up off the curb.

When I see myself in photographs
I wonder what’s inside.

Forgotten things
I’ve swallowed up
And let them work
inside of me. Running
thick against my veins

like water muddied
by the slippery soil
my mom got on her shoes
and dragged into the kitchen.

A heart coarsened like the second
skin my brother grew
of sand and desert heat,
which he later shed upon the bed we
shared and scratched me
while we slept.

It’s the thirty pounds
of dog dad mourns, or
his brother’s soul
that ran into
the woods and climbed
into a tree, the big, black pig
I saw a picture of
while she was still alive,
before my grandpa
carved her flesh
and fed it to his
children on the road.

It’s blood just like
the muddy river
running fast beneath the surface
calm. Its slippery bank has
face imprints where
children played in mud.

Their infant fossils
washed away
and buried in the sea.


(Juan Fernando Villagómez is a writer from Houston, TX. His work is forthcoming in the Cincinnati Review. He is a member of the Macondo community for writers, a recipient of the Crawley Research Grant, and a finalist for the 2021 Keene Prize for Literature. He is currently an MFA student in fiction at the University of Texas in Austin where he lives with his dog, Abba and two cats, Brick and Ghost.)

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

would you like to swing on a star
and be better off than you are
or if you prefer not to go to pay your respects
you might grown up to be a pig. (bing)

rip

Anonymous said...

Looks like el pendejetes sitting on a chair a pig is a pig REGARDLESS!!!

Anonymous said...

oink

Anonymous said...


This is a beutiful poem. I need to read it again.

Thank you for posting this information.

Anonymous said...

Oink used to work for cob now "it" is working at a farm pig-pen.

rita