RE-write
Diary of a Thief 
In college, I was skinny 
and small, wore too many clothes, 
bit my fingernails and fucked anyone 
who asked. 
Excused from my glass house for the first time, I replaced 
again and again and again the small 
things, the feathers and the colors, 
that had been broken inside me. 
I loved to trespass: anywhere 
that was easy to enter and forbidden, loved to barely 
touch what wasn't mine, loved to pretend this was my place. 
When I wasn’t drinking or fucking some boy who smelled 
like all the others, I lived in our school library --a miniature cathedral 
of dark, sweet smelling wood, a church absent God, 
the angels books, helpless, blind and flat, easily torn. 
One Saturday night, I crammed myself into the book 
elevator and sent me, now a blinded angel, too, 
up to the 6th floor, behind locked doors and bars. 
A famous poet, you would know his name, had gone to my college and 
behind the chain-link fence rested the only copy of his thesis. 
I took it down with me. 
The paper like baby skin, transparent, elusive, 
pages fed through a manual typewriter in the days of carbon paper. 
I took 
his manuscript, also considering the Durer etching, the Degas sculpture, the signed Dickinson letters: the rare things we hide 
because some objects shimmer so 
they melt in sunlight or with too much viewing. 
I took that thesis 
and I touched it, the hand drawn illustrations, the naive anthropological 
assertions, the poet's embarrassed youth and misspellings. 
I kept it with my books on a darkened desk for a week, imagining 
the thousands it could get me or how to take it to my 
breast and suckle it, make it 
a part of me and my own, seeing the shine 
around my head from having such a valuable thing. 
Then I put it back. 
For years I have done this, 
the forbidden, the trespass, and the baroque plans 
with things that seem to be suddenly 
mine. And for years I have only touched 
and returned. 
At times I have regretted the things caressed and left behind, 
the Vonnegut drawings, the Monets. 
But this last spring I finally saw it as a talent: 
I can enter a space as private as the chamber of a heart, 
uncover without stripping what shines and is hidden, 
touch without a need to mold it to the shape of my fist 
or mouth. I can return it unbroken, give back what belongs. 
And it was spring 
when it finally hit me: 
now I can be a mother. 
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