How to Forgive | Poetry

How To Forgive

Susan Nguyen

    She asks me to write a list
    of all the names I’ve been called.
    And then a list of things
    that are killing me.
    Where to start? Susie. Sue.
    Big Head. Men have called me cold.
    Men I know, men I don’t.
    It’s all over the news
    how they want to kill me.
    It doesn’t matter what they
    call me. When I was 17, I kneeled
    on the stained carpet at Men’s Wearhouse,
    looping a tape measure around
    a small boy’s waist and he showed me
    my name. He pulled his eyes slant
    as I measured the distance
    between belly button and floor: inseam
    or outseam, it’s hard to keep track.
    A wedding, his father said.
    There was going to be a wedding.
    The boy needed a tux.
    I don’t like this memory
    because I did nothing.
    In remembering,
    I become nothing again.
    Not long after in college,
    I was sorting clothes in the back
    of a Goodwill. Court-ordered community
    service. An older man took
    his time looking me up
    and down as I sweat through my shirt,
    threw pit-stained blouses
    into the discard pile,
    everything else the salvaging bin.
    I went home with him for years,
    not knowing about the prior assaults.
    Would my knowing have changed
    anything? He was gentle
    to my face. I only ignored
    his texts sometimes.
    Men have destroyed me
    for less. Even the boy.
    I’m supposed to tell you
    I forgive him—
    he was just a boy.
    I forgive myself instead.

    Copyright © 2022 by Susan Nguyen. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on September 26, 2022, by the Academy of American Poets.


    Discover more from Laura Moreno Garcia

    Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

    Leave a comment

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    search previous next tag category expand menu location phone mail time cart zoom edit close