Monday, 10 February 2025

Three Poems by Marisa Vito

 






 

Butterfly Shells

 

Butterfly shells are coquina clams. 

 

Surrounded by family, coquina clams capture nutrients  

from spilled sun on the ocean’s waves. 

A coquina talks and everyone listens,  

a coquina moves and everyone moves. 

 

There is love inside the heart of a clam. 

 

But when they die, the ocean gives their emptied bodies 

to pretty girls. 

 

The more beautiful the shell is,  

the prettier the ocean thinks you are. 

My family’s mollusk mythology, 

started a routine beach hunt  

between my sisters and I to find the most pleasing 

clam. 

 

However, the ocean did not decide  

which shell was fairest. My dad did. 

 

My older sister always found the prettiest ones,  

my little sister and I would race for second. 

 

Second pretty is the safest place. 

You will never be first pretty, 

so second is valuable. 

 

Sometimes I wasn’t second pretty 

because I chose a live shell. 

I wedged my pink fingernails  

into the palate of the clam,  

kneading its mouth open 

revealing mucusy insides. 

 

Mucus means last, 

mucus means dad called me disgusting, 

Mucus is the heart.



 

 

The Golden Calf

 

no one is waiting for you 

to return to them. 

this was the secret that God 

carved into the stone of my palms. 

 

yet I love my people— 

who trust me because they trust 

the power of an ocean, 

who care for me like a first born 

wailing. 

 

i read again the sculpted words and think 

about the dreams i had each night— 

that love is a full locust, 

that truth whispers like wind, 

that someone was waiting for me. 

 

i pushed myself down the mountain, 

feeling earthy toughness between my fingers. 

And i came back to the Calf 

of my expense. 

 

the Calf set everyone free. 

it twitches the gold hair of its body 

and its luster is adored. 

everyone kneels beside the calf 

and the Calf sighs its language. 

it speaks of forgiveness, 

of what the heart wants 

when it no longer hurts. 

 

when i stood next to the Calf, 

of course, i felt ashamed.  

its golden mouth, its golden eyelids. 

the Calf only knows how to be loved.  

only knows the sounds of kindness  

without the labour it takes to be thought of. 

it has never felt forgotten.   

 

but I know the ear hair that tingles when God says 

there is divinity in losing. 

 

And I slit the calf.



 

Aphantasia


When you envision an apple, is it a clear picture of an apple? 

or is it fuzzy, imperceptible. My apple is clear; 

the fruit of togetherness 

that you and I will never be alone. 

 

When I think about it, yes, I would have accepted 

the horse filled with people. 

I want to believe I am wise enough  

to hear breath inside a body that does not belong to me. 

That I could not be fooled by something wrong. 

That as long as I accept my own harm, it will come at my own cost. 

I draw little moons around your navel 

and listen to the celloed sound of your belly  

when you ask me what I think of you. 

It takes me three moons to know,  

you are a good person and kind to me. 

 

I give you the horse problem and you say no, 

you would not take the horse. 

But what if you know people are inside waiting? 

How would I know that? I can’t see inside of it. 

But you would be ready. 

Why would I set myself up to fail? 

I wait for you to say more because I want there to be. 

 

There are times I pull the horse  

through the gates. Times I bite 

the apple I dream of.  

I dreamt of you. 

And since I cannot feed on what I cannot touch,  

I grab your absence. 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

Marisa Vito is a queer, Filipinx poet from Southern California. They graduated from the University of California, San Diego with a degree in English Literature/Writing. Their writing has appeared in The SpectacleMixed MagPhyll MagazineLos Angeles Magazine, and Mantis: A Journal of Poetry, Criticism, and Translation. When not reading or writing, they enjoy video games, Vinyasa yoga, studying theory, and learning about niche topics. They are based in Brooklyn, NY. 

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Three Poems by Marisa Vito

    Butterfly Shells   Butterfly shells are coquina clams.     Surrounded by family, coquina clams capture nutrients    from spilled sun on ...