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ALONE, A LOW-KEY UMBILICAL WOUND OWE

Alone, A Low-Key Umbilical Wound Owe

 

I entered the hush where ancestors spoke

in fractured echoes, wrapped in colonial smoke.

My name bore the weight of rivers split 

half saltwater, half sacred spit.

 

The wound is round, small, unseen 

a soft red knot between spirit and skin.

They said I was born

of stories torn,

between the gourd and the gun,

between the exile and the sun.

 

Each breath I take is a ledger of blood,

owing debts I did not sign

but carry in the way my bones hum

when the drum calls home.

 

Alone, but not untouched.

The umbilical thread may be cut

but it coils in memory’s dirt,

where my great-grandmother’s whisper

rattles like dry kola in a calabash.

She tells me,

“To be born in contradiction

is to inherit the power to choose

which gods to rebuild

and which lies to refuse.”

 

Low-key, I keep the wound clean

not to heal it,

but to remember that

I walk the fault line between

what was broken

and what breaks free.

Not healed,

but hallowed.

 

Alone, a low-key umbilical wound owe 

not shame,

but a shining.

Not a scar,

but a map.

 

Ibukunoluwa Ayodele Omole

2-8-2025

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