Teresa Dzieglewicz

Poetry

Teresa Dzieglewicz is an educator and Pushcart Prize-winning poet. She received her MFA from Southern Illinois University, where she received the Academy of American Poets Prize. She has received fellowships and residencies to New Harmony Writer’s Workshop, the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center, and the NY Mills Arts Retreat. Her poems appear or are forthcoming in the Pushcart Prize XLII, Beloit Poetry Journal, Sixth Finch, Ninth Letter, Thrush, RHINO, and elsewhere.

To the abstinence-only educator at my high school:

Lady, I’m sorry you wasted your money on that grocery store rose, petals creased white from cheap scrunchy cellophane, sinewy green scabs where there used to be thorns. Sorry you wasted your time ripping your french tips into the flower’s dark crimson hips, petal-flesh shards reddening my desk. You stood in the glow of your powerpoint, ponytail swatting the STD bulletin board, licked your lip gloss this is how sex makes your body ugly for the man you’ll marry, shook the shorn stem in my face, is this what you want to give to your husband? Lady, I was fourteen, suddenly feeling my body like a wind chime, ringing with the breath of everyone else. I almost believed you, believed I was someone else’s piece of bouquet, until the first time I made myself come, and I was a sapling snapping back, a potpourri of macaws, winging from feathered pistils of the tulip tree all at once a fist unfolding unfolding the most open palm prayer. And lady, I’m sorry you looked in your mirror that morning, buttoned the box of your blouse, made pink buds of your cheeks, practiced whispering your body is beautiful for somebody else.
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