I was ten when I learned I could hold
my breath, long enough to make the adults
come running. At the traffic lights, after school,
I tensed ’til my face screeched
with blood, stars. I shattered two teeth on the concrete,
was made a fuss of. It wasn’t enough to ask for love.
I needed panic. It was the language, the formula
I understood—harm yourself love will follow.
My tiny face, found suspended in the coat rack, looking
for attention, cord from dad’s dressing gown
in a double-knot ’round my neck
their little balloon.