A single man knows a widow’s heart.
A whore’s broker reads another broker’s eyes.
Her withered character, her torn pussy-
she believes both can be patched
with the same cheap tape
a child slaps onto a broken kite
before sending it back into the same wind
that shredded it the first time.
It never lifts again.
ABOUT THE POEM: This terse, brutal poem is a modern cynical parable about self-deception in the aftermath of loss and exploitation. The “single man” is the opportunistic lover who moves in on a recently widowed woman, mistaking (or pretending to mistake) her raw vulnerability for romantic availability. The “whore’s broker” (pimp) watching another broker represents the cold, transactional underworld that profits from broken women; their silent eye-contact is pure business calculation. The central figure is the widow herself—emotionally shattered by death, sexually used and discarded, now reduced to bargaining for scraps of affection and validation. In her desperation she believes quick, shoddy fixes (cheap tape) can repair both her devastated spirit and her abused body. The broken kite is the perfect metaphor for her repeated, doomed attempts to soar again in the exact same destructive conditions—grief, predatory men, the sex trade, loneliness—that destroyed her before. The final line is merciless: no redemption, no flight, only the certainty of another crash. The poem’s power lies in its refusal of sentiment, delivering a stark verdict on cycles of damage that people stubbornly re-enter. Subscribe
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