Boundary Survey

boundary-survey

The psychologists have been told to survey my psyche.
They’re trying to see if my mind is a mountain range

full of jagged precipices or a desert, bare boned and dry.
They begin topographically, looking at the contours of my landscape,

the existing features, the surface of my earth.
They need to scale its territory to see if it’s flat like the

soles of my shoe or round like a helium balloon straining to escape
behind the clouds. They’ve been ordered to map out the places unknown.

They want to know if the visible network of roads leads to the eye of
the storm, is there still a buildable base there?

There is a place they will never be able to access.
At night, the sweat hangs around my forehead, a crown of pearls,

my eyes are wide shut and filled with sand and I become your princess again.
I meet you there at the surf’s edge. We chase crabs on the beach and you

teach me about the stars. The only bottles in sight are the ones filled
with messages we launch into the ocean.

In the morning, I taste the salt on my cheeks and they’ll think it’s from tears.
They’ll never be able to reach the outer banks of that place.

I don’t want it to go into their draft.
Certain terrains are required to be left alone.

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Article by Tak Erzinger
TAK Erzinger is an American/Swiss poet and artist with a Colombian background. Her debut poetry collection, Found: Between the Trees is a chronicle about a life interrupted by mental illness. Its poems are a reflection of how love, nature and hiking nurtured and fostered an injured soul suffering from acute-childhood trauma and PTSD, leading to a path of redemption. This collection takes the reader on a journey of love, loss, forgiveness and healing. Her poetry has been published by The Curlew, The Cirrus Poetry Review, The Beautiful Space Journal, The Mojave He[art] Review, The Origami Poems Project and The Rising Phoenix Review and many more. Last year TAK began a walking pilgrimage on the St. Jacob’s Way through Switzerland. Her most recent interviews can be found at swisspats.com and SwissPats met a poet, don't ya know it.
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