“i wish i looked like my mother,” but i have my father’s face. when i laugh or smile i see a look that could have been traced. sometimes i look like my mother, i think i see it in myself. “i hope i grow up to look like you,” i tell my mom at 12. when i feel helpless and afraid, i look like my mother at 14. married off to an old man that she had never seen. when i worry i can’t make rent, i look like my mother at 19. an immigrant who quickly learned to live within her means. when i care for my little brother, i look like my mother at 25. a young mom of three, her youth did not survive. when i argue with my boyfriend, i look like my mother at 28. being with dismissive men seemed to be her fate. when i am insecure and self conscious, i look like my mother at 30. wearing spanx because motherhood made her feel unworthy. when i have men call for me, i look like my mother at 33. always followed around and worried for her safety. when i am exhausted after work, i look like my mother at 35. clocked in to her second job, prepping dinner with kitchen knives. when i am sick of cleaning my house, i look like my mother at 41. nearly three decades of her life picking up after a daughter and two sons. when i feel useless and alone, i look like my mother at 45. all of her kids have grown, but she’s too tired to feel alive. i am now 23, the age my mother had me. “i do look like my mother when i don’t laugh or smile, you see.” Author's Note
I wanted to somehow share my mother’s story of hardship, while also capturing my feelings towards it. I wrote about all of the struggles she has gone through, from being a child bride, to an immigrant in America, to her broken marriages and single motherhood. It wasn’t until I was older that I truly realized how hard she has had it and how much society had failed her.
I wrote about how my heart aches with her and how I feel connected to her trauma, in a way, as my mother’s daughter. We are both victims of a broken system and society, where women are unsafe and uncared for. The poem talks about how I have the same smile and laugh as my father, which I am only able to compare because I saw happiness more often in him than my mother. On the other hand, the theme that I only look like my mother when I am facing the consequences of being a woman comments on how our patriarchal society only supports the happiness, safety, and livelihood of men while generations of women continue to share the same struggles.