I Grind My Teeth: Oral Poetry by Jordan Eve Morral

It was kindergarten.

The creepy guy on lunch duty

pulled my teeth out with a wrench.

They fell out in a clump

of enamel and gum.

Still, I felt convinced

they wouldn’t notice.

I lost my teeth again –

the four front ones on top.

They remained in my mouth

with Scotch tape, held down.

My teeth are so loose

they protrude at all angles;

My lips have parted,

forever alone.

It’s weird. In dreams

I’ll be endlessly falling,

my throat slit,

a child’s voice calling,

but I only wake up scared–

delirious and delusional–

when my fangs are not bared

and able to reflect the moon.

*Dreams of lost teeth commonly symbolize feelings of insecurity, loss, or transformation.

I have always been interested in the concept of dream interpretation, yet I am always going

back and forth between believing and not believing the accuracy of a real-life translation.

However, I have been dreaming about losing my teeth for as long as I can remember. Starting

in elementary school and continuing into the present day, I have had the lingering fear that I will

one day soon be without my teeth.

The hard thing about this constant worry is that I am afraid I will never be able to rid my mind of

it. Teeth are so often the focus of my dreams that I spend my waking hours thinking of them too.

Unfortunately, this leads to more of the same dreams. I cannot stop the cycle.

It is for no other reason than my recurring dreams that I wrote this poem. On some level, I think I

expected it to be a form of catharsis. In this aspect, I believe I have failed. I have simply

confirmed how much time I spend thinking about my teeth. I am perpetuating the cycle.

Jordan Eve Morral

(Image is of the author)

3 thoughts on “I Grind My Teeth: Oral Poetry by Jordan Eve Morral

  1. Jordan Eve

    Obsessions are cyclones in the mind. A whopper of a twister happens here. The timing of the lines drives this along at a paradoxical contolled mania.

    Excellent work this week. We look forward to more!
    Leila

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  2. Bill Tope's avatar Bill Tope says:

    A stark reminder of the mischief (malevolence) that our subconscious levies on us. When I began reading, I wasn’t sure where the poem was going. I confess it was a relief to know that some freakish creature didn’t lurk on playgrounds tearing the actual teeth out of actual children’s actual mouths. Still, this is a disturbing verse. Well done!

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  3. DWB's avatar DWB says:

    Jordan Eve

    Poetry is music in words and this piece has a wonderful mix of tones.

    Conversational, nightmarish, lighthearted, psychological, humorous, obsessional, calm and analytical, everyday and outlandish. A wonderfully mixed bag, and all held together with unity, too! It adds up to a great sense of personality in the (word) music.

    The irregular rhyme scheme works really well, and the coda, or final reflection/s, are a great switch. The wonderfully understated ending of this piece hits its mark at all levels, thought-provoking and abrupt in the right way.

    Leila and I are privileged to bring some of your poetry and prose to the select, cutting-edge audience of the Springs. It used to be called “the avant-garde,” and now it is called the wise ones in the bunch. We look forward to seeing more of your work very soon…

    Dale

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