When I was fourteen, I wrote a poem.
I called it “The Good Man Dies”
because it was about how
the good man is always slain.
Now when I am seventeen, I am writing a poem
called “The Good Woman is Misjudged”
because it is about how
the good woman is always misunderstood.
I wonder why drama ensues whenever
women work under the same roof.
Why do they have to bring each other down,
isn’t men’s actions already enough?
Why do they have to judge each other,
and why do they have to look for a scapegoat
among themselves?
Why do the bad ones group and frame the good one,
and in the end, why does no one believe the solitary?
She stands alone, framed, drowning in false blames.
She is the good one, but it is decided that she should leave
because the others say they can’t stand her,
and they judge the good one’s good actions,
they score them wrong, but the actions are good
Are they blind?
So I sit in my room and write another poem
about how the bad conquers the good,
and I write because I want to control my anger,
and distract myself from bringing down those bad women
who misjudged the actions of my mother.
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