Self-Spelling: A Bilinguacultural Poem

I vs 我:
The first person singular pronoun, or this very
Writing subject in English is I, an only-letter
Word, standing straight like a pole, always
Capitalized, but in Chinese, it is written with
Lucky seven strokes as 我, with at least 108
Variations, all of which can be the object case
At the same time.

                                Originally, it’s formed from
The character 找, meaning ‘pursuing’, with one
Stroke added on the top, which may well stand for
Anything you would like to have, such as money
Power, fame, sex, food, or nothing if you prove
Yourself to be a Buddhist practitioner inside out

 

Let Me Be a True Human/人

Since I am a direct descendant of Homo Erectus, let me
Stand straight as a human/人, rather than kneel down


When two humans walk side by side, why coerce one
Into obeying the other like a slave fated to follow/从?


Since three humans can live together, do we really need
A leader or ruler on top of us all as a group/众?


Given all the freedom I was born with, why
Just why cage me within walls like a prisoner/囚?

Yuan Changming grew up in an isolated village, started to learn the English alphabet at age nineteen and published monographs on translation before moving to Canada. Currently, Yuan edits Poetry Pacific with Allen Yuan in Vancouver. Credits include Pushcart nominations and appearances in Best of the Best Canadian Poetry (2008-17), & BestNewPoemsOnline, among 1,839 others across 46 countries. In early 2021, Yuan served on the jury for Canada’s 44th National Magazine Awards (poetry category).