Poems

JEDDIE SOPHRONIUS
Heritage

RainiiLike any good son, I stole
Riimother’s
insomnia when she delivered me.

RainiiMy cries kept the neighborhood
Riiawake.
The night wind was my sunlight, the chorus

Rainiiof birds my signal to sleep.
RiiI grew
up believing I was a sinner. By

Rainiiage nine, my record was one
Riiwarm night
without sleep. I could say it was my first

Rainiihigh—the visible world a
Riipool of
water in which I could baptize myself

Rainiito sleep. By nineteen, it was
Riithree days.
What did I do? The same things I did when

RainiiI was sleeping: I went on
Riiabout
my days, drove three hours to the nearest

Rainiimountain, visited zebras,
Riilions,
and chimpanzees in their fake habitat.

RainiiI sensed they weren’t sleeping too.
RiiLunches
blurred into dinners, dinners were just snacks.

RainiiWhen I told my friends of the
Riisymptom
running in my family, I was told

Rainiito pray more. Repent. Read Psalms.
RiiTwenty-
nine: five days without a meal or sleep. I

Rainiibelieved those who said my sleep-
Riilessness
was the wage of my sins. I was closest

Rainiito God then. A
Riiprophet
I could’ve been—all the visions I’ve seen—

Rainiibut who would believe me?

Jeddie Sophronius is the author of Interrogation Records (Gaudy Boy, 2024), Happy Poems & Other Lies (Codhill Press, 2024), Love & Sambal (The Word Works, 2024), and Blood·Letting (Quarterly West, 2023).