Ellen Austin-Li

poet and writer
Ellen Austin-Li
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  • When Art Delivers Forgiveness

    Posted at 1:41 pm by Ellen Austin-Li, on March 20, 2021
    Adonis
    
    Maybe I didn’t really want to find you
    or I would have hugged closer to where it culminated
    forty-one years ago this past May in a crash
    on the way to Green Lakes      your home    of course it was 
    since the water in those rare lakes
    is the same turquoise as your eyes      like some god
    had poured the overflow of them into you
    I’ve been wanting to tell you 
    how sorry I’ve been for that night      I was behind
    the wheel when I couldn’t even navigate 
    a sentence    I remember it was our first evening out
    as ex-lovers but I knew I was in trouble
    the moment I saw you step out of your house
    and walk towards the Valiant        the sun hung low
    enough to catch your hair and spin it gold
    and ignite those eyes in the hottest blue flames
    and the great span of your shoulders stretched 
    beneath a white button-down shirt    you burned
    like Adonis come to call and there 
    was only one way I could answer     
    I ordered beer after beer at the bar 
    and I don’t know what happened next
    except my head hit the steering wheel so hard
    I didn’t open my eyes for three more days
    
              what the sight of you did to me    
                     
    I opened my email four decades later 
    and there you were       you said I suddenly hummed inside
    so you opened the internet and I spilled out
    you read the poems in my book      lines about you  
    I made the mistake of telling my mother     
    who at 92 recalled your name 
    as if it was back then with her accusing me
    of kissing you    our joined images   in the kitchen
    reflected on the polished wood door
    like it was something dirty she saw
    she never liked us together    she sensed
    our heat    how our hands always touched 
    each other’s bodies     one day
    she called me back into the house
    when my leg draped over yours
    while we sat on the front walk    love
    filthy love   desire and shame stained 
    in a way only buckets of booze could scrub clean 
    and this left you broken on the side of the road
    you said I don’t owe you amends      it’s enough 
    that no one died      now I see us 
    sitting on a tree trunk fallen by the shore
    our feet dangling in the cool green as we watch 
    our ripples meet on the surface.
    
    -published in Literary Accents, Vol.1, Issue 4, 2021
    
    

    When Art Delivers Forgiveness

    The most I’ve ever wanted from my poetry is to create empathy. Whether it’s by composing an image a reader recognizes or by witnessing human interactions, I wish to convey the truth that elevates the human experience. The best possible outcome is to stir a connection with a reader, to allow them to reflect on their own lives in every context, to see something of themselves, or gain an appreciation for another. 

    With my first poetry collection, Firefly, I wanted to witness my own experience with alcoholism and addiction as a way to tell others who suffer that recovery is possible. But, underneath that, I tried to tell my story to create empathy in the larger world for alcoholics and addicts. I thought if I could capture some of the nuances of living with this shadow—the crippling self-doubt, the denial, the shame—perhaps I could open a space for those unafflicted to begin to understand this often misunderstood disease.  

    Never (“in a million years,” as we used to say) did I expect to hear from someone I had gravely injured during my drinking days. The poem I posted tells the story better than my prose can recount because, for me, the difficult-to-capture emotion shimmers between the lines with poetry. I don’t know if my first poetry collection accomplished my grand dual goals of creating hope and empathy for fellow alcoholics and addicts. If I only reached one, then baring my soul was worth it. But, I do know that publishing Firefly gave me something I never thought possible: forgiveness. 

    I don’t think I was fully aware of the shadow I had internalized and carried around for over forty years until I heard from the person I had harmed. I still struggle with the damage I have done. In recovery, we hear, “we do not regret the past nor wish to shut the door on it.” Intellectually, I know this concept concerns using our past experiences to help other people, but it can be challenging to embrace, especially when you have caused lasting bodily injury to someone else. The old part of me still says I don’t deserve forgiveness. I’ve been carrying this shadow for so long—I don’t know how to let it go. But, it doesn’t feel as heavy now that I’ve taken the shadow out into the light—art, specifically, poetry, allowed me to do that. I’m forever grateful to the generous soul who granted me forgiveness, so I can perhaps learn to forgive myself. Thank you. You know who you are. 

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    Author: Ellen Austin-Li

    Ellen Austin-Li's work has appeared in Artemis, Thimble Literary Magazine, The Maine Review, Solstice: A Magazine of Diverse Voices, Lily Poetry Review, Rust + Moth, Pine Mountain Sand & Gravel, and other places. Finishing Line Press published her two chapbooks—Firefly (2019) and Lockdown: Scenes From Early in the Pandemic (2021). She’s a Best of the Net nominee. A Martin B. Bernstein Fellowship recipient, she earned an MFA in Poetry at the Solstice Low-Residency Program. Ellen co-founded the monthly reading series, "Poetry Night at Sitwell's," in Cincinnati, where she lives with her husband in a newly empty nest.
    Posted in alcoholism/addiction, poetry, publishing, recovery | 0 Comments |
    • Author photo by Suz Fleming

    • Publication date May 21st, 2025. Click on image to order from Madville Publishing.
    • Books

      Publication date: August 6th, 2021. Click on image for Finishing Line Press's bookstore

    • Books

      artwork by Elaine Olund @ EEO Design

      Firefly is available for sale at Finishing Line Press or at Amazon.com

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