25.3.15

LOVE RECRUDESCENT

since the violation
my nightmares have all
included the threat
or the reality
of immobility
and I am there,
body pooling around me,
held down, useless.

wake: now I am here,
next to a plenitude
of gentleness,
unafraid. the humidity
of shared breath,
the safety of control:
call me a jar
of consent.

you draw nazca lines
at the entrance
to a lush forest 
shaped like hummingbird,
or shifting coccoon—you
remove the ruddy
pebbled blush
to reveal what’s under.

a religious act.
give those lines
a purpose. give them
clarity without hesitation.
we should try,
you said,
everything, just to see
what you like best.

4.3.15

Goretti Girls get their man, Oct. 2003

Every day, for weeks, we’d seen
pink heritable flesh, a shock
of sickly invertebrate underbelly extended,
engorged. The fat meat turned uglier
and redder by the second, fevered, swelling—
an unwanted inheritance come too early,
a sight we neither asked for nor wanted,
not yet. Me and the other girls trooped down
from St. Maria Goretti, down in South Philly,
wearing modest knee-length plaid
and starchy white shirts, suspicious and tense.
We kept together on the walk home from school,
schools of nervous trout avoiding
an ugly red worm—bait—from a crooked hook.
Yesterday, though, sick of the taunt, the show
and the fear, we became fearless. We moved
together when we spotted him—not away,
but closer. Kell dropped her bag like it was full
of heavy sea-stones and sped toward him,
little legs pumping under ugly grey-patterned
war skirt, to deliver the first blow, a firm kick.
Red algae bloomed where her foot landed.
The nasty worm shrank and receded to useless
pulpy flaccidity, like an empty sock. Me and the girls
kept kicking, 'cause we really wanted him to know
how much we never wanted to see what he offered.
Fish move together since they know 
that to present a united front is wise. It’s better
for the whole group. It’s easier to defend
when there’s lots of you. It’s easier to attack, too. 

Goretti Girls v 2

Every day, for weeks, we’d seen
pink heritable flesh revealed, a shock
of sickly invertebrate underbelly extended,
engorged. The fat meat turned uglier
and redder by the second, fevered, swelling—
an unwanted inheritance come too early,
a sight we neither asked for nor wanted,
not yet. Me and the other girls trooped down
from St. Maria Goretti, down in South Philly,
wearing modest knee-length plaid
and starchy white shirts, suspicious and tense.
We kept together on the walk home from school,
schools of nervous trout avoiding
an ugly red worm—bait—from a crooked hook.

Yesterday, though, sick of the taunt, the show
and the fear, we became fearless. We moved
together when we spotted him—not away,
but closer. Kell dropped her bag like it was full
of heavy sea-stones and sped toward him,
little legs pumping under ugly grey-patterned
war skirt, to deliver the first blow, a firm kick.
Red algae bloomed where her foot landed.
The nasty worm shrank and receded to useless
pulpy flaccidity, like an empty sock. 
Me and the girls kept kicking.
Fish move together since they know 
that to present a united front is wise. It’s better
for the whole group. It’s easier to defend
when there’s lots of you. It’s easier to attack, too. 

4.2.15

Enter Smiling Carolyn Bessette
after “Another Day” by Stephen Dunn

1.
Girl as pioneer: she fits the bill perfectly, she is fresher
than the unbidden moon, which has followed her to this
collection of roundness, a hyper-elegant orchard devoid
of laughter or insight or real fruit. She nightmares, fitful,
throws a fit, is nightmarish. Carolyn charms, sells,
and rescinds the charm—she has held your emotions hostage,
torture named desire, the succubus that invades sanctuary.
When the moon rises in the early evening, she is there to bite.

2.
In Wyoming, or some other great midwestern state
where Caro never studied being social or shouted in a park,
some untamed mare snorts canyon dust, while elsewhere
near Camelot another dust is prepared by a tall palamino.
She experiences no crises of faith, because faith is found
only in dressing rooms, ballrooms, any crowded room
where she might revise the persona—ars simulacro—
and hook another easy-catch trout peeking from the river.
She tinkers, dawdles, strays, commands. No man keeps her.

3.
After the aircraft accident, she lived in the conditional—
would have, should have. Charm is a sort of magic,
devil-sent to punish the soft pioneer, for allowing herself to be
kept, tethered by a man, hooked the way she had hooked
unapologetically. Her grounding was caused by spatial
disorientation, bitten moon charming the pilot and drowning
the succubus, who was tied to the plane seat to watch
Icarus her husband fly too close to the devastating moon.

21.1.15

the final frontier

when we passed through the mountains of utah,
strange, looming, repressive, dark,
so dark even the lights of the highway
and the yawning, dizzying swallowing
of galaxies too visible, too accessible—
even these million lights could not touch
the gaping pressurized darkness
of that unfamiliar landscape,
so dark it absorbed the light of his voice,
so dark I could not be reassured

when we passed through the mountains of utah,
full of invisible beasts, brutes, fiends and foes,
crudely built, unidentified by science,
like a new, harsh planet where the natives
aren’t friendly, I was sure they were mean—
I mean malicious; I mean inferior; I mean
starving—just the shadow of that potential
was enough to convince me of their reality,
their cruelty, their intentions toward me
and their superior tracking abilities.

when we passed through the mountains of utah,
rocks stacked by some old,
unseen hand, rocks stacked unnaturally,
at least for what I knew, too geometric,
too jagged, too intentional,
and far too tall, like little elevators to space,
shapes on shapes, rectangles that touch and negate—

when we passed through the mountains of utah,
I had a panic attack that lasted thirteen minutes.