Young Fenimore Lee

Convergent Double Golden Shovel for Leaving the Ground in Black and White

after “Rough Landing, Holly” by Yellowcard

The plane fucking crashed. Tell me what happened when we

tumbled hard, pass-pawn, stone-cracks down tattoo arms. Hard came,

myself, until I couldn’t bear it, downed a last one. Pop-tumble down

side lantern, exactly enormous, one more time, from tip to

razor, all the way to Kansas City from Ottawa to find some watch-

man, the world away. Send it. Give it the shot I’m taking. Ignited the

combustible machine-edge, little jackrabbit of a world

gauzed up, literally spilling red from its cheeks. On a walk,

witnessed absolution in a fire deep in the sky. Tomorrow, by

mourning, we’ll be ready. Hang tight. Daze and

hang it all in the air — we’re keeping it here for all

the blaze we could find — I was told that she

was forgiving, could have been brightened, but soft-found,

fading… I forgave that way to heaven. When I was

eight years, circle in, circle out, engine burst in, find trouble

walking into a million different possibilities, each playing out in

more dimension than I cared to understand. Put it on my

fucking Visa card, yes, I’ll doubt this forever, but won’t forget eyes

Didn’t just inaugurate sound, and light, but — she…

dubious, frequently hurt-slouches out the club, calls

enormous beats flying like paper slips off walls out-

shined, tip. I’m Holly, you see, minerals and minarets claim the

starter I could never find, and I guess I forgot about you, farther,

locker stuffed with that drab outfit you’d rather have bagged — that

one time she thought I’d never last in. Trust me, turn the key I

gave you, dumpling-wrapped, somehow-trying-to-fly

gas mask, I tell you the truth, disappearing into “I”

confusion. It’s time-to-take-off or a never-ever-love,

the photographs that cushion the landing. Thought that

wouldn’t put me in an early casket, but something about that sound

didn’t give me grief. I’m trying to let go of something so glowing, so

aching, I was giving back to ourselves in some cycle of give,

in the smallest of burst-full envelopes to mail to nowhere. Me

miserable, ways, trying a place to escape to — name me Holly, one

religion, some little-death, but so much more —

that do not see, so much that couldn’t drag the line

under the blue topping an endless ceiling. From

here to eternity, we’ll always wonder about the

mechanics of activating the sky,

consuming ourselves farther than she

wanted to ask for. What did I do? I’m just Holly, I just pulled

the lever, and a catastrophe unrolled beside me —

tear this fucking glassy skyscraper — this terror shine —  down

and get off the damn drugs. I’m trying to imagine some damn lights in the horizon tonight,

but unfortunately, God wouldn’t let our sins go, wouldn’t let

anything into that fitting room with that black dress — and her

telling me, “just cut off the back” — “just backless” — “just breathe” — “just go.”

 

Young Fenimore Lee (they/them) is a Korean-American kid, poet, and music journalist whose work has appeared in beestung, DIALOGIST, Entropy, Existere, filling Station, and other publications. Indie rock, emo, post-hardcore, and other music genres are important influences in their writing. They are editor/founder at Jellybones Mag (jellybones.net). They received a BA from Stanford University and an MFA from The New School. They are currently pursuing a PhD at Ohio University.

 

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