GLAMOUR / I harvest for an altar / snowbush clippings / Dutch still lifes / Brooklyn Barbies / discarded condom / cloaked in glitter / my eidolons / o,a,blation / to fashion / “technologies of self” / to cohere / slow as salt / a cur,ation of / straw dolls / golden ring / light above / which defies / the blur of extinction / “tarot as mirror” / a shifting practice / stems from / the vase / f,unction / in f,lux / I want to be / elsewhat / flotsam / haunts the throat / I whistle / my antiphons / green kundimans / the ‘ō‘ō call / one-hit wonders / yes / some ghosts are welcome
GLAMOUR / I figure an object into being / a ceramic jug / which bears / nub teeth / googly eyes / a garbled mouth / it chews / speech spits / back profanation / listen / it’s an imprecise alchemy / to en,chant / points in a series / which in,dic,t,ates / what encodes / a toad and its stools / a forked tongue / whisper of flesh / I throw my enemies / a parade / why deny myself / a new desire / blooms / an arrangement / broken tulips / lemon peels / bale of wools / costume jewelry / the male feathers / golden calves / skincare routine / larva / rendered fat / my bubble machine / my pleasure circus / how best / to sublimate / to be sublime
Grammar
GRAMMAR / who is at the door / to map / a shifting terrain / a hermeneutics of self / a heretic / a “physical website” / I repeat to myself / knowledge which falls / out of my body / and intuit / arches / towards a locality / bends air / or descends upon it / a threshold of trees / what hinges on / my proximity to capital / empire / I am edging / the lines here / I furrow / in the creek bed / I look for / my corner / I look / dumb / struck across the body / of water / the ferryman / inside I reach / for a coin / to bite / which leaks / a string / of Janus words / that which / means its opposite / to weather / to splice / to c, leave
GRAMMAR / moonphase / illus,trat,ion / what obscures a body / of work / process / maintenance / labored breathing / I sift valences / find many teeth / arrive at many / im,ports / medicinal bark / oils / rare & rarefied / pomander / against all manner / of contagion / language of shame / to sanction / against silks / Gov. Dasmariñas / the friars / their illuminations / which state / our prurience / for food / & drink / & clothes / & gold / & fucking / & not property / my people / knew how to live / damn / the land / gives endlessly / to those who tend it / what use is there / in punishment / or paradise both / are here
GRAMMAR / correct / what the lens fails / moon’s immensity / in the eye / was it the rivers I placed / sipped from the collar creek / mistook for veins / or bones I dig / plasma-cracked / licked for syntax / bramble of star / thistle / darling /to decorate / decollate / a bird / which appears to me / imperious signs / overdetermined auspice / pleats / replete / my runic skin / or comma splice / “language of my oppressors” / is at times my own / pocketknife / is there any / undeterminate limb / locus of power / insect vistas / re,peat into / libidinal machine / old gods in the now / alien spaces / remember the enemy / is often beautiful
Grimoire
GRIMOIRE / the ceramic jug / has returned to kill me / I let it / know that parenting / is unmiraculous / every generation / should be aimless / the leaf / varie,gates / touch-me-nots / uncoiling / a totality of bodies / endless & queer / the intext of survival / our learned brush / stroke of / foxtail / wild orchids / inner thigh / hanging from my ribs / a bending light / a joint probability / escapes us / what leaves / dried & bound / induce an astral state / memory fails our magic / does not contain / a plurality of / worship / a stylish fringe / a sacred study / of faggots / be,hold me / unfollow the line / into another / a meteoroid / inertial / refractory / I stab at the sky / re,in,cite / incoherent factory / infinite perf,orations / multiversal gl,itch
Leon Barros (he/they) is a Brooklyn-based Filipinx poet whose work is featured and is forthcoming in Annulet, diaCRITICS, beestung, and more.
I once read the last part of a letter he wrote before his murder
I wouldn’t be able to write you anything half as eloquent, paint a world in which this string of words and em dash are enough are all
I wish that when you looked up the old west this was all you found love sealed in ink sealed in wax gun parts melted, sweethearts’ promises abound whites never feeling the urge to build a ship, one sturdy, able, thick pulse of a thing to withstand the non-Atlantic
Land never having left the hands of those who come from it
Who do I go to with this one? I grow up with some Annie Oakley crap and lies about the praries while perched near the Ala Wai when 4,389 miles away half of my heart is missing me my ancestors have been holding it and waiting but don’t know where I’ve been stashed away
Can’t call me home with pūtōrino or pūrerehua when I wouldn’t be able to recognize the sound
Does anyone else know that kind of feeling? You know the one where the blood is knotted so close together it starts fighting itself, a petition to move across the body, another limb a different artery, away from the parts that it finds savage strayed from God foresaken
What a strange life it is— the offspring of Anglia digging generations deep into Texas soil, a meeting house just minutes away from where Horouta beached in Te Tairāwhiti
Beneficiaries off the butchers for the New World a people who saw home fires snuffed out in succession both lines burn hard in me a mixing a legacy in two parts an attempt to reconcile so as to unearth some sort of beauty
Ngaio Simmons (she/her) is a Māori/pākehā spoken word artist and educator born and raised on the island of Oʻahu on Kānaka Maoli land in the unceded nation of Hawaiʻi. Now permanently residing in her ancestral homeland, Aotearoa, she is still writing about diaspora, identify conflict, and what it means to be Indigenous and queer in a world that repeatedly rejects both. She has been published in Contemporary Verse, Flux Hawaiʻi, Literary Hub, Ora Nui, Hawaiʻi Review, and Bamboo Ridge, among others. Her poem “Whānau” was recently featured in the Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day series for AAPI month.
I need a new tattoo. A bird in the shape of an angel on my back, a form that rolls and folds against my own – that moves both with and for me
What has preserved me these last few years is the feeling of being stitched, point by point, into a new body, one made up by the body of my body and the hands of another. To feel a foreign art carefully attached to my own
And if I am in this moment, it is not those wings that brought me here. My first respite from the world was not my mothers womb, but a trap: a snare that gnawed and gnawed until I was no longer whole. I have scars across my shoulders from the things I have escaped, and I am ready to see them burned
I want to be abandoned by god in reverse
//
I need a new tattoo. A bird in the sh ape of an angel on my back, a form that rolls and folds the feeli
point by point, into a new body, one mad
the hands of another To fe el a foreign ached to my own
brought me h My first respite
from thnot my mothers womb, bp: a snare that gnawed no longer wh scars across mythe things I have escape
d, and I am ready to see them burnedtndoned by god in reverse
//
| ,. I am a body .,.foreign to my own mother: || a scar across god I / |
sterling-elizabeth arcadia (she/they) is a trans poet and lover of birds. her work has been published inpoetry.onl, HAD, New Delta Review, and elsewhere. she is a first year MFA in creative writing at Rutgers–Camden. this poem is part of a series of burning haibuns (a form invented by torrin a. greathouse), the first of which can be read here: https://www.poetry.onl/read/ster-el.
orange rinds and hoops after school wandering hands in that void of a closet got big teeth like a beast, sinking—
fires in my chest; I am eating the last of you. Little pounding nymph. Boxing gloves against the caverns—these damned walls are thick.
You’re straight like an octagon. A million tiny dots on that globe I can’t shoot. You’d laugh, you ever hit it from the back?
2) Database Animal
I am [ ] I’ve been chewing at the moon—barking. Fucking on Wednesdays. Resting on Fridays. On one at the Turkey Hill—drinking gasoline some guerilla shit.
Eat till full, molars crush rinds. Seraphs too, wings and horns,
all bodies are [mine]
Y2K deathmachines; factory farm sonata. You better meet me in the middle.
Listen moment static hits. I’ll meet you there. Bring the goods. You’re a god today. Bring everything. I’ve/got/the/cash/in/my/screen bring the goods to the drop spot.
// error
4) trauma maps
a) ontologies
Trauma
Acceleration
$$$$ Data
$$$$
Autonomy
Uprooting Blood
Quarks
Parts
Simples Theism
b) [memorytype] the gig fucked up club oldheadwithhands onmyback
seehisfaceintheevenings, tracingoutlinesonmyback
5) Repeat
does the void speak in tongues or the queen’s English?
a) Autodidactic
orange rinds and hoops after school wandering hands in that void of a closet got big teeth like a beast, sinking—
fires in my chest; I am eating the last of you. Little pounding nymph. Boxing gloves against the caverns—these damned walls are thick.
Been drinking gasoline in the mornings fucking on Wednesdays, resting on Fridays— watching market trajectories like blood-sport.
I am [ ]
Eat till full. Molars crush rinds. Seraphs too, wings and horns,
all bodies are [mine]
Y2K deathmachines; factory farm sonata. The hot silence pre-Disaster Engine. Machinelearning into hyper-capital—
technoanimalia, I am a legion on the face of advancement, the vanguard to a dying day.
Phenomena: 1) Café Let’s fuck during the Zapruder film. We can drive a ‘74 Cadillac off desert roads till your trauma catches up to you. If we unravel, I call dibs on the brain. The font of the organs spread like d r e a m s
2) Home Singsong advertisers, sing me to sleep. Tear me into quarks, spread me thin;
eat me whole as I whistle that church bell melody, the death tone.
Guide me down the roads where I found love on blacktops and
you—are one, and all bodies subsist in their solipsistic glow—O’ melodrama!
Got four walls and I’m screaming— head into plaster, chewingonthumbs.
3) The City overlapping traumamaps noise.noise.noise. fuzzy warm [blankets]
screaming.
4) Everywhere repeat. 5) Nihilism fuck that. a) Ontology Roots Sex Love Body
Rest Labor
//error
[start up: init //002]
What’s the harm in lips?
I read an article on the calisthenics of communism and the inherent freedom from capital that comes with lifting oneself via branch or bar. Parallel bars rooted in concrete utopias—where the body defies gravity, where each second is a fight. It’s all in the control. The tearing
of muscles, when shoulders become planets—when the body, reacts to the abuse. A feeling of flight in the muscle-up, a communal celebration in the park across the elementary school where shells sleep on pavement like an ocean landscape in the evenings.
X-ActoTM knives, boxcutters, and anything with some grit—it’s all in the control. The tearing of epidermis. Those fascists want blood. Predatory opportunists, they slept in backpacks and drawers, cunning friends when his hands grasped my face.
It’s all in the control—of breakbeats and vibrating fluorescents. Make the people dance. Kiss the boy with long sleeves and hands tucked in pockets. What’s the harm in lips? Repeat these words. Talk about time like liquid and not like a carved out stone.
In Calisthenics, one aims for hypertrophy, growth from the conjunction of time and tearing. It’s all in the control of repetitions, of breath. The control of repeated pain in hopes of accessing
something new. More control, more strength, the shaping of the self into something else— it’s all in the control of etymology to create long words like calisthenics. The conjoining of beauty and strength, the image of Plato wrestling boys before his hands spun sophistry down their chitons—the definition of justice is justice and the world is a series of shapes like puppets
in a cave where control is key to the shadows they make. You are not like Plato and your hands still move. Like shadows in a cave—I’ve been seeing you in the evenings. The silhouettes of time shapeshifting on my walls. My hands move differently now. No longer grasping sharp
edges, or any boy with some control fantasy. My hands curl into fists clutching rings and branches and bars. It’s all in the control of moments, holding my breath, engaging my core as the blisters form and your face starts peering in like the violence in daylight or an email, something
so normal. Out of my control. I found a picture of us, two pleather jackets and my half-smile, a face like a car wreck. You still make people dance. The boy in that photo would leave and dig into drawers and backpacks, the normal things. He would reek of the cheapest bodega liquor.
He wouldn’t really read Plato, he’d carry some dialog sometimes. He’d dig into himself without the growth, just fascist edges and a marked up outer layer. He wouldn’t expect to spend days in the sun, grasping at branches— totally in control. Trauma mapping, not deconstructing—
In 1998, Serial Experiments Lain debuted. The series featured a series of adolescent suicides. Children abandoned their bodies to become one with “The Wired,” an early symbol for the world wide web. The first time I thought strongly about suicide was in 1999— I was four years old.
I read a chain letter on AOL and believed that if I took my life first, I would be saved from the haunting an adolescent suicide victim would bestow on me (per the email). My breathing accelerated, my mind was racing, I spent an evening in the ER with my first panic attack.
Recurring thoughts into catatonia—my time in the self-harm haze was controlled. Household objects repurposed—I became one with space. Evenings spent in thrash den paradises, learning to socialize in isolation. I met flame with
hazy eyes, greasy hair and love which only flowed outward. Everything passes. Mitigated voids, held hands through the worst of it. Vomitfire nights—talked of songs, hummed melodies under motel moonlight, cigarette butts in the parking lot ballroom.
Mixed Lexapro with clear liquor and concave brain—smashed my head into walls until the lights went out. I wanted so badly to swim. Nerves at white corners, all my connections are fractured. Tying knots, trying to tighten my connection—every second is a reminder—is a stall tactic.
Every time I pass a diner, I think of a friend who used to bus tables. She took her leave at twenty-eight after a man systematically maimed her. We met in Pittsburgh; smoking cigarettes outside of a Super-8 when I was young and taking the long road to decay. While having coffee or
when a morning breeze is too calm, I think of hanging bodies. Like the swaying of leaves, or Suzuki Izumi alone in her apartment. Dissociating in motion or mid-conversation; I have yet to find words grounding enough to keep me here. I wonder what she thought of before the leap?
Before me, my father served time in solitary confinement. The minutes kept adding up like centuries. When I was five, he told me he tried to starve himself to death. I pictured his big hands smashing against concrete; his face gaunt, and my body disappearing.
My body is a survived future. My hands are automated machines, they clutch at my neck or pinch at thumbs, I paw for a pulse to remember something about autonomy while someone, somewhere else is abandoning themselves entirely.
There is a targeted ad promising to press cremation ashes into a record with all your favorite songs burned to the remnants of your loved ones. I heard Facebook is working on a deceased section: and I think I am still alive on a Myspace page or AOL chatroom where a man wants to fuck my seven-year old brains out. I am alive everywhere eternally, and with my feet on the ground and my throat wilting— do I need to have a body? My flesh might fertilize honeysuckle on a patch of green or glutton the plastic-full seabream off the coasts of some island, only one maxxxed out credit card away. Do I need to have a body in order to subsist on a heating globe or for my loved ones to remember my face now that my prints are digital, should I wait for the revolution in virtual reality when my sprawled out flesh can be re- animated. How many times does a symbol have to shatter before the simulacra is enough? Do I need to have a body/
//error_corrupt_file //exit initiated.
Eros Livieratos (he/they) is a currently an MFA candidate in creative writing at The Ohio State University. Eros’ writing tackles topics of identity, capitalism, art, and the Anthropocene—their poems seek to deconstruct theoretical and systemic frameworks. Eros is a harsh-noise artist and can often be found yelling about aesthetics & automation in your local basement. They’re on Instagram and Twitter, as well as his website, eroslivieratos.com.
The Plane Lands at Ben Gurion and Every Passenger Bursts Into Song
tradescantia
from the mundane root. an oyster plant. a spiderwort. its variegated purple across nearly every flowering inch of the world. sweet Moses-in-the-cradle-lily. amethyst Angel of Doubt. o Lucy, Saint of Sight, blind me to etymology, the perse plum pit in every story about G-d. what wildflower deserves this wandering? to be buried in a grave so violet? a name so violent it once curbed the crucifixion. yes, cursed to roam until Christ returns. sisyphean in our ignorance. my aunt gave cuttings away each winter as a Hanukkah gift (we all need a little Jew in our lives) terracotta exodus. tangles of it end- lessly growing. creeping across oceans. spreading over continents. the lurking of a lesser theology. o Lord, leave us to our legs, our purple leaves. Lord, where we grow, so do the conditions for surrender. look us in the root. o Lord, Lord, let even the seed of affliction bloom into a blessing.
Matryoshka
Zach Goldberg is a writer, educator, and arts organizer from Durham, NC. He is the author of XV (Nomadic Press, 2020) and is a 2021 MRAC Next Step Fund grantee. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in AGNI, Washington Square Review, New South, and elsewhere. He lives on occupied Dakota land in Minneapolis, MN. Find him online @gach_zoldberg.
The way you play this game is simple: there is a boy on a skateboard and the boy has four lives. The goal of
the game is to get the boy on the skateboard to the end of the racecourse. The racecourse is not an oval
or a circle; it’s a city. Miles translate into a pixels. The pixels may be counted. The counting, of course, is not
a requirement, but a strategy:
the math works like this: a clinitron bed, which could relieve the pressure on bedsores, costs upwards of 40,000 dollars. Less than one milliliter of infected blood may lead to sepsis. If septic I would be hospitalized and placed in a clinitron bed. Once sepsis is cleared I would be sent home and to the same bed that caused my wounds. An obvious pattern would emerge.[1]
The city is blocked off by buildings. The stairs supplemented by railings. The ramps are
fashioned into figure eights. To take the stairs would crack the skull. To ride the railings would break a leg. To risk
the ramps would lie to gravity. The skateboard boy has four lives and with each death he can experience
partial revival. The funding for complete revival floats at the end of the racecourse in a pot of stars. The pot of stars is surrounded by
a pit of fire and evil wizards. The evil wizards hold both the wand of Sudden Death and the Key to Level Up
The concept of step therapy is simple: just because something is expensive doesn’t mean it’s the best option. A medication made out of dirt is the same as a medication made out of chemicals. Both drugs have capsules. Both drugs are dissolvable. The idea is not to dwell on differences but to be grateful for your temporary survival.
In a simulated attempt to Level-Up, the skateboard boy calculates the inertia needed to conquer the ramps. The skateboard boy
succeeds the figure eight but on the way down gets shocked by the wizard’s wand of death. The boy loses one life, revives
inside the pit of fire and loses a second life. The skateboard boy bleeds from his neck and stomach. He can see
the pot of stars, but, oh, are the wizards laughing.
The concept of step therapy in practice: Because Carrie Ann worked for the state, she had to use state insurance…. In January of 2018 she got a cold which turned into a trach and lung infection. Her insurance company UnitedHealthcare, refused to pay for the one specific inhaled antibiotic that she really needed. She had to take a less effective drug and had a bad reaction to that drug.[2]
To revive from the second death is to not to be confused with the revival of Jesus. The body quivers with
electricity. Nerves tingle. Burn marks fester and bleed. Bacteria crawls into open sores
and tissue necrotizes. Stars blur into the retina, begins visual snow. Lack of blood flow to the brain…
Bouts of sepsis, an increasing number of wounds and hospitalizations. Over the period of time my body will weaken, sepsis will become increasingly difficult to treat and recover from.[1] In this state, the wizard shocks the boy again.
Of course, there are strategies: trick the wizard, take out the middleman, start a go-fund me, grow
a rich uncle, a relationship with the president, unblock the buildings, throw the wizard into the fire,
fix the ramps, find the bug, rewrite the program.
My name is Carrie Ann Lucas. I am here today on behalf of Not Dead Yet … If I were to become depressed… and this bill passes, I could go to my doctor and ask for a lethal prescription. Because I have a disability, and because physicians are terrible at evaluating quality of life of people with disabilities, I would likely be given that lethal prescription.[3]
The doctor comes into your room in the hospital at night and shares the math with you:
this medication, bed, treatment, pill, stars, Level-Up will costs 2,000 dollars. Not to mention the cost of wound care is astronomical.
It’s your choice how you would like to proceed, he says gently. He tells you he can make you very comfortable.
[1] Peace, Bill “Worse Wound Care Woes” Bad Cripple. 24, April, 2019, http://badcripple.blogspot.com/2019/04/worse-wound-care-woes.html
[2]Lucas, Carrie Ann. Carrie Ann Lucas Death. Facebook. 24 Feb. 2019 https://www.facebook.com/CarrieAnnLucasPersonal/posts/10217145330961609 Accessed 26, Oct. 2019
[3] Lucas, Carrie Ann. “Carrie Ann Lucas Testimony in Opposition of Colorado SB 16-025.” Not Dead Yet, 3 Feb. 2016, notdeadyet.org/carrie-ann-lucas-testimony-in-opposition-of- sb-16-025. Accessed 27 Oct. 2019.
Rachel Litchman (Rachel DL) is a queer, disabled artist, writer, and member of the Dane County Youth Action Board. Her work centers themes of survivorship, trauma, chronic illness, disability rights and justice. She has been published in Colorado Review, Rooted in Rights, Redivider, and Black Warrior Review, among other places. She is at work on a graphic novel about being hospitalized during the COVID-19 pandemic. You can find her on twitter @wordcalculator or on her website racheldl.com.
You part your hair zigzag again, so I can’t ghost you.
I swipe across your scalp & perch on its dandruff—
it snows mid-August & I feel so super special
without my seasonal depression. Had such small wavelength, no true imagination. & so, I theorise about the green thumb
of my mother; the lilac pyramids in her front yard
& the headlights of her car, atomising
the dark. I was only myself, trying music—
who is only me in motorised skin—& thought: a pianist is only a prison
guard holding a key & thought, now this music
had made a good woman
of herself & still, you break my heart.
& so, I waited for it to rain my lover’s beard—he’d cut the hedge & flushed the stubble.
Shaved the chin
into the wheelbarrow.
Roller skated to the street sign
with his razor—looked so boyish: wish I’d known him. Found a neon seed, a smoke of worms.
Found the stencil
of a six pack shape a lovesong
like a turtle—found it in his hair
like curlers, & you got so jealous.
& so, the lanterns baptise their light. I heard a god invent hibiscus in Alaska, & it all happened in my body.
Pinched two things that exist
like they did not, & so now they’re woke
like me: a praying
mantis on a popsicle—aren’t you absurd? Something outran my childhood like a cyst on a kitten & it was just a prototype.
They tell me to fix it, or else—
& so, was my own death only fiction?
For everything behavioural
there’s a thesaurus, there’s archeology. I couldn’t hear god think that day, couldn’t replace it,
& so, the ferris wheel in my Babylonic
head, so the language. & so, you are
& aren’t you a dynamo, spinning on air. & aren’t you just artificial grass in snow.
Canoe
Hey, I’m back. Came here closed atlas, peppered light— swung beneath a disco ball, didn’t feel it. Watched the robbery: everyone hunched their hips under the laserlight, smeared across their skin like green lipstick on St. Patrick’s. Didn’t feel it wear off. Came here because the street was pouched in light and I had no clutch to go with my shoes, yet. Came here asking people in whose image you were made— silly me, forgot you didn’t have to be made twice to be remembered. Came here and then the music was clueless. Came here because the street lamps were low pyramids— so ancient, but I still wonder who’s the dust, who’s the museum and where is the dance floor? Pre-electric light only had one emotion: a single longing to dissolve in darkness— came here because there was a silencer screwed onto my lanterns. Thought you might know something about the body that isn’t bodiless, that isn’t somehow a migration. Know I’m only soft at a distance, only brutal to myself up close. I’ve got a blindfold between my shoulders— I only measure uneven 5’6 but hear you’ve got a ladder, hear you’re a forest and I’m returning in my head-lit canoe.
Nadine Hitchiner (she/her) is a German poet and author of the chapbook Bruises, Birthmarks & Other Calamities (Cathexis Northwest Press, 2021). She was a Best of the Net and Pushcart Prize nominee. Her work has been published in Midway Journal, GASHER, Red Ogre Review, and others. She lives in her hometown with her husband and their dog. Find her on Twitter: @nadinekwriter.
I (you?) descend the cave through it’s stalactite incisors: pungent trollgoblins, thundering shadows and midnight grumbles – Bloodrot of fresh kill – ugh, the reeking mossgrot and quiet shh shh your bloodnoise they will grok and their bellows will topple my preyerful musque so stand rockstill Allow healing rivers to replenish daylight to (y)our splintered granite slopefalls…
[the trumpeteering towncrier abreast a weathervane]: a rose, a rose, my strawberry Summer… has arose?
Dawnlight trickles from dry waterfall sky. Gentle lover with cracked lips, will you allow my tears as balm? accept this lonely morning psalm?
“He loves me, I rust and rot. I hunt him, he lusts me not?”
Petals droop tearfully in sleepy sinking hammock-swings…
V: I heard- O: -what?- V: I heard that – I heard- I heard- O:-what!- V: Won’t you shhh? There were thunderbolts.
As my gaze rumbled & undressed the trembling stembrush— stumbling storm-strirred eyes.
(Uh-oh)
Rising from loam her blooming iris painted the clouds in whirlpool watercolours – (my pirouetting sunrise, how you were mist) – directly spy-swirling their (over-there!) inner-eye.
“Will you help rescue my beloved?”
… Okay?
And so we breeze the promenade, haunt the hillsides, overcast sheep in suffusions of mist.
When the Seer, Ms. Hawthorne VII, Daughter of the Gnostics Temple, summon(ed?) them/us to family dinner, the invite is (was) by windswept crow.
Now entering the applecottage pie quaint English hamlet – deer on the mantel, blackberry eyes opaque and oracle –
Ms. Hawthorne II, tragically perished, wrapped me with cackling voodoo beads and thus were her deathwords: “Oh what is it to be loved? A snare, a snare, look at my rabbit paws. They bring luck.”
Hypnotic hearth, hypnotic heart, in the warm-rug warm-rum library of Mr. Haardt… her eternal heartthrob.
His eyes are accusations. “Have you ever fired a rifle?”
I’m swinging my neck across the horizon, so we pulse through the vein, fluid hunters, brandy hemoglobins preserved in amber…
boozed (wobbling) scope
drowssy crosshairs slurrrring skyward:
[clangclanging churchbells] Dinner dinner for all you carnivorous sinners! Dinner up(on) the clouds in the giant white wintercrowned poplar with popular vegan guests and tables carved in artisan-flavored cherrywood.
And on the menu, my dear whoms and whomstresses (inc. bodies and nobodies): some strawberry Sum Myrrh
(where did she go?)
Chiming tinkling cutlery, guests quiet like sorrow:
V: … But papa, truly you are fowl. O: Yes, I am a monster, little chicken. V: I am no longer little, papa. O: Ah, but we are specks to the sun –
The hunter that flings incandescent spears, flaming battlechariots of barbarous heat –
At this her face speckled, freckled pomegranate seeds;
(slicing kitchen knife & wooden cutting board) “I’ll be out soon with slices of lemon.”
Lunar-yellow crescents, heavenfruit fumes waft from bubbling stars stirred in the night cauldron.
Occult astrology on the barnyard roof, shuffling tarot decks hosted in the wine cellar: rotting calendars & desiccated dates. I stretch for the pulp, you stoop for the pip.
“Please, don’t sulk, we’ll be back in a bit. He must learn to shoot.”
But I & we & you turned the cards over in that basement crypt, intoxicant grapevines: The Silent Archer and The Juggernaut, The High Priestess and The Tangled Lovers. (crystal-dark cave) A most stormful forecast, indeed.
“Okay, be careful, my beloved.”
During the Sagittarius eon of Brontosaurus Rex, silent-toed they crept with axe and club, meat for cavern. “Look, look!”
There’s two of them, fullchested and loinclothed, circling the other like twin flames, lightningforged blades crisping to spark. They duel for ripe daybreak. To pluck the wallflower from between unruly heap.
Sobbing rain mourns the clouds. Rotating garlands of our children circling skipping chanting around the campfire: I am you and you are me, in perspectives of eternity…
Hiyoowi Hamainza is an emerging poet who resides in Cape Town, currently working on his debut novel. He works as an English Editor, studying Psychology and Philosophy part-time.
I hope you know it wasn’t me that twisted your ankle / how could you regret anything more than what you didn’t even do / I gave my wrist away to play table hockey / falling through the table falling through / I gift myself the chance to sleep for a whole year
I remember that June where all I could do was be awake in a bed / I could feel the oil inside of me begin its boil / the origin of snakes under the peritoneum / I heal it I heal it I heal it / what do I have to do to get the snakes back / please just tell me I can’t keep guessing on the quizzes / I was told I pour boiling oil over people
but I know in my snakes / I know inside the snakes of my snakes / that it was the oil they wanted / the boiling oil all over their skin / and of course it burns / it is oil / why am I made liable for the burn / I’m just taking quizzes over here hoping to find the results to where my snakes have gone
I blush at the thought of forgiving you / keep me away from granite table tops my head falls down so violently / checking the spoons for the sharp splice / giving up forgiving for Lent / giving up going home for Lent / the bemusing of a snake pile Lent / the mastery of somethinghood for Lent / give me a break for Lent / giving everything up for Lent
how many times do I have to tell you I don’t have anything for you / I don’t have anything for myself but today I feel like I found something / I want to keep and she looks like June Jordan
and she looks like wind blowing up leaves / as fifty people circle a tree we call June Jordan / and she looks like a clock striking three June Jordan / and she looks like me if I looked at myself June Jordan
don’t take my June from me / I have got a hold of her / could she be the snakes I’ve been penciling in the circles on the quizzes for / could it be the snakes are back
they’re looking for my Easter June Jordan / crack my knuckles for me / it’s time / my snakes
Don’t let the violence stay inside your body
I own this type of cloud that sobs next to me whenever I need a lift. She sounds like static after some time. This morning, she burst open a whole new brook. I’ve always wanted to live where I could hear the water–
::
I ask Jenna what flower she’d be if she was a flower just today (“Lilies.”) but I don’t think she understood the violence of the proposition. (“What color lilies?”) She didn’t catch that she would be thrown into the whole life of a flower (“Tiger.”), subjected to the pluckers without a lampshade, a crescent mouth, or incisors to protect herself. (“What flower does your danger feel like?”) I’ll keep my eyes to myself, even if her violets look so good when they’re breaking open her tears.
::
What would a pelvis smell like if it was fried outside in Liberty Park? Would pelvises differ in the way they’ve been smote? The knife makes magenta contact. Translate this as a body seized from the self. Enter the BBQ with the sole purpose of “punish” for the people who gather. It doesn’t matter how flat you sit at the rain-soaked table if everyone there has added to the loom of shadows that left you to solo, left you to hunger for a colossal care. Colossal as in chasm. Colossal as in natatorium. Drowned before you were able to fit into the ice cube tray of love. Something about too much vodka. Something about it becoming the same as water after a point. It’s not a family, but it’s certainly a crowd. Wefted breasts who were never a cup.
::
I often open around this time, enough hurt pulsing behind my ears
how aquatic of me to invite you to my body
::
Today I want only $17mil so that I can fly to Chicago, to Milwaukee, to Monterey, to Cape Cod, to San Fran every weekend. The way it’s looking right now is that I am able to cry only if I’m a millionaire, first class seat on my way to the people that can draw it out of me–
would you think I deserved the money more or less if you believed me? I’m so full of water and I’m afraid of what will happen if I can’t get it out. If only my rain was a season. If only I knew how to make myself into a body of water. I could ask the Ocean for tips on how to charge admission.
I could ask the Ocean how much money it would cost to gun down intruders–
KP Kaszubowski (she/her) is a poet, filmmaker, playwright, and writing instructor. Her debut poetry collection somnieeee was published in 2019 by Vegetarian Alcoholic Press, and her debut feature film Ringolevio premiered in 2020 at Dances With Films in Los Angeles. Her previous poetry has been published (as Kristin Peterson) by pitymilk press, Great Lakes Review, dancing girl press,Juked, Flag + Void, ICHNOS, and elsewhere. She is currently an MFA candidate in Creative Writing (Poetry) at Eastern Washington University where she teaches rhetoric, composition, and creative writing courses and is pursuing a graduate certificate in Disability Studies.
8 24 2019 on a lightless night elijah mcclain 23-year-old black masseur and violinist
who plays for sheltered animals listens to music hums walks home from a store after buying tea anemic he wears an open-
faced ski mask for warmth 911 brown caller thinks he looks weird suspicious 140 pounds 5-foot-6 night in white
auroracolorado black innocence guitarist walking sketchy unarmed not accused of any crime denver blue line
where domestic terror foments three achromatic officers tackle elijah to ground chokehold him down in that special
suite of white hell reserved for black men my name’s elijah mcclain i can’tbreathe please stop—they do not three depigmented law men
two of whom are former u s a marines randy roedema and nathan woodyard plus one jason rosenblatt cuff black elijah’s
hands behind his back i was just going home i’m anintrovert i’m just different i have no gun i don’t do that stuff i don’t do
any fightingi don’t kill flies i don’t eat meat forgive me he vomits gasps for air i‘m sorry i wasn’t trying to do that
i can’t breathe correctly thisnight sans light hushed white hot fascist winds whirl alt right blood rushes swirls blanched paramedic jeremy
cooper takes lieutenant peter cichuniec’s order injects slender elijah mcclain with 500 mg ketamine
post heavy sedative dose on his vomit elijah chokes heart attacks declared brain dead pray tell how the hell did all three
body cams fall off during the arrest our best supremacists three more on duty officers erica marrero jaron
jones and kyle dittrich arrive at the scene where elijah was stopped they pose for selfies smile laugh joke they reenact the same chokehold
used on elijah by righteous sworn officers of law jason rosenblatt even sends ha-ha texts mocks black elijah’s death
blue passionfruit
in mirrors mama looks back at me i’m older than she was when she died in february my head shaved for months years i wear black
my soul in freefall through foothills tall sahara roses fry in triple digit may june heat i wrestle pen to paper to purge
for black elijah mcclain whom three white colorado cops and two white paramedics slayed cold ketamine injected
under a headlight moon indicted for the death they mocked my stomach churns a sea tide turns far right far white storms forewarning
civil war looms smoking gun grey sky red mars black sun rising white supremacy seeks to suppress the vote semi-welcoming war-
driven afghans as white border boys beat back expel black haitians catastrophe-driven they’ve walked apocalyptic miles dreamed post-
apocalyptic nightmares a white idaho woman confessed no masks were worn at her baby shower she caught covid gave
birth on a ventilator they cut the baby out amid vaccine hesitancy hoarding unhoused neighbors can’t quarantine friends need
healthcare chemo nurses drag ass to therapists we’re unhinged i leave food money notes blue kisses ruby orchids at their doors black
rickia young today received two million dollars after she was pulled from her car and beaten by lawless white lawmen sans love
in philadelphia though our cars are dented swiped swastikaed keyed we don’t call boise p d our olivia lone bear found
drowned among thousands of amber black girls gone missing i deep-seed lily lotus amaryllis visions of equal justice rise
i see mama’s eyes unflinching our voices ring i’m older than she was in my late september garden mama looks back at me
Risë Kevalshar Collins is a writer living in Boise. She studies creative writing at Boise State University where she has served on the editorial staff of Idaho Review. Risë earned an MSW at University of Houston. She holds a BFA in Drama from Carnegie-Mellon University. Her poetry appears in ANMLY, The Indianapolis Review, Tupelo Quarterly, and Minnesota Review. Her creative nonfiction appears in Michigan Quarterly Review and is forthcoming in Texas Review. Rise’s fiction appears in The North American Review. You may read and/or listen to Risë read her poetry online in Tupelo Quarterly (“Decrescent Moon” and “Threnody”)and The Indianapolis Review (“Passion Flowers” and “Pauli”).