I would love to swan around and say dusty things about poetry and have everyone give a damn and have groupies who show me their boobs and read at Carnegie Hall to 53,000 screaming teeny boppers in poodle skirts
and all that other shit that real poets do and don’t actually do
but always do in my sweaty jealous glory hogging little mind.
Sliced Turkey Stacker Only the whitest turkey With Best Foods mayo.
-M. Ashley (Real menu item. It was ten years ago, so I have no idea what restaurant it was, but you have to love it when the poetry Universe delivers like this.)
I’ve had almonds today and chocolate and dried cranberries and French press coffee and a bit of a ham sandwich and real butter on real bread. All signs point to the blissful Elsewhere being right here in my cabinet with the chocolate
and nuts. Swimming around in the French press before being all smashed to bitter oil and wakefulness. Shivering in the fridge in an off-brand baggie. Baked in an industrial oven. Treading lukewarm water in the blue porcelain butter keeper.
“Much have we loved you, but speechless was our love, and with veils has it been veiled.” -Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet
In a moment of pain, suffering again with a traumatic memory, beyond trauma, that gave me tremors in my right arm and down the length of my leg, I cried out in loneliness and, in the imaginary conversation I was having with my therapist, I said how lonely I was with my trauma and how talking to my god was not enough because “he’s a ghost!”
(I am thinking of a ghost’s sheet as a veil.)
I hurt my god’s feelings. He has been right here with me through all the blood and guts.
Many times, talking to others about him, I have referred to him as “a figment of my imagination,” and “my all-powerful psychosis.” He joyfully laughs.
The base note has something to do with sunscreen—a fair haired girl’s most important piece of camping gear next to bug spray which is the sharp second layer of the scent. The whiff of stiff, chlorinated towels, unwashed and hot from the top of the waist-high chain link fence they were draped over to dry completes the first perfumer’s chord.
For nuance, a drop of happy sweat from happy children come to wash their hands and faces with pink powdered soap from lime green metal dispensers hung over shabby sinks on which daddy long legs perch each rolling their eight dull eyes at the rush and frivolity of the new generation.
I trace your ribs In cerulean ink Dewdrops of blue On the skin A connect-the-dots That somehow Resembles a unicorn In calligraphy lines A unicorn with the stripes Of your bones A child of myth And the Serengeti A mythical zebra with a horn
They must have had unicorns In the Serengeti too And your ribs And my ink Must have been What their pelts looked like On the walls of mythical hunters
If they had pottery In the mythical Serengeti And this cerulean ink Would stick I would trace your ribs On the pottery too While you are sleeping The rise and fall of your abdomen With your sacred breath The reason the lines would be blurred Not my tears, my love Not my tears