19-22
there is something rather big about wholeness.
to meet the entirety of one's own self where you stand
with the palms of your feet pressed against the belly of the earth.
you can feel her as she breathes against your skin,
bare foot, back, chest, and naked bending against the light
like fingertips scraping against the stars.
there is something that writhes under skin.
sometimes you can see it - feel it, a great expansiveness curling into your chest -
all of it burning in reckless abundance and white-light brilliance
that seems to look like you.
passive impulsivity breaks the seams of smoke
and smears on your forehead where there are cracks
(the whole of your shell seems like it's splitting
and you try not to impede the growth).
there are creases where your eyes fall,
opaline and crescent paling and cobalt,
ebb of rib where breath meets bone
and swells and seeps phantasmic into chest,
an extrapolation of body into heart into sky
that almost tastes like absolution.
do not be afraid of it.
one day you will see yourself and say "this is beautiful" -
color yourself like water and plant yourself in the moon.
let your baobab roots run thick enough to burst
and do not run from the implosion.
do not be afraid to collide with the enormity and absolve into it.
here is whole.
here is you.
here is home.
how queer the cold
icicle snow-bites
cylindrical spheres like soft
like slipping like sleep.
hoarfrost catacombs comb through your hair, sinking ciphers into polarities you try to touch. (they are magnetizing.) calcifying clay into crystals, you coil yourself from the sun. it burns somewhere beneath the clouds–an opposing creation quelling icy water over your feet.
some days are quiet.
dragonflies curling between
your toes do not wake.
phosphenes feather-kiss your eyelids when you look at the sky. charcoal contrails spatter against clouds that hang like dead-weights; fractals sink to skin and make a home there–an impulsivity that spits back at you. glass spires stick to the palms of your hands and you can feel the cold when you breathe. it stands straight in your lungs.
there is solace in
freezing. cobalt catches the
quilt on your shoulders.
cloud-walker, xv
he watches the wind. sleeping chromatic
and kaleidoscope dreams like drunken moon,
purple distortion curling phantasmic
and psychadelic lilac cocoon.
seafoam cinders like copper tea kettles,
he has eyes like wildflowers and seashells;
white calla lilies and pink rose petals
oceans like mint and saturated cells.
thin glass bottles, cedar wine on his lips,
he steps before the Sun King on a high
like Elysium closing fingertips,
pale; he is falling into open sky.
stillness swelling in surrealist cascades,
he sinks; shifting spine, sifting shoulder blades.
16-17
I have never been subject to endings.
they never really seem real until they've happened and
even when they're gone it's still hard to believe in them.
I think I find it easier not to believe in them.
it is always easier to believe in nothing than in something.
departure tastes foreign despite its familiarity
and it pushes back as much as I do.
time itself is illusive in its passages and
perception burns until it breaks to the obliquity of the breach
and we seethe in it.
learn to understand yourself.
learn to understand the architecture of your skeleton where it hangs,
the suspension of your weight and your bones
that crackle when you touch them.
there is belonging where you look for it and it lusters
when it lets itself surround you.
make like skin
and stretch to see yourself
and shed the dead parts that accumulate under your fingernails
and do not ignore them.
understand the deserving of fullness.
understand that bending does not equate to satiation.
you are actualizing.
don't forget to breathe.
vestigial creatures
i
watercress condensation sticks to your fingers and melts.
it is monday and you are slicing iceberg lettuce for the salad
and at dinner you sit and hold hands around the table to pretend
nothing is different. make like you don’t see cells unfolding
into ash in a small pot on the fireplace mantle; make like you don’t see
decomposition. you like to pick at the dead skin under your fingernails.
(sometimes it is the only acceptable place for dead things to lie.)
you know that dust is primarily made up of human skin and
you wonder if the urn on the mantle has ever spilled. it is wednesday
and your mother loves you the same she always has, but you are coming alive
as she is withering away and sometimes you’re scared
of breathing in her cells, her skin; you wonder if she is in the dust.
it builds up in corners and on the old dinner plates you keep
in the glass-cased cabinet like tiny secrets clenched between your teeth.
you wonder if you are in the dust, too.
ii
on friday you plant crocuses in the backyard. (she always liked crocuses.)
purple petal lips sprouting from soil that squishes between your toes
remind you of her. they furl from finger to hip,
and you imagine them curling acquiescent cadaver, crested and
callous against pelvis sunken and serpentine like white stars caged and ribbed.
you saw her body, afterward.
her eyes were still open and fixed on the doorway where you stood
and you felt naked. her skin sagged over shoulder blades that stuck out
like chasmic artifices you could touch and fall into;
you could feel the stillness pressed into you. (heavy dehumanization.)
you’ve never been afraid of death–you can stomach the deadweight–
but you didn’t expect to feel the absence. it burns like ephemeral gold.
you open the window in the kitchen.
the smoke of it makes your eyes water.
iii
you think you might just be hollow.
sunday makes a week and your family doesn’t really talk about it.
you went alone to the crematorium, all full of caskets and black boxes
big enough to swallow you. you watched them carry her in
and started to wonder what kind of a person would choose to work
in such a place where the air is stale on your tongue
and the walls push back at you until all you’re made up of is cotton webbing.
it’s a strange place to bring a dead person to.
they must be more deserving than a cold metal table and
dingy waiting rooms. expensive wine glasses and heavy china
cannot equate to this. this was once a person.
you touch the urn on the mantle. this was once a person.
you swore you could smell it.
flesh burning, smoking, sizzling, old blood thick like barbeque
spilling and swelling into dust.
you are quiet as you spread and sprinkle her over the purple flowers,
imagining her stretching into them and stilling.
you think you must be the only one thinking of her.
the eulogy was short.
you think, perhaps, death must make vestigial creatures of us all.
you sleep before the light goes out
thunderstorm watching
under alabaster sheets
you swell and you sleep
I like it when you fall asleep on my chest. curled and twisted, your body over mine and I like the smell of your skin against my neck.
I will burn through such
light like honey and you will
dance like lilac smoke
sometimes you move, tiny twitches into shoulder blades or fingers tied tighter around my shirt. I think you're unaware of it.
sunflowers thinning
pearlescent petals on your
lips I kiss so sweet.
affinity to kansas (twenty-seven lines of sad prairie words)
these are flowers of the wind.
this ground knows the contours of your face
and the weight of your toes
and sometimes you can feel the earth breathe
as it swells beneath your feet.
there is a strange feeling to coming home,
to stretching into the same cotton sheets
and breathing into the same sky
just as when your eyes were a little younger,
your skin was not creased,
your bones still stretching against muscle for the first time.
but your bones are paler, now,
your skin has spilled six times since last you were here
and you have eyes of old moons.
(it’s never quite the same.)
how strange it is, then, to unfold into it all again,
lungs breathing in tandem with greying daylight,
expanding and lifting just as they always have.
the orangey kitchen light is a frayed familiarity;
the jazz,
the loud rapture,
the people that smell like something that creaks
like the floorboards in your emptied bedroom.
frost curls over soil worn by prairie winters
and you are listening to saxophones on a scratchy record player
as you crawl into the comfort of coming home.
(you sometimes wonder why the mouth of the sky never seems to change.)
prayers into the sun
there are many days I spend on my back
stretching my arms to fit the sky
as it spills across mountain peaks,
casting gold against shadows in blue
spine attached to string,
lifted,
palms facing the sun,
I hold the earth inside my stomach
the silence opens in the core of the horizon
and everything is so loud and so quiet
as it swells into all that it is,
so large and so small
I fill the empty space with gilded light
incandescing against the fringes of nightfall
parallel wavelengths meeting the eye of the sol,
blinking
static spiraling beneath the skin,
I like to imagine my cells absorbing light like honey
as my body collapses into midnight
there is something disjointed in falling asleep,
in curling into a crook in the mountains
only to wake up again between
cotton bedsheets and the smell of my mother,
a familiarity I cannot name that clings to my shirt
when I dream, I am gone again,
silence blossoming in the prairie,
body weightless
to empty out is to sit in the belly of the earth,
to feel lungs filling and letting out;
stretch toward the sun
and drown in the mouth of the sky
honestly, it was different than what I was expecting.
it wasn't sparks and heat and hands on the back of my neck
pressing knees into thighs and breaths into lips,
a sudden burst of uncontained passion finally actualizing
into something physical.
something we could both touch.
it wasn't innocence and grinning
rosy and hasty and clumsiness trapped onto tongue
big eyes and gushing and giggling into cheeks
like children would.
it was quiet and easy and our fingers were freezing,
still and hesitant and careful and trying not to breathe too hard
and then it was gone.
(and I could still feel her lips against my mouth.)