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  • “Name your torture,”
    one of them said
    with a wink.

    I wanted an orchard
    but I swallowed the vodka
    he handed me
    willingly.

    “The Gorge”

  • my writing process:

    thought, beat, tone or simple note in phone.
    elongate into rhythym, find your step in cadence, and blossom.
    begin to jot more notes down so you do not lose the feeling.
    return to sitting.
    delete all that felt superfluous or was more private:
    like how many times you became suicidal in private.
    begin to elongate in fluid cadence.
    is this a story or a poem?
    choose your book and place it.
    rough draft it.
    edit.

    step away

    edit.
    choose your book and place it.

    go for the next walk.

  • I begin to weigh the scales:
    what’s the probability
    that illusion grows legs
    or that imagination is laden
    with foresight?
    you see if I don’t begin to
    think this way, I will
    begin to cross the bridge
    and when my foot hits the
    concrete, I want to
    leap, arms spread.
    it’s not about anyone coming
    back. it’s about me
    accepting love is a double edged
    sword and I’m a fucking
    whore. isn’t that what
    you told your friends?
    that you can’t date
    a whore like that.

    “the bridge #1”

  • before I moved to Boulder,
    I developed a very good working
    relationship with the Harris Teeter
    in Ghent. I would do my local grocery shopping there,
    pretty regularly, dividing my cart into half:
    stealing that half and paying for the rest.
    this is how people who have fifteen dollars
    and a drinking problem live.
    they neatly divide what is worth
    paying for and what is worth ignoring,
    letting go, stealing or conning.
    when I moved to Boulder,
    I developed a good working
    relationship with the Whole Foods
    but I cut my teeth stealing bike lights from
    Target so that my partner and I
    could go places at night.


    I showed him how to pocket
    toothpaste as mine was homemade
    of bentonite clay and I am doting,
    if not simply peacocking
    about my bold chase of everything.
    I showed him how to pocket the
    Kombucha and show up to
    meetings with it in hand like
    it had no alcohol,
    like I didn’t pocket the lip
    gloss either.
    when I moved to Philly,
    I developed a good working
    relationship with every Whole Foods
    in the area.

    I want to be remembered for the
    ways I never died,
    not for the ways my mouth
    looked shut in meetings
    every time an old white man
    repeated an aphorism I have yet
    to swallow: you are only as
    sick as your secrets.

    I want to be remembered as a
    passing silhouette in your
    night or the arms that
    held you finally
    so long as you know
    my pockets are heavy
    like chests.
    so long as you
    like little gifts
    now and then.

  • my partner turned to me
    so matter of factly
    as we ate vegan nachos
    I had made, and said
    this is a place to cut your teeth
    and then leave.

    “Philadelphia”

  • suffering incursion will
    change you. there are a thousand ways
    to die, my head begins again.
    nail in eye.
    car to body.
    man with fist.
    I begin to count
    and begin to twist the straw
    in an effort to curb the brain
    from going deeper, usually
    the fixation begins from the most
    likely place.
    it was the end of February,
    2014 and I lived in a rowhome
    on the cusp of Port Richmond
    and Kensington and knew two things:
    cars don’t stop for anything here,
    and neither do men.

    I begin to count and organize and also
    step into a dark long reverie
    of a place that is warm and
    seeking me, but I also begin to
    count and create myth from fingers.
    begin to list the ways I’ve watched the
    Earth take: my aunt run over multiple
    times, murdered. my eight year old cousin
    died from a brain anuerysm. my uncle
    shot his face off in his father’s
    old house. my aunt drank her body to death.

    you see I have to stop and enter
    the beach seeking me.
    you won’t make it otherwise
    as I turn the headphones up,
    just miss a truck but I can
    hear the ATVS revving.
    the sign says walk
    but my aunt was once run over
    repeatedly.

    it’s the coldest winter in years,
    they tell me after meetings,
    and it’s not an easy time to make friends.

    “doors #2”

  • “it was beauty, I learned, that we risked ourselves for.”

     

    –ocean vuong

  • (first draft I wrote walking around town)

     

    I walk around giving women bad advice..
    Things like
    when a man follows you,
    turn around and smile.
    That is bare your incisors
    like maybe you’ve used them
    to chew tendon before
    and

     stand tall, taller than you are
    and on tiptoes. don’t call
    the police. fuck the police
    is another thing I like to say
    but
    it’s not fair of me to
    demand such things
    knowing the ways we’ve been bent
    and the price I’ve paid for
    teeth
    but
    one time a man rested his hand
    on my knee after a meeting
    to converse.
    to talk to me and I said
    I am not railing, take your
    hand off my knee.
    and he loudly shouted to the meeting
    that he had touched me and
    I freaked out.
    it was february 2014
    and I had lived there one month.

    it is not fair of me to look
    around and wait for the other women to
    chime in; expecting anything from white
    women is like expecting mice to suddenly
    organize and take the floorboards
    back. we know the cats and rats
    own them and we know
    where they hide.
    I feel no loyalty to certain
    things.

    it is not fair of me to look them in the eye
    and expect anything so I began the
    quiet ascent right then and there
    reiterating that there is no need
    to touch me, a woman that you don’t
    know to talk to me and he began to
    turn blush red and stammer and
    get louder with everyone
    assuring the group that
    I was freaking out. I guess
    to let them know that
    he was calming me down.
    I forgot this part but later a
    friend said he was in a bad spot
    like I was allowed to be grazed
    by men in bad spots
    with bad tempers
    in bad neighborhoods,
    just hanging skinned meat
    from a hook like a bag
    to hug when they’re worn
    out so I controlled the eye
    roll and returned to the sea.
    began to call stallions to
    me to see if I could
    ride them and began the quiet
    ascent,
                I break men
    and rather than complain
    about hypocrisy and To Wives again,
    I merely left that place and rather
    than
    repeat myself  to him,
    being new in town, making
    friends and also finding ways to
    assert myself at night on my
    lonely, cold walks as men
    followed me in cars,
    as men whistled at me in winter,
    me, bundled, as they began to walk
    steady behind me,
    as a semi truck stopped in the middle of rush hour on
    Aramingo to honk at me and look at me
    and me reaching for the women to hear
    that’s normal.

    I repeated myself and noticed
    no one said a word as this man
    reiterated that I, the new girl,
    simply freaked the fuck out when
    a man touched my thigh.

    one day I heard encroaching
    steps and turned around
    just for the scent
    of it. sometimes men
    sniff your hair when
    you sleep and enter you
    before you wake up
    just for the scent of it. 

    “the black book”

  • “perfect joy excludes even the very feeling of joy, for in the soul filled by the object, no corner is left for saying “I.”

     

    –Simone Well

  •  

    every day up at dawn
    on my knees and thanking
    God for letting me stay feral,
    hand drawn
    and as sick as all my
    secrets.

    2.

  • i am the magic,
    they are the drawn.

    magic magic clap clap clap
    look who got her fangs back!

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