Posts

  • “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”

  • in Colorado,
    his name was Alex.
    I am passing 3rd street unaware
    of my hands withering,
    clutching my phone.
    another bad habit of mine,
    not wearing gloves and never
    placing my hands in my
    pocket.


    he was very young and
    wide eyed and used to doodle
    through meetings
    watching the layers of people
    shift in their seats, gathering
    outlines with his pencil.
    I would try to peek,
    said hi to him only if I passed
    him but mostly enjoyed the thrill
    of picking a home group full
    of freshman in college,
    the perversion of me
    unfolding like that,
    so uninhibited in my quest

    for sobriety, spreading my
    legs in the chair
    in my turtleneck dress and
    brown tights.

    three children catch me muttering
    and smile.      they watch
    my fingers curve around an object,
    then divide as I tap each tip
    with my thumb like
    I’m counting.
    they are thinking
    I have secrets,
    not that I am crazy.

    one time,
    he kept his eyes closed as everyone
    in the circle shared.
    when it was my turn, he popped
    them back open and stared
    the length of my story.
    I was too confused to make
    direct eye contact with him;
    this being so flagrant
    and sudden, I fluster
    with bold advances.
    I spent one whole year fantasizing
    about him. not lured by his youth
    which makes him easy to command
    but the way he was clearly taken
    by me, his insouciance,
    and his right to be that way,
    being only eighteen and
    forced here.

    the children notice my
    mouth moving as I walk down the
    street, reviewing.
    they all think I am writing about
    them. I am writing about a cloud
    I passed once.
    cry cry cry and then
    just start fucking laughing,
    I say out loud
    so the ten year old widens
    her eyes
    as she passes.

  • “Something spreading underground won’t speak to us,
    under skin won’t declare itself
    not all life-forms want dialogue with the
    machine-gods in their drama
    hogging down:

    whats for dinner?
    bad guys.”

    –anselm hollo

  • where I grew up summer had
    an intensity. the days were long,
    bright and humid.
    we would be drenched in sweat by
    noon, loitering outside of 7-11 asking
    for change to buy slurpees and
    the mosquitoes could pile up on us
    until we were just slick with
    sweat and blood from
    both smashing them onto our thighs
    and cutting the welts off with our
    paper clip knives
    we had begun to use to scratch our itches.
    and then these winds would hit you.


    first, you embrace the coolness
    because it was 101 degrees
    and when the air drops ten to twenty
    in a blow,
    it is welcomed.
    you feel this more at the beach
    but I remember many times shivering,
    coming inside after
    rains hit to jump
    in the shower and others
    peeling back the slick of
    my shorts, completely stuck

    with now rainwater and
    my perspiration to my hips
    and feeling no respite at the beginning of August.
    people forget that February is the coldest month
    and that August is a swelter.
    even if it was bright outside,
    the sky would cut to black.
    this was monsoon season.
    hurricane season.

     

    when a storm hit,
    we opened the windows
    beckoning the air to come in.

     I watched the
    weather channel every morning to
    see around what time they predicted the
    afternoon thunderstorm would hit and
    being more fixated on some measurable instance
    of rightness that was public,
    was obsessed with dressing exactly appropriately
    for the weather each
    day before meeting my friends.
    on anything sixty nine degrees or above,
    I wore shorts and anything above seventy-seven,
    a tank top.
    I ran and sweat a lot.
    also I love getting caught in pure raintstorms.
    I was often turning the channel on
    and off to time it..

    to this day I have not found anything
    as soothing as preparation
    and facing things
    with as much immensity as a southern
    coastal storm. 

    the thunderclap is so
    loud it is alarming.
    you feel it.
    it is a bomb going off
    and lighting quickly follows.
    we were taught to count the beats
    at the end of the thunder clap
    and the sight or sound of
    the crackle of lightning
    to see how many miles away
    the storm was.

    but sometimes they coincided
    and you saw the lightning hit horizon
    if you were on the shore.
    waves growing in size.
    these clouds moved faster than the current.
    rain falling so hard
    it felt like needles
    or sleet and we named
    them:

    Allison

    Bernard
    Cornelia
    Duke
    Elana
    Fred
    alternating gender
    alphabetically each year

     

    as if they
    could be shrunk like that,
    these wild beasts that
    pummeled us,
    our uncontrolled.

     

    “Oya”

  • she was pandering to my 
    emotion, calling this episode
    a real child even though my friend
    took my side and mentioned how
    dramatized television is
    and that those cases are slim.
    BUT 

    she said you said kill everyone.
    I never said kill everyone, I said
    if the law is  x=x then it’s x.
    I could see her reaching for
    the feminine in me
    which
    as far as I could see
    was straddled and leaning back.
    confident enough to be the first one
    to volunteer for the exercise,
    which I remind her, is not
    examining the morality of the law
    itself but to remove debate around it
    so that it may be better enforced,
    without outcry and fairly.


    when I finished nine hands
    went up. we were a class of eighteen.
    unsure of why
    I volunteered for the exercise
    first, and given the freedom to begin
    with any declaration, why I chose to
    examine how mass assassinations
    could really kick things off to accept
    blindly that some people are
    executed.

    the argument was not over
    until all counter points had been examined,
    the professor said.
    she was tall and smiling when
    I spoke and I felt thankful for her
    defense of me any time she reiterated,
    I was correct in re-summarizing the
    exercise for each of the
    nine hands that went up,
    consuming the bell with a
    theoretical society that arbited
    punishment blindly as the statue
    alluded to also,
    the society we try to 
    have now is composed of
    criterion like that. 


    I was eighteen and glowing
    and enjoying the attention
    with zero conviction about
    the death penalty.
    and when it came back to
    her, and she presented it again
    after many others had spoke,
    I am sure I said,
    to be perfectly frank,
    we would HAVE to
    kill the child in order
    to make the law work.

    and then I just kind of laughed
    because the exercise itself asked you to
    first pick a side and fight for it;
    not to defend the death penalty
    but to remove morality from law
    having the freedom to remove all
    structures of law around murder,
    I could have created a punishless state
    in which murderers walked free
    or a Hammurabi and it is with the
    same amount of callousness, that I
    have begun to plant
    nightshade around your house.

    probability being like
    you probably like to touch
    things like me
    and thinking it

    to be Queen Anne’s Lace
    giving it to your girl
    for Valentine’s Day.

     

    “Valentine’s Day part #1”

  • of course i would never kill
    a child, I continued with her,
    but the question was
    how do we make something like
    the death penalty less of
    a moral argument?
    and the only way to take morality
    out of law is to write clauses that
    outline exactly what will happen
    and under what circumstances and
    then without reneging, go and
    enforce it every single time.
    these are authoritarian things.
    but I didn’t agree with any of it
    so I felt like battling me
    was moot but I enjoyed the spectacle
    and had, for no reason, invited
    a male friend to join me in
    class that day.
    I too was interested in
    motive but we cannot prove
    intent truly, without
    absolute confession
    and even then, we may
    doubt what we hear.

  • my interest was
    social experimentation.
    it’s why I went to college.
    I  wanted to be educated on the ways
    to manipulate small crowds
    and because of my naivete,
    I did not realize at first
    that my interest in slightly
    sociopathic
    behavior was a reflection
    and that I find,
    truthfully,  serial killers
    to be undeniably weak
    in their compulsion.

    they are artless megalomaniacs.
    you could just as easily garden
    with the same amount of torrid wonder.
    learn to grow nightshade and then
    plant it all over town
    in places where people smell
    flowers and pick weeds for each
    other.
    but these are men and
    they have to be known.
    I’ve always had to cross my
    legs.


    Mrs. Shepherd said you
    cannot bet on things that talk,
    Sarah, when I interjected to
    share my observation that
    the same formulas can be applied to people
    when presenting with the same patterns over time.
    they would be seen as a fixed event
    because they have not wavered in
    reliability yet.

    another time I stated calmly to
    my ethics class that the best way to enforce
    a law to ensure it gets a message across
    is to just begin enforcing it.
    if you believe in the death penalty
    the best way to slice it
    is to make a black and a white clause;
    no matter what the circumstances,
    calculated homicide will put you
    in the electric chair and then they
    wouldn’t quibble so much with semantics.

     

    the first girl to shoot her hand up
    was the most riled by my
    callous eyebrow lift and when
    she presented to me a law and order episode
    where the murderer was a child,
    I said kill the child.
    “events #1”

  • then I see your friend three times.

    this is where formulas come in
    handy and I am grateful:
    formula for probability of
    A and B.
    I am thankful for my AP statistics course in
    the 12th grade.
    to begin to find the probability
    of two events (events being actions or interactions,
    not literally events but )
    co-occuring you begin to
    first choose the right formula,
    then map it.
    I loved this class. I aced this
    class having been removed from all other
    advanced math classes. there was nothing
    confusing about finding probable
    cause.
    and when she brought out the dice
    to teach us statistics, it kind
    of coalesced: luck is when
    things occur against all
    odds.

  • this year i decide i am a descendant of harry houdini

  • realizing my audience
    is mostly male,
    a little scared to play
    myself; the villain
    but also literally can’t go
    one more step forward pretending
    I did not orchestrate an
    entire clandestine destiny.

    I don’t know, sarah,
    you’ve been wrong before.
    but once i start writing names,
    they feel the difference in truth
    and a lie; I feel them
    sort of pulsate, getting ready
    to confront this absurd idea
    that you are using actual events
    from their life as a barometer
    for some sort of seething,
    sidewinding violence
    in which former victim
    grows into a constant
    predation and all
    senses.
    also me being unable to lie.

    one by one,
    precious line,
    them being hung
    like witches and
    all labeled the same
    way.

    “xxx”

    or

    “the black book”

     

     

     

     

     

  • in Colorado,
    his name was Alex.
    he was very young and
    wide eyed and used to doodle
    through meetings. one time,
    he kept his eyes closed as everyone
    went around in a circle and shared.
    but when it was my turn, he popped
    his eyes open and stared at me.

    I spent one whole year fantasizing
    about him, not lured by his youth
    but the way he was clearly taken
    by me and how he didn’t just
    act strange, but possessed it.

    they all think I am writing about
    them. I am writing about a cloud
    I passed once.
    cry cry cry and then
    just start fucking laughing.

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑