Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Phantom Limbs

How the body remembers
is not at all like how the mind does.
The severing of one’s memory is
Like losing a limb
All along, you reach for the glass half full,
arm outreached, when suddenly
you realize neither the glass nor the arm is even there.

This isn’t a love poem

This isn’t a love poem but
me trying to find a way to love you right to
give back how good you give it to me
Try and find the words between
the body and mind, say,
create words that touch you
like my lips, yours
like my ass, your hands
like my inner thighs, your hips

This isn’t a love poem but
me trying to feel you despite distance
reach for you
by the memory of
your sounds as your warmth spills inside me
the heat of your neck I soak in with my lips
your eyes’ shine as you watch me turn with you inside me

This isn’t a love poem but
it is this, a tasting
so you know
how the whole of you
is loved,
how each crease of every finger
how each line of the palms
how each strand of stubble
every sigh and giggle of you
fully completely wholly.

how silly of me (to say I write yet)
be so unable
to find the words
to tell you precisely

this lusting of the heart.

The Prawn’s Tale


My mother tells me how she
never got over
her motherlessness.
(I am still working on it myself.)
Over coursed Chinese cuisine,
I tell her I felt
compelled to find her,
partially thanks to my father.
“You know, Dad never once said a single thing bad about you.”

She replies, “How could he? I never gave him any reason to.
He was the only one who did anything wrong.”

I sit, eyeing the split back of the giant prawn.
Picking it up, gently twisting off its head
peeling the skin off its back,
I push the flesh out.

An eye dangles to meet mine.

“It depends on whose side to tell a story from.”

The Guilty

Opening the door to leave
he watches her smile,
her eyes vacant rooms
chandeliers cobwebbed
dusty white sheets on furniture,
it has been so long
he has forgotten what was under them.
Turning back to say goodbye once more
he sees the door close.

It is funny
but in dreams
she hums
suspended in screeching silence.
When he moves to touch her,
she flinches as if he is a fist
about to clock her
to scatter all her teeth
on the damp spring soil

like Silver Queen corn kernels.

Excuse

For nine months,
you take the time to know
her name, mutter it even in your sleep.
Say it aloud to bring her into being.
Practice what to call her
when the time is right.


When she comes to town,
she breaks every bough of tree,
uproots your home whole
mauling the gardenia garden
deforming the green truck left out to rust.

As you leave her,
you think

This is why she is the child you refused to get to know
the one you let go
never raised,

the rogue and raging.