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hagsville
hagsville
23/F
I am trying really hard to live in this body, but the rent is too ******* high and the paint is peeling off and I’m too tired to patch it up.
0
Jul 15, 2017
Jul 15, 2017 at 9:21 PM UTC
Foreclosure
Have you ever had a recurring dream? One loaded image that cemented itself in your memory with the force of a freight train? Mine is simple: I am standing in front of a mirror, nothing special, no indication of time or place. But it is me, and I am standing there, looking at myself with stiff eyes. But the eyes are not mine. They are definitely stuck in my skin, but they do not roll from side-to-side or reflect any light. The eyes are there, and they stay calm as blood pours out from their bottoms down to my lower lip-- and it is my lip. But it is not my blood, so it must be borrowed. It might be the blood of someone I used to know Or of a stranger on the street Or of someone famous Or of my next-door neighbor Or of someone not quite alien enough to bleed a color other than red. All I know is that the blood is there, running out of me And every night my tongue rolls out to taste it, but its owner remains unknown to me.
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Jul 15, 2017
Jul 15, 2017 at 9:08 PM UTC
Recurring Dream
Your voice floods my ears At 6:45 A.M., "Patient Number Four, it's time to do your vitals." I'm standing in the doorframe of my hospital cubicle-- right hand in yours, the nurse's, left hand in the shredder-- or is that the wire frame that's holding me up like I'm a head on a stake? "Have you eaten, how long has it been now?" I try to tell you the truth, but my mouth feels miles away, riding on the train that you people call my throat. And my throat has brought me here, to your pristine prison cell because I betrayed it too many times. "I need to get your vitals, will you come with me?" And how do I know, how do I really know that you are not trying to ****** me with gleaming round numbers and records of compliance, cooperation. How do I know that you are not trying to re-name me in this hospital's file-cabinet language? "I need you to follow me to the lab." Why are you trying to take me away from myself?-- The self I spent so many years constructing from the bits and pieces of black earth I dug up eagerly, fearlessly. I cannot move to your white room-- the other flavor of white reserved for nurses, not the oatmeal in my cubicle. I cannot leave this arm with its chewed-up edges or this crime-scene throat with its flapping lid. "Please give me your arm and make a fist." I already told you, or tried to, I cannot give myself to you. I have given myself away too many times under too many names. And I am tired, so tired, of chasing myself back to Me. So you drain me right there in the hallway and seal me back up without a kiss-- So I kiss myself on the thick vein you chose and whisper my real name to myself Because I am terrified, so terrified of forgetting it.
0
Jul 15, 2017
Jul 15, 2017 at 8:50 PM UTC
Patient Number Four
Your voice floods my ears At 6:45 A.M., "Patient Number Four, it's time to do your vitals." I'm standing in the doorframe of my hospital cubicle-- right hand in yours, the nurse's, left hand in the shredder-- or is that the wire frame that's holding me up like I'm a head on a stake? "Have you eaten, how long has it been now?" I try to tell you the truth, but my mouth feels miles away, riding on the train that you people call my throat. And my throat has brought me here, to your pristine prison cell because I betrayed it too many times. "I need to get your vitals, will you come with me?" And how do I know, how do I really know that you are not trying to ****** me with gleaming round numbers and records of compliance, cooperation. How do I know that you are not trying to re-name me in this hospital's file-cabinet language? "I need you to follow me to the lab." Why are you trying to take me away from myself?-- The self I spent so many years constructing from the bits and pieces of black earth I dug up eagerly, fearlessly. I cannot move to your white room-- the other flavor of white reserved for nurses, not the oatmeal in my cubicle. I cannot leave this arm with its chewed-up edges or this crime-scene throat with its flapping lid. "Please give me your arm and make a fist." I already told you, or tried to, I cannot give myself to you. I have given myself away too many times under too many names. And I am tired, so tired, of chasing myself back to Me. So you drain me right there in the hallway and seal me back up without a kiss-- So I kiss myself on the thick vein you chose and whisper my real name to myself Because I am terrified, so terrified of forgetting it.
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46
I have two kidneys and one broken tooth. In grade school a pack of boys stomped on me, like I was the **** of a lit cigarette and they were the rain.
0
Jul 13, 2017
Jul 13, 2017 at 10:16 AM UTC
On the Schoolyard
I was born when the sky opened up and polluted my mind with its brown ash-- an initiation of sorts. I was born again when the wind cleansed my skin with its ferocity-- an invitation to breathe from the surface.
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Jul 12, 2017
Jul 12, 2017 at 10:36 PM UTC
Rebirth
I am in fourth grade--ten years old, first period, first kiss, first full shave from armpit to ankle. The teacher pulls me aside--all smiles and maternal excitement. She tells me that my test scores put me in the 98th percentile. I **** my head, recalling the soft-lead, the guarded pencil sharpener at the front of the room, and the bullseye ovals that tested my mind, my palm sweat, my straining eyes. I am in fourth grade--ten years old, first violent fight with my mother, first homosexual fantasy, first dressing room meltdown. The pediatrician pulls me aside--half austerity, half pity. He tells me that I need three HPV shots, and by the way, my weight puts me in the 98th percentile. My eyes sink back into my face, and the flood doesn’t come until I am home, curled into my mother’s breast, wondering how to divide my head into Focused Student and Focused Starver. I am in fourth grade--ten years old, times tables and long division and calories in an apple and calories burned in a playground brawl. I learn to count my success in numbers and my failures in grams, pounds, inches, threats of fat camp, images of thick yellow fat sandwiched between my organs. I am in fourth grade--ten years old, 98th percentile and chewing and spitting and growing and pinching the body that I cannot call my own-- and numbing the brain that matches the magnitude of my fullness. I am a split-girl, a shame reservoir spilling over and out and coating my paper with fractions and plans of calculated disappearance. I am in fourth grade--ten years old, and the teacher’s clock doesn’t stop, and the and the doctor’s scale doesn’t pause to make room for my magnitude.
0
Jul 7, 2017
Jul 7, 2017 at 12:13 PM UTC
98th Percentile
I am in fourth grade--ten years old, first period, first kiss, first full shave from armpit to ankle. The teacher pulls me aside--all smiles and maternal excitement. She tells me that my test scores put me in the 98th percentile. I **** my head, recalling the soft-lead, the guarded pencil sharpener at the front of the room, and the bullseye ovals that tested my mind, my palm sweat, my straining eyes. I am in fourth grade--ten years old, first violent fight with my mother, first homosexual fantasy, first dressing room meltdown. The pediatrician pulls me aside--half austerity, half pity. He tells me that I need three HPV shots, and by the way, my weight puts me in the 98th percentile. My eyes sink back into my face, and the flood doesn’t come until I am home, curled into my mother’s breast, wondering how to divide my head into Focused Student and Focused Starver. I am in fourth grade--ten years old, times tables and long division and calories in an apple and calories burned in a playground brawl. I learn to count my success in numbers and my failures in grams, pounds, inches, threats of fat camp, images of thick yellow fat sandwiched between my organs. I am in fourth grade--ten years old, 98th percentile and chewing and spitting and growing and pinching the body that I cannot call my own-- and numbing the brain that matches the magnitude of my fullness. I am a split-girl, a shame reservoir spilling over and out and coating my paper with fractions and plans of calculated disappearance. I am in fourth grade--ten years old, and the teacher’s clock doesn’t stop, and the and the doctor’s scale doesn’t pause to make room for my magnitude.
Continue reading...
39
I sit outside the piano-room door and listen to you sing because it makes me want to be alive. I imagine myself dancing in the center of a pearl-white key, waltzing backward toward the string that ties song to sound. You lift a finger and pause to breathe and I fall a thousand feet into the space between silence and noise. If only your voice were never-ending, then perhaps I’d fall more softly or not at all.
0
Jul 6, 2017
Jul 6, 2017 at 12:41 PM UTC
For Lindsay
Don’t ask me how I feel about food because you’ll find yourself lost in stories that glorify pathological eating patterns. Yes, I am a loud-mouthed ********* Yes, I will tell you about the time all I ate on a Wednesday was a single mustard packet and you better believe I held the near-empty plastic sleeve under my desk ripped it open and brought the splayed-out wrapper to my lips. How about the Saturday night my roommate left for her boyfriend’s house. I waited for the sound of her car pulling out of the driveway then spent the next two hours eating bowl after bowl of frosted cereal and throwing them up one after another until I couldn’t feel my jaw.
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Jul 6, 2017
Jul 6, 2017 at 12:39 PM UTC
Don't Ask How I Feel About Food
When I say “I don’t think I have a problem” What I really mean is that Some people have to break themselves To prove that they are worth reconstruction.
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Jul 6, 2017
Jul 6, 2017 at 12:38 PM UTC
Denial
At night my emotions sit on top of me like bricks The monster in my head reads a bedtime story about A fat girl who does not eat. It is a tragedy disguised as a triumphant heroine’s quest, read in the voice of my mother. I do not remember what the girl is looking for, but she keeps going, keeps digging her nails into the Earth, searching for the promises that her monster makes. She finds bits of debris that she cannot name and fungus and grains of sand that cut like sea-glass. The monster sighs, “Just keep digging and you will find victory, happiness, safety, and love.” The girl becomes confused and falls into the dug-up ground like a limp fish, she cannot breathe underground, and she ***** dirt like air.
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Jul 6, 2017
Jul 6, 2017 at 12:37 PM UTC
Bricks