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wrenderlust
wrenderlust
just a misguided girl in a dress
One night you turned and made the piano an ocean, told me to dive in, but even before you played me into the taut steel strings of your net, I knew I'd be lost in the undertow, tossed back and forth, and somehow, when the current swept my breath away I'd still find myself thinking in pillow talk, mouthing: If I could, I would make these insecurities a bed and climb inside with you. We'd sew sails from the skeletons lingering in our upstairs closets, and maybe one day I'd find the right words to tell you that your body is a pond, and I am a remarkably privileged fish– I could lose myself in you, let my lungs fill with water, close my eyes, and remember drowning is a fine art- you've got to do it with grace, do it so the last trembling bubble leaves your lips like a love song, and you sink with limbs outstretched, and you turn a respectable shade of blue like the tablets we'd swallow to float, flotsam with her jetsam, out to sea.
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Jan 15, 2014
Jan 15, 2014 at 2:29 PM UTC
Water Sign
He asked if I'd stay, and my silence trapped him like a mosquito in amber. The seconds rumbled past, unhurried glaciers, two hurricanes, a drought, and a war came and he was still rolling his joints, tapping on shoulders, asking soldiers for a light. When the sea rose and flooded the town, he sat in his swollen armchair exhaling smoke bubbles, while parrotfish gnawed at the carpet, and later, his eyes glazed with a tired sort of expectation when the manatees swam past in their solemn triumph over the suburbs, as if any one of the lumbering sea cows might come bearing my yes.
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Jan 15, 2014
Jan 15, 2014 at 2:27 PM UTC
Flood
One hundred years of solitude and Marquez still couldn't shut you up, your words tear down the walls of Macondo, heckling the Buendías, poking fun at Aureliano and his golden fishes. The circular history spins to a halt, and I fold down the corner of a page, as if closing the book could save the city built on paper, on the Formica tabletop of an old café with a broken clock A few chapters back, you were chastising time, saying one day you'd crack your watch open, rearrange the gears, twirl the dials and steal back from the ticking hands that steal so much from you. On page 178, you committed abominations, spooning sugar into espresso, and declared your love for Dali because the man melted time, didn't care for anything not molded to the back of a horse. Cranberry scone finished, you ruffle the newspaper, bemoaning the stockbrokers who grow fat and complacent on the crumbs of seconds, chewing chronological cud, you called it, but you said nothing could ever pin you down, much less some cheap Timex on a nylon strap. Cast out of the fourth dimension, Marquez scribbles graves for the Buendías, in death, they've forgotten the original sin and the Colonel forges fish from the gold fastenings on his casket ad infinitum.
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Jan 15, 2014
Jan 15, 2014 at 1:11 PM UTC
Arcadio
Average-joe protagonist wipes beer glasses at the helm of his sports bar, blissfully ignorant of the imminent laughable tragedy. Clouds circle, and there's that obligatory radio broadcast, the one that warns of inclement weather- rainy, with a chance of Selachimorpha. You hum the Jaws theme, tracing pickup lines on the skin of my back, while sharks pour from the sky, the improbable tornado dropping great whites on the California shoreline. One arm curled around my waist, you tickle erratically until I squirm away, only to creep back again, and put my head in the mouth of the sand tiger, wandering too close to the edge of the water, foolish, but this is a b-movie, we swam out too far knowing how it would end. The extras scream and scatter, arms flailing, going through the motions of surprise, stumbling in their scripted attempts to flee the inevitable. Predictably, they fall. We all fall, and the girl trapped in the hammerhead's belly has this peaceful expression, as if she can't quite remember why she ran away in the first place.
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Nov 5, 2013
Nov 5, 2013 at 1:05 PM UTC
Sharknado's On Again
The café rumbles like the belly of a fasting saint, voices competing with the clanks of silverware. In the tearoom a boy with a tangle of wires leaking from an unzipped backpack struts between tables, billing himself as a "human hotspot". He wears the same glasses you do; they slip down his nose as he leans over to flirt with the waitress in the red apron, who taps her nails against the cash register and laughs at his bad jokes, she tells me, because he wears his pants too high, just like her brother used to. A man with a soup-stained button down and a bald spot introduces himself as Peter Ling, proprietor, oracle of the inner city rummage sale, advisor to the lost and hungry. He doles out pithy wisdom and lentils into mismatched bowls- "You want therapy? Try your ex boyfriend." The four of us hide our grins, and flee to his cavernous basement. As we go spelunking through the puddles left by a burst pipe, clambering past bloated books and warped furniture, Emma Miller swears that she slept here once- on a moldy brown sofa crouched like a hibernating bear among empty Heineken bottles. The expedition yields four boxes of acupuncturist leaflets and a damp antique suitcase filled with seeds, who seized the opportunity to germinate, their tiny roots searching fruitlessly in the mildewed silk lining. Ling says he's going to try gardening this year, serve up spaghetti squash grown out back by the garage. We sowed pea shoots and salad greens in glass jars pilfered from a claw-footed armoire that lay on its side, defeated, like the last of the saber-tooths. I named one for you, tucked Eruca vesicaria sativa into potting soil, and set it on the balcony railing- tempting fate and gravity, because you always liked a little excitement with your afternoon cup of rooibos. I didn't see the girl who knocked you off your perch, saw only the sun's sharp gleam off the glass as the jar plunged, graceful as a slow-motion train wreck on its arc toward the concrete, and Peter Ling reached up with his big, calloused hand to break your fall.
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Oct 31, 2013
Oct 31, 2013 at 4:35 PM UTC
OneWorld Café, Salt Lake City, UT
The café rumbles like the belly of a fasting saint, voices competing with the clanks of silverware. In the tearoom a boy with a tangle of wires leaking from an unzipped backpack struts between tables, billing himself as a "human hotspot". He wears the same glasses you do; they slip down his nose as he leans over to flirt with the waitress in the red apron, who taps her nails against the cash register and laughs at his bad jokes, she tells me, because he wears his pants too high, just like her brother used to. A man with a soup-stained button down and a bald spot introduces himself as Peter Ling, proprietor, oracle of the inner city rummage sale, advisor to the lost and hungry. He doles out pithy wisdom and lentils into mismatched bowls- "You want therapy? Try your ex boyfriend." The four of us hide our grins, and flee to his cavernous basement. As we go spelunking through the puddles left by a burst pipe, clambering past bloated books and warped furniture, Emma Miller swears that she slept here once- on a moldy brown sofa crouched like a hibernating bear among empty Heineken bottles. The expedition yields four boxes of acupuncturist leaflets and a damp antique suitcase filled with seeds, who seized the opportunity to germinate, their tiny roots searching fruitlessly in the mildewed silk lining. Ling says he's going to try gardening this year, serve up spaghetti squash grown out back by the garage. We sowed pea shoots and salad greens in glass jars pilfered from a claw-footed armoire that lay on its side, defeated, like the last of the saber-tooths. I named one for you, tucked Eruca vesicaria sativa into potting soil, and set it on the balcony railing- tempting fate and gravity, because you always liked a little excitement with your afternoon cup of rooibos. I didn't see the girl who knocked you off your perch, saw only the sun's sharp gleam off the glass as the jar plunged, graceful as a slow-motion train wreck on its arc toward the concrete, and Peter Ling reached up with his big, calloused hand to break your fall.
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43
Sleep visits me again, a man in a grey overcoat, smiling, beckoning. It's easier than you think, he tells me just like they say, counting sheep and stars. There are somnambulists and the creak of bedsprings, some nights silence, but more often the clock ticks back and forth. I sit beside the bed with its sagging dust ruffle and watch over the sleep of the living. It's funny, he says, stifling the lamplight, especially when they talk, and when they dream.
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Oct 31, 2013
Oct 31, 2013 at 4:32 PM UTC
Cure for Insomnia
Disillusioned by the open market, he polishes his glasses and stretches, running a hand through hair made artistic by the blunt scissors of the philosophy major who lives downstairs. It was a trade, he tells me. Short back and sides for a batch of macadamia nut cookies. Barter economy. He mutters about measured value, divides a piece of paper, and breaks a pencil while forcing the verses of quarter sheet poems, recounting the night he stole four sponges from a craft supply store in town, a drunken fuck-you to the establishment- but also, he admits, it was late and he had to do the dishes. If you want to see how big the world is, he says, take off your belt. Now tighten it to the usual hole, put it down, and look. You are a speck of dust on the wineglass of human existence. Don't let it get to you. You are smaller and better than you think. Another quarter sheet finished, he slumps back on the defeated sofa and reads me Desiderata, putting on airs, grappling with devotions to poke holes in certainty just as I do now to the worn leather strap, shrinking my claim to the wineglass with each punch of the silver awl, and after years, still waiting for the clink of his belt buckle, the moment when, humbled, he remembers he is only a child of the universe.
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Oct 31, 2013
Oct 31, 2013 at 4:27 PM UTC
******* the Anticapitalist
With her black eyeglass frames and sensible heels, the psychiatrist is a contrived portrait of neutrality. The timer on her desk ticks sickeningly, counting off the missed opportunities for revelation that pass with each minute. I ask her if she has considered a Victorian fainting couch, she does not smile. I make cheap cracks about diet ads and the plight of the modern anorexic, she scribbles something on a legal pad- from where I sit, the only legible word is "questionable". She is not describing herself, yet I can think of nothing more dubious than being paid to listen to another's tedium. I spend one hour each week with my hired companion, and she, in turn, spends her time relaying information to another army entirely, sending reports to the other doctors, leaking statements to my family. She is the informant, and I, the gullible sap who believes in "conditional confidentiality". I pretend I know nothing of the arrangement, and try to speed time by imagining alternate realities. I picture her as a talking doll- A string protrudes from her back; when pulled, a mechanical voice says "I see", or occasionally, "How do you feel about that?" I stifle a laugh, and glance over at her glazed expression- there isn't much of a difference.
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Jan 13, 2013
Jan 13, 2013 at 8:52 PM UTC
Former Psychiatrist Imagined as a Double-Agent
I wear my scars on my sleeve, far away from my heart. I give them no introduction, and in return, hardly anyone comments. Once, I was told that such marks are something to hide with neatly pressed skirts, long sleeves, and dim lighting. For some time, I made an effort, then lost the shame-filled motivation. They are rose-pink, criss-crossing, haphazard badges of a life lived free of convention, every one a road sign that tells just how far I've come- beautiful if solemn reminders of a former self. They are small, puckered triumphs, things to admire if only for their stability: They do not grow in number. I love their gaping mouths, their age and soft surrender. Infrequently, I examine each scar with all the care and concentration of a cynic in wonderland. My fingers land on them like butterflies, any pain has long since faded.
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Dec 9, 2012
Dec 9, 2012 at 8:46 PM UTC
Cicatrix
I have no tolerance for the music you listen to. Slow and heavy, I worry that maybe it might make me feel something.
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Dec 8, 2012
Dec 8, 2012 at 8:51 PM UTC
VII