--DON’T
BE SO HARD ON YOURSELF
…In
two days I’ll be in Napa. I love Napa. How could you not? I wish they had all the water they need. There’s nothing like running though vineyards
with purple fruit hanging off the vines, staring you square in the eye.
…I’ve
been writing a…lot…of poetry lately.
Maybe it’s not that good. Or
maybe it’s nothing. That’s the thing
about poetry.
Here’s
some of it:
S
& M Breakup
Today
the lake is into S & M,
all
black-whip waves and inversion current.
The
fish wear turtlenecks
while
the squirrels don flak jackets,
scurrying
in the trees like paranoid socks.
I
know how weird that sounds.
That’s
what you told me after you said
you
didn’t love me anymore.
Sometimes
there are no reasons, but still
I
thought I might have Necrotizing fasciitis.
I
thought that was the reason.
Look
it up.
I
checked my gut as well as
the
faint mustache above my lip
that
you once called a cute little caterpillar.
I
checked my legs—
Jelly Thighs you used to
call me.
I
opened my mouth wide to see if my tonsils were still gone.
I
wrote I Want You Back
with
ruby lipstick
across
the bathroom mirror
while
noticing how crocked my pupils were.
Everything
seemed pretty normal.
Afterward
I drank a broken glass
to
see if I could stand it,
to
feel my insides shred,
trying
to deal with something
other
than you.
Reasonable
Paranoia
The
sky keeps following me,
even
when I’m in the bathroom
or
our windowless shower.
The
sky, it has a million lurking eyes,
not
one of them a star or moon.
Under
the covers at night
the
sky shows up,
making
the sheets and blankets glow.
My
parents are worried.
They
call me “strange” and “paranoid”.
They
say I’m imagining things,
same
as when I told them
what
Grandpa did.
Better
Off Dead
My
skin is coming off in peels of leafy
orange
rinds that smell of formaldehyde.
That’s
okay.
My
nose won’t stop bleeding and my hair hurts
even
after I’ve shaved it all off, leaving tufts that
clog
the sink drain.
But
that’s okay.
My
eyes flip upside down,
turning
into lava lamp glowing worms of goo.
That’s
okay, too.
The
furniture moves by itself,
like
chess pieces randomly moved by some bored giant.
Still
okay.
Then
a wide, hairy fist is flexing in my chest,
reaching
up and gripping, closing tight around my larynx.
I
don’t think that’s good.
So
I call someone I know who knows someone else
who’s
in touch with these kinds of things
and
we hold a séance at my house
where
the woman in charge
takes
my unsteady hand
and
shakes her head
saying,
“Believe me on this:
you’re
better off dead.”
Inertia
The
dogs are outside hiding
and
the kids have been gone for years.
Three
ceiling lights are out,
Did
you notice?
A
casserole is molding in the fridge
while
we’re eating breakfast or dinner.
Time
is a flat circle we keep spinning in.
and
inertia takes us where it will
as
we go on
married
and maybe content.
Reasons
for Living
She
wants to make love in a graveyard at night,
says
it’s kinky and that she wants to be choked
or
slapped around like Isabella Rossellini
in
that Sand Man movie.
Hair
pulling only goes so far
and
new days keep showing up like
well-meaning
Jehovah Witnesses.
But
the graveyard, the choking and slapping—
those
are real.
She
says they’re something
to
take the edge off.
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