the last six things

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one
i tie a garbage bag around my finger to remind me what we have, to remind me what we had not, cuts off the circulation, bloodrise plum-colored, bejeweled, glimmering in sunrise see-all, sunset scavenger garbage trucks wink me in malfragrant collaboration as they zoom down the block toward the sea.


two turns me into a monster, little easy-does-it, little glitch of pretending second-guess our dream-people, our concocted bedtime cocktails, our slivers, incisions, the angle to the arch in our feet. feet are for touching together, for asking, for come with me, don't you want to go where i go. run. brake squeak, a baby terydactile. a street before time. a cloud-shaped dinosaur batting her long eyelashes at the crows who howl at the traffic from treetops and telephone wires. looking for lost things.


three banging pots and pans around in an elevator shaft, my digestion sounds like a chorus of machinery. sloppy gulp, i swallow a flower, oops. empty, ouch, we're going up when we were supposed to be going down. things are growing from every direction. i end up somewhere i never thought of, never even made up, and you know me, i make up everything. you miss that, don't you. are you or aren't you. what, dying? i forget your name when the adjective follows the noun. lost. looked-for. liar pretend. i'm growing your name like a forced bulb, my sweet saliva keeps you alive where you are, buried in my cheek, keep you like a miniature garden with my tongue. shhh. if i open my mouth, a bird flies out.


four i is for me is the girl is a character in a book is the way to be is to be like her is like taking nothing for granted is difficult but not impossible is the skylight in your cheekbone is a nutmeg brown is a nice color is integral to survival is tough in the city is made of rock is wedged in a the doorframe is the way to get in is the way to get out is to flee is flight is limited to a bug or a bird is.


five in the middle of me lives a hurricane, hurricane ali. it's nice to meet you. i'm looking for a lamp, i'm looking for an emergency candle, a knitted-blanket-and-beach-towel fort in the den. i'm looking for a bear in the pear tree. withstanding the wind, i cup my hand to my forehead and look out over the ocean. in the distance, a lighthouse with a dumb dragon inside. drenched. sneezing little smoke-bombs, allergic. in the other distance, a scrappy moon. pierces the purplish drape of sky. holds together our two sides of horizon. a frankenstein-stitch. a lilypad. an anchor.


six all arrows are pointed down. i hide myself for you in the hole of a tree, a broken curb, under a rock with wildflowers or weeds. purple, yellow, some are edible. some are both. "which is which?" you whisper. you can't tell the difference. only i can. from the ruins of my box of shipwreck tricks, i have one left. i play the cards like each is my last, and it is. i stroll like a porcelain pony, chinadoll in a white frock and bonnet. threaded with pocket roses, i bat my plastic eyelashes. i lie to your face every time.


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when you call

when you call, i'll be knitting a hat for an elephant. droopy, gray. gigantic.

when you call, i'll be making lasagna in a quiet kitchen listening to my voice in my head. i'll be just beginning my fall pledge-drive, trying to raise the vibe, or the roof, or the stakes. someone sad will call in and pledge their thirst or their art or their love, and i'll accept.

when you call, i'll be in the bathtub filled with ice. i run so much my legs are like lamp-posts. because i can't keep my feet still. because someone is always around threatening a game of tag. because i want to be faster than everyone, just in case.

when you call, i'll be writing a jacob-poem. a poem like jacob would write. or i'll write a matthew-poem. a leaf-poem. a dave or vaughan or tully poem. the only one who writes poetry i think is actually jacob. it's nice poetry, too. about sweat and love and loneliness. all these women.

when you call, i'll be sleeping.

when you call, i'll be eating a peach in silence. i mean slices.

when you call, i'll be trying, lying, spying on the doctorman in green scrubs who lives in the building next to mine. his bonsai needs water. he sets it on a paper towel and gives it a bath. looks at me funny.

when you call, i'll be peeing in the tiny bathroom, investigating my fun-house facial reflection in the silver faucet. my eyes are so goddamned big sometimes. no wonder.

when you call, i'll be banging out something on the typewriter. it'll say "when you call, i'll be angry. when you call, i'll be trying to be so angry," and it won't work.

when you call, i'll be a pacifist.
when you call, i'll be a buddhist.
when you call, i'll be a waitress. thanks very much. hope you enjoyed yourself. come back soon.



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cardboard cut-out of how to Be

what did i say? you said it's who you are. then, later, when the wall had cracked spiderstyle down the one corner you said it's who you have been. where are you trying to go? your high place, happening place where nothing and everything happens or doesn't. what does it mean to not have expectations? i expect the sun to come up swinging, then i get hooked like a fish in the lip with the moon in my eye. milk-moon blanket over all of it and you have nothing to say. headinyourhands. your irises like lilypads with dark things underneath, growing lungs and legs.

i said i was water and i am. what are you? a book on the shelf pressed with the others, somebody burrowed a hole through the inside of. i had my binoculars, magnifying glass, i was starting a fire. i just wanted to know what you kept in there. i speculated: A Dead Mouse. A Family Of Dead Mouses. A Falcon Feather. A Paper Mask With Dried Leaves. A Bodiless Stretch Of Skin. an extra. a glass fruit. A Handful Of Seeds. a book like a ground, like a room, like a you-sized hole in the universe. a place where so much can stay but no much can grow. a place where trees start from their sweet-seed and stem, but never fruit. aren't you getting hungry?

so our bellies met and the moon tilted and flung itself across the frame of window to the rest of the world. in bed with your book open. two doors away from escape and you stayed, sifted the sand with me for all the little sharp things chiseled smooth with water and time. then two days too late and i turn up in this photo where i remember the play but not the players. the rules to the game that seem ridiculous tinted yellow in place of blue, orange in place of lavender. our half-lit production was the color of a bruise, a star-speckled-garden, the inside of a box. in the glint of sun on saltwater it all seems to be made of paper, plastic, tempera pain mixed on cardboard palettes and watered down. i mixed a runny blue glitter glue to water the paper flowers. a paper-mache moon strung up in the rafters or hanging on a wire from a lamp post, a porous eggshell crust with shallow plaster craters, a new foreign terrain mapped with sticky fingers and some necessary abandon.

on your way out this morning you stepped on a paper bird, the one i liked best in fact, and ran off with one eye and part of a wing smashed to the bottom of your shoe. because i wanted you to notice, and you never even noticed, i looked straight at the sun to temporarily blind myself and said nothing. your plan backfired, made that sharpquick popping sound that terrifies the warmhearted birds in the plum trees, that shakes the neighborhood for a moment, the birds and the girls with our heads in the trees, snapping us out of it. the sun had nothing to say of my performance. one little branch fell, under the weight of some miniature winged thing i never even saw, and you were gone.



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homesick

back home i have tiny lights strung all twinkle-flip around the edges of the planet- i live on a planet with the makings of an urban bird's-nest, of books with colored bindings, spraypaint blackchip bookshelf, pokerface moon poking lightfingers at sidewalk couchcushions. jelly-jar flower stolen at moonlight bicycle. spell your name in the rain between trees, sharpen a pencil with your teeth. i only invited you because here you are, finding yourself tongue-tied, halloween cat-tailed, flutterspent at the edgey curb between this and that. rat-a-tat-tat. tapping your own lip with your own finger. blurring yourself in the mirror.

back home i have a dresser drawer with exactly 2 condoms and 2 plastic tests. oops. an invisible picture i took of us. bent heart rocky: missing. hankercheif crumpled with salt, snot, sweat where you draw a map of the bed. flowerbox wound yellow with years; bear-colored clump of hair; silken steel string; a thimble. memory of floating compass. memory of grain formation; rice castle. memory made of water and fallen leaves. memory bald, empty, layers of paint as thick as the crust of the earth. sometimes when the earth is a pie and you are slit at the center, steam-seeping your inside heart out. children make beautiful music when they dream. the picture of them. the curl of them like birds, bent, sip the air up like a sugar-cloud.

i am falling out in another place.

i miss everything at once.

spin birds up in my twinkled web of sleep.


breathe.


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spanish for bird (from Hunger Mountain, print only - no longer available)

i want to meet a man who keeps a clean, old paintbrush in his pocket. you know, horse-hair. featherdown. a man who keeps a pocketfull of feathers. the tips of my fingers have gone missing, numbed by a certain empathy for pending weather, autumn and all that comes after, a certain picking-up-of-habits, nailbiting as a sign of solitude, sorrying, emotional wandering, taking out your worry and wonder on yourself. i meet a man with a pink plastic-bag full of bones. a man collects birds. reads me winged words in the way their feet are flung. once i found a green bird, the color of a perfect lime in a picture of a lime. flavor-color that sweet pucker on one's tongue. a man leaves his window open all night. the pattering heart of a sweet-lime bird is flung into the sky and bursts into a star i get to name. i want to meet a man who lets me name a star. when i name the star i bite my lip and name it pajaro, spanish for bird. i meet a man who worries that it's too late for chickens. "it's never too late for chickens," i tell him. the moon is in my eyes. i meet a man in the dark. we sit on a green parkbench, breathing giant quiet tree-air. a pirouette of fog lifts the sky away from us, just a little. lets the edge of a secret in, under a crack in our grass doorframe. i meet a man who holds his cards close to his chest. a man who is sleepy. a man who keeps looking at nothing in the distance. who puts his head on my shoulder under the streetlamp and sighs, as if we were lovers instead of strangers. i want to meet a leaf-eyed man who whistles like flying, like slicing the clouds to nibbles, pictures, brush the blue away from my secret expanse of stars. exposition: i want to meet a moon-flavored man who will kiss me on the lips. .
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"dreaming" :: kyle m. stone

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love-affair in green

dear,
come back tomorrow, won't you? they're almost finished turning me under again. tunneling through my stomach for their water-lines, a little lavender tractor idle, stained with spray-paint and rain. my crows collecting wasted papers, tall grey owl steps back and forth in cypress, the eucalyptus makes a small mess everywhere he is. i want you to gather my pigeon feathers and fill your pockets, i need your noticing where my trunks are stump. you're the only one to remember me rightly in my totality, unruly ecology— our secret rabble of wings; our trimmed things.

*

dear,
i've been slumped up book-piled indoors, white windowsill dusty, but the color of snow in the sun. it's been summer. are some of your winter-trees tossing cherry petals yet? with you last, i thought, "i want you like a dish of sweet-cream for a kitten." like needing your even green gullies, tunneled tummy. your pinprick tips of mistletoe, little hard red blood-berries, apple-tint ink-blots in green. where and what were you before this? this morning in my "i smell purple!" i thought you heard me. tomorrow will be some other thing. all curtseying, cypress, your wing-shadow, soap-flower. when i finally find that dappled owl again.
see you then.
love ali.



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untitled in the city, number three

yesterday all rain was tilted at diamond-shaped angles to the street and i hid out in a rainy day bookstore with wet wood and old books with broken bindings and gesture-drawn portraits of old poets on the covers. oppen, olson, ferlinghetti. i drew a wet gesture, drawing of my face in the rain on a fogged up window i drew little red-ruffled, surrender, umbrellas collapsed in my eyes. little blue diamonds of displacement under. the staircases were damp, were old honey-colored in the back of a cupboard. i clomped various stacks of books up and down them that said things like "bird feeder's snow cap sliding off", or "a lurching frozen from a warm dream. Kiss me." or "cross of sponge and good will through the center of the eye", or "Favorite body of water: Arctic Ocean." i held them until i made them be quiet against my body. we each started to dry out a little, one by one. that took a while. the books were heavy and held my heart up.

today the clouds look like underexposed eggplants. today the clouds are ambling in like soft sleepy soldiers. today the clouds are making pockets to see through, today the city is a submarine and everybody's riding in it, underwater weighted down with our weird dreams and our broken things and our puddley streets and alleys and our hiding, and the clouds will make little round windows for us to see through to the surface of the sky, where the light is.


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i only say four things and the fifth i keep to myself.

1 with the sun coming against brick buildings and slabs of grass, wrapping our legs around the city. around all our absences, our missing crickets and chances and keys. around all the old books curling the curb with abandoned words. lovers drinking paper teacups in windows, lined up in cobbley rows, talk about being waist-deep in water, walking against the river, a harvest of lilypads in the bathtub. everybody rubbing dreams, crusted from the corners of our eyes. our collection of pigeons and crows. all the quiet sharks of our imaginations hungry, circling, weightless, searching for the ocean.

2 all my important papers are shifting between boxes or mouths. i'm signing my name in the back of a red tinted book with a leg on the cover. the leg on the cover does not look like my leg. my leg is muscled and soft with a thin felt of hair. i am a mammal and the book doesn't reflect that. heart like a hummingbird the book doesn't reflect that. my feet like freight-train hobos the book doesn't reflect that. make-shift whimsical tinted my underwater blues and greens the book doesn't reflect that. this, my salty yellow breeze in the window tickling the houseplants. the purple bruises and sandbox bags of sad hidden under the bed. the faded black letters of the streetsigns that keep me. the world atlas blown open in the gutter with its rain-pages, torn-out continents, curious pink countries, the book doesn't reflect that.
i am stuffing my hand-drawn map of the city in my mouth for people to make sense of what i say. my legs are stronger than everybody's, i wrap them around the skyline and tilt it to my liking. my feet are sneaky. second-hand knee-high spy-socks, hiding under my pants. the dreamtime compass built in to sneakers, my heart. my fingers that reach under the table, not over, trying to touch. the book doesn't reflect that.

3 "dear san francisco, warm up. your pigeons' lavender talons are stuck to the wires. i am looking for a rotary phone, i am looking to time-travel. i want to dip my body down into the seaside renaissance of your concrete belly. love ali. your fog is building pictures of pelicans in my hair. your faulty edges snapping off like cypress, or like eucalyptus skins peel away in winter strips. dear san francisco. tumble our corners down, surrender us in your crumble, tip us into the sea."

4 if it was watermelon sugar that would be a good thing. being alive living in an apple tree makes me tired. i started sprinkling cinnamon on everything. i am only thirty percent better than i was before. parts of me are worse. one part of me wants to find an avalanche to build a snow-cave in. one part of me wants to sit in a shallow tidepool sifting the sand for starfish. one part wants to put myself on witch-trial and find out what the november village really thinks of my slapdash ways. part of me misses the mountains, surrounding, sharp-capped with circling snowbirds and ice. the same part misses rivers, clumping sneakered feet from one rock to the next, the mud of being born into flower, the balance on fallen logs left for crossing. that part of me muggy, doe-nibbled, vegetable garden, fireflies to float my irises. that part grounded, a blanket of pumpkin-colored leaves falling. all parts of me are swollen with longing, this i build my self on the inside of. all parts of me for cycles, to be better; loneliness, to be worse. all parts in disagreement. all parts rusted, oiled, standby, sugar, chugging that old sour heart along. the path home will be lined with wild strawberries, no bigger than a thimble. if you look closely. if it rains and the birds and you listen

5





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storm systems

my word for today is hard-hearted.

the rain and the wind are hard-washing the neighborhood. one window started leaking, i let the rain in okay but the wind comes with it. they are wedded to one another. marriage has always been bullshit. the soggy book on the shelf used as a barrier for obdurate weather. i use up all the words i can find in the dry spine of the dictionary, poke around in there with my compass and my flashlight until the backdoor blows open and i have to get up to nail it shut again.

there are at least two words for everything. i guess i'm bent on the weather, storm-watch gusting to ninety miles per hour, coming in from the coast through the side door, knocking people over, headed for the rockies. bent on my refusal to bend over, i roll up a threadbare beach-towel and sponge the rain from the cracks in the window. i procrastinate curtains. i taste the ocean in the bucket i catch it in. my tough skin soft and salty and untugged.

every morning i think, "maybe i'll build a bridge today." i think, "that tree that keeps me is going to snap in half," or "my word for today is hard-hearted". i file my round things to straight and sharp. i chisel myself to a point, my body hard, just a tool. i ache somewhere hot in the middle and press cool chamomile words against it. water piles itself against concrete with nowhere to go.

i am writing this as an unmarked letter i'll send down the stormdrain.
i am about to get very wet. i am about to get salt in my eyes. i am about to never be dry again. i am married to this, imposter winter, all my best trees snap in half, fling their birds across the sky.

tomorrow i will build the bridge.


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weather forcast

i read your weather forcast every week after my own.
our storms that chase each other.
the sticky link.
your eyes like streetlamps that go out.

i sit in a pile with richard. i try to
remember the flowerburgers. his
ladies who wear plastic
fruit on their hats.

my ripe edges start to mush.
swatted by fruit flies.
birds wait at the window
for someone to notice me.

everyone’s hungry
for something.


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the language of three-way mirrors

"let's dive in and turn up green in search of our roots," oh. bob dylan on the record player. contrast in diction, Spanish Boots. a bumbling mumbo jumbo extravaganza. i feel it coming on.
i'm slurping my soup alone, saving my radish for the horses, not knowing how to read you this time. hesitating. orange and gray. pulling my hood up.

"look up Make-Believe in the dictionary, it's there. mark it." page four-twelve. put your feather in the crack. the receding hairline fracture between obscurity and exposition. your make-shift whimsy. your fanciful fits of sleep. so many tongues loosened, sidewinded toungue twister, naked on the board, red plastic pointer spinning. "gotcha. you're out." the brilliance of all your bulbs burning up. a light show.

use your plain brain to imagine my fancy cortex. do i look red to you? redder than normal? no, i haven't been in the sun. i've been underground, i have dirt between my teeth. see?

how am i supposed to read you, you riddle me with running to the books. everything keeps falling off the shelf, the spanish-english translator fell on my head again. pull me apart to see the mechanisms that move you. don't be shy. i don't feel like playing right now. cool september sun to close our wounds over. i am trying to promise.


hulking the oxford off the living-room-lectern to wear it, to defend my papery grace. get it? all these people with no voices, what difference does it make? he wants to know if i am happy here and have i eaten any apples yet. i have, and i'm not, and i'm hungry, and there are no apples left. my lips are red like the letter. sweet-blood swarming with fruit flies. apple-juice sloshing my tear ducts. how many fingers are you holding up? while i'm un-pinning un-sent envelopes from my chest, the elephants are stomping the un-book to shambles. i'm hiding in the laundromat or the library, i forget which. i want your favorite books to be trees like me. i want to let you live in my house like a sleepy cat. leave it at that. beautiful & awful & ridiculous like

being alone, like "Stranded in Peru?!" like pennsylvania in the station wagon, the suns go down like apricots, like running with crutches, like your mother eats blue-green algae, like taking your pants off in the parking lot, like "what's another word for Faithlessness?" like falling cauliflower coral, yellow apples with brown leaves, like Danger in love with your imaginary friend, like timelessness, endlessnesss, everything that won't stop in multiplicity. fluffy bunnies scrambling the warm cobblestone hearth on their big, dumb feet. like noses rubbing for luck. fluffy gray kissing. like Make-Believe in the dictionary, spelled-out, hyphenated: soft blue guts exposed.

spell it out. there is no game. i believe in it.


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birds who eat flowers

concrete noun proper noun me to pieces / out the window past halfway shades birds circle where megan says “avenues of doom / spirit of she isolated in time” / form is the form is the form is how it sits on the page / sick with the furniture / spicer waiting in the parlor without dinner for days / levels of texture / textured birds on the wind / close to the ocean you can feel it in the fog / i lift things because how can i not / what to do watching the birds want to cross things off the list / add another new at the bottom: “i love a red window” / poems as petals that fall off / i want to be delayed / i want to eat paragraphs / i want to be eaten by birds


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untitled (snow poem #5)

dear,

i'm here in bed in the room i grew up in. i didn't grow up in the room, the room grew in around me. elbows into the windows and fell out onto the roof slope, tumbled myself in lilac and birdcall, tulip squash to run to the forest, sneak to the highway slip, that long yellow line, long spiderweb road that spattered me onto the atlas like paint, like spark, like rain.

you said "a raindrop on the highway", then "fuck the floor away from", you know i want to, you know that. i'm on my belly in the bed in the room that grew in like dandelion roots and sputtered me out the window like milkweed, somewhere later i stumbled into you in words and we tied our tongues together to make meaning, pushed our breath together for drawing pictures on all the old bedroom doors leaning on the hallway, shadowy and unhinged.

you said bricks and hammers and what are you building? you said earthquake and "you're biting your lip—" and then the city trembles when i tell it. you said "red. red." you said home not in your mouth you said. i start to know your back where it curves and your voice when you're reading. i start to know how to fog you and press my fingers against your glass, pressing pictures. i taste paper in my mouth. sharp breath of catching letters on our tongues. i know what you look like with your mouth open.

home is a place full of whimsy and nightmare and snow-persons and plate boundaries and none of it means me. home is birds flying into the wind. the walls. home is a constellation i want someone to show me the parts of and the history of home is holes in the sky.

do you miss me?

my body is fidgety, whining for it. full of empty to breaking. i want a sex of words. i want lips that can breathe me can speak my round places like they mean it. can press wet poems into me like leaves, press me like a leaf in a book, pick me up and hide me away from where i fall.

i fell off the city like a carousel.

the horizon here filled with silhouettes of places i probably miss.

out in the center of the pond i made an angel in the snow and thought of you.


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why it is important to behave more like a book

i believe in letters. at the moment, i believe in the v, for vixen, vantage, and volatile. reading is a virus, plagues me in my sleep. all my books grow lips in the night and whisper from the shelf. they have all fallen in love with me and with each other. they paint my dreams in underwater maps, rearrangements of lines, squishy stolen internal organs, wispying trees. they move me on a paper sailboat, or sail me through the forest on a red-flyer wagon. they banish me to a makeshift igloo on the roof or to clutching my talons to the tail of a kite, sailing over the city. they arrange themselves according to hue and binding.

all the vintage books of poetry are hunkered together like antique architecture, all their lovely invisible cobwebs strung from one to the next like old clotheslines between buildings. on this one hangs an empty nightgown, between these two a pair of gnats, wound. this one has a rust-colored maple leaf suspended in mid-air, time-stopped between creased covers, speckled in gold, all of it. backbones balanced upright in history to make meaning between. these books are patient doorframes. i spin their pages like a map of the world. i am the woman of myths and bullshit. these books are my piled lovers, pulling me, limbering me, breathing me, believing me, teaching me the papery secrets to dreaming.


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why metaphor can't hold me up

i have drawn falling girls down the margins, their triangular party-dresses slant, tilted with wind. i have drawn dismantled windows, or windows with splintery frames and glasses that don't match, perforated in endless ellipses, mapping trails to mystery places off the page.

i have been reading and writing you with all my attention, intention, intoning you to frame your newness. your unknown book-ness. your blank spine that tells nothing.

i build a dangling gate, to slip through in the night, to access the curious crooked space you populate. the latch is rust-colored and squeaks and flakes and was never taught to catch. A and B doesn't equal anything. all letters spill up like sparks. the subtle scent of sweat that collects between words. the entire alphabet splashed up like a crystal film of slippery possibilities, pulsing, palpable, liquid friction, glistened over the sky.

nice try.


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why they should make a statue out of me and put it in the museum garden

drifting day, breeze from the wrong direction, movement through stillness, palm trees and green oxidizing you. growing all your extra arms. windy mythical half-hearted, evasive, snapping the stretched rubber band of your intention back, slapping your heart against your palm as a threat, or a proposition, or to warm it.

weathered like this in grass, slip-up under these wooden benches, your asleep-with-crickets heart, thievery-reach for it down night-lit gopher holes. your dangled-from-a-broomstick heart, zag it, sailing it through stormclouds like a paper airplane. your french-press sleeping-bag getaway-car heart, nap it in flight, lunar, bronze-dipped, antiquated, albatross.

cracked-back from rearranging the weather, your knotty shoestrings, your mangle, record to calamity, scratching your bad maps in the outside walls. you say, "this way", you say "apocalypse my apples", or "believe in me". hunkered over your mossy toadstool dog-table, stolen records and typewriter skipping.

you wrap yourself up in butcher's paper, where the road forks and begins.

you stuff yourself into the broom closet, hide in your accumulated clutter and dust.

you build yourself into a fort with ragholes, mopheads, crashing tools down, wearing an antique copper bucket on your wrist to collect the silt, attempt at catching all your underwatered moments that leak.

imaginary momenting, emergency exit spark and sputtering out. made-up fairystory swells, poking your fancy abscess to bursting, to push through the cracks in your fingers, pool on your shoes.

the wrong direction is not the way the wind blows. chop your tincture garden down before the flood starts.

you grow things to interrupt them.


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animals

“let's loll on a sunny rock, lick our wounds,” you said. you were tilted toward me, you were reaching away like cypress. i am pretending to listen but the pelicans—"You And I,” you said, escaped with my family, i played with bits of string as a kid. birds joining forces, scooping up schools of fish, spitting them in the air, makes me want to shake my elbows out like a chicken. a barnyard bird, i crooked my arms and sprout barn-owl wings out: owls fly silently, prey to nothing. “pray to Him, He’s testing you,” you said. “prey to nothing,” i say, without looking up. or i looked up, but not at you. i look all the way up. i am looking for the california condor with his Bald Head and his Endangered Species and his Mates For Life. his weirdness among other birds, his impossibility. they are tracking him.

i write my name and cross it out, the leaves turn orange for no reason in july / in cahoots or sympathy with southern wildfires / iris patches that re-name me. i cross myself out with the straggly branches. the starlight mints. buttercream cala lilies lopped over, top-heavy, tired of living so close to the ocean. you are not the ocean like saltwater taffy, like red or yellow plastic buckets full of sand. you are the ocean like salty flowers, like all sorrowful things that crust up in disappointment, your careful draw-bridge drawn, all stone lion statues who lose their pledge-paw to the weather. their noses corroded in the jetstream of history. sharp things. i am pliable, i have edges that bend. you are the favorite wrinkled poem that gives me papercuts. i keep you under my pillow. you Invader of Dreams: you are unexpected.

”stop startling me like that,” you say, “I forgot, I...got distracted...” i pour the teabag on the floor because you’re too close and i can feel your breath breathing me, the chamomile, the jasmine, the peppermint. the jasmine is a seed-pod that sprouts up a starry white-pink forest when it hits the linoleum. green flecks pepper my sneakers. a moment, yes. i forget you. i stand there quietly, thinking to breathe, biting my lip, then parting the leaves again, remembering. it smells like dusty storybook elf-love or trees that come alive when i cluck my tongue. “smells like someone’s grandma’s house,” you say, muffled, your mouth full of flowers.


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the accumulation of dreams

1 this is the boat i dive, electrified, that i crash nosedown in the mud between years, i stick there like gum on your shoe, stuck like god is stuck like gum to your shoe, this is involuntary mythology, this is the ugly stuff our beautiful imaginations are built of, this is the mortar that holds my hand-drawn legs up, my recipe for a cherry-jar filled with sand, for non-nourishment, for drinks that taste like holding everything back behind your lips.


2 this is the rift that encircles me, this is me circled like a broken bird. this is the us of me, marked. this is the postscript to insistence. my pebbled fists clenching empty. my knuckles scraped against stacked paper. this is the us of you confabulated, doomed, surrounded. this is a turn. this is my turn, or yours. this is the us of me salting your sores. circling your delicate wounds with my clumsy twigs and crayons, my endless collections of alphabet sugar.


3 this is applause. this is a girl drummer. this is memory, splashed like everybody dancing drinks across the ballroom. this is fable or prequel or pattering your palms against mine, uncreating a mess, rewinding our eyes to the first time when the feathers in my pockets were just feathers in my pockets. this is how you look at me like that. this is to forget me how i bat my lashes, laced with starry things. this is the sand dollar in your wallet, waiting, this is the emptying of your magic hat. this is birds don't fly out. it's all made up.


4 this is watery sleep-gesture. this is your body how i imagine it. this is me and you in a basket, left on the doorstep of an abandoned house. this is where an owl lives. this is where i balance my secrets with creations. this is full. this is a color without a name. this is a picture of you i colored on the back of a box. this is the color of your decisions. your organs rearranging, your heart and your lungs disagreeing, this is the knot i keep tying. your eyes are the attic window. this is the way to escape.


5 these are my guts.
this is the gut-boat i drive, this is the leak in my good intention. this is when i lose the last oar. this is me staring at myself in a gutter-puddle. this is cupping water to my lips. this is standing up as straight as i can. this is me sleepy. this is me bewildered. this is me full of shit. this is me looking at you. this is the trapdoor to our dreams: these are my hands: these are my bruises. this is me a liar. this is me in love. this is what the blue sky smells like.
i'm telling you because i know.


today is my birthday.


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nose to the ground

back between your cobbled trees rubbing your toes in clover trying not to steal anything from anyone.

stuffed my beloved. autumn in a box.

that's the thing about a magpie, about clanking the rackety dial around, turning in a quarter, everybody wins.

shiny things we leave in dark places to remember where we came from, to move away or move back accordingly.

shadow puppets canoodled on tree trunks. riding buses in the rain. a charlie chaplin yellow umbrella tattooed on my wrist.

this week the paperbox tells me the same thing pressed in newsprinted piles, stacks of hollow advice weather-rusted like a stump.

apples to apples, dust to dust.

trust yourself kid, trust yourself or you'll fuck it all up.

i don't know who these planets think they are, deciding my weeks like this, contorting the stars just so, just so i can't find my way back if my mind changes.

as it turns out, a day without wind is maddening.

or, a windless afternoon is better for juggling.

but those dead leaves just hang on the tree, not falling, having to wear the mask of indian summer, breathing strained, shallow

little caterpillar eye-holes poked, covered.
one copper penny apiece.


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how to conjure rainclouds by candlelight

our voices are wedded to our eyesight. i sense you and that you are somewhere in the city. your brown eyes wide, or soft, watery. looking at a thing or at a person. my eyes think of you. losing a thought, or toasting it, or making a toast to it, or burying it up to its neck in cut grass. there was always so much glass in the way. when i take off my glasses i can see you more clearly.

i keep straightening you, smearing you in a line through my eye, stretching you to a median, to the place that separates me from the ground. a desert in bloom. circling language like an animal feeling in the dark for the right place. being sure meant nothing. our focused negative space. my first-person present-tense that is exhausting. my ears that are stuffed with tissue and damp, windblown umbrellas.

our negotiations and contradictions, our pre-orchestrated derailment. our veer. our dreary short with fuzzy, underexposed photographs of the neighborhood we took place in. i wanted us to extend past the outline of our bodies. of our fitful rhythms, our accidental alchemy. of all of our things, which were never ours, which were only mine or yours, or mine and yours, or nobody's, everybody's, but never ours.

our delusions, obsessions, the poetry of our deconstructing a story that was never constructed to begin with. our fictions, our fictionalized flight and fancy. the illegal inhabitation of our world. it was as though there were sheets of glass between us, between all the parts of us, disallowing us from confusing our bodies into one. but still, even now, my own smell seems to remind me of you.

i am eating this poem with a splintered wooden spoon, like cold soup, or warm milk, or dishwater. grazing my fingers along our rusty iron railing. peeking over the edge into the sea.

i conjure your image, or your laughter, to keep me company. your thick, gray promise of rain on the horizon that keeps me. i keep the perforated specimen bag that contains our glass heart. there would have been a great deal of rain at the beginning of the story


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john ashbery's hat

how musey, how the leaves don't fall. how that tree with the flower outside your wrought-iron window tells time. it starts out blood-orange, peach-fuzz, shaving-hair down the drain, goes red like a plastic fire truck in a fire. pollute the sidewalk with spaghetti petals, angel-hair, how the rosemary blooms all year long, look how you drop it down your shirt. your fingers smell like spice and earth. do you understand what i'm telling you?

it sounds like autumn, the sun being busy and leisurely at the same time, to be stung by the sun's bees and have it not matter, the world-bridging, the pumpkin-yellow light through cypress, the children won't sit still, rummaging through their brand-new pencil boxes. can't that child be made to stop practicing? personal pronouns expand, long sun swells the moment. clarify the spelling of your name. last name first, you know who you are.

ankles to handlebar, places round themselves out of the photograph, time unspooling somewhere along the way, almost a half a mile late, in the middle reaching in both directions with one arm. one was Dreamland but somehow it's all dreamy, the brown tweed brim of your floppy-cap, brass butterfly wings, copper shoes worn by someone's baby father made into a keepsake plaque for the fainting room. your mother's hand-wrung apron string, patterned with poppies and rotted docks.
you're not quite out of the water yet

floating your transparent bones

Dreamland has other pastures

rappelez-vous que l'oms vous sont


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UNTITLED (NOTHING-SACRED-TO-SAY-BALLET), 1979


Welcome to the shoebox. Stitchy inventory of an urban fairy-tale: messy marmalade bedsheet stitched into a curtain; dusty luck-tree with snailed leaves; lopsided reading chair under a burnt-out bulb; a four-inch plastic doll with striped stockings and no shirt; a folded triptych of trees with two panels dangling. A dried seahorse afloat midair. A leaf-rubbing. A starlit teacup dreaming of tea.

The crystal of a kaleidoscope, crushed. A penny in a pill-bottle. A single pigeon feather fastened to your hat. A bazaar of torn paper-corners shouting the corkboard. All houseplants tilted. Everything exists inside of this box; your sky is a box-top. Scrapped-up theater in the wet memory of your eyes. An old blue book bound with allusion.

There's a boxfull of nouns to punctuate the window, they crowd the sill like raggedy orphans around a fallen bird's nest, all their soft little ears sticking out. There's nothing to hear. Quiet trappings with their toes poked over the edge of your crowded shelf. The ground is just below the surface here, piled with nouns to break other places open. Nothing is a forbidden thing to see through. These are the parameters.

Tapping the tacks with a toy hammer, pinning the floor to the wall, all your bumbling efforts at grace make art. A painted drawer filled with imagined mothballs and smooth antique cameos of forgotten women. "Anything imagined or remembered can twist off into something else," they say, "Beauty is about the improbable coming true suddenly." Director exit stage-left like a villain, her cape of crickets vanishing behind her. Your silent conductor slips through the cardboard trapdoor. A curtain goes up and there you are.


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the squander


pocketing our hands and walking away, sleepwalking, moon-pulled. such wild and lonesome things that we've become. buried in the heavy snow that holds the house up, i won't be seen again until the fence melts.

all our trembling bridges made of eyelashes & braille, milkweed & mustard, wild carrot & clover. my heart is an enthusiastic, old sinner. your scruples are shameless, oozing with god. lobbed with contradiction. snatching up all of my only moments.

you climb my giant chestnuts like kudzu. you come undone like loose buttons on old pajamas, a pile of brown and yellow leaves kicked over. erecting sparkled mausoleums of our doomed chance, snow isn't overrated.

my magnificent attempts to throw myself out the window. your big round marbley sea-lion eyes, watered down with indecision, looking after me, flooding my gills with your honeyed breath. i bet my last piggybank quarters and you bet the lint from my pockets, calling my bluff that is impossible to prove, winning the pot by default.

all your careful drinks taste like medicine. cooking your heart on a wrought-iron spit. your hands move like sparrows.

i keep coaxing the pirates. backing you onto the plank. i keep walking out into the trap.

we can scrub and rinse and rinse me and i'll never come clean.

sit still and i'll show you.


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