front zipper no one asked how i wanted. never in the hourglass & inkwell onward. in the mood ripe-tide i took a needle to the glass jar. siphone a single hair & named it "look." on the porch a proud ironing board. tomb stones playing crochet. grandmother trees knitting sleep-hats for babies. i used to tell the boy to use his pocket knife & whittle me a house at the edge of my own sadness. sleep with me there where dead birds became pocketbooks. stealing money from the collection basket, i have been to hell for vacation. heat humid body floating funeral down stream. basket ball courts with cigarettes hanging from their lips. i'm often tempted to ask god for a rose in my hair while i sleep but i know he doesn't respond to challenges. the proof is in the parade. a bass thrumming in my left thigh. at the subway station you & i were almost beautiful. took me by the lip & yanked downward. how you remember me & how i remember you are two separate animals. don't tell me it was good. a soup of headline & highline. shoes crumped by the door like crab shells. several months cracked open coconut. everything is tropical on the trembling yellow side of depression. my loneliness used to have a same but now it waits in the sink to be washed & put to use.
Author: Robinfgow
06/23
countdown it was sooner than we thought-- the red number in the drain. the shoe hovering just above a slam. all the tea leaves had promised at least a decade but then oceans turned inside out. slugs fell like tears. barefoot, i went out to the garage where my father knit his coffin from steel wool & ice. told him not to worry anymore. what comes to pass will come to pass. the cloud of noise floating just over the highway. he stared like a pin cushion's face. i packed all my love into jelly jars. watched it buzz & limp. ate false strawberries with bare hands & wiped the stain off on any availible lampost. up the street, a home was being auctioned off to a hedge fund or a ghost. i'm rooting for the ghost. in the crawl space cats were telling their children the truth. i wish someone would have done so to me when i was small & pink-handed. instead, bibles rung like bells. i washed my face in the occasional river. then the time rushing like a slit throat. everything outward even the orange heart. even the woven basket. even the new blanket. even the school of minnows. even the elsewhere & the maybe maybe somewhere. all that gone. silk like & blue. kneeling on a tongue. my father worked & worked & it was still not here & i still was the only one watching as the numbers shed themselves--as the sun shrank & swallowed-- as the coffin became a slipper-- as a moment became a bookshelf thing. a paperweight arriving tethered to a white balloon.
06/22
welcome mat the entrance was a wasp under a mason jar. you & me other other side telling the wasp to consider the positives. pollination is at an all time high. so much pollen & way too much nation. at his front door i pretended to be reading something on my phone but really i was checking the weather in san antonio (a place i've never been). i am sadly not a vampire but i do have to be invited inside. i need two doors worth of space. we brought the furniture in through the window of the new apartment so no one would see exactly what we were carrying. sometimes, i dream of babies. no having one or being one, just trying to imagine what their thoughts are like. i am trying to return to my own bliss. i want to be cared for in the most drastic of ways. food brought to my skull. a carridge to deliver me. i remember the afternoon my father installed the doorbell in my parent's house. he tried three sounds: sharp bing, church bells, & a soft chime. we pleaded for him to keep the church bells. no one rings the doorbell. no one wipes their feet either so we track the world all over the house. at your house, i always forgot to take off my shoes & i say, "i'm sorry i forgot." i am sorry even if only in a minute way. on the "sorry" spectrum i am hovering close to the middle at all times. we built the house. all but the door & gazed at the hole where it should be. i told you i was scared to build. you carried a bucket of nails & slung the hammer over your shoulder. told me not to worry. no to worry at all.
06/21
pineapple august we ate nothing but vertebra. sour & sharp. slept tangled in our bareness, freshly quartered by our father's adolescence where he was a produce boy. sheltered melon. paring knife through the bone. nothing was bruisable then, we were so sugar & so hurry. everything yellow in the early evening. finger thumb. finger thumb. turning on our walkie talkies & standing at the end of driveways to talk to the moon. she would say, "bed time is soon" & we would reply "i love you too much to sleep." i could have had any kind of future, or, so a pigeon once sung on an electrical wire. everywhere is a city & everywhere isn't. cutting the lawn for god. a silver bowl sweating like a stomach. hair on my arms. hair on my neck. cicadas trying to go back to sleep & wailing because they cannot. this is the awake awake. there is nothing wider. place marrow in my mouth & wait for the kindling fires. place a stick of incense in my mouth & pace the house until it feels vascular. i'm hungry for nothing but fruit.
06/20
familial dentistry we have crowded mouths. once, i opened mine & a swarm of cicadas flew out & into a nearby tree. how long ago was seventeen years? i have been stealing teeth since i was two when i reached, fecklessly into my uncle's throat where rested a tooth & a bundle of sticks. you know what they call a bundle of sticks? the tooth was made of jade stone. the tooth shape-shifted into a lighter. watching him smoke a cigar on the porch. sweet leaf smell. rolling myself in a leaf for safety. i have so many crooked teeth. i look in a mirror & i see gravestones jutting from dirt. often, widows will come & leave flowers on my tongue. my mother, stirring a pot of promises, has lemon rinds for gums. unlik her i'm not prone to citrus. nothing sharp about my talking. everything is air pilot & pizza kitchen. throwing a handful of teeth into the air. a spoon for craddling teeth into the garden. planting & hoping for more to grow. sharks, as you know, they keep yielding teeth their whole lifetime. no shortage there. my body makes me feel so deeply un prepared for my own life. who decided on the tongue? the lips? two row boats. paddling harder. in the dentist chair, my father clasped his hands together like an acolyte. asked for the procedure to be over as the dentist pried a carrot from his soil. roots down all the way into the ocean. he cried i held his hand. when the tooth was out i pocketed it & i said, "what tooth? where?" i have it still. yellowed along one side & prone to minnow swimming. someday, when i need it, i'll fix his tooth in my own mouth root & all
06/19
cow heart garden in the first chamber we were burger-hungry & ready to grind. pushed meat through a hole the size of a penny & waited on the other side for a process to begin. often, the flowers bloomed like severe hearts. pink blood in our faces. the oxygen blue of early july. then, in the second we asked each other's middle names. held them like quarters for a future machine. made all the wonderful unkeepable promises. your nose against my neck. your body a school of rings. all the while the cows crouched on their hind legs trying to be teenagers. we snacked on onion grass & drank milk from the stream. wiped our lips with leaves. in the garden, the sky lilted towards sherbet but we didn't bring any spoons. alas a missed opportunity for a headache. our shoes floating like viking funerals down the creek. a snake in the grass asking for our vascular systems. i wanted so badly to make a life out of you. carve your face into a foyer or a vestibule & likewise you hung your leopard print coat on my back. in the third chamber the drought arrive & made all the life clench. field of fists. the heart itself, tired from its own animalness. turned butterfly with waiting. flew down my throat & then you were gone.
06/18
grenade crates my father puts the weaponry to sleep. cradles each bomb & each detonation. in the basement, he collects war like flowers. waters a machine gun & stroke the forehead of a missile. drinks amber beer from a thermos & reminisces about never happened. everyone is a son every so often. when i stand in doorways i am one. i belong to my father & his beloved destructions. a hole in the stairwell wall where he became a puncture. anger is syrupy. sticks shoes to the kitchen floor. attracts ants & cockroaches. once, i bought a single bullet. a secret. carried it under my tongue safe to my bedroom. sat it on the windowsill & listened to silver hum. my little child waiting for me to show him my own threats. i couldn't do it. fired him into the ceiling where he escaped & is now a hot air balloon. yet still i miss his danger when he could have inhabited a barrel. when he could have thrown himself straight ahead. i tell my father i love him more than anyone else in my family. he digs the basement wider to have more room for the weaponry. have you ever been an arsenal? i fear i will wake up as one. will see him standing over me, ready to make use of my design. when i'm not a son i shake boyhood off like a dandelion losing her face. i crouch in the grass & converse with the machinery of cicadas. listen to my father's bones as he builds another basinett for a grenade to sleep in.
06/17
canines our teeth barked all night. spoke to us of future fires & a need to tie our shoelaces to god. mouths closed, we huddled in the closet hoping to not be discovered. the stars were all teeth & so were the lamplights. glowing enamel. sleeping on the tongue, i dissolved & was born again as a toad. toothless, i was briefly liberated from all thoughts of destruction. once, we had a t-rex tooth displayed in the living room. it would growl whenever anyone ate meat. we promised we would share but the tooth was greedy. the first time i kissed a boy our teeth clacked like tap shoes. then, he bit my lip & i became the trout who wants the hook. often, i would dangle myself from the ceiling by the cheek or the tongue. even caught myself generating gills whenever i showered. the boy then became nothing more than a diagram & i likewise became an example. leaned into every reflective surface to check my teeth. used to crave sharper canines. crawled on all fours in the hopes it would unhoax my feral. nothing. nothing at all. rounded gumdrop teeth. spitting the sugar out. spitting the sea weed out. told the teeth to hush. nothing was on fire. not quit yet. in a decade or so maybe but by then we could be so gone. could be in another planet or solar system. the sun could have gone home, leaving us in the last beautiful dark. it is always worth agonizing over the future. by doing so we keep it shiny & alive. my teeth knew exactly what they were doing. barking, yelling, pushing the inevitable farther away. tonight in my world there are no fires only a glass door knob & rows of teeth: patient & eager.
06/16
night vision i saw you in the fluent green of midnight with your face a matter of cattails & swamp. a swing dangled from the ceiling & i waited for you to ask me what i did with the stars. led them out on leashes to drink from my mother's face. each of us has more than three eyes. the eyes in the cupboard. the eyes for morning light. the eyes who see a bruise before it blooms. we are a family of watering cans. the tomatoes know how to get exactly what they want. once, i let you slice me open just to see how this could work. crawling on hands & knees in the dark kitchen where the pots & pans have no right to be so jovial. we could have been the whole cylinder. i'm realizing you aren't who i thought you were & likewise you're seeing all my heat. red spreading from my heart to my face. let's talk about depth & iron. let's eat crayfish from the water. our hands fresh & cold as stones. should we speak of this again? should we call it "legend" or should we brush the dead leaves over this old night's face. lay him to rest, his time like dew collecting. do you trust me to tell you what i do & don't see? i see an elephant in the backyard. i see a neighbor mowing his lawn at midnight. i don't see you at all.
06/15
the invention of waterfalls in the before times, there was no such thing as plummet. the water came down from the mountain geometrically: triangles & hexagons. swiped from the air by neighborhood children & used as rainbow-spitting prisms. the angels spun each shape. decided on distance & divison. as they worked they named the clouds after the children they wished they could have. their long dewy fingers knitting water into water. no one fell. not even small children. the ground was made of flurries. when dishes were dropped they'd just hover before laying down gently. not all acts of physics are scientific. in fact none of them all. the downward was something angels had considered often, wondering if it might make less work for them. they took turns testing the new feature, tossing a rock down a roof-side or spilling glasses of milk. they delighted in the hurtling. they even tried to fall themselves, nosediving from their clouds to no avail. they could invent falling but they could not fall themselves. some wept, wanting so badly to feel the air open around themselves. others thanked god for this gift of presence. yes, everything else would drop & crash, but not us they said. the waterfall was not intentional. it was a natural consequence of the contagious descension spreading all over the world. one day an angel went to knit to water & found it gushing from the mountain's throat. washed his hands in that deluge & then his face. soaked through his robes. he laughed. decided not to tell any other angels. this would be his private plunge. he dreamed all day of it-- water free of angles. water spilling & wild.