1/3

roostless 

when the chickens cannot find a roost
they find a skull. pile on each other
in the shoulder blades of the yard.
i do not have a roosting instinct
or even an instinct to come home when
the sky starts turning dreamsicle.
i have tried to be a wristwatch person
& even a person with wings. the middle
of the night chews my fingers. i stand
on the roof, peeling lobes off the moon.
it is ripe & i am not sharing. the chickens
use me as a roost. soon we will all
return to dinosaur. i believe in cycles
& thus the age of giganticness is on its way back.
i am hoping to be a herbivore but the chickens
suggest that being a carnivore is more fun.
more of a chase. i tell the chickens i will
care for them even when we are dinosaurs.
the rooster would make a very good terror.
he wants daggers for teeth & a fossil
on the other side of a dusty man's dream.
those solar system models never quite catch
just how wild the orbit is. the moons
are looking for a roost they will never have.
the dinosaurs too have stories & poetry
ready to breathe again. i think if we do not sleep
we do not have to grieve. we can keep moving
& the earth can keep moving & we can
go aquatic again. the chickens do not like
that idea. it rains microplastic. at first
i mistake a bead for a droplet of water.
on my tongue it feels prehistoric. a footprint
twisted into a pin-prick. i wait for the sun.
for the chickens to scatter & do their yard plucking.
worms who thought they could sleep in.
i stretch. feel like a trash bag of coat hangers.
weep for my big cavernous organs. for the lizard
i will soon be. for the time the orbit will take
to make us massive & somehow still roostless.

1/2

let me be less clear

i don't wake up like i used to.
instead i consider becoming a walnut.
hearty & winter-ready. my fist, eternal.
i used to order teeth in the mail
& send them back after using them.
it was greedy but you always have
to game the system while you can.
they catch up to you. they password protect
the stars. sunglasses on the dashboard.
everything has been getting louder lately.
i put peanuts into my ears. i do not think
there is much left that i need to hear.
i shoplifted jello in college
but not enough. i used to believe
that the cop cars were always coming for me
so i would give my face to a squirrel
& tell them, "run while you can." i am sick
of having something to say. i want to be
like the rocks who take centuries
to form a single word. they tell stories
only one another & the bones can read.
there is a man in my neighborhood who runs
miles & miles each day. i consider talking to him.
running to catch up. out of brief. his sneakers.
the cold january morning. i would
make up a story about my life.
running along & telling him that the beautiful farm
at the end of the road is mine. has been
in my family for centuries. nothing has
been in my family for centuries besides hunger.
an emptied tongue. a wooden spoon ground down
on one side from once catching fire.
everyone wants to learn a second language.
i want to speak crow bird. sit outside
& make jokes with them about the purple berries
that humans cannot eat but they can.
our stomachs are like knots in the soil's belt.
i have seen the truth. it is shivering
in the corner of the sky. lie to me until
we are both happy. i want to eat from bowl.
i want to get on my knees. watch the house shrink
in the dryer. lint sweaters for the rats.
the rooster screams. it is still the dead of night.

1/1

genie in a bottle

you can ask for more wishes. you can
rub every bottle in the house until it laughs.
you can travel in the desert
for years just to reach a stone.
humans are not the only creatures
who have the concept of a wish.
the birds too, dip their beaks into the sky.
skim off the cream. hear the giants
in the thunder. their boiling bones.
the story of the genie in the bottle is believed
to have come from a story of a demon
in a stone. the stone was black. probably obsidian.
museum locked, my partner & i look
at knives cut from the same rock.
our reflections are birds in their mirrors.
all the flesh on both sides of a tool.
in the gutted house, we look for an allen wrench.
none of our friends know what that is.
the year is over & i have not wished enough
or i have wished too much. i can never tell.
the neighborhood cats are wishing
on the moving truck. they rub the sides
with their cheeks. snow comes like
wedding rice. the story of the stone is
a cautionary tale. of what i am no longer sure.
i like to think i am better than a parable
but who would not touch such a structure
in the thirsty nowhere? the desert is endless.
will drown you in dust. we all barter.
his stone is cool to the touch despite
the hammering sun. despite the color.
on the other side, the demon, asmodeus,
tells me to let him free. you can even ask
for more wishes. the lanternflies on hamilton street
coax a demon from the shiny buildings. wish for
home. i am a third-generation hoarder.
i keep the wishes. i keep the lamp.
even keep the stone.

12/31

unscathed 

i used to have a friend who kept her tail.
i asked to see it but she declined. it was
rude of me to have asked. i only have
six fingers, the rest were bartered
to a police station in the new york
where i tried to explain i was just trying
to get home. sometimes when i ask
my gps to take me home it brings me to the cemetery
on the big hill in my hometown.
i do not try to stop it. we used to watch
the gnarled finger tree hole up the moon
like a communion wafer. beneath us
the dead held each other all the same.
i am trying not to think of everything in terms
of loss. what limb you kept to paddle
the boat up the creek. i of course have
fragments of you. a window in the house
that turns stained glass despite my protestations.
my left shoe always untied. that article
is going around again that says children leave cell
inside their mothers & mothers inside their children.
we are either rosary beads for the thumbs
of trees or we are skipped stones. i try to feed
our sick animal. she will not accept the food
even from my hand. as a child my father
used to have a rock tumbler that he would use
to process river stones & sell them. they were
smooth as whales. the evidence of loss. contours
in the world belly. i do not want to be
smooth but i do want to sleep in someone's pocket.
i wish i could lay the losses out on
a little blanket like a street vendor. then when
the night comes, curl up in them. roll myself.
a reverse carpet man. open me. see what you find.

12/30

canceled plans

the moon texts me to say,
"i can't do it tonight." there are
secret police. there was a siren
in the sky & i wasn't sure to what kind
of emergency sought to warn us of.
i tell the moon,
"it is probably better you stay home."
i am worried about when & if i will
see the street like it was the summer
before my teeth fell out. i have to say
i love canceled plans. i hold them
like dream terrariums. there we are
as painted turtles.
there we are watching the stars
buzz above the sink. my partner & i joke
about being opposites. he wants to
always be out in the world
i wants to stay inside. plant tomatoes
in the floorboards & see what grows.
when the sun texts me too, i start
to worry. someone has to plant their feet
in the sky. i once climbed a lighthouse
with my whole family. i imagined
living up there until i learned
where wings come from. i break more promises
than i ever have. tomorrow. tomorrow.
i need to stop pretending like
there are not cameras in the shape
of men. that there are not laws that come
like parasite babies. a body to hold.
a body to hollow. yes let's try again
tomorrow when the moon is here & the sun
is making tea again. i don't know
if that will stick. if i do not see you
pretend i have seen you. we can sit in separate
horrors & draw pictures on the ceiling
of our garden. the moon is running.
i found her shoes in the yard. scuffed white sneakers.
i look up methods to distract a god.
my purse fills with cell phones. an empty car
parked by the forest opening where
the hunters go to track down a buck.
i call you in the middle of an ice storm.
i say, "please be with me."

12/29

rock climbing gym at night

in the dark, we reach for teeth.
i am trying & trying not to panic.
lately i have been feeling like a ten-year-old.
reality bleeds. where does the blood
come from? i am in fifth grade & my stomach
is softer than it'll ever be again.
we eat windows. girls without genders.
i see a picture of friends from high school together.
wonder who i was then & if i was there at all.
the rocks, still bright in the dark.
i put time in a blender. housing crisis.
recession. i was born into a wound
that never closes. the wall that gets taller
& the spotter who leaves. no more legs
just the side of an animal. without
light you can pretend that you are
on the side of a great mountain. that they
will write legends about your hands.
reaching & reaching. one rock, a fist,
another a mouth, still wet from
chewing blue gum. i remember loving
the climbing. i felt like i could almost
touch the ceiling. in a dream, there is a tarot spread
on a table in a coffee shop that reminds me
of an ex. we ate afterwards. cake. it was
all of our birthdays. we were turning eleven
or eleven was turning us. a garden spade
in the back, twisted. the soil coming
to the surface. walls full of
all the colorful rocks. it was a sleepover.
we lay on the floor. her house smelled gingham
or was it dull pink? i scaled the bathroom
like it had rocks. we ended up on the roof.
i end up on the roof. i look up to see the sky is
dotted with orphaned teeth. some of them
must be mine.

12/28

pour over

we were breaking up when
i started to get into coffee brewing methods.
the keurig had died. i thought maybe
we could be free. i tried
the french press & i tried the moka pot.
i ultimately settled on the pour-over
because the internet god told me
it was the strongest. god i loved
how bitter i could make it. i was always awake
even when i was asleep. i once sat up to see i was
without any hands & i wept & you were
not there at all.
we shared a room & i pictured
cutting everything in half. the bed
& the window & the desk which was mine
& became yours. i have never
been good at uncoupling. i draw things out.
try to make it work. try to make it work.
which is less about love & more about
bills & apartments & shoes by the door.
on my worst days i would stand &
let the hot water's steam fog my glasses.
pretend i was driving a car into a lake.
the smell of coffee blooming. the sound
of an ambient siren. police or ambulance?
i ask myself the same question. when we first came
to the apartment we had no curtains.
the light at everything. you watched me
make coffee once. you asked,
"doesn't that take longer?" i wanted to say,
"i need more time." ending do not
wait for us. instead i explained,
"it's my favorite way to make it."

12/27

cold brew

i soak my bones in your throat.
it does not make soup.
we take the train into the beast's
little knee. kneel in the museum,
notebooks in our hands like all prophets do.
the sky has earbuds in. the train
is only as long as we need. or maybe
it is not enough & we are pulling
our lives like field ox. a stretched arm.
a candle lit behind each eye. i want
to be swallowed & turned into
a mosquito. i want to pierce my tongue
into the moon. my hands are cold
& this winter is thick. do i fall asleep
in the puddle? does the straw led
to a carousel or is this the kind of journey
that takes a tooth away? i park the car
on the wrong side of the war. the police
do not know what we do behind
the laundry mat right beneath the
"no weeping" sign. we buy gas ten dollars
at a time. drink cold brew at the little shop
that rattles when the train comes.
cheeks flushed. our one friend just started
experimenting with eyelash extensions.
i stay awake all night. spit hummingbirds
into the sink. jars of sticky old spices buzzing
above the stove. you sleep on the window
where the trees should be.

12/26

pocket bible

what a relief
my god gets smaller every year.
at the august fair there was a man
handing out bibles the size
of my palm. i asked for five.
the man was ecstatic. did i take them
in earnest? belief memory is the hardest
to track. it's hard for me to know
what the faith suit felt like.
i was fifteen. i bought a magnifying glass
to read the bibles.
put one in my purse. i never really
got past genesis. the bible is a slow burn.
it only really gets good when
you reach jesus. each year at the fair
i would see the man again & the bibles
would get smaller & smaller. a thumb's height
& then a strawberry hard candy.
i accepted them. sucked on the bibles
all night in the hopes
that something miracle might transfer to me.
in college i listened to an audiobook
of the bible. some of the stories
were familiar from having gone to church.
other ones felt outer space. i know i was
looking for something in the pocket bible
that i never found. i dated a boy once
who loved jesus & god that was awful.
he wanted me to love jesus too & so
i stared into the dead little books until
they became moths. until they became
horrible albatrosses. i didn't see the bible man
at the fair after that. i wonder if he started
to get smaller too. if now his bibles
are the size of sand grains. if maybe only he
can read them. i am glad my pocket bibles
managed to escape. eyelash-winged little breaths.
even the source can get away.
my beliefs have turned crepuscular. a great darkness
always comes with tiny points of light. the stars, each
a bible turned inside out. the light waiting
to swallow the sky. the bible man still at the fair ground
in the middle of winter. his book, a fleck of salt
dissolving on his tongue.

12/25

our whole house used to fit in the dishwasher

who taught you how to be clean?
i have had to cough up a skeleton key
to climb out of my body.
the roof could use some tender love
& care. my dogs sometimes argue.
my old one, left hovering in the living room
without a place to lay down. once,
a hole opened in the ceiling & poured dust
all over my room. i did not clean it.
instead, i wrote my name. left paw prints
as if i were one of the mice in the basement.
the dishwasher died years ago & now
it is used for doorknobs & other ways out.
i keep dreaming of gutting it to make
a proper portal. sometimes cleaning can be
a form of blessing. i have tried to bless
all the wall that've held me (some better
than others). i have not always been
a good keeper. some spaces beg to be dirty.
the apartment on union held a mouthful
of the old tenants. their light scent never fully gone.
the house here has halos from the its markers. their
mismatched screws. their ugly carpet.
i hate the warmth after the washing.
how the machine knows just how to burn
a thumb out of the sky. in a dream my father
is on fire & i have to put him out. i put him
in the dishwasher. in a dream
we are hurricane children again & the town
is blinking on & off. i am an expert
at making megaliths smaller & smaller
until they can be held & lulled to sleep.
i wash the windows. i wash the doors. i wash
my face until it shines. there is a peephole
on the dishwasher for everyone to look out
& see me with my shoes still on in the house.
when i open it i know they will scold me.