antlers for almost once dead boys with a pocketknife we planted seeds in our skulls. blood throbbing all night long. on the trail the day before, we watched a buck chasing a comet. he looked over his shoulder to tell us "feed the sun." so we did. we baked all day & all night. offering loaf after loaf of bread. sun refused to eat until he saw deer had come too. an antler is a branch from one day into the next. one body to the dirt to the roots. an antler is a courier. it took weeks but the seeds did take. in the mirror, now, an oak tree sprout grows from my skull. soon, i will have antlers. planets will nest here. i ask them to ward off my hunger.
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7/30
narwhals kissing we skewered the moon like a white grape. every core was apple flesh. breaking the ice & waiting for angels to come out. at the poles, god comes with handfuls of thumb tacs. you told me you wanted to become penguins in our next lives. i asked, "how are you so sure?" you said you were not sure. not at all. i swam through blurred ancient worlds in search of our oldest skeletons. graveyards beneath the water. i looked up & saw you. your body like a book of commas. everything i know about blood i learned from snow. when they see horns crossed, will they know we are kissing?
7/29
smelter last winter dad told me a man at his work was burned alive in a vat of molten lead. he works in a battery factory. today i am looking at a busy street & wondering how many of my father are curled inside bellies of passing vehicles. then, if maybe, there are still cars moving with a flicker of that man eaten by flames. i look up pictures of car battery anatomies. staring into the folds of mechanical hearts. i am tracing assembly lines in my blood. knuckles & respirators. i want softness for our bodies. a graveyard where cars can go to become mammals. where fathers sleep & wake up with pockets full of gold.
7/28
mirror cakes i watch tiktoks of bakers making my face. in the basement i keep knives & serving pedestals. he is cutting the throat of the moon to stand beneath a waterfall. i wish someone would teach me how to coat the edges of my life like this. a blurr blanket. mixing sugar & sugar mirage. the baker is careful. knows nothing about my nose & my cooked teeth. instead he works from memory of the last time he made a mirror cake. his own reflection peering up. severing his face into eight slices. one night my bathroom mirror shattered without warning i kneeled to collect fragments. my face in each.
7/27
inedible my friend says to me "you know the food you see in commercials isn't real?" we talk about food stylists & wonder if our ancestors could have imagined a whole profession around making delicious phallacies. my grandmother used to grow herbs in her windowsill. i remember her thin fingers pinching boats of basil. she would talk about her mother's tomatoes: amorphous but sweet. almost none of what i consume is picture-worthy. then i think that eating is a kind of anti-knowing. tongue & gums. only senses. photographs always unfurling in my blood. blueberry fields & sighing corn stalks. fingers holding steady a zucchini to cut into cubes. on tv there we watch ice cream made of potatoes. water droplets that have been delicately placed on a skirt of lettuce. we are hungry tonight & we watch burger advertisements. the buns rotate on their pedestals. smiling mouths. white teeth. a nuclear family laughing & i laugh too at the absurd distance between of what we say we want & what we really want.
7/26
feather duster in my polkadot life, there is always more childhood. i fill my shoes with blueberries. wear the straw hat. i am eight-years-old again & it is a cleaning afternoon. my mother is handing me the feather duster. i observe how every corner of the kitchen gathers dust of all pigments: grey & blue & amber & saw-dust beige. congregations above the fridge & along the fire place. dust in the corners & dust on the ceiling fans. i think of the church hymn line, "remember you are dust & to dust you shall return." the words used hollow me but seeing all the dust i feel plentiful. if i really were dust, i would be tended. gathered. taken. then, arrive again.
7/25
visitors when the night the visitors came, we covered our ears. our soil hummed & then screamed. we mistook their halos for airplanes. in their arms they cradled giant teeth. spoke a language full of nails. in the morning, i often cut a hole in the sky to let the sun out. these beings had no use for light; it radiated from their eyes. we welcomed them as we do all visitors. angels or gods or demons or interplanetary birds. we fed them oatmeal & all laughed like rain. i wished i were them. opening homes like sweet melons. begged them to stay, but they departed by turning into grains of rice. to this day we keep those grains in a little bowl by the door.
7/24
i bought you a church the church comes with angels. all of them pour their blood into the fountain. jesus is like a flag. he's not supposed to touch the ground but there he is lying face up on tile floor like a dead spider. walls moves with jupiter beetles. this is where we will baptism all through the night. do you like it? i wanted a place where we could be sacraments. devour & confess. stained glass shows a scene of dissection. no one returns to sky. every day i watch the world empty this is where we can be full. angels coo like doves.
7/23
swimming lessons the day slips into the water as a salamander & i walk barefoot. i learned to swim from watching minnows. they move now between my fingers like ghost lungs. i am learning how to breathe stone. i shape shift only when no one else can see me. a heron. a headless deer. listening to the water's ancient tongue. on my back i let the river take me. become the water strider. my legs like pylons. i hear the cell phone conversations of dead lanternflies. they say, "this is a dying place." to live in the world now is to feel the world pulling back. gums & grit. i find a river monster to talk to. he comforts me. tells me, "it is right to be afraid."
7/22
worm eaters my father was a ten-year-old prophet. he would go out to his grandmother's yard & eat worms until they spoke through him. i'm scared i am the same way so i avoid grandmothers & yards & talking to worms. this morning i saw a worm being consumed by a wave of ants. they looked like water. in a past life, i drown in a green lake. i can still hear the muffled birds above saying, "gone." then, last year, we went canoing on your parent's lake & everything was worms; even you & even the clouds. i closed my eyes hoping it would pass. still, my father stands in my every backyard. he eats worms. offers some to me.