10/1

fake watermelon 

sell me something that makes
my mouth water. for the most part,
i prefer the fake fruit tastes to the real ones.
something uniform & expected
in a world of roulette sundays.
banana candy & a grape soda dark.
i scroll in the highway video
& every other oracle is a girl who is
hoping you will buy her tongue
from her mouth.
i put peach rings on my fingers & go to
a job interview at the dead people place.
my partner makes fun of me
for wanting to go back to wage labor
after living off of a golden goose.
the interviewer is a woman i have met before
who is thinking, "how easy will they
be to hurt?" she asks me what kind
of ghost i would be. i am the poltergeist always.
i took karate as a kid & i remember nothing
but the smell of sweat & those gymnastics mats.
don't tell my dad though, he's always been
really invested in me becoming a killing
machine & not the state-sanctioned kind.
once i save a bird from the tall grass.
his wing was hurt & he was begging
for some sour patch watermelon candies.
i told him we should find him a real fruit.
i taught him how to fly again. he stole
a strand of my hair as a memento. i hope he
was just being sentimental & not planning
on some witchcraft but you know,
if he is i'm flattered. i might as well
collect another hex. the fake watermelons
knock on the doors at night. my partner says,
"please don't let them in." i usually do
& just hope he doesn't notice. i am not good
at being a wife. i am also not good at being
a husband. i enjoy most just being
something kept. a door inside a door.
i don't buy candy most of the time. i don't have
a reasonable hunger. i put off my cravings
so long that i just want to eat through
the day & into the midnight. juice down
my face. the fake watermelons with their
almost laughter. the sandpaper sugar
of a good sour dream. it is hard to be full
in a place like this.

9/30

good liar 

i wish i was a better liar. i think then
maybe i would have a basement full
of dinosaurs & a car without a light-bright dashboard.
instead, when i lie everyone can tell.
they can smell my hesitation from churches away.
i got caught shoplifting in college. i had become
so cocky. a backpack full of jello. i ended up
paying for the whole thing so that
the manager wouldn't call the police. i sat by the creek after.
i had five dollars left in my account & i imagined
all the teeth i could buy with that. i see money
not like a hoard but like a pile of sugar. i ate
strawberry jello & stared into the creek.
considered catching fish with my hands. carrying
them back to my dorm & keeping them
in a little pond beneath my throat. raising them
to be wonderful children. all of us, escaping
for a gilled life without the same hungers.
then, thought about what i had done wrong.
too much. too quick. i did not feel bad. everyone
at that grocery store had a clenched face
& they smelled angry. i guess i was angry too.
i have been having a harder & harder time
lying & saying that i'm alright
when i'm really really not. i had the misfortune
of talking to a politician recently & he bragged about
how much he loved homeless people, all while
he was evicting them from a shoulder of land
by the creek. some people use their tongues
for awful things. i guess i am jealous.
what kind of alchemy did he do in his head
to justify shoplifting hope from our dirt?
i embrace the company of shoplifters. if i could
lie like him i am convinced i would try to use it
for good. maybe i could talk some money-handed
people into buying us a stoplight to dance under.
maybe i could talk the winter into staying away
for a few extra weeks to let us kiss the dandelions
goodnight. do not believe me though.
i am not a holy person & i never want to be.
one of the people who lived in the encampment
told a journalist covering the story,
"we are ghosts." i know tonight the man
who loves homeless people is eating in
the yellow light of house that could swallow
thousands of tents. i ate all the jello. it was not
the last time i stole. i don't do that anymore.
like i said, i am no good at lying & i think
it might be too late for me to learn.

9/29

little piles 

i live my life in
small mountains. a pile
of fingers. a pile of letters that
for whatever reason we are unable
toss to the compost. my partner calls me
the architect of piles. this is sometimes
a compliment & sometimes a grievance.
all the prophets these days are passing
by in algorithm soup. i saw a post
a few days ago that read,
"i refuse to keep my house
looking as if we do not live there."
i do not even remember who wrote those words
but suddenly, i am in love with our clutter.
the piles of books & the piles of dried
corn husks. the piles of abandoned
spider webs & the piles of shoes
worn down to the earth.
i do not want to have a life in which
my feet do not touch the ground
& i do not ever track dirt into the hall.
i want to live a life in which i sweep each night.
see in the dust pan a tiny night sky.
all the stars are lost marbles. beads from
a broken bracelet. i make another pile
& another. we go to sleep inside of one
& wake up in another. as a child,
i used tp be ashamed of our house's mess.
used to choose instead to meet friends
in the graveyard. piles of bones. piles of leaves.
now when visit my parents' house
i find a history of piles. the piles of tomatoes.
last of the season. piles of bills waiting
to turn back into moths. piles of
our cut hair. year after year, falling as horses.
we live here. we live here. we live here.



9/28

orchid keeper

i lose my head & live a tiny green life.
in my house-sitting days every place
had orchids. they liked to speak in parables.
once, i sat down & a white & blush orchid
told me, "there was a girl
without any parents. she emerged
from the earth." i thought the flower
was talking about me so i ran away
& did not get to hear the end of the story.
what happened to her? is that why
there's always dirt under my fingernails?
i think politics are awful & i would rather
just sit with the orchids & try to not die.
i hated caring for my clients' orchids. i was sure i was
watering them too much or too little.
one woman had a husband with a whole room
of orchids. the chatter made it hard
to sleep in that house. they talked all night,
repeating their stories to one another.
i spent the last dark of my stay, in their room
& let their voices wash over me. i craved an answer
to my wandering & thought maybe
that they had one. i lived on the cold side
of the sun. my bed was a staircase &
the backseat of my grandmother's old car.
the orchids asked me, "do you want to become one of us?"
i turned them down. i was worried about
not being able to eat oatmeal anymore.
it's the small pleasures. an orchid spat off
all her faces at me in a house with too many windows.
i harvested them. tried to put them back.
nothing left but big green shoulders
& a neck to the sky. the faces were of course
still talking. they promised me that
on the other side of a bridge, there would be
a quiet place of syrup. a story is sometimes the truth
& other times a comfort wagon.
i do not think i am equipped to own orchids
maybe just to keep them. i know too well
how fickle they are. how easily a head is lost
& then we're in someone else's house
looking out the window at a night full of eyes.

9/27

deer language 

i find a golden tongue
in the leaves. i put it in my mouth
& talk to the stars. their worries
are thick as squash soup. the deer come
because dusk taught them
all the words they know.
there is never enough time
for sleep. i imagine hollowing out
a year with a wooden spoon.
crawling inside & not having
to talk to any more fires. i crawl out of bed
without wings again. i sew a pair of eyes
into the ground. bite the string.
once, as a child, a deer asked me,
"would you like a crown?" i felt
unworthy & so i denied it. the deer laughed
& said, "you cannot turn down
your antlers." i checked my head for weeks
terrified that i would wake up
with antlers budding from my head.
they never came but now i feel them.
the weight of holding a piece
of the sky. each of us, little billboard painters.
i leave a puzzle with missing teeth.
the deer, the same one that once visited me,
returns headless. he speaks using
the arms of the trees. his prophecy,
urgent now, is, "talk to all
the colors you can before it is too late."

9/26

unkept pronouns

let's never talk about the government again.
build a house with chicken legs to escape in.
i want to eat honeysuckles & learn
the language of the mosquitos so that i can bribe them
to drink my enemy's blood & tell me
what it tasted like. i have been
letting my pronouns get unruly lately.
call me what you think i am. it's a game of
visibility. i am your magic 8 ball. shake me
& i'll give you a fortune or a warning.
aren't all fortunes warnings though?
if i lost my sense of taste i don't think i would
eat less. instead, i crave sugar like a butterfly.
i have a bad habit of throwing things out
in preparation for a sudden & urgent runaway.
i get rid of the hedge trimmers & the scythe.
the pronouns get weedy & unkept. the government
punches a hole in my ear & tags me
like the dairy cows who roam the pasture looking
for a way out. i promised i would not
talk about the government but i am really sick
of considering what i should hide. i am too tired
to be anything but a menace. i let me pronouns
attract bugs. i get the hoa called on my pronouns.
they cultivate wild raspberries & i eat them
all myself. red-fingered & sweet. dandelions come
& sing their yellow hearts all night. a family member
buys me a push mower for christmas.
i bury it. i will not be tending this mess.
i want to see how wild i can get.

9/25

deep-fried communion wafers 

this is my get-holy quick scheme.
we become miracles. maybe i'll wear
stigmata & you can cry milk. we'll attract
all kinds of people. the believers & the curious
& the atheists. we'll make a carnival out of it.
neon halo. a lemonade stand.
somewhere on the side of the highway that
makes a belt across the state.
maybe we can take over that old building
that used to house the model train showcase.
glow beneath a jesus billboard that asks,
"are you ready for him?"
i'll dress in white & you can dress in black.
we'll make big beautiful promises
that never go anywhere. then, in the dark,
we can kiss each other like only trans people can.
we'll sell deep-fried communion wafers
& offer them with powdered sugar.
tell everyone to lick their fingers clean.
once, when i was an altar girl
i dropped a consecrated host. i felt so bad about it.
i still believed that little piece of bread
was god. i actually still think it is but
in a different way now. in the sense that there
is no god so we have to be him.
we can get a few good years out of being
roadside holy. maybe make enough money
to buy a farm. i tell you all the time
about how badly i want a cow. we'll settle down
but still travelers will come to us.
they'll say, "i saw you years ago. you prayed
over us & we ate deep fried communion wafers."
we'll make them again in a stove pot.
i'll bring out my stigmata. you, a glass
of milk wept fresh for our visitors.

9/24

re/growth

i was convinced my hair wouldn't grow back.
it is autumn now & still there are flowers
who find reasons to open their eyes. i have been
warming up to the color yellow.
when i shaved it all off, i remember collecting
the strands from the red tile bathroom floor.
i thought, "what have i done?" people like to say
"it will grow back" but what if there is not time?
the staircases & the windows. touch & evaporation.
hair is not a limb but a place. when it is gone
that is like severing a house. i am great at leaving
& horrible at letting go. i prefer to still talk
to exes even though i hardly do. when it first started
to grow back i wanted every day to shave again.
to press the clippers to my scalp & say,
"i do not want to remember all the world
we can hold." to be bald meant to be untethered.
unmarked & unowned. my hair craves a place
to wash. a well to worship. my lover to learn
exactly how i curl. so, i let it. i can almost pull my hair
into a ponytail. i tell myself that this time
next year the house might have
new windows. we might have a car that works.
my hair might almost be where it was
down my back. eager to be braided & pulled.
on the hillside there are wayward crocuses. purple
& meant for spring. i go to tell them the terrible news.
that soon winter will be here & that they
are lost. they laugh at me. they say, "there is
not point in arriving if we are never gone."
i love my hair most when it is wet. when i sit
in the shower like i used to as child. pretend i am in
a lush rainforest. the bugs whine & gossip.
the birds eat neat holes in the night sky.
my hair grows slow but steady by
the moon's yellow light.

9/23

twist tie 

we save the twist ties from
the bread to make a ladder to the moon.
they say the moon is made of cheese
but i know it to be a melon. honeydew.
there's sweet flesh inside that, when you decompose,
a horse comes to feed you. i do not know
how to process the world falling apart.
i have begun to question though if it was
ever together in the first place. there are
holes dug in the earth where children have dug
for weddings. as a child once i was a ring bearer
or was i a flower girl? history is hard to make sense of
because what persists is not the facts but
the emotions. i think when i was a child
that someone put me on a butcher table
& marked my body like a cow. the dotted lines
like skipped stones in a valley of teeth.
i saw a meme today that said,
"when i hear people say fall, i don't think
of autumn anymore." there used to be a fountain
where i played as a child. we went barefoot
& once a high school boyfriend spelled
"i love you" with the rocks. there are not
enough opportunities to be sickly sweet.
there are too many runaway trains.
i catch one. i have nothing but a bag full of
twist ties. i have a dream of making
a house from them. weaving the plastic & metal
into something breathing & holy.
a monster maybe. a creature with a hunger
as sharp as mine. i would sleep inside the beast.
let its lungs press against me.
until then. i collect the ties in a little drawer.
measure our days in loaves of bread.
the bread knife with teeth like an alligator gar,
takes me home. tells me to stop coveting the moon.
we are not gone yet.

9/22

elephant keeper

i have the sense that terrible news
happened last night but if i don't look at it
then i can just tend my elephant in peace.
no one knows i am an elephant keeper.
i assume i am not alone. someone of us
are born with something gigantic
that follows us asking to be fed. i named
the elephant when i was little but the name
no longer suites him so i just call him,
"elephant." sometimes, when i am feeling
particularly lonely, i will call him,
"sister." i have a suspicion that my brothers
have elephant too. i am getting to the age where
i am worrying about what will happen
when my parents die & the house is still there
full of all their skin. i saw my father's elephant once.
he keeps it in the garage. he sings to it.
he used to sing to me. i was convinced he was
john lennon when i was very small. thank goodness
he is not that would be upsetting. i have not
had the courage to ask my father, "will you sing
nowhere man to me?" but i crave it every night.
the news breaks a window. there is a lost elephant
weeping on the roof. maybe it is my partners.
in the end i am selfish about my creature.
during college when i kept almost jumping
off the top of the building, i promised the elephant
i would deliver him to a zoo nearby. the lie stretched
until we talked about it but neither of us believed it.
sometimes a fantasy is just a tool to keep going.
we could just never open the internet again. i could
for the first time ride the elephant. flaunt him
& his massiveness. tell him to scream at the september sun.
i hide him behind the oldest sycamore tree in our yard. i bring
him a loaf of banana bread & we eat together.
do secrets keep us human or keep us from it?
i wish i could trade places with him. be the hidden
monster instead of the singing one.