BODY MAP SYMPOSIUM
If we have a plan, it’s
unbecoming: we could
do nothing and let things
happen to us, but that
just isn’t how we roll. Places
we fly over have cities
and culture and cracked
sidewalks too. Lines
that form the right side
of your face want to
take me away. Each inch
is covered in
creases and I think
the room wants to sleep
the room wants to sleep
with you. My relationship
to my body
has changed and we’re
here to discuss exchanging
faces and making arbitrary
lines and separating
families with borders. This is
my story of the generations
and how they collapsed
and came back stronger
than ever. My version
carries with it a stigma
and an American flag
traced on your
body from the legs
to your collarbones. I
to your collarbones. I
know tattoos which create
the most pain, and I
want you to become
them: a graft of old
skin, inked, and
replaced; remnants
of a letter
never sent; and
covered marks
exposed. Where our
organs begin is a
story to be told
in flightless language,
grounded and
menstruated. They
expect us to come
running when lights
burn brightly or
ends of words turn
in meaningless
symbols and repercussions
of other faults. We push
to know how, but
only when connected
in series does darkness
get purged and then
an open fear is held. With
teeth marks drawing blood,
only lust can penetrate
doubt. I know places
that force your head back
and words that
make you sing, but
unfortunately, wind
has come in and
gotten us lost. I’ve got
the whole thing down
to numbers, but a chart
would be helpful. Figures
one through nine
could lead us into
the right species but
my orientation is spread
and bursting. I can meet you
and bursting. I can meet you
where you tell me, but I
don’t know the way there
by divine causality. Dismemberment
is not the side-effect
of any drug I am
aware of, though a response
aware of, though a response
to an externality
it may be. I have learned
it may be. I have learned
to think in one hundred
word bursts and
keep myself to one
thousand and eight words
per day to keep from
repeating sounds and phrases
I know. I don’t know if
you’re a boy or a girl, or
sometimes nothing
at all, but any pointing
at all, but any pointing
could be helpful. As long
as I can hear you
to know where you are, I
am happy, though
I’d prefer to see
or taste. I know I
should have kissed you
but did you have to
tell me that when you
were putting your
break up speech
together? Every day
has grown from that spot
in my lungs and I
cannot suture new
feelings together or
tell them which way to spread
because I’m just as nowhere
to be found. Wanting
to believe each thrust
will be the last, we
speak only in words
which cannot be seen. I’ll
leave you part of my nails
in my will, though I
plan to use them
to scratch my way
out. I will crawl
in to find where you
go, but I know I
can come back whenever
I want. As your
breath is caught
in my mouth, another
in my mouth, another
desire washes back
over my central
arteries: to feel
unwanted and
forgotten primes
my blood for
exaltation. My next
performance will be
“The Abstract,” a
novel in seventeen
words, but on
nine hundred and
fourteen pages. I want to
pull my legs up
to my heart and
burn them
all at once. We could
require immediate infiltration
require immediate infiltration
if our arms were to
end up behind us
in a fire or a
mélange of different
noises. If lies go
too deep, we can
consume them and
make them a part
of our lineage. I have
a lingering desire
to be placed on a
somewhere-bound
bullet but to force it
back into stasis is a
trouble worth waking
up to. I cannot complete
my own words
without seeing
which you want to
use first, a decision
taken too hard to
remain uncaring
about. I don’t
want to steal your
lips, just lease them
for my revolution, as
private as it
might be. When
I press my flesh to yours,
I hear tiny music escaping
and ceasing to form
notes, much less a
sonic argument. These are
supplemental words to a
love poem that was written
in a bloody bathtub over-
looking language as a
device: how could I
be the last to know? For those
who look to the sky
hoping for a better figment
of this imagined prophylaxis,
I want to hand you my
non-vital organs in the
hopes you’ll find some new
destruction for them. As my
anemia leads me, so does my
bile. I want to discover
a reverberation to sink into and
become part of its silicate. I
refuse to accept that this is
the last memorized passage that will
make its way into our canon, but
only rejected vowel sounds
will please our ears, wherever
we might find them.
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