Monday, March 10, 2014


A spider crawled from the pile of last week's dirty laundry this morning and I didn't even have the energy to kill it.
Meeting someone is like taking drugs
it sucks up all my strength at once, and then I'm lost laying in bed for hours by the phone.

I leave early, slam your car door,
scram off to places that don't
Make me choke on my words.
I'm sorry I have so many questions
It's just that  people like you split me open
and
I won't do that for anything.

On nights I don't know where you are
I play music to bare bulbs and blanketed walls
friends howling beside me like the street dogs we are.

You're no glass of cold water, darling.

But it's our third date and I still swallow hard when I meet your eye.
The faucet drips in Nick's bathroom. I listen from the toilet
close my eyes, bare ass cooling on the seat

spring's heat plays the bastard
I sweat caffeine, work with half my head singing a song of yours.
Bile builds fortresses inside my esophagus while I wait.

Someone knocks on the door,
"C'mon Ana let's go,"

We walk to the beach, visit the tide-pools,
You still haven't called so I turn my phone off.
The pools have been ransacked by children
A dead starfish curls, drying around a stone that has been forced through its middle,
the same way we all hold on to the things that kill us.

I turn my phone back on and I don't have any messages.

Friday, March 7, 2014


Daniel
I wanted to tell you—
My mother nags me to take initiative all the time.

Your Volvo slid off the same cliff I speed down
Whenever I endeavor to die
But don’t want get caught dead taking mom’s advice

The paper identified you by your wounds,
As we all learn to identify ourselves;
Broken collarbone, fractured neck, multiple cuts and abrasions

Non-life threatening, it said
The moment you slid your hand between my legs an EKG flat-lined in my head

Phone ringing vaguely, aloof to your struggle
Someone cared about you then,

I’ll bet you sat on that stoop for five hours trying to remember
Who it was

By the time you did, her name was sliding off your tongue and you
Were flailing to catch it,
Bound up in search-and-rescue red

You called your mom and she called the police.

L3: The third vertebra does more than you’d think
Christopher Reeve was superman and even he fucked that one up falling off a horse,

I don’t have to remove a tube to kiss you or
Push you down the street in wheelchair

The doctors kept saying LUCKY
Like you’re so LUCKY, someone’s looking out for you

When you smile the gap between your teeth
Takes off my shirt
You’re so LUCKY and I’m so LUCKY

I’ll tumble down the brush in place of you one day and
Your mother will cry when you marry
A girl who doesn’t know
How you waited on that stoop for five hours

Trying to place a call.

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

THINKING I WOULD NEVER NOTICE





Some one sucks the marrow from my bones,
Is it you?
Cruel impaler, leaning over me in sleep

The fingers I loved so on black and white keys 
Stretch, grotesque, peeling back my skin 

Crack my ribs, tie your bib, suck me dry

Every day I feel more empty
you have the nerve to ask me why.

Untitled 9


"Do they have you taking lithium now?" my mother asks.

Good morning to you too. My eyes would roll but she has a point —I couldn't even complete the task of pouring her newest eastern remedy into a tablespoon without dribbling bits of purple nectar all over the marble counter. She sighs, tears a paper towel off its roll.

I woke up healthy enough after a week of bedridden illness to a batch of lesions bubbling up on my face. Impetigo is a skin infection most common in infants and toddlers. I'm sick twice a month at least. My immune system has its defects. Mom frets; scours the internet for magic potions to make them go away. My hands just fucking shake.

"I don't think so."
"What do you mean you don't think so?"
"I just take what they give me."
Well are you bi-polar or depressed?"
"Uh...
depressed I guess. I don't know."
"Is that what you tell Dr. Ferguson?
"Sure."
"Ok good, no lithium then. So what's wrong with your hands?"

I down the syrup that made it into the spoon. It's over-sweet, mouth now slicked with sugary slime. I think about smiling at my mom, letting the dark red syrup squeeze through my teeth, down my chin.

I meet her eyes once more, nothing like mine. I tell her I feel better already, kiss her cheek, turn towards the door. My vision is blurry, my face is blistering, my hands quake uncontrollably as I reach for the knob.