In Front of Someone’s Teeth

By | 13 May 2024

One time while climbing a snow-covered mountain
clunk, my ankle got caught in a trap.
The trap had been set by a villager to catch wild animals.

I managed to break the trap through the snow,
but my injured ankle was bleeding.
As I limped down the mountain,
I looked back and saw
every footprint in the snow was covered in blood.

Since then, inside me
lives a scared and wounded animal.

It is said that Val Plumwood was almost eaten by crocodiles three times.1

Up the river in the rainy season
she went too far alone in her canoe.
It wasn’t until she looked into the crocodile’s eyes that she realised

that her body was juicy meat.

Golden pupils shining under the eyelids.
She could understand what the crocodile’s eyes were saying.
The crocodile attacked her body, as well as
human pride and illusions.

After being bitten by a crocodile three times,
Plumwood became more than just food.
She came to understand humans as food.

Even though she cut, grilled, and chewed meat countless times,
she never thought that at any moment
she could be eaten by another being.

As a beast or a piece of meat
trembling before someone’s teeth.

  1. Australian feminist ecologist Val Plumwood, The Eye of the Crocodile.
This entry was posted in INVISIBLE WALLS and tagged . Bookmark the permalink.

Related work:

Comments are closed.