homebound doubts

encased in an almost-convincing inhale of cotton
(all cerulean blue and burgundy coddled)
is a ritual as ancient as the windcheater
that somehow still smells like you

like salt and surf wax
neoprene and sunscreen

it casts the mind back –

a sunburnt nose
drips sea water
onto carpet

ninja turtles made
from laundry baskets

bike rides to the river
a bridge-crossing like terabithia’s
watching for echidnas

waiting for the riverbed
to swell and break with rain
for all the trash and treasure
to greet the ocean’s maw

a blue-tongue in the garage
almost takes a shovel to the neck,
the danger of another dugite
fades into the concrete
like snakes into the brickwork

a persisting christmas tradition:
plucking chillis to punish
the loser of lawn bowls –
this sharing of fire
resembles friends
breaking bread

bluebottles popped barefoot
translucent jellies tossed underarm
contrast to torpedoed paddy melons,
scattering bruises that fade
to the yellow of their insides

polished abalone, prettier than pearls

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

If a Baby Cries

1.
After bellows of gas take the mother’s voice
contract crown expel
a baby
a silence
the nurse holds her breath to find a breath
and a mother wants to be a mother
she shows
a breast
a doctor enters the room of no sound

2.
The newborn decides to cry
as their mother
carries them down
the stairwell
during gunfire
a fleet of soldiers lower their weapons
to recall
the first rule
love and be loved
as they dodge
among the strollers
emptied
and without wheels

3.
The mother is seventy
when she enters
Alzheimer’s door
to outlive her ghosts
she ceases to talk
her brain is busy
running from attic to cellar
the cry gets
louder
her breasts enlarge
with memory

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Patchwork Memories

“good morning,”
sings the doorbell.
“Open up, open up,”
followed by a light
shuffle of feet.
mrs. is a title that fits
now – she ‘misses’ many,
many things. not the least
of which is optimism.
the sewing machine
keeps moving, keeps
building. gets stuck,
and keeps going.
how kind of it.
gingerbread has a
very distinctive smell,
and she will never forget
it. ginger and laughter
– a perfect recipe.
now that it is only
her, she sees the
fragments
differently. tears
them apart, and knits
them back together.
the morning tastes of
many things, and
loneliness is one of
them.
home: tea, milk, no
sugar. the sound of
ceramic as the
teaspoon ricochets
inside it.
she can’t think when
she last cleaned the
window – but she
smiles to see the tiny
fingerprints still on it.
a to-do list, hastily
scrawled, and
dropped in kitchen
flour.
the baubles, never
taken down, have
started to break; like
shattered glass.
shattered glass up
against a tree…
“i’m sorry for your
loss – we came as
soon as we heard.”
a butterfly lands on
the bouquet, and her
hands shake. how
beautiful.
red and blue circle
each other in a
whirlwind dance,
contrasting the
fireworks above.
knitting needles –
another thing that
moves, but goes
nowhere.
scones, like her own
grandmother used to
make. she hasn’t
quite perfected the
recipe yet.
and the rocking chair
goes back-and-forth,
back-and forth,
back-and-forth…
dawn sets the clouds
on fire, and the stars
seem closer than
ever. tomorrow has
arrived yet again.
“how kind of you,”
and the floorboards
creak their grieving
thank yous.
stringing up the
tinsel, and the fairy
lights. red and blue;
and green and
yellow.
the bedsheets feel
colder than usual –
but only until she
remembers why.
Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

On an Antique Breast Pump

after ‘Breast Pump, London, England, 1870-1901’, Wellcome Collection

The pump, nestled in a cloth-lined
locked box, is made of two parts:
apple-shaped glass bulb,
brass syphon embossed with the names
of its makers, son & son.

The key to the box is long-gone,
not to be used again: the piston missing
its sweet oil, the mouth it fed
a mouth no longer.

Glass has a memory we can only
intimate: skin and heat,
milk blown brightly to a centre.

Salt on the lip
between bowl and brass:
where tears were shed,
the greedy instrument had its fill.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Holding the knowing

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

I am Learning Peacefulness

I almost miss her
Told to look for massive tributes,
there are none.

Only a tumble of blue and pink
so voluminous
it covers up her name.

There are no poppies in October.
It’s borage and granny’s bonnet in June.

Snapdragons, and low-growing lemon
roses enfold her edges.

Bees come and go with a soft burr
that sounds like honey.

A single strand of sedge rides the air—
slow Ariel.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Amygdala hijack

Silverback stride delight neon lime road bike
I can’t ride outside, the cars croak too loud, the magpies swoop too low
in our little cul de sac
Wait till Ba gets home, but he says it’s too dark to practice now
And tucks himself back behind the wheel
I can sleep anywhere except on a bed, he laughs
Fishing boats, sputtering sedans, late buses, full trains, paper planes
Symptoms include fatigue, uneasiness, dizziness and vomiting
If he stays still for too long, the faster and further
away
he is to who he was,
the better.
And so, I fold him into a frog like he taught me all those centuries ago
I tuck him into our letterbox where he can finally sleep
With no return address

I waddle back and forth under the shrinking carport
Throwing bang snap poppers at a head of weeds crowning out a
Split on the concrete patio
Slow down. Always have one foot on the ground
Our backyard is as big as a baby’s thumb, but I go fast until I can’t stop and
Tug the tire out the wall of our granny flat
To find a hole in space and time that I’m sure wasn’t there before
I poke my head through the gash and watch my mum
Hang a husk of my body on the rotary line
my arms and legs flail as she beats me with a tennis racket
I wheel the holy trinity of bins to cover it up

And beg to lie with you on the mesh hammock
I got here first! Wait your turn!
I fan away your tears with a palm leaf
And rock you back
You are eleven, youngest of eleven, lucky last
Nothing to eat but cassava,
even now you miss the taste of cyanide
I rock you forth
You are seventy seven, in bed by seven,
starving for sounds of me,
I try to catch you in the moment, as you are now
Before your tattooed brows fade green, before your brittle hands dry out, before you forget who you are
I tangle myself to you

We are bound
not by the red thread of destiny
pinkies
but connected by the tapeworm of fate
belly buttons
When you become a mum, you’ll understand
Next time
aroundnuora
I’ll make sure
You’re my daughter
So I can finally ununderstand.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Pyromancy

“[] was only interested in uncovering the subfloor that he imagined would be a map to the fire.”
-Beyler Report

In ’92 they defined the standard of care for fire investigation and confirmed that plastics
can look like liquid spills after a fire. Since plastics captured the market after World War II,
everything we own looks like arson fuel. To live surrounded by your presumed guilt, drink
the evidence, breastfeed the evidence into infants, to be laid down in a crib of suspicion.
Your parents watch with a philosopher’s anxiety of the numinous, torn up floorboards,
a telltale heart. When Thich Quang Duc was candled across that intersection in Saigon,
what was found skulking around his luminous mind? Is this the hard, gem-like flame?
Is this the hard, gem-like light? A spring so silent you could hear the plastic in his organs
crackling like a fireside chat, which your parents hear ears pressed against your new belly.
In ’92 they advised all fires are accidental until proven otherwise. And with his five eyes’
foresight, our angry god dangled us over his furnace to determine whether we would catch.
It was an autumn of orange spiders and orange leaves, deciding to embody the philosophy:
one might as well live combustibly in a burning world. What is burnable will catch beside
a being made of blazing. The marshal will scry anthropology after they fill the final crib
of plastic, in the ground of plastic, in an age of plastic. At the body’s trial, they might argue
the fire tells a story, I am just the interpreter. A terrible point of origin, but how to burn.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Hamza

What’s weird is that this morning
I woke up with your name in my teeth
I had a dream about you
or maybe it was about a cousin
on the Bugojno side
Someone I’ve never met
just seen
in photos
in front of the rebuilt city hall in Sarajevo
the rebuilt Turkish bridge in the town I was born
Standing
young and earnest
in the face of our history.
Not unlike you,
Hamza Hamza Hamza Hamza Hamza
Until it becomes a purr in the deep belly
of a lion.
I hadn’t thought about you in weeks
Not since you wrote
How bad it is!!
Trying to convince the world that you are dying.

That was months ago and
since then,
you have fallen silent and
since then,
who has been convinced?


On Oct 13 2023, Hamza Ahmed (@hamzahjazar) tweeted these words. He has not tweeted since.
The name Hamza Ahmed Mustafa Al-Jazzar is listed among the dead. He was twenty-four years old.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Yellow Pressed

after Robert Hass


Yellow was the smell of plump September wattle, dangling over goldfield shale. The colour of my teddy born with a design flaw. He could never sit down. Destined for straightness, arms at right angles, like a fuzzy jesus on the cross. At tea parties, I bounced him on the long dry grass, desperate to re-shape the unbending.

At thirteen yellow was my favourite colour. I wore a daffodil gingham skirt, sewn by my mother. Paired with a giant orange t-shirt, to hide the bumps on my chest. When faced with a difficult moment, I would trace those checked contours like a way out of shy. A yellow brick road to calm.

Oxford yellow was found in kitchens. On buttery walls of the snug or carpeted bathroom. It made summer last through the grey lightless winter. Brought port meadow inside. Pressed shadow fossils of fly honeysuckle and creeping yellow cress, onto ceilings. A reminder of golden Ibiza sands between toes.

Melbourne yellow was the brilliant sun. Molten-wide in the agapanthus sky. The colour for my baby not yet known. A pasty lemon rebellion against pink and blue. The only two colours sanctioned for children.

Yellow was my son’s sons first pair of gumboots. Worn on opposite feet. Splayed with independence. Matched with a nappy and dinosaur singlet, he wrestled the garden hose, watering zucchini flowers, unaware his ureter was pinched top and bottom. Turning him jaundiced. As his kidneys began to fail.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

barefoot with a hot meal

I stood in the kitchen
scuffing crumbs off the bottom
of my bare feet onto the
cuff of my ankle.
I had said I loved him
and I did.
It didn’t matter though
because I didn’t want him.
The curry on the stove simmered gently
Large fleshy chunks of meat
rising to the surface
I looked at him across the expanse
of the bench between us
he stared back, angry and sad
perhaps afraid.
I turned down the
stove and let him pull me
up the single flight of carpeted stairs
sticky and hot he slid in and
out of me. Cardamom and salt
drifted upstairs. I’d
forgotten to add ginger.
I pissed him out of me
when he was done
and held wet toilet paper
to my raw skin.
He wandered downstairs
a while later.
and found me peeling a
thumb of ginger with a
carving knife.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Forty Years

Forty years since the conflict in 1974. Forty years since my mother’s family moved here. Nineteen years later I’m born on the day the border opens between the Turks and Greeks. Forty years later I’m on the phone. My uncle tells me about the blow to the wheel of his new car. He tells me he has loved kangaroos for forty years since coming here. He says in forty years he has loved kangaroos and never hit one on the road until today. I meet a man last week who tells me he’ll never change his five year old’s tongue. He’ll never correct her English. If she says karma like karrrrrma at school that’s because that is how it’s said. I am twenty-one, forty years after, when I learn how to spell my name, AYLİN not AYLIN, as I sign contracts to be a jewellery sales consultant. I want to be a poet and the Grand Bazaar of Melbourne, selling jewellery. I felt forty years behind on myself that day.
Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Please explain this gap on your resumé

He fought a bear once. He went to prison once. He started a vigilante gang once that was only mildly fascist. (Someone had to clean up the streets, okay, and there were real gangsters, not driven to it by economics, funded by a real estate developer, like usual, the big city pressing down on the river-split town, ready to fork its delta.) His father died. He played football. He disbanded his vigilante gang. He joined another gang. That one was driven by economics. He wrote songs. He wrote poems. He fixed a jalopy. He crashed the jalopy. His head hurt some days. He dated a teacher. He dated a student. He went to war once, he’s not sure which. There was a lot of smoke. In the smoke war looks like football. There’s another team. They tell him it’s that simple. It’s possible the bear took something vital. His dog died. His friend died. In the smoke a friend looks like a dog. He doesn’t know which to bury. He worked for the real estate developer. He stopped working for the real estate developer. He doesn’t know exactly what real estate development entails. Mostly he hit people. He worked construction for his uncle. He stopped. He went looking for the bear again. He wishes there was smoke. It opens its arms.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Gin Fizz

For Tisa


I was anxious, I clasped your hand a little tighter.
I was maybe seven, and you weren’t going to school.

Our tall dark aunt had promised us a lovely holiday
but when she had driven us to a remote and primitive

shack where she lived with her new husband, she knelt
before us and said she would be going to work tomorrow

and I was to mind you till she got back. This dereliction of
adults was not new, they often abandoned us to circumstance

but this place was off my map. As we had been hustled down
the path a row of witchy trees had cast shadows and creaked.

And the kitten had wee-ed where it should not and raised our
aunt’s ire. One bare light bulb burned above. The house smelt.

The house with her old husband had been grand. In the garden
the brook with the bridge arching over. This house was a shock.

But downstairs in the bathroom, her bottle of Gin Fizz by Lubin
from which I took frequent aromatic therapy. The shapely flask.

She doesn’t remember, my tall dramatic aunt, curled in her bed
like a quarrelsome baby. We were so many, us children, arriving

for no good reason, or refusing to arrive, which was even worse.
She doesn’t remember that her high-heeled shoes slopped off

behind her as she knelt, or how her chin pointed grimly to the floor.
I was so afraid of having to look after you. You cute button, you.


*


The first day we played in the garden and I thought up ‘collecting
caterpillars’. I knew I had one life and that is what I did. I thought

it up. The caterpillars gave outcry and writhed, they were squidgy
brutes, and they poo-ed black tarry dots. I felt no pity, actually.

I found a box on the sideboard within which to imprison them,
but our distracted aunt said, after the very long day, that it was

a special box, a lucky box, that a dear dear friend had given her.
I turned on my heel and scrupulously rendered the lamenting

bodies of future butterflies back to where they came from. Hungry
hungry caterpillars. I’ve no memory of the kitten after the first time.

I do remember her crusted bowls on the kitchen lino. As I pressed
the lucky box into my aunt’s hands, I gave her a dark child’s look.

When would this end? I didn’t know. No one told a child anything.
And where was our new uncle? I had overheard his aggrieved voice

from the next room as I lay shivering in my chilly bed and our aunt,
a little squiffy, almost shrill, explaining and explaining. Late home

from the pub I expect, later than usual. Because of us. One thing was
certain. We were not welcome. And you, my little sister, snoring like

a prickle-backed hedgehog, lapped by the moonlight pouring through
the window without curtains. And we woke to another day. This life!


*


I helped you to the toilet, lifted you onto the bowl, although you could
wipe yourself. I pressed the flush. And then we found the steps down

to the beach cut into the cliff. You remembered, I saw you remember,
and you were so young to remember anything. How we loved the beach!

Those seagulls with red stockings on who are walking with high heels.
At low tide a sand bar poked its shoulder out and I risked the rippling

shallows. I was becoming bold. I knew that we had been abandoned
but I kept it from you as best I could. All that claptrap about a lovely

holiday! Those grown-ups couldn’t tell the truth or lie straight in their
beds. I sneaked downstairs and took another snifter of Gin Fizz. Nice!

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Arms

My own story is full of missing links, full of blanks
said Chantel Ackerman. And I do not even have a child.
In heaven, they say I will without the mediation of any creature
find some divine essence with an intuitive vision. Move forth, I tell them
I am nearing thirty and I do not even have one abortion to show for it.
To prove my potential instead I whisper incantations of hospitable
Martyrdom. Wipe my fingers on the edge of my shirt and apply different lip gloss
to different mirrors. There before me, the markers of my numbing are contained
in a single vision that my life should unfold in recognisable steps.
Yet the terrace of my future is not so bright as to reflect sunsets
Or idyll voices where the headlights turn off at night. Rather please and thank you I say
to populate some move for acceptance. Where stillness captures my breath between the waves
And I can solemnly say to you my Father that I tried, forever ago
To put my longing to good use.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Borderlands

Sunday mornings are for sex and to catch
on sleep. In the crook of your breath the bed sheets
are tenderness. Your arm reaches out and around our galaxy
of wants

only you can hold them.

Above the bed hangs a painting in an old timber frame, of a house
in Victorian style, with a pale blue pond, silent
outstretched in the foreground.
On the upper floor, in the left window you may see me drawn
peering down at the mess

of bed sheets, the cocoon, your crown. I live behind lace
and on Sunday mornings, I try to find my way out.

After the war, I went back to Beirut and the men that I knew there
had all lost weight. We forgot, they said
to eat. Amid the worry of bombs and guns

I have not tasted our life.

My father, who carries his sorrow pushed out before him
like an offering we must take up in order to love.

All of my life

My father, who sat in the backyard, accused me of not listening
the first time I said, I don’t agree.

high in a house.

In 2006, south Lebanon
still smelt of rubble and smoke. We drove
through the villages, shaking our heads. I saw a white house
lettered with spray paint as high as the roof

CLUSTER BOMBS HERE

A lament, a warning.

When cluster bombs drop, they fly into bright pieces
each primed to explode, and days or years later
children can run into fields, reaching for toys
that erupt in their hands.

I have walked to the brink but no further

outside
your promise
the most powerful storm.

We should weep for the children of Lebanon. We should weep
for the quiverful all east and west, born macerating
in madness.

But we are betrothed to the rage of injustice, barred
from grieving such loss.

My father once told me of a man who had written
some of my freest times were in prison

I choke at the memory

My father, who delivers his wisdom like unspent
munitions. In my father’s house

there are no mansions.

And, I am afraid of what I may find in these fields.

The bed sheets, your crown. As I dip into sleep

I smell the bread, in each house of the village.

Even after the world burst into pieces, people turned to each other
made sure each was fed. The men used to say

In Lebanon, no one will starve.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Our mothers

Last night the boys went to the
terrace—a bottle of gin, a coke, a large sprite, cans
of tonic water, Lana Del Rey’s Diet
Mountain Dew
on speaker and nothing
else. Nothing. As in after the song was over
—twice, perhaps—none of us said a thing—
everyone quiet around eachother, even the drunk ones who’d struggled
taking the stairs only moments ago.
Now all of us reminiscing about our mothers—
as women who always fed us
before sitting themselves down for lunch
and for dinner,
and now we live in hostels, away
from our homes; and in some homes, still the absence
of mothers—and one says, tearing the blanketed
quiet of heavy January air
—they say our sons take from us all our flaws
like the shaving mirrors
from our Sunday routines, say
will mine understand grief exactly the way I do?

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Hurstville Station Platform 4

after Rosalba-Paul / Hurstville Station, Platform 4 by Paul Higgs

Here below, the platform is dim,
water rushes from sinks, gutters,
flushed toilets, sluiced through
reckless downpipes

and even though it hasn’t rained for weeks
the weep-holes are slick:
isosceles of soot, of fecal umber,
algal verdure, of lime condensate.

~

In the gallery hung between
polemics and disco, the work
appears stolid: ‘string, pins, wood,
mesh, acrylic paint on paper’.

He says brush marks are a thing, not an abstraction:
take any object, a yellow ticket say (or a word),
move it around until…

~

The trains are late and the Waterfall service
now leaves from platform 2.
There are no straight lines
just a recursive descent off the plateau.

I dream of ordinary days: precarious
carparks, arguing over shopping lists,
the last time we caught the express to the city.

Take the escalator up to the mall: a Coles,
a greengrocer with bitter melon, coconuts,
trays of khajuri and sel roti, Taiwanese boys
in line for bubble tea.

Me and you, one and two
the incantation goes.
1 2 buckle my shoe, 3 4 open the door.

~

The train grinds on the curves,
through cuttings, abandoned works
rucked beneath the scarp.

I’m in the last carriage. Across from me
are two explorers, she ruffles his buzzcut.
I envy them this spectacle: the tender rainforest,
gliders on bald hill, a glimmer of creekwater
even though it hasn’t rained for weeks.

How do we meet our dead?
In the Quiet Carriage, a priest opens the door
and it’s you, halfway along staring at the blackened
dreamscape. Coins of sunshine, then a tunnel.
My heart so loud it echoes and moans
and when day returns
there’s nothing (of course).

How do we meet our dead?
After she died, he reworked it,
hammered on a balcony, a string of bunting.
went back over, wrote her name
in capitals, talismanic like cutting
into a tree-trunk or a good arm,
staunch the bleeding with ashes.
He re-named it Rosalba-Paul,

Says he doesn’t want the work
to be a sentimental memorial
to a couple,
one who died;
I see nothing else (of course).

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

The Death of Burke

“These rocks
are so old, they have forgotten the singing
and the shouting of the sea, the violence
of the earth in the making.”

– William Wills


A tempestuous leader, querulous
and autocratic, Burke thought to subdue
this insurgent landscape, as he did his men,
to call forth great lakes or watered plains
from its arid centre.

Shouting matches and thrashings
as well as deaths, reduced the party.
Abandoning most of the camel train
and much of their twenty tons of baggage
(as useless in that sandy stone country
as Burke’s transported dining-table)
they journeyed on, rewarded only
by waterholes and mangrove swamps.

Fearing the Aborigines, yet reliant on them for food
Burke shot at a tribesman stealing oilcloth
and the natives fled, shifting camp.

Beset by thirst and hunger, Burke died
entangled beneath a clump of box-trees
fossilised forever in the rocky outcrop
eyes staring out past the unflinching sky
into a surreal desert.
The land claims him
as he wrestles against it
hands and feet carried off by dingoes.

After David Boyd, Death of Burke (c.2003).

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Place of birth: Hong Kong

The home I loved is no longer
No, it was not war
that bombed the buildings
Nor famine
that made the people hunger
Nor plagues
though there was sickness
We thrived through colonisation
now a type of chill settled, spreading
over years

I don’t know what to believe
between my parents and the media
Everything is fake news
curated by someone
an invisible hand hovering like
a threat or protector
You can’t trust anyone
and it’s best not to talk about it
at yumcha or anywhere
No one can agree on
What happened or
who are the bad guys

I know this
嫲嫲 lives there
with all of my aunts and uncles
and the neon lights still shine in my memories
but it’s getting hard to remember
the good times buried
under all the things
we cannot forget



嫲嫲 [maa4 maa4] = Paternal grandmother

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

Three Seedlings


三株苗 种在花盆里的种子发芽了 但不是花。我记得去年秋后 曾把几粒辣椒籽、苦瓜籽和 丝瓜籽深深地埋进了土中 它们果然不负所望,破土而出 春天我就蹲在花盆旁,如果 将这情景放大,再放大 就能依稀看见一个人回到了他的老家 但他已经分辨不出哪是 辣椒苗,哪是苦瓜苗或丝瓜苗 三株幼苗从土里冒出来 像三个刚刚学步的孩童 在阳光或细雨中乱窜 我要扶稳它们,等它们长大 自报家门,而这样一天 让平庸的生活有了盼头






Three Seedlings The seeds planted in the pot germinated but they will not be flowers. I remember after last autumn I had several seeds of pepper, bitter melon and sponge gourd buried in the soil They did not fail me, and germinated In spring I squatted by the pot, if we magnify this scene, and magnify even larger we would see a man returned to his hometown but he could no longer distinguish pepper, bitter melon and sponge gourd from one another Three seedlings popped up from the ground like three toddlers taking their first step and staggering in the sun or rain I am holding them steady, waiting for them to grow up to tell me what they are, and that makes life something to look forward to despite its mediocrity





Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged ,

chameleon

ask them to pull their pants down and see the colour of their pantat! – my father

my dad always had a turn of phrase which we could print on t-shorts. he was referring her to our cousins in perth, the ones who had hidden among the white folk in their mown suburbs, who had two children and a dog, who had a barby in the backyard, who had a garden in the front, who said their yes and naur, who complimented that we were tanner than usual, who prayed by holding hands at the dining table, who looked in horror when we did not use the serving spoons, who gasped at using our hands to rip chicken apart, who called them chooks, who instructed us which sauces go with which dishes, who said chilli jam instead of chilli sauce, who summoned forth the wiggles to entertain a toddler, who drove us to the hotel, who gave dad ten dollars to buy a bouquet for his mom’s grave back in singapore, for whom we never saw again for the rest of the trip, for whom we gave the angbao and casually put it on the table without saying thanks, who told us moving from a bungalow to another bungalow was considered an upgrade, who told us about wildfire warnings, who told us about reading the bible right, who said he liked his curry mild, who said we no longer do those things here.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

how to live at The End of Days

When the end comes
it is easy to live
Trust me,
you do not need much

a thick layer of
vegemite spread to
the corners of toast

shaving your legs
twice a year
and your pubic hair
even less

an hour-long phone call
to hear their voice

a whiff of the flowers
as a reminder
they only exist to die
and this is the way of things

using the thin-stemmed
wine glasses prone to shattering
and the left over perfume
from Duty-Free

the cold relief
of the ocean
and the pleasure
beneath a solar shower

your nose nuzzling the nape
of my neck in the morning

Yes. You are needed to live

Let us live these last days
together hand-in-hand
with the nice glasses topped
to the rim with red

drinking it all in
before the collapse

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged

After Injury

After injury, my father told me,
the house was so quiet he could live by listening.

Outside: rain. Cicadas bristling.
Our neighbour fumbling softly with his gate’s useless lock.

I remember the awful intimacy of those months:
your sleep was a sound I woke to.

All summer the neighbour swept leaves beneath his fruit trees.
It hurt me, remember, how he tended his awkward privacy,

yelling yes, I love you, no I can’t help you
at the shallow breathing of his wounded dog.

Posted in 116: REMEMBER | Tagged