Philippinitis, Three Movements

The disease seemed to attack the most refined
and productive members of society, the caretakers
of civilization.
—Warwick Anderson, Colonial Pathologies



When I was depressed, I was looked at crazy for not wanting
to take my meds. The Americans didn’t take medicine,
they went to Baguio and played golf. When the doctor asked me
why I wanted to take my own life, I looked at him like, Really?
The Americans blamed it on the heat, the climate.
It made them sluggish and sad just like the natives, the brown folk.
If I said that shit today, doctors would prescribe me Lexapro
two thousand pesos a month and two thousand for the consultation.
What I would actually say: I’m tired of being colonized.


When I was depressed I was
looked at crazy for not wanting
to take my meds The Americans didn’t take meds
they went to Baguio played golf
When the doctor asked me
why I wanted to take my own life
I looked at him Really?
The Americans blamed it on the heat the climate
made them sluggish and sad just like the natives
the brown folk If I said that shit today
doctors would prescribe me Lexapro
two thousand pesos a month two thousand for the
consultation What I would
actually say: I’m tired
of being colonized


When I was depressed
crazy not wanting
to take my meds The Americans
went to Baguio played golf
asked me
why I wanted to take my own life

The Americans blamed it on the heat the climate
that shit
Lexapro
two thousand pesos a month
What I
say: I’m tired
of being colonized

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Or Archaeology

Fasten fragments dug up
only just reborn from dirt
which conjures a phone
screening a text two thousand
years late, originally built on the face of
a thumb anointed in the bed of sweet ink
approximating moonwet years in regress
from where you continue adding
day to day, casually eloping at convenience
stores to search for a fragility resembling
life before subscribing to self
mythologizing LRT commute routes
where you cease to understand
company in favor of a starpunctured city.
Fumble open scarce remainders of your past
living regret in unsent postcards
unmended drafts
unused sticker palettes
never meeting their own shadow; elsewhere
deposited in an emptying couch
covered in soot or sweatvapor or cum
are anonymous hair strands
barely registering as something akin to a neutrino.
Fear or despair serves no practical
purpose in your mistaken eternity
walking into another collapsible year
head held low, hoping
bus fares remain fixed
and procession breaks you
out of the adamant landscape
a holdingbody of anatomy
gluing you to your rust.
With Herodotus failing,
you dislodge records
let time go into what
dead poets cried as forever
(he keeps failing) you
snap out to your actual phone
screening an actual text
“how are you feeling?”
carry me home

your job is to deal with the dead
never having really lived
decay grows into decay
confront Sappho on promises of remembrance:
condemned to papyrus she speaks severed
half-truths decreated as a candle
skinning off Elektra.
Hold dirt up to the sky and see it remain stupid.

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Naked Snail


I was sitting in front of Triptych 1974-1977 by Francis Bacon at the gallery, waiting for its clear sky to visit outside. It was time to run away from that deep bellow and rough hand to where outside ribbons of water danced in the air, velvet rebellion, mixing with soil, painting my soles like woodblocks, bistre. Morning athletics, I hurdled the train turnstiles all the way, backpack flailing. A stop later, a dozen boys got on, filled the top-car with swearing, taking proud sips of cheap beer, chuffing vapour down into the neckline of hoodies. Young as 13, nursing broken knuckles. The other commuters diagnose discipline deficiency. They need a good kick in the pants.

Reading the little plaque, this is one of those rare outdoor works in his oeuvre. Renders a beachfront getaway for his vacationing models of pink amorphous body and ominous black square.


Rain patters outside, a tremulous eulogy. Pink Amorphous Body makes kissy faces at me through what I think is its mouth, or kicks me with what I think is its foot. Why my sudden fear? Pink Amorphous Body whispers through its foot that its name is George and that he used to be a boxer. In my shrinking I wonder why anyone would step into a place that would beat them. My hurt mouth flubbers this question, and George asks what’s going to happen when I go home.

I tell him I’m staying here until they close, and through his feet he kisses me and the ground beneath him before retreating back to his dimension, his big purple shadow a bruise. My own foot puckers to kiss him back, but he’s gone and I’m left on the little seat, pulling myself, skin, hair, over myself, shell, Shetland shield. Home is where no one never wants to touch you.


These beautiful creatures that live everywhere. The few pairs of lips, the dead and others busy dying in the far background dressed in black suits, everything is sweating without breath in the shade of dark umbrellas. I feel myself tired, knotted and beginning to hunch over, mirroring the pink bodies like oysters, extroverted, raw. My lip stings from an ulcer, a drunk mouth that forced itself on itself. Hot tongue digging in the sandy fibrin.

Pink bodies, sunburnt or blushing or feminine or foreign. They have taken my backpack and given me some little card, warming itself in my right pocket. Shetland is the wool of outerwear but it’s all I could find in my haste and its dank dew and bristle, like beardhair, itches perverted and desperate on my skin. It is the sensation of everything made to scratch and I wish I could be made of hair all over, or something, anything less tender.

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Status Effects

As if a perfect vision means the day is in order, I watch with calm the news of murders.

As if the recent months weren’t enough, I pen a confession on a postcard.

As if taste isn’t a warning, I take another swig.

As if virtue has a single definition, I fashion my mouth into an agreeable shape.

As if experience is not a reliable guide rail, I summon a supernova of scenarios.

As if habit, I pocket a fist of pleases.

As if the holidays are supposed to be otherwise, I swim in fever blue.

As if the rush is a symptom, I quote the wisdom of quagmires.

As if the arc of wanting, I release.

As if tomorrow is another today, I brace for the lonely impact.

As if light could be held, I trace the fault lines on my palm.

As if hunger is an excess, I swallow the wishbone whole.

As if the body is a lack, I speak in third-person.

As if offense is an unwelcome mechanism, I stance a stone exterior.

As if waiting is the only option, I put my phone face down.

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Mammal response

There was shame when my hands shook.
When the nurses asked if I suffered
from seizures, I said, No. They said it was shock.

I never did just sit there when babies or blood left me.
I would become the shuddering sides of the deer,
the tremor that comes with the canine whine.

I read somewhere that it is the way animals
release the day’s damage so I have decided
not to deny the mammal inside me. After all,

I am only half tame. Let me fall back
against the grass, see only sky above me.

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Animal

The autistic clerk who attends late-night bebop gigs down the arse-end of a cobblestone laneway then sleeps in a van by the park. The scuffed one whose hair is overdue for a wash and whose glasses are scratched and finger smudged. The one who wears duffle coats and hand-knitted vests and licks the wooden spoon. The chaos gardener and lapsed weeder who eats leftovers off strangers’ plates in cafés and always pays in cash. The subterfuge with moth holes who steals fair-trade chocolate from Woolworths and leaves post-it notes on badly parked cars. Who turns off footage of bombed hospitals and rocks like an infant on a hand-loomed rug, sourced, according to the dealer, from the most primitive tribes of Iran. Who remembers the quiet patina on her mother’s loafers long after her mother has gone. The louche-laced one who walks with her right foot in the gutter, sprig of Silver Wattle in hand, and only the vaguest of plans. Who trips and face-plants fearlessly into the lovely dirt. Who always provides an orthogonal response to a straightforward question. Who cannot see past the spelling mistakes in the instructions. The one who is sworn off social media from now until death. Who has a diagnosis of Borderline Personality Disorder and thinks it is an asset. Who understands that identity is slippery, not a Pinterest board. Who refuses to pathologise every human tic and tendency. Who lives and feels and dies resolutely, unashamedly, mad flesh, sweat and desire. The homo sapiens who is more than an inefficient robot. Who sits every morning on the front verandah and greets every passing dog that lifts its leg on the gatepost. Who recognises another animal when they meet one.
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Red Right Handfish

a Golden Shovel

Liberty-spiked, I rock on the current. You should
cut and run
my complexion sputters. The sea, unintermitted
synthesis, grasps its parts. It would pickle vengeance,
if it were you. Three killed. Four missing. Still, your polychloroprene arm
assumes it can soothe water’s prickly heat, and mine. Think again
my infinite filament spits. It sensed sudden ahis’
new-salt sensitivities, golden streaks breaking away in the reef’s red
aqua regia. Lobsters’ cresting shrieks : urchins’ wandering fire : my nurseries’ bright
-ening absence. The thinned out instincts of kin you sent back. A big hand
for the transgressor
surf seethes. You can’t not lend your name to
conservation, but can you love me, warts and all? Unplague
yourself? Unkeel? The moon wheels its shelfless basalt ocean towards us.






Note: fewer than 250—100, according to one source—red handfish (Thymichthys politus; warty excrescence, polished)
are living in the wild; ‘wandering fire’ is from Paradise Lost

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BITE HISTORY

Click image to zoom.


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The Lammergeier Diet

What was happening now to desolate these patients was a predation
pure and simple, nested on villages of cliff, the consumption of non-
steroidal anti inflammatories in the marrow of their tracts – a lethal
dose for vultures of worlds both old and new. This brief of evidence
dropping from crowded skies like a big idea onto blood-fabric: pilots
abandoning manifest, UN World Food Programme baskets feathered
with corroborating bones, full-dome projects of celestial excarnation
ferrying tiger dust to Garuda left ferrymanless before the dim zodiac.
Tibias and tarsals of ibex and sheep left whole upon a shattered earth.
Here was the only living vertebrate to dine contentedly on vertebrae,
rushing to bequeath its own. The lofty desert never gave her thanks
though for the odd length of bovine spine local wild dogs made a gift
of their rabid brood. Om Mani Padme Hum. Medicine is a closed loop.

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Self-Evaluation Form

Never Sometimes Frequently Almost Always
I can be cut open
I can stay still for extended periods of time
I flinch at the sight of blood
I consent to be photographed when nude
I exhibit behavior distasteful to my insurance provider
I remember to refill the gas tank
I confess to my wrongdoings
I feel guilt when consuming animal meat
I am overwhelmed by unpleasant feelings towards dull objects
I imagine the next 10 years
I locate a pulse over my windpipe when distressed
I believe in the occurrence of memory
Precise and unforgiving, like a second set of teeth
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An bees

1.


I see a child take their singlet off in front of an unclouded bathroom mirror.
And pose
sideways. Look
at their still flat chest, deciding if they’ll get away with cutting their
swimming suit in half, and tucking something into their bottoms.
When they go swimming with their newly found friends next day.

I see a child freeze. A bee approaches them in the garden.
They halt their breathing when it hovers
oh so close.
Question their own. Gender—
does it make you a girl if you are frightened easily by insects?

I see a child visiting the village of their relatives and everyone they meet
would like to know their age and how they are related to so-and-so. Discuss
who they remind them of.
And then decide based on the length of the child’s hair, solely, whether to
call them
gorgeous
or to praise their apparent strength and bravery.

The relative accompanying the child rushes to correct.
She. He. He. She.
The duel of pronouns ensues. A ricochet above the child’s head.

It’s Mikael. Lucia. Me.
Again Lucia.

It’s bees and water everywhere
in my memories and films I watch.
And I no longer know what’s what.
Whose queer childhoods.

Mikael is swimming. Lucia is swimming. I am swimming.

And I am booking tickets to another queer childhood film to see with a
dear friend of mine. That’s two in just one week surrounding your birthday,
she points out smiling: 20,000 Species of Bees and Monster.
(And Tomboy that I streamed without you last week, I want to add. But I
just smile back).

I am looking,
I think,
to fill the lacunae between the things that I remember.
Where a sensation of not-being-present
is pooling. And where
its accompanying vagueness can’t make up
for what has never been acknowledged.

And when I read the scenes above out loud I can’t help but notice how they
resonate.
Within my body they are indistinguishable
whether the words come from my diary
or outline something I’ve seen on screen.

Performance and authenticity might seem at odds, or even opposites, but
aren’t we always dependant on the shared, borrowed from each other
gestures, storylines, vocabularies when we either are contriving our lives or
trying at a later time to language our pasts.




2.


I take out silver prints. A faded stack I store inside an envelope on the
bookshelf.

And it’s me and my grandfather

this time we are on the beach.

Here, I am sitting in front of him, leaning my back against him. And our
arms are folded in a gesture of, well… nothing in particular…
It’s just a shape we made.
A pleasing visual echo of each other’s body we composed inadvertently.

And here—I am in the shallow water of the Azov.
His childhood sea. My childhood sea.
Its name now borrowed by the ordinary heroes—a battalion of defenders
of Mariupol. A small town nearby that now made them famous.

Here, between Leena,
with braids arranged into loops,
tied up to stop them soaking in salty water,
and a boy
whose name is lost (perhaps, a neighbours’ child?)
I am smiling
and I am perfect.
I am neither–nor.
I could not
do it better if I tried, deliberately.

And the photograph is modest in size and slightly tilted. Printed in the
makeshift darkroom in the bathroom. Corners are slightly bent, but
composition reveals a practiced eye and hand.
In yet another coastal location, approximately thirty years prior, the same
photographer took pictures of
my newborn mother,
and her older sister,
their nanny,
my grandmother,
the US navy ships,
communication tower locations,
idillyc islands
strung along the coast of Greece.
But that’s a story for another time.

Here, he simply framed three children sitting in the shallow water.
And then I shiver realising that this boy, whose name I do not know, is now
in his forties.
Like me. This boy.
Was killed in war? Still fighting? And my throat closes up.

Next print is me and my grandmother. In the playground, on the high
shore with view over the sea. I am hanging off the bars above the slide. My
grandmother is keeping watch from under her oversized sun hat. And she is
working on something delicate that’s resting in her lap.

A pair of lacy socks is in the making here. To be held up by delicate
crocheted ties with the cherry-size pompoms that make a dainty bow below
my skinny knees. An outlier in my wardrobe of red and navy corduroys and
sweaters—all hand-me-downs from a cousin.

I barely had any clothes suited for a girl. And maybe, it begins
to bother my grandmother. And she wants to correct this.

Maybe, it’s a summer when we are on the brink.
Of tensions
caused by boyish misdemeanours.
Of voiced concerns
and stopping me
from climbing trees. Correcting
manners inappropriate for girls.

The image of a boyish child in the lacy knee-highs is sweetly camp, but I
could not know this at the time, and I objected. It will be a long while till I
understand that you can feel and look not less but more a boy when wearing a
dress.

What is the word for a bookish, shy, sensitive tomboy
in lacy knee-highs?

How do we read her?

A bee is circling around to suggest an answer.




Films mentioned:
20,000 Species of Bees. Directed by Estibaliz Urresola Solaguren, Gariza Films Inicia Films, 2023.
Monster. Directed by Hirokazu Koreeda, Gaga Corporation, Toho Co., Ltd., AOI Pro., Fuji Television, 2023.
Tomboy. Directed by Céline Sciamma, Hold Up Films, Arte France Cinéma, Canal+, 2011.

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HuΣanity

Today angel got caught up in the Σarch
he was just outside the casino headed 2 lorne
it’s hard enough 2 get thru the crowds but now they’re
ringing down the street for miles

only 2 more days to go angel says & the win∂
will die down with the rain running through
his ears like the suez canal when did it all
begin?

in this world there’s 3 e√ils

religion poli†ics & oil

if we get rid of all 3 we might finally get some
peace the suez hasn’t known that 4 ages eh
angel remembers passing throμgh a river
with sand on both sides just a ri√er long
meΣory no weaponry just sand on its banks
just lyk ∂a grand canyon

NO MORE PRESIDENTS

mr president iƒ angel waz ever 2 see u here
beware he’d show u a bench give u a cardboard 2 lie
on sir have a nice long sleep so ∂eep you
might say u might never wake up cos rn i mean
(look at u lol) u probably gotta headache

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Athabasca

across the glacier
to a clean slit in the ice
blade through white fish
the guide crouches
a small child at the brook lip
take off your mittens
drink this and your hair
will turn white
your soul will turn pure

white water white
icescape white thought
child becoming ice
and shattering an elk
calf onto birth
-staggered legs
adult popping
white hairs from a chest
sucking the cool
white bulbs free
what if they were wrong
what if truth is heat
not white heat
horseshoeing into cold
the heat of spring puddles
spawn heat
not even heat
not even truth
what then would this ice
cube at your lips bid you
let go
a child’s balloon
into shadeless sky

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Irre…artist… or a thousand spangled…

to whom it may con… do not be concerned… the creative director… of sales… is replacing car with project… and yes rebellion looks a little like… that middle manager who asks if you’re okay… by asking for your… number one… kid… see i see… everyone… with a gmail… as problematic… and the party is always a rager… as in my dad is getting shitty… on the carpet… as in… he’s cutting… up my credit card… my allow… me… to be anything you want in this world… as long as it isn’t… unemployed… like dreaming… of being… the first male poet… to win… the stellar award… because over… hearing… reminds me… deftly… of email protocol… how efficiency is… okay… as in they need a new term for… poetic economy… or dinosaur… as in a zoom call is… its own sort of invoice… and an email is… a cheque… you can’t cash… in… on your friends even when… they’re boasting about… the pits… are where i store my innovation… because no one expects a man… to love an… abalone… like an arrow… like a cigarette… as in watching a lecture on self-employment… in the age of… self-empowerment… is akin to forgetting how to read… a clock… face… it… grab a… scratch that… forget who controls… the cogs… on that man… which on that note… tick… punch it when you’re pissing… not it and not out… in… the other room there is a woman… half my… family size… doing twice the… work… on yourself… but that is another room… for improvement… performance reviews are like… reviews… by bad character… actors… call this talk… shit… by the institution… but isn’t every artist just waiting for their… parents to die… of heartbreak… as in that evil… mix on your spotify… goblin core… man-hunter trap…. feeling… scene… which has its own term now… genre alchemy… disc… cogs… disc… ogling… blood… lustre… 1743 genres… and only one word for… f… unemployment… as in… i’m a bow… wow… bird of… bad ideas… that i made good in… an essay… about how my handwriting gets worse… in public… as in my hand… is giant… is this why my doctor… only uses capitals… when spelling… ADHD… because isn’t this… all… just a darwinian take down… of the canon… which i want to shoot out of… like a thousand spangled… mountain lions…

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Flat

The sea is flat
and far out
tonight

as I have been
a long time now

shallow
all the way
from skin to
bone and
ice-cold too

the way ships feel
floating always
far above
their slow lives

hungry rust eating
the underneath
of the water.

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praise poem for these girls i was

who rake the floor with want
clawing wood with blunt nails
asking for rest in bold italicised
underlined, cursing subsequent void

vomiting false diagnoses
in each day, a new house of panic
a prayer to god in a language
they don’t understand, precisely memorised

sharp, fanatical clinging to life
when it seems hellbent on chasm
on swallowing nerves
on fireballs for the innocent

where will you sleep next
sweet children, you whose emergencies
go unregistered, blanked out and shoved away
into every small cabinet of your chest

/ there will be a flat surface to lie on /
your respite dream, simple, recited
/ these flames can’t last forever /
you say to your mind, the last remaining

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Aug 31st and everyday like it

early train
light rattle caresses the carriages
aircon soothes my forehead

trees wave past
eyes shutter as my head nods

train slows

along with a burst of dust
men enter draped with the Australian flag
that stir with their hips
eyes dart behind
they swarmed the next carriage too

beer breath and morning pong bellows throughout the train
they encase me
as the train chugs along
their flags and shoulders barge me

next stop, more flags march on
men pressed into me
their breath heats my scalp
my eyes clutch the floor

“you coming today”
shake my head
he huffs
his eyes stake my head

like the ground was staked to map out this track we’re travelling on
built by Blackfullas like me
on the paths our Ancestor walked, mapped by the stars
over a millenninia ago

train slows, i constrict
another gang of men

a boot on my chest
i sink between bodies and chants
they sing the land is full
my lungs
pluck for air

“excuse me! this is my stop!” my voice punches through their yelling shroud
i repeat myself – no movement
as i tunnel they sneer,
one man trips me

skin scrapes the station’s gravel
they laugh
“fuck off” “suck a black dick, greenie”
i crumble until the train departs

Get up
wipe the gravel off
their smell grips my clothes

outside the station i watch
a white lady head barrel towards a group of brown women
straight on
a slow gore
huffs when they’re not impaled
splits the group with an eye roll

one of the women is wearing a no room for racism badge
i grin at it and her
check train times for when i can go home

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Side Hustle

Signed off for a week by the doctor
with Squid Games-induced anxiety
you set up a net consultancy
Elvish for self-actualisation
drum bath relaxation technique
US Marine-style dog perfumery
ecumenical corporate ice chant
non-traumatic distress spoon crochet
hormonal paranoia yakitori sequencing
semi-rural mansplaining triggers
Himalayan yak fur folding
statistical cyber cynghanedd days
medieval wicca regression darts
pseudo-Maori moose waltz
is your cat a psychic vampire?
Printed up leaflets and everything
now back to work

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i before e

My po po tells me to marry a woman who speaks Cantonese,
a warning against miscegenation with western devils.

This fence she draws around family is the outer limit
by which I am to understand myself defined

but what if when I grow up I’m the one teaching them English:
when to use a period and when a semicolon, how to demarcate

clauses that hedge against one another like shifting land borders
or the odd spellings of their drifted words, i.e. i before e

except in weird, conceit, and deceive? A kowtow, maybe,
but if gwei loh is the extent of the Cantonese I retain

and in their language I devise a voice more expansive
than could ever be afforded me elsewhere, who’s bowing

to who? What does it matter if I assimilate their speech
more deeply than the pinyin of my own Chinese name?

If po po had the answers, she took them with her when she passed.
Not that I could read a note written in her hand. I measured

every minute at Saturday school, determined to learn
nothing. I scrubbed all my Mandarin tones from my tongue.

She might have guessed I’d be so stubborn, but not
what I’ve grown to regret: my lack of her language? No,

just that I was made to choose at all between beige and foreign,
between Sheila and geisha, between my language and me.

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Evening Raga

street stalls of books outside
the shop in Charing Cross tatty stacks of Edwardian
memoir, kitchen-sink Osborne looking
back in anger
and Punch

novels from days
of smoky pubs and bombsite London

my vagrant hour, rummaging broken spines, bargains
fifty pence, in mythic memory before
asymmetrical towers shouldered
skylines near St. Paul’s before WiFi facial recognition
software future fantasy
heralds

everything, pre

there John Berryman

diamond geezer moonshine Homage to Mistress Bradstreet
signed
‘Harriet from John, a fellow traveler, with all good wishes’

from my last pound note, fifty pence
change held back to feed the meter in my room

Pimlico shabby chic, chipped-paint mantlepiece Dali print
of melting time on the table, the book of poems

through the window, wet streets a red
phone box
opposite, blood-garish the phone

ringing and ringing

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Days

Somehow the after-days kept their structure.
My bus followed its scheduled
route, the usual people hopped on

and off. One day, I began finding
pumice in my yet-unmade bed, as light
rolled about the world like a pair of socks.

Then in the left-hand pocket of my jacket –
and on the strewn floor of the shower; every
where the ruin of an underworld.

On another, I found two on the turntable
of the microwave. And when I walked the weekend
streets, they clinked – clattering about my

forgotten feet; but soon after, I just enjoyed
kicking them away, watching them
scatter from the heart’s broken moment.

Yes, there is usually a quiet Krakatoa
beyond the brightening horizon that no one
notices. Sometimes you even hear it.

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Black + Blue(s) Plastics

for Hughie Stanislas

the houses press closer & closer
against the don drumming light. against
sky that is their living monument

—Kamau Brathwaite, “Koker”


A plank of hardwood cut like teeth –^–^–^–^–^–

to hold in place the steps of a staircase

serving as footbridge across trench

of blackwater and mudded earth

sprouting victoria lilies and ‘one-foot’

wild eddo whose lofty purple-veined

legs sway in the softened seabreeze,

a gentle, moist and salty heir, who

conveys the sounds of cows contented

with birds on their backs pecking at

insects and disturbed flesh, parrots

in the yellow plum plimpler branches

above, amassing in the dungs tree *
* *
at the center of this abandoned lot ^
^
now accommodating the village dump. ^
^
That saline draught also carries an acrid ^

smoke of scorched refuse, rubbish

gathered into the cavity of a rusted-out

refrigerator turned on its back from

where a smoldering plastic bag caught

that same wind, and silently lit upon

my young boy’s wrist instantaneously

attaching to and liquifying his touched flesh

sending lower limbs sprinting up the steps

in astonishment, upper limbs cradling torso

silently inside to be coddled, cared, why rebuked?

for creating future scars: monuments unveiled.

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Unbroken

1.
Intimate, as one flesh, we read
her bodily signs, a language learnt in childhood.

You know why I brought you korma, mum?
Yes, because you know I like it.

Dinnertimes at this age involve
gentle coaxing:
a gradual accumulation.

The tin of stuffed chillies
from Mexico
draw the other ladies’ disgust.

She won’t do salad
with bread. We settle for a movie.
The others go to bed.

2.
Reversals:
I tend to you as once
you tended me.

Ease you out of bed
in the afternoons
offer you tea

help you mobilise.
Wheelie walker always
in reach.

3.
CT HEAD
Clinical Details: Increasingly vague. Past history of left parieto
occipital change. Differential diagnosis: HSV encephalitis or CAA
related macrobleed.
Findings: The widespread oedema/decreased attenuation within
the temporoparietal and occipital lobes has substantially reduced
as compared to the prior CT scan performed on 17 February
2019.
The previously documented left parieto-occipital haemorrhage
has resolved.
There is no evidence of an intracranial space-occupying lesion
nor midline shift. The ventricular system, basal cisterns and
cortical sulci are reasonably well maintained.

4.
Not just clinical notes.
Nothing can encompass:

The struggles were from disbelief.
as if I wouldn’t know my own mother

Sat there, over an hour, trembling, at 7am.
“Refused to eat”, the RN notes.

She has nausea, I say, get her
some IV maxalon, not ondansetron.

“The patient must be able to state this”.
Me: I know my mum.

5.
When you had an EEG
you were Wired For Sound
skating through aether

singing the Cliff Richard song
Then: back in the room –
flying cats.

6.
The vertigo of your constant
comebacks

shocked us out of our skin
One instant fallen: Glasgow Scale 6.

Next morning
up and singing.

7.
Time dilated:
we swam in it, whole pools of it
the seconds, the minutes
stretched out endlessly.

This could have been infinity: it was not.
You left us, when
our sun and Antares aligned:
the soul-portal open.

8.
The other night, five years hence
my brother reports in a dream:
Mum has been calling… when will you pick up?

Posted in 118: PRECARIOUS | Tagged

Chekhov’s Dog

The train North rocks. Like a drunk.
We fold into a dining car booth, our tenth anniversary hanging
above us, grim as a wilting mistletoe. He pulls

from the archives that reverent, watery gaze – a by-product of utmost sentimentality.
I open my lips to a screwdriver and calcify in the wet cement of the near-past:
our discarded child, a loaded jack-in-a-box in the centre of my chest.

He leans in, takes my hand. A-G-A-P-E, he spells passionately. Goes wild with fire
metaphors: rekindle, fan flames, tend sparks.
I prefer the horticultural ones, I say. Cultivate, prune, nurture, water, grow. He appears

not to have heard me. Love is a verb, he says, stressing this last word. He is quoting
Bell Hooks, or is it Massive Attack? I concur, gardening or arson, we must try.
For the rest of the afternoon, I smile but cannot shake the image of a singing foetus.

The colossal red rock stretches, yawns, and plummets like a graph with tragic findings.
We gawk into its smooth buttocks. The guide calls me sister.
Don’t you feel like we’re part of a problem? my husband asks when we’re alone.

Speak for yourself.
As tourists, though.
I nod, recall that joke about the wombat – eats, roots, and leaves is its punchline.
At night, we watch the stars loosen: incalculable cubes of glass lolling about on a

cosmic hammock. In the lurching lounge, he bumps his elbow on the table’s rim.
Bumps it, moans, curses. My eyes remain fixed on the sliding landscape, flattening itself
into a coarse, red palm. Wind stirs the dunes, but there are no oak trees

to trouble. If I were ______, you would have soothed me.
Are you a child? Are you?
A penetrating silence.
As the day unfolds, we stringently exchange words, but do not talk. Our cabin

smells of coffee and feet. Shelved on the top bunk, I read of war in the paper.
The article is sad and deeply biased. I ask why we allocate compassion so selectively?
It’s like that drooling dog, he answers from underneath me. Chekhov’s.

Pavlov’s.
Once we determine who the Cowboys are and who the Indians are, we have our stimuli.
I suck air between my teeth.
Tell me I’m wrong.

On the way to Adelaide, it rains. The confused, cracked-heel earth clenches
and softens. Taking care of oneself – our private euphemism for masturbation. I assume
this is what nature is enacting, until I see the wonder across his face and realise

it is an act of mercy.

Posted in 118: PRECARIOUS | Tagged