Time Machines

1.
In the aching light.
I stand for a long time thinking how small your hand.

2.
Of another
I had held at some previous time,
though it was nothing I could put my tongue to.

3.
My personality at this time:
say, elusive at best
an annihilated jumble.

4.
The throbbing in my leg
becomes audible time.

5.
The central question
I was forced to revisit time and time again
in his sessions was: ‘Where did?’

6.
I slipped in and out of consciousness.
At times when I opened my eyes he was sitting beside me.

7.
By this time his voice radiated menacing intensity.

8.
Disaster, he had told me.
If ever there was a time
when a little external structure was required.

9.
Sounds settle into a dull murmur.
By the time I have dressed they are completely silent

10.
Swedenborg was explicit this time:
we must take one of the ambulances to the crash site
and blend in with the other rescue crews.

11.
Over the clumped terrace houses:
a pyramid flashes four times in the sky
I pull off my latex gloves.

12.
It is time.

13.
Did I love you enough
at the time?

14.
Lifted into warmth
that time on the barge
that may or may not.

15.
Pontoons.
There are not many boats moored this time of year,
still fewer residents. Just you. Just I.

16.
A signal lodged in the sky.
Throbbing into existence four times.

17.
Four is the heart’s time sequence:
equal by equal.

18.
Some genetic paradigm
to orient myself next time around –

19.
Yes.
But she may have died in the end this time.

20.
I hope so.
Remember what happened last time?

21.
Over the lens.
I study her boat for a long time
extrapolate her movements from the shift of the hull in water.

22.
We both turn our heads
to the timer
watch the last sand drain from the glass.

23.
Suddenly and stare
at the ceiling through your eyes.
I hear your childish voice for the first time.

24.
For the first time
it is some time else.

25.
It is time to meet the sonic chambers.

26.
He laughs again,
this time as a baby might – all gums and drawn lips.
He walks away, a column.

27.
Of the building’s staggering height.
In recent times it has come to serve another more private purpose

28.
Obelisk Enterprises reserves all rights
to manipulate time, space and any collected data.

29.
Three times in the sky ridge a void in the dream.

30.
Channels I have calved.
Her mouth moves all the time
breath squeezed from between lips in a repetitive, controlled gesture.

31
She mumbles ‘life can be hard sometimes
but I really quite like it.’

32.
Three times it has all fallen through my fingers.

33.
If you fail to materialise at this time you will receive no further communications.

34.
Time is very big.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

11/8/15-2/9/15

11/8/15

If you can’t save your own soul you might as well save electricity
I know that bug wants more and will plead with me in a dozen different
Dylan draped guises
H+R Block sure don’t miss a thing
and neither does that hamburger box
so long as those cloud hills stay nice and blue
we’re both in for a satisfactory skidad to the carillion
I was a teenager once
everything was included
and again I reign victorious over myself
I moved the tape player slightly.

2/9/15

I know I care
about the placement of one piece of paint or another
and the seriousness of being gone
and someone’s need to be transferred (no)
and someone’s dying child (no)
she hopes it’s dying anyway.
But really I just want to look for the right aquiline nose on the internet
and almost any man with long hair will do.
I tried to convince you I had grown up
you may or may not have believed me
you probably really wanted to
but I was always going to turn back into a goose
and apart from a sometimes doubtful stomach
it doesn’t matter all that much to anyone.
Because retaining the right amount of moisture between 6 and 7:30 am is peaceful
enough.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

An Object exists only as it might exist to Another

The melancholia of not being Anne Boyer.
The melancholia of melancholy,
of listening for factories out there in the sea
when everyone else was searching for whales.
The melancholia of a word without a poem,
of the poem as pristine category looking forwards
to an unseasonable year. The melancholia
of mid-size body suits still wrapped in the box.
The melancholia of the test subject
reduced to running slip or outmoded art form.
The melancholia of the barely perceptible
snakeskin purse clutched on dry afternoons
of laissez-faire capitalism. It’s true, isn’t it?
Only the romantic can be that real.
The melancholia of sharp, leopard-print belts
burning naively at the fashion blog
found in the heart of yesteryear.
The melancholia of the human
as a class of actors, reciting Moby Dick
to the signature tunes of Prince. The melancholia
of melancholy, writing city rather than cosmos.
The melancholia of repetition,
recidivist as the eye that refuses
to gaze back at you. One woman’s fantasy
is another’s solipsism.
The melancholia of not being loved,
firstly in the age of Aquarius and then again
in the age of the Anthropocene.
Or the melancholia of window dressing
the incision between innocence and experience.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Destiny

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Seven Formulas of Method

1. Data:
Sun on the right hand
Sand fun this roght hend
Sent an tho rught hind
Sin ends thumb raght hond
Song in that reght hund

2. Mix:
on the right sand / sent behind / thumbs end rage / expand this shine / song that hounds

3. Booster:
and forbudden her and dumb
as a-peaking of hindone amiss
a fire hends rope to the day
I had the soul’s whereght
nurse sick we make send this newhom
wherught he thathat then is
but their eyes the bling brayes for
where that burn und suct that thing
more

4. Selection:
then is but their eyes
then
is but their
eyes
then is but their
eyes
is but their eyes
then
is but their eyes
then is
then
thathat burn und
suct thathat burn und
suct thathat

5. Turbo:
Sunshine handling furnace sent rught hit sunshade right sardine furlong sent roght
histrionic siphon engineering tibia to sort that hand

6. Hone:
sunset sarcophagus sortie sunroof sapphire sinus handle history

7. New charge:
a fleet of headaches running the deck, ocean sick
we manufacture fantasies and suck that timber more
a flavour heads the decision-making
we had the spectacle’s willingness
an occurrence as sick as could we make in an hour
flash hatred rules the cycle
sick obstacles keep us interned
with our faiths, our factories
hardware and fabrics turning out song
sin counting our right thumb
sand in the engine, sun sent gone

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Magnet Theory

i.
this is the last time i try & turn us
into the ocean. i want to be wave motion
but know shitting & sweating are the same
pack aged par cel complete with Atlantic
origin story, each cell repeating murky beginnings
on election night meeting at a birth
day party, talking only of endings – it is hard
not to be political, difficult
to divide via semantics, the physical
, the actual & the symbol.


ii.
we hold hands for the first time watching
Salo or 120 Days of Sodom dir. P Pasolini (1975)
. above her covers winter is holding on out
side, wrist meeting mine half way across my chest
& i am facing away – she will have to see my eyes curl
in the laptop screen, repress a smile through torture
deprivation shit-eating howdidtheyeven?? apparently,
(i’ll read this later), Pasolini gave the kids chocolate,
& they were constantly on the crest of laughing
fits. Salo has been mostly banned in Australia. so too
once was Salinger, & so are visual depictions of the inner
labia, even now, viewing Salo is only allowed
with 180 minutes of extra material, which we will not watch
so I guess this is illegal but


iii.
i know all words have their
place-making agenda. we hold hands & two nights later
she’ll tell me how her mother died of cancer when she was
fourteen . i’ll ask if she heard through a network
about my own run-in, whether she is surrounding herself
with this on purpose. she’ll say
she never got to see how chemo actually
happens. i tell her everything became an image of myself
amplified leaving its brine in my
memory & finger shadows on my back. she likes the way
my veins bulge. nurses told me
they were clear as day but thick skin required extra
downward pressure. we hold hands while the moon
pastels her motions fissured & silver, a reflection


iv.
on the water, hyperbole skipping at some hundred
knotted characters. it resonates & grows while we filter
feed on what we want to know – at least we can
download Salo, watch above covers & hold hands
while the new PM occupies negative space. i know
he & i are the same in that we are both obsessed with self
replication & validation before a recognised audience.
he is buoyed by the country
voting like the inward-looking sickly, while i am stuck
on the analogy – it is too transmutable, or perhaps it is simply
too easy to get cancer. all
this information is more likely to divide


v.
than unite, dears caught in backlights
tracking anachronisms through dimming
distance. afterwards we put on Slacker dir. R Linklater (1991)
& spend all night almost
fucking, half skin against hemisphere, these two surfaces –
planets apart from one movie ago when holding hands
for the first time, now plying planets into poems
to dissolve insurmountable distances, as though words
are alchemy of Fe 2 or 3 plus concentrates in the current. we touch
& reach constantly. we try not to break the illusion
that to be staring into eyes is to be sharing thoughts
& feelings, a cross-purpose colony , a multicellular entity
coming together & glooping into history’s ether. swim
, reel, swim.Salo finishes with the final


vi.
crushing fade out of ambivalent dancing & we realise
that we are watching, still attached by the ends
of our upper limbs. without growing fins
she looks me in the eyes & tells me about Pink Flamingos
dir. J Waters (1972) & how Divine eats dog shit, not
chocolate, & there is nothing quite like it
in all of cinema.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

The Expansive Aura of Discs

Sit down in a comfortable, quiet setting. Alter your default settings. Find a CD that you love. (It is best if it is a DIVINE SOUL CD, but this does not have to be the case.) Take the CD out of the case. Place the CD on your head. Balance it there. Focus on the CD. See the CD, not with your eyes, but with your mind. Reach through the jewel case of your mind and feel the CD. Consider that this CD is an object. Consider that all objects have a soul. Consider that this CD has a soul. Consider that the light embracing the CD is encasing your mind in a curdled rainbow halo. Do you mind that? Do you feel warmth? Do you feel anything? Consider that there is nothing you are meant to feel. Consider that the soul of the CD contains songs that are part of the song your soul sings, part of the universal soul song. Play the CD with your mind. Sing the songs of the CD, remembering that all CDs are transitional objects connecting individual songs with the curdled rainbow of the universal DIVINE song. Slowly feel the songs of the CD, and your songs, merge with all other possible soul songs. Carefully remove your CD halo from your head and place it in the microwave on high. Observe it transcend. Celebrate the residual transcendence it has left behind. Download, from the universe, any one of the songs from the CD and make it your personal ringtone. Every time the secular calls, unify this disruption with connectivity.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

DogText










Dogs are not an alibi for other themes; dogs are fleshly material-semiotic presences in the body of technoscience.

         Donna Haraway



Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Élan vital

It’s hard to gauge the health of this interaction
because I’m grateful, because the iron fist is long gone,
gabled in the California bungalow of dementia breached,
lead gone, gold siphoned. I have you crystalline
like childhood’s glass statuary, perfect model to perfect
likeness of perfect memory now a figment of imagination.

This digression is well-known but few write it.
An aching of wattle cascades from alps of vision,
a rusty grating one’s only proof. Remember memory,
veins and dimensions. The wisteria is the limit,
the waratah a grave, the orchid a room, everyone’s
dead parents propped up like a bloom. Never your
music to stir some vital signs. A lungful of harness.
It is cheaper to be here as I am, a tyrant of life.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

The Falling

I want the building
that stretches up past
the top of the white like driving

up a summer road into heat-haze
that ends, might end, here
with low gray

and I never noticed the sky.
Why fear what’s out of the frame?
I cannot name this city

except to say I went there once
and everywhere was white
and perpendicular and nothing

was like myself or my city.
Man has not burnt with fire,
this building shall not either.

Black has a falseness.
I grow nostalgic
for primary colours, for sound.

But I work when the scenes
only empty,
the end of the stairs.

I think the sky is clouded
but maybe it’s not. They can create me,
I give myself the lassitude of stone.

I wanted none of this. Speech
beyond speechlessness.
A slow lyric.

Step away from me,
back towards the cars
parked resting in a row.

I want to gather together
our last breaths
and float.

I cast nothing behind. Step.
I’ll find a piece of wood
to step to. A bridge.

I’m casting shadows you can’t see.
Here. It’s all the way
gone down slow.

Talk slower. My building
to tear. You tear.
Wear myself, your sleeve,

tissue thin, skin,
voice is the opposite
of cloud.

I’ve missed
the sensate elements of thought.
Your mouth

tastes metal as you fall,
or as you remember
falling.

What my hand holds
is not mine,
but the sensation is,

those small tendrils
of electricity.
I am never going to be a person.

I am never going to be a person
who dies in a fire,
I am never going to.

Put your face
up against
a window,

it’s yours
these clouds,
slow pokes of air,

your lungs burn,
even if a fire
couldn’t make a match flicker,

keep this: sand, sky, stone,
the grim thing of what’s outside,
your own fallow feelings,

the falling.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Stations and a Crossing

No one checks your ticket. Outside
the train, whales arch across noise
and blue static. Take off
sodden sneakers, socks.
Get comfy. You didn’t bring a book.
Watch your window.

Split lightning flashes /
clouds seeded with bats
over slurred vine / bruised fruit pelts
out the knees of toothpick huts
/ arch from mud. The swelling shore
licks the palace lidded on bamboo / sway.

The train pulls to a stop
to take the tide in, with a few
tired eyes, dripping.

The next town lit up radioactive:
neon on puddle / every store
a corner store, each street one bodega long
/ a maze of corners / each sign a lighthouse
; ;

Doors shut on blurry glow
of adjectives. A tunnel.

A man in red embarks and slides
a red umbrella in beside you.
“What’s your blood type?” and you
point to your headphones / shrug / he thinks
you’re pointing to your neck. Nearly miss your stop.

Squelch. Into pavement’s grey inch of water.
Doors slurp — your shoes inside
and gone. Your lover won’t pick up his phone.

Cross the city’s heft / a wet cat / awning
to awning / feet blistered and pruned.

His apartment.
He laughs at the dank surprise of you.
“That’s sweet. But I have company.”
Foyer so white, his teeth glow. Ha. The elevator’s
big mouth. He leads you to a room you’ve never seen.
An aquarium. You’re so tired of water.
In the tank, women float like weeds.

“These / my former loves” / fingertips
on glass: “I wanted / to think them over.”

Fumble in your pocket for the ticket home. Breathe
faster. His teeth again. He leads you to his waterbed, slicks
blonde hair / watches you.

Morning retraces hot steps on stone.
Buy clear gumboots in the market square. Fail to find
a hot breakfast.

At the station, a machine dispenses novels.
Choose one about a child detective. Block
your lover’s number, pick the longer route
home, unblock the number, crack
the book’s spine / crack your own.

The train hurtles over railed ocean, past
disused amusement rides hoisted on
old sailing ships / a city of pirate rigs in rags
/ rollercoasters link decks / Ferris Wheels spin
listless off of masts.

In the sky, no movement.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Auto

The hairline of people is nice. You could spread butter there, and probably some do. What does pat cheeks mean? How tender? What does *talk* mean? How do you say *gesture*? Focus on that today, as you make pleats where
there were none. Make an apex. Make another. Well the dip is implicit. You asked for a donkey, you got an ass, what’s the difference? You wanted a guide dog, you got a lap dog. The baby elephant sat on you – you cradled it – you hadn’t thought you could. How funny. A day spent turning away from the sun. The back of your head shines.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

The Blazar Axes

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

I Am a Pioneer of the Artificial Heart

The heart has to come completely
out of the body.

Lift now, hold now–I could explain
myself better.

The smoldering wires before
the house fire.

The growths that grow back,
grow back

at even the cleanest margins, at the threshold
of the tree line.

The body is a lie.
If I were to say

a copse of, does that mean anything,
further the number

of burr holes in the Ash tree as it loses limb
and limb–O Emerald

Ash Borer, your jeweled metastases,
your larvaes’ serpentine

feeding galleries. If I say the lakes here
look like fingers,

and the patches of milfoil, myrio,
meaning ten thousand,

meaning too many to count, spread
like the exanthem of disease–

But in this painting by George Boorujy
a blue jay is “anting,”

sitting and spreading its wings
in the dirt,

letting ants crawl up into its feathers
to eat the mites.

As in one infestation
can cure another.

I am a pioneer of the artificial heart.
A garden hose

with too much pressure
shooting through.

Fever of unknown
origins.

The body of the lake
a body all around me

tingling with milfoil. There is no cure.
I want to unstory this story,

patent this invention, this pump
of doubt.

My pill-box heart, wooden arms
and legs,

spasms in the limbs:
electrified marionette

of hospital gauze and desire.
I begin to empty of blood.

The heart valves, little lub-dub mouths,
they snap shut.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

room

this room is brain devices whirr in a
chiastic arrangement refrain chorus
chorus refrain carolling intimate
concert with me o! such melodious
gadgetry this room is house it’s solid

enough for ephemera holding firm
with a granite grasp the walls wear gloves the
furniture hovers the good ceiling stares
from above this room is planet immense
& remote I follow myself through a

telescope sometimes I peer at a dot
of a girl a tininess inside a
mammothy world & the girl dreams dreams in
here comets & atoms collect in this
room all my darlings & dears & it booms

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Monologue of the Terminator

If you want the guise of a sparrow, you must work to achieve it. Laziness is the bane of your generation. Why do you think the ancestors of the trap door spiders had such fine, romantic legs? I worked in the kitchen of their spaceship factory until the roof began to cave in. Well, actually, it was always caving in, but it got to the point where you couldn’t not notice it. So frustrating when throwing the right ingredients into the soup. My designers appreciated the importance of aesthetics. For them it was about more than apocalypse and salvation. I was made to look pristinely human, not just for espionage, but because it made them feel better—while herding their animals into their zoos or perfecting paints into more radical colours, or whatever it was they were doing. I’m not talking about mechanics. Not robotics, not spider plans, not beauty. Oh Sarah, if I hadn’t melted away what would we talk about tonight? Save me from the new models they are feeding into my post-termination dreams. The ones for whom car chases are easier than building sand castles with castle moulds on a beach. Where we swam, remember?

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Dream Flotation Device

He was driving her in a car. She thought they were out for a nice afternoon spin but then he told her he was dropping her off and she would have to walk the rest of the way by herself and suddenly she noticed she was only wearing her pyjamas and slippers.

After a long scenario entailing mislaid travel tickets and a lost passport, it became apparent the rest of the group would have to leave her behind at the border. She looked in the waiting-room mirror: her hair was cut in a strange way and there was a gash across her top lip. She could no longer recognise herself.

She discovered that her body was in fact made of many separate pieces that could come apart and then be placed together again in an entirely different way. She started trying to do it. Hours went by. She should never have taken herself apart in the first place.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

wat is yr emergency

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Shed tissues on a big canopy bed, it’s a boring afternoon

Inside ivory boxes you find mounds of pink like the nits on Josie’s face in 7th grade
When you stop at traffic lights you think of jungle juice sweat and smother your lips.

you are a sticky dime, but secondly you are a shiny coin which sounds like cutting when you drop it on linoleum and thirdly –
          – only two humps on the beige duffel if you’re looking with eyes.

Limping in tiny spaces.

          We’ll continue as long as there are squeezes of pulp, could you get the blender?

The pyramid on a tightrope
The Thursday afternoon spent in a refrigerator
The scorned voodoo on the side of the road
A sign reading:
Do not claim the gin if you spilt the wine

Maybe for a bite you’ll go to Sierra Leone, maybe not.
Sloppy seconds is always bad unless it’s a pistol with one bullet.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Heritage

out of that sack
I came

and that bent flower
the dark room

ancestors lining up
their hands cupped with genes

out of that throbbing
the blood around their hearts

ribs touching
in the dance hall

he in his white shirt
she with her tender mouth

wartime, tolling in their ears
engaged and wed in weeks

out of that hype and terror –
she in satin

with her home fires burning
he, deep in the Borneo jungles

playing Mozart at night
making the mad men weep

out of that I came
and now –

out they come
out of the bending flower

my ancient room
ancestors lining up again

with strangers
slipping in a bowed mouth

a squared chin
and a pang

out they come –
and out

and out
and out.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Intensive Care (ii)

There had been an earlier
waking, though,
in the ICU,

a time you have
deeply forgotten,
when you had the worst

of it—the pain, the detubation,
the harrowing scenes
of your return to life.

Your wife witnessed it,
graphically laying it out to
you some weeks later,

so that you were both
gifted with that
pointless knowledge.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

untitled

Each morning now you test the apparatus.
Waking to its pounding core
you seek remote appendages,
test for the function of digits lost in the night,
the forgotten texture of flesh.
The television tells you
people will let you down, machines won’t.

On a white-lit afternoon
blinking back the little oil-spills,
you cover your eyes and ears
and are cocooned in the industrious
whir and hammer of an agent
as it reads your mind.
Voices come to you through speakers
as if from a distant blue planet
to a churning vessel
mapping shrouded constellations.
Its artworks are luminous, irrefutable;
the machine is broken.

In the lift a woman peers at you
against reflecting mercury, as if
discerning the features of condemned cargo
hazardous appliance, do not touch
Mirrored back its outlines are slipping, precarious
a specimen studied through cracking glass.

With grinding spokes and chains
you find the shoreline and immerse
let salt seep into its crevices, and wait
for a culmination, an interruption,
deus ex machina. The water crackles on
to its faltering soundtrack
of automated thuds and ticks.
A liner coasts the horizon
all indomitable volume and calibrated steel
it diminishes quietly toward a certain future.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

ha rd-won

in the y
ear of
our
rar est digit
al flow
er
the de

ad ’re i
n the
ir g
rid

the algo
r it him’
ll give
u their stat
em ent

who
can
clean

for get
the unrecor ded y
ears
the mainstream plane
ts cloa

king
trad
bot trad
er
tax have
n $$ mo
fos

!w
hose
ease do
n’t im
press

us we us
ed 2 g rind f
or ’e
m to
o

workflo
wed
ma
chined it
up ’t il the flick
summing mys
elf ’neat
h screeng
low

working 4 my micro
bio
me

2 give
it
its …
risk

ed be ing ‘lo
ved’
such th
at i’d rip en
int o so me o
ut
senti
(t hen i 1st hear

d it
spoke
n a
loud : )
what ever

t
hey try to puff
on me @ the
moodshop

2 take
good war
d of my
plea sure
i. e.

not w
anting it 2
end no t
wanting it 2

n
ever end nor sur
render to som
e defaultcore
long long vo id





‘The dead are in their grid’ is a line from the poem ‘Everything Must Go’ by Matthea Harvey.

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged

Nox

A poem addressed to Anne Carson


My husband is wheeled from emergency to theatre
along a hallway carpeted with silence.
Escorted to a waiting room, almost fin de siècle Victorian,
I survey medical books encased by glass and
blighted like old taxidermy.
The registrar, wearing a Freudian beard, stalls at the door,
unimpressed by my progress in mourning.
The heart has failed, he insists.
He draws a childish diagram on a scrap of paper
pressed onto the coffee table.
I must strike him as thoughtless, but I am thinking.
Hospitals were not always like this.
When I was a girl, gurney wheels trundled on a bright-and-shine floor
that disinfected all memory of grief
—sanitised the griever, whole.
Now, with the registrar spilling words, I am cleaning up after him,
revising his sentences into tidy units of five or ten,
repeating the most pleasing combinations again and again.
My fingers type at my side, next to invisible.
The only person who would see them has, by now, been anaesthetised.

I did not invent the typewriter, but at some point in the high school
typing pool, it secretly invented me:
aaa space bbb.
Before then, I was silent as a rabbit beneath
the zig zag of a classroom ceiling,
enthralled by Pythagorean heaven.
Then suddenly: a surge of electricity.
The machine was oneiric, like good gothic technology.
It brought words to my fingertips—words, words, words
to be purified through mathematics.
But here the registrar, persisting with his lesson on the heart,
knows nothing of my scientific art.
When he finally leaves, satisfied I am pathological,
I remove a laptop from my black bag of tricks,
usurping the drawing of cardiac arrest.
Nox is not here.
Your book on grief is at home amongst my alphabetised books,
a perfect accordion sheaf folded in a rectangular box.
You might understand how I compose.
This elegiac poem, recounted just so.

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