A Shoe, a Scarf, a Thimble Full of Faith

– “ Border Tryptich,” Norma Cantú

Outside, the hate copied and cropped
in reverse as if people were trying
to put together a construct by sorting out
a manufactured cross, struggling
over a wall and then putting in a stitch
to follow like a hard trail, a land map
sorted out through mature, white torch
cactus and dry rivers churning up dry
conscientious objectors, dry like
dirt or pressed silt. We are large
and weak, a group spread out like
a messy table, carrying what we can
manage, casting off the weight of
who we are against low trees: shoes
with broken soles, we are doubling
up on wet socks found discarded
along the weedy pathway, our feet numb
from the heat of walking though our
own heels. We cannot feel our toes, walking
through this giant land of pretended
sanctuary, the shot popping heard
sound around our tied up dry journey into
rope time we know not of nor can we track.
We are originals unto ourselves, rivers
delivered from mercy like long ago Gods,
Captains of steel who swallowed carefully
the reward of new cities built as they imagined
when manufacturing. Like lies we grow into.
We are not given, we are the steel, the iron-armed
harm we cannot vocalize in our diaspora
bodies as we walk without stopping,
metal doubling up on discarded wet socks,
found along the way like us, discarded.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

sundown

ambrosial fruit citrine star
if i could follow you around this house i would
drift through the gold air in
the morning slip barefoot out the
door
steps grass-quietened bathe in tropicana let the midasian
heat reanimate my blood move this
body be young be loved like all the rest but someone
turned all the lights off in my skull brains
full of sludge nerves tangled and
gummed over fingers gnarled i could
listen to the birds i could eat kiribath with my fingers
my
shoulder blades could erupt in angel wings i
could leave this wretched place
go home
you sure went home, didn’t you
left me to rot in this goddamn house didn’t you
did
did you know my baby? did you know he was golden too? he was
i promise i swear it on my life he was he
was bright as a halo he was molten with faith oh god

where is he
don’t
don’t leave i’ll behave i’ll be good i’ll
be a good girl
i won’t go outside i won’t wish for anything except
maybe that this cold would go away if
you could just bottle up the
sun for me darling thank you
don’t let it sink don’t

you dare oh

my goodness would you look at the sky

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

River of Life

Little leaf fading, green-bleeding xylem, phloem from veiny cells. From stem to tip pinnate venation of a fine web – leaf-lines mirror crowning purple plum tree. So long life map. Dried shoot floating, sun-crackled, cast-off and dropping dull into still water. Little leaf-boat, edges curling: withered, jagged shape sinking.

Little mama waning, skin crusting soured fluids from leaky hull. From head to toe apoptosis of a fine frame, laugh-lines hailing a living once loved. So long soul-shell. Blue rivers trickling, time-worn, finished and tipping left into harbour. Little kind ship, body drooping: wasted, bony shape crumbling.


Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

jeju air

“Making food is the only talent I have, so I wish to donate this talent while staying together to share sadness.”
– Ahn Yu-seong at Muan International Airport, January 2025


taking the ladle, he pours another scoop
of porridge, abalone soft to the teeth. it has been
too hard for them to swallow. death has
settled on too many of their shadows.
they drink each serving, sometimes muster
the strength to eat a piece of gimbap
or the corner of a sandwich. forced too
often to view footage of a flame, words
have receded into stares. the emergency
responders had broken down in tears.
nobody had been brought to their wards.
since catastrophe, the ddeokguk has been
too hard to chew.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

A Cormorant Dying on the Werribee River

I

Polluted mud coats the river’s mouth
south stretches of impassable reeds.
Walked up midday, casting until empty;
empty until late; back past midnight.

Hungry for something beyond
distant eyes untiring mind,
searching for static traces
of silver ghosts.

A stick plunged into the viscous shore;
Straight stem bifurcated, forming a why.
What does it divine? The wind elbows,
cold at bay; core warm; face and hands white.

Night. How long has it been? I should go.
This is not a bed of triumph.
Nor a dawn of promised sky.
No: the dark above water is hollow.

A night with pinched cheeks;
a thin oily sheen on being,
stillness as though —

Discarded wounds deposited like silt,
building up, gradually cracking the dam
that contains the void above the mud.

And a breeze that only lifts
when the wind is completey still
pours along the river from that void

bearing a weightless, mute gelatine,
an imperceptible, all-pervasive condensate

of ugly grief and desperate pain.

II

As I was, as I was, in the glowing young arms of the sunny day, in those hours still blessed, before the gelatine had begun to seep up from the mud. Up a crumbling red cliff, clutching weeds, dodging thorns, keeping balance, heavy load, sweating, hot, alive. My phone buzzes: leave me the fuck alone. The coming night grins. Cast, cast again, telling myself it will work. A tap and then tension. Rod slightly bent, reel relaxed — oh look, a small bream. Ok seeya mate. New cliff, new spot, try something else, cast, retrieve, wind wind wind, free free free, this is what I wanted, and I am having it.

Atop the cliff, the farms, and they do not feel right. Migrant workers, mostly Vietnamese, tend to and pick the crops, and sometimes nod as if to say, “who is this idiot?” The owners’ houses sealed with roller shutters. Big satellite dishes. Manicured gardens behind cypress and brick, segregated from the red earth and the lines of dark green kale, broccoli and spinach. And the people who pick them. And the fertilizer runoff — and the mud.

Atop the cliff; down again, between the reeds, lose a lure, no bites. Did I eat lunch? May as well have. I meet the gap between day and night in the wrong place: where the reeds die off, and revegetation has failed, and it is there that the eroded bank becomes a VCA grad show dedicated to casual, local pollution. Concrete rubble with roots of rusting iron; trees with roots dead or dying. Hung in growing number on the water-carved gallery walls, a pleroma of acrylic, nylon and polyethylene tears: veins of abjection that put shame to those who speak it vainly: filthy, torn t-shirt, faded flat soccer ball, sun-bleached longneck, ruined camp chair, ruined Ice Age backpack, twisted, fetid umbrella, long-lost esky lid, mud-filled tyre, half-buried trolley, a tangle of dirty, thick monofilament lin —

A small finger of bare land emerges from the opposite bank, from an impassable reed bed, pointing to the sea. On the tip, a single worn out school chair. Upon it sits a guardian that can only be seen by an over-tired fisher, by peripheral vision in the light of a head torch: this muddy, still psychopomp watches the unmourned and unwept scraps of determinate being as they slowly relinquish form, grieving the death of their purpose, awaiting their microplastic revenge.

Oh my brothers and sisters, witness this reminder you who walk neck bent back and eyes to the uncloudy sky: this is such a small taste of what has been done.

III

I cast again —

— heavy jig,
doesn’t help,
weed on hook,
take it off,
cast again,
more weed,
reel it in,
take it off.

Try a vibe,
doesn’t work,
knew it wouldn’t.
Diving minnow,
doesn’t work,
knew it wouldn’t.
Try some bullshit,
doesn’t work,
fuck you.

My monologue has turned ironic.
Not a promising sign.
So I smile as I dance down the bank
of this distant cousin of Styx
on the Western border of Bunurong land,
whose gods I have not met.

A change in the atmosphere brings seriousness back
There: the Y-shaped stick!
Of course it’s a sign! Not a Y but a V —
Nike! In her four horse’d chariot…

A silvery trail in the current, what does it mean?
Squint at the opposite cliff, a deep hole beneath.
Cast again, mind into the dark.

How far can I walk out before the water enters?
A meter. Two. Water laps up. River bottom pulls.
I sink: the mud wants me. I re-plant my foot,
my stumble my yes: the river smiles.

Perfect cast, full focus on the hook’s point:
Lift-lift, wind, sink. Always certain any moment
My back hurts, I repeat: maybe now, maybe now,
maybe even — no.

Past 2:00am, I’m beyond jouissance et le mort
— still having a go, mind you —
but I know in my heart of hearts, I should go home
to a flat filled with problem after fucking problem.

I cast again.

IV

As I near the end of the bend before the mouth widens and gluts, there is a red glow above the cliff on the distant bank. Fires from the refinery near Geelong cast a strange aura on the clipped horizon: the painted void invites.

Then a wetly jagged noise penetrates the still gelatine into which I had been so absorbed that I cannot remember if the wind lifted or not, because what’s the difference anyway?

The harried sound punctured that appalling and insidious voidal gelatine — it wasn’t loud, but it didn’t need to be.

I knew what it was before I saw.

It should have been asleep,
but its flock had left
and now it was alone.

It propelled itself
cross water’s veneer
wretched and frantic,
toward the sick bank.

Heavy fishing line wrapped
around its muddy white neck
feathers stained with dry-and-fresh blood
wings nylon-bound.

Trailing from the cormorant,
a curse of swivels, hooks
monofilament line

and a large teardrop sinker,
heavy enough to hold bait in place
against tide, wind, current —

— and life.

Pulling the cormorant down slow,
reeling it in over weeks.

How would it feel, this perfect cruelty to a bird?

Picture a steel rod, rusted,
breaking away from concrete rubble
as it punctures your foot and calf.

But you are very far from home,
there is no help
and you know how this ends.

You, too, would thrash against mute denial of sky.

It reached the bank,
and then ran away,
calling out deep and
wet and ragged.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

Pink Grapefruit

Six Caravaggios that searing afternoon.
Our dehydration as marble dripped slick with light
on the statues, the lids of tombs, what eats the flesh
in the afterlife, glinting newborn that autumn.
In a haven of temperature-controlled galleries,
you sutured a future I didn’t want to wear.
It was the first time I noticed. For your photographs,
my lips parted forever against a backdrop of bitter fruit,
Sicilian oranges on my dress to match vitamin-rich paint.
I didn’t let you touch me. Verses lurked in my head.
You took pictures when I wasn’t looking, pretended
you were interested in other details: the dresses
others wore, how carrara marble caves under touch
in the rape of Proserpina, the taking made to appear
a tender act. Home in the evening, you talked to me

while I oiled my face to wash off the rouge.
I like it when the curtains fatten with silence.
When I was in another room, you smeared my pillows
with cologne then left for your flight.
Your motive was to appeal to my animal instincts,
for me to trace your scent and crave you.
The poems returned in a dream, as if they slipped away
for a walk in the cold air while waiting for me to be alone.
They smelled like juniper berries, cedar,
tonka, a souring bouquet.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

I Have Died Over & Over Again

& each time, it is with slick precision.
every year i note the distance
between myself & the end
by flicking my thumb
through a dollar store calendar.
the spine, ribbed skeleton inhaling
days crossed off &
exiled to the wasteland, the dump
chained together with last year’s alloys.
how is it we know a year
by generation? gen eighteen, gen x, gen
one, two, three, incapable
of withstanding the world’s concrete
approaching with increasing malice.
overhead, the magpies warble &
i fear nuclear sirens, before finally
the new year has arrived & my heart
has shattered, showering shrapnel at the feet
of children frozen watching winter’s
rocket fire & instead dreaming
of fireworks. the clock has ticked
a minute past
doomsday & here
i am praying to a vain god
for a stand–
still where
the mid-twenties & i both
cower behind youth’s
jagged
boundary & drag
a cigarette to floating ash,
keeping age
at a desperate stalemate.
holding time hostage is no strange
feat for a Balmain boy. ask any boozer from the 80s
& they’d tell you the local legend.
the cop that shot the clock a moment before midnight
& drank until sunrise.

there is some liberty in the retelling of this tale,
but it is always from old men,
eyes drawn on the grandfather clock.
i know prayer when i see it.
prayer how we do it.
a single strand of grey plucked from the scalp.
prayer like:
if i stay here,
reeking of beer taps & loose spirits
will you leave me my hair?
call me pretty, sweeping over my hazel eyes
with a tongue-like gaze?
call me tonic, call me bittersweet?

no fortune of begging weighs enough
to keep the hands at six.
every year the world ends & i begin
anew / atop the bodies
of myself that could not bear
becoming me. if only
they could see the sunrise.
count each echo from
the last bullet dropping.

if only

we buried the dread.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

Sunset cognition

Too cruel a phenomenon? How sunsets are more
spectacular when fires are burning behind them. How

to deny the beauty of a blazing sunset, even when it reflects
a blaze. Today I looked for you in the sunset and all I saw was

a streak. Tomorrow I will look for Gariwerd, for L.A., for
Gaza in the mute grey-blue sky and wonder about cognition. I’m

never more suspicious of beauty, never thirstier for it. Oh,

flames. Our stove is gas. The auto-ignition is broken. I light the
burners like if I tilt the match at the wrong angle, it might

slip and melt the world. I want to throw a cup of water on the
sunset and see how fast it sinks. I don’t want it to sink. The

earth below is dry. The earth below is weeded Country. The

orange and pink in front of me, a reminder that aesthetics can be
murderously distracting. Therefore, please rise on new neural pathways.

Divert my leaking eyes. Outside, a tap connected to an underground
pipe is watering an unburnt spot of lawn.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

picking at air

when you died, you didn’t die
a car crashed through your living room wall.
through the wall of the living
room you were in

you were in your rose garden
chair, eating smoking answering
questions from sunday’s
rag. when you died mum told me to come

told me to come quickly. i was busy
getting inked – a portrait of pj harvey, i asked
if you were picking at air yet?
i asked if you were ready to go.

if you were ready to go
you rattle-spoke-slurred
an answer and a question:
‘how do i die?’ ‘how do I die?’

‘how do i die?’
were the words, you spoke
‘i can no longer find home on a map’
geography forgetting spells the end for some.

the end for some is in your rose garden
chair – eating smoking answering.
the room is silent, you could hear a bone crumble
you are as thin as i wanted to be in high school

in high school, i made my bed
in the gaps between your ribs
between breaths. in the gasp
between birthday parties

birthday parties have a shallow fall: ‘how are you?,
how do you do?,
i think we met years ago’ and so
on until we all die.

until we all die, the nurse says
it won’t be long now, is this white light
heaven or morphine? is there a difference in
asking for death from a poem?

death from a poem, or from
a car crashing through you?
will you go more humbly if this fits
neatly on a page?

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

An Ordinary Violence

a politician spins a top
in mud and millions

contracting shooters, police and bad boys

still no peace

who so has the privilege to read

homicide statistics?

mother of three, chopped to death
one arm severed

garbage man, doing his job
shot 7:35am

pray for these casualties of nostalgic
wars

no one, but corbeaux, dignifies graves

dis dread
60 explosions

force meaning

somebody mudda tonsils ringing
church bells

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

Revenant

  1. AI starts up a literary magazine: only accepts submissions from AI.
  2. Occasionally, God sneaks in to one of the poems
  3. To read anything on the net, you have to accept a cookie.
  4. The government calculates the estimated time to heads-on-sticks paraded in the streets
    is twenty-eight days.
  5. The government calculates unrest.
  6. The poem which started as a sonnet is not a sonnet.
  7. Yesterday I was riding a bicycle. Eating a banana passionfruit.
  8. Pain changes your personality.
  9. I did not believe I would become a ghost alive.
  10. What you learned from a velvet rope around an artwork: it is precious and you are not.
  11. To enter a cold universe as David Fincher makes.
  12. Gregory Crewdson’s solitary dreamscapes.
  13. Todd Hido’s homes at night.
  14. Headlights on the Venetian blinds at 3am.
  15. The way the military have of saying actual.
  16. A queasy feeling like ground disturbed.
  17. I was dreaming of another blanket.
  18. I had to find a way of finding another blanket—
    in an institution that controlled all the blankets.
  19. (I dreamed of a man wearing a red hat who controlled all the blankets.)
  20. When I woke I was cold.
  21. I said the comforting mantra: Death.
Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

Living in Australia

living in australia

Is a long process of torture, self-torture, torment, self-torment, watching all the uglinesses turning into buty, thinking alone of centuries of solitude, and unshat shit, a silence as long as its history before it was even called Terra nullius,


Living in a

living in the middle

Moving towards a neutral position, a grey area, like the sky just now, not quite black, not quite white, not quite yellow. Just a bit blue, bluing. What I like is not important, how I feel is. In the middle of the night when the words, ‘in the middle’, came to you, eyes closed, ears listening to the dripping of piss. Dream images drifting away as if they had never been there. Not seeking to identify, or taking sides, or. Living like a tree, waiting for a car to crash. A stranger who forgets to ask who he is, what gender they are now, where he or she places himself or herself, how he or she or they would like to dress themselves next time when he or she or they go outdoors. Living thus. Living in a way that life is not made out to be


Or living, in the middle of no, where

not hypocrisy

You think it’s hypocrisy? No, it’s not. You think you can cut it all clean, having nothing to do with anything, erasing a memory like removing a tumour, like burning a house, like selling a property, like splitting up with a partner? You think anything human is easily resolvable like paying a bit of money and having it done with? You think everything works as effectively as capitalism? As capital punishment? As white? You think you can treat all that like in a spring cleaning, just chucking out the ashes and forget all about it because you are no superstition, you don’t believe in all that shit, people treating their dead like the living, presenting them with good food, good meat, good dishes, dumplings even?


No, it’s not

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

birch

it starts with a subtle desperation.
asparagus fields shooting up, brown under fluorescent
lights. they’d known god a portrait of white panel his
blood a tapering of black checks; prisoners to
a column. they’d known him as voice rocking it, killing
it, spillage and guts wrung out into calligraphed
intestines on a sheet of bright sun. this is how
you put on a show. we’ll turn this into wonder
and tall grin taller still every time I flick my
wrists we erupt in a chorus of moviegoer cheers until
deafened by our own singing. palms molded to the sheen
of a metal knob this umbilical cord attached to
a door that has long forgotten its name.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

AGAPE MAN

hey sis, what’s the hold-up
evil chen requested turndown service ages ago
filled w/ tumors & open sores
hart crane was in the videos
he somehow thinks he’s picasso
we cast this movie w/o knowing
what anybody looked like—a fatal flaw ?
some of the actors belonged in the sewers
WILL SMITH: i am alive in my documentary
independence day
ZOO: every little bird should understand
paradise
MOUNTAIN DEW: do u think
their intentions are genuine
OCEAN: take ur shoes off
before u come inside
LOVER: tonight i’m going to reveal
who the killer is
JONBENÉT: sissy that walk
this is my revenge fantasy
i had an art
it scared the horses (hoes)
pour some sugar on me
white sluts on grand st—how is ur spanish ?
ur questions will be answered in due course
look it up on ur phone
u can hit it from behind
u didn’t have to come all this way
pls leave now
u’ve gone & done it again

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

I was Lectured About Mitosis from Trivia While News of War Played in the Background.

“Mitosis – a process of cell duplication, or reproduction, during which one cell gives rise to two genetically identical daughter cells.”

The body remains singular, but it divides itself based on belief, amidst its ambition to historicize all the senses of relief. It is dependent on where home can be. For example, I sleep soundly while bombs fall thousands of miles away. Quiet, once my peace, becomes unsure of the family it shelters. The spokesperson on the television tells otherwise. “Peace is sure, we have seen development. Let us wait.” Confident, yet invalidating, at the same time. “You will be saved.” Who could tell such a thing? It’s never a question of how. It’s always a question of which hue. It’s always a matter of comfort. As it is, what it means: Certainty. Whoever sleeps easily at night grows to their heart’s content and leaves their husk and bones easily. The body remains singular.

The body remains singular

But it divides itself based on belief

Amidst its ambition to historicize

All the sense of its relief

It is dependent on where home can be

For example, I sleep soundly

While bombs fall thousands of miles away

Quiet, once my peace, becomes unsure of its family.

The spokesperson on the television tells otherwise

“Peace is sure, we have seen development. Let us wait.”

Confident, yet invalidating at the same time

Who could tell such a thing?

“You will be saved”

It’s never a question of how.

It’s always a matter of which hue

It’s always a matter of comfort.

As it is, what it means: Certainty

Whoever sleeps easily at night,

Grows with the heart’s content

Leave their husk and bones easily.

The body remains singular.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

Under Rain

between the crow and its croak
the general’s breath curls cold

over the blasted heath in death
metal’s blast bleats of the hot

cramped Volvo I find darker shades of decibel and speed

where the garage TV myst glows in the same bad movie I hear the phlegm-
stuck throat call of the crow

let them come

to hover to peel cheese from plastic in paved floodplains to let wind

spell billow my black silk shirt as I amble

the drought-struck concrete sunburnt scheming another day raw and eaten by critic

children I see a red bicycle halved by flood

crow let crow come

let crow come click in subsong and drown gun

snuff flame with wing cloud let kevlar molt let them
click open bursting mega-mart turkey in basements of cold America let us zone further out

on storage wars in a concerted campaign let crow come from roach electroshock into undeath

every buried thing let wingbeat eclipse our hallowed yawp
the crow is always new
they come in 2s, 4s, 8s slanted infinites in 16s doubling harried flaps cup
salt-spray dissonant warbles pilfer op-eds from columnists’ gloom-filled navels


let torn bullet money adorn their scrawled nest let crows feed their crowlettes–tongues pointing in need

fed from scavenged stolen light
let the squall come pell-mell in clouds to slip

over berg-cold sea with slick black wings and crag coast coughing

let crowfoot be quiet on peat moss soft as they walk black-taloned

green as rain hastens pine

let their plumes block satellites beaming data

let midnight spill over creek the path let them open me like teenagers twitch-born

let their looping math beam through me mad down through my gut drum

let their raw youth speedrun my whole life concoct

operas in shared worlds

let me nod in approximate communion

as I catch open klieg lights beckon

let me fall into the crow’s abyssal lake-cold eye let it burn a look to pluto locked in dance with charon

two shards huddling with lesser moons hydra styx nyx dangling mass

I wade flooded bomb shelters

in storm drains we play at drowning

where the wire sparks hot a headless snake through puddles

let the weird come switched on

let hell clean

let their siren croak crack cragged rock

let me shovel corn in the wastebasket movies let crow choke the poison

cough repeal with legal and brute grunt

let crow call run their voices’ hoarse

let flap beak hold their eyes forever

let crow croak fight for honest life

let crow call in krill in awk- in coil in malcolm hecate

shock clock crock

talk pocked

in skulk in cawdor locked its skitch beckoning beak of mate

let speech-weeping eyes stick in the crow’s beak vacant

rubble aswarm with crows crawl

over ears with rake

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

The Bronze Man’s Burden

A mantis shrimp can see four times our visible light spectrum
but to excuse your colour blindness as only human
was my mistake. Yours was knowing one fact about every animal
and nothing about surviving a world that wasn’t made for you.

You were my fair lady to course-correct into the culture,
a minister’s son set too straight, grown too narrow.
I had my work cut out, clearly:
a worm with its head cut off can regrow its entire body.

You loved every person made in your god’s image
and that made you holier. Shame that only a fair few are chosen
while others must be bleached to whiteness. Was I
a yellowed xerox of your paper saviour or just a chink

in your defenses? I’ll never know. I’ve released myself
from my bronze man’s burden of swimming in your pool,
paring lap from laboured lap with the blade of my body
only for the water to smooth over again faster than I can

draw breath—but by all means, keep furrowing your brow.
Mistake that for the work. Pray on our conversations,
take your guilt to Sunday service, anything but actual solidarity
while the protestors march and brown bodies burn again

for the fiftieth week. Wile away your mornings tapping out
your poems, tepid verse for tepid men. Continue to make
no difference. Sting and feel stung; retreat again
to your wasps’ nest. Bees at least will die after the first jab.

Another animal fact: I made you more than bland.
I gave you legitimacy. For years you monopolised
my patience for the pedestrian until last summer my god,
iris-dark, knotted as mangroves’ roots, messier than

the arc of the moral universe spoke to me
in words even you could understand:
No more pearls before swine.
You have given this clown enough of your time.

So if you want forgiveness, I am not your man.
Possibly I never was one. Go grovel to your god instead
who counts you among his precious children
and me among the animals.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

My DoorDash audition will not bring me fame (but hopefully will bring me a $3000 fortune minus tax)

1
I walked to the forest to write poetry.
I found the correct log in the correct amount of sunshine. It looked like a spot a bush
poet would write a bush poem in or an old boy poet would write a old boy poem
about the old boys of the war (the ANZACs are my heroes etcetera, I love my local
RSL etcetera, I put my pink five dollar note on the bar every day and every day the
barman serves me a pony of beer. One pony at a time etcetera. The barman calls
me Chook and this is my spot and I carry with me a photo of my best friend, my
special friend from when we were just teen-agers, he was only 19 etcetera)

I sat down
Felt the earth (Spotify wants me to listen to Carole King and so I listen
to Carole King over and over again)
crunch beneath my shoes
(my Blundstones that were my good Blundstones until my everyday Blundstones
wore out and now my good Blundstones are my everyday Blundstones)

I picked at a pimple and listened to the birds and I thought about Britney Spears and
how she dances in the greige (see: sad beige baby) tiled space next to her lounge
room in front of her camera with her eyeliner thick and black just like how I wore it
when I was 13 and a few years into the choking freedom of adolescents (this is a
story about a girl named Lucky)

and opened Instagram on my phone.

2
The humiliation of working at the desk, tied to the desk like a rat in a rat sized office,
while redundant
is so big and stupid and why did I buy the lie that a job at a bank will mean security
when you can just get the (cashless) cow for free (read: nothing).

3
I sent in my latest audition for DoorDash but I live in the country where I see a man
walking his Shetland pony down the main street like how the people here don’t walk
their dogs.
You don’t get DoorDash here. Or Ubereats or Menulog or all the other gig economy
jobs for when you’re overqualified but you can’t get a job elsewhere because we live
in this big, endless, racist Australia so big so boundless (no plains, no sharing) (no
hat, no play)
.

I humiliated myself for DoorDash and stepped on a crack and the devil broke my
back – fuck – from dancing too hard in my DoorDash audition.

Now I need ibuprofen, tiger balm (like my mother used to rub on her neck in the spot
where she whipped and lashed five years before my birth her car folded and was
placed inside out at the wreckers yard now my mother jumps and gasps in the car
and her passenger foot breaks like I’m learning)

My yoga teacher cancelled because she just can’t work out (and the doctors don’t
know and she’s on her third round of antibiotics)
why her voice is just sitting and
refusing, gasping for air on the edge of her throat.
So I did yoga in my Cotton-On Body teal (not like the party) yoga crossback bra and
my Cotton-On Body black (like our coffee in bed with the sun in love with you, I read
in the morning)
ribbed (for her pleasure when I worked for Durex not Dulux and then
my contract finished and my dad died and I lost the password to that account
anyway, we all gotta make our living some way, bring home the bread, be the bacon
winner, the winner takes it all)
bike shorts on my Kmart yoga mat with Yoga with
Adriene (she’s free) (hello Benji)

And I am forced to watch a DoorDash advert before I can stretch out what I did for a
DoorDash audition
so I opened Depop on my phone.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

Calliste

So small was
your earth clod
thrown out of Argo,
it crawled into a tectonic hole —
the hole is black,
tears the cyan —
you came up for air,
we didn’t breathe a word.

Now you swell and swirl,
you erupt till you burn
to obsidian hopping on archipelago.
Love fears of you
so love dreams of you,
builts houses and poleis for you
and crowds them so full
to awe your loveliness.

Calliste, half-moon Calliste, don’t tremble,
we cannot love you any less.


Seismic tremors rattle Santorini as Greeks fear a big earthquake. Santorini is indeed a volcanic island and I’ve been thinking about
the myth of her creation. One of the Argonauts, Euphemus, dreamed of making love to the sea-nymph Calliste (meaning “the
most beautiful”). In his dream Calliste became pregnant with his child and asked him to throw a clod of earth into the sea to
create a safe place for her to give birth; as Argo was sailing, Euphemus threw a clod of earth and an island emerged. He called this
half-moon shaped island Calliste (modern name Santorini).

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

Jolly Phonics

They pronounce your name wrong they all pronounce your name wrong they pronounce.
Your name wrong.
You furrow your brows and say “pronounciation” and the whites of your friend’s eyes gleam. You steel yourself for the strike, but are still bowled over when the herd gathers.
“Pronounciation? It’s pronounced pronunciation.”
You are pronouncing my name wrong, you think but do not say.

Every morning your class gathers silently, eyes on the hunt for mischief.
Every morning a teacher shuffles in, simmering anger made more pungent by having to teach your class.
First on the roll, first to fall victim to your teacher’s blatant disinterest.
Your name, so beautiful when your mother calls it, shouting for you as you huddle over your computer trying to type just one more sentence, is now
Mangled in the mouth of your teacher, who glares at you pre-emptively daring
You to speak.
“Here.” You mumble, and try to sound happy about it.

Chicken change. It starts because of chicken change. Something you know you know you’ve heard
Your father say. Chicken change, it sounds so ugly in the mouth of your friend, who curls her lip and says
“What.”
Chicken change. You stammer out. It’s a Nigerian phrase, you manage to say before she says, her joke a gash across your face,
Well are we Nigerian?
No, you have to admit. No they are not.

International Mindedness Week is a week for whites to become aware of coloureds. You know this.
They don’t.
They make a pageantry out of it, with all you in your costumes, and you clutch the material and wish you were anything but who you are.
In the safety of your home you can make fun of their lazy ignorance, because if you got the privilege of being ignorant, you would at least make something of it.
Instead, here, they call you to the stage to give your address in Igbo. Your name, so uncarefully practised, falls off their tongue and shatters on the floor.
You try not to wince as you rise, and with the whites’ eyes heavy on your back, their tongues panting, salivating for a taste of your culture,
You speak the words you have so carefully practised,
So unlike the lazy ignorance they don’t even know to flaunt.

Europe-ean. It becomes an inside joke for your friend group, and you know it’s an inside joke because you are outside it, beating your fists angrily on the glass.
It’s not even a funny mispronounciation. You made a mistake.
It doesn’t seem to matter.
The next day the teacher laughs as they take in the first name on the roll.
“I’m not even going to try to pronounce this one.”

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

Triptych

The recipe


They will tell you that there are things alone, things gone, things wearing shirts that would have been ugly in the 90s. They will tell you. They might tell you. They will say something, likely mostly nothing. But they will have said something even though the thickest meaning present is nothing. The season is an ebb. A tide left out too long so the mud has dried. I know the tide returns but there are days where it seems unlikely it ever could. You do not know what to say to this doubt. I do not know what to say to this either. Whether the climate changes and the seas dry up or we take ourselves off to some other way of thinking about people I cannot say. If I never hear the self-satisfied loudness and laughter of men taking up space like this it won’t be soon enough. And if I stop trading labour for something we just made up I will probably start trading it for something else we just made up. This is what happens when things like this happen. One thing is a straight swap for another thing. It’s all straight around here. Tiresome in its lack of imagination. Tiresome in its insistence on a binary back and forth. Just leave they would say. Just go. Just leave it all behind. But it is never that simple or orderly it’s all just a big systemic mess. Too pea-brained to think ourselves out of anything we hang here inventing technology we can’t even use to save ourselves. The recipe is repeated, only not to perfect it.
Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

My lover from another continent eats pandesal

after he savors his cup of coffee
into a long stretch of morning’s infant hours.
Part milk, heaps of sugar, a whole modest
affair of candied indulgence, this

childish happiness. Unfold this bagged
breakfast, warm with its sands
of crumbs. Slice it in half though not
all the way, pull it apart and birth a bed

cupped in palm. And how simple
is coconut jam, no measurements
needed, control discarded, all want
and remembering. How this may be

no viennoiserie, but childhood
is brought back to him, those summers
in the South of France, crusty baked rolls
served by the sea, so strikingly

similar to pandesal. How expensive those were,
he says. How heavenly these are, he whispers.
Flour, sugar, yeast, and salt, how simple
melting is. Far too simple unlike what it took

for us to reunite – their policies abided,
procedures tolerated, just to end
that distance, that cruel hunger
from gated borders. Then, at last,
to share bread with you.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

Thermal Runaway

At thirty-two weeks in utero, babies
start dreaming. Sometimes during the collapse of
an iceberg you can see the dark blue colour
of its underside.

Dreaming about WHAT. Iceland holds funeral
for the first glacier lost to climate change.
Visitors must be present to buy tickets.
Billionaires want to

go to space because guillotines rely on
gravity to work. DREAMING ABOUT WHAT. Ice
churn, burning goo. Rinse, repeat. Remote control
white phosphorus and

sea spray, another child vaporised on screen.
Evie asks me, Would you rather be a twig
or a piece of dust? Can I be a plastic
particle in the

Arctic snow? If we took the excess carbon
in the atmosphere and made one big diamond
it would be 3 billion cubic metres
or a cube the size

of Everest. This is an advertisement
disguised as life advice. Would you rather hug
a koala or a quokka? Tilda asks.
Our planet’s poorly

equipped for delight. Your password must contain
an upper case letter, at least one number,
a gang sign, a haiku, a hieroglyph and
the pink blood of a

unicorn. The boy’s scared of blue skies because
the drones don’t fly when the skies are grey. Elsewhere
the weather’s a xenomorph in a black dress.
While you’re watching bombs

are dropping. Under cloaks of diversity
and justice visuals. That dark wispy mass
floating above Sydney Harbour has fully
baffled the masses.

I do not think, therefore I do not am. We
must snatch pleasure from the days to come. Was it
liquid metal, a dementor, pollution,
or just a scud cloud?

There are more hydrogen molecules in a
single molecule of water than there are
stars in the solar system. Are we not here
to fuck spiders? I

am dreaming my teeth out again. Government
as high corporation. To let us know your
feedback on genocide or the weird weather,
please consult this form.

Blue-sky thinktank. Our AI team will get back
to you. Would you rather a tsunami or
a bushfire? asks Evie. At our next presser
will be blandishments

on unrelated tissues. The same people
responsible for Robodebt will be re-
sponsible for a reactor. In this life
it’s not hard to die.

Blue-sky blood clot. Tilda asks, Would you rather
swim in a pool of Nutella or maple
syrup? AI is now the ocean plastic
of the internet.

To make life is far more difficult. Would you
rather stumble across a panther in the
Blue Mountains or a thylacine near Cradle
Mountain? People watch

people reacting to people streaming games.
Smoke from the burning Amazon rainforest
plunges São Paulo into darkness in the
middle of the day.

When male and female anglerfish mate, they melt
into one other, share bodies forever.
Overcome with emulsion, I’m going to work
until my bones turn

to dust. The tiny variations in a
singer’s melodic conviction that increase
across the arc of a song. Would you rather
plague or famine? These

sapphics are so unsubtle. This meme wants
everyone to realise that Australia is
two mining companies, seven landlords and a
bunch of asbestos

in a trench coat. Blue-sky drinking. Cuts against
the iambic grain of English with its fixed
pattern of falling stresses. Would your rather
eat yttrium or

lanthanum? Oil-company simps, business hicks,
debate-club bedwetters. A line is a fuse that’s lit.
Selling off their grandchildren’s breathable air
to buy an under-

ground bunker to fuck their cousins in. Housing
bubble or bust. Next, an iceberg the size of
London breaks off the side of the Antarctic
ice shelf. The decline

of the northern carbon sink. Just wait until
the stratospheric cloud shelf evaporates.
Maybe they’ll drink their teeth in their sleep.
Can we have some more

dragons in our climate predictions? Mortgage
originates from the old French dead pledge. My
children probably won’t be able to.
Would you rather work

non-stop for the rest of your life or sleep out
your days? The line smoulders, the rhyme explodes. And
by a stanza a city is blown to bits.
I’m so tired of folks

only talking about politics. I want
to talk about the trees. Blue-sky flooding.
Did you know that plants have photoreceptors
and can tell if you’re

wearing a red or blue shirt? I don’t know, bruh,
that sounds like politics. Israeli settlers
are burning Palestinian olive trees.
‘Australia’ is

an Enlightened blank space for colonial
experiments structured around a booming
land market. Nothing’s as precious as a hole
in the ground. Meanwhile

invasive and bushfire-fuelling buffel grass
has overtaken ecosystems wholesale
in the continent’s centre. Would you rather
inherit a house

or the planet? Would you rather drink algae
blooms or a toilet full of lava? My hair
is a mansion for nits, Evie yells. I buy
McHappy Meals and

ask for the toys to be removed. They
include them anyway. In 2050
there’ll be more plastic than fish in the ocean.
Would you rather be

in a zombie a robot apocalypse?
Raccoons are trying to break into Cybertrucks
because they’re literally confusing them
with dumpsters. Sewage

in Gaza laced with Polio. Chernobyl
wolves resisting cancer. Don’t forget to like
and subscribe to the dystopian beauty
of an oil rig. A

nurdle washed from my eyeball will soon join the
Great Pacific Garbage Patch, which viewed from space
is a nurdle. Say a prayer for the ether
which is obsolete.

Leave the birdies to contend with dark matter.
Wobbly space-time explains the expansion of
the universe and galactic rotation.
Your capital eye.

Gravity has a history of being
a trickster. I is some other. So there’s no
point fretting that what we’re doing will cut ice.
Don’t feel constrained by

the world limit. Strip a rhino of its porn.
Shit on a plate, charge a fall guy a fortune.
Thousands of lorikeets are unable. All
possibilities

for meaning have been suspended or crushed. Now
poetry can only be barbaric, weird,
estranged from atrocity. Would you rather
be hellish or hold

out for heaven? I got the Blue Screen of Death.
What if dreams were real and life was fake? The sun’s
plasma clouds interject. I address my kids’
fair demands to the

system, expecting the system to comply.
A pink-green glow sways like an iron curtain
to the south. Hail the earthworm rain. Every
precipitation

precipitates another. The long extinct
takahe lives. Techno-solutionism.
Their bodies appear perfectly spherical.
With blue-green plumage

they look like a model planet Earth perched on
two spindly, bright red, windmilling legs. The
kids are alright, clambering across coal trains.
If you hacks can’t hack

civil disobedience, I’d recommend
the Euthanasia Coaster. Private jets get
ready to leave for climate change conference
in Dubai, get stuck,

frozen on a runway in Munich. Now is
the winter of my kids’ disco tent. Zoo Snooze
is a riot. Lions escape. Instead of
this old world ending

catastrophically, what if one by one we
got sleepier and sleepier until it
gently stopped. Don’t say bedtime, say fuck the cops.
Campus encampments

our last resort. Would you rather never fly
in a plane or never swim in the ocean
again? The water in your body is just
visiting. I was

a thunderstorm the week before last. I will be
the ocean soon. Verify you are human.
Most of your cells come and go like morning dew.
Black mayonnaise dredged

from the depths of canals. We are more weather
pattern than stone monument. Green sunlight on
mist. Summer lightning. Would you rather dream in
Adriatic or

amniotic fluid? Fuck around, find out.
Your choices outweigh your substance. The child who
is not embraced by the village will burn it
down to feel its warmth.








Note: ‘Thermal Runaway’ mines various social media feeds, appropriating,
for instance, Elias Greig’s tweet, ‘AI is already the ocean plastic of the
internet’, among others, while quoting phrases from Vladimir Mayakovsky’s
poems ‘To Sergei Esenin’ and ‘A Conversation with the Inspector of Taxes
about Poetry’ (both 1926, and the translations are my own), and a line
from the Midnight Oil song ‘Blue Sky Mine’ (1990). The poem ends with
a proverb purportedly of African origin.

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged

GMT-8

i tangle dreams within dreams
spinning entire runways like cotton through a charkha

“journeys end in lovers meeting” or so i hear

i traverse entire landscapes with the gentle
छम छम of my paayal breezing through the wind;
this is not your village, not my city
but somewhere in between

suspended in this limbo of here and there
i try to punctuate the journey between यहाँ and वहाँ
from the liminal spaces of airport gates; where one life ends and
another begins—i am here, there, everywhere, and achingly nowhere

i think of how my friend likes Turkish tea
as i gargle down precooked airplane meals
// from through the looking glass of a layover
i see day break in istanbul
/// i long for my mother’s pav bhaji and chai

somewhere, my neighbour’s cat plays with a toy i bought for her /
my lover checks anxiously for arrival times // my father must have left for his walk
my sister must be getting ready for class /// my dog could have had a seizure
all my relations, dislocated from myself — defined by their relationship with
Greenwich Meridian Time

i spin dreams within dreams
and wish i could weave together the ones i love
like a piece of فلسطیني tatreez;
i do not want to miss you all forever
i cannot miss you all forever

Posted in 117: NO THEME 14 | Tagged