Authors: Erika Meitner
I
L
ITANY OF
O
UR
R
ADICAL
E
NGAGEMENT WITH THE
M
ATERIAL
W
ORLD
Objects around us are emitting light, transgressing,
are discrete
repositoriesâ
tropes, backdrops, ruination, lairs.
Objects around us are blank and seamless,
suffer from an arbitrariness,
are habitual or habitually
absconding.
Objects around us can be carefully etched
or stitched on top of our skins,
dismantled and placed in the trunk of a cab.
Objects around us are Oh my God.
Objects around us shimmer in air-colored suits,
in flesh-colored suits,
are waiting to be caressed.
They breakdance when we turn away.
Objects around us depend on fracture and fragment,
are picked clean, derelictâ
shudder
like hostages without blindfolds
or tout survivability
by trilling in the wet grass.
Objects around us are durable,
glow relentlessly
as if they're actually immortal.
Objects around us are not strangers.
They are the ruins
in which we drown.
Objects around us are expecting again,
blanket things with feathers
to offer refuge
but tremble anyway.
Objects around us wrap us in compassion,
sing an ode to something,
take the long way home.
Objects around us are no substitute for anything.
Objects around us moan.
Objects around us wander the aisles,
take everything of worth,
flee, exit, make off, vamoose.
Objects around us dismantle the city.
The doors are wide open. Go in.
N
IAGARA
White towels folded into swans
with heads touchingâ
their hearted bodies trail
the floral bedspread: polyester,
used over and over again.
The bed itself casts a shadow
on desolate paneling.
O bed. O motel. O girl
in white pantsâyou are voluminous
and shine like the glossed doors
on rows of identical love shacks
punctuated with all-weather
lawn chairs out front.
Clouds ride past the pool,
faces of brick, the oil stains
on parking lot asphalt.
Did someone teach you
to park in a place like this,
between two white parallel
lines stretched like arms
saying come here? In the grass
behind the dumpster you lay
your head on his pale, shirtless
chest. On his skin, warm as
melted butter. It is the blue hour,
floating on quiet water, after
the sun sets, before dark.
Love on damp pavement. Love
with sanitized glasses wrapped
in paper. Love in the violent mist.
In the velvet night. He kisses
the soles of your feet. O girl
in white. Be good and take care.
I haven't fallen like that in a very long time.
B
IG
B
OX
E
NCOUNTER
My student sends letters to me with the lights turned low.
They feature intricate vocabulary, like
soporific
and
ennui
.
Like
intervening
and
kinetic
and
tumult
. He strings words together
like he's following a difficult knitting pattern. He is both more
and less striking without a shirt on. I know this from the time
I ran into him at Walmart buying tiki torches and margarita mix
and, flustered, I studied the white floor tiles, the blue plastic
shopping cart handle, while he told me something that turned
to white noise and I tried not to look at his beautiful terrible chest,
the V-shaped wings of his chiseled hipbones. I write him back.
I tell him there are two horses outside my window and countless weeds.
I tell him that the train comes by every other hour and rattles the walls.
But how to explain my obsession with destruction? Not self-immolation,
but more of a disintegration, slow, like Alka-Seltzer in water. Like sugar in water.
I dissolve. He writes
enthralling
. He writes
epiphany
and
coffee machine
.
He is working in an office, which might as well be outer space.
I am in the mountains. The last time I worked in an office, he was ten.
I was a typewriter girl. I was a maternity-leave replacement for a fancy secretary.
I helped sell ads at TV Guide. I was fucking a guy who lived in a curtain-free studio
above a neon BAR sign on Ludlow Street and all night we were bathed in pot smoke
and flickering electric pink light. Here, the sun goes down in the flame
of an orange heat-wave moon. The train thrums and rattles the distance,
and I think of his chest with the rounded tattoo in one corner and my youth,
the hollows of his hipbones holding hard, big-box fluorescent light.
C
ORRESPONDENCE
I drive around in my small, old Honda Civic
and play music that reminds me of driving
the same car when it was new but no larger.
The Civic held four people, but now, with the car seat
and its five-point safety harness, it holds three.
There are Goldfish crackers ground into the floor mats.
My husband is the bassist in a local bar band.
They play classic rock covers, and though my husband
hates classic rock, he loves his powder-blue bass.
He loves playing in a band. He loves when Frank,
the owner of the bar, gets drunk and tells the band
how much he loves them. They have a monthly gig.
He makes fifty dollars a night when he plays 622.
There are things that are broken beyond repair,
but my marriage isn't one of them.
I am not telling you any of this.
Everything I am telling you is in that letter.
I will not tell you about the fact that I thought
praying mantises were an endangered species
when I was a kid. That was in the seventies.
If I think too much about my childhood,
I will feel too old to write you a letter.
The Internet tells me that this is a long-standing
urban legend; killing a praying mantis was never
illegal or subject to a fine. The origin of the myth
is unknown. Mantises are beneficial to gardens they live in.
Here it seems to make sense to evoke Eden,
but I won't. My son loves praying mantises.
He goes outside each night after dinner to
look for guys
,
and finds them tucked into the spiky barberry bushes.
I will not write you about my son, and if I mention
Eden, it would be to tell you that there's no such thing.
That you are not the talking snake and I am not
the woman without clothes who offers and offers.
The apple has no knowledge to give us. Our cosmogony
is unclear. This is not a love note, or a prayer,
or a field equation. I hold my cards close to the vest.
You send me a picture of a tattoo you'd like to get
of a compass, and the road unravels in front of my Civic
like a spool of thread. We are a gravitational singularity,
a theory that implicates epistemology, but I am not
rigorous enough in my approach to uncover anything.
You write me a letter.
I write you a letter back.
We go on like this for some time.
WITH/OUT
after Janice N. Harrington
And the mornings were detritus,
bent bottle caps, chrome diner matchbooks,
always the pack of playing cards in cellophane
with the tab half-pulled, and the unearthed voice
of the drive-thru pricked by shined key chains
jangling like tire irons. And the nights were detritus,
expired gas station receipts, mall vapors, a half-used
tin of tattoo salve, all of Bayonne, New Jersey
mapped on your back in chalk. The moon was detritus,
shining on a pickup dodging the curb, trailing nail clippings,
onion skins, translucent stars, five beat-down Nikes
that wound up phone-pole hopping in Ditmas.
And you were the detritus of magnifying glasses,
half-done lanyards, award ribbons fluttering
like condom wrappers at the shore, the wreckage
of contour lines, a hand-tooled leather souvenir
from a red rock abyss. The scent of your drawer
was fresh rubber and guitar picks, the metallurgy
of scattered loose change and blood. Your bed
wore charcoal detritus, lip-gloss and pot-dust,
ill-fitted sheets. And the detritus the July heat let loose:
gnawed Bic pen caps, a glowing Duncan Hines yo-yo
tangled in dead 9-volt connectors and envelopes
whose lips sealed shut from humidity that swelled
the windows into their frames. If you had scrawled
something on the inside of my wrist back then
it might have been a Venn diagram: your contented breath,
six glove-box necessities, the muffled places detritus would take us.
S
TAKING A
C
LAIM
It seems a certain fear underlies everything.
If I were to tell you something profound
it would be useless, as every single thing I know
is not timeless. I am particularly risk-averse.
I choose someone else over me every time,
as I'm sure they'll finish the task at hand,
which is to say that whatever is in front of us
will get done if I'm not in charge of it.
There is a limit to the number of times
I can practice every single kind of mortification
(of the flesh?). I can turn toward you and say
yes,
it was you in the poem.
But when we met,
you were actually wearing a shirt, and the poem
wasn't about you or your indecipherable tattoo.
The poem is always about me, but that one time
I was in love with the memory of my twenties
so I was, for a moment, in love with you
because you remind me of an approaching
subway brushing hair off my face with
its hot breath. Darkness. And then light,
the exact goldness of dawn fingering
that brick wall out my bedroom window
on Smith Street mornings when I'd wake
next to godknowswho but always someone
who wasn't a mistake, because what kind
of mistakes are that twitchy and joyful
even if they're woven with a particular
thread of regret: the guy who used
my toothbrush without asking,
I walked to the end of a pier with him,
would have walked off anywhere with him
until one day we both landed in California
when I was still young, and going West
meant taking a laptop and some clothes
in a hatchback and learning about produce.
I can turn toward you, whoever you are,
and say you are my lover simply because
I say you are, and that is, I realize,
a tautology, but this is my poem. I claim
nothing other than what I write, and even that,
I'd leave by the wayside, since the only thing
to pack would be the candlesticks, and
even those are burned through, thoroughly
replaceable. Who am I kidding? I don't
own anything worth packing into anything.
We are cardboard boxes, you and I, stacked
nowhere near each other and humming
different tunes. It is too late to be writing this.
I am writing this to tell you something less
than neutral, which is to say I'm sorry.
It was never you. It was always you:
your unutterable name, this growl in my throat.
I
NTERROBANG
As an advocate for the precision of communication
I have to tell you that the typographically cumbersome
and unattractive combination of an exclamation
point sidled up to a question mark could be replaced
by a more compressed pairing; if the two separate
pieces of punctuation merge totally
into an outpouring of astonishment
to express modern life's incredibilityâ
Who forgot to put gas in the car
You call that a hat
Did you see the way she fell to her knees
in the supermarket because she was suddenly
overtaken by an erotic paranormal experience
âthen faster breathing implies candor when we
shift these two elements together: I send
my love! You must carry yours in a luminous
tent rounded at the top? Latin for query
with a shout, in the dark I
seek you out as a witness because I adore
curiosity wrapped around wonder:
and in the second coming when I bare
my interrobang, located in the lower right corner
of nowhere you've seen, my skin does not tremble
before you, but rather
becomes punctuation for this illicit
almost-run-on sentence. My interrobang
should not be used in formal writing
as it's socially irresponsible and tangled
in knots over our inappropriate situation
which is exactly the shape of naked John Lennon
wrapped around clothed Yoko Ono, their
intertwined bodies (eternal, glorified) captured
just hours before he was shotâcan you see
the way he clings to her as if he's drowning
in astonishment at his good luck?
John Lennon is dead and you and Iâ
you and I
are separated by miles
of ticking, snarled night.