Send. End.

I PROMISED MYSELF I’D STOP THINKING about it, so instead I gave memory to thing I’d never much noticed: Intersecting lines, crumpled paper, smooth chords. An aroma that wandered over from the next table, two curls in my face, a saturated photograph. Persnickety, New York, or wherever that station was where we got on the train to the city. Rye bread. Poughkeepsie, that’s it. Sitting in an ’88 Chevy Suburban on a hot day…

There’s nothing in the mailbox. I used to read a book about figure skating, I could be in Vancouver. I have no recollection of being anything less than five. The best times are the silent ones.
The only time I ever wore lipstick, it ended up on my teeth. I’ve been longing for bigger hair. I’ve never smoked a cigarette, not a single inhale to my name. Every time a car gets too close, I exhale again and again. I’m scared of traffic and of the buzz. I feel tied up in petty obsessions: making my bed, straightening the closet, the loose thread on my shirt, buying groceries. Mother taught me everything about modesty, and how to arrange the stuffed animals on my bed in perfect succession. They’re all important.
Aching, I looked on as she raised a sheet into the air, watching it float down on to the living room floor. I looked on as the bridge raised, the ship went under, the bridge lowered. I looked on as he stood in front of the microphone and feverishly strummed through red and dark. I looked on to the cul de sac below, the door across, the car next to. Volume. I looked on to my grandma, who looked to my aunt, who looked at ease. I looked on from my bed, some couch, a passenger seat. I looked out.
Jkl Mno, the /\ OK \/ is not CLR.
Things to consider: Getting lost, taking the train, reconsidering.
PWR. END.

Nosebleeds

LAST WEEK-ISH I LAID MY HEAD DOWN TO REST in a quiet, dark, and dry room. Seconds after I reached out to extinguish my bedside lamp, I felt a drip, another drip, and finally, three streams roll down my face and on to my pillow.
My bleeding nose isn’t anything unusual; in fact, nosebleeds are commonplace in my world. During the winter months I experience nearly one a day, no matter how often I moisturize. I’ve accepted this flaw as adjacent to people that have asthma or allergies. I get nosebleeds.
This particular nosebleed was, however inconvenient, just beautiful. I ran to the bathroom to clean up the mess, looked in the mirror and saw delicacy. The lines of blood had made perfect curves strolling down my cheeks, along my chin and to my neckline in arbitrary beauty. It was a graceful accident.
That night after cleaning myself up, I went to rest my head once more. Another night in a dry room, shifting side to side, holding back the outpouring as it dried in place. It’s the time between awake and sleep that’s hardest—holding still, wanting to go on with your usual ways, but feeling the slow trickle roll toward the edge…
…right before the drip.


THIS IS WHAT I’M KEEPING IN MIND as I move forth with my next sculpture project. I have high hopes and am really looking forward to experimenting with new materials + concept.

Today I am 22 years of age—
I feel ecstatic, I feel wondrous, I feel ready for the up-growing, the limitations, the intensity of another year. The splendor is, I’m still young.