A WOMAN WANTS WHAT A WOMAN WANTS
	The alarm goes off and I wake up
	to perform my critically acclaimed
	sentience in my morning posture
	I seek to achieve the impossible angles of a bird
	lying dead in the road – with its head and its wings
	folded down into the asphalt from the vantage point
	of a crane shot.
	To make direct eye contact
	with the camera is to move the perspective from
	the watched to the watcher or to present an emotion
	as a publicly observable signifier,
	a voyeuristic experience –
	The Feel Good Movie of the Year
	was my nickname in high school
	and as is cinematically compelling,
	I brush my teeth for the duration of sand
	moving from the top of the blue plastic hourglass
	to the bottom. "Look at this existence.
	This pathetic, fallible, wonderful body,"
	you can say rhetorically, sarcastically, or earnestly
	and still achieve death.
	Look at me falling in love with fallible bodies.
	Look at me performing emotional labor,
	my arms are strong enough
	to work a tract of land:
	The impatient man calls me
	a bitch at my place of work
	and the upward movement
	of my facial muscles causes
	my eyes to wrinkle, a smile.
	This is a method of intention setting.
	I seek a husband
	with broad shoulders and a symmetrical face
	A hard worker, whose value is in the width
	of his chest. I do not want
	men that can teach me. There is nothing
	more that I want to know; free of want,
	I can’t use men in the same way
	that they can use me. "Give up
	on art and love," you can say rhetorically,
	sarcastically, or earnestly and still achieve death.
	I wouldn't be a good wife,
	but I would be a wife
	in a way that was cinematically compelling.
	In my dream last night
	there was a factory farm
	that performed full body castration;
	I went there
	to lie with the women who wanted
	to find a calm somewhere.
	I became a body
	and my sentience became someone else’s
	problem as I awoke thinking,
	“Where is my value?” as if I had misplaced
	my lipstick again.
	
	THE WOMAN AT THE END OF THE CUL-DE-SAC
	I watch the woman at the end of the cul-de-sac,
	through my car window with the pleasure
	of my internal monologue thinking “cul-de-sac”
	and feeling distinctly suburban, as I drive
	at slow speeds and gentle angles,
	as to not run over the deaf children that live inside
	of the cul-de-sac
	The deaf children play secretly, exclusively,
	a game of hide and seek, as I have never seen them
	But I drive in gentle angles to feel amused and calm
	thinking about humans that can go unseen
	The woman at the end of the cul-de-sac
	doesn’t walk like a secret but she walks soft-bodied,
	like the women in poems are,
	and she retrieves her mail with a small key
	from the community mailbox; though she is soft-bodied
	she walks without the hand of a man around her waist
	The sun comes into my face
	through my windshield and
	I feel my internal monologue
	thinking, “The Female Gaze.”
	I watch the words pass
	inside of my head
	and project
	onto the sun through my eyes.
	At this moment I know
	that the woman in the cul-de-sac can see
	the words, “The Female Gaze”
	written on the sun.
	Now her internal monologue is thinking,
	THE FEMALE GAZE
	in all caps and she feels suspicious but she pulls her face
	at me to nod and smile
	And I pull my face at her to nod and smile,
	quickly averting my eyes before she looks to me
	to improve her life or teach her something about it.
	(Sometimes, my eyes suggest things about me–when
	they go off talking on their own–that just aren’t true,
	for example,
	when I was there with you on the night
	that you asked me if I was sad
	because my eyes were heavy and wet with tears
	and I couldn’t quite look at you straight on,
	I was only sad
	in the way that I was supposed to be
	when I was there with you.)
	And I know that she also averts her eyes
	because the sun presents itself
	as an empty light source–
	We do not earn salary
	for this emotional labor.
STEVE BUSCEMI EYES
	Supine, I am watching TV.
	In the dark, light moves against the wall
	behind me as the scenes change on the TV
	and nothing else happens
	but night turning back into day. I witness it:
	The nothingness, the feeling of wasting my day
	off from work. I think about ingesting caffeine
	to make myself more of a person
	that is motivated and interested in life.
	5 am on a Friday is a time that doesn’t exist to me
	when I can sleep and my father is pulling
	the trash can out onto the sidewalk.
	Tonight/This Morning I have a distinct sense
	of 5am and sadness in my stomach as I lie supine
	but I can’t cry like this
	because of gravity, maybe. Who do I need
	to email to improve my life?
	When Kanye says, “Ain’t no tuition for having
	no ambition/and there ain’t no loans
	for sittin your ass at home,” he is making
	eye contact with me.
	Outside there is a singular bird
	seemingly shrieking out
	into nothing, performing the sadness
	that I project onto her. It sounds
	like a nervous breakdown,
	I know this. I feel it
	in the vibrato and the tree
	branches, given temporary meaning,
	clutched by light bird feet,
	feel an immense sense of duty
	to console. Feeling an immense
	sense of duty, I want to call back to her
	but the bird wouldn't understand
	that she wasn't alone. There is nothing
	I can immediately do
	to fulfill my sense of duty to everything
	that is suffering. Keep in mind,
	that I would hurt someone
	if I knew who to hurt. Am I
	the ultimate goodness?
	On the TV,
	Steve Buscemi looks sad, the way his eye folds sag,
	though he smiles and laughs
	with slicked back hair.
	He waits tables through the TV screen,
	making the lights move on the wall behind me. 
	I lie and I watch him
	I feel myself not cry
	I hear the bird shriek
	and then become apologetic sounding:
	softer, slower, desperate,
	and then silent to my ears.
	But the bird can shriek at differing decibels,
	heard or unheard to me, and I can only remain
	supine; Steve Buscemi can always wait tables
	through the TV screen like this,
	even in death,
	and I can watch him.
