Foxhole in the Wall
I’ve seen men punch holes in walls. They lead nowhere – I’ve looked, I tried to escape. I’ve seen what happens afterward too. The hole remains there for days, maybe weeks, ignored. When there’s a threat of someone else seeing it, wondering and judging, the hole gets plastered over. It is never fully repaired to the inches of mere expanse that it was before: when it was even and strong. It is never apologized to, though sometimes a pretty landscape is framed and hung over it. It becomes more hidden, like stains under a rug. I’ve seen men punch holes in walls. I tried to escape, but a fox wandered in and asked for my help. He said he had been wandering around in these walls for years, and when the hole broke through, he broke free. He said he needed guidance, as he was a helpless animal with a wounded sense of direction; that he didn’t know anymore how the world worked outside of these walls. He was so small (and cute!). For weeks I focused all my efforts on rehabilitating him. I gave him love and blankets. I made him several thoughtful meals each day (I wanted him to be healthy!) I sang to him and laughed at his jokes. I told him he was funny and charming and handsome and cute and fun. He said he didn’t like men punching holes in my walls – neither do I, I said – but he was grateful for being set free, as that allowed him to meet me. After weeks, we ran out of food, and then I saw it: the door, not plastered over, but latched shut. Fox said, you thought there was nothing beyond that hole in the wall, but there’s an entire world there I wandered through for years. I’m surprised you never heard me knocking around. I bet there’s even more beyond that door.
Diorama
I can bleed
around your lips
raspberry stains
and stick around
your hips, something
grasps to keep you here
communion bread
until we disappear
beneath the sheets
wanting: fantasy
stuck: paper dolls
a maypole
kind of feeling
do you feel
your lips on lips / of bottles
and fruit, pears, cold
& uncalculating
curves, your head
cranes to plastic
wrappers, a goose
with its head stuck
inside; pitiful sight,
your tongue
circles, noiselessly.
You lying bastard
graffiti on the bridge
reproduction mother-belly
grumbling: river
water, what bothers you?
Why so restless
frothing at many
mouths gathering
to a surface, born
of the brewing
something down deeper
stirring, curtains blowing
other domestic figures:
spots beneath coasters
spoons spinning in cups
laughter overheard
in the other room,
these cushions beneath
us, the bark on birch trees
strips like old paint, teasing us
with what’s [not] beneath.