Lisa Gill

MANIFESTATIONS OF THWART AND OPINE FOR CURVED BILL THRASHER AND TOY PIANO

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1/e

Read my lips.
All efforts at communication
remain subatomic. Right now

my mouth is an envelope, sealed
or unsent.
Only kettle steam or desire,

yours and mine, some kind of consensual,

will part my lips. Even then,
even now, perhaps I won't say anything.
Perhaps I will

merely open.
Gently.
Why not

zero? Why not space or void,
empty or sky? Why not abide
this pause in the glut? Why not embrace?

Pretend you want to hear this. Do you?
What if you read my lips and only find there
the word, "Pshaw." Gee golly,

what if you can't read my lips?
Busy busy busy, mouth ears eyes
so many fricking fingertips…

More ache. I ache.

What can I say that would be transcendental?
2.718281828459045?
We all ache.

Should I prove it to you?
Do we need a solution?
More proof?

Here a logarithm, there despair.
Blah blah ta-da equals blah blah blah
inevitably.

What if this parting, this frontal separation,
is not simply one lip
abandoning the other, sundered?

What if this is blue,
the taste of blue,
hard hewn from stubborn rock?

Parting works syllables, necessary
mechanism of breath chasing
"Wonder."

Togethering and suchnot is how we eat sky.
Bliss-bitten. Consumed.
Sometimes something falls silent.

Duly. Here is no rift.
The space between lips, breath flailing,
matters more than words.

Let me be precise:
      Communication is collision.
Bang bang smack boom—ah, language fails.

Electrons spin anyhow. Whirling.
Here, in the negative space of my mouth,
a tongue-flick towards yes.

 

2/City

The mind turns to pig iron.

Amid sound smack, sun steep, cloud clot, duplex and highrise, all our racked and branded bodies vie and jostle for coveted green teats, gape mouths ready to clamp down hard and suckle. How brittle! How preparatory! Let us all roll over, belly-up, and snort at the sky.

A fist-sized ribbon flower in a woman's hair matches the rims marooned on her car. An old man on his way to the methadone clinic still walks with a schoolyard swagger, sagging pants now due to malnutrition. Chronic argh, I stumble.

Ingot is a hard word to say. Harder still the blasted memories, the puddling fear of what comes next, what doesn't. We forage preservatives. Anesthesia. Amnesia. Go to the cornerstore, the hospital, the smack dealer, set our faith in row upon row of shelves filled with canned goods. Loss accumulates. So we go. We get in our little vehicles and we get in our big vehicles and we ride a bike or walk, run or take a wheelchair. We go. We go places, we go people, frenetic propulsion, exhausting every last whim, years spat, soot-covered, from wagging tailpipes. Listen how our gridiron goals sing in concert. How we clap one communal hand. Sound of so very much combustion: I curse. So what

is intimacy? Another opportunity to melt and be reformed? Truth:

I don't know the city and the city doesn't know me. (Will blocks view.) Buildings keep going up, coming down, and going up, and in this we are leveled. Briefcase, backpack, satchel, bedroll, no matter: all our hopes are razed. There are so many ways to harden, so few to shatter properly. Only in anonymity, in the refusal to attach and the utter decomposition of self, will the collarbone turn to motorcycle catspray, the tibia be scraped clean by a cymbal, skin pocked by barking dogs or some announcer at the ball game around the corner. Light light light light.

There is something to be said for dissolution. Sometimes I sit on a mat in a quiet room and feel the cells of my own body eroding, toppling one by one onto tectonic plates: everything is shifting.

 

3/Cure

What's broken?

Picture this: some giant cottonwood, rings alternately hard-pressed and swelling, record of every drought and monsoon required to tap sky, this tree now splayed, fully stumped by circumstance, and here, in this impromptu midnight, suddenly cleared of day's expectations, we find the chopped circumference of upward motion, this once harrowed happening, to be an invitation we are ready finally to heed, to rest our rumps, lean a bit and accept the curve of shoulders, interplay of fingers, every negative space, molecules of risen river, tracing the contours of our apart and our together, deciphering even the smallest juncture of connection, lips or nape, thigh and shoulder blade. My legs root into the earth, some hot core, and you for a moment balance against me, both of us connected to the substrata of another body, commingled weight carried by tree and earth, our minds cloudlit by city refraction.

Who said river? And who said yes?
The traumatized or the traumatized?
Yes, my brain lights up on MRI, starlight.
Bright patterns of grief and glow.

Please.
Please fix me.
Fix pleasure in my mind.
Please fix me in time and space.
The only stasis being now.
The quandary nothing but this river's current.
I close my eyes and drop the history text, the latest release by Nostradamus; I release every broken horse grown accustomed to being ridden; and excommunicate my own ideas; excommunicate the words of doctors, that sad scratched album, the oldest riff:

We ex
We expect
We expect you to de-
We pecked you
We expectations
We pecked you to pieces
We expect you to de-
We who will die expect you to de-

Generate
This:

Simple transition from inhale to exhale,
Eyes opening,
Breath wrapping hours and minutes,

Wrapping the room, the planet,
Another person,
Arms some giant lung-driven akimbo em-

Brace yourselves:
the fix is here.

And this
cannot last.

 

4/o

How grace.

The body shaped into O,
an industrial spillway or hydrothermal vent,
all the marginalized moments wildflowering
across the threshold of tongue,
this ecosystem of delight,

where breath perpetually bated
is retooled,
finds resurgence and release.

O lime.
O bread.
O belt buckle and monster truck.
Look how telephone wires root through the garden bed.

Each narrow stairwell,
breath trundling in and breath trundling out,
plays prayer flags, unflappable
desire to monkey around
in the temple of no
clutch.

Gasp.

An elbow plays the cello;
the second knuckle of the right pinkie
perched upon a baby grand
bends the joint in the leg of a black widow
retreating into web after a tossed ball lands. Near
every time the jut of someone's hip rises,
the ozone crinkles, while shin bones
bore through the lower mantle,
to tap what's molten,
magnificent.

Still.

Each cranial fossa remains emptied,
unmapped tributaries of crevasse
ever deepening,
these slender-fingered voids
catching shadow.

Catching up
world.

O.
For a moment.
O.

 

Lisa Gill is the recipient of an NEA Fellowship and author of five books of poetry. A semi-regular contributor to Wordgathering she writes frequently about issues of body-brain and zen, contributing her odd efforts to as many formats as will welcome the discussion, including: Beauty is a Verb, Brevity, NDQ, Room (Ca) , numerous anthologies and various blogs, including her own at http://localpoetsguild.wordpress.com and www.cerebralpeepshow.com. She lives in the rural high desert with her dog, where she begins work on a new micro-press, all the while treating herself for a currently unnamed disease in the porphyria/cytochrome P450 spectrum.