Chopping Herbs
I don’t know any prayers
so I make one up. I start
out slow. I say Hello God,
I like how I can whistle
a stem of parsley between
my teeth. I like how all
green things echo in the eye.
I wish you’d teach me
to chop correctly. I wish
you had. I watched a video.
Sometimes mundane tasks
feel violent. I am ready
for a new feeling. Maybe this
is my new life.
New Reality
In this one I learn to ride a bike
and am beautiful the way a woman
on a bike is beautiful. The wind
is tepid and the leak is fixed
and that one friend isn’t dead.
Even the old woman who waits
for the bus is right: I have the face
of a teacher. I’d abandoned that desire
the way a bird pushes a runt
from the nest. I should have
kissed her. In this one gold trees
poke holes in the sky. Buildings stop
burning. I write a book about the bird
which drops dead without a father,
then comes back to life. I can
lap the sea on my bike.
Even the shadows are warm.
Canyon
Desire cold as a tide pool of shivering
molluscs. Desire loud as a whip
cracked over a canyon. A canyon
leaves room for desire. Holy
and hot as the needle you pressed
to my thumb. Desire before and
desire after. Please says desire,
wearing her gold and her furs.
Another. Desire disappeared me.
Like a knuckle or a drum. My desire
is a needle on fire, a bloodhound
chasing a man with a gun.
