poached paranoia on

The Cut-Up is the Only Way

S. quanders on…

He is a person of many-selvedged hesitations. The sidewalk is a concrete slur, a grey articulation that refuses to resolve into a destination. He feels the syntax of his own skeleton beginning to loosen, the joints becoming mere suggestions of connectivity.

He passes a storefront where the mannequins are engaged in a silent, high-stakes negotiation involving nothing but their plastic elbows. Their eyes are painted-on voids, gazing into the Interzone of the department store’s after-life.

“The word is a parasite,” a voice mutters from a doorway. It is a man whose face is a topographical map of failed drug experiments and lost weekends. He holds a stack of mimeographed sheets, the ink still wet, still screaming. “We are being lived by our own vocabularies. The adjectives are drinking our blood.”

S. pauses. He feels the weight of his own bag—a heavy, inanimate noun that insists on its own reality. He considers the possibility that he is not walking, but being walked by the street’s own insistent, rhythmic “is-ness.”

The air thick with the smell of scorched carbon and the metallic tang of unspent intentions. A siren wails in the distance, a long, thin needle of sound stitching the grey sky to the grey buildings. Real skronk-o- rama!

He enters a diner where the coffee tastes of burnt saliva and the waitress is a sequence of tired, winces and brays. Daily gestures. Her apron is a manifesto of liver and gravy stains.

“What’ll it be?” she asks. Her voice is a recording of a recording.

S. looks at the menu. The letters are migrating, moving from one dish to another in a slow, alphabetical crawl. Poached Paranoia on Rye. Fried Fragments with a Side of Silence.

“I’ll have the … uh …,'” S. says, his voice a dry rustle. “I’he hollow man special.”

She doesn’t blink. She simply writes something on a pad—a jagged, illegible mark that feels like a wound winding down.

Outside, the city’s pulse is a low, subsonic thrum. The billboards are shouting silent commands: CONSUME THE VOID. OBEY THE TENSE. THE PAST IS A VIRUS.

S. feels a sudden, sharp displacement — a schpilkes, you might say. The diner’s walls are becoming translucent, the patrons mere flickering shadows in a cinematic projection racking its focus. He is in the Interzone now, the space between the sentences, where the narrative-police have no jurisdiction.

He looks at his hands. They are beginning to pixelate, the edges of his fingers blurring into the steam rising from his coffee. He is a run-on sentence sprinting toward a terminal punctuation mark that keeps receding.

The man with the titanium teeth is sitting in the booth across from him. He is eating a plate of raw, unedited verbs. Chanting: i before e, except after seizures.

“The cut-up is the only way out,” the man abruptly says, his teeth glinting like surgical instruments. “We must rearrange the reality-film. We must splice the sunset into the middle of the breakfast.”

S. nods. The coffee does not nod back, but he feels the caffeine beginning to rewrite his nervous system. He is ready for the next clause. He is ready to be edited.

In short — he quanders on.

What I’m Reading:

Writing anything and expecting somebody else to read it is an act of hubris, but nothing good can be written without persistent doubts, one of the paradoxes of a writing life. I don’t believe that I have ever taught anyone to write. Every writer in the end is an autodidact. It’s a lifelong course of study, or should be. You must believe that you are the only person for this job, which is a fact. 

— Elizabeth McCracken / A Long Game: Notes on Writing 

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does not yield 

Quanders On and On

The Moon Ecliptic Jejune…

S. understands nothing still. 

No progress, just suspicion — an achievement of sorts — another impinged misalignment.

The hotel carpet is a pattern of smatters, a garment of tatters and spatters designed by no one for no one — a tessellation of suppressed anxiety in burgundy and teal. S. studies it. It does not yield, but his socks are clean, and somewhere a bag cannot suppress its will.

Checkout is at eleven. It is eleven fifty-nine.

He reassembles his left shoe, then reassembles himself, then his right shoe, that smells of coal and desperation. 

He carries his bag into the hallway where the man — the hogmanay man — is gone, but left a distinct smell of black pudding and resignation. The housekeeping cart lists to one side, towels piled in a monument to the provisional. 

S. nods at it. 

The towels do not nod back, but he feels something has passed between them.

He descends. The elevator opens on a lobby of atonal breakfasts — the waffle iron’s red light blinking its one-note scripture: repent… repent… repent… A child is crying tender misericordias to the orange juice machine. The orange juice machine winces its particulate brays.

Outside: the city in its chanteuse shoes and Piaf neighs. S. walks. His shoes a parenthetical syntax  on the wobble cobbles. He is a flash contingency of the street — an aside no one inserted, in a clause claustrophobic, dangling in the new year’s raw and unfiltered air.

A sign reads: Needs Not Met Here — Inquire Without Inquiry. The Unexamined Life is Go Go Go Go!

S. does not inquire.

He quanders on.

What I’m Listening To:

I’m gonna write what I know
Things I ain’t known for a long time
I met the real John Cale
He had no words, but I don’t mind
I packed the stage while he ate rice

— Aldous Harding / “One Stop”

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muzz of voices

Bray of Winces (redux)

S. understands nothing. He tries, squint-eyed, to turn his brain over. Without spark, the ignition doesn’t catch.

S. sees himself, monochromatic, on the screen of his childhood 1974 Panasonic. He’s talking globular in a rectangular city. He makes connections obliquely — only in transient bursts. He needs raiment for the soul but finds defenestrated appliances and tatters in mounds in their stead. He walks a bray of winces in piles of miles of monticular hunger. Nothing for the stomach and nothing for the next life. He quanders in squandered lines of obtuseness. A sign up ahead reads: “Squelch and Skronk, $2.99/lb.” He makes a beeline for the whole ball of wax — a hive of astute astringency on loan — from a god lost in this corner of the universe…

He’s lost in the reticular coldness of the attenuating picture — a cathode ray tube snow (fuzz from his childhood in 1974) and a muzz of voices echoing from the exhaust vent above his head. He’s one with the toilet seat now, one with his pins and needles thighs, and uncomfortably prescient.

He continues his note: … all will be needling shit this new year… Happy so and so… New Year so and so…

“Screw ‘Auld Lang Syne!’” he says. “Screw Robert Burns?” he says to his reflection in the mirror.

And some person outside his hotel room door — which is disquietingly close to the bathroom door (for hadn’t he last night passed one door where he swore he heard a fugue of wet untethered flatulence, and walking by another door heard wretched retching and moans?) — why did the man outside his door continue saying “hogmanay” this and “hogmanay” that, and what was that infuriating accent?

S. understands nothing.

What I’m Reading:

What the wealthy would wage
to feast an unfamiliar creature is enough to shatter
an ecosystem into oblivion, is enough to defaunate the earth.

— Mai Der Vang / “Twelve Million Loops of Wire” / Primordial

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lesser of two

Venting Splenetic

Nothing additional to add to the crimes against humanity? Huh?

There are mental impingements circulating in the ether. We are helpless to change their direction, their aim, their relentlessness. What we did to deserve this is make clear and unconsidered choices — petulant choices. 

We could have chosen the lesser of two evils, the lesser destructive ineffectualness, or plainly put: the least stinky turd. But we chose comeuppance and “I’ll show you!”

And look how fucked we are!

And see how bleak it looks for the foreseeable future.

There’s no place in the world to hide from this scourge.

One tells themself political violence is not an option — it’s the choice of the impotent and narcissistic crowd — remember January 6, 2021?

Remember those historically dangerous and imbecilic clownboys and their rich dark money benefactors?

There is no end in sight, and the garrote tightens.

What are we to do?

What I’m Reading:

A fascist is president: infection in the sentence breeds. We can’t help talking about him.

The comedian says people can’t think when they’re afraid. Satire makes them laugh, forget their fear . . . 

— Aliki Barnstone / “The Sign as You Exit the Artist’s Colony Says “The Real World”

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are all villains

Memorable Stuff I Read This Week

“The thing is, May,” the hum said, “the goal of advertising is to rip a hole in your heart so it can then fill that hole with plastic, or with any other materials that can be yanked out of the earth and, after brief sojourns as objects of desire, be converted to waste.”

— Hellen Phillips / Hum


betelgeuse is turning on and off
like your love—everybody knows
it’s dying

— Julian Talamantez Brolanski / “hasten slowly and you shall soon arrive”


The world is changing because it must. If seeds can germinate in the inferno, so can revolution.

— Mohammed El-Kurd / Perfect Victims and the Politics of Appeal


I hear the hush of sheet iron being cut,
The tear of frost where pear trees
Lean in a wind white with your breath.

— Nancy Ryan / “Poem”


YOU WILL KNOW THAT YOU’RE DONE WITH something when you can’t imagine making it better. For some writers that’s a state of exhilaration: They’ve done everything they can. This beautiful accomplishment! Nothing can improve it. Others of us arrive at the same place, despondent: This ramshackle thing. I’ve reached the end of my powers. Nothing can improve it. 

— Elizabeth McCracken / A Long Game: Notes on Writing Fiction


I heard my voice from below:
It called me by my name.

I ran downstairs.
When I arrived, I was dead.

— Ulalume González de León / “The Stairs”


“We are all villains,” the hum said. “The system only gives us villainous options.”

— Hellen Phillips / Hum

What I’m Listening To:

Sisters and brothers, our struggles
mirror each others’
Recognize you recognize me
Mutual, support, unite

— Stereolab / “Cloud Land”

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want them out

eyeless and unctuous

take my eyes
i want them out

the colors blanched
it all went soft monsters
everything i saw lost its definition

there is nothing worth seeing in this world now

What I’m Reading:

I bathed in a bathtub full of full- 
fat milk and never felt more a monster.

—Mary-Alice Daniel / “Ancestor Syndrome”

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in my neighborhood pt. 122 (10 views from a frozen pond)

What I’m Reading:

“Every time it starts to snow, I would like to have sex. No matter if it is snowing lightly and unseriously, or snowing very seriously, well on into the night, I would like to stop whatever manifestation of life I am engaged in and have sex…”

— Mary Ruefle / “Snow”

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your contours faint

darklight nightmare ii

drag city intimacy clipped
i look back at the wake
of my time there and see
only the outlines of bioluminescence
in the roil

today, at 7:15, will be taxing
documents of the trash city sick
like the light limning the outline
of the bathroom door in the dark hallway
your contours faint in the void

What I’m Reading:

The life’s work of anyone who gives a damn about humanity is to resist the economic elite, demand the taxes that reduce their power and defend the space in which the rest of us can thrive. If your “elected representatives” aren’t helping with that, they are not your representatives, but theirs.

— George Monbiot / Bluesky post

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is this on?

Mainlining Extinction (redux)

An overheated tragedy unspooling
in a slow motion, so obscene—
so perverse—in its deathly insistence,
and the players moving about
as if in a deep pool of molasses.
What gives? Why this suicidal main-
lining extinction by heat, drought,
famine, forced migration, acidification & flood?

(while the planet’s little wars start joining hands)

Who’s at the wheel of this floundering mammoth?
Who cares?

Hello! Is this on?
Hello!

What I’m Reading:

When I despair or doubt, I tell myself that I am an artist. That is both highfalutin and modest: it gains me nothing. It promises nothing. But it puts me back inside me, where art occurs, and nothing is quantifiable. 

— Elizabeth McCracken / A Long Game: Notes on Writing Fiction

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in the void

Darklight Nightmare

Flotilla face on the yardarm angles me grace in deliquescence. Crill face sanguinary acts without the bliss and bloom. 

Wreck me a fantastic drool spanner in deep blue space. Deep sea snow is dying whales and jellies as bottom feeder regalia rejoices. 

I see these letters pooling and drifting down to the depths where translucent fangs await glinting in darklight. 

A tenacious cold envelops their trajectories toward impalement. Impatient teeth. 

Impenetrable meaning impossibly inert in the void.

What I’m Reading:

There is snow on Vesuvius
And the barometer has dropped to one.
Winter again and Spring suspended
On metaphors and appetites.

— Nancy Ryan / “Poem”

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