your hardcover deeds

Softcover Words

Read this “How to…” book
and communicate in softcover words
your hardcover deeds —

herding sheep and goats,
lying with packs of dogs,
theorizing  yersinia pestis theorems,
and puzzling though a sheaf
of sanity assassins.

Read about the coughing
and sneezing of the infected.
Eat stands of banana, malanga, and yuca.

And make ten thousand marks
silvery and lustrous gray —

recounting the executions carried out
by children bored of kicking
old oil drums green
and rusted brown.

What I’m Reading:

I spend the drive searching for cactus
as if cactus was part of our bodies

— Basel Abbas & Ruanne Abou-Rahme / Until we became fire and fire us

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siphoning a network

Duchampeum

The kings and queens surrounded
by swift nudes
apropos of little sister
torn in tatters.

Stripped bare by bachelors
trailing coffee mills and paradigms —
siphoning a network of stoppages —
nine curving lines.

Dust breeding hideous
noise and a farewell to Florine —
Apollinaire enameled —
by a girl painting a bed frame.

So why not sneeze
At a cage full of sugar cubes?

What I’m Reading:

I wanted to get away from the physical aspect of painting. I was much more interested in recreating ideas in painting.

— Marcel Duchamp / “Marcel Duchamp” / MOMA installation

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all that matters

Memorable Stuff I Read This Week

There is no point
In doing anything,
There is no resisting
The monstrous god
Who devours
His own children.

— Fernando Pessoa / “Ode I”


Cars are, without exaggeration, one of the most significant and negative environmental, political, social, and cultural forces in the history of humanity … Instead of unbounded freedom and rugged self-reliance the never-ending proliferation of automobiles has delivered a host of costs and burdens. Among them are the demolition of our neighborhoods, towns, and cities to make way for expensive car infrastructure like freeways.

— Sarah Goodyear, Doug Gordon & Aaron Naparstek / Life After Cars


My disorder stacks to the sky. Those whom I loved were attached to the sky by an elastic. I turned my head … they weren’t there. 

— Jean Cocteau / “The Red Packet”


Oceans absorb more than 90 percent of the excess energy in the Earth system, which is primarily caused by burning fossil fuels, such as oil, coal, and gas. That imbalance hit a record 23 zettajoules last year, more than double the average of the previous two decades.

As a result, the oceans are warming at an accelerating rate. In 2020, the amount of heat being added to the oceans was equivalent to about five Hiroshima bombs per second. Last year, it was closer to 11 Hiroshima explosions per second. The UN’s secretary general, António Guterres, has warned “Earth is being pushed beyond its limits.”

— Jonathan Watts / “On the Longest Day of the Year, Ocean Surface Temperatures Hit a Record High” / Mother Jones


Where there is violence
there is always a trace
of an echo buried
deep
deep
down

— Basel Abbas & Ruanne Abou-Rahme / Until we became fire and fire


I have forced myself to contradict myself in order to avoid conforming to my own taste.

— Marcel Duchamp / “Marcel Duchamp” / MOMA installation


I could fit all that matters
into one bag.

— Kate Braverman / “Job Interview”

What I’m Listening To:

We don’t know anything
You don’t know anything
I don’t know anything about love
But we are nothing (Whoa-oh-oh)
You are nothing
I am nothing without love

— The Magnetic Fields / “The Death of Ferdinand de Saussure”

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a futility profound

(They Hope)

All we do is theatrical resistance —
Without direct action —

Elaborate gestures
Of a futility profound.

A pantomime —
Enervated and impotent —

A room full of brume
In my vise-like brain.

Fight fight confront confront
Resist resist resist —

Resistance is pointless.
(They hope).

What I’m Reading:

My blood has become ink. It was necessary to stop this revulsion at all costs. I am poisoned down to my bones. I sang in the dark and now that song frightens me.

— Jean Cocteau / “The Red Packet”

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in this (my) neighborhood pt. 141

What I’m Reading:

4 am
We are under siege
I say we and yet oceans divide us
If you don’t leave
they will demolish the house on top of your heads

— Basel Abbas & Ruanne Abou-Rahme / Until we became fire and fire us

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the east side

overheard in nyc …

… Someone said …

… Geckos of a wet finger … 

… You mean fingers of a wet echo? …

… which is why I get so physical in my practice …

… They cut off his head — they threw it overboard … 

… Only two drops of datura to make you lose your mind forever …

… Who is feeding the pigeons yellow rice? …

… I need to focus on finding an exit from that maze …

… Was the message sent using standard encryption? …

… The future is the same …

… We are in the midst of a mass extinction event driven by humans …

… I wouldn’t say she’s ugly …

… Is that what I look like? …

… I still don’t have a job …

… and he’s saying: I’m not perfect — I’m not no saint — and meanwhile he’s robbing the shit out of you …

… Wait here, you need to stand in that line …

… They got the Legionnaires’ thing up on the east side …

… How am I safe here now? …

What I’m Reading:

Nothing is stranger to humans than their own image.

— Karel Čapek / Rossum’s Universal Robots

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good little pawns

The Pomp (redux)

Today I broke my vow of silence when I broke the glass in case of emergency. I croaked in a muttering fashion most embarrassing, “Ra… rah… run. Run! There’s a moth infestation.” We had moths. We were underground in our hermetically sealed glass boxes, and here we were with an infestation of moths. How was this possible? Had we not paid our alms, and made our ablutions in the appropriate manner? Had we not made cretinous burnt offerings—I was always against this affectation—pungent and breath-taking like good little pawns. For our troubles, for our conceits to our deity … we get moths! Was it worth breaking 137 days of silence over? Documents were signed, codicils initialed, an ascetic’s vow taken. The pomp. The sacrifice. Moths! What does this mean?

What I’m Reading:

My enemy keeps
a bowl of anemones
on my bedside table
and this cruelty
has killed my will
to perform even the duties
of an invalid

— Fanny Howe / “My Enemy”

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suck on hardscrabble

[detonation nation]

a bullet whizzes my ear

the strangest, most riveting fists found purchase at my temple
a familiar scenario

a rough patch—
a dispatch—

aggression unmoored
this land is not mine / not yours
it belongs to all / to none

so take your right cross & elbow shuck
listen as i convert it to poetry
for the empathically challenged
suck on hardscrabble knuckles tattooed

“H A T E”

a brusque burlesque of mutual disdain
convened long before the season
of fake fascist spray-ons

all these deft scraps of ignorance
a cutting shorthand of petty grievances
dyspeptic interlocutions & prickly retractions unretracted
unredacted — i remember last year was so hot

this will be hotter

this year will demarcate — forthwith —
the honeymoon croon from hell

the detonation nation

plug your ears
it’s coming

What I’m Reading:

Our lives are spinning out
from world to world;
the shapes of things
are shifting in the wind.
What do we know
beyond the rapture and the dread?

— Stanley Kunitz / “The Abduction”

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timbre of rime

congealed bacon

i googled white nationalism—
flashes of congealed bacon

you play the tragic heroine
toothy femme fatale

dont judge my painting
until i finish my ropa vieja

dont cut your hair
before tinting it blue

i fix you a tongue on rye
my marbles gather dust

we wait for slide guitar solos
on an unmoored pontoon bridge

in darkness your voice
has the timbre of rime

the choice you say—love
love

is love

What I’m Reading:

. . . the world is always ending for each of us and if one begins to withdraw from the possibilities of experience, then no one would take any of the risks involved with love.

— Ben Lerner / 10:04

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poverty is violence

Memorable Stuff I Read This Week

When I consider the curious habits of man,
I confess, my friend, I am puzzled.

— Ezra Pound / “Meditatio”


A record-breaking heat wave is baking Europe, hot on the heels of unprecedented temperatures in May. “Heatwaves are here to stay, until we turn the tap off to global emissions,” says Samantha Burgess, deputy director of Europe’s Copernicus Climate Change Service. “They’re more frequent, they’re more intense and they’re lasting longer.” Europe is heating up twice as fast as the global average, and scientists are trying to understand the complex factors that will determine whether this year’s sweltering heat should be considered ‘the new normal’.

— Flora Graham / “Does Europe have a new climate?” / Nature Briefing


Days are dams.
Each week posts
a sign above the water.
This week: Goodbye.
Last week: The Possible.
I close the dam of The Possible,
open the dam of Goodbye.

— Lily Brown / “Venus Transit”


Trust in science has collapsed — right? The evidence says that it’s not necessarily so. From a global perspective, public trust in science and scientists is high. Trust has dropped in certain groups, notably among Republican-leaning people in the United States. And research in the United Kingdom shows that the proportion of people who have “a lot” of trust in science tends to be lower among politically right-leaning groups than those on the left. In many countries, people are also increasingly questioning definitive evidence on divisive issues such as vaccines, partly because scientific information is being drowned out online.

— Flora Graham / “Trust in science: what’s really happening?” / Nature Briefing


Poverty is violence.
We know the look of dead
things behind pinned drapes and how to make
history in one day.

— Silvia Bonilla / “Bone Harp”


Blatant lobbying, not for the sake of our country, but for the fossil fuel industry, in which almost all the ultrarich – including, in all likelihood, the proprietors of these newspapers – are heavily invested. These people are not and never will be your friends.

— George Monbiot / Bluesky post


Nothing can ever happen twice.
In consequence, the sorry fact is
that we arrive here improvised
and leave without the chance to practice.

— Wisława Szymborska / “Nothing Twice”

What I’m Listening To: 

If nothing means anything
And I’m just a little big nerd
Floating in the ether (Ether)
Crying in the bathtub
Metaphorically speaking, of course I’m lost, we
We lost our minds, our marbles

— The Bug Club / “A Good Day for Dying”

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