What do you think?
Rate this book


108 pages, Kindle Edition
First published May 10, 2022
’[the fox] never cares how long you watch,
never cares what you need
when you’re watching, never cares
what you do once he is gone.’
“How funny that I called it love and the whole time it was pain.”
Joint Custody
Why did I never see it for what it was:
abundance? Two families, two different
kitchen tables, two sets of rules, two
creeks, two highways, two stepparents
with their fish tanks or eight-tracks or
cigarette smoke or expertise in recipes or
reading skills. I cannot reverse it, the record
scratched and stopping to that original
chaotic track. But let me say, I was taken
back and forth on Sundays and it was not easy
but I was loved each place. And so I have
two brains now. Two entirely different brains.
The one that always misses where I'm not,
and the one that is so relieved to finally be home.
The Hurting Kind
I.
On the plane I have a dream I've left half my
torso on the back porch with my beloved. I have to go
back for it, but it's too late, I'm flying
and there's only half of me.
Back in Texas, the flowers I've left on
the counter (I stay alone there so the flowers
are more than flowers) have wilted and knocked over the glass.
At the funeral parlour with my mother, we are holding her father's suit
and she says, He'll swim in these.
For a moment, I'm not sure what she means,
until I realise she means the clothes are too big.
I go with her like a shield in case they try to upsell her
the ridiculously ornate urn, the elaborate body box.
It is a nice bathroom in the funeral parlour,
so I take the opportunity to change my tampon.
When I come out my mother says,
Did you have to change your tampon?
And it seems, all at once, a vulgar life. Or not
vulgar, but not simple, either.