August 21, 2023

E. P.

HIT AND RUN

My therapist tells me I’m better off if you’re dead.
 
I mean, not dead-dead,
maybe I’m paraphrasing.
They aren’t suggesting you should die.
Please don’t go
driving off a cliff with your lovely new wife.
I already tried that.
I assure you
the static between atoms as your hands levitate
is charged by a guilt that has its own gravity.
It will pull your fingerprints back to the grooves
worn softly into your steering wheel
like tiny graves
for the smallest traces of your identity.
 
No, my therapist just means
it’s better if you’re dead to me.
Which I guess you have been anyway.
I’m not imagining a world in which
I never got an apology.
 
I will never know if you are sorry
for picking me up from the abortion clinic
and taking me to your grandmother’s house
to dye Easter eggs
with your entire family.
It sounds like a sitcom
but I am not nearly clever enough
to fabricate that kind of tragic comedy.
 
Do you still have that car?
Your dad’s hulking ’64 LeSabre?
Everyone called it Gold Member
and my only real memory of the interior
is how the front seat
felt devastating.
 
The problem with post-traumatic stress
is that it manifests in strange
and unpredictable ways.
For example,
any time a nurse comes near me
my legs crumple like a bruised fender
and suddenly I am screaming.
Whenever I see a gold car
all I feel is that coffin heartbeat
crashing.
 
The fevered aftermath
of turning life to death to ash to agony
was a lesson in shattering.
It gashed holes in my brain,
like the cigarettes I stumped out
on my thighs left potholes;
like the white lines I chased
mirrored the skid mark scars I carved;
like the accident in my abdomen
left a crater in the road.
Each finale landscaped my terrain, 
and I will never know if you are sorry
for leaving me to patch it on my own.
 
If only the tenacity of my rage
held as loosely as the cells of that body.
My resentment and regret
don’t disintegrate so easily.
 
If I ever find the note you left me—
yes, the one from two weeks after
when you quietly crept to my window
in the dead of night
and so tenderly slipped
some debris under the sill
to tell me you were breaking up with me—
I will never know if you are sorry
but I will read that note as a eulogy
on every anniversary.
 
I think I kept it, anyway.
Or maybe I buried it with you
when my therapist suggested 
you are more helpful six feet underground.
I’ve dug and filled so many holes
they’re all starting to feel the same,
but I suppose one of them must contain 
some evidence of your hit-and-run.
 
Really though, did you keep the car?
I have to know.
How much can you fit in the trunk of a graveyard?
What baggage did you pack to fill your new home?
Did your wife let you bring it in the house
or do you keep it in the garage?
Are my stains still on the bench seat?
Can you see the small hole in the lap belt
where I bit through trying to muffle my grief?
When you reach for the steering wheel
can you feel the pull of my gravity?
Or the tombstone weight of our baby
that I cradle between my knees?
 

from Rattle #80, Summer 2023

__________

E. P.: “I am a ray of sunshine who moonlights as a poet. I live in San Francisco and write to give my heart some breathing room. Most of my attempts to write about life end up being poems about death, but poems about death are merely poems about love.”

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August 20, 2023

Bridget Kriner

ON AESTHETIC INJURY

“It does not follow that acorns are oak trees,
or that we had better say they are.”
—Judith Jarvis Thomson

Every wildlife adventurer understands the lure
of spotting a rare creature in its natural habitat.
Like when you’re in an airboat, skimming over
 
the swamp & you yearn to feed marshmallows
to gators, watch their jaws open & snap as they swim
right up to the boat, glimpse their armored bodies
 
sunning on logs among blooming swamp irises.
Or when you’re hang gliding over the Grand Canyon,
suspended by nothing more than a thin, flexible wing,
 
you count on looking down on bighorn sheep & bison
roaming as you circle overhead. Or in an open-air 4×4,
driving through the heart of a game reserve, you reckon
 
you’ll be among lions, elephants, rhinos, leopards.
Or when you snorkel out in the night, it is expressly
to swim with giant wild manta rays, to come within inches
 
of their grand wingspan. But if it just isn’t in the cards,
for you to behold any of them, despite all of your concrete
hopes & calculations? What a bitter pill that would be.
 

from Poets Respond
August 20, 2023

__________

Bridget Kriner: “This poem is written in response to the recent court decision regarding mifepristone, where federal appeals court Judge James Ho argued that doctors suffer aesthetic injury when they are deprived of the experience of seeing their ‘unborn’ patients. He wrote, ‘Unborn babies are a source of profound joy for those who view them. Expectant parents eagerly share ultrasound photos with loved ones. Friends and family cheer at the sight of an unborn child. Doctors delight in working with their unborn patients—and experience an aesthetic injury when they are aborted.’ In making this argument, Ho used case law that has only previously been applied in environmental or animal rights cases.”

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August 19, 2023

Lindsay Lin (age 10)

HOW TO DEAL WITH STAGE FRIGHT

Imagine the judges
watching you
are donuts.
 
You can have a bite
after every word
of your poem
or every step
of your dance.
 

from 2023 Rattle Young Poets Anthology

__________

Why do you like to write poetry?

Lindsay Lin: “I like to write poetry because I can explain my thinking in a different way than others. I want to be an author in the future.”

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August 18, 2023

David Oates

FARTHING

In Victorian London, a farthing could buy you three oysters, with bread and 
butter, from an oyster-seller walking the streets. Or in the East End, a sparrow 
that God has forgotten to look out for.
 
Farthing is also, I think, what happens when an outing goes bad.
Lostness, danger, no one to help, farthing
well past any address you’ve ever heard of.
 
Nearing is nicer. Closeness. Maybe the shore in sight, lights flaring
and concerned people looking for you, with blankets
and biscuits or maybe burly men to haul you, at last, in.
 
Someone to tousle your wet head, laughing because
it all came out right in the end. Meanwhile the surf crashing
and cries still heard from far out, farther, farther, farthing.
 
Everyone listens. Is that it? No, it’s not. Or it is. Wind in your ears,
salt on the rims of your eyes, your skin glowing now, but when
you look back … well you’d better not. And you don’t.
 
Someone brings you bread and butter and you think, oddly,
of sparrows.
 

from Rattle #80, Summer 2023

__________

David Oates: “All the good luck in the world can’t quite erase the knowledge of what else might have happened. Almost did happen, maybe. Only the ones who survive are able to have such thoughts. We smile at the retro-inevitability of everything that has come to pass. But poetry can tell stories in both directions simultaneously, so fear and a sense of the uncanny infuse everything. All this messing about with language is a way to feel the grain of existence, so random and so beautiful.” (web)

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August 17, 2023

Rattle is happy to sponsor the annual Whole Life Soaps Haiku Contest, which is part of the Wrightwood Arts & Wine Festival. Entries were taken both online and in person at this year’s festival in May. Created and judged by Whole Life Soaps owner Bill McConnell, the winning poet receives $100, and their haiku is printed on a custom line of soaps later in the year. We’re pleased to announce this year’s winner, but visit Whole Life Soaps online to read the top 20 entries and more of the judge’s comments.

 


 

Eavonka Ettinger

 

 
 
shedding its skin
a snake slithers away
growing pains
 
 

2023 Soap Haiku Contest Winner

__________

Bill McConnell (on his choice): “The idea of having a haiku published on a bar of soap is a unique and appealing element that attracts writers of all skill levels. I believe that the notion of seeing one’s writing wash off the body and down the drain is a conceit that very few people will experience over time, but that writers, nonetheless, strive for. It’s good, clean fun. This year’s theme presented a question: how does nature reflect aging and the cycle of life?”

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August 16, 2023

Traci McMickle

10 THINGS I LEARNED FROM CINCHING UP A DRAG QUEEN

1.
A drag show dressing room
smells like Urban Decay
and two-buck ’80s hair shellac.
 
2.
Queens live under layers.
Every surface a swap meet
of things that hide other things.
 
3.
Pee before you tuck.
Tuck before you cinch.
Go to the bathroom in pairs.
 
4.
Fake nails will fight you.
No matter how early you are,
you won’t start on time.
 
5.
There’s no such thing
as a dress rehearsal. Do it
on the night or not at all.
 
6.
Photos must be high- 
angle with flash.
Facetune is not optional.
 
7.
Whole queens bewitch
audiences. Half a queen 
scars Taco Bell workers.
 
8.
Your fuckups are yours.
Smile, honey. Even
if you dance out of your tits.
 
9.
Do not touch
the queens. Their paint
is always wet.
 
10.
Taking off makeup
is just as hard
as putting it on.
 

from Rattle #80, Summer 2023

__________

Traci McMickle: “I read my earliest poems at a sweaty bookshop in Missoula, Montana, over protesters yelling out on the Higgins Bridge. A fellow poet, late to the party, hollered back in blue language. My own phone went off as I read, and everyone laughed, stamped, and booed in turns. Afterward, real poets told me I was good, even though the writing was baby stuff. I knew I’d found my people, and I keep writing in order to deserve them.” (web)

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August 15, 2023

Glenn McKee

LATE FRAGMENT

My glass regardless of its contents
is full of Now—so full of Now

I can drink my fill without fear
of Now going out of business.

When unable to bend an elbow,
I take my Now through a straw.

from Rattle #23, Summer 2005

__________

Glenn McKee: “I suffer from a 60-year-old habit of tearing poetry off my life. Not many pages of my life remain, and those that do hang on like surgical tape plastered on a hairy body. Nevertheless, I intend to write myself out of life.”

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