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“sometimes i open my mouth and my mother’s silences come / tumbling out of me”
— Rita Wong, from “value chain,” Forage
I never made a mark on my own body— instead I stood proud and let someone else do the breaking. Called it football, called it dirt bike, called it round here you take a beating when you earn it, boy, called it do your worst, I know you can’t break me half as hard I deserve to be broken.
— Jared Singer, from “Shatter,” Forgive Yourself These Tiny Acts of Self-Destruction
Admit why you do not take your sleeping pills: the only time your brain gets quiet is when it is sleep addled.
Forgive yourself these tiny acts of self-destruction. Watch the sunrise for the fourth time this week. Allow the new day to give you hope.
— Jared Singer, from “Things to Do When Not Taking Your Sleeping Pills,” Forgive Yourself These Tiny Acts of Self-Destruction
“I believe […] that the one who is most alone is the strongest one.”
— Renzo Novatore
“(…) what happened (to Kafka) is the same as what happened to me: he withdrew he went too far into solitude and knew — he must’ve known — you never come back from there”
— Alejandra Pizarnik, from Psychopathology Ward
“Whenever I’ve tried to free my life from a set of circumstances that continually oppress it, I’ve been instantly surrounded by other circumstances of the same order, as if the inscrutable web of creation were irrevocably at odds with me.”
— Fernando Pessoa, The Book of Disquiet
“Little Red Riding Hood Addresses The Next Wolf,” Brenna Twohy.
A few hundred feet off Highway 18, about halfway between Portland and my mom’s house, there’s this pickup truck stuck up in the limbs of an oak tree.
My friend Zak pointed it out: I wonder how that got there.
I had made the drive less than a month before without noticing it.
My mom was out of town for the weekend. I took my boyfriend to finally see the Oregon coast. We drank red wine from the bottle and fell asleep together on one couch. In the morning, I couldn’t figure out the coffee machine, so he drove to the next town over and brought back paper cups with a picture of a pirate on the side. We went to the Ripley’s Believe It or Not museum and bought trashy souvenirs from the gift shop and I said to him everything in this moment is exactly perfect and six days later my brother was dead.
My first semester of law school, I had a mental health crisis.
I would sit in class and list things: this desk is real. the highlighter is real. my left thigh has a freckle above the knee so that’s real.
I have hundreds of photos from those first few months, all from my own apartment. Pictures of the sinks turned off. The stove knobs. The freezer, closed. My key in the door lock.
Oregon oaks are marcescent – the leaves change color at the same time as the trees around them, but don’t fall. The dead leaves hang on all winter. When the wind picks up, you would swear it’s raining by the noise of it.
Before he died, my brother drove up to Sacramento for an apprenticeship with a guy who made knives. I don’t know everything that happened there, but I know most of the ending.
All the outlet covers pried off all the walls.
I know that’s where you keep the cameras, he said. I’m not a moron.
They’re going to keep him 72 hours, my mom said. At least 72 hours.
We never talked about mental illness. Just sat next to each other in silence for decades. Fiddling with the car radio. Up in the tree.
Even at the worst of it, I was surrounded by resources. This is a privilege, undoubtedly. It was also profoundly unhelpful.
Career counselors and professors talked about income potential and market desirability and I pressed my thumbs as deep as they would go in the spaces between my ribs.
What does it matter how fast I can move, I thought, if I can’t get the hell out of this tree?
I didn’t need affirmations about the ways it gets better. I didn’t need vague promises of support; of “just let me know what I can do.” I needed someone to bring me a fucking ladder.
Someone did. “I will make you a doctor’s appointment right now,” she said. “I will drive you there myself.”
We don’t need to be louder or more persistent or more earnest about helping – we need to be more specific. We need to make it as easy as saying yes, because saying yes is hard enough.
My go-to question for a struggling friend used to be, “What can I do for you?” I don’t ask that anymore.
I ask, “Can I order dinner delivered to your apartment?” I ask, “Is there an email you need to send that I can draft?” “Can I take your dog for a walk?” “Can I find a therapist nearby that takes your insurance?”
Can I get you a ladder?
I was back on Highway 18 right before New Year’s. It was an unusually cold winter for Oregon, the schools had already run out of snow days. We drove at about fifteen miles per hour, leaning forward to see through the fog.
But there was that tree. Even in the frost, the leaves held fast. Withered. Brittle.
Hanging on.
i wonder, when will god reach down and pray for my forgiveness?
i tried, for a while, to live under mercy’s roof to rid myself of a choleric heart i tried, for a while, to swallow forgiveness
like i swallowed
anguish
— Ashley Miranda, from “the fool says,” No Faithfulness in My Mouth
i’ve never felt the encouragement of belonging, instead, a personal limbo,
existing in silence, or in betweens, an anonymous misery, lodged between my creaky heart.
— Fariha Róisín, from “belonging,” How to Cure a Ghost
“The hurt coming out, from your open mouth, could / open a grave.”
— Vievee Francis, from “Canzone in Blue, Then Bluer,” The Best American Poetry 2019
“One of the most persistent lies is that boys are angry”
One of the most persistent lies is that boys are angry.
And the shadow lie: that girls aren’t angry.
But even though we aren’t formally trained to hate like boys are, every girl is a natural expert:
We have so much to hate.
Listen: A growl that tastes like blood
Black reservoir Of anger splashing Closer than you think Beneath the slimy dock of everything I say In my person voice Nice woman voice
— Amy Berkowitz, from Tender Points
Let’s watch him claim this is a witch hunt, like the rest. Let’s be the bitch cunts he regrets, as though we women never once were burned when forced to stoke the flames for our own funerals. As though we witches cannot hunt where we were hunted.
— Rebecca Salazar, from “Witch hunt,” Best Canadian Poetry 2019
“but when the time came, nothing could stop me, i tell you: // i made a living of my death”
— Toi Derricotte, from “Answers from Anne,” “i”: new and selected poems
“Count your windows, city. Watch how they erase me. As if I were a sentence, a woman.”
— Caitlin Scarano, from “To the City With Her Skull Wind,” Do Not Bring Him Water
“Haven’t I spent my whole life / recoiling?”
— Caitlin Scarano, from “The Ice Pick Being Her Sharpest Object,” Do Not Bring Him Water
“Being in control of my own destruction has always seemed like a solution for it.”
— Rachel Cusk, on her smoking habit, as cited in Olivia Sudjic’s Exposure