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@jadednuvaring
Red Poppies ~ Kiyoshi Saito 1948
Today Larissa shared Sx-Edâs âtexts,â including something I wrote after my first ayahuasca ceremony:
âListenâ
I.
She taught me how to worship her.
quiero
quiero quererte
quererte es querer
quiereme
te quiero
querer
My want is my worship.
Not what do I want? but I want.
I want.
I want.
I want.
Authentic desire ⊠human desire PAR EXCELLENCE ⊠the desire for desire, reveals the secret truth of the desirer, which renders him or her truly human.
Desire renders us as subjects. She subjected me to her worship by returning me to my desire. And my desire was to worship her. And to worship my desires. So green, so fertile, unapologetic in my wildness, my wilderness. untamable and untamed, I was an invitation, all I could do, I felt, was call to her, to take me, take me, take me, come inside, stay awhile. Lush, my hair in my face, my skin rich, I am the gift I could give, a gift worth giving. She has never âheld still,â explosion, diffusion, effervescence, abundance, she takes pleasure in being boundlessâŠstunning, extravagant, one who is dispersible, desiring and capable of the other, of the other women she will be, of the other women she is, of him, of you.
II.
Ayahuasca is a vine. Woody, rope-like, she wraps the Peruvian rainforest, then harvested and brewed into a thick te. She goes by abuela, doctor, vegetal que ensena, genio, espiritu, iman. She has a way about her. Sheâs a teacher, a healer, she guides, her will rising from the smolder of the shamanâs chant. We are not her patientsâdependent, tolerant. She doesnât inject, doesnât prescribe, doesnât diagnose, doesnât reduce healing to normalizing, numbing, silencing, as if our pain wasnât a song, the tremor of resistance still pulsing in our blood. She whispersâlisten. Disease is language. She demands we speak to her with a voice that listens. What does our sickness sound like? What is it trying to tell us?
Our bodies speak but we do not know how to listen.
III.
Depression deflates motivation, gives into an exhaustion of the soul. It summons an incapacityânot an inadequacy. Itâs not that I canât; itâs that I just wonât any longer. The depressed individuals are not up to the task, they are tired of having to become themselves. To the powers that would have me produce my subjectivity into the endless churn of content, depression is coded as a paralysis of the soul. Instead, itâs protest; a struggle that renders my spirit wasted, my soil barren. A psychic unwillingness to comply. Rather then defeat; depression is a site of resistance.
Impotence, in the same way, is my refusal, our refusal to work. Although consciousness has been colonized by an indifferent desire that gets hard for anyoneâmeaning for anythingâon command, thereâs still an ember of will nested deep in my tissue that refuses to get up. My flaccid cock refuses the pharma-porno-apparatus that strains to yank it taught with itâs little blue pills. It stays soft, it stays depressed, unmotivated, unwilling, utterly useless, still human.
IV.
A case study: In Brazil, where the brew has brewed religious ceremonies for centuries, ayahuasca is administered to convicts accused of murder, rape, kidnapping. Â Not administeredâinmates tend the gardens where the vine grows.
At the temple here in Ji-ParanĂĄ, the inmates appeared to experience a range of reactions after drinking the ayahuasca. Sitting on plastic lawn chairs under a tile roof, some were stone-faced. Others seemed lost in contemplation. One was constantly in tears, as if demons were at the door. All of them sang at the top of their lungs when the rhythm of the hymns intensified.
Can healing be, more than just restorativeâredemptive? Can it radicalize? Rather than reform, can healing forgive?
V.
A vision: I want the smallest thing. I think of the smallest, smallest thing I could wantâand I think of a cell. Her cell. Her cell spills from my unwelcoming womb, turning into a river of blood, pouring out from our legs. Itâs her blood, but also my blood, our blood. And I am swimming in it. A river of our blood. Of us. The joy of âusââof feeling in communion, of summoning our pain. The fullest moonlight spills onto the river. The moon sings. She sings of our suffering. And we repeatâwe listen, and we never forget. We never forget. The moon is a reflection, a mirror, and soon we are swimming in the moon, and she is filled with our blood.
VI.
In other words, to the persecution that works me over most patiently and which is the anonymous passion in myself, I must not only respond by off-loading it out of my consent; I must also respond to it with refusal, resistance and combat, returning to knowledge, to the self that knows, and knows that it is exposed.
When you just finished dicking her down and now you in her pantry looking at all of her sonâs snacks you about to eat
This meme is far too powerful, and should be locked away in a vault where civilians are unable to access it
at Hair on Earth
ph.by danny lim for satellite journal.
Mood
My nephew is in town
my bf: i want to be inside you so badÂ
me [disassociating]: me tooÂ