How You Survive
I wedge my hand inside a jar so similar to the wedge of last night when I plunged it through the rubber mouth of the garbage disposal to retrieve raspberries, almost like my hand no longer fits anywhere it wants or needs to go
but of course what is really happening is I am animalizing again, I cross my nearly willing way to the side of wild and drag a heavy blanket of blur over the world until all I see through my thorough distortion is a deprivation
I don't really see so much as swallow swallow and swallow, as us famished creatures in the woods cannot afford to be precious about a hand, and in fact, I remember there are tools, fancy sticks for scraping out cavities this dark and
cramped where fingers can't quite reach and the tips by touch must dangerously fill in for vision (there will be no snake spiraled in the sink who may startle and strike, but the human body will always believe in the snake, in her fangs) but
they are shut in drawers several inches away, and there is not a moment to waste in wild, nor a want I want to tame with forethought; I lift my pinched fingers loose and drag my tongue hard through thick deposits of oil and chocolate, my knuckles
streaked brown like those of a toddler teaching itself feces, and in the frenzy I misplace pain, misplace squeamishness and disgust, am left only with the familiar chaos of the kitchen, kitchen light, kitchen hum, kitchen’s fresh kill, as if in another
rendering I am the predator or scavenger who slides her arms inside a steaming stomach up to the elbows and delivers a value menu burger, a clean and dry contrast to sleeves of blood that start at the wrists and fade to faint stains crowning her cold cheeks












