Your pen stays in the margins,
comments aligned behind
the paper’s cage,
You stay safe in the liminal,
the paper’s way
to say ‘Don’t write here -
‘... all the things, the ridiculous things.’
seen from Japan
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from France
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from France
seen from United States
Your pen stays in the margins,
comments aligned behind
the paper’s cage,
You stay safe in the liminal,
the paper’s way
to say ‘Don’t write here -
‘... all the things, the ridiculous things.’
To you, I’d say
I think about you, often. As habitually but unthinkingly as I turn off lights in the house.
An old text message reopens that space that was once bright and alive between us. Like some kind of sci-fi flat pack, your few words, whether friendly or hostile, make any room feel larger, and more than anything that is in front of me, here you are.
Though as fast as digital, or as fast as a morning’s newspaper can shout LONDON IS BURNING, come evening, it is then the papier-mâché stuck to a man’s shoe as he walks past the supermarket in the rain.
What I mean to say is, these memories don’t hassle or tug. I cut the cable tie and watched the pages fall into the wet, the images transferring nothing onto the pavement. Scandal is washed into the gutters, old messages become a phone’s strata.
I don’t see the harmful or the sad.
News will still be printed for tomorrow, and I will think of you again.
You are so boring,
I think when I roll you over in the middle of this beautiful restaurant,
I’ll find woodlice.
I’ve pieced out our conversation
from the odd bits of floating driftwood
but watch the structure,
damp and moaning,
cast ripples
pronounced
as those napkin swans.
My laughter happens - stiff as
shoelaces,
so I watch your fork muddle through,
the meal of fish,
and plan,
How I will snap you open,
Your neck, burst
like a kid’s wishbone -
but I’d probably then
wish to be left alone,
and where’s the fun in that?
Unsavoury snack
‘We’re languorous on Sundays’ His voice stretched. Fraught and stale through white teeth and a polo mint. The sandy ground around the pool was pieced with big pink rocks, sun-warped loungers, and angled benches, without paint or idlers. The pool cover was stashed in the yellow, leafy bottom of the jacuzzi and the garden concoction brewed with hot bubbles with the lick of Sidney’s voice. The ducks dropped in corrugated shapes. The sun set in the sea: a show of red, darker than black. My eyes traveled to the shorts, clung in ribald bunches.