Back to Fall 2018 

We all breathe age nineteen

BY SARA ALDRICH

detox ourselves, truth and holy water run in streams

from the shower we take not to get clean

but to sing tender sacrilege and desecration

to drown retinal ripped lace and the smell of tanqueray

and the terror tremors when he touched our thigh

with a wet fingertip scrawling:

“i always knew you needed me”

we need like we breathe which is to say painfully

fixate on morbidity, plum like blooming bruises

on friends swinging from the rafters by their neckties

and we will never know if the last cries on their lips

were for mercy or for vengeance lovely wide eyes

we all become martyrs in their rigor mortis

and we are all terrified of seeing ourselves in them

in little orange pill bottles in worn gun barrels in the nightly news

we pray for a cure for cottonmouth

              no one ever answers

feed our body, gorge it on the sound of our mother’s voice

on the hissing whisper we hear through insomnia

they say to come and claim our rapture

but nevermind the sainthood if we exchange it for sanity

we fill our body and find it rejecting its youth out the mouth

with throat convulsing we pulse high and defiant

fist raised compulsive like a millennial child

we run our body bloody through the streets

we may not all become redwoods or loudspeakers

but we know things other people never could:

the stripping of rights like bras in alleys

and the claiming of selves like baby blankets

HOME BODY

BY SARA ALDRICH

am i even a poet

if i don’t gut myself

with a housekey rusted over

maybe if i’m lucky it’ll break off in me

i seep into a ballpoint on the daily

i spend an hour writing as if

i could ever funnel blood back in a heart like that

i only ever learned to perfuse

am i even myself with still fingers or a regular pulse

if i stopped screaming into the drywall

such wracking theatrics make for a wanting daughter

but a wonderful artist

they love a perpetual basketcase

so i place it on my brow like crown moulding

i laugh

is that even myself

i feed off of others’ dopamine

an addictive personality in declining sanity

i gather homefuls of words from a stupor

it takes one million poems to get over it

but you get a million and one if you never do