I like the campus where young women wear new shades of green and white.
I don’t dress like that—instead I observe the girls inhabit clichés.
I feel clichés surge through me in the form of bad sentences: You don’t love me.
Hey, I just wanted to check in. How do I look. I think I like you more than you like me.
A kind of desperation inhabits fucking when mutual love has been foreclosed.
This is a poem: a collection of sentiments attributed to no one.
Spring is a great time for profound thoughts about non-specific experience.
I have to write about what it means to teach a class on poetry for six semesters.
If you don’t love me and the recognition of this makes the sex hotter, I welcome it.
You think I’m singular, off-the-charts, but you don’t love me, and will never love me.
I make you feel like a man, I think, and that’s great— I like to work with concepts.
Women have issues with sex but it doesn’t really matter because women love issues.
This guy I like deeply told me I looked pretty when I cried and I gloated over it.
Now I know that my tears make him want to burrow into my cunt.
You think you know that I’m more than that, that this is all hardness like a cock.
That I’m “essentially girlish” doesn’t look right on the page, but it’s true.
I know I’m not that when I see her short hair; I like to hold mine in bunches.
I like how it becomes elastic, stretched, pulled. And how annoying—
how fun it is to be annoying. And for a few reasons, cared for.
I had these pressing issues once: am I pretty, am I desired, am I loved?
The curve of a hair has something to do with the answers to all these questions.
The deep questions in life are delicious and matterless; I chew on them, I don’t chew hair.
I race to the finish, but I cannot be ahead, slow as I am with the thighs that loosen.
I cannot run—I cannot move with the neutered strength of the days when I did research.
I did not write this, as I am stuck in the ventriloquist’s house, where he makes me ink.
I’m a bit lost: eye is swollen, face seems lost.
If I don’t look fertile, pretty, or cute, how can I write?
Books around me suggest I have learned a lot.
It’d be a bad poem if I continued,
But he makes me feel fuzzy, wet, or soft, like a leaf.
It’s always a “he” making me feel fuzzy, wet, soft.
I had sex with my father in the dream, it was normal.
I felt successful, I felt I had reached the pinnacle of dreams.
I had had an orgasm before the dream, and before the walk.
And the traffic lights were beautiful, everything seemed nice.
I told him that if I came every time I had sex every time I’d happily go home.
But my right eye is swollen and for this reason alone I cannot wake or sleep.
My eyes look more battered than swollen: I’ve worked hard, I’m infertile.
It’s true: I came for the fourth time with a man and now I’m ruined.
“She” either refers to myself, my mother, or a substitute.
The higher substitutes for “she”: older female writers.
Re-reading Sheila Heti’s Motherhood: her boyfriend sucks!
Still looking at my eyes. Maybe I look vulnerable, now?
Is this an essay in understanding why I can’t wake up?
Is this an essay in understanding why I dreamt the dream?
I feel ugly, so I can’t write (but I write while I feel ugly).
Something’s dissolving—I bought a carbonated drink.
Let’s come to the end of sex. Do you remember what it was like for me to come?
I race to the finish, but I cannot be ahead, slow as I am with the thighs that loosen.
The bloom of the tunnel, the bloom of the darkness, I want to end in the trash.
Who I am has started to matter. No more difference, I want to be one. One.
Did you know that sex is where I end? Where shall we begin again?