The Gospel of Breaking

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The Gospel of Breaking Page 5

by Jillian Christmas


  Out the window I can see the cactus mommy has told me is good for washing hair, I can see the big mango tree and the bay leaf too. I can see the bird of paradise blooming orange and blue. A home that knows me.

  A healing view. A patient sort of medicine. An old way. A new lesson. Good truth.

  reasons to burn

  i.

  no water in the line

  there is no water in the line

  there is no water in the line

  for bodies on the land

  there is no water in the line

  there is no water in the line

  there is no water in the line

  just bodies on the land

  there are bodies on the land

  there are bodies on the land

  come and drink the water

  come and drink the water

  come and drink the water

  does it burn

  does it burn

  come and drink the water

  come and drink the water

  come and drink the water

  does it burn

  does it burn

  ii.

  I have things to burn this body already alight these words ashen and weightless and offering themselves like dancers to darkened sky this quickening clock this tightened yolk this ship that will not port and will not port these borders and the walls that would enforce them this frozen tongue these slow feet this stage this pen this quiet voice

  I will make a fuel of them

  better than bitumen better than petrol

  better than elephant tusk or drug lust

  I filled myself with false fire once

  only blinking before I was emptied again

  I have put acres of rainforest up my own nose

  burned money on clothes I did not wear

  charred myself throat to belly with firewater that would not

  extinguish a match and I have been thirsty ignorant naive but not

  innocentcomplicit and complacentI have been

  and seen time wasted

  there are no renewable resources

  not waternot shorelinesnot a hundred little boys in wet

  red sweatersnot traditionnot treaty

  not native tongueor trustor thirst

  iii.

  Everything can burn

  I learn this

  watching water ignite from kitchen faucet

  I learn this

  watching a man once mountain reduced to carbon

  everything can burn

  and all of us turn either to ash

  or to dust

  if fire is either lust or love

  then I want to stop dousing myself in gasoline

  as a cheap party trick

  there are reasons to burn

  and we have plenty

  let me make of my words a fire

  a purpose

  a front line

  a service

  a choir

  an engine

  the matches

  and the urn

  just how some folks learn the blues

  “There’s just something about the wide-mouthed women!”

  I say, bashful over details of my latest adventures,

  down the front of slim trousers and up the back of summer skirts.

  My lover is coolly unsurprised; it’s all common tongue

  for the young ones like us who shake

  out our sexuality like boas shedding feathers up and down commercial drive.

  But back in harlem, when the blues was all there was

  between a big, black, bull-dyke and a wooden box,

  wandering hands in restricted places landed some of the greatest voices of the day

  behind bars barely thick enough to hold any of their wailing.

  when ma rainey, mother of the blues, got herself jailed

  for hosting an orgy with her chorus girls,

  bessie smith bailed her out.

  even now there are stories that it was ma who first inspired bessie to howl

  it’s dirty … but good!

  two BLACK renaissance women, friends,

  singing about the thing that would have them jailed again and again.

  both of them, with their men,

  it didn’t matter, they couldn’t keep that song off of their lips.

  the first time a woman kissed me,

  I heard the music.

  I was terrified that the moment she pulled away

  my tongue would erupt into a clanking of pots and pans

  right where the horn section was supposed to kick in;

  exposing just how many lifetimes I’d been keeping my breath tucked

  in the heels of my boots,

  waiting for permission to sing.

  when she asked me with saxophone tongue if I’d ever kissed a woman,

  I wanted to be just as smooth and twice as brave,

  toss back my head and laugh the names of deities who had danced across

  my lips.

  I didn’t want my mouth to quiver and crack

  into a pile of pleading at her feet.

  I didn’t want my hand to tap out an SOS.

  as I reeled it back from the steady blade of her jaw.

  I hope that my arms didn’t flap like mad,

  untethered sails as she dropped me back into my seat.

  In that moment, I wanted to be the even anchor of some

  bad-ass, blues-fire bass line.

  I wanted to BOOM-BAP-strut my way back into my whiskey throne,

  with the ghost of ma rainey riding my tailbone,

  and bessie smith lyrics

  burned across the lids of my freshly opened eyes.

  honey

  I wake up in the big bed

  on the top floor of mommy’s house the walls are birdwing and cricket-whistle

  twirls from floorboard to ceiling every time I open my eyes kaleidoscope colours

  tumble in

  through the stained glass

  I have a dream that you are an arbutus tree

  and I am a rope swingI have a dream

  that I am the ocean floorand

  youareafarawayraft

  that I am a quiet stargazer and you are the

  WHOLEBIGSKY

  that you are a fragile tent made of sprig and

  parchment and I am a strong clumsy wind

  I wake up sorry

  I have a dream the staircase goes on forever

  or we are eager fingers on the same hand

  moving between the crookof some other

  hungry limb or our bodies are open mouths

  spilling madness like honey and everything

  is golden because of usor my fingertips

  draw the hummingbirds to our wet lips

  I have a dream that you tell methe sea

  isn’t nearly as dark or endless as it seems

  so there isn’t any need to be worried

  I wake up wishing I knew how I could return the favour

  honey

  I

  kaleidoscope arbutusaway

       fragile

  I

  Imoving madness

  endlessasit seems

  returnthe favour

  couldthe

  spilling

  hand

  birdwing eye

  wind you afar

  dream me

  golden

  confession

  Down in the basement

  brave animals test the corners of a room

  pressing stone barricades against fresh bruises

  here where we squirm/ boil/ wriggle/snap

  I curve my lip to make the music of a mouse

  slipping between the cracks into new safe darkness

  you grin and growl

  hungry as the cat who chased her

  This is how it happened

  distracted by thoughts of you

  raised fleshthe feeling

  of r
opes against my hands naked

  belly/ breasts and palms

  pressed into the cold top of the table

  your knuckles finding my edges

  that is a type of kindness too

  I suppose everyone has their limits

  every so often I catch a glimpse of you

  in the window’s reflection

  pondering over your tools

  you kept me there/ for a long time

  has it only been a day

  your mouth the heart-shaped

  bruise you left on my thigh

  rug burn on that elbow again

  it hardly hurts at all anymore

  I felt your voice move in my body

  is that why you crossed my mind

  confession: I’ve been thinking about your mouth so much today

  there’s this beautiful bruise between my breasts

  confession: In the dream I’m both turned on and a little scared

  my eyes are watering just thinking of it

  you have that effect on me

  confession: There is a crescent shape on the inside of my lip from where you bit me

  I ran my tongue along the ridge of it all night

  sometimes I hear my blood pumping when I look at you

  can I ask you a question

  did you have any nice dreams last night

  when did you get off last

  are you home

  are you in bed

  would you like more distraction

  would you like that

  are you up

  can I ask you a question please

  did you get off today

  are you at home

  can I touch you there

  are you home

  do you think I’m a good student

  will you tell me a story about us

  will it be a messy fix

  would you like me to

  what is your sign

  want to know a secret of mine

  I’m jealous of your hand

  I’ll be thinking of you all night

  I don’t want anything between us

  that was how it happened

  I started remembering and suddenly my hand slipped between my legs

  you are very good at this distraction game

  these fingers have a mind of their own

  please/ yes please /yes /and also /yes please/YES

  I enjoyed it very much

  you’re welcome/ thank you /yes yes /thank you

  yes thank you/ thank you/ yes

  I really miss you.

  godI wish you were here

  how will either of us ever be productive again

  that’s a legitimate question

  untitled

  The sun sank

  as her counterbalance

  lifted us into rippling skies

  draped our faces in pink shades

  of bright peach easter egg eyes

  floated us across ourselves and into ourselves

  waking us up to everything that was whispering

  and glistening and drifting like oceans

  hung high abovethis

  is loveyou said with

  open faceyes

  I thoughtthis

  is love

  acknowledgments

  This book could not exist without the rampant generosity of:

  Arsenal Pulp Press. The BCAC. My dearest friend, mentor, femme-healer, and editor, Amber Dawn. My loves, Lucia Misch and Carson Welch. Azuka Nduka-Agwu and Udokam Iroegbu. Tanya Evanson. Alessandra Naccarato. Brendan McLeod. Alissa Powell. Jane Davidson and Boyd Norman. Chelsea D.E. Johnson. Alexis Wheeler. Curty-Curt. Vivek Shraya. Kai Cheng Thom. Lishai Peel. Erin Dingle. Melissa Brazier. Claire Love Wilson. Dana Kagis. Llana James and Anwar Knight. Desaraigh. Sonya Littlejohn. Zaccheus Jackson Nyce. RC Weslowski. Johnny MacRae. Wendy Welch. Mommy, Mum, Mama, and Daddy, too. Michael Timinsky, Victoria Scott and Tony Misch. Khari Wendell McClelland. Jasmine Liddell. Velma Spence. Aunty Vero. Melanie Mununggurr. !Kona. Morgan Switzer. David-George Morgan. Erin Kirsh. Duncan Shields. Dina Del Bucchia. Daniel Zomparelli. Billeh Nickerson. Sally Zori. And a community of poets, musicians, and clowns from Whitehorse to Melbourne. Thank you.

  JILLIAN CHRISTMAS is the former artistic director of Vancouver’s Verses Festival of Words. An educator, organizer, and advocate in the arts community, using an anti-oppressive lens, Jillian has performed and facilitated workshops across North America. She lives on the unceded territories of the Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh, and Musqueam people.

 

 

 


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