A work by my very first guest poet, Jessica Perini! Thank you so much for gracing my blog with your words and images, Jess x
after Hikmet/O’Hara/Reeves/Vuong/Rader
Someday, I’ll love Jess Perini
the way my broccolini
mesmerises the white cabbage moth
or perhaps the way the rain carves a path through my garden beds
when the second scene to falling
is not waving
or even being of this earth,
in this bacteria-house body. Food for famished worms.
Someday I’ll love my distance, itself an eggshell cave,
let nothing too close, for fear of cracks.
Even my chatty side –
like danger, small children, rash arguments of stars –
must be dug, fragmented
bacterially lined, worm food,
weft with the terror of transformation,
like waiting for your adult features, or bread to rise.
I never knew I loved my name,
can anyone born in a no ‘J’ country,
believe a Jessica?
I was never proud of being an Aussie
’til I ran out with fellow ‘deep southerners’
into the streets of Phoenix,
sourcing the sound of gunshots in our ears
Americans gaping in our naïve wake.
Someday I will love the cold,
not just as the numbness in my nerve-damaged fingers,
or the radiance of my red sharp face this June night,
but as the time my wildest plants flourish.
Today
former tears unwept
drench my carport
now carpeted with flower beds
my nephew’s face elongates
half a world
and a pandemic
away.
Someday I will love my words,
the way I owe distant fields my longing.
But, no.
I owe nothing.
It is more like this:
the future is
the mown grass of now, nutrienting fields
a creeping gratitude
light through the slats
of each new day fresh.
It wasn’t always so.
Some days I closed my ears
and disappeared
hiding
silently drumming the bottom of my father’s boat.
Counting the seconds
minutes
hours
’til someone discovered I was lost.
Remembering the small child, whose love of story smouldered
unattended
in the trailer out front.
My mother at her tenderest would call me Jess-ii-CA.
Still, I love them all.
Someday
Just someday
all of forgiveness
will stir my curtains.
Someday I will love the blessed wildfire that is my brain,
and I will not think of longing,
and even if I do feel my bucket, drained of its last drops
I will still love the Tempest that was grown of my name.
This day I will forget Yessica
the ultimate people pleaser
and embrace
the flaming forest ever fanning in my heart.
Never a twig, never a branch to break.
But a forest, full, echoing
Bridged with bird life
a zillion creators, critters of my wildfire
reclaimed,
emerging
Alive.


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Nice that you found a great guest poet. Love the symmetry between your poem and Jessica Perini’s poem.
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Would you like to try it too? We copied and pasted Dean Ryder’s poem (linked) into a document and kept most of the joining phrases and added our own content. I thought it would be impossible but having a template made is surprisingly fun and easy! X
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I tried a little bit just now. Oof it’s still quite hard even with the guide. I’ll see if I can work on it little by little.
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Would love to see it at some stage: )
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Sorry, I don’t think I’ll finish this one.
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That’s totally fine. I hope you enjoyed trying x
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