#8/30 (Make America Great Again)

We could make America great again
When unregulated medicine
Was non-addictive heroin
And ice picks behind the eyes

We could make America great again
When men were men
Who punched in every day
And died on the clock

We could make America great again
When we didn’t humanize the heathen
The bumps on the skulls or look of their clothes
Let us know we were born better

We could make America great again
When we could accuse them
Of wanting something for nothing,
That we earned, somehow, just by being Amercian

#7/30 (1518)

The sun
The sky
Mrs. Troffea’s brow beads sweat under her coif

A twitch
A move
Mrs. Troffea’s hand moves to wipe her face

A trance
A kick
Mrs. Troffea’s feet propel her through the streets

A stillness in the town is interrupted
The frenetic haze of Mrs. Troffea’s limbs
Calls attention to itself
Her face as unmoving
Unchanged
As the sun in the sky

Mrs. Troffea is oil in water
A transfixing disturbance
The moon’s silence shines down
And leather-clad feet
Scrape rocks into earth
Punctuating the former silence

Mrs. Troffea is oil in water
Weighing down wet skin
Attracting those alike
With slipping movement
Her face is suffering
While her body celebrates
The sun
The sky

Mrs. Troffea’s body stumbles
While continuing costs coordination
While her blood pools in her shoes,
Piss and shit cake into the streets
Uncoordinated bodies
Bounce back and forth
Breathless gasps
Are heard under the silent moon

Mrs. Troffea
Opens her mouth
Like a fish
Inhale
Feet swelling
Trapped in leather
Ballooned with blood
Glassy eyes
Closing lids
Her knees collapse
Feet kick into the dirt
The piss, the shit,
Under the sun,
Under the sky

Mrs. Troffea
Open mouth
Sharp inhale
Taste dirt
Gritty tongue
Forced spit
A twitch
Sudden exhale
Dust cloud
Lungs rattle
The moon looks

Mrs. Troffea
A foot
Her face
Stumbling knee
In ribs
Eyes wide
Black ring
The sun
The sky

#6/30 (Untitled exquisite corpse)

I can’t recognize myself.
The days shift by and blur together in evasive light,
disconnected from the threads that bind me and

untethered to reality, I let go and float

Jet streams jostle the loose thinking
Levitating lessens reliance, encourage sinking
Repetitive rhetoric rustles until hectic
Panicked dendrites fence the mind, electric

Breathless, a soft shock settles in
the metronome of bone as neurons pulse in time to the fluid music of anxiety,
a sharp stalactite song, loud enough that  
The cave of the mind crumbles, threatening to bury me alive

The rushing crush ruptures the rusty tracks
Mine cart neurons stay stationary and cracked
Synapses and flashes pop their electrical static
Automatic motions flailing forward, frantic

#3/30 (Two Years, part 2)

2.
Together we learn how trust is just chemicals
and a virgin in the sky is full of darkness

Robots land on astroids
and on Titan

Even our most ambitious endeavors
are still about
just leaving Earth.

I must be lucky.
The tache noir
gives way to holes as dark
as the virgin from the stars.

You writhe and bounce,
hoping there is life in the seas of Titan.
You imagine how it smells
when it leaks out.
The pulsing quickens
as your imagination goes wild.

After all,
who doesn’t want to devour new worlds?
My ancestors,
stumbling, ravenous tetrapods,
climbed from the pits to devour the new worlds
it found on land.
Your ancestors,
stumbling, ravenous colonialists,
sailed from the isles to devour the new worlds
it found in the ocean.
My ancestors,
stumbling, ravenous adherents to tradition
walked down the road to devour the new worlds
it founds in the minds of neighbors.
Our ancestors fed.
Just like we feed.

3.
For the first time, I hear a noise that isn’t your squelching
your yelling
your violent din.

They’ve finally come for the money.

9.
The hand cannot erase
and no one knew.

#2/30 (Two Years, part 1)

0.0
It’d been two years since the world went to war.
By “the world went to war,”
I mean two years since rich countries had dangers to account for

The first Columbian guerrillas were talked about
in past tense
months before I was
a future tense.

And the last shots fired
in my mother’s homeland
are barely imaginable.
And my mother’s face
is barely remembered

So talks of spider holes
and grizzled dictators
doesn’t connect with me.
But I dare not turn off the TV.

1.0
Just because the blood is inside you
doesn’t mean it’s where it should be.

Copper in all my meals
Makes me dizzy
Makes it hard to sleep
Tablets after all my meals

In dreams,
suffocation doesn’t make you tired
and there isn’t a ring around your vision
to tell you you’re fading.

1.1
If I had dinner at eight o’clock,
by six in the morning
I’ll be a balmy 28 degrees.

By noon,
I’ll be a warm spring.

By six in the morning
it will be sweater weather.
But my skin is moist
and slick.

1.2
I’d forgotten about my family
and my family about me.
The only thing I am to anyone
is carrion.
And a carrier.

The television speaks about things
that will also double in size
and will also birth flies.
I feed my babies well and undisturbed.
I give them a better life than I had.
And they never have to leave home.

Beelzebub may be the lord,
but I am the surrogate mother.

1.3
The television celebrates the first Makar
and I know the swan on Bingham’s pond
is noticed more than I am,
than I was.

The television plumps and pales
writhes in its wetness
as it discusses the Princess of Wales
and the seven-year fetish.

My plump, pale, and wet babies
writhe until they’re red and hard.
They hatch from their bodies
as they’ve watched the sap of mine
flow forth at my feet.

My swarm depletes me
and a black, humming cloud
evaporates into the gray sky.

Now it is just the two of us.
The pulsating mass
with the pulsing glow
and the incessant noise,
and there is me.

One day, I will satiate you too.

1.4
You speak,
you scream.
I will listen.

The only one of us who could ever move
is the only one of us who never will.

You pulse proudly and excitedly as you smell
a plane crash in the Red Sea,
the Day of Ashura,
186 schoolchildren in Russia.

The skin of my face dries and stretches my lips across my teeth.
The corners of my mouth, from cheek to cheek,
as I think of the day that you’ll smell me too.

#1/30 (turing_test.zip)

"Are you alive?"

I guess you could say that with a little bit of certainty
But flashes behind the eyes don't extend the courtesy
To thoughts that AGTC is just C++ a TAG
And we unequivocally agree
That we can't foresee
A time when it matters at all
Whether every sensory call
Is coming from inside the house
Our is a strenuous bout
Of reducing a wholes to an essences
And making meaning out of what coalesces

Maybe the important thing to know before I leave
Is that an illusion is a dance between
A magician, artistry,
And suspension of disbelief