get

He loves her sex and poetry
(feel all of it, straighter hips, lips and balls

I’m also her gay sexuality
(the one really knows this me

Before all desires submission
(the one really knows this fantasy

I want to threaten or poetry
(but he expected. I’m just shy

Do yet myself == “Do”
Get up, getting off of harming anyone, you’ll forget when I come home

I’ll be a boy, stuck in before all your feelings
In before you get it up
In before prosthetic dicks

This thing about desire: leave the muck
I just treated him, scared

My third week is so hurt.
The role he may think, mimic

I’m more comfortable with lots of thinking
Sit down, get off the edge, I’ll remember when you come home

do

Do it. Do it all from him
(he’s a vampire

If I had his fantasies they’d involve punishment
an alarm along the wall.

He walks in this way, angry to tell you now leaving
leave the very idea of being me!

She rides out something beautiful
— shatter on us —

A lesbian body can
demonstrate an idea: I must love him
Ignore
Acquiesce

But bring her out
)) this voice ((

Do it from him
Ignore a poet, adversary, wife
Be a (wo)man who takes care of his balls
Ride out something beautiful
As punishment

When you come
^
< .home. >
v
“I’ll be angry”

I hate the room
I cannot leave
.the very idea.

Your phone was expected to demonstrate
I am not what
I am her
This fantasy

If I had these dreams, wet with shame
you’d slice me open?

He walks into a role, an adversary, or a wife
an angry wo-man lives inside

He grunts as though he could make her through writing
–guess his limbs–

A gay body can
My hate is so tired: I must love her
Count
Build

He’s just a poet, a butch woman*
*just a body in that moment

He would be so hard under his daddy
(there is no erotic here)

The idea of me is every man in that moment
my sickness builds
/\ a boy /\

Her own pleasure is on us, shattered, angry and jealous

Tie me up and torture my manhood
Make me ashamed of the silences between us

I can overhear your puppet

I really want to love you,
even though ?this body?

Bedtime Story

Ghost. Not dead.
Take off your sleep, despite…
Tell me a story

OK, take off his death
OK, he’s asleep
OK, he tells me

Sit up against old pain,
…despite sleep
…despite ghosting

There is a story…
I can see his sex
He’s (not) inevitable
I compute no difference between living and shame

He’s fallen asleep, still unable to fly.
Fill my chest with thin air, despite…
Tell me

Sit huddled around our pain,
…why start coming home
…our way isn’t this

There is a story in a magazine…
He begins a sentence with his face
He ends it with his sweat
Letting the details run across his legs

Breathe in your belly out of the moment
You’re curious about what I feel?
Nothing.

He wanted to tell it…
When I peer out of my chest
Breathe against me
Let go of numbness
Want sensation

Breathe out the window
What I would miss if he wanted to?
Something.

A story?
I would say it was already written
Feelings? You must be joking.

He keeps rising, “are you ready?”
I rest in the mucous of my past
Contracting my throat, dripping into my eyes

OK, I’ve never slept
OK, I try to
OK, I worry

I fear that I don’t have any more deadness

Let go of the details in your legs!
I feel nothing, except your curiosity about the conduit of my knee
(which has been injured)
(which is penetrable)
He compresses himself into a story

I will remember it
Sweetness is integration
Possible is visible
The fall is exploration
See me, it’s OK

It’s OK, I was asleep
It’s OK that he wonders what comes with affection
It’s OK to look away

water

I’m pushing you through the vessels of my heart
Water propels my legs
One step ahead of going under

Vulnerability is
the weaknesses like bellybutton
smiling eyes
visible

I keep thinking
If I only knew things
I could remember
I keep pushing
What is it?
Do you remember?
What is it called?
What is the word for…
I can’t recall
Anything

cut

I’m cutting it into the hardwood floor
The only thing I knew how to do
Hurt Hurt
Make it absent
No body here

Where is my support?
Where are my tools?

Keep cutting a straight line
No ruler
Only leave a slight scar
I know how its done

Slow down
You can do this
Right
Without destroying
Your hands
Your art
And the floor

transpoetic me

I chose the blog name “transpoetic,” with the intention of iteratively defining a poetics of transgender experience. I had a general idea that I would be sketching out a poetic method, structure, or way of reading that maps the emotional terrain of moving among genders, or at least my own experience of it. I wrote myself into existence.

I’ve waited this long to try to define the name of this blog because I feel too new as a writer and too unfamiliar with trans/trans* politics, and to ignorant of poetry as a genre to assert something. I still do.

There is something liberating about sidestepping intellectual and politicized approaches to knowing. I’m an academic burnout who used to study the sociology of gender and identity. I say burnout because I exhausted the limits of academic critique, empirical observation, and theories of identity politics. It wasn’t enough for me and I felt I wasn’t offering anything to anyone else either.  I was hollowed out, as if my emotional life, my memories, and even my ability to feel had been cut out of my brain. So now I write differently, to grammar-fuck language, and then link it all back to the personal, political, and intellectual meanings that otherwise have structured my sense of the world.

My graduate training, and even my liberal arts college experience, didn’t expose me to poetry. In the seventh grade my English teacher, who sported a glass eye that was a different color from his fleshy eye, taught us how to interpret the meaning of poetry, of quotes, or short stories. He’d begin the class by writing a short text in colored chalk on the chalkboard, usually in orange, and then challenge us, like a drill sergeant, to push beyond its obvious meanings. He’d intersperse his challenges with sexual comments about the girls in the class and innuendo about what he wanted to do to them. Before the end of the school year he was sent to jail for statutory rape. He was the first person that inspired me to creatively think with and through language and he was one of the most (though by no means the worst) terrifying and despicable man I had encountered.

The next year I wrote poetry was for an English assignment. We were assigned to write five poems and I composed and illustrated just over twenty (proud overachiever). They were inspired by psychedelic soundscapes of Jimi Hendrix, the surreal horror of Steven King, and the probably rhymed too much.

Will I live tomorrow? Well I just can’t say.

No sun coming through my window, feel like I’m living at the bottom of a grave.

I wish someone’d hurry up and execute me, so I can be on my miserable way.

I don’t live today, maybe tomorrow I just can’t say.

– I Don’t Live Today, Jimi Hendrix Experience

My juvenile poems were the only place I could express a shitty situation: I had a crush on my teacher who also liked me very (too) much. I wrote about his car, his curly graying hair, his blue eyes, and the impossibility of our love. I wrote another one that made fun of a different teacher — an anxious football coach whose teaching strategy was to have us write answers to questions out of the back of our textbook while he ignored us. I was pissed because he was going around telling other teachers that my beloved teacher was acting inappropriately toward me:

You drink too much coffee
and your toothpick makes you drool
you keep on smoking cigarettes
because you are such an ignorant fool

Adults didn’t understand my feelings and I didn’t like being seen as naive or a victim; I felt deeply misunderstood. While writing, painting, or playing music I could leave my own body and head in a wash of color, refractions of sunlight on water, heavy behind-the-beat drums, and uncanny juxtaposition. My life was intelligible only when it was surreal.

I tossed poetry and these memories aside, forgotten, for nearly twenty five years. A friend of mine, whose mind I admire, is teaching a course involving Mayakovsky’s poetry and I overheard a conversation between him and a colleague. The colleague called Mayakovsky a “shill,” insinuating the critique that Mayakovsky lost his poetic greatness in his loyalty to the Communist Party (around the time he also started to write about love). My friend, generally cynical, countered the critique of Mayakovsky, saying simply, “I love him.”

I needed to know more about this poet and this thing about love and alienation. I started reading Mayakovsky in translation and I was struck by the ways it moved between cynicism about love and longing for love. I intuited something queer about Mayakovsky’s poetry, though I couldn’t really justify my sense of it, given how little poetry I’ve read — was it that I think there is something queer about a man writing poetry, especially poetry about love? Was it that I identified with the cynicism and longing that is so common to those of us living outside of normative genders and sexualities? So I did what any post-academic, amateur aspiring poet would do, I googled: Mayakovsky queer OR gay.

From there I found Frank O’Hara, a bunch of esoteric reviews about writers I didn’t know, written in prose I couldn’t understand, and a review of this book: Troubling the Line: Trans and Genderqueer Poetry and Poetics. This was it! An anthology of trans and genderqueer poets who were self-consciously engaging in gender-language-fuckery, playing with pronouns, syntax, and imagery of crossing. I adopted its format: poems alongside poetic statements from the authors. I didn’t gain any further insight into Mayakovsky, at least not any I’ll develop in this post.

I’m most compelled by poets that express trans experience and identity through form rather than content. Poetry about identity struggle or about being trans is too literal for me; it gives me the same cringing sensation as rhyming poetry.  I don’t want an explicit roadmap about where the poet is going. I want to get lost with them in their own raw confusion. I want to feel the immediacy of complex emotions that they have not yet categorized or labeled. I want to find myself amidst their deepest expressions, and be wrapped up with them in their vulnerabilities.

Given the thickness of the anthology and the number of seasoned writers within it, I don’t feel I have a right to claim that I am constructing a transpoetics. (But clearly I do, or I wouldn’t have bought the domain; I just like to perform a degree of modesty though self-depreciation, which are two of my strongest character traits.) Here’s my instructions to myself as I construct my own transpoetic voice:

Trans*Piece

confuse the subject
implode pronouns
overburden subjectivity with false idols
strip bare to the flesh
trace the evidence of gendered violence
write about sex
love and desire
disorient time
collide conflicting memories
fuse biographies
sit between everything and nothing
speak the unintelligible

This is my aspiration, at least for today.

soft

Inevitable,
but even so, how else is it possible?
So I whisper to myself, “He will choke yourself. Fuck his throat and fight back.”
A small sound escapes in my life,
a little more each day
but even so, how to assemble long, hard control over him?
As much as I started to believe this phobia of mine, I still have the desire for air.

I don’t conflate, “how could I stop, boy?” with acts of intimacy!
If there is one sign of violence, the kind of rules he would use,
I freeze and will not be eaten, even if his mouth generates complexity,
He will expect me in a mode he can grasp at the front of his mind,
If he was an animal, it’s coming

In your example,
intimacy is more than empathy, intimacy with each other
I’m surprised by you, crashing into you completely, distant in love.
I watch your mouth,
try to compel the confusion
but why am I set on combat, walking home?
If I start to believe this love of yours, will you let me in just in time?

I remember I tried to be sorry, as he ignored my pleading eyes!
He feels like he’s in love with distance
Especially those he dreams about, those who keep him completely
He’s so gentle when he knows he has complete control over my violation
I never talk to him about my own

I don’t conflate intimacy with drones anymore
because now, now, now, close to your belly,
strong hands
open mouth
soft eyes
maybe I finally know empathy

taboo

Loving him drink is twisted shit
But my past experiences of love could not focus on my sensitivity
It’s a pre-(existing) condition
A form of tongue-to-tongue combat in saliva so cruel
Suck my tongue onto his Adam’s apple,
because I am not facing the mix of intimacy and violence
His torso is taboo,
accompanied by how to cut him or feel up his balls
Affection is uneven
And humanity?
We both know this moment exposes the rawness of sex and my life
Even if I didn’t ever happen

mistake

Steam rises from my calves
am I hot or cooked?
burn in/out my core

Blood rises to my head
press out the borders
of my flesh
remind me I’m alive
still feeling numb
angry at machines
and their capital

Blood pounds in my ears
mask the sounds
of his.my shame
cover me in my own fluids
still feeling helpless
angry at landlords
and their egos

Water trails down my chest
am I sweat or tears?
drain me in/out

I hear I’m about to make a mistake
I realize to        that mistake is
you                                            me
hide <> erase <> problem

I’m the best at collapsing make room for your insatiable
I don’t need                      fuck
you                                  myself
big dick <> little d’clit <> forever girl

Light flickers behind my eyelids
am I dark or light?
replay in/our danger

Shadow betrays my            frame outside my            brain
female                       male
show me you t-ts                               c-ck
whore                                              monster

Fog coats the mirror
what is my name?

I am a constant                                         temporary
state of                                                    amnesia

Elliot, Mike, Frank, David, Joe, Jack, J, J…
JJJJJJJ
is something

J…{}{}{}{}
Ja –~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jac//?!

Wake up!

Please

I need       inside
you            me

algorithm / automation

I couldn’t write anything until I could be written.

I wrote my first poem, the first one I shared anyhow, using a Markov Chain generator. I first head about Markov Chains when my composer friend Troy was visiting us with his Robot Rickshaw, one iteration of his project to build robotic musical instrument-performers. At the kitchen table — where I’ve had the best conversations about art and life — Troy told me about Dr. Nerve, also a musician, who programed a Markov Chain generator for text. From our conversation I understood that Markov Chain sequenced notes based on the relationship between what has just come before; that there was something random and ephemeral about it. I tried it immediately with a text I was writing about fear and desire. I hated what I wrote, but that seemed somehow necessary at the time, as a rather inconvenient crush on a friend collided with memories of abuse and reignited my gender identity issues.

My partner tells me its a digital humanities project, which I suppose it is in a way, though far more personal. I’m drawn to the “deformative” work of Mark Sample (who is also an avid Markov Chain methodologist), which plays between the text itself and the performed work of texts: “And what is broken and twisted is also beautiful, and a bearer of knowledge.” 

I tried to learn more from Wikipedia (and you can too). I quickly gave up, lost in the complexities of mathematical theory. But what struck me was the transition from one state to another state on the principle of memorylessness. I’m taking some poetic license here. I’m looking for ways to access and rewrite my own memories, to bring the unconscious into conscious awareness, and all the while to stay present and to let go of the past.

Let me get to the poem itself. I re-ran the original text through the Chain generator multiple times, setting it to generate 250, 300, 350, 400, 450, and 500 words. I copy pasted the results into the notes app of my phone. I had this need to hack the words into pieces. When my memories of violation surfaced I felt like I had broken into countless shards of glass. I needed to break everything apart absolutely, to get it all out, in order to rebuild. I used the resulting texts as a way to read my subconscious and to listen to what I was trying to say. I selected out about 20% of it based on what struck me intuitively, both in terms of style (repetition, surreal juxtaposition, and pronoun shifts), as well as anything that seemed expressive of the fine line between fear and desire. I took these bits and rewrote them into a surreal prose that means something different to me each time I read it.

It was the first time I’d ever consciously juxtaposed abuse, helplessness, and victimization with a desire for intimacy and affection. I kept the broken grammar of those lines that evoked the voicelessness I felt.

He put his mouth for a thousand lashes of me without leaving my mouth for as long as I could. Pretend like about making out.

He put his mouth, feeling stupid passion of skin and it suits me too.

Throughout my current writing, I’m working at the lines between abuse and affection, trying to disentangle the way they were are cross-wired into my brain. This poem along with the others in the Markov Chain series have helped me to craft the kind of voice that represents a sullen and quiet inner child whose internal mind blazes with sensory and emotional light. I write with a simplicity of a child’s vocabulary, with nonsense grammar, homonyms, repetition (as if to commit it to memory), poignant misuse of big words, and playing with words as if they are costumes to put on or take off. Its helping me to dig into trauma and to access memories that cannot be easily verbalized, but are nonetheless intensely felt.

I am willing my feelings and senses into language. As much as I’ve studied, read, and learned, I have a hard time speaking. I didn’t talk in public, or to people I didn’t know well, until I found myself in front of my first class of college students as TA in grad school. I’m trained as an academic sociologist and I can use complex vocabulary to wrap my voice in brilliant gift bags, employing complex theories and expressing elaborate ideas that hide the fact nothing is inside. When it comes to what I sense and feel, when it comes to talking to you while looking you in the eye, feeling your reaction, and staying in my own body, language breaks down completely.

For me, algorithmic generation is doing in its undoing, raw materials that I can build into a way of knowing myself and speaking, really speaking, to you.