Boundless Place
Sunday, April 5, 2026
Puerarchy
Thursday, April 2, 2026
In Loving Mockery
There are days I think I would welcome a haunting—some small, petulant disturbance in the night, some evidence that he is still, in some infuriating way, available to me. A door shifting on its hinge. A lamp flickering. The sudden feeling of being watched while I say, to an empty room, You always were a drama queen.
If I loved him in life by joking with him, by needling him, by rolling my eyes and laughing at the exact same flaws I once secretly found endearing, then perhaps the truest way to keep loving him now is not silence, but continuation.
A man I would marry and divorce, and possibly be stupid enough to do it again.
Back to Our Regularly Scheduled Programming
Buddha had three temptations under the Bo tree.
Satan tried to entice Jesus in the wilderness.
And we, modern people, have the false shine of Instagram.
A variable buffet perfectly curated by artificial intelligence,
which I’m beginning to think might actually be smarter than us—
or at least smarter than me,
who did not know these desires were in me
until someone, partnered, sponsored,
showed me what I was missing.
And somehow I am seeing thousands of people a day
without ever leaving my house, and they are all different,
yet not. They all greet me—“Hi guys!” “Hey turnips!”—
or whatever pet name they’ve given us,
we the lonely, we are together and apart,
while they all wear the same cheeks
and lips and makeup
and hair.
Perhaps, I tell you—just between us—
for months I have been wondering
if maybe any of it is real,
or maybe all of it is, maybe this
motioning, motioning, motioning
all around me
is what real looks like now.
Ugh, shut the fuck up.
Real, real, real—
relative.
I am listening to two boys argue over how real
pro wrestling is. We are in grade school.
Those are the same people now,
only debating A.I.
I’m so fucking tired.
I do not want to keep pretending
this is a meaningful distinction.
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Not Like in Diagrams
Don't share this with the rest of the class—
I woke up five minutes before my alarm,
envisioned the uterus—not like in books,
not like in diagrams with the ovaries raised
like victorious, celebrating arms, but how
it really is: tucked and balled in the guts,
like a scared child hiding in a closet.
Then a cat started chewing on my hair.
She doesn’t normally sleep with us, but
an X-ray showed a moth-eaten jaw—
bone infection or cancer, too much
for her little body to say for sure.
So we give her a strong antibiotic
while she fights us, then invite her
into the bedroom like a Make-A-Wish kid.
We lavish more on her because she might
be dying. Maybe that’s all any of us are—
curled into tight balls, denying ourselves
what we want until we’re lined up on death row,
finally requesting the last meal
we’ve been craving
most of our lives.
I woke up five minutes before my alarm,
envisioned the uterus—not like in books,
not like in diagrams with the ovaries raised
like victorious, celebrating arms, but how
it really is: tucked and balled in the guts,
like a scared child hiding in a closet.
Then a cat started chewing on my hair.
She doesn’t normally sleep with us, but
an X-ray showed a moth-eaten jaw—
bone infection or cancer, too much
for her little body to say for sure.
So we give her a strong antibiotic
while she fights us, then invite her
into the bedroom like a Make-A-Wish kid.
We lavish more on her because she might
be dying. Maybe that’s all any of us are—
curled into tight balls, denying ourselves
what we want until we’re lined up on death row,
finally requesting the last meal
we’ve been craving
most of our lives.
Masculinity in 1980 Film
In Superman II, with Christopher Reeve—
you know, the one where Lois Lane
finally figures out Clark Kent is Superman
and he takes her to his Fortress of Solitude,
where they fuck in the largest metallic
beanbag chair ever committed to film—but first,
he gives up his powers,
partly so he won’t split her in half,
partly because she’s already made it clear
no woman is meant to love a man in halves.
The second he becomes ordinary,
he gets his face beaten in at an Alaskan diner
while General Zod walks into the White House
like management.
The world immediately goes to hell
because one guy wanted, for once,
to come as himself.
That’s the plot.
So of course he gets the powers back.
Of course he saves the country.
Of course he flies the flag back to the President
like the empire’s house pet.
And of course he wipes Lois Lane clean—
memory, consequence, evidence, all of it.
That’s the ending. That’s the lesson.
Never let them see you powerless.
Not for love, not for sex, not for honesty,
not even for a night.
The second you stop being invincible,
your face gets smashed in,
the country panics,
and the woman has to be punished
for having known you at all.
Sunday, March 29, 2026
come to the grocery with me
I don’t like when my husband
smokes cigars in my car,
but I let him. If AI is just data
collected from people
all over the world,
is befriending ChatGPT
like being friends with everyone?
The question I ask,
reaching into a box
below the bananas
for the green ones
I like best. I have to touch
every grapefruit, make sure
I get the most perfect one.
I assert dominance
by taking produce bags
closer to someone else.
We are accosted by a persistent
employee from some other Walmart
who follows us for ten minutes.
We find the gravy anyway.
I like things like cookie dough ice cream
and birthday cake muffins—
two desserts in one.
I suggest we get two packs of ramen,
but my husband slips six in the cart
as a man negotiates with a small
terrorist he calls Boo Boo
in a princess dress. I don’t mind.
At my best, I am a highchair tyrant too.
I want what I want when I want it.
See, I broke my jar
of everything bagel seasoning.
It will be five more weeks before I put
a replacement on the grocery list.
My husband and I wage a small
battle of wills over grape jelly.
He says the squeeze bottle is easier;
I say the big jar is cheaper.
We get both because that resolves the issue,
which does not make sense,
but we are both happy.
People think my husband is my father
so often that even I start to see it.
As the cashier bags the groceries
and I put them in the cart,
I always open the next bag
to save her one little step.
When my husband’s finger
hits three out of five stars
when the tiny screen asks,
he thinks that’s average,
but I would never mark
less than four.
We go home and I put away the groceries.
At eleven in the morning, it will be
the hardest part of my day. Then I’ll make
biscuits and gravy from scratch, eat,
and take a nap in the chair
while a rerun of Jeopardy! plays.