Elae [Lynne DeSilva-Johnson]: #MeToo Series
market value
in 1988 in the thompson street pool
and anywhere else downtown nyc gave us cover
i told alice exactly how
and where to touch me,
my skin’s newly sentient landscape, in this streetscape --
out of the thick surveillance of home
and its nonexistent doors ---
quick becoming a refuge, a resistance
it was brooding benjamin
at commie camp
in massachusettes circa 1993.
there: in the boys bunk,
behind a tree,
under the stars looking the other way
skipping swim class, feigning cool
i learned to leverage the only thing that was mine to give
it seemed a fair trade for the stories
i returned to eighth grade with like a golden ticket in my fist
waved high like a bowery news boy
“strawberries” “extra extra” “i told you i was someone”
do you see me now?
the awareness of other on and in my body
not always pleasurable, consenting
or kind, but yet
proving its existence
as electricity and pain
came and went from flesh
the handfuls others wanted
mapping value onto abandonment
an absence made real by what felt like desire
the void where worth should be
so long longed for
as to be entirely mistranslated
readily, as this junkyard equivalent
big tits, i talk a big game, slur myself for them
slick rick lyrics and liz phair
the bitch was strong, the kids was gone
fuck and run, fuck and run
on young tongues and walkmen
our dangerous swagger
leaving a scar tissue wake
of necessary forgetting
yet
even as i buried myself
i began to make that dirt into a form
of my own choosing
until the priest tasked with my saving
and the harsh lights of planned parenthood
on second avenue
and the clinical sting of termination
and everything it doesn’t say
were mere bumps on the road
to a salvation written in my blood
flesh house with my own name
on the door
i am not the “daughter”
you built a cage for
i am mine on any stolen time i can find
i am smoking pfunks because the
recessed filter leaves less trace
on your fingers
and i love calculus and philosophy
and i put in my pocket
an equivalence I touch with my eyes closed
a sweaty dollar of knowing someone wants to fuck me
and i am holding on to the horizon like a buoy
shame and fear burnt on the retina like a bleach stain
i compensate with complexely wrought justifications
and spin love stories with everyone
who touches and grabs, making shows of the romance
danny’s housekeeper looks the other way
during all the fucks, all the faked little deaths
that fit between classes
in the spring of 1997
it’s my first time
for totinos pizza rolls and delivery he pays for
in a deluxe apartment with a doorman
and i am elated, conflating this kid and his anxieties that bore me
with knowing i can turn the water i was born into wine
if i play my cards right, and i am learning to grift
to hustle with my body bait, my only chip to ante
i can get out of dodge
i can live like this
i can make myself out of spit and the lint
in my pocket
i close my eyes and grit my teeth
when the script calls for more
than i had planned
i fashion a future i imagine
can only be made by their hands
guided by mine if i’m lucky but
this is about survival and
the line where desire, safety
money, escape, and the body’s preference blurs
has long been indistinguishable
girls didn’t come with deluxe accomodations
so they were the bathroom at woody’s bar
after the rugby game on the dance floor
in her dorm room or mine
sorry, heart, but i’m still here primarily for the golden ticket
and i can’t take a risk on this horse
but you were first and you will be always and maybe someday
i’ll get top surgery and find myself under there
not sure if i want to be or be with the bull dykes i lust after
but my mouth and mind don’t know this language
because it’s 1999 and we just got the internet and
this is the self i know how to sell
i learn to wield facepaint, fabric and a heel like an alchemical reaction
you’re born naked and the rest is drag
feel power like i never thought could be mine and i
am on my way to totino’s and park views
am on my way to frequent casual vacations
mentioned in cool conversation without missing a beat
blase
patagonia and cocktails at lunch
because fuck you i made this
i can taste it
you say salty milk
i say dreams
and when i say love
i believe it
i dont know yet i love everything
and i am scared and lost
and breathing onto the glass
of other people
to make sure i’m here
i cannot see another path
i don’t know how to turn report cards
into apartments and i need a back up plan because
only forward motion
has ever been an option
i’ll sell my body before my soul
i look the other way and
throw myself into the fire
my threatened animal
had a plan
Lynne DeSilva-Johnson (she/her/they/them) is a nonbinary queer interdisciplinary creator, cultural scholar, and educator. Lynne is the founder of The Operating System, a radical open source arts organization and small press, and serves as visiting assistant professor at Pratt Institute. Recent publication credits include Wave Composition, The Conversant, The Philadelphia Supplement, Gorgon Poetics, POSTblank, Vintage Magazine, Live Mag, Coldfront, the Brooklyn Poets Anthology, Resist Much/Obey Little: Poems for The Resistance, and “In Memory of Feasible Grace,” part of the Panthalassa Pamphlet series, among others. Her performances and work have appeared widely, including recent features or projects at Artists Space, Bowery Arts and Science, The NYC Poetry Festival, Parkside Lounge, Carmine Street Metrics, Eyebeam, LaMaMa, Triangle Quarterly, Undercurrent Projects, Mellow Pages, The New York Public Library, Launchpad BK, Dixon Place, Poets Settlement, SOHO20 Gallery and many more. They are always still beginning.