Mark Anthony Cayanan: I've Built a House

Mark Anthony Cayanan: I've Built a House
Photo: Joanna C. Valente

Photo: Joanna C. Valente

Ben Ben Ben Ben Ben

The narrator who foretold my life says passion is like crime

both welcome the weakening of society because they can profit off of it

A month has passed in the novella and the locals are dying

as though thinking of you could make cholera a sunset backdrop

The barber who trims and darkens my beard says I’ve no fear of the disease

my personality plagiarized from my favorite characters, all magnetically staring out into the void

I think I’m alone because I manage romance

with a girlish evasiveness that’s a front for sexual frigidity

When a man’s already in front of me, too loose, the wanting slips off

my mind scrambles ahead to the ride home and some Tim Tams before bed

I’m being facetious though not entirely incorrect

I pine for life-altering tenderness but prefer it in the abstract

Outside St. Mark’s I feed on impatience like the other pigeons

or like the sweet-medicine death-smell of Venice, I wait in ambush

More than wanting the reward I want to be the reward, the boy

who knows his beauty but not its magnitude, bending over a prie-dieu

I wish to be in a situation where I could say Am an attendant lord

though I’m pretentious, I haven’t gone beyond the required reading

Some plotlines I repurpose for what you think of me end with

in retaliation I write poems about impossible men with hairs on their backs

Sad Ben, sarcastic Ben, Ben who wakes at noon and pees while waiting for his tea to steep

and sighs loudly while he writes and microwaves burritos for brunch

You’re Tadzio plus adult acne and the threat of a paunch and an open invitation to destroy me

though I won’t die for you yet you’re dreamt of the way he is

Your friends keep tagging you in pictures of smoky cafés, your face turned away from the camera

I want to step into their bodies and be the thing you’re looking away at

Ben of the macho sentences, Ben as bracing as a papercut, as permanent

Ben, you’re mainly incontrovertible proof

 

Mann cultivated a public image of Teutonic reserve

among friends he was prone to nervous trembling and convulsive sobbing

I borrow his biography from the library to discover why my impulses override my tact

when in his diary he draws a parallel between his sweet tooth and covert desires, he gets poetic

Extra fastidious, he writes about his daily walks to the market to ogle shirtless workmen

in his fiction he thinks of himself when he writes about other people

I’m the kind of twink whose body has outweighed the term

I keep pointing this out because it’s one of the few insights I have into myself

All I want is to prove I orchestrate my life with the efficiency of a single mother

yeah, that’s another lie

I’m the videoke singer who licks the corners of their mouth between lyrics

I make every heartache ballad salacious and vaguely offensive and absurd

Quite obvious at this point that I want you to hear me

if not you then I want to exorcise my agony with everyone’s ear pressed against the door

 

The first time we shared a cigarette, just to connect you said

you preferred brawny men who could suffocate you, I looked at my hands

I congratulate myself for charming you into changing your preferences

never mind your girlfriend

I love you enough to look for confirmation in newspaper microfilms

the year you were born we had our first presidential elections

Erap was the comic relief in the vice-presidential debates, needless to say he won

funny things stupid people say made national news 28 years ago, as they do now

A woman in her 20s was found stuffed inside a suitcase

she wore green basketball shorts, a cord around her neck, and a baby tee

Bakit Ako Mahihiya was showing at Ali Mall, not sure if it’s a remake of the 1976 film

some days your beard’s still scratching against my cheek, Ben

When I was born a man died from a cigarette he flicked at a bunch of balloons

do you know that a bunch of balloons is called a festival

 

I feel weird whenever your novel refers to a Southeast Asian

had to put it down when the Thai girl on the webcam plays with her nipple

At 16 I offered my married neighbor a blowjob

just because summer took too long and it seemed an important thing

You’ve gone over the age of Keats when he passed on

not enough time has passed for me to leave myself behind, fervently I giggle at your jokes

The past few years I’ve been dating younger men, like you, and I’m embarrassed about it

Korean face masks and my genes make you look older

Before you’re 30 your disheveled pompadour will irreversibly transition into a combover

Aged-out Asian Twink isn’t a porn category, it’s why I don’t upload nudes on Grindr

Wouldn’t you say we’re perfect for each other

we deserve a maisonette in the suburb, we’d take turns vacuuming the carpet

You’d write your books and by 7 I’d set the table

for each other let’s be someone’s dreams, marooned forever outside dailiness

 

Love makes Aschenbach realize how much he neglected his looks

his intelligence made him assume beauty was an unnecessary capital

Translators differ on Aschenbach’s lipstick shade

Appelbaum and Heim: raspberry, Luke: cherry, Lowe-Porter: strawberry

The point is he gets a horrible makeover, the kind you never see in rom-coms

the point is it gives him enough hope to magnify the obligatory disaster

My role models are either abject homosexuals or doomed women

why don’t you ask yourself what that reveals about you

Walking into a room I pretend my hand isn’t mine and turn on the light

then recoil in dismay at my undisguised face, puzzle that one out

Aschenbach concludes his hope by eating lukewarm strawberries

he continues to stare longingly at the water before the epidemic bests him

Because hope has turned me into a bat inside a cave, I make screeching noises

still essentially alone though the acoustics are much better

 

 

The one time I asked about your girlfriend after your fourth lonkero

you said, Sometimes you wake up next to a person and wonder why you’re there

I’ve never experienced the luxury of being so bored you have no choice but to stick it out

this is a hint, Ben

Meanwhile I’m always dishonorable from a distance you won’t bridge

poets can’t soar upward, only commit extravagances, says Mann

And in the end hunger for a new naïveté, the severity of wanting only the feeling itself

for encouragement I curate a Spotify playlist of pathetic ballads

I run errands in Cubao and in my ears everyone shuffles to it as we do fear in this city

I want to keep sighing your name while I’m in the back of a Grab

Today I think about newly elected senators and keep all the doors locked

a man who’s beside himself, says Mann, dreads becoming himself again

You’ve moved to Bulgaria, no longer sober you go drinking with the ballet dancers

are you finally single again, why haven’t you declared your intentions

 

Just so Tadzio remains untouched by the plague and the worshipper’s fearful awe

Aschenbach considers telling the boy’s mother to flee Venice

In Aschenbach’s dreams his fear is a brutally insistent flute

when a heavenly VO shouts, The foreign god, Mann drops a brick into a beaker of water

A gigantic wooden dick stands in a field, worshipped by satyrs

this dream is an orgy or a buffet or yet another unsubtle contrivance

In my mind Gloucestershire is your neighbors climbing up the roofs of their semi-detached

it’s 2007 and being a teenager with drug issues, you go back down for your bass

But a three-foot flood’s just another August afternoon to us

and by us, naturally I don’t include you

I pretend to be so used to horror I make off-color jokes about it, that’s my aging persona

like Mariah I contort my boxy body into sultry poses

I fold a frozen lake into my luggage before separately we leave, your face in sleep too

out of your lyric curtness I engineer elegiac silences, slightly lurid and regretful

 

 

Smooth-skinned boys grabbing onto he-goats, Aschenbach’s dreams are Nick Joaquin dreams

the boys goad the goats, goad being a phallic object  

For Joaquin smooth skin isn’t so much an indicator of youth as a given

you already know this, you being you, you having touched me

Our post-coital talk would’ve covered random topics

the Hollywood starlet who honey-trapped the former president and then survived

In the recording you could hear Marcos begging for a blowjob

reason gives way to violence, the headboard bangs against the wall

Dovie Beams wipes the saliva off her underboob, he asks her if she enjoyed it

no matter how white you are there’s only one answer to a dictator

Eventually he tires of her and she wouldn’t have it

she takes the tenderness in his letters and builds a press conference out of it

In her final years she has a golden pool installed in her Beverly Hills home

she dies free of him on the eve of Rizal’s death anniversary


 

Mann says art is a war, a struggle people can’t keep up for very long

I hope for the rest of my life to be as privileged

Everywhere are cigarette butts wedged between cobblestones

I scuttle past streets that smell of piss and I’m flung to Manila with you, would this city do

In Berlin you’d be the best person to keep drinking dinner with

you know I’m the second funniest me I’d ever be when I’m being passive-aggressive

I worry about the Philippine fishing boat rammed by a Chinese vessel

then get distracted by my hair collecting on the shower grate

I want to fly out to where you are, gallivant, order unpronounceable drinks

nothing but a backpack with underwear, mouthwash, your books as proofs of devotion

But as you know I’m a middle-middle-class citizen of a poor country

between you and me lie a hundred-dollar visa fee and a plane ticket

Spontaneity is a gift of the lucky

I have to retreat back into my low-cost longings 

 

 

I show Jov a video of you singing Like a Virgin

I cover my mouth when he says, The British have bad teeth, no

Sir Thomas Rich’s School added a swimming pool in 1966

the potted history of your school says it was closed in the ‘80s but reopened in 1995

Adorably chubby at three, you know I could’ve wanted a brother like you then

I could’ve been the perfect sibling, my sisters would swear by it

You got yourself a writing career at 17, fuck higher learning

at first I went straight to envy, now I wonder what it says about your inner life

You showed me your KS5 band covering The Pogues, thank god you outgrew that phase

instead you’re always in a puffer jacket, through my window you can hear These Days

I encourage my self-absorption, I’m silly enough to think it makes me interesting

I make obsequious bows to apologize to the world and my betters

I have to open another website to figure out what potted means

though I’m not dumb I don’t know English


 

Aschenbach knows his last few days are his last days

the city government disposes of the sick, each one floating away like The Lady of Shalott

Professing love to someone who says it too easily is the second most exciting carnival ride

impertinent to stop a man who’s about to jump into a river, says Wilde

I deal with chronic depression through pathological self-mythologizing

or I sleep a lot, watch the same series until I’ve memorized the slayer’s quips

I don’t ask but I wonder if you’re still somewhat hot

if I press your jacket to my nose are you still your special odor

Wherever you are, come back from the bottle shop, shake the snow off your boots

out of your stories I’ve built a house we wouldn’t want out of

Don’t you like editing your sentences until they’re basically just verbs

I have so many verbs to give and so smash three plates, startle a cat for emphasis

My love is true as a Ponzi scheme and I’m made of defense mechanisms

but let me be the most compelling version of myself with you

 

 

Love’s a wheel rolling downhill, a poet says, back when jeepneys were a new invention

she was right, fresh tread marks decorate my cheek

Mann offloads his gay shame onto his characters, makes the kyphotic music lover kill himself

ambition was his antidote to self-disgust

I write long poems about shame, they’re decent-sized flats

if enough people tell me how brave I’ve been I’d at least have use for it

Since I was 14 it’s been my dream to be the person someone masturbates to

I touch myself to you going through the same arc of lust and remorse

I consider being funny but I only bring it out

when my kindness, an offshoot of my need to be universally liked, proves ineffective

What is the cure for shame, my shame indisputable as the mole on my nose

I’m one of my lesser faces, Mann excised his by disfiguring Aschenbach

I check in on him, collapsing on the beach

and having depended on him for guidance, of course I end up thinking, Why not

 

 

After years of erotic austerity comes abandon, in Mann as in Freud this means oblivion

punishment unretractable as academic tenure

Before it arrives Mann finally calls Aschenbach delusional

with Apollonian arrogance the author reasserts his moral ascendancy

And the world enters a new politeness, shame discarded like last millennium’s plastics

like the unlicensed gondolier in chapter three, I try accepting disappearance

Ben, though I’m afraid of living as myself I don’t want to be unafraid


Mark Anthony Cayanan is from the Philippines. They obtained an MFA from the University of Wisconsin in Madison and are a PhD candidate at the University of Adelaide. Among their publications are the poetry books Narcissus (Ateneo de Manila UP, 2011) and Except you enthrall me (U of the Philippines P, 2013). Recent work has appeared in Foglifter, The Spectacle, Crab Orchard Review, Dreginald, and Lana Turner. A recipient of fellowships to Civitella Ranieri and Villa Sarkia, they teach literature and creative writing at the Ateneo de Manila University.