I Did an Ugly Thing Once, But It Was In a Beautiful Room
When I knelt
at the Temple of Nature,
I keened, “O! Wreck me,
wreck my guts, daddy.”
I have given everything
to the earth that has pulled me
through a lonely winter.
What if I had loved you only enough?
We emptied the dishwasher, we ritualed
to incite self-induced preservation.
Don’t you ache not to die?
Baby, I feel so down—turn me on.
Through the tall grass: a slither,
a woman taken by the wind,
the Pepsi Cola sign, the seagulls, the noise.
In my grief over you, I run off
with a grad of the school of dope tattoos.
I give myself to a man with a dark plume.
He imagines a world without art: it’s not bad.
Poetry is often just another form of content.
You were my absolute favorite vapor flower
in the garden of the world. There’s such
a thing as suffering. I pray to the moon,
I touch myself and you are alive again.
How To Stay Politically Active While Fucking The Existential Dread Away
“Bang your tambourine! Kisss/my ass, don’t mind if they// say it’s vicious—they don’t/know what music should do to you.” – Frank O’Hara
It’s November and the dead
should stay dead.
There is no script for this,
this life, your lemon seeds
on my kitchen island.
The woods are full
of people like you,
all positive self-talk
in a lynching country.
I think I’ll miss you forever.
Once in a Freudian driven love,
I lived near a water tower
with a snack basket
and he called me his favorite
pampered lil suburb bitch.
I center myself on his gun
control and pour some salt
as if we were never here.
I am queering this shit from the inside.
No matter how many shapes I change:
I am an animal.
Forgive me of my humble dreaming
I’ll do whatever it is
that you want me to do
to you. Stop, right now. Burn
some sage and play “Runaround Sue.”
Come back when you’ve reached the chorus.
Come see me
on Tuesdays and Thursdays—
what have you got to lose?
I miss your ankles so much,
I taste it in my throat.
Ever since, I have felt like a beautiful stranger
at a nonprofit sponsored cocktail party.
There are addictions to feed
and mouths to pay. Trash
is trash is trash is trash.
On a Thursday, after a salad,
you ate me out and threw my love up.
I forgive you. I forgive myself. I release the situation.
I am blue, and unwell, you make me bolt
like a horse that stands around
my bedroom making things cry.
I like to drink and take pictures;
I want everyone to have good sex.
But don’t you forget about the dark woods.
Can’t you hear me
calling, begging you to come out and play.
Enter a synth and call my mountain ranges
by their proper names. I’m doing this
for my younger, suicidal queer self.
Pity isn’t a usable currency. I don’t care
how you feel about vengeance as justice
in five words or less.
All day, I’ve thought of re-entering The Closet
for safety’s sake. A commissioned buzz-cut,
muted earth clothes, all baritone.
My God, my God, my Mother
still asks about you.
Promise, when you’re done with me,
you’ll burn everything I ever loved
—
C. Russell Price is an Appalachian genderqueer writer originally from Virginia. They are a Lambda Fellow in Poetry, Ragdale Fellow, Literary Death Match champion, Windy City Times 30 Under 30 honoree, and a Pushcart nominee. They are the author of Tonight, We Fuck the Trailer Park Out of Each Other (Sibling Rivalry Press) and a forthcoming collection of poetry (oh, you thought this was a date?!) and essay collection (Everyone Is Doing It; They Just Aren’t Telling You).