Future Friday – August

We’re thrilled to bring you this month’s Future Friday – a creative nonfiction piece by May Hathaway.

May Hathaway is a high school student in New York City. Her work appears or is forthcoming in Blue Marble Review, perhappened, and Sandpiper Magazine and has been nationally recognized by the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. She is a 2020 Adroit Journal Creative Nonfiction Mentee and enjoys doing crosswords in her free time.

How To Immigrate

1. The immigrant narrative was set in stone by the time my mother got off the plane at JFK, her first and only one-way trip to date. She knew the role she was meant to fill and stepped off the plane anyway, suitcase rolling behind her.

2. My mother avoids the word “immigrant,” but I cling on to the label of “first-generation” because it is the only identifier that can explain my upbringing.

3. In Chinese school at age six, I learned the phrase yi min. Literal translation: shifted people. I imagined continents rearranged, like Pangea, not my mother hopping over the Middle East and Europe and the Atlantic Ocean before the hair at her temples turned gray.

4. The immigrant body stripped of its functionality is just a body.

5. I often wonder about the logistics of immigration, though my mind always manages to find routes around that word; my mother and I are both afraid of confronting reality sometimes. More specifically, I wonder about the intricacies of moving to a foreign nation—how many suitcases would you need to check? One of the many issues with moving somewhere where no one knows you is that there is nobody to help you with your bags at the airport.

6. So much current literature refers to us as a faceless, nameless horde. By “us,” I mean immigrants and the children of immigrants. By “current literature,” I mean every story.

7. I am not the daughter of immigrants. I am the daughter of an immigrant. The distinction matters because it makes saying “first-generation” feel fraudulent.

8. When I was younger, I loved how-to books. How to bake a cake. How to start a lemonade stand. How to become an astronaut. Never did I wonder how to immigrate.

9. My mother and I are not minimalists, so I cannot imagine her packing all of her belongings into suitcases, but that is what she did at the age of thirty.

10. Another issue: real estate. Last summer, my parents and I moved into an apartment we had toured three times before committing to living in it. My mother is picky about everything: sunlight, square footage, feng shui.

11. Sometimes, I read stories about immigrant bodies with no eulogies. Sometimes, I see their faces on newspapers strewn across avenues. Sometimes, I close my eyes and think I’m sorry I’m sorry I’m sorry.

12. My mother had a small wedding—her dress was navy and contained no ruffles—but she has made me promise that I will throw her a big funeral.

13. My history books like to refer to America as the “promised land,” but the only promise any nation can keep is the certainty of erasure. America excels in this area.

14, A lesson from my mother: Americans are bullshits artists. She does not clarify on our car ride home from school, not even when I dig my chin into the passenger seat in front of me and press my palagainst the center console until my wrists ache from bending. She mutters these four damning words over and over and over until I finally realize that I am expected to understand and internalize (though I still don’t get it, not really).

15. Immigration inherently calls for blank space—a hollow place where your home should be, a new culture to transplant like an extra organ.

16. Items in my mother’s suitcase, circa 1998: two photo albums, batteries, a stamp collection from her teenage years. Omissions: college textbooks, her extensive Celine Dion CD collection, a sense of belonging.

17. Another lesson from my mother, her forehead pressed against my bedroomwindowpane: Americans love summertime. The neighbors are hosting a cookout and their dog is barking noisily. Damn pitbull. Our invitation got lost, I think. My eyes burn from the smoke seeping in through the screen door, charred meat and mayonnaise.

18. Identity politics is less of a noun than it is a verb—a way of commodifying immigration for consumption, a way of survival.

19. A confession: when I was six years old, I tried to widen my eyes, pinch my nose bridge higher. I tried to forget how to tighten my lips into Chinese characters, how to speak with my immigrant tongue. Erasure is transgenerational.

20. Final lesson: Americans live for emptiness, and my mother is nothing if not a vessel.

Future Fridays – Art & Poetry

We’re thrilled to bring you the incredible work of two New York City Teens! An art portfolio by Lola Simon and the debut poetry of Carol Brahm-Robin.

“My artwork focuses on desexualizing the female form.
In high school, faced with dress codes, I often found myself being told to put on a jacket because I was wearing a tank top on a hot day, when the boys in my class weren’t asked to do the same. I became uncomfortable with aspects of myself I couldn’t change. My junior year of high school, I took my first figure drawing class. Drawing the models, I gained a new perspective: the female body is beautiful and natural. I began drawing colorful illustrations of the body in order to further explore this theme.” – Lola Simon

Lola Simon is a senior at Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School in New York City, where she majors in visual art. Her favorite color is yellow and her favorite artist is Yayoi Kusama. In addition to creating her own art, she enjoys museums, and has interned at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Guggenheim Museum. She will attend Brown University in the fall.

Purple

 By Carol Brahm-Robin 

I woke
sunken deep
in a world of
Purple
 
What a nice
dream
swathed in mulberry hue 
 
Nobody
i could see
Except for
Purple
 
i was alone with it
Lavender dream
 
It wrapped its arms around me
Pulling me further
into plum
 
I breathed it in
orchid in my lungs
Too deep now
I Tried to inhale
only Purple
 
Only Purple now
I was alone
in amethyst chains
 
deep in a violet embrace
Drowning in Purple

Carol Brahm-Robin is a young writer who lives in Brooklyn with her parents and two cats. She enjoys poetry and cartooning. “Purple” is her first publication.

January’s Future Friday – Charlotte Hughes

Charlotte Hughes attends high school in Columbia, South Carolina. She has attended the Iowa Young Writer’s Studio and is an editor for Polyphony Lit. Her poetry can be found in The Louisville Review, Lunch Ticket, The Raleigh Review, and has been honored by Penn State, F(r)iction Magazine, and the University of South Carolina.

Elegy with an I-77 Truck Stop

Driving onto campus, I consider the alternatives. Sink in the swamp. High tide with no footholds. Meet the farm fence going one twenty. I am angry because there is no way to pass the time. I can’t count to twenty before falling asleep, and given the the way music tinning from the car radio numbs me, I wouldn’t be surprised if I fell asleep halfway down the highway. Turing says machines cannot give up but mine does. I am learning the names for different shades of mourning: sound of a plastic wrapper, diesel, green neon lights. I am looking for turn-tracks and loopholes. I dread this & so here is me as the whirring ICEE machine at the back of the truck stop. The whirring is my lullaby (I cry in shades of Blue Raspberry and Cola.) Please, sing me to sleep and tuck in my covers, please. Take my keys, hide them in the boxes of Honey Buns. I’ve been right all along. I don’t need to drive to campus and see you’re gone. I can just be this shrink-wrapped box of Honey Buns—see how I’m bathed in this corporeal glow? I could stay here forever.

A Girl Walks into a New Year’s Eve Party

after Raphael Soyer’s Entering the Studio

Oh baby   this time you’re catty-corner the studio door
clasping hinges   to fall off — where’s the invisible man?
Girl, he could be   in the adirondacks of the Carolina hills,
home  for his tar slush Christmas   rolling large in Vegas
feathery girls saying  try  just one more time   where’s your
twenty twenty luck? Seeing straight? Anyways  look at you
the next incarnation of you  of course  it’s not really you,
the woman with eyebrows meeting in a v   sensible house shoes
half heel  nude pantyhose  trailing up a sensible plum ankle skirt
look    he even added a daub  of grey at your widow’s
peek  after you waltz  in the door with those sickeningly
sensible shoes,  maybe he’ll call you muse. Maybe  mother.
Maybe you should just  clic-clac   clutch my wrist
into the frame. We’ll dance to radio rock   in the studio and
your shoe’ll be gessoed with  muted oil  cornflake yellows &
blues. Stomp a painting onto his mid-century  oak floors.
An   old friend told me  waiting is a death  in itself
but that’s exactly  what I love  about a new year
So later I’m poised right outside the door  at midnight, while
you’re hiccuping  and tripping over my steps  your pantyhose
already fell off   two hours ago   my silver tube top is slipping
your sensible house shoes lost   but God we’re here at least
drink   pray to that   I can’t even write what’ll happen when
we walk in ball drops (new decade) we sing  but that’s the love, isn’t it?

November’s Future Friday – Divya Mehrish

We wanted the holiday bustle to settle before sharing this wonderful story by Divya Mehrish for our November Future Friday! It’s our first prose piece of the series!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Divya Mehrish is a high school senior from New York. Her work has been commended by the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award and the Scholastic Writing Awards, which named her a recipient of National Gold and Silver Medals. Her work has been published in the Ricochet Review, the Tulane Review, Body Without Organs, and Amtrak’s magazine The National.

Snapshot

We keep leather-bound photo albums on the bookshelves. Dust slithers over the front covers, reminding us to read our memories like encyclopedias, to search for the definitions of who we could have been. My mother has stacked them onto the shelf at the back of the living room, behind the piano no one plays anymore. On some Sunday mornings, as her espresso whistles on the stove, she sits at the dining table, her baby blue bathrobe draped over her narrow shoulders. She leafs through the books, her eyes wide. It’s my first birthday again. The pale pink cotton of the little embroidered dress wafts over my body, the body my mother had forged with her own hands, her own thighs, her own breasts. As I sip on my orange juice and try to balance redox reactions on the tablecloth, I watch her out of the corner of my eye. Her eyelids are fluttering, her face changing. One moment, her lips part to reveal her small jaw of beautiful, straight teeth. The next moment, she is gnawing at her lips, little vermillion carnations bursting in the thin line separating each half of her smile. Briny drops the size of the dew clinging to the petals on the terrace flow down the concaves of her cheeks. My mother never could hold back tears.

She leans over to me, holding the book in her arms like a sleeping infant. “Divya, look—this was your first birthday.” My gaze flutters over to the image. My hair is thick, dark, soft—raven feathers humming at my shoulders. It seems that I had my mother’s hair, once. Little gold bangles suffocate my fat little wrists. I am holding onto the pole in the playground for balance. I must not have been able to walk properly yet. My first two little teeth are showing, peeking out behind my moist, plushy upper lip.

I don’t look at my mother. I refuse to engage. I swallow the growing lump in my throat. I don’t remember that girl, but I miss her. I bite the inside of my cheek until I can taste metal stinging my teeth, rotting my gums. My mother’s fingers are stroking the waxy paper the same way she caresses our goldendoodle’s flaxen curls. “Weren’t you so sweet? Look how happy you were.”

“Leave me alone.” I turn back to my chemistry homework. But no matter how hard I try to focus my eyes, I can’t make out the oxidation number I am staring so hard at. As I squint, a drop of warm liquid slides out of the safety of my bottom eyelid, leaking onto the piece of paper. The crystal of fluid makes contact with a portion of the instructions on the top of the page. The water pools into the ink, clinging to the fibers. I think about the polarity of water, and for a moment, I hate knowing the chemistry behind my tears. I imagine what might have happened if I had not known the instructions yet or started the worksheet. Could I have gone to Mr. Nick and told him “my eyes consumed my homework”? I wonder what he would have said.

I can’t concentrate anymore. I’m beginning to confuse single and double replacement reactions again. My mother has gone on to look at the album for my seventh birthday. She appears to have her favorites. I rest my chin in the curve of my elbow and think about how much I loathe my mother’s use of the past tense. I don’t have the stomach for nostalgia, for the “weres” and “would have beens” of this world. I can’t reminisce about my childhood without feeling my intestines clench and gurgle inside me like a ticklish fetus. At the moment, I don’t feel like being pregnant with sentimentality.

My mother is stacking up the albums as she finishes with them. She’s moving more quickly now, her fingers accustomed to the routine of pinch, flip, turn, slam, stack. She’s on my tenth birthday now. That was the year I had a tea party at the Plaza Hotel. We binged on petit fours and saccharine pink tea that smelled like my body the time I poured my mother’s rose-scented perfume all over my arms like body oil. For the party, I wore a lovely blue-and-white sailor dress with what I used to call a “poofy” skirt. I wonder what happened to that dress. I notice that there is only one pile of books now, stacked high, and that it is slanting over precariously like the Leaning Tower of Pisa to the left of my mother’s elbow. She is finished. Her eyes lost in the leather, my mother traces the covers, her fingers circling over the hills and valleys of what may once have been animal skin, but now shields my childhood. For a moment, I wonder why my mother isn’t looking at the photographs from my more recent birthdays. I feel the space in my mouth begin to increase in size behind my closed lips, pressed tightly together in the shape of the “m” sound. But just as I am about to interrupt her meditative silence, I slam my jaw closed. I already know why. After my tenth birthday, I began to grow touchy around photographs. I became increasingly conscious of the way my cheeks swelled in pictures that would last forever, the way the dark circles under my eyes sunk into my pale skin like black holes. I stopped letting my mother capture the progression of my smile, either with palms shielding my face from the grenade of the flash, or simply letting my eyes frost over with a hard, angry expression. Sometimes, my mother still managed to capture some images when I wasn’t paying attention, but only with her grainy phone camera. An actual camera would have been much too obvious. After the party, I would demand that she hand over her phone so that I could systematically check the Photos app. I knew where to look—she had grown too intelligent and too practiced to simply leave the photographs in the normal Photos section: she had begun deleting them. These images would remain “hidden” in the Deleted Photos section until my swiping fingers, bent on annihilation, would encounter the bolded red letters warning me that if I chose to delete the already deleted images, I would never again be able to retrieve them. Yes, I told the device. I understand. I would breathe a sigh of relief as I expunged the few moments that my mother had been able to secretly capture—blurry images of my face, neck bent back, as I sipped on a glass of water, or as I turned my back to continue a conversation. None of these snapshots were worthy of preservation. On my most recent birthday, as I handed back my mother’s newly-cleansed phone, smiling strangely with a mix of relief and irritation, she refused to look at me. Her waiting fingers grasped the sides of the slippery case and slid the device into her purse without a pause. She zipped the bag closed and trudged forward into the wet April afternoon. We walked for a few minutes in silence, our steps in sync. As I rubbed my bare arms, the chilliness seeping into my bones, I clenched my jaw. I was peeved at her reaction, but not at all at the fact that she had taken those photographs, despite my many warnings. I had almost learned to enjoy the tradition—to let my mother engage in her foolery, and then punish her for it. But at the same time, I felt almost felt guilty. What other fourteen-year-old would force their parent to hand over their phone so that the child could survey and delete information off of the device? I began to wring my hands, taking a deep breath as I prepared the introduction to my apology—

“You will regret this.” Her crude comment cut sharply through my beautiful, flowery train of thought.

“What do you mean?” I had stopped walking, taken aback by her brusquerie. I folded my arms against my chest, ready to defend myself against any bullet she shot against me.

“One day, you are going to wonder where all these memories are. Don’t come blaming me then. All I’ve ever tried to do is to help you preserve them, to lock them into books that one day you might have flipped through, letting your childhood flow back in.” Her voice was beginning to tremble. “I was a child once, too. I only wish that my mother had taken this effort to hold down those few moments of happiness, before they flew away, and pinned them down to paper. You don’t know how it feels to reminisce and then wonder if your mind is playing tricks on you. You don’t know how it feels to live each day the way the breeze zips through your hair—with you one moment, gone the next. All I’ve been doing is trying to help you save yourself.” Her voice was thick and wet, but also hard, like frozen ice. It seemed that we both already knew this secret—anger is the best kind of tissue. She didn’t wait for me as she continued to march up the Avenue, the brown paper bag holding the leftover cake slamming against her thigh. I let her keep walking, imagining the lilac frosting clinging to the sides of the plastic. Standing off to the corner of the sidewalk, I folded my arms against my chest and hid my chin in the concave formed by my elbows. As my throat began to close, I let myself travel back to my first birthday. I was an infant again, blissfully ignorant of flashing cameras, of the rolls of fat cascading down my pudgy legs. I wondered, momentarily, how I had such clear memories of my toddler self, playing out like a film in my mind. Tucked behind my irises was a leather-bound album, with a series of photographs so similar but for slight differences—a movement, a change in background. My mind had learned to splice the images together, creating its own album out of the memories someone else had found worthy enough to capture.

 

 

October’s Future Friday 10/25- Janiru Liyanage

The last Friday of the month we feature an incredible young creative talent age 18 and under in our Future Fridays!

Janiru Liyanage is a 14 year old Sri-Lankan Australian student and poet, who currently lives in Sydney and attends high school. He is the 2019 junior winner of the Dorothea Mackellar Poetry Awards, a national poetry competition, & loves the Oxford comma, hyphens, & cats! – His work is forthcoming in Driftwood Press and The Journal Of Compressed Creative Arts, is a prolific participant and winner of poetry slams, and having just begun his personal poetic journey, Janiru is eager to find his own voice in his work.

 

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It’s The Hunger

The inside of heaven is garland with all the animals
we made extinct
The inside of me is garland with glass bottles that
cooled too early to have any noticeable shape:
a single kidney that may also be a liver,
an ambre lung;
The ghost of a thrush sings its songs each night
and I listen just to fall asleep –
this living
this body: my insides scraped out by a single
index finger
I bare the same tenderness of a small child
decomposing into his grave – the heaviest breath
is the last one  –  there are men
who still worship black moons
they light candles and draw circles around their feet
These men seek out my insides so hungrily
I’m sure that whatever moves them must also move
us – slouching into the night just to wake into
TV light with many Sinhala women singing old
songs; I forgot all the words I repeated last night –
still, there is the scent of tobacco and maple after all these
months –
I am still the ugly boy I began as – nightly crying for
mothering and suckling on everything I find
I’m sure something or someone is summoning me – still,
I am deflecting all their wishes;
the first few times were out of curiosity – now, my body steps
out of me and I have to leash it from snorting, smoking
or drinking anything – it’s the hunger that stops me
and the hunger that starts it too;
A single thumb placed under my tongue – I recite the
smallest prayer; even that I’ve forgotten:
Oh Lord, something, something, You are mine, I am yours,
take me, take me, I am waiting and will be
 
 

September’s Future Friday 9/27 – Grace Song

Introducing our very first Future Friday–a showcase of talent 18 and under.

 

Grace Q. Song is 16 years old and a Chinese-American writer from New York. A high school junior, she enjoys photography and indie music. She thinks you’re awesome.

 

DEAD FISH SYNDROME

They came at dawn—
blue fish, amber fish, silver fish.
After the tide slipped away, I walked
past overturned boats
to where the ocean buried them—
eight, nine, ten in acid seaweed.
The sea cannot carry all of its dead
forever. A body hurts to touch
my sister tells me, so we never touched.
Our hands returned to salt
& shipwrecked light stole eyes
devoured bones, tore scale after scale until
the gulls must have mistaken them
for broken white shells.
These days, I leave the piano covered.
I don’t know where I’ve hidden myself
in these minor keys. I don’t know why
this music box & everything I want to hold   cut
into my skin like those crimson-serrated gills.
I am so in love,        so lonely,
I could fill the ocean with this song.

 

 

SISTER, YOU CALL ME A BITCH

& the wilderness lures us
into its jaws.
But this story,
I devour the land
alive
& leave no bone
to the vultures.
Here are the knives I throw
into your thorn-
plum shoulder.
Here is the name
you brand on my cheek.
Its vowels fester
in my belly.
Look, sister: I break
my fingers for you. I crush
my ribs for you.
I wear these wounds
as a second skin
& bathe myself
in carnivore
darkness.

 

 

THE BOYS PLAY FRISBEE BAREFOOT

& grass clings to their toes
like dew to sunrise.

I can name this afternoon as a memory
in a brief, summer blink

& I must tell my sister to doubt
the world I’ve given her.

She says I am not sick
& I know she loves this lie—

counts her bones as sheep.
The boys wear sweat as rain

roam the olive hairs of the earth
as a fuzzy rug that curls

against the rough of their feet.
I hold my sister as a stranger—

unforgivable—
watch a white disk

cut a horizon
across the sky

as a swan
I know

is dead.