On Writing
Jennifer Baker
Took years to fracture
this strata fear of being looked over
*
trust out on a limb
turns lens on memory's ossuaries
turns lens on memory's ossuaries
*
in the bush where
we tapped trees the pond my grandfather called bottomless
its mirror cradled canopy sway its silted bottom a warning
its mirror cradled canopy sway its silted bottom a warning
once you start swimming you
have to keep treading forever
drowning
open-mouthed we tell
*
one of the men
hauled me back into
our tree
scraped against street-glow in
public
petrified I dropped my Coke
petrified I dropped my Coke
my first thought my
body is against the law
scraped against hard
light
tell them you're 18
tell them you're 18
against
I got you out
I got you out
scraped up worldly
over chasm when the bough
over chasm when the bough
breaks
*
traitor foliage
tricked
cover for quiet
night's wide electrified itch
night's wide electrified itch
*
now he concedes I
was the smart one
despite his assumptions
at the time
I wonder what they were
*
I wonder what they were
*
entire fields leap
skyward
enormous turbine blades rotate this process
down
backroad powerlines
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silence is
the
mirror-space between self & self
twinned in repulsion & longing
twinned in repulsion & longing
*
I don't know why I'd tell
when explanation fakes out shelter
except that justice is
a scrutiny we step into
& my heels are still dirty
from digging in
& my heels are still dirty
from digging in
bullish between
vulnerability | erasure
witness | voyeur
wink & a no
wink & a no
Jennifer Baker
lives, writes, and teaches in Ottawa. Her first chapbook, Abject Lessons, was
published by above/ground press in 2014. Her poetry, interviews, and reviews
have been published in The Journal of Canadian Poetry, Ottawater,
Dusie, The Bird, Philomela, and Illiterissuesixature, with a
forthcoming review in The Bull Calf.
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