Sunday, November 5, 2023

{**18+ content**} Binding Freedom Zine (2023)

Binding Freedom
(This is an 18+ work, please DNI if under 18. The original format is a zine, so each stanza is its own page. Check out the photos for the cover art, made by yours truly.)

Ropes of black
and green
slide through
Their fingers
with the 
unimpeded grace
of the Serpent
through Eden.

Slithering
around me,
A familiar
feeling of
electric tension
builds in my
core.

The urge to resist
becomes a distant
memory as I'm
coiled into
hitched ties and 
breaths.

In tightening each 
knot, They loosen
my grip on the 
reins,
Freeing me from
the burden of
control and
conformity.

I've never felt
closer to
salvation than
when bount at the
mercy of Their
confident,
calloused hands.

What I wouldn't
give to experience
this moment for eternity.

-   -   -


If you want a physical copy of any of my zines, they're available for purchase! Email me at radiostationpet@gmail.com with the subject line "Zine Inquiry" and I'll be happy to send you as many as you'd like. 

{**18+ content**} Kadan Zine (2023)

Kadan
(This is an 18+ work, please DNI if under 18. This work is a love letter to Dragon Age: Inquisition's NPC, The Iron Bull. The original format is a zine, so each stanza is its own page. Check out the photos for the cover art, made by yours truly.)

How sweet of them 
to let me taste 
perfection at the 
convergence of 
their powerful 
thighs.

To allow me the 
honor of hearing 
them sing my 
praises with a 
vice grip on my 
horns.

The trust they 
have in me to 
finally let go.
Unburdened,
Unashamed.

What an honor it
is to be a part of
something so
primal,

So human.

They're the reason 
I wonder if I'm 
even a monster at
all.


-  -  -  

If you want a physical copy of any of my zines, they're available for purchase! Email me at radiostationpet@gmail.com with the subject line "Zine Inquiry" and I'll be happy to send you as many as you'd like. 

{**18+ content**} Attraction Zine (2023)

Attraction
(This is an 18+ work, please DNI if under 18. The original format is a zine, so each stanza is its own page. Check out the photos for the cover art, made by yours truly.)
They talk about
chisled jawlines
and shapely
thighs the way
retired dad's talk
about horsepower
and torque.

While I can
appreciate a hot
rod when one
presents itself,
I'm not looking
for a pretty
paint job.

Do their fingers
curve around their
glass or cigarette
the same way
they'd curl over
my body?

Is the diameter of
their grip similar
to that of my
tightest necklace?

Would I like to 
look up at them
from my knees,
soaking up praises
reserved for me 
and God, if she's
listening?

Does their smile
look like it would
tear into me just
as quickly as it
would moan my 
name?

-   -   -

If you want a physical copy of any of my zines, they're available for purchase! Email me at radiostationpet@gmail.com with the subject line "Zine Inquiry" and I'll be happy to send you as many as you'd like. 

Recipe For Your First Daughter (2023)

Recipe for Your First Daughter
(Best served in quiet contemplation of who she could have been, with a mix of Pride and Guilt)

Start with a firstborn daughter, layer in expectations of being the smart one, the successful one, with good grades and better manners, the only remark on her report card being “she’s brilliant, but she talks too much”

Chop off the rebellious roots, the untamed dreams, but keep the safe, stable life choices in case anyone ever needs to lean on her

Boil away any sense of individual; her life will always be in response to someone else’s needs before her own

Incorporate siblings into children she didn’t have or ask to be responsible for, but do it anyway because someone has to and why not her

Simmer over years of pretending everything is fine until it boils over in the middle of an argument, in the Kwik Trip parking lot, or a staff meeting, never where it needs to and always at the worst time

Garnish with an anxiety disorder disguised as “compassion” and “empathy”

Serve cold-hearted and years too late, on Gramma’s worn-out potholders, with her same worn-out smile.

-   -   -

Published originally in Portage Lit Mag's 2023 issue. The original version can be found here: https://portagemagazine.org/recipe-for-your-first-daughter/

Release Your Inner Femmonster (2023)

RELEASE YOUR INNER FEMMONSTER
I want to be feminine in the way that
The Sphinx is feminine
Or Baphomet, or Dionysus.
Dangerously Feminine.
Threateningly Feminine.
The kind of feminine that breaks norms
And ignores outdated opinions of what a
Body should look like or shroud themselves in.

I want to the the type of feminine that people
Tell tales about to scare little kids away from
Hot Topic and Tumblr.
"Beware the ones with the wild-colored hair
They come at night, trapping you in their 
Fishnets and stabbing you with eyeliner
Sharper than any sword."

I want to be the type of feminine that grinds all those
"Cover up" comments into the powder of their foundation.

I want to be feminine like fish scales and horse tails
Like chalcedony and lemon cakes
Like chopping wood in Demonias.

I want to be so terrifyingly feminine that no one
Ever touches me without permission again.
That my very visage is a warning,
like a poison dart frog or
Mountain Dew.

Feminine like the local cryptid,
Indescribably alluring,
A whisper in the trees calling you closer
A shiny coin at the bottom of a mountain stream.
Feminine like broken stained glass at the foot of an altar.
Feminine like a proclamation of war.

I want femininity to be a choice
Not a default setting to be assigned.
A standard of being that demands respect.
That takes up space.
That refuses to kneecap its sentences just to
Make room for others’ egos.

Whoever decided liking sparkles and pink and
expressing emotions meant I can’t
Fend for myself,
I just want to talk.
Never mind the fishnets and eyeliner,
I just want to show you
What I mean when I say
Femme fatale.

-   -   -

Published originally in Portage Lit Mag's 2023 issue. The original version can be found here: https://portagemagazine.org/release-your-inner-femmonster/

Great Expectations (2023)

Great Expectations
You’re like bubblegum stuck in my hair
I think I’ve got every trace of
You removed but there are
Days where I find more
Stuck deep in the roots or
Little bits at the edges.


I finally cut you out but now
I’m left with a jagged pixie
Cut that doesn’t suit me at all.

I shave my head, desperate to
Remove every piece of you.
Now I look in the mirror and
I’m reminded of you regardless.
How luscious I was before you
How barren I feel after.

You didn’t break my heart,
I did it for you.

You’re moving on.
I’m not your concern.
I never was.

You can continue searching that
Bottomless ocean you call a heart
For the meaning of existence without
Me to weigh you down, keep you
Grounded for fear you’ll forget to
Breathe.

You can fly as close to the sun as you want
Without me warning you of
Dripping wax.
You can burn out to your
Heart’s content.
I only ever stifled you, anyway.

Even when it’s easier to forget I exist,
I hope you remember Hay Creek.

I hope you remember the makeshift canopy fort
Silk sheets and woven wool,
White wine and gummi worm charcuterie,
Sandalwood and lavender.

I hope you remember the squishy,
Broken bits we took out of hiding and
Handled like museum quality relics
Only to shove them back in a dusty box
Left for the next moment of
Performative vulnerability.

I hope you remember the
Bargain jeans and sticker bins
Painted pottery and
Deli sandwiches in a snowy cemetery.

I hope you remember me trying to love you
Even when if felt impossible without
Divine intervention
Or an alternate universe.

I hope you find a love that fits you
Like glass shards in a mosaic
Completing the picture I wish I was a part of.

-   -   -

Published originally in Portage Lit Mag's 2023 issue. The original publication can be found here: https://portagemagazine.org/great-expectations/

Frogs (2023)

Frogs
When I was little
Before my sister was born
Before I knew much of anything about pain and suffering
My grandfather convinced me that hail was
Little white frogs
Jumping around in the grass
Never mind where they fell from,
Look how they hop when they hit the ground!
His name was Kermit,
I trusted he knew all things about frogs
The big green ones that lived in the koi pond
And scattered when I tried to catch them in my net
Or little white ones that fell from the sky
And disappeared in the afternoon sun.

I'm much older now
I know much more about pain and suffering
I've read his memoir
Learned about the miracles,
The fishhook in the eye,
The shrapnel missing his exposed body
Killing his friends through an eye slit in the bunker wall.
No one in his family lived to be 46,
but this little, stubborn old man
Frail in body but strong in wit,
Nearly doubled that age,
Refusing to be a victim of fate time and again.

I heard it all again at that church in Poysippi
Listening to the pastor read the sermon
The little old man wrote
Because of course he planned his own funeral
Writing drafts up until he couldn't hold the pen
I can't help but wonder if the perfectionism and
procrastination combination
Is genetic
Like heart disease
Or a dry sense of humor.

I find myself looking out the window
With my little sister
Telling her about the little white frogs
Look how they hop when they hit the ground!
I can't help but see that little old man
Smiling back through my reflection on the glass
And I wonder if he felt these moments
Were worth all that pain and suffering.

-   -   -   
Published originally in Portage Lit Mag's 2022 issue. The original can be found here: https://portagemagazine.org/frogs/

Home (2021)

Home
Where I’m from 
For some folks 
Is apple pie and Jesus. 
A comfortable, 
Unchallenged existence 
Filled with Bud Light, 
Cornfields, 
And dirty looks at people with colored hair 
And piercings. 
 
Home to them is avoidant. 
All scripture but no heart, 
All hate and no depth. 
 
Home to them is a place I am ashamed to be associated with. 
Me, 
With my Paganism 
And love for girls 
And boys 
And everyone in between. 
Me,  
With my “voice” 
And “opinions” 
And resistance to complacency. 
 
Home to me is boiled bones  
And tanned hides, 
Open hearts and mixed drinks. 
It’s a love that’s not conditional on  
How I spend my Sundays 
Or who I spend them with.

 
Home is all the folks 
Who don’t see their own validity 
Who pretend to be something they’re not 
Out of necessity. 
 
Home is knowing I can’t change where I come from, 
But I can change who comes from it. 
I can be the home they never got, 
Open my door to those who can’t ever go back 
Welcome them with a smile, 
A cup of tea, 
And a hug that breathes,  
 
You are allowed to exist.

-   -   -

Published originally in Portage Lit Mag's 2021 issue. The original can be found here: https://portagemagazine.org/home-4/

On Adulthood (2021)

On Adulthood
When I was 7, I thought that adulthood would be ice
cream for dinner whenever I wanted and I could read
Books all night long without being told when to turn out the light.

When I was sixteen, I thought adulthood would be living
on my own with no one to tell me I wouldn’t make it in
“the real world”.
When I was eighteen, I thought adulthood
would be selling my body to the capitalist machine and
yelling at the people I said I loved.

At twenty-three, I think adulthood is finding moments to play
farming simulator games and cuddle with my giant stuffed
duck, Chuck while eating too much cheese and ignoring
Mount Laundry on the horizon.

I think adulthood is trying to chase the high of a scholastic
bookfair. It’s trying to find that hunger for knowledge that
kept me up all night reading series after series of books.

It’s wondering why, no matter how many bubble baths I take
or times I try and fail to meditate, I can’t seem to take care of
myself long enough to remember what it is I’m working towards.
It’s wondering why I need to work towards anything in the first place. 

Adulthood is buying Funko Pops and art prints
to decorate my house that I hardly spend time in because I’m too
busy having to make money to afford my house. It’s surrounding
myself with color, sweetness, and cute creatures that remind me
there are still people out there who believe in expression, who said
fuck you to the notion that productivity is equal to validity.

It’s remembering that life happens in between obligations. It’s the
Sunday morning sunrise over Lake Winnebago that stings my
third shift eyes but feels like cotton candy on my skin.

It’s driving around the block one more time so I can listen to the
end of “Day Dreaming” because Aretha understands love is
a vulnerability but it feels so fucking nice to put the shield down.

It’s letting myself believe this sheep-haired man with
the halo irises really means it when he says he loves me. It’s
learning how to live without thinking every good thing is
actually some massive iceberg of shit under the surface.

It’s letting myself live without having to rationalize why I deserve to.

-   -   -   

Stretched -Extended Edition (2021)

Stretched
The women in my family are all thin
No, not in the physical meaning
(yes, I see you looking at my curves and double chin)
I mean that they stretch themselves like taffy
Until they're spider web thin
Desperate to wrap arms around those in pain
Desperate to cover the scrapes and bruises
Desperate to wipe away every child and partner's tears
Desperate to take away the hurt
Until there's no more left in the household
Besides her own.
We dislocate joints and break ribs
To transform ourselves into whatever tool those we love need
Saving our own tears for the moments alone
Crying into a pint of frozen custard or a glass of wine
Like a lifeline.
A bandaid on a crack in our foundations.

My mother is a fixer. She pours love and understanding over disagreements like thick, 
viscous, cough syrup, suppressing the "you don't understand"'s and the "fuck you"'s until all 
that's left is long sips of the next cocktail and a feeling that you're right even though no 
one actually said so.

I thought this was a magical skill. Even as a little kid no higher than the kitchen counter, I
remember peeking around the corner into the kitchen, listening to Dad to that growling
whisper he has when he's mad but doesn't want me to hear (I always heard). Her voice,
always a calm river, never a jagged, raised mountain of misplaced feelings like Dad's,
washes over him, putting out the embers before a fire can start.
She never said it in words, but I learned that fire was bad. Yelling was bad. Disagreements
were worse than holes punched in the walls because holes in walls can be fixed, emotional
bruises cannot.
It took a divorce, rehab, and one moment of anger with me to show me how cleansing that
fire, that difficult conversation can be.
I sit here now, wishing to feel her voice wash over me like a warm bath; wishing that she
could wrap her arms around me and take the pain I feel inside away.
If only for a moment.
I find myself longing for a love I know is deep
Not like an endless well
Deep like a root canal
Not painful for the dentist who needs the paycheck
Painful for the patient
Rakes groves into the armrests
While declining the novocaine until they pass out
Not wanting to burden the assistant with the process.
I long for a love that I need
But now can never ask for
Knowing the price she pays to give it
Knowing I am the next in line at the dentist
Knowing I am just as thin.

-   -   -

Posted originally in the 2021 issue of Portage Lit Mag. The original version can be found here: https://portagemagazine.org/stretched/