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Two Poems from “open pit”

These poems are from Villarán’s forthcoming collection open pit.

 

he likes to stare at walls

you were born in davis

in a small inflatable pool

in april

 

during those first weeks, you would often wake up crying

in the middle of the night. without really knowing how

i would pick you up from the crib and hold you tight against

my chest, until you calmed down, and fell asleep again

 

i liked staying like this for a while

staring at the darkness

that would become the wall

 

the world is waiting in line / at target

imagine us in the car a sunny day the windows down

 

driving to the beach 88.3 driving and all those cars next to us driving

always in movement the highway is always full because the more

lanes we build the more cars are attracted to the smell of concrete

and white arrows painted over seemingly endless black surfaces:

 

the original infrastructure of future battlefields

 

imagine thousands of small highways running inside of you

 

all those cars driving somewhere taking something someone like us

perhaps to the beach with your mother so we would have the cooler

and the tent the umbrellas and the surfboards imagine all those cars

going somewhere taking something driving someone imagine all that

movement all that continuous movement the displacement dislocation

bodies inside metal vehicles on black surfaces running

 

imagine thousands of small really really small

 

a huge conveyor belt a network of swollen arteries imagine an open pit

an open wound the skin rupturing imagine your leg imagine your arm

 

imagine my leg imagine my arm

 

a big bag of tendons and ligaments necrotic tissue a bundle of nerve

tissue imagine bags of plastic inside your stomach lining your

intestines and climbing up your esophagus through the larynx

the lack of oxygen

 

imagine these huge pond type structures with plastic geothermal

liners stretching across the mountains dissecting the mountains

becoming the new mountain the only landscape leaching ponds laid

out in endless geometrical patterns

 

imagine every single muscle every fiber every synapse every neuron

needed for you to type with your right index finger:

n. n. n.
the letter n

 

imagine thousands of small highways pulsating inside of you

 

imagine it never stopping

 

thousands of small highways and the cars and the people and the things

and the places they want to take those things to because that’s what we

do we go places with things and we use metal vehicles that travel on

seemingly endless black surfaces just imagine all of this happening all

the time all the time happening all the time always

 

this highway

 

 there’s no outside

 

this open pit

 

this wound this rupture this crevice inside body this highway all the time

always

 

what i’m trying to say miqel is:

 

just imagine thousands of small highways always running inside of you

 

imagine everything that’s needed for this to happen

 

all the time

 

always

 

now imagine an open pit a large open pit in the middle of a valley

surrounded by fractured mountains

 

i think that’s how it works

 

we have that pit

 

we keep running: faster faster faster

 

birds die and their stomachs are filled with plastic

 

whales die and their stomachs are filled with plastic

 

the united states economy gets a billion-dollar daily shot in its arm

 

imagine your arm

 

i’m thinking of mine

 

we have that pit

 

and we fill it with these things

 

we keep running faster always faster

 

now imagine us at the beach, imagine it being sunny again but not

too hot, imagine the sky punctuated by a few curious clouds, your

mother would be smiling, she’s beautiful when she smiles

 

it’s still happening

 

i don’t know what it is

 

i’m not sure what to do about it either

 

but i know it’s happening, all the time, always, relentless

 

we have that pit, it’s open, really open

 

and things are exploding and people are breaking and burning and dying

 

and we’re distracted

 

because we love the sand

the salt in the water

the cool air

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Jose Antonio Villarán

Jose Antonio Villarán is the author of la distancia es siempre la misma (Matalamanga, 2006) and el cerrajero / the locksmith (Album del Universo Bakterial, 2012). In 2008 he created the AMLT project (http://amlt-elcomienzo.blogspot.com), an exploration of hypertext literature and collective authorship; the project was sponsored by Puma from 2011-2014. In 2018 he published an English translation of Omar Pimienta's Album of Fences (Cardboard House Press). His third book, titled open pit, is forthcoming from AUB in 2019. His work has appeared in MAKE, Tripwire, Jupiter 88, Entropy, Hostos Review, and elsewhere. He holds an MFA in Writing from the University of California-San Diego and is currently a PhD candidate in Literature at the University of California-Santa Cruz.