Writing When I Should Be On A Diet
Carrie Chang
On a blue Izod pillow,
I will lurch for time, abetting
Ghosts and dreaming
Of the men I will meet
In the metro station selling
Lemons and limes—some quixby
In their step, putting on airs of the motherland,
In chipper chinglish, they will take my hand,
And dance in union, say, “Ain’t it grand?”
The ice cream dissolved in my stomach
Like an if and &, pistachio and custard
Now boulevard bitch, on these days,
I will find my niche, sampling
Boogie-man donuts
From the slim-woman shelf,
My elbows anointed with a viennese
Snail parfum that sings for roses,
On the bed, my teddy-pig
Will be doing poses, some thing
To be doing the Lotus on a sanguinary
Day, when outlaws have their vision,
And life a ragamuffin’s cliché,
The petals of the flower scour,
Like fatal bits of heavy metal,
Oh me oh my
Carrie Chang is the self-published author of Two Shades of Regret, Laundromat, If Gretel Were Chinese, and Fairytale Origami. She resides in the Bay Area, enjoys the taste of ornamental jellyfish and dragon cider, and is the editor of this fine journal, which is in its fifth year.