“This is the light of the mind, cold and planetary.”
—Sylvia Plath, “The Moon and the Yew Tree”
White Light
Who decides what’s wrong and what’s right?
So many people suffered to perfect this drug.
Before the irises bloomed,
there were lilies. A warm frost covers
everything snug. Moss and stones—all
their insides grown green. I watch a nurse
refill her gaping white jug. There’s a field of snow
and a field of sun. Do you want the frost
or the hug? Take the white light in,
and you can let everything go.
Pink Light
When you see pink, do you think Barbie or
Cancer? We’ve been trained to rewire our thoughts.
I use pink light when I want to look pretty,
pink noise when I tune everything out.
The spine of this book is so broken. I’ve read
the pages ten times too much. I refuse to use
the word many. In poetry, none of the rules
really count. Break the strongest and the weakest
start fighting. See? The carnations drank
the roses to drought.
Red Light
In the middle of France, there’s a desert.
It’s not real, but there’s sand in your head.
Now imagine the most pain you could possibly
feel. What color is it: is it blood or is it rust red?
Maybe you can’t smell it but trust me. Black blood
billows from the mouths of the dead. Before you
pass out, take the lake to the tea tree. Now wrap
your sad self around its sweet head. Good things
aren’t meant to be alone, darling. No matter how much
you seek silence, the elegy you wrote must be read.
Orange Light
The horses in the stables eat oranges—
intact with their skins still on. No one
has brought them to slaughter. Glue works
best when everything moves on. When you
see orange, do you think fruit or hunter?
We’ve been trained to rewire our thoughts.
I think the youth like me more than
the gatekeepers. I throw my ream in the ring
like a whore. Who wants a piece of my pages?
Turn your hazard lights on and burn orange.
Yellow Light
Before you die, you first see a taxi.
I know this because a car almost took my life.
It was icy and I was driving. It doesn’t take much
to careen off a knife. I thought I saw a lily,
but it was linen. A light yellow that matched
her short dress. I remember when she said she couldn’t
love me. The lemon matches flamed out in duress.
The sewers in Paris are so old you smell them
all summer. When you’re in love, you block
so much shit out.
Green Light
On Christmas, no one can really go home.
Home is a place that exists in the past.
Do you remember yourself at your happiest?
Some of the best memories smell like winter-whipped
pine. Some others smell like summer-drunk grass.
If you bundle up a room full of presents,
you’ll still crave the edgy emptiness of your last fast.
Holidays are hooks of grieving green and greed
and yet nativities naively narrate each new year
as somehow different from the last.
Blue Light
In Québec, I got lost on the blue line.
I spoke French, but couldn’t understand what
they said. When the train moved faster, I
balled small as a bullet. When it stopped,
it was as if I were dead. I carried my ghost
groceries through the blizzard, without my
mittens or my hat. I spent the next two days
defrosting my pear-shaped plum-bruised hands.
There is no light when the blue leaves
your body. Everything turns a swollen blue-red.
Indigo Light
Look at the rain through the castle.
Nothing is stranger than air. Here we go again
drinking rose water. I shut the door,
but the light filters there. The light on the wheel
is a centipede. The spokes are the strands of its
hair. The lake holds the secrets of summer.
Two girls named Indigo once drowned on a dare.
Their dull skulls scrape my tongue
like rock candy. I taste their names
like blue violets on air.
Violet Light
Once, a lady read my aura. I thought
she’d say it was blue, but I was misled. She said:
You are a sea of violets, an amethyst
of chrysanthemums, an angel in the bluest of red.
I didn’t believe her and went Ouija. Starting
seeing a dark spirit instead. When all the good
spirits have vanished, you too will be fooled
by the dead. Please don’t look straight at them.
Look at the clear lake instead. The moon some nights
shines violet, and that’s when it swallows your head.
Black Light
There’s a cathedral at the end of this
chapter. I don’t make the rules, but no one
can go. Once, when I was delirious, I saw
the devil. Her red horns and wings
were dusted in snow. Hell isn’t as hot
as they say it is. Nothing is true,
we know. There’s a field of poppies
and a field of roses. Do you want the high
or the thorns? Take the black light in,
and you can’t let anything go.
Note: “White Light” and “Black Light” were first published in Bad Lilies.