Omkarasana
You know who are secretly the biggest
assholes?
Yoga Teachers.
Adverts full of pretty people bending
blithely
on teak docks jutting, calm, into Bali
sunsets.
Then I’m ‘unspiritual’ for complaining about
not mastering the humble flamingo on the
thousand-buck (mosquito bites gratis)
intensive
‘retreat' on a suburban tarp-walled
concrete slab?
The bemused man listening from the tatami
is luckily not a maligned yogi, but a
bicycle theft victim. He searched every
back lane,
sketchy corner shop, then the whole police
impound.
They let him scour CCTV footage for
four hours until he saw that French dude
with a
Kundalini studio cut the lock. Before
he could decide how to confront the yoga
bro,
A cop tipped off the French guy’s wife,
who called in a
favour, sending a thug to tatami man’s
door
with his bike and a threat: don’t press
charges or you’ll
be doing omkarasana in the river.
To my Grandfathers
The Gascon
Setting me on your tweed-suited knee
“call me grand-père”
You fulfil a fantasy of patriarchy,
Posing, feeding your koi, walking your
elkhound, spotting dolphins, as though
you care
Longer than the camera flash.
Coming out as gay,
I read your smiles as tolerance
Unusual in your day;
Now I recognize your indifference.
The Caitiff
Swivelling in your tall desk chair
“Leave it; don’t gawk”
You direct as a dare
To look at the model rockets, framed
diplomas, vague plaques, pens in cases,
under lock
Trappings of a career, over.
The only grandchild to learn your mother
tongue,
I still wasn’t worth talking to,
While had I known what you had done,
Neither would I have talked to you.
Flightpath of a Cicada
Humidity
Remember laughing over umlauts:
it’s schwül; we’re schwul?
means
even Taipei nights are hot
For
now
I
shouldn’t tease you,
unable to open enough for ü to echo under your collarbone
past
midnight,
you
didn’t mind me laying my fingers around your throat
pressing against your windpipe where to feel each vowel
we
will ignore
walking
our new dog,
I
feel you swallow.
addicted
to cicadas.
the
warships
Flying
squirrels, civet cats, even pangolins live here
While
we brainstorm collective nouns
but
frog-song fills the dark neighborhood
—an
argument, caterwaul, fracas, fray of frogs—
and
fighter jets
between
the river, beautiful for swimming if not for water-ghosts
She
cocks her head for the rattling chirp
and
hills scaled with brightly tiled and mirrored spirit homes
from
the bully
that
gives no warning before careening in
we
woke early to hike through,
a
wobbling dive at our heads,
across
the Straight
daring
our bodies not to perform the miracle of turning sunlight to sweat
you
shriek, uncharacteristically vulnerable, pull me into you.
luxuriate
in being.
drenched.
L.
Acadia is a lit professor at National Taiwan University, a dog pillow at home,
and otherwise searching Taipei for urban hikes and ghosts. L. has a PhD from
Berkeley, received fellowships including Fulbright and Marie Curie, and has
writing published or forthcoming in Autostraddle, Common Knowledge, Immanent
Frame, Neologism Poetry Journal, The Dodge, The Oxford Left Review, Typehouse
Literary Magazine, etc. Twitter: @acadialogue
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