Loving You, Praxes for
1. CORPOREALITY
Your thick black hair
is so abject, so tangled,
in bobby pins & hair ties.
You are as precious as
a rice seedling. In your
marrow, are hungry
children who eat boiled
banana. You, on this
train, have a chance
to unweave your tangles.
2. EPISTEMOLOGY
You are as precious
as a rice seedling—
you know (the pain)
of intimacy: stone, vein,
ephemeral. You, on this
train, have a chance to
unweave your tangles.
Your legs ache just
before sleep. It feels,
you say, like dying.
3. ONTOLOGY
You know (the pain) of
intimacy: stone, vein,
ephemeral. You wait for
visions, for the right train
in the wrong station. Your
legs ache. Just before sleep.
It feels, you say, like
dying. My memory,
you say, is what fucks
me up…I remember: Things.
4. CARTOGRAPHY
You wait for visions. For the
right train in the wrong station.
There are tenement fires in your
blood, your bones wet of Manila.
My memory, you say, is what
fucks me up…I remember:
Things. There are women & lolas
locked in your joints for refusing.
5. HISTORIOGRAPHY
There are tenement fires. In your blood.
Your bones wet. Of Manila. You are
the historical moment in which
dandelions hum flame. There are
women. & lolas. Locked. In your
joints. For refusing. Has the wind
from the Pacific rustled through
your leaves? Have I given?
6. ETHNOGRAPHY
You are the historical moment
in which dandelions hum.
Flame. In. Your. Marrow are. Hungry
children. Who eat boiled banana.
Has the wind from the Pacific rustled
through your leaves? Have I? Given.
Your thick. Black hair. So abject.
So tangled. In bobby pins & hair ties.
NOTES
This poem samples & reconfigures lines from the following: Mila D. Aguilar, “A Comrade is as Precious as a Rice Seedling” and “The Peoples’ Poem,” in A Comrade is as Precious as a Rice Seedling (New York: Kitchen Table Press, 1985), 38, 11; Chrystos, “I Walk in the History of My People,” in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color, ed. Gloria Anzaldúa and Cherríe Moraga (New York: Kitchen Table/Women of Color Press, 1984), 60; Audre Lorde, “Women on Trains,” in The Marvelous Arithmetics of Distance: Poems 1987-1992 (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1994), 31-33; Audre Lorde, “Stations,” in Collected Poems of Audre Lorde (W.W. Norton & Company, 2000), 367-368.
Jason Magabo Perez is a writer and performer based in San Diego, California. Perez’s writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Witness, TAYO, Mission at Tenth, and Vitriol. Perez wrote and performed in You Will Gonna Go Crazy (2011), a semiautobiographical play-in-progress about the intimacies and traumas of racialized state violence, which was first commissioned by Kularts SF and funded by an NEA Challenge America Grant. Perez has performed at the National Asian American Theater Festival, the International Conference of the Philippines, and at venues such as the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts and the La Jolla Playhouse. An alumnus of the VONA/Voices Summer Workshop for Writers of Color, Perez received his MFA in Writing & Consciousness from the now defunct New College of California and is currently a dual PhD candidate in Ethnic Studies and Communication at UC San Diego where he is exploring Filipina/o American history and state violence through performance and experimental documentary filmmaking. For updates on projects, publications, and performances, please visit: www.jasonmagaboperez.com.
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