Emily Lee Luan

There are not enough hours in the day before I have to perform affection.

That's an objectively robotic thing to say, my therapist tells me, when I speak about my responses to sentimentality.

My weekly battle with the laser printer—a kind of intimacy, my pleading.

I don't want your flashing red light, I say, telling me you won't go.

I wear shoes I found on a sidewalk. That must mean something, my feet bathed in the ghost of someone else's feet.

When Cynthia, the taller and much-older cousin, looked under the deck and saw that the baby birds in the nest had their heads bitten off, I screamed until someone inevitably told me to stop.

I've always been this sensitive, hands clapped over my ears.

A pure emotion, like thread trickling from a spider, is rare and terrifying in its precision.

After the particularly stressful movie, I provoked a fight.

Or, should I say, the fight lived in me, and then it was rattled out of me by the screen performance of other griefs.

All emotion feels to me a kind of performance. I'm trying to unlearn that now.

At the cafe, my laptop screen kisses the screen of the laptop across from mine. Mwah. Though the other screen already has its partner.

The acupuncturist smoothing tiger balm on my shoulders every week. That could be enough to live for.

Who will love me when my WiFi code runs out?

I break my grandmother's $100 bill on squash and eggs. She touched that bill; I saved it as a greedy child; that money goes quickly from me now, as she went from me, as she's now gone.

I thought: that money is little to me now, and the thought rattled out a nest of bitten-off sadness.

I was in Chinatown when the building with the archives burned, but I didn't see the smoke. That's where those beautiful archives are, I'd said to my companion, and pointed freely.

from the journal AMERICAN POETRY REVIEW
READ ABOUT TODAY'S POEM
Share Share
Tweet Tweet
Forward Forward
Graphic representation of Poetry Daily's reaching its fundraising goal of 25 new monthly donors
Black-and-white headshot of Sylvia Plath
"Sylvia Plath Calls Out for Connection"

"I cling to reports of Plath reading 'Lady Lazarus' with the joy of a woman released. I read the poem as victorious in the sense that while Plath herself is not actually able to rise up out of the ash, her poems do. In a letter to his sister Olwyn in 1962, Hughes described Plath as a 'death-ray.' I suspect that what he was describing was not so much her as her ambition. Her drive. Her desire for a parallel career."

via LITHUB
READ ALL TODAY'S HEADLINES
Cover of the February 2022 issue of Poetry magazine, in which the English translation of Irma Pineda's poem appears
What Sparks Poetry:
Irma Pineda (Juchitán de Zaragoza, Oaxaca) on Ecopoetry Now 

"In my mother-tongue, Didxazá (Zapotec), there are two words for referring to nature. One word is nagá, which makes reference to greenery, that which grows and reproduces, like plants, trees, flowers, maize: because there will be food, there will also be life. The other word, which we use more frequently, is guendanabani, which you translate as the blessing of life and which makes reference as much to the human life as to everything that surrounds us."
READ THIS WEEK'S ISSUE
View in browser

You have received this email because you submitted your email address at www.poems.com
If you would like to unsubscribe please click here.

© 2022 Poetry Daily, Poetry Daily, MS 3E4, 4400 University Dr., Fairfax, VA 22030

Design by the Binding Agency