poems by rachel kellum

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2021 2021

Roommates

Hildegard is seventeen, or maybe six-.
She helped me raise three kids,
watched men come and go, hissed
either way: hello, good riddance.
Like true roommates, we don’t kiss
or cuddle. Sadly, I’m slightly allergic
so only scratch her ears and chin, 
tolerate her needled love nips,
wash before I touch my eyes and itch,
periodically brush her coat, let her in
and out to prowl night’s holey pockets
and ward off that other cat who likes to piss
on our threshold. Little bitch. Hilde
knows I love her: I scoop her shit,
meow back when she wants to chit
chat, don’t scold when I step in her vomit.
Like me, she’s gotten fat, likes to sit
upright like old Hotei and slowly lick
her round belly. It swings when she skits
across the floor, and her eyes, sky slits,
are fading strangely: ghostly, distant.
Perhaps she’s going blind, but not decrepit,
not yet. Last week, before a 5 day trip,
she went missing getting her night fix.
I meowed from the porch, across the mint,
and she returned the call from her pit
beneath the porch, behind the lattice.
Her eyes burned yellow, that spectral glint
of flashlight. Here, kitty, kitty. She wouldn’t. 
Under the steps, on sore knees, I flashlit 
my waggling finger tips, luring her with 
touch. That is all it took. She came, slid
against my sharp edges, her catnip.


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2021, Bönpo-ems 2021, Bönpo-ems

Hagstone

On the beach we all have a knack for something.
My son in law skips stones six leaps across a thinning surf.
My husband harbors inner heat despite the wind.
With ease I find black stones with holes clear through
where witches live, my daughter says, and laughs.
Her gifted ears are fine tuned to tumbling staffs
of waves crashing in multi-phonic whispers and roars.
Harmonics hum along this stretch of sand, lost on me.
My ever gulping pupils ignore my poor ears, grow 
lost in mirages of hands and feet burning in the campfire,
wood mimicking bone, an archeology of grain 
that striates everything, as though the whole
earth were breathing inside a set of giant, fractal ribs
spinning out the endless chests of gulls, men, fish,
metastasized hotels, pretty cages glowing along 
the coast like mammoth corpses or gum-receded teeth. 
Red logs remind me how many degrees my bones
will reach on the path to ash, ash my family may choose
to suspend in blown glass, spun globes to place on desks
as paperweights, or shelves as funerary art or shrines
beneath thangkas of Tapihritsa where I may serve
as a reminder, a gutted clock. Perched on a mirror base, 
plugged in, LED lit, five alternating colored lights 
shining through what’s left of me, a tiny spiral galaxy— 
starry crumbs of my body glowing in vitreous space 
like Tibetan thigles—to everyone’s surprise I will be 
not quite a comfort, not quite discomfiting. 

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2021 2021

Matroyshka Dolls

for my mother

So many memories I can’t access but know.
I still own the I Can Read books you read to me--
flyleaf scrawled with my name in child’s careful cursive,
saved to read a thousand times to my kids--
but not the viscera of your voice reading them.

It is a small tragedy. Cosmic irony.


I have passed my voice through books
in endless silly accents against the truth
my children will forget my voice too.

This perhaps is the great loneliness
of motherhood: to be the only one to remember
the dream of raising a child raising you
into invisible servitude, constant, busy solitude.
How hard you try to hide the struggle,
remember where you buried the bone
of yourself, avoid the fall into empty holes.

As a mother forgets her own mouth
on her mother’s breast, so do her children
forget the lullabies she sang, thousands of meals,
imaginative games, lessons on magical rocks,
nearly every reassuring caress, except the ones
bookmarked by chronic, irreparable loss.

Doll. House. Family. Father.

Mother, I don’t remember
every bedtime, but my heart recalls them all
as one grand, archetypal Tuck In, complete
with prayer. The reverence of your voice,
its cadence washing over, eroding worry,
rhyming with every helpless mother’s prayer.
I know that ancient language in my cells.

Everything else is fog. We forget
our deepest happiness like we forget air.


I don’t remember being an egg in your body.
Small, quiet moon tucked inside the tiny nest
of your fetal ovary. Together we floated,
little astronauts, two Russian dolls
stacked inside your mother’s body.
I can’t remember, but I know.

We’ve been together from the beginning.

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Instead of Children

Asleep I dream of clay and children

          and not enough time

to show them how to fully open the eyes

          of the hands, the fingers of the eyes.

Awake I dream of clay instead of children

          and not enough time

to fully perform my own concerto, lucid fingers

          bowing from silence

innate melodies of mud and fire into mugs

          that become children.

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2021 2021

deep end

slick and sharp 

as a new needle, as a girl

I forced myself 

to jump feet first

incremental courage

nine feet, sixteen, thirty-three

pinching my nose

eyes clenched closed

belly coiling velocity

life rushed up stories

to swallow my inches

how we must live

stitching sky and water

to earth, back up for air

stitching us all together

we who don’t belong

to each other, miles 

of unknotted thread

trailing behind every dive

releasing the seam years 

and years behind me

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2021 2021

Dog Psalms

1. God stares out the window for hours, surveying His domain. Everything smells of Him. He waits.

2. God wants to find a good, fresh bone on His walk, perhaps a tibia attached to a knee, still sour sweet. If he’s lucky, He can sneak it into the house before I close the door, curl up with it on His bed and chew Himself into a dream of a yipping chase in which He, exploding from His hiding place, lands His teeth exactly on a leg and wakes to find it so.

3. God is always begging to be scratched, to leave His musk upon my hands and through me touch the world.

4. God longs for a grungy god-couch upon which He can lie with me, kneading His silken ears, our hearts aligned, my morning breath and distant crotch thrilling His modest, omnipotent nose with my story of love and loss, and through my sorrow penetrate my soul. Perhaps you already know: God is an olfactory historian, a healer, a pleaser, a connoisseur of forgiveness.

5. God has brown eyes. I cradle His slim face. We take each other in, unblinking, oxytocin surging, mutual medicine.

6. Every evening, God begs me to walk with Him. When I emerge from the closet in my unwashed walking jeans, He smells what is in store. It sends Him into frenzy. He dances back and forth between me and my husband, a reluctant walker after a long day of work. Egging, wiggle-begging in ecstatic downward-god pose, He prances, tosses His head toward the door. Come on!

7. Tired as we are, we go with God.

with thanks to Rilke for the phrases explodes from his hiding place and the modesty to use sorrow in order to penetrate our soul

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2021, Bönpo-ems 2021, Bönpo-ems

Betelgeuse

All light is former mass
she heard a man say.
Deep in the shape
she has made
rests a glass lotus, no,
a bottle of colored sand
swept from a mandala,
no, a black hand.
In the palm is a wheel.
It spins her into sets
of five limbs: arms, legs,
head, each arrayed
with five ways to take
the world, take it in:
five fingers, five toes,
five monstrous senses:
eyes, ears, mouth,
nose, skin. Some
centrifuge pulls her
out from a center
like carnival taffy or light,
a star exploding slowly
in the shoulder of Orion.
Up close, she shines.
From far enough away
she’s already dead.


with thanks to Rilke for lines 3 and 4

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2021 2021

The Reverence of Dogs

Hank drops his humble offering
sat the feet of the household yard gods.
All winter, snow does what it does.
Generous, he lays down more. I do
what I do: ignore his poop till spring thaw.

St. Francis came crumbling with the garden
when we bought the house three years ago.
Face eroded, hips severed from legs, he leans
in crisp sedums against a post, blesses
the perfect pie of a rescued dog at his feet.

Gaia, kitschy relic of early motherhood,
green resin figurine gifted by a dying desert
midwife, perches sun-faded on a stump
in yarrow, smiles serenely over Earth belly
where there is still room for the turd in her lap.

Parinirvana Buddha’s resting head, small town
thrift store find, cracked, epoxied, spray painted
black,  idol I cannot let go nor forget, drifts
in the promise of daisies, eyes high on death,
sweet whiff of long-wintered dung, nearly dust.


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2021, Bönpo-ems 2021, Bönpo-ems

doing nothing

I am done mutely berating myself
for avoiding doing things

I told myself I’d do on my days off.
I won’t do them till I do, or must.

Sweep the floor when the feet say.
Suck skin off chai when eyes

take a break from the dog eared page.
Write words to frustrate my future mud,

roll out clay, curl a slab into a cup
only when the body, empty, erupts.

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2021 2021

Wonderland

Allison's witness doll
dancing masked
with an egg
with me
over a shallow grave
friends take turns in.
Heel to head
dirt mandorla:
I lie down
in a strange death
pasture, crack
toward sky, gravity
mixing grief, snow melt,
relief, eye water.
So many ways
to make mud.

(a combined response to Wonderland's Pandemic Philosophizing in conte crayon and her 2020 earth installation, Feral Nostalgia's Delicate Commonweath)

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