To look sexy in security footage, emulate
cave art; the painting with the disemboweled bison,
its hunter thin and lying on undefined earth.
We have named everything and it’s still not
better—every discovered fish, the range of human
emotion, each maneuver with a car. I stand
in the sun and discuss with friends the process
of aging, how we hover like fruit flies around
ourselves, searching for signs of decay.
When modeling for an introductory art class,
unfurling myself like a country, I wondered
for the first time if the painting was fantasy:
that perhaps there has always been fiction, the bison
running back to the herd unharmed, and the hunter
left in the near dark, curious about the planet
of pain and physicality. The students kept their eyes
low leaving class, and I pocketed the fifty
dollar bill, considering what I would break it on:
the reality of an object, its city of shadow and wells
of light. I thought of myself like a tunnel that guides
non-aquatic life through great bodies of water, functional
and empty, whose very being rests on the uncomfortable pinnacle
of disaster. There is life swirling around the barrier,
predating and, in the odd instance, being released.
