INITIATION 

your genitals deserve something gentle. 
first a name that doesn't sound like a punchline.  
names are everything, one misstep  

& you're in another country.  

there's something new in new england: the slips  
in the cobblestone streets, those grooves. i love  
the border of things. here is where it becomes 
there. i'm ending. this is my natural limit.  

you peak like a mountain.  

nature is such a tease, such a star. look, up,  
the moon would like to spin in your orbit. 

when did you get so good at gravity?  
what would your hand like to show my hand? 

have you ever really known a woman? not a flower  
or an ocean. i mean, the flesh. not a mother, not a 
girl. ever touched the tip of an iceberg?  sorry, not an 
iceberg. ever listened to a plaintive cry?  

the plaintiff of my heart would like  
to say a few words about the color marigold,  
to spread over the rug in your basement. 

don't you keep the best things in the worst places?  

worst is another word for evil.  
evil is a secret code for live.  

i'm living on you. you make me  
come alive. you make me arrive. i'm here.  

this space is waiting for you to follow me: sweet 
alice, down the rabbit hole, into the forest of 
weird & wonderful.  

will you move those still-tender
legs? will you let me bring you  
to the ground? 

TIME OF ARRIVAL  

you are going to die. probably not today, so 
you might as well come to terms with 
the body you are. if you could change it, 

you would change it out of yesterday's 
dirty underwear. remember, someone 
wanted to buy you underwear,  

someone wanted to peel it off with her mouth. 

if that was hot to you then, it was hot  
because her mouth was hot. do you 

only feel sexy imagining the eye of a camera? 

she could've called you tiger. really, you are
a pussy. when it comes to love, you might as well 
be dead. when it comes to sex, you might as well 
welcome them in. this is your secret club: 

here are the people who know you, can  
recognize your bartholin gland by touch. if it only
swells when you are too indulgent,  

maybe you should want less. 

you'd think a woman would know what to do 
with you. you would've lived better  

with a ghost, a man haunting through your phone.
he really did eat you. in some world, that's how you die. 

in this one, you're coming to life, and as this body, 
yours, floods, blooms, echoes in scene, you think  

stranger things 

like the stranger girl everyone saw you to be,
the one you are finally allowing lungs to breathe. 

now with the white hair, now with the corned foot,
now with the aching hips. lord, those child hips,

how you knocked into everything. you could knock
on the door of someone's heart with all that,  

and when they come to answer, that someone, 
waiting, pining, life opening, you can't
believe in the power of your body: 

even its shadow, everything it is, everything  
it almost touches, everything that disappears 
when you die, probably not today, everything 

everyone, yes you too, will miss.

Yena Sharma Purmasir is a poet and essayist from New York City. She is the author of Until I Learned What It Meant (Where Are You Press, 2013), When I’m Not There (self-published, 2016), OUR SYNONYMS: An Epic (Party Trick Press, 2022), and VIRAHA (Game Over Books, 2022). As the former Queens Teen Poet Laureate (2010-2011) and a lifelong New York snob, Yena now ironically and happily lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.