beauty of west texas
sunsets, like creamsicles reaching their pinnacle, their final
evolution. beauty of every
dissertation title my friends invented every unfabulous
last week of a term. unbeauty of grading finals
while over-yet-still-under-caffeinated & clacking out
our own. beauty of queer texas
tech students forming a queer reading group.
beauty of a dry heat & everyone remarking but at least
it’s a dry heat. beautiful
wind through trees whose beautiful names it took a year
to learn. bur oak, western soapberry, desert willow. hello,
beauties. undeniable beauty of
“of zombies & zest:
a queer poetics of the walking dead’s steven yeun.” undead
beauty of lubbock alleyways & their raccoons. beauty of those dauntless
dumpster divers. beauty of not
caring if the soul exists, so long as the heat of his inner thighs
does. beauty of caring
so much i handwrite a half-dozen cavafy poems i love,
while ignoring two paper deadlines. beauty
of him, & of he who licks
the sweat from my inner thigh. beauty of my ugly
handwriting. beauty of mitski, tweeting about caring
so much, saying, fuck effortlessness. fuck that. try
really hard and let everyone
see. beauty of writing poems
that former poetry teachers would not approve of—for example,
this one, which surely would anger the teacher
who said, you overuse the word “beautiful”
& the teacher who said, never use the word “soul.”
beautiful beauty of the dry
soul of midday lubbock
beautifully, lubbockly unlocking every window.
beautiful anger
of a queer organizer, in the comment section of a poem
online, one of my lubbock poems. the organizer’s beautiful
critique of my complaint
over how small lubbock pride was. her you don’t know
how underfunded, understaffed we are. the beautiful back & forth
we were. beautiful,
to learn about her work, for her to learn about
my loneliness. beauty of our lonelinesses
talking. west texas beauty that some days hurt me into seeing
how much i missed my seasons,
my trees.
but beauty, the oddly
large dollhouse exhibit inside the massive windmill
museum. the beautiful fact that it is home
to more than 160 windmills. the beautiful, powerful wind
that made my beautiful, powerful bangs so unhappy.
exhausting beauty of trying to live
queer & asian, among so few of either, & were there ever
any of both?
yes, there was
one, a poet, who visited for a day. one gorgeously beautiful day,
beautiful regie cabico
on a texas tech stage, performing his poems. regie,
who had been invited by matthew, beautiful
lead organizer of the queer reading group, who another beautiful day,
invited me to a gathering around
my book. beauty of the invitation, beautifully crowded
discussion table. the red & black, unmistakably ttu conference room
queered by beautiful readers,
writers, beautified by queer makers
of t-shirts with lines from my poems, other poems, many.
queer beauty, glory of the group’s questions,
our conversation—enthusiasms fabulousing the room.
& my handsomely beautiful pleasure-honor to say
how queer, isn’t it, our living
here. how queer, west texas, thanks to us. how unfinal, our
unfurlings across the plains, our lines of pain, stanzas of standing
up. & then, on the t-shirt table, one beautiful,
beautiful, beautiful, beautiful
shirt, its pinkly
powerful shine—& the students saying, go on!
all yours! & i
sleep in it, now, back among the bursts of green, the long
new england grays i know so well. i fall
beautifully asleep in this shirt, nights when i miss their words,
that wind.