Going Feral
NaPoWriMo Day 26: an ars poetica for the polysystemic, the multilingual, the unruly — and the cat who edits the drafts.
Day Twenty-Six of NaPoWriMo — and a small thing worth noting in the margin: yesterday’s Metà Phérein earned the featured spot for today.
Today’s prompt asks for an ars poetica. What keeps you writing. What you think poetry does, or refuses to do.
Mine goes feral.
ars feralis (the art of going feral) I write in the language I choose. Today: English — all jaw and speed, monosyllable and punch, the way it fits my thinking like a good coat in cold air. German surfaces mid-sentence when something wants holding English drops. Geborgen. That state of shelter where you remain entirely yourself. Tomorrow, maybe, Spanish, French, Italian — whatever the coastline speaks. I carry all of them mine. I choose both and neither and the feral place between, where neither grammar holds and something older breathes. *** A poem, they said, makes a moment permanent. I say: a poem makes the moment permeable. Lets the next thing through. A poem, they said, earns its ending. I say: a poem knows when to stop pretending it owns one. *** I write from a canyon. The canyon holds every layer — old red stone, new green lichen, the side-canyon the map forgot, the shadow moving whether or not the sun agrees. Subscending: going down and through, touching the old water, letting it touch back. The view from the bottom shows you everything the peak hides. *** Ars poetica assumes a singular art. One speaker. One tradition. One beautiful object placed on the shelf of the culture. I carry incompatible dignities. The American who says I matter and means it alone. The German who says wir halten zusammen and means it collectively. The body belonging to neither, fully — refusing to dissolve into either. Polysystemisch. Inscribed by more than one hand. *** I write until the form opens from the inside. I let the line break where the breath breaks — sometimes mid-word, sometimes the white space carries more than I do. I write poems my cat approves of. He sits on the draft: the oldest editorial method. I write toward people who know the cost of staying legible in a language built for someone else. I write the way the Leine floods: slow accumulation, then the whole field, water, sudden. *** I answer to myself. I know my worth. It arrived with me. It stays. *** I want the poem to leave a mark the way a river leaves a mark — present in its absence, visible in what it changed.
As always, Thank you for reading and following.
xo Jay
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Hi love
“where you remain entirely yourself”
Perfect
Love that you are touching the old water
Perfect
💙
Hey Jay,
It’s as if I’ve been going through some sort of alphabetical regression recently, where thoughts cannot cohere themselves into words, but retain their letterality. This poem resonates with me, precisely as I’m in this state. Thank you for sharing.
Best,
Mahdi