Cyborgs, Flowering
I didn’t expect
the hall of cyborgs to look like this—like portraits of me
hung in a long gallery
on the dating site—
I divided myself—
I cleaved her from me,
I collaged and arranged
my most flattering photographs,
different approaches to my face and body
that become her
flickering around and around
in the zoetrope of autobiography
(forget the time-lapses between each photograph
as the camera forgets the past lover who stood behind the shutter,
whose body always leaves
space for a new body to step into, and gaze);
I wrote about time, how she makes use of it, the composition of her days,
then I left her in the room to wait.
How does a profile open?
The dolls’ roof yawns wide
to reveal them in Victorian rooms, hands in their laps
folded like cloth swans
so formal you believe
you almost caught them misbehaving—
Is the trick
to imagine desire like a bloom, opening its skirts
for better weather? Open, ladyslipper. Open, gold-slaked throat
of the Asiatic lily. They open to drink, and I open
a profile
like I pry open a clamshell into a moth’s gray wings.
It’s hard not to imagine longing as the clam’s
pearlescent pink raw
as the insides of thighs in summer, hard not to forget
when I’ve pried her so far from me, left her behind
to do my dating for me,
how her desire opens our shared body.