Indigo Perry
Playing in the Dark of Winter
Indigo Perry lives in the Yarra Valley, outside Melbourne. Her book Midnight Water: A Memoir was shortlisted for the National Biography Award. She is a lecturer in Writing & Literature at Deakin University. Most of her current writing is poetry, often written in public spaces and in collaboration with musicians and dancers. Her website is indigoperry.com.
previous page contents next page
Playing in the Dark of Winter
Looks like falls down mountains this afternoon. And hiding places in the turning-around of ears. I've shouted at one man this week. He laughs and calls it a whisper. Dug in like fingernails to deeper layers of the snowdrifts inside. Can a voice break the skin? A played note received like a paper cut. Opening up. Channels for drowning in. Screaming-dark crying stuck like a glued sore. A child with hands held to cross over her face and cover her eyes so you can't see her. Laughing quietly at her foolishness She doesn't look as she thinks. Not enigmatic. Just transparent. Her emotions shallow and transient. Puddles when she hoped for oceans. She tumbles in waterfalls in a dress that folds and shimmers like refractions of light, but everyone else sees a woman cumbersome falling off chairs and tripping over her feet. (I am dying to cry.) Sliding along the dust-sharp floor, skinning my face. And there is nothing. An invisibly risen heartbeat. The quietest drum, resonating in a moment already gone. Toes curled inwards to keep it all out and in until something gives way. But it doesn't. Mouths opened and poured and still no truth. The threads and patterns for truth are twisted into blocked airways, wounded cervixes, knots in necks and sick bellies. Dry mouths that forget how to kiss. Unsteady fingers that forget how to scratch with bones to make marks and take possession. Roughly rocked roads broken through, to remember. And then pretend to forget. I want to trust the other and I keep hearing a ragged-raw voice pulling me inwards until I’m shattered china reforming to a skin with a texture like moonlight – Make yourself so fragile that you are unimaginably unbreakable. What's most true is what is most purely loveable. The ecstatic pain of being played until I am pure instrument vibrational and the instrument dissipates, to tune, to moment. To falling. Falling asleep in the middle of speaking a sentence, so lovely that the other must lean in to kiss the falling softly mouth. Press the sternum. It was made of rock, but if you approach, it may be malleable, beach-washed cartilage of cuttlefish. I'm soft fontanelle baby bones in the presence of heat and depth that don’t run out with a hard thunk and crack. How frightening to hear from the inside that if I want to be met, then I must meet. (But I'm all finely shattered blue remains and hidden whispering and stolen caresses. You can put your hands through me as if through a spiderweb.) You cry, easily. It’s dark in here and our eyes are under shadow so we can look a long time without self-consciousness. My back is to the clouds at the window. You can’t see my eyes and I can’t see yours. But I know you cry. Even with shadows crossed like hands over my eyes, I can’t cry. (And I am dying to cry.)
Indigo Perry lives in the Yarra Valley, outside Melbourne. Her book Midnight Water: A Memoir was shortlisted for the National Biography Award. She is a lecturer in Writing & Literature at Deakin University. Most of her current writing is poetry, often written in public spaces and in collaboration with musicians and dancers. Her website is indigoperry.com.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home