Community Anthologies: 2023, On Permanence
Lentz-McMillan, Tina
By Tina Lentz-McMillan

she/they

“Object Permanence” and Other Poems

Poetry

In her dazzling suite of text poems, image poems, and art, Tina Lentz-McMillan designates the negative space in every page as an intimate collaborator in her story. Her speaker is an un-silenced witness: of obsession, desire, and the ache of longing—and of what (and who) lives on even in the liminal territory of erasure.


Object Permanence

You are a black hole
because you have been told
you are a black hole.

Every time you come close
to finding your [other] name,
the hungry part of you awakens, devouring
your definition. This deity wanders
through the interstitial marshes

of your body—the parts
choked out by rushweeds—destroying
the [soft] parts. To be [defined]

is to claim object permanence
in the order of things. How do you take
your place among rocks and mountains—
how do you say, i am [alive]

without losing yourself?
You find it through everything
around you. You measure

by what is [missing]. You return to this
burial ground again [and] again,
searching for two-names
and anywhere there is [enough]

space to lay down
your knife.

Further Possibilities

________

Intimacy

Sweat that smells like yeast,
the touch of lived-in linen
against a cheek. Rough

hands that press into your arm
like pressing into a mango.

A broken suyod at the sink / or a bottle of efficascent oil.

Lines in a face seen only when close enough
to touch / gray hairs that grow a new crop each season.

A door left open

a crack. When you come home,
a dimming porchlight and a kitchen
filled with the smell of simmering pospas.

The intimacy of a mother with a shape like your own,
a look that says come here, child.

By its Name, a Wolf




Edited by Briana Gwin.
Explore

We nurture and champion the voices of those dedicated to their craft.

  • Superstition Sonnet

    Teri Vela’s “Superstition Sonnet” invites readers to dispense with everything they think they know about the sonnet. It is not the rules of a form, but the warp and weft of intergenerational violence and prevailing softness that tethers these intricate lines together into a powerful reverse origin story.
    Read
  • My Father Is a Crab Nebula

    Part elegy, part prayer, part epistolary masterpiece—Amy Rose Lafty’s “My Father Is a Crab Nebula” is as littered with love and grief as the galaxy is replete with stars. You won’t soon find a more intimate glimpse into the cosmic transcendence of a life lost too soon—and the mourning that comes from being left behind.
    Read
  • 10 TSW writers to read for National Hispanic Heritage Month

    In celebration of National Hispanic Heritage Month, TSW is sharing 10 pieces written by writers and poets published within our past 17 issues.
    Read