dear mice: stop shitting
in my toaster and I will
put away my traps
(2022)
dear mice: stop shitting
in my toaster and I will
put away my traps
(2022)
Not my high school boyfriend.
He was not in high school. I was, quite specifically in the middle of high school, which back then was a five-year hitch if you had intentions of post-secondary.
My mother despised him, in a large part because he reminded her of my father, whose death less than five years before had left a Problematic-Man-shaped crater in my preadolescent heart.
My older boyfriend offered me the sex and drugs I had been looking for. 1980s prohibition messaging had lead me to expect high school to be a smorgasbord of inappropriate behaviour, reefer and bennies and circle jerks being offered at every turn, and I was poised to take advantage. Instead I was in choir and two bands. I had coloured hair and that was sort of insurrectionary. Holed up in my bestie’s basement (except no one was besties because that word didn’t exist yet) scarfing down British music magazines and their lurid descriptions of Madchester rave-ups, I was longing for something strange to happen, primed for absolutely anything.
And when I met him and he offered, I took it. Not because he fooled me, but because it was everything I wanted.
Did I have an ordinary life ahead of me until then? I can’t say that I did. If not that man then another, or a woman, would have offered me something I wanted that I wasn’t meant to have. And I would have taken it. He just got there first.
What is a ‘fixer’?
The term has immoral connotations, referring one who dodges, bends, rewrites the rules, gives unfair advantage to a certain outcome. Lawyers, generally. Mafia, frequently. People with the tools and ambition to bend reality to the shape they desire.
It’s a fun word, though. Flexible and ironic. To fix means to do many things. To repair or remedy, to put in place, to arrange, to neuter an animal. It’s a threat (“I’ll fix you!”) and a humble request (“can you fix this?”) It’s everything I like about language.
To fix is to set in place with a sense of permanence that time betrays.
To fix is to render an animal sterile. Fix a genetic line in place, remove from stock.
In the very best orgasms, time and space stop, and start again. That is the stuff in you that once was a supernova, that once was a star, remembering how it felt to be nothing at all. Why is pleasure not sacred?
How can we be expected to fix ourselves when they won’t even let us repair our own phones?
Fix this, fix that.
Fix it to the wall.
Burn the wall.
These are uncharted times. The schism between narrative and lived experience is more apparent than it has ever been. That seems like something we need to fix.

Before Chuck Tingle…
Before the bodice rippers…
There were these two dinosaurs.

No one means for their child to get their first lesson about the birds and the bees from an artful illustration of two Parasaurolophods in rut. It really is a very pretty picture, and the text casts animal behaviour in such a romantic light, as “(t)he pulse of their dark dissonance throbs in the air like a heartbeat.”
But it’s still two dinosaurs fucking.
The Dinosaurs is a spectacular book, a somewhat fanciful but wholly believable dive into the behaviour of this class of extinct animals: the births, lives, and deaths of dinosaurs. Service writes with the meticulously descriptive voice of an Attenborough documentary, and Stout’s art fairly leaps off the page, employing a wealth of media to show dinosaurs as they may have lived.

And on one page, dinosaurs fuck.
Do animals fuck? Or do we reserve that word for only one species i.e. ours? It’s said that dolphins are the only species besides ours that has sex solely for pleasure, and not as a seasonally triggered biological imperative. Perhaps Mr. Service went overboard in attributing such tenderness to mating dinosaurs, but come on…those lizards are in love.
My father (R.I.P. 1989) had no filter. I’ve had to think about him from this peculiar distance for most of my life, and thank the gods I knew him as long as I did, because I don’t know if I would understand myself as much as I do without that solid decade.

Near the end of that decade, he acquired VCR, then rented a number of really challenging films for a nine year old to wander into the room and watch.
2001: A Space Odyssey. Altered States. Rocky Horror Picture Show (calling Dr. Freud, bring clamps) and oh gosh, and I sort of wish this wasn’t so, but among these mind-bending stalwarts I have to list A Clockwork Orange.
I was nine. Maybe ten.
Now, I’m not saying that I’m a bad person because my daddy didn’t monitor my viewing. I’m saying these are some heavy duty psychological loads for an absorbent mind to bear. The circumstances of my life had already conspired against me being normal (Montessori is scarily effective, for the record.) Now I had the mental imagery to suit, stewing in my preadolescent brain, waiting for me to stumble into my libido.
But I like who I am. I don’t think I’m a bad person because I have peculiar tastes. I’ve never thought that, no matter how often people have tried to tell me it was so.
I still miss him, for the record. 1989.
"I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past, I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain." -Frank Herbert
The Bene Gesserit litany against fear is one of the strongest examples of a clever, spiritual-sounding concept from a piece of fiction being turned into a near-religious text. It sounds magnificent, and it echoes many sentiments of Western thought. Perhaps it’s less meaningful to people whose religious cultures make death part of an infinitely iterating cycle and not the end point of a linear process (see: apocalypse, Christian obsession with.)
But the litany, along with the existence of the Bene Gesserit and the rest of the Dune universe, is a fictional proposition. Frank Herbert wrote fiction. He made it all up. That it sounds like a real religion is simply because he did a good job of it. By way of comparison, consider The Force, which is essential Qi in a British accent. Good old Ether if you like, if it was real and semi-sentient. Lucas didn’t invent that out of thin air (*laughs in alchemist*) but patched it together from established texts. He got away with it because his audience of pre-adolescent North Americans had by and large never heard of Taoism.
We’re meant to overcome our fears, but I have a very different attitude these days. I don’t need to ‘conquer’ my fears before doing The Big Things. I’ve tried and tried to make myself fearless before doing something, and it’s a waste of time. Go ahead and have the fear, but do the thing anyway. Doing The Thing is maybe the only way to get rid of the fear.
As Space Mom said, “stay afraid, but do it anyway.” If anyone was ever Strong with the Force, it was Carrie Fisher.
So grab your maker hooks and let’s ride this sandbitch into tomorrow. Enjoy this you-failed-witch-school-but-yay-now-you-don’t-have-to-fuck-a-Harkonnen litany against giving a shit about being afraid.
And if anyone mentions that these are two different sci-fi franchises, I will literally scream.
I can’t do shit about the fear It can kill me if I let it, but I don’t think it will Besides, there is no such thing as total obliteration I will face my fear I will let it walk along with me It will not keep me from taking another step The fear will probably never go away. Regardless, I remain
A white sky
As I stood by the
water the falling leaf brushed my lips
(21/11/21)
[I am haunted by my characters. Nathan is the most persistent. I have been writing him for 8 years, at various stages of his life. For the first several years, I never wrote from his POV. I wanted an enigma. A black box of a character. A man who acted solely under his own internal logic, to which we could never be privy. More recently I began to let him speak. There are still many ‘episodes’ where his silence says far more.] please note: story contains brief use of homophobic slurs
The final raspberries are tart and demanding
You will go through the bracken and the apple trees
Wilded from forgotten orchards
The hill a hard climb
To reach them
When you stand knee deep in trillium and the canes arch overhead
The frost-sharpened fruit like blood on their thorns
She will be not there
Not there too in the next room
The scent of her perfume
Blown away by your arrival
Forever elsewhere
Turning the corner before you
Leaving the room as you wake with your hand hollow for want
Looking always away and the back of the head is not hers
Though the laugh and the wave was
You are there
Where you go
She is not there
Where you are
You are not anywhere
You are not
One day you will let go
At the top of the arch of the swing
In spite of the lake and the cliffs and the sky and the steel
You will let go and she will be there
To catch you
The second last line was the clincher, the typed page clearly showing where the word ‘not’ had been included, then redacted, then penciled back in by hand, then erased, more than once. Ray couldn’t expect the kid to read this aloud in front of the class.
He knew–everyone knew–that Nate Tallent’s mother had taken off when he was in grade seven. Between that and his father’s friendship with Hillebrand’s principal Jasper Urkell, you tended to give Nate a pass most of the time, though he never took advantage of it like other kids might have. He was smart for starters, not a screw-up but an intelligent kid dragged down by his peers. Smart but indifferent, and between Ray and a few of the younger teachers, it was agreed that if you cracked down on him he’d probably stop trying.
It showed in his grades. Nate was more than smart enough to average better than a C in English, but he hated doing the work, often spending more effort to get out of it than it would take to just sit there and do it. The results were usually below his best, but with no interest in post-secondary and a family business waiting to pick him up, he could get away with not caring.
Ray Fletcher cared, always a sucker for students with untapped potential, whose meager expectations he could raise, or so he liked to tell himself. Nate was a different breed, not selling himself short so much as wholly disinterested in school, so deep in his own head that Ray didn’t have the time to draw him out.
And then Nate had handed in his free verse assignment. Asking for ‘free verse’ was optimistic, as few kids had ventured beyond ABABCC, as if all the best poems rhymed, as if Whitman and ee cummings and everything since sonnets hadn’t happened. Nate got it, not just the form of real poetry but the feeling, the couching of impossible emotions in a few spare lines describing a walk in autumn, a trace of memory, a hint of one’s mortality. He was fifteen.
Usually Ray asked other people’s advice. Jake Urkell was a legendary principal, genuinely devoted to his pupils, unlike others Ray had known, to whom the kids had seemed an obstacle to the work instead of the work itself. You could ask him anything, questions about protocol, discipline, keeping the attention of the smart kids and bailing out the rest, and when he was wrong, it was only when he didn’t know enough about the situation.
Ray didn’t need to know any more. Everyone too much about Nate Tallent already. He was the sort of kid who set off every teacher’s curiosity: a careless genius who was a waste of a brilliant mind, a sterling individual athlete who lacked the temperament for team sports, a habitual shit-disturber playing them for fools, and a bastard in the biblical sense, his parents unmarried, though they were rich enough no one talked about it. To ask anyone about Nate’s poem was to publicly dissect the kid yet again.
Making Nate read the poem in class would lead to the same result. Ray could barely make it through without choking up, struck fresh every time by that second last line, and the first of the stanza: one day you will let go. If Nate cried in front of his classmates, Ray would have ruined every minute of rest of the kid’s high school career, if not his life.
That day as Ray passed along the rows of students silently gnawing on a passage of Macbeth, he touched Nate’s shoulder so the boy looked up. “Come see me at the end of class.”
Sitting behind Nate, Peter Conroy snickered, glad someone else was under the gun for a change. Peter thought he was sneaky for sourcing Iron Butterfly lyrics instead of Zeppelin, as if Ray was an old man and not twenty-six. He still drove a damn Camaro, which at times had made him the coolest teacher in school and at other times made him feel like a try-hard.
“And Peter,” Ray went on, letting his exhaustion harden his voice. “Next time you pinch song lyrics for your poetry assignment, you might try to reach back farther than five years ago. I don’t want to see you after class. I just want you to hand in something tomorrow that’s worth grading.”
Nate barely reacted: a widening of the eyes and the hint of a smile. When the bell rang he stayed in his seat. Ray closed the classroom door then slipped into the desk beside.
“What’s going on?” Nate asked after a prickly minute. “You’re not dying or anything, are you, Mr Fletcher?”
“No. It’s nothing to do with me.”
“Then what did I do wrong?”
“Nothing. It’s your poem, Nate. It’s outstanding. Really well written. Clearly it’s about something very personal, though. So I wanted to give you the chance not to read it tomorrow.”
The boy looked hard at him. “Why wouldn’t I read it? Isn’t that part of the assignment?”
“It is, and yours is one of the best poems I’ve ever seen from a student. And I don’t mean technically, though that’s there too. It’s just…it’s rare for someone your age to show so much feeling.”
“What about Marcy’s poem? That had plenty of feeling.”
“Melodrama, we call that. It looked less…expressive on paper.”
“They say delivery’s everything.”
“Nate, your poem made me cry. I can’t imagine what it was like to write. And I want you to know that if you don’t want to read it in front of the class, I’m okay with that.”
“Are you worried I’m going to lose my shit up there?”
“I wouldn’t use those words, but kind of.”
Nate took a deep breath then sat back. “Look, Mr Fletcher, you shouldn’t read too much into it. Into the poem, I mean.”
“But isn’t it about your…” The chill in Nate’s eyes told Ray he was overstepping. This was the very interrogation he had been trying to spare the kid. “I’m sorry. It’s none of my business.”
“I’ll see you tomorrow, Mr Fletcher.”
***
If he hadn’t been able to see the parking lot from his second story classroom, Ray might have sold the Camaro by now. It was what the kids called a heat-score, a beautiful machine that made people stop in their tracks to look, and every time Ray gave out an F or a detention, he felt the need to keep half an eye on the car for the next few days.
It also made him early, as he needed to get the right parking spot, in his line of sight but not under the pine trees and their drips of paint-corroding sap. As a bonus, it had put him in good standing with Mr Leonard and the other veteran teachers, who thought of him as the punctual one.
Ray had grown to love the serenity of the school before the bells rang, as he nursed the morning’s first coffee and took in the view. In June the sun would have risen hours ago, but on this November morning the pines’ shadows still lay long across the frost-rimed grass when he heard the fighting.
Yelling you heard plenty of, but he knew that edge, when it was more than two kids trying to shout each other down. Whatever was happening, others were gathering to watch. During his practicum he’d had to break up a near-riot at a football game, when two factions of children had turned on each other with shocking speed. He’d been herding his charges onto their school bus when the name-calling started, suspension-worthy insults flying back and forth. He’d looked back in time to see a canvas backpack flung by one of his kids sail across the gap and slam into the other crowd. He’d had no time to notice whose backpack, as their side had immediately returned fire. Like iron filings to a grade nine science magnet, every kid in sight had been sucked into the maelstrom of undirected anger.
The voices this morning had that same anxiety, the same urgency of craving yet fearing the sight of blood. Ray grabbed his coat and ran. By the time he got downstairs, other students were running across the grass towards the parking lot, drawn by the sound. He couldn’t see the source until he got around the corner, where a couple dozen kids stood in a loose crescent around a pair in the centre. Ray’s heart dropped as he recognized one of the pair as Nate.
At least it was only a standoff, nobody bleeding, the boys a few yards apart though both bristling with rage. “You ought to shut up about things you don’t know, Conroy,” Nate was saying as Ray approached.
Pete didn’t answer, the taunts coming from his cronies behind him. “Oooh, little orphan Annie’s gonna cry.” “How was that ‘special meeting’ with that faggot Fletcher? Your ass sore?” “No wonder your mom took off, fucking queer.”
“What the hell is going on?” Ray shouted. “This stops immediately or every one of you is suspended.” Other teachers were running this way, and in Ray’s moment of inattention, Pete Conroy made his move.
Not much of a move, as by the time Ray turned around Pete was on the ground, clutching his face and howling, blood seeping through his fingers. Nate lowered his fists from his boxer’s stance as the crowd scattered.
“Sorry, Mr. Fletcher.”
“It was self defense.”
Nate frowned, at Ray, at his own hands. “I hit him first.”
“He antagonized you.”
“You weren’t even here. Are you saying you’re gonna lie?”
“Are you?”
***
Ray never found out how the fight started. It was however the excuse Urkell had been waiting for to expel Conroy, already on probation for what staff referred to as the Volleyball Incident. Nate got the mandatory minimum of three days suspension. By the time he returned to English class, they had started The Merchant of Venice.
Cleaning out his desk at the end of the semester, Ray found Nate’s poem, ungraded. He’d given Nate a hundred percent on the unit, enough to raise his overall grade to a B minus. The typed poem he had hidden, not wanting it to become evidence. Nate had never asked for it back.
Ray read it now in the pale light of a waning January afternoon, then again out loud, because poetry is meant to be heard, then once more because he liked it so much, because he could feel the want in the hollow of his own hand. Nate had never needed his help.
First you must forget
all the names they gave you
These will not matter
Burn and bury the names
Do not give them away
Forget about keeping
one in a drawer
so you can take it out to show
and pack back in tissue
You will not be coming back to this room
Go away from everyone
to do it
Dig deep
Return soil and sod
Do not mark the
grave
Now you are ready
Go into the desert
Sit on the rock
Remember what to do next
(2020)
I
jumped
from
a much
higher height
than I
thought I was going to
(2020)