Psychic Numbing
A man ejaculates into a cup in a room
where none of the cabinets have handles. Smooth
odorless units spring back with the slightest pressure.
He flips through images of breasts wrapped in leather
and buckles. Afterward, separates act from state
from performance from love with absolute certainty.
Ashes in a glass ashtray. Death in pixels
across the algorithm. For a whole year
the strawberry crop tastes of garlic and we pretend
we’re not all strangers but we are, and we are
complicit. Due to a high volume of atrocity,
Psychic Numbing is the term coined to define the 20th century
human brain and its inability to absorb a death toll
greater than three. Psychologists have suggested for some time
the heart and the mind are not to be considered
kindred. The authorities send ships up the river
to care for the sick and collect bodies and revenue
and accolades. There is nothing but luxury
in the generosity of language. The Episcopalians in DC
condemn apartheid. Tomorrow, the Catholics. We look on
as infrastructure starts to crumble; meat-eating birds roam city skies
in packs stealing matryoshka dolls from little girls’ hands,
downing hotdogs in one sustained gulp.
Somewhere someone is working
on a mathematical principle that makes logic
the bifurcation of mother from child; the benevolence
of mother to mother illogic while mother
mutates to child again in a single generation;
as if there is a way this cleaving could be subtracted
from sentiment and structurally understood
by name, definition, and made searchable.
With this kind of precision, we update
PowerPoints exacting timelines for when we stop
guarding against the irrelevance
of feeling. In this model: a set of equations
for the splintering of consciousness. Or so reasoned Descartes
who wasn’t around when Breughel painted
both The (Little) or The (Great) Tower of Babel.
At the Vatican, the Pope condemns apartheid,
but falls short of believing that
breaking a single language into many
was punishment for the wicked—it was
what required us to learn to love each other without words.
A man with desirable genetics jerks off into a cup
and makes a baby, heads back to the office
and plots complex points on translucent paper
that measures the approximate value of a single life lost
in events of mass casualty. Suggests the payment structure
adjusted for inflation, that will be approved in a court of law
and paid out responsibly. He goes home and makes
peanut butter sandwiches on whole wheat bread
in a vast, sterile kitchen, orders sugar spoons from IKEA.
He never has any children he holds. In a stroke of luck
scientists discover black holes create stars.
They are spit out on the backside into
an unknown frontier we can't quite grasp, but we try
to name with our inadequate language
and end up with hyphenated numbers
that fail. In a lecture on YouTube
Robert Hass says, Is it not the duty of the poet to root
the tenderness of tenderness? I think
he's talking about grief. My best friend floats
the concept of radical love. We debate
our adolescent obsessions with violence
that have mutated over the years. If the human
mind can hold on to the proposition of goodness
and still murder animals for sport, what then?
Recommended
Wolf Lichen
Intimate Cartography
A Partial Accounting

