White Hot Forever

Karen Leong

(she/her)

@karen.gif

Karen Leong is a writer of poetry, prose, and nonfiction. Plucking inspiration from reclamation and desire, her works mainly involve Hong Kong, Women of colour, and her lived experience in straddling both. Outside of writing, Karen daylights as a model and creative when her mulch-like thoughts have run dry. 

1.to halve a home


 I once rolled chestnuts away 

from the house  with well watered eyes

where my grandfather laid his head and

 breathed into the cool brown pane, 

listen— it has started to hurt. 


the stomach is first to go

the pancreas short- sputtered  

when i am left gouged

by the way pain dilates in slow, thorny bloom

I become 

speck-frozen in amber


I am not so old now to have forgotten 

 one summer my mother stayed 

seizing quietly inside the brown house 

gutting fish at my father’s side

 I tacked myself onto his bait:

 hear me?

everything was going to be the same.


later I’d return 

same country home bricked 

ruddy with coughs

I am on pulpy growth 

chestnuts ground asphalt 

under my feet 

a flowering pain 

the mass of it choking me her or us?  

leadening in my grandmother’s eyes 


it is not an unkind house that left me strung up 

like a doily, 

like a tender faced epithet,

like the driveway raining down with hard old stones.





2. the long march 


It has started to rain, 

puddle in helpless antiquated ways. 


cheers ghosting on my lips a

 soliloquy so sweet


how long do I pretend this is elsewhere? 

if it is more or less the same 

foresight breaks like shrapnel

on the soft of my skull


It has been raining for the last twenty days

we are hewn into our fear 

we are more or less the same 


I cannot do my laundry 

moss and mould dance on tarmac dewy

the bend of winded trees 

commit me to memory 

  

now stretches lithe 

now has pleated folds 

there is dancing and dilated eyes

and shelled cities swayed 


soon it’ll be march again 

see not much has changed 

when we seismic ants scuttle 

down hot wood

fear one another 

crowdy is the tempest 

a place to look for shade 


twenty-three beckons in the 

same same that will be my march,

dripping dulcet with flowers

and the knife kiss of rain 





3. White hot forever 


That it would take a visitation across sea

to get to me again

In the same careful, 

not to wet my head

five summers being blonde

taught letting go — 

 not to capsize.
Who are we to think we are beautiful? 

 floating in the embers

of the whittling day


the world engulfs me in swathes 

last week I opened my thumb on a can. 

ruck up my skirt to find 

a suckling monster 

making off in the dead of a silvery night


how bright the sun seeps 

into the crease of my thighs

into, mary oliver whispers;

The family of things 


I parry the blows of return 

meanwhile the sail tilts  

meanwhile I want to make a home 

in the faces yet to nick 

stowed in a blinding place 

where they can glint hot in the 

flush of my hips

 where 

all my life I will be sweet 

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