the dust is awake and kicking. down on cook street the blue-collar boys in their traffic cone nests, the single lane flocking. i want to throw out every smile and nod i can muster enough to knock something over.
a nod to the camas confetti the driftwood towers the couples making out there is a tide watering wilted hearts an architecture of bodies, their sunscreened shapes. the strands tucked back brushed, braided. the entrails of kelp the kids left out under solar supervision: pink and all screaming something slimy and urgent. the digging hands and show off palms. the sudden currency of beach glass.
here we are again in the back pocket of spring the holy unpredictable mess of it. the lilacs are nearly ajar and everything else: eager and hungry. a verdant phosphorescence forgotten in winter’s amnesia. a biting, endless sprawl. a shotgun in the face of yesterday – cocked and ready to feed you to the green.
Savi Hanning-Brown was raised in the rural mountains of Sinixt territory. She studied creative writing at Selkirk College, and later received a B.A. in Anthropology and Environmental Studies on the west coast. Savi has been making things with her hands for as long as she can remember. To her, the process of poetry resembles sifting matter, or unearthing things. She is grateful to now reside on Lekwungen territory, where she works with plants and walks often.