Poetry, Week 12: Safi Alsebai

 

Hayy Ibn Yaqzan  

After Ibn Tufayl

I am Alive       I am four post-card
-sized watercolors of factories making death  

My father        whose name is Awake
is the gas that makes clay as tousable as hair   

All factories are factories that make death
but not yet  

I hate to emblazon      I am allergic
At the risk of holding my breath with my breath:

From head to toe I am made of the openness of eyes            From
my skin to my lumens of grief            And  

After I am long gone they will understand that
utopia comes early in the mind and                late in the mind

On this Island              which is everything 
I taught myself everything like 

Love and that              Did you know that your mother
can be a gazelle even if your father is a death factory  

Still, I don’t know from sleep             I only know
to spin because I am planets this week

On Monday     Am I a novel? if
I learned to undergo hypnosis?           which 

Is a social contradiction since I am alone
            I reconcile it by imagining my mother’s pain  

On Tuesday and so on            I am
breakfast lunch and dinner for plants like palms 

On Wednesday they will find petroleum
Only    eight-hundred years from now 

Until then I will wait for         pearl-divers
who will teach me about their tongues  

Am I a novel? if          I pass before they
arrive? if they decide not to autopsy me? 

But I don’t worry about that   Coughs
are only the experience of being rustled  

Tomorrow I cannot have any illness
because here you cannot own anything yet 

Not sleeping is not an illness              It is
how I continue to make up my mind  

I dream of swallowing everything      in the world
which I can already tell must be massive  

Even with my eyes open my vision is
oneiric and                  Of the rise and fall of industries   

Trust me          I am (not) an insider
When I opened the chambers of my mother’s  

Heart               doe-eyed
was the beginning of writing and relation

When I opened the chambers of my heart
to the Almighty  

I did not yet have a concept of the Sublime
            And then there it was  

Right alongside           my sleeplessness,
my grief, utopia, death factories yet to come   

All at once      from my ribs and from my
liver                 And then 

Think of how disappointed I’ll become when
I wake             If they ever shave my chest for surgery

 

Safi Alsebai is a writer from Arkansas, where he studies medicine. His work has appeared in Amygdala Journal, Discount Guillotine, Virgo Venus, and ballast; and has been exhibited at the American Arts Center (Casablanca, Morocco). He has poetry forthcoming in Michigan City Review of Books, Medicine and Meaning, and the new Vers Lit Mag