Haley Bossé

Transplanetary Dust

at any given moment/ there are untold numbers/ of micro-meteorites/
buzzing forth/ from radiation/ and entering/ the planet’s atmosphere

and still we move/ through cells/ that would consume

us/ our ability to break/ down and deliquesce/ to

dissolve ourselves/ be small/ and small ourselves/ into

a spray of us/ that penetrates/ even the most/

concentrated resistance/ is how we form anew/ just as

queer/ and glorious/ as we were/ just as us/ though we

look/ and even feel/ different to the touch

It’s a bloodbath

Meaning we are both/ bleeding into it/ the water/ our trans bodies swimming/ once again in
synchrony/ sweating/ soaped/ with tiny pustules/ blisters/ bulging lines of bright red/ scars and
that’s just you

My body breaks/ open at the toes/ fingers/ considering a mutiny/ the bacterio-fungal glistening/
contemplates/ where to grow

Our eyes are sacred scatter/ unable to stop stuttering/ across this rising page of fog/ the need to
see something/ in this unmoving moment/ to find silt on the bottom/ or floating scraps of paper

You go under/ stitches going rosy/ cause a coastal drift/ changing dunes/ moving hermits/ other
creatures/ subcutaneous/ making closures/ out of tunnels/ making movement/ where we once/
were frozen solid

You turn over/ and drip/ the water/ shifts its form

Seams

I drink my coffee slowly down the side of the cup, leaving stains that remind me of a friend’s
concentric mountain tattoos that have never remininded me of mountains.


I like the language of body modifications or “body mods.”


I think it might be relieving to have a body perfectly equipped for some function, like a
dandelion or an argonaut octopus.


Sometimes, I consider cutting my breasts off.


Sometimes, I think if I peel off enough layers, I’ll take the shape I’m supposed to come in.


I think the scars under what were once thought to be breasts are like strikethroughs.


Beautiful also.


I long to pierce my nipples.

I long to let them strikethrough or even underline.


My mother says nipple piercings prevent breastfeeding.


I am not sure I want to be a feeder or to feed.


Maggie Nelson taught me how to watch a mouth for hazards and Violeta Parra
stitched a movement from her sickbed.


And so I am inspired by the craft of motherhood.


I briefly take up embroidery.


I think of it as stitching.


I want to attach things to other things, to graft connections where none were before.


Instead, I find myself skipping over the surface like a stone, sinking my needle deep and letting it
hang there.


I ache and practice hollowing out my chest.


I am guilty of feeling myself cut from the tradition of creation: I worry at the ripping of my
seams.


Somehow, I learn to believe this: breasts are not prerequisites for sewing and motherhood
too is a series of complicated motions.


I begin to map a space that sends its arm out and through womanhood.


I practice speaking and hear my name spoken back to me. I stitch

myself along these lines.



Drawing joints together, I make them real.

Haley Bossé (They/Them) is a queer non-binary poet and educator who emerged slowly from the dripping lichen of the Pacific Northwest. They can be found collecting plastic on the beach, wading shin-deep through mud and liquid sand, or consulting with the fungal goddexes.