SurVision Magazine |
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An
international online magazine that
publishes Surrealist poetry
in English.
Issue Five
JOHN BRADLEY How to Seem More (Anatomically) Likeable Offer free shoe-shining services and bicycle drive-by shootings. Remember Dr. Seuss said: Adults are obsolete children. Even more good news. President Hoover bobbleheads. Ask questions about animal obituaries that say: Eat yourself up; you will eat nobody else, nor anything else. Freddie Oversteegne was an assassin for the Dutch when she was fourteen. Learn more about garden eels. It's all in your head. Your footware shaped like Italy. Your Starbucks board game shaped like Starbucks. Keep asking those anatomical questions you asked when you were fourteen. Fallen angels make eye contact in Antarctica? If you're eating Haagen-Dazs? So close to the fire that you burned your boundless feet. Am I talking too much? Then I'm talking too much. How to Respond When Someone Disappears on You Don't tell the disappearing how worried you are. Charlie Chaplin under a falling piano said, I knew this all along! Your eye slides right over it. Think Edward Hopper and Oprah Winfrey at the late-night diner counter staggering away to sleep in the bathtub. If you have seedy or religious beliefs, don't tell Google Chrome. Whatever you do, remember the permissive thud of the Machine Age. The eye slides over. Tiny, sexy houses scatter behind you. My bed raged against the mass- produced ottoman. According to legend, a twelve-year-old in Minneapolis transformed into pivots and pistons in a spasm of shock and delight. Disappearing with a pleasing thud. How to Vanish Start disposing of facial hair. Altered ethical parts of the brain. Dissolved back into the elements – sun, earth, rain, cash. Study the bingo game televised live from Oklahoma City. Abandon your gorging. If they've seen you leaving at night. If you're discovered in brightly striped pajamas in Chile, Belize. It is possible. Eat your cowboy boots. Eat your threads. What you're running from. Move about your cage like someone in striped pajamas waiting to arrest you in Chile, Belize. Don't be tempted. Waste your time on refined carbohydrates. An obese mouse in striped pajamas. Prolong your high or low. No logical beginning, no end. Televised live from Oklahoma City. Tell no one, anyone. The entire world, internally fossilized. Confuse your disappearing bodily fluids. Eat an anecdotal mouse. Snail mail is looking for you. Small, speculative. Dissolve back into the elements – sun, earth, rain, graphite. Now breathe. It is possible. John Bradley teaches at Northern Illinois University, in DeKalb, Illinois. His poetry and prose has appeared in Caliban, Hotel Amerika, Shadowgraph, and other journals. He has had eight books published, the most recent Erotica Atomica (WordTech, 2017), on American nuclear history. He frequently reviews books of poetry for Rain Taxi. |
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