Jessica Barksdale
I want it to be quick
and sharp like a vaccine
or a crackling slap in the face.
I want it to shoot
me up before
I have the time
to say goodbye,
express my regrets,
or sign my will.
I want it to be more
thrilling than fluffy clouds
and harps. More
roller coaster
and space shuttle
and less St. Peter.
I don’t want a body
or skin or shape.
I want to be bigger and less than,
able to cover everything
or slip through the eye
of god’s needle,
if god is there at all,
much less sewing.
I want to recline
on the beach of a new moon
and think about nothing,
and then I want to disappear
into the atoms I once
was, all of this happening
so fast, I still think
I’m here typing.
Jessica Barksdale is the author of twelve novels, including Her Daughter’s Eyes and The Instant When Everything Is Perfect. Her stories, poems, and essays have appeared or are forthcoming in Mason’s Road, The Coachella Review, So to Speak, and Salt Hill Journal. She is a professor of English at Diablo Valley College and teaches online novel writing for UCLA Extension.