Joshua Merchant

Red Herring

the bait I was

the bate I be

the batter

a good hook

the line I hit

he sank me

I fried

we fry together

ask the choir what we know

what we didn’t

what we’ve learned

between a buckle

and a hard place

this country loves

a kitchen boarded

a gender ruled

a body famished

a child confused

in the sun

as warning signal

in the sun as a debate

as a broken watch turning

backwards he wore me

like a recipe coughing

blood threw the text

of me to the oil

I splashed and rubbed

a handful of pink

to the surface this country

loves a child left behind

if it means communion

if it rings the bell of supper

January 18 th , 2019

i. down the street from Chabot
she asks if I always do that,
play with my hair that is,
and the door swings open.
I fear for all the heat in the
living room syphoned in
search of the hubble scope’s
laser point, not to tiptoe around
the stars but to say I’m here, its done, I was
warned of this day
. the cold

grabbing a lock of what I thought
was mine. the fraudulence of this
new comfort. the audacity of the length
curl and shrinkage- the bounce back
into shelter with grocery bags
and a dustpan. the mythos
of sacred numbers traveling
the sun swallowing me whole
in one gulp. yes I reply. hmm
she responds. nothing breaks
but the silence of gravity

ii. the subtext that leads to my disclosure~
I actually do this a lot now.
there’s a lot I wish I didn’t do.
do you know how long it takes
an iv to embarrass a pulse? or that
I’ve had students who tilt their noggins
sideways to the idea of ‘TLC’ but I’m just now
learning what “scrubs” meant? or the fact
that you have given all of us three rules to live by
and we’ve all broken all of them- and my insides have
their own spin cycle I don’t know how to stop- do you
remember you used to call me ‘wash’? how I couldn’t
pronounce myself? you said you were cool with libations
and burning bushes but I’ve made gems dissolve into thin
ir- and maybe that’s why I fear your gaze- but I just need you
to tell me the punishment is over. you were always good
at telling me when it was done and I never listened-

Image ID: A blackout poem in which the visible text reads:

Found Poem In Search Of A Prayer

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Joshua Merchant is a Black Queer native of East Oakland, CA exploring what it means to be human as an intersectional being. What they’ve been exploring as of late has been in the realm of loving and what it means while processing trauma. They feel as though as a people, especially those of us more marginalized than others, it has become too common to deny access to our true source of power as a means of feeling powerful. A collective trauma response if you will. However, they’ve come to recognize with harsh lessons and divine grace that without showing up for ourselves and each other, everything else is null and void. Innately, everything Merchant writes is a love letter to their people. Because of this they've had the honor to witness their work being held and understood in literary journals such as 580Split, Eleven Eleven, and The Rootwork Journal.