Thursday, August 8, 2013

Bathroom Monologue: A Narrative in Skin



Hers is a narrative in skin. There are castles at her ankles, drawbridges moored to the dimples on the inner junction to feet. The castle is burning, flames swaying mid-shin, and they sway whenever she jogs, cascading inked smoke to offend the clouds at her knees.

It's where tattoos of smoke ebb into tattoos of clouds that the narrative lives. Here, in the ridges and contours of inked air, the outlines of weeping and howling human faces emerge. There are no tricks; they do not murmur or tear at their hair when she does a little dance. They are remarkably still faces, frozen in mourning, caught in the cloud banks, no matter what she does. All their moist eyes peer up upon her thighs, to portraits of catastrophes that brought down the castle below. Their memories have been wrought across her midriff in sequential art that sags and wrinkles with time, and yet never loses its poignancy. Perhaps that's because she shows so few people the memories. Not all body art is public, after all.

All that is public is her face – colorless, you might call it, undrawn, never wearing make-up. All that is public are all the times she casts her eyes down upon the artifice climbing up her legs. Her expressions are a more living art. How do they look to you?

6 comments:

  1. This is intriguing. Thank you - but I am sure there is (at least) another story about this woman.

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  2. I was a little confused at first, but then it started to sink in. I like how you pointed out that her body, not all visible, is intricately decorated, yet she wears no makeup because her expressions are the most exquisite decorations of all.

    I really liked this!

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  3. A fascinating character snippet in gorgeous prose. Loved this.

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  4. A little Keatsian. Very interesting.

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