DANI PUTNEY

 

 

 

 

Coordinates for My Dad’s Ashes

 

 

Apostrophe:

I didn’t want to write

 

for you, for me,

because I might spell

 

Forgiveness, the same feeling—

or is it an action?—

 

Mom told me sunk

your clogged heart.

 

(You can already see

I’m not good at this.)

 

I needed to believe

you were God:

 

It’s a cakewalk to destroy

a monolith, your whiteness,

 

a penchant for the Orient,

the skinny boy who discovered

 

Luzon beauties

and never looked back.

 

Alternatively, I found

psychoanalysis:

 

There was a blond man

(I think we have the same type)

 

who gave you a camera and said,

Remember me.

 

I glimpse your chests painted

with Mid-Atlantic scum,

 

I want to lick the photograph,

maybe I’ll understand why

 

you denied me this memory

and instead talked about

 

gay prison rape.

Call me the id

 

to your ego—it’s simple.

I still tell everyone

 

your conquest was denial,

a route forged in tropical storms

 

and the sweet taste

of mangoes.

 

You found an archipelago

while I found men

 

to replace you.

(Is my honesty

 

too sentimental?)

But I know I can’t

 

write around your body,

much like I can’t

 

throw away the scrap of paper

where I left you:

 

Latitude: 39.37

Longitude: -120.12

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dani Putney is a queer, non-binary, mixed-race Filipinx, and neurodivergent poet from the American West. Their poetry most recently appears in The Fourth RiverGlassThin Air Online, and Tule Review, among other publications. They reside amid cowboys in the Nevada desert.