Skin hunger
by Annie Stenzel
That my
flesh is relentlessly thirsty has been true
for years:
the juice my youth used to generate
long gone;
the Mojave now papers my arm.
But I’ve just
learned a term that frightens me—
one of
those phrases that, once read, reverberates
inside
your head like a temple gong.
This
morning’s find derailed me. Who knows
if I will
suffer from this strange disorder—
me, solo
for all these years, plus months
plus days.
It was details from the experiment
that
rocked my soul: the obscure scientist who found
that baby
monkeys would choose starvation
with a
pseudo-mother made of softest wool
over
survival with a creature made of metal that would
feed it
milk, but couldn’t cuddle worth a damn.
* * * * *
Annie Stenzel was born in Illinois, but has lived on both coasts
of the U.S. and on other continents at various times in her life. Her
book-length collection is The First Home Air After Absence (Big Table
Publishing, 2017). Her poems appear or are forthcoming in print and online
journals in the U.S. and the U.K., from Ambit to Willawaw Journal
with stops at Chestnut Review, Gargoyle, isacoustic*, Pine Hills Review,
Poets Reading the News, The Lake, and U n l o s t, among others. She
lives within sight of the San Francisco Bay. For more, visit anniestenzel.com.
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