Most likely from the Elizabeth Andersen translation of The Flowing Light of the Godhead. ❤
Tag: asks
are there any texts or films you would recommend exploring the theme of women’s desire?
Luce Irigaray—This Sex Which is Not One
Luce Irigaray—”When Our Lips Speak Together”
Carolyn Knapp–APPETITES: Why Women Want
Jade Sharma–Problems
Maggie Nelson—Bluets
Katherine Angel—Unmastered: A Book on Desire, Most Difficult to Tell
Helene Cixous–The Laugh of the Medusa
Charlotte Shane—”When Desire Goes Dark”
Jess Zimmerman—”Hunger Makes Me”
Kathy Acker–”-Desire: A Play in Two Parts”
Kathy Acker—Blood and Guts in High School
Dodie Bellamy–Cunt-Ups
Dodie Bellamy–The Letters of Mina Harker
Karen Volkman—Spar
Lucie Brock-Broido—Master Letters
Maurice Pialat—A Nos Amours
hello, i was wondering if u could pls post another rachel milligan poem. i really loved the envelope poem, thank you for posting it.
I can do you one better—I am so grateful for this ask, because I knew I had mislabeled a Kristin Sanders poem that I loved a while back, but I couldn’t recall what name I had stored it under. As it turns out, it was Rachel Milligan! The actual author of that poem is Kristin Sanders. The attached link is a pdf of the collection that the envelope poem is from! Happy reading. https://arterialtrees.home.blog/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/5af20-thisisamapoftheirwatchingme_kristinsanders28129.pdf
Where did you meet your first love?
The first person I thought I was in love with: We’d gone to school together forever, but the first time we talked was on my parent’s roof in Texas. He brought me cocaine and I gave him a cigarette and put my Huck Finn hat on his head. He was wearing leopard pants that were so tight he had to safety pin the crotch shut (though it would be a long time before I got to find that out). He was taciturn by nature, but he smiled soft and sly and I could tell that he liked me. I had lost thirty pounds over the last month, and hadn’t quite realized that my high school real estate value had skyrocketed with the ascent of my eating disorder. I still felt big, clumsy—I had been terribly teased in middle school, so all of this still felt like a teen movie. Clear, bright, ecstatic.
The first person I really loved: Thanksgiving. Texas. He seemed to make me good again with each kiss. I saw myself becoming worthy through his eyes. He showed me there was still truth, hope, a path out of the dark wood I’d been stumbling through since my best friend’s suicide several months before. No condoms or dirty words. That softness. Our hands drifting like loosed lily pads over each other. We moved as through a dream. My sad eyes through the dark. His hardness pressed against my back, kissing me softly; tentative in the joy of that permission. He stroked me like something small and fragile, his hands on my side, the places where I fold. “You have a girlfriend.” “I know. I don’t like my girlfriend.” Beside me on a step, two scared children at the edge of a primordial dark. At Goodwill the next morning, he bought me a stuffed frog of purple velvet. The clerk, a round-faced, middle-aged woman with a West Texas accent, beamed at us, chuckled. He kissed my forehead. Who did I think I could be but the dark seductress? The girl with the witchy eyes crouched in the corner of the woods?
You have breasts like bowls of snow. And the eyes of an artist.

Your blog should win an award.
number 1 most prone to rumination and self-recrimination goes to me.
but seriously; thank you! ❤
Hey, how do you find out about the art you post? All of it is so beautiful and violent. I’ve seen your posts on Ana Mendieta and I just love it. I love art but don’t know much about and don’t know where to start :((
Honestly, it is just a lot of obsessive internet scouring. If you look at the sources on my posts (especially the more recent ones), I usually link to galleries that I love. Also, this may seem obvious, but it took me a minute to start doing this: image searching on google (right click on the image and do a google search) can link you to amazing blogs where you can find similar work.
It can feel daunting at first, but you have already started by loving art! That’s all it takes—especially now with the internet at our disposable. I’m having family time right now, but I’ll try to compile a big resource post in the next week for you and the other people who have sent me similar messages. ❤
your writing is beautiful and you are too
One of my professors at grad school opened up our first workshop by asking, “when did beauty become the default?” I liked that.
But I am not immune to the charm of this statement.
What is one book you would have everyone read at least once if you had the power to do so?
Please post more of your own art. When you’re famous I’ll be able to think to myself “I wrote her when she was just starting”.
Oh man. What a lovely comment. I don’t generally post the text of my writing, because I am shopping my work to publishers right now and any prior publishing is frowned upon, but here is a link to an audio recording of the first section of my collection, The Orchard, with some weird sound effects.
Again; thanks so much. I have scant ambitions toward fame, but I do have aspirations to achieving some sort of emotional and intellectual cogency, so this note made my night.
Is the “you can terrorize her with her own body” excerpt you posted something you wrote or from a book? I can’t stop thinking about it.
I initially wasn’t able to track the source, but it appears that it is from a play by Carolyn Gage called The Second Coming of Joan of Arc. ❤
Is that you? If so, how did you get the photograph to look so classic?
Sorry—I answer these like once every six months, so I am not sure what you are referring to. If the photo was tagged as #personal or #me or #my face…then it is me. If you get this, let me know what you were referring to and I will answer in a more helpful way. I use a few different editing tools on photos, so I can’t be certain what, if anything, I did without knowing which image you are referencing.
