Thursday, November 3, 2022

MK Chavez : Process Note #4 : Process Note or 666 Considerations on Horror

The 'process notes' pieces were originally solicited by Maw Shein Win as addendum to her teaching particular poems and poetry collections for various workshops and classes. This poem and process note by MK Chavez was part of her curriculum for her Poetry Workshop at University of San Francisco in their MFA Program for Fall semester of 2022.

 

 

 

Process Note or 666 Considerations on Horror began as fragmented thoughts on the meaning of watching over 500 horror films during the first year of the COVID pandemic. Eventually, Blueprint for Mysterious Creatures was born, it is a hybrid poetic exploration of identity.

 

 

Process Note or 666 Considerations on Horror

 

This creature emerged as a fragment.
In this story horror inspired and permeated
the corporeal and the intangible

parts of self.

One night, I found Frankenstein
&  knew I loved him, I was him.

The desire to speak the unsayable
to ruminate on the unthinkable.

In the nightmare, I opened amaranthine
door after door. I wanted the answer.
This book is the sacred realization, I am.
 

The landscape of horror films
is fashioned from the details of lost identities. 

In El Salvador, I’m Black but Black in that
we don’t have black people in El Salvador way.

Joan Didion's book Salvador
was a slasher film. It said, here’s one way to see yourself.
I shut my eyes as one does

during the scary parts of a horror film
and closed the book. There was blood everywhere.
 

My friend says, I never feel Latina enough, says
but at least you speak Spanish.

My other friend says I knew it when I tell her

that I recently learned that my father’s side of the family is Black.
My other friend says, but you’re not really Black.
 

Father never said we are Black.
He said try not to look Black.

Frankenstein is not the name of the monster
the monster has no name.
Frankenstein is the name of the father.
 

Note to self:
What would happen
if I brought bring friend to Father.
 

I watch horror to make sense.
So that I might love my monster, love your monster
love my father’s monster, love the monsters

that my friends carry
even love that monster, Joan Didion.

American anxieties find a good home in cellulose.

Becoming numb is body horror
and an integral part of the pantheon.
What I know is that when all is lost

I find my body in horror. Some stories
lurk, lurch, and levitate. Stay with you

like a hungry ghost
that lives in the back of your throat

like an eyeball.

Horror is an allegory.
A not-so-secret secret
and fabulist at heart.
 

Join me in the labyrinth
but you should know
if you build a labyrinth from the inside

out you may never find your way.

Horror has a penchant for mimicry
& repetition.

Recurring themes include desecrated
burial grounds, infrasound
that pairs with the spongy

tissue of marrow. The company
of the haunted, cherry-colored lip-gloss

a certain coming of age
trope, dioramas of wounds,

the best fears, the tender view
of teeth. All that is swallowed.
 

Horror gives trauma an alternate ending.

Studies say we don’t go to horror
to see violence, we go to see
the unraveling of rage.
 

In The Thing, there is one woman identified character.
Her name is cheating bitch.
Cheating bitch is a voice

that beats a man at chess.
The 2011 remake includes women.

In an Atlantic a man says

there is something lost when you include women.
 

Wrath is a meditation
Horror is a wish.

Consider the monogamy of some monsters
their single focus and the promiscuity
of others altering everything

they touch.

My father would drink and ask
why are you so dark
?

Monsters once lived on the edges of maps
& minds. Eventually, everything is explored.

The word monster is derived from the Latin
monere meaning to warn.

Art historian Asa Mittman says
Monsters do a great deal of cultural work,
but they don’t do it very nicely
. 

Somewhere inside me
lives a wish to incite fear.

Deep in the swamp land, sunk in silt
slithering among Cypress & Tupelo,
seeped in brackish water

among Spanish moss & Shoebills
lives the forgotten creature from the Black Lagoon.
 

A good horror film shows us who we are.

What if we are the monstrous thing?
What if we are the rescue group
that shows up at dawn and shoots

the survivor of the long night?
What if we are every character?

What if every film carries a truth?

Even the worst of them.

Dear Reader,
this book is an invitation.

 

  

 

Sample poem:

 

Diegesis of the Bear in Midsommar

 


The practice of crawling in and out of the bear skin.

The way in which grandmother begged

Don’t get a tattoo,
                     your dark skin is already working against you.

The year the bear made friends with the man
who owned the corner store.
He liked to say,
 

I like the color of your skin. 

The bear found reasons to visit the store
cigarettes for father.
Jolly Rancher candies

to stain the tongue
and occasional milk.
 

It was the first time
the bear’s color
was not a warning

or resentment.

The iris opens and opens.
The bear is fictional space.

The world of Midsommar is an ellipsis…

Here, in this whiteness, my blackness is pure macula.

Bear alight in my eye.

 

 

 

 

 

MK Chavez is a mixed-race Afro-Latinx writer and educator. She is the author of Mothermorphosis, and Dear Animal (Nomadic Press), and the lyric essay chapbook A Brief History of the Selfie. Chavez curates the reading series Lyrics & Dirges and is co-director of the Berkeley Poetry Festival. She is a recipient of the Alameda County Arts Leadership Award, the PEN Oakland Josephine Miles Award, and the 2021 San Francisco Foundation/Nomadic Press literary award. Her most recent publications can be found in the Academy of Poets Poem-A-Day series and at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco with the Voice of Trees projects. She teaches writing and is a book coach through Ouroboros Writing Lab.


Maw Shein Win's most recent poetry book is Storage Unit for the Spirit House (Omnidawn) nominated for the Northern California Book Award in Poetry, longlisted for the PEN America Open Book Award, and shortlisted for CALIBA's Golden Poppy Award for Poetry. Win's previous collections include Invisible Gifts (Manic D Press) and chapbooks Ruins of a glittering palace (SPA) and Score and Bone (Nomadic Press). She is the inaugural poet laureate of El Cerrito and often collaborates with visual artists, musicians, and other writers. mawsheinwin.com

 

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