Mating Chain
           When three or more sea slugs mate in unison, the first animal in the chain acts exclusively 
             as female, the last as male, and the others as male/female simultaneously.
    
Learning the difference takes so long. Of being demeaned or being
     taught to navigate the seafloor. It’s a language of stoplights
     and dark folds you never saw creasing. For example, left is actually
     below your stomach and to the right is a reef of indigo. Patches of  grey
     and pink fondle me to sleep. I want to be one of the species
     that pins down the other, circling two or more lovers. To push 
     my flimsy heart forward in the currents. Lithe as eelgrass, 
     drunk on endorphins. The best a body can do
     is fold itself in half, flapping flail, repetition 
     of loneliness. But what’s the difference between this hunger 
     and parasitic tendency? I twist and steer each tentacle,
     tying knots against the stillness. This one to symbolize love and the  other,
     savagery. I’m learning the subtlety, braiding between them.   











 
    
