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Flirt

What makes me awestruck is impossible to remember.

It was so insubstantial that I had to save it as a draft.

Save, which means write more, how shameful.

This keyboard suddenly feels like a contraption.

Bottoming out as if language could bottom out.

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Take all hesitation as a mark of interest.

Do not ask him for the content of his dreams.

What’s in process can’t be disturbed.

Don’t combine in order to fill the blanks.

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I’m not interested in building a notion of who he is.

A negative held up to the light seems romantic.

Signs of interest out of balance. I’m noticing a pattern of effacement; character assassination; single sudden movements, so you can’t see how it was done. Decompose the composition. Kill him off with a set of images. I run and I see and I name, I dream and I record. Objects of observation are made into literal “texts.” If I’m loud and clear enough I can drown out tenderness. Nobody is worthwhile until I’ve known them and ripped them up over the length of my new pubescence.

Dream in which I encounter the mutilated face of my beautiful and dead mother. The cinematic close-up is horrifying but conventional. Blonde hair in wavelets, dressed in a white cotton slip dress. We begin to touch each other, I wake up immensely aroused. I tell it to him immediately, because it’s striking, and because the Oedipus complex isn’t mine. Isn’t this boy the same one I taught to read, the one whose name had been used “130 times” before? He responds by saying that it is a “very sad but very pretty” dream. That’s very sad but very pretty, the way he says this. It’s how I’d like to remember him. I push him into silence, I push him into something to be remembered as nice, and my rejection feels like a stony act of will. I’m sure he’s not thinking of me, and that becomes my way of rejecting him in a reflexive sense. I can’t believe he had something to say when I told him this or that thing, about a hummingbird, for instance. “I had a dream with a hummingbird in it too!” I imagine this bird is a phallus, that he’s fucking that other girl. It’s easy to imagine a blockage and use it as an excuse to become cold. I’m disappointed in him for being nice to me, for having thought of me as smart or enjoyable to speak to. I’m nothing but a pervert, and an excessively serious one, too.

Analysis is only about to take fruit in the transformative sense when there’s a palpable resistance. I’m remembering now resisting speaking about how much I dislike physical proximity with my mom, dislike being touched by her. It doesn’t seem worth talking about—some stupid explanation involving omnipotence, being afraid of maternal power. I can’t be in love with a woman, because I need to be the ultimate woman. I foreclose sexual relationships with women because I believe it’s my hero’s journey to find a sperm donor who can double as a father. I insist that men are averse to such schemes, that they must be involved in some kind of web of trickery. I think I’m fearless, that I want the thing that’s most fearsome, and that I will inevitably walk through fire to obtain whatever it is I want. I also think I’m more alluvial and simple, more capacious, accepting, because I refuse to think so-and-so is dumb, I refuse the paradigm of “smartness,” and I refuse to believe that whatever caustic tendencies I may have are anything but a front, as hardy as a PET bottle. I’m super flippant, like my hair, which has a jagged fringe, which might as well inadvertently grow into a shaggy wolf cut without being entirely discordant. The ends are lifting up a bit, I look like someone who’s in eighth grade. Will things be self-evident on account of my hair?

My cunt is probably as abject as the worst thing you could possibly imagine—i.e., it’s something you can’t conjure yet.

It disgusts me that you would see me as male, as safe territory for treading upon the discussion of “feminine sexuality,” I imagine myself as a kind of beige piece of spandex, wrapped over a book or some other inert object which certainly isn’t a body. I don’t believe you’d believe me if I told you I was literally anatomically female, not because I can’t prove it, but because you’ve been inculcated with visions of the feminine which are being effaced and forgotten every time you name it. It’s not a thing anyone who knew it would be so concerned with. Your lack of knowledge could be endearing and even productive, but it isn’t, and I don’t know that it’s possible to twist that non-knowledge into something else.

Why are men so obsessed with the virginity of the ideal?

The only imaginative training consists, during the ordinary hours of attending Dance without any particular aim, in patiently and passively asking oneself about each step, each strange attitude, these points and taquetés, these allongés or ballons, “What could this mean?” or, even better, from inspiration, to read it. For sure, one would operate fully in the midst of reverie, but appropriate; vaporous, clear, and ample, or restricted, so long as it is similar to the one enclosed in her spins or transported in a fugue by the unlettered ballerina lending herself to the play of her profession. Yes, that one (if you’re lost in a hall, very foreign spectator, Friend), so long as you submissively place at the feet of this unconscious revealer, like the roses taken and thrown into the visibility of the upper regions by the dizzying play of her pale satin slippers, first the Flower of your poetic instinct, expecting nothing but the display, in its proper light, of the thousands of latent imaginations; then, through an exchange of which her smile seems to hold the secret, she hastily delivers up, through the ultimate veil that always remains, the nudity of your concepts, and writes your vision silently like a Sign, which she is.

(Mallarmé, “Ballets”)
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In the terrible cascade of cloth, the figure swoons, radiant, cold; illustrating many a spinning image tending toward a distant unfolding: a giant petal or butterfly, uncrumpling, all according to order, clear and elementary. Or she fuses with the rapid nuances transmuting their crepuscular or grotesque phantasmagoria of air and water into a rapidity of passions—delight, mourning, anger. One needs, to set them off, prismatic, violent, or diluted, the vertigo of a soul that is as if cast into the air by an artifice.
[…]
Thus this peeling away of multiple layers around a nudity, enlarged by ordered or tempestuous contradictory flights, circling, magnifies it until dissolution: a central nothingness, all volition, for everything obeys a fleeting impulse to disappear in whirls; it sums up, in the will and dizziness of each wing tip, and hurls her strict, upright statue—dead with the effort of summing up—beyond the liberation almost from herself, the last decorative leaps evoking oceans, evenings, perfume, and sea foam.
So much is understood—but not spoken!—that to proffer a word about her, while she is performing, very softly and for the edification of the immediate vicinity, seems impossible, because, firstly, this sows confusion. But the memory, perhaps, won’t be drowned out by a bit of prose here. In my opinion, wherever fashion wishes to range this miraculous contemporary phenomenon, it was important to extract the summary meaning and the explanation that emanates from it and acts on a whole art.

(Mallarmé, “The Fundamentals of Ballet”)

The floor avoided by her leaps or hard on her points acquires a spatial virginity undreamed of, isolating a site that the figure will, all by herself, build and make flower.

“L’air me brise.” “I am broken by air.”

What I do is reorder free association until it is truly free.

How do I grasp my left breast? How do I grasp the sign?

I’m a vain hind. Is summer a good time for drama?

You can’t see me until I’m done with my transformation.

The problem is that the events were never written.

It takes a lot of study to become a dilator of time.

“Truth is the little sister of jouissance, we will

have to come back to this.” (Lacan 116, Seminar 17)

I’m not skimming the surface enough, haven’t given the surface enough time.

Tingling skin after an afternoon in the sun makes me hate him, makes me want to hurt him.

I’m supposed to tell him that I’m female in a way that precipitates from a need within a narrative framework.

It’s inelegant to divulge something that hangs from nowhere; it disfigures the natural evolution of things.

Why is it so easy to remove oneself from the world? How dare he lack in his lazy elongated easeful tiredness?

Comfort around someone is unusual and even if I don’t try to preserve it it persists.

I hate to be made to like, to be made to know that we have something in common.

I understand you as transient, I understand that you cannot be a point of fixation.

What I cannot say to you directly is what I own, what I come to know as valuable.

This doesn’t work in reverse. I don’t know what you dream of, though I might be there.

If you wish for something from me, do know it so it might come out.

I can’t continue to use a person as a particular kind of mirror.

I can’t say I’m grateful without sounding epitaphic;

I am glad you have enjoyed me so much.

Please enjoy me further.

If in ‘The American’ I invoked the romantic association without malice prepense, yet with a production of the romantic effect that is for myself unmistakable, the occasion is of the best perhaps for penetrating a little the obscurity of that principle. By what art or mystery, what craft of selection, omission or commission, does a given picture of life appear to us to surround its theme, its figures and images, with the air of romance while another picture close beside it may affect us as steeping the whole matter in the element of reality? It is a question, no doubt, on the painter’s part, very much more of perceived effect, effect after the fact, than of conscious design—though indeed I have ever failed to see how a coherent picture of anything is producible save by a complex of fine measurements. The cause of the deflexion, in one pronounced sense or the other, must lie deep, however; so that for the most part we recognise the character of our interest only after the particular magic, as I say, has thoroughly operated—and then in truth but if we be a bit critically minded, if we find our pleasure, that is, in these intimate appreciations (for which, as I am well aware, ninety-nine readers in a hundred have no use whatever). The determining condition would at any rate seem so latent that one may well doubt if the full artistic consciousness ever reaches it; leaving the matter thus a case, ever, not of an author’s plotting and planning and calculating, but just of his feeling and seeing, of his conceiving, in a word, and of his thereby inevitably expressing himself, under the influence of one value or the other. These values represent different sorts and degrees of the communicable thrill, and I doubt if any novelist, for instance, ever proposed to commit himself to one kind or the other with as little mitigation as we are sometimes able to find for him. The interest is greatest—the interest of his genius, I mean, and of his general wealth—when he commits himself in both directions; not quite at the same time or to the same effect, of course, but by some need of performing his whole possible revolution, by the law of some rich passion in him for extremes.

[…]

(In making which opposition I suggest not that the strange and the far are at all necessarily romantic: they happen to be simply the unknown, which is quite a different matter. The real represents to my perception the things we cannot possibly not know, sooner or later, in one way or another; it being but one of the accidents of our hampered state, and one of the incidents of their quantity and number, that particular instances have not yet come our way. The romantic stands, on the other hand, for the things that, with all the facilities in the world, all the wealth and all the courage and all the wit and all the adventure, we never can directly know; the things that can reach us only through the beautiful circuit and subterfuge of our thought and our desire.)

(Henry James, Preface to The American)