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The Holiness of Degradation

Katie Schmid

September 30, 2021

with a title and a line from Leslie Jamison

Anne says, what if you are not sick or bad, what if you are Katie?

I know I have to fuck the stories that are fucking me.

I think about the writer who spoke of “despair that remains curious about the world, thirsty

for justice and company…” and what it would mean to keep myself company in this hateful hour. Accompany

myself into hell, knowing that even in hell there is singing. The most beautiful singing.

My dog noses over my body to find a warm pained spot for her cold nose. It is dark tonight.

Many hours of the night await me. It will not be enough to be good, Katie. You must be

something you haven’t created yet. To think you know anything of what you are is a laugh. To think you know

anything! Like sitting in a Quaker meeting house and wishing Dorothy would shut the fuck up and then

you wake up and realize Dorothy is holding the oars that are rowing you to god, and god’s universe is thick

with the good black rot that means something will grow again. If you can only… Stay with me here, don’t leave.

                                                                          This moment is safe if we don’t think about the next, this holy room Dorothy let me into before

she died and took the oars with her. I’m trying to stay in the boat

though I am beside myself. I am trying to be

beside myself. Look, she doesn’t have enough strength yet. But the boat

is big enough for two. The boat is patient for what it wants, holy nothing rolling forever.

Her arms are not strong enough for oars, but she’ll try her voice and see where that takes her.

Katie Schmidis the author of the poetry collection Nowhere (University of New Mexico Press, 2021) and the poetry chapbook forget me / hit me / let me drink great quantities of clear, evil liquor (Split Lip Press, 2015). Her work has appeared in 32 Poemsthe Rumpus, and elsewhere. A former Best New Poet and AWP Intro Journals award winner, she lives and writes in Lincoln, Neb., where she is a lecturer in English at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln.


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