i am sitting in a darkened cinema 
rolling a spiky metal ring
up and down my fingers
pressing in sharp
to stop myself scratching
sigils into skin again

it’s history
          soup that has been simmering
through generations of us

driving; i bite hard into the fleshy pad
under my thumb, leave teeth marks
i recall clear imprints on my arm
canines and molars, a perfect set:
my own, sharp then fading over days
to mottled purples and yellows, bruised
echoes i worried at, fingertip pain points

each night after the spices, 
                     shells and bones
                              have been skimmed off, 
it’s canted into waiting children

my edges are murky; flickering images
dark seep into senses
it is unclear who is the daughter
who tripped and who reached out
whose gnarled hand clawed up

the warm aroma of 
                    intergenerational soup becomes
a fug in my every memory.

death rituals are supposed to be
a coming together a farewelling
a holding of space and folding grief
into the every day, tucking it
into the corners of the shuffling 
clacks of crafting, slipping it into
cakes, handshakes, solemn hands
on numb shoulders.

instead
funerals flicker on my screen
a parade of pixelated pathos

the lovers children friends left behind
                  add tears to soup
eulogies and the rending of cloth

the women are taken by cancer
brains breasts ovaries
riddled with it
the men don’t wait for death
but rather engage 
         trains ropes pills plastic bags
to do the filthy work

it’s all fodder for soup
         fragrant, sharp — boiled down
                  to stock, sticky, pungent
until we add another life
                  raw
                           potential
star anise and cinnamon

i had hoped you would
kick the pot over
rather than 
kick the bucket
but in the face of the 
coming conflagration
you were consumed

23 august 2023
templestowe
for sophie trevitt and fraser brindley