On top of sweaty sheets, I exist without basic
order. Order of eating. Of hydration. Of relieving myself of concentrated
urine. Buddha says: Existence is
suffering. Desire is suffering. To be awake with one’s anxieties is
suffering. If I can sleep, then I can survive, but there’s something I desire,
something that, in my rest-deprived state, seems attainable. Reunion. Perhaps
through dreams? But then there would have to be sleep. Without worry, without
unnamed guilt.
Reality is unreality. I have no references to
validate my existence. Mornings at nights I pray to other gods, talk to you,
think of new superstitions.
5 am, I wake. Hello?
The
first published book by Vancouver multidisciplinary artist Leanne Dunic is the
poetry title To love the coming end
(Toronto ON: BookThug, 2017), a book-length suite of lyric meditations composed
as a series of self-contained fragments. While this appears to be a sketchbook
composed during foreign travel, this is less a book about travel than one that,
through the experience of travel, allows for the removal of the distractions of
home, forcing the narrator into an examination of self after “the loss of a
loved one.” As she writes: “Even while in Japan, my missing doesn’t thin.
Maples and pines root my muscle, call me back to land.” Dunic writes the
self-doubt, recriminations, observations and pessimisms that are often
associated with loss, writing:
Within me, a gaping crevice. The more I change
my environment the more I lose track of myself, yet I traverse. Maybe that’s
the point. Nothing is anchored. Today is unstable, easy for people and land to
split. Minerals grind a geological dance, the balance of the earth’s axis
shifts. Chile, Indonesia, New Zealand, Haiti, Japan. Where next? The unsure
crust hectors the Pacific Northwest, evidence of instability buried under
substrate. A story, mounds.
Dunic
writes of impending natural disasters and impending destruction, questioning
how one can continue on such a precipice: “Singapore grows, a city of glass, as
if there is no threat of plates and quakes.” To love the coming end is a book about isolation, vulnerability and
perspective. She writes on Mishima and travel, Singapore and her “next project,”
attempting to find ground even as she deems herself perpetually unsettled. She
writes:
I hate November. Especially in Singapore. I’ve
given up on aging, on anniversaries. I’ve given up on freshness. Showers are
pointless when you step out of the bathroom and into fortified humidity.
Despite the heat, I leave the flat to gorge on noodles oiled with meat fat and
yeasty goods from BreadTalk. I’m readying for tropical hibernation.
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