It’s Let’s Get Food

Not I love you, that are the three best words
in the English language, because I believe
in the practicality of love. Romance is when
I order two Palomas and a steak for lunch
in LA—that windswept feeling of victory
is what the movies are about. Do you want to
rent a convertible, drive off into the sunset,
finger bang tongue me down when the light
turns red I’ll blush all over.
Are you love or
a beautiful memory is the 50/50-coin toss.
At a beer garden, X licks salt off his Paloma
with that tongue I’m about to tongue—his
seduction of eating me, then soft kisses. How
much longer can I accept beautiful memories—


Triple Sonnet for A Lover’s Secret I’ll Share Now

“I get my hair cut like Harrison Ford

in Blade Runner,” he says on our first

date, creating a new lover’s secret

that’s not okay to share but fine to put

in a poem. We order a Caesar Salad

& olives, & I don’t understand the rules

of heterosexuality, while the snow falls

in this backup town of the TV movie

of the week. In a week, he will tell me,

“Baby, no fast food,” & I will be reminded

of how in the ’80s, my dad dropped off

McDonald’s at my mother’s dorm when

she was the hottest co-ed, ultra femme

begins to explain both my problems with

love and my love of fast food. In a week,

we will eat at another restaurant. I will order

a fajita bowl with shrimp and no cocktail.

He will say, “That looks healthy, baby,”

while craving a baby in me. Do you ever

wonder about attraction—one Christmas,

my mother switches subjects when I ask

about how she met my father —“After

college.” Another holiday, my father brags

that my mother, at eighteen, was ready

to care for him & his two sons. Femmes

born in the Year of the Snake are said to

frustrate the most when it comes to romance.

Do you ever wonder about attraction—

When I was six, I asked my mother about

two-headed snakes, how most don’t survive

into adulthood, sometimes one half will

eat the other head. What if pop divas danced

on stage holding two-headed serpents, though

I loved Britney & Banana at the 2001 VMAs.

When I was six, I found a red lipstick in my

mother’s bathroom drawer, a relic from her

20s, a color my father forbade her from

wearing, from attracting other men. I use

older men. For dick. For presents, because

men my age give me nothing but honesty. 


Triple Sonnet Because Food is My Love Language

You can’t holler at a queer poly Asian

without knowing the ropes, Rita says,

because every time a love interest makes

me cry—yes, I sound like a casting

director, Rita and I are gazing out into

bodies of water, and I’m so sick of this

story arc. I remember Lake Michigan

on Easter weekend: furs wrapped around

our bodies, after brunch facing the Chicago

Skyline: Corned Beef Hash with Potatoes,

hot sauce, ketchup: a Bloody Mary with

bacon, three olives, pearl onion, rest of

garnish, etc., which is my favorite word

in the English language, because it’s sexiness

 

embodied. The lake looks the bluest when

your best friend is your life partner and soul

mate, which is never talked about enough

in this world of breakup poems and nuclear

families, and how on my birthday, I hang

up on my brother after he laughs when I teach

him the million-dollar lesson that the child

chooses their gender, so can you please fuck

off with those parties where pop the balloon

and out comes blue or pink? Did you ever notice

how aunt rhymes with cunt? It’s that special

slant of sound, but I can’t be an auntie because

I’m not a lady. I’m the highest of femmes

eating their way through life. Rita and I dream

of lobster rolls, and I’m reminded of Tampa,

after a lunch of cod and chips and mojitos

when we decide to sail away on a yacht,

because escapism is everything, only we

both get seasick, like when the actress on

the hottest show of the season admits that,

only she’s been filming on a boat this whole

time, and I just wish we could enjoy things.

I’m on a boat, well, “I’m on a float,” is that

remix from college, and I remember A feeling

heartbroken at that concert, but really, enough.

Rita tells me there’s more to life than monogamy,

and I take a plunge into the Love Potion No. What-

Ever Cocktail for $15: Yeoman Wheat Vodka,

Spiced Pear Liquor, Lemon Juice, Brown Sugar

Syrup, Cranberry, Rosemary—a little courage.


My Lover’s Wife Says

She hated her maiden name, which is why
she took his. I look at her straight black hair
and sensible heels that say I won’t take up
too much space.
Chanting her family name,
in a dream, I notice the slant rhymes with
Chan, how she gave that up for [this generic]
white man, who’s sleeping with other women—
other Asian women—me. He buys me
Japanese whiskey in Chicago, then complains
about the bill. I sit on his lap. He unhooks
my bra. I could write Think Pieces about
what leads men to Orientalize their partners—
Let me drink you under the table. Fuck.
Then throw you out once I’m done
, I tell him.


Dorothy Chan the author of five poetry collections, including the forthcoming, Return of the Chinese Femme (Deep Vellum, April 2024). They are an Associate Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire and Co-Founder, Editor in Chief, and Food and Beverage Editor of Honey Literary Inc, 501(c)(3) BIPOC literary arts organization, now in its third year. Their favorite sweet is red bean ice cream.

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