Un/Occam’s Razor: In Praise of You, Dear Complex


Felicia Zamora

Cut away

(extraneous material)

unceremonious

* philosopher * theologian *

un/known fuzzy logic

un/known phenomena

un/known quantities: a rule

espouses complex theories

A rule: logic of un/

Poetry

2 September, 2023

to butcher [what we know

of knives, sharp blades

in the back—a whittled down]

*INSERT WHITE SUPREMACY. INSERT COLONIALISM*

[amygdala—careful now, don’t slice

incisor before the chomp]

we un/butcher at the shin, torso, elbow, thalamus, cornea

to un/heap a pound of flesh; whose flesh? [Our flesh.]

[Complex, variations of all you endure in un/

pleasurable

equal

tolerable

holy

realistic

fathomable

answerable

fettered

fallible

derstudy

knowable

seen

derstood

tied

doing

] ] ]

] ] .]

Let us hold space for [ ] [our bodies not transparent]

[ ] [ ] [ ]

[ ] [ ] [ .]] Water in/is wave [transform].

The way imagine says field & you run

barefoot into brambles, over hedges, palms

of thorns, heels of honeysuckles, nipples

bulbs bruit in soil & salient in air—a body

What worth to be metaphysical hums of an earth

older than our un/possibilities sings. Complex, you stretch

your sharpened bones, cilia, tendons to unleash un/[ ]

unsimple. We unsimple. Body unsimple

note: First, left-side stanza is language erasure from Merriam-Webster's online dictionary. 

Felicia Zamora is the author of six poetry collections including I Always Carry My Bones, winner of the Iowa Poetry Prize and the 2022 Ohioana Book Award in Poetry. She’s received fellowships and residencies from CantoMundo, Ragdale Foundation, and Tin House. She won the 2022 Loraine Williams Poetry Prize from The Georgia Review and the 2020 C.P. Cavafy Prize from Poetry International. Her poems appear in Best American Poetry 2022, Boston Review, Guernica, Orion, The Nation, Poetry, and others. She is an assistant professor of poetry at the University of Cincinnati and associate poetry editor for Colorado Review.