gaia lit
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Skiff

​​in my dream, the earth is an hourglass
and we are five stories from submergence;
rather, five months, five weeks, five days--

i watch boats dispatch from our neighbors’
balconies below, carrying cardboard boxes of
whatever they could carry and hoping they would
pass as waterproof. i ask my mother when it would be
our turn and she tells me soon, my daughter, soon.

we don’t have a boat, i say. she smiles sadly.
in the kitchen i help my father assemble a paper skiff.
i hope it holds up, he tells me. every day, up creeps
the acidifying sea, rising like nature’s bile.

of the skiffs i watched deploy, i wonder--
how many are made of paper, made of postcards,
shopping lists and holiday letters, photographs and
checkbooks, crinkled diplomas, waterlogged dreams.


                            i can’t believe, when i wake up, that

                                   the world is still drowning

"2050"

                                 In thirty years
                      my mother’s birth town will sink
                                 like Atlantis: foretold by the
                                            prophecies except
                                 not a myth.      That’s not what I told her.
                       Even after graphic design screams           activism
                                             ​on my Instagram feed. Even after storms
                                 inundate news overseas.       In a language I can only
                      listen to, my parents stream live footage of
                                 a flood.      Once, my uncle got a photo from
                                             family I don’t know, and laughed
                                  at a house half-underwater
                                            as if it were not a house          but a country.
It is 2020,                 early enough to be funny. Early enough
                                    to tell my parents that it
                                                                                  will be okay.
 
                      I told my dad while driving the other day.
                                 Then I told him that They could fix it
                                                       and prayed that they would.



Caroline Dinh is a Vietnamese American writer and artist. She is the founder of Backslash Lit and has work forthcoming in Strange Horizons, Flash Point SF, and Honey Literary. She has strong feelings about the color cyan. Visit her online at https://cyborg48.github.io/.
  • Home
  • ISSUES
    • ISSUE ONE
    • ISSUE TWO
    • ISSUE THREE
    • ISSUE FOUR
    • ISSUE FIVE
    • ISSUE SIX
  • CLEAN-UP EVENTS
  • PROJECT GAIA: AN ANTHOLOGY
  • BLOG
  • ABOUT
    • MISSION
    • MASTHEAD
  • SUBMISSIONS