trying to. He fucked me a lot. I’d be crying or waiting. I’d be-
staring. I’d stare. I was like some idiot, staring. After he
fucked me I’d just be there, a breathing cadaver. Y ou just wait,
finally, for him to kill you; you hope it w o n ’t take too long,
you w o n ’t have to grow old. Hope, as they say, never dies.
T im e’s disappearing altogether, it doesn’t seem to exist at all,
you wait, he comes, he hurts you this w ay or that, long or
short, an enormous brutality, physical injury or psychological
torture, he doesn’t let you sleep, he keeps you up, he fucking
tortures you, yo u ’re in a prison camp, yo u ’re tied up or not,
it’s like being in a cell, he tortures you, he hurts you, he fucks
you, he doesn’t let you sleep, it doesn’t stop so it can start
again, there’s no such thing as a tw enty-four-hour day. I don’t
know. I can’t say. I didn’t go out anymore. I couldn’t walk,
really, couldn’t m ove, either because physically I couldn’t or
because I couldn’t. There’s one afternoon he dragged me from
the bed and he kept punching me. He pulled me with one hand
and punched me with the other, open hand, closed fist, closed
fist, to m y face, to m y breasts, closed fists, both fists, I am on
the kitchen floor and he is kneeling down so he can hit me,
kneeling near me, over me, and he takes m y head in his hands
and he keeps banging m y head in his hands and he keeps
banging m y head against the floor. He punches m y breasts. He
burns m y breasts with a lit cigarette. He didn’t need to hold me
down no more. He could do what he wanted. He was
punching me and burning me and I was wondering i f he was
going to fuck me, because then it would be over; did I want it?
He was shouting at me, I never knew what. I was crying and
screaming. I think he was crying too. I felt the burning. I saw
the cigarette and I felt the burning and I got quiet, there was
this incredible calm, it was as i f all sound stopped. Everything
continued— he was punching me and burning me; but there
was this perfect quiet, a single second o f absolute calm; and
then I passed out. Y o u see how kind the mind is. I just stopped
existing. Y ou go blank, it’s dark, it’s a deep, wonderful dark,
blank, it’s close to dying, you could be dead or maybe you are
dead for a while and God lets you rest. Y ou don’t know
anything and you don’t have to feel anything; not the burns;
not the punches; you don’t feel none o f it. I am grateful for
every minute I cannot remember. I thank You, God, for every
second o f forgetfulness Y ou have given me. I thank Y ou for
burning m y brain out to ashes and hell, wiping it out so it is
scorched earth that don’t have no life; I am grateful for an
amnesia so deep it resembles peace. I will not mind being dead.
I am waiting for it. I have breasts that burst into flames, only
it’s blood. Suddenly there’s a hole in my breast, in the flesh, a
deep hole that goes down into my breast, I can be anywhere,
or just sitting talking somewhere, and blood starts coming out
o f m y breast, a hole opens up as if the Red Sea were splitting
apart but in a second, half a second, it wasn’t there and then
suddenly it is there, and I know because I feel the blood
running down my breast, there’s a deep hole in my breast, no
infection, it never gets infected, no pus, no blood poisoning
ever, no cyst, completely clean, a hole down into the breast,
you see the layers o f skin and fat inside, and blood pours out,
clean blood, just comes out, it hurts when the hole comes, a
clean hurt, a simple, transparent pain, the skin splitting fast
and clean, opening up, and I’m not in any danger at all though
it takes me some years to realize this, it’s completely normal,
completely normal for me, I am sitting there talking and
suddenly the skin on a breast has opened up and there is a deep,
clean hole in m y breast and blood is pouring down m y chest
and I’m fine, just fine, and the hole will stay some days and the
blood will come and go. T h ey’re m y stigmata. I know it but I
can’t tell anyone. They come from where the burns were, the
skin bursts open and the blood washes me clean, it heals me,
the skin closes up new, bathed in the blood: clean. Because I
suffered enough. Even God knows it so He sent the sign. I’ve
seen all the movies about stigmata and it’s just like in the.
movies when someone explains what real stigmata is so we
can tell it from a trick; it’s real stigmata on me; it’s God saying
He went too far. He loves me. It’s Him saying I’m the best
time He ever had. They asked in the camps, they asked where
is God; but they didn’t answer: omnipotent, omniscient,
omnipresent, H e’s right here, having a good time. When you
get married, it’s you, the man, and God, ju st like is always
said. God was there. The film unrolled. The live sex show
took place. I’m filthy all over. The worst thing was I’d just
crawl into bed and wait for him to fuck me and he’d fuck me. I
couldn’t barely breathe. His long hair’d be all over me in m y
face, in m y eyes, in m y nose, in m y mouth, and it was so hot I
couldn’t breathe so I went to a barber and I got m y hair cut off,
almost shaved like at Dachau so I’d be able to breathe, so m y
hair w ouldn’t m ix with his, so there’d be less hair, I got
dressed, I found some change, I was scared, I didn’t know
what would happen to me, I told the man to take all m y hair
off, keep cutting, keep cutting, shorter, less, keep cutting,
shave it shorter, I just couldn’t stand all the hair in m y face; but
it didn’t get no cooler and I’d lie still, perfectly still, on m y
back, m y eyes open, and he’d fuck me. He didn’t need no
rope. Y ou understand— he didn’t need no rope. Y ou understand the dishonor in that— he didn’t need no rope and God just watched and it was your standard issue porn, just another
stag film with a man fucking a woman too stupid or too near
dead to be somewhere else; a little ripe, a little bruised; eyes
glazed over, open but empty; I would just lie there for him and
he didn’t need no rope. We was married. I don’t think rape
exists. What would it be? D o you count each time separate;
and the blank days, they do count or they don’t?
E IG H T
In March 1973
(Age 26)
I was born in 1946 in Camden, N ew Jersey, down the street
from Walt Whitman’s house, Mickle Street, but m y true point
o f origin, where I came into existence as a sentient being, is
Birkenau, sometimes called Auschwitz II or The W omen’s
Cam p, where we died, m y family and I, I don’t know what
year. I have a sense memory o f the place, I’ve always had it
although o f course when I was young I didn’t know what it