Poet Elida Silvey’s Compost Heap

Hiya, my name is Elida Silvey

I’m a Mexican-American poet, writer and editor based in London, UK. I’m part of Gobjaw Poetry Collective, who run monthly spoken word nights in London, and I write for Sunstroke Magazine, an arts and youth culture mag. I recently became editor for Latin Girls At Work’s blog Vocês, a charity that seeks to support Latinx women and non-binary people in the UK – a community that is close to my heart.

 

In 2021 I self-published Home in Limbo, a collection of poems and photographs I took and wrote during a trip with my dad to our family home in Aguascalientes, Mexico. This was the first time I had visited Mexico and I found it felt more familiar to me than I was expecting.  This collection was a sort of reckoning with all the wayward parts of my identity and the limbo they exist within. In 2023 I followed up with an 80-poem collection titled, Nothings, about my long distance relationship with my partner. Written in my tiny New York City apartment, during my visits to see my partner here in London and in my parents’ basement while waiting for my visa, the book is a journey about falling for someone from across a vast, untamable ocean. Touching on themes of love, longing, lust and a different kind of in-betweenism, its words come from a very real, raw place within me. 

 

I’m really interested in the connection between language (visual and auditory) and memory or dream formation. Spanish is my first language, but I find English to be the one that I am most expressive in. So I try to think critically about the language that is associated with whatever I’m using as the basis for a poem. Some of my work is an intersection of the two languages; with Spanish being peppered into a piece if it deals with themes of family, identity, or childhood, or with English following Spanish grammatical rules for a more melodic structure. These interests also spill onto some of the writing workshops I’ve run, as I often use surrealist and sense associative techniques to guide people into connecting words with their own memories.  

 

A lot of my poetry is born out of my attempt to understand the world around me and the way I fit into it. It also acts as a form of release, allowing me to process hardship by highlighting the beauty that remains in spite of it. I’m fascinated by language’s ability to act as a projection screen, drawing pictures in your mind’s eye that represent someone else’s real, relatable but often intangible feelings. Writing, poetry in particular, feels like an incredibly intimate and honest way to connect with other people. I hope you enjoy my work and feel welcomed into my gooey, gushy, girlie mind. 

Feel free to connect with me anytime @elida.silvey 💋

Girl-Apocalypse was written during the 5th session of Compost Library’s WRITE What's RIGHT workshop, as one prompt entitled “Vulnerability” helped me reflect on my desires and dreams. I ended up writing about the textures, objects and places that allow me to connect with my femininity as an act of rebellion.

Expansive

Expansive was written during the 6th session of Compost Library’s WRITE What’s RIGHT workshop following the prompt “Sound” which recommended we listen to ‘expansive’ music in order to think about your dreams. I listened to this playlist and writing it made me think about my future self and the kind of life I would love to have.

Expanding 

          is the shuttering of doors

so hard they fall off their hinges

 

I want to bathe in this newfound light

offer a bit of me to you, to who is willing to regard it

it, being everything and

             nothing at all

 

see me.

 

I imagine my children

                each delicate piece, created on paper

with fabric

         with sound, non-sound

 

the lump in my throat gives way

 

        dissolves

 off the sides

a Beetle could walk on it

sticky legged, red-hot

           giving into the malleability of dunes

some polygraphic gaze, ogling.

 

I hope to gather each precious pixel

        like those toys you’d make pictures out of

with metal sand

Etch-a-Sketch a whole crusade

for the I that isn’t ashamed of

              the me

who revels in her

gracelessness.

 

To expand space, not

          dimensions but dreams

                    so they sit lofty above my head

                above with the stars so gigantic

they form cattle stamped frames

in the bulbs of

my brain

 

light up every groove ‘til they’re neon

 

those streets full of music and wonder

take a big bite out of it

        so it sits heavy in the stomach

                      a warm meal, on a cold night

a good night out

with friends

 

expand those feelings

not their distance

‘til shoulders graze

            in karaoke bars off

                      abandoned highways, in towns

we can’t remember the names of

 

‘til all I has is me and

you and

    you and

        you and

             you and

                                       endless laughter.

Electronic, or Otherwise Known, Experimental

E.O.K.E. was written after seeing an experimental music act at Cafe Oto as one of my Compost induced artist dates. The show made me think about why I like music and how spaces like these erase everything that others me. It’s in the safe glow of warping music where I can exist as nothing. What’s more freeing than that?


The band plays sonics

             sound spaces stretched

dwindled

         then all of a sudden

                            aggressive

                                     smell of bleach pours into the room

 

I lift my feet, afraid I’d stain

              my maroon shoes

                          marble colour around the floor

bleed out from it

one, sip                           two

The song dopplers around the room

                    howling at the no-known moon

carcinogenic hue, not that

           swiss cheese blue blue

                                        not blue

blast me baby blast me

with the twist and turn of a synthesizer knob

 

a portal opens

            another mind thought closes

                   tight like the mouth of an angry man

 

so tight you can barely see it

 

                 sink your teeth into its texture

so circular your head bobs about

        buoy in all the sound

like a warning

 

Not blue, yellow

             like summer marigolds

wafting noise, an ocean of ones and zeros

one, sip zer o

 

you find meaning in its truncations

finite bliss

                 candles light the room in a glow

inchworm made inch work

strained eyes

              not used to the shadow play

 

the sound of laughter breaks the silence

outside

          we are grounded

                         but only for a little while

 

up sound, speeds up, up-up and away

ready for takeoff

 

transcendental

only in so much as

                it straps you in

does the astronaut merry go round

                          pulls flesh so tight

           against your bones

you metamorphose

 

into a creature

 

an, alien

       you learn to assimilate

                                when landing

brim with same-one-ness

                 til it’s shines so chemical

                                         oil slicked pavement

only then can you move on up

        leave this plane

par ticipate

 

the placard says your name in tungsten

                       wiggles about against the lighting

the sound encompasses

everything

 

you, the wholeness of nothing.

Slice of Toast

is the prelude poem in my most recent collection titled Nothings. The collection is about my long-distance relationship with my partner and it shares the feelings of helplessness that I felt while waiting for my visa back in the US.

My tongue runs over fuzzy Pepsi Cola teeth

attempting to wipe the sticky tack

residue

 

left over from an afternoon

spent. 

 

In Spanish we say money was wasted, rather

than spent

 

I can’t think of us

        in this moment

any other way.

It feels like time is wasted

spending it

 

          implies there is something of value

worth saving up for.

 

Where you enthusiastically gather rusted

pennies, from

the taped over bottom-sides of

plastic pink piggy banks, or

 

collected them from

             embossed floral green couch seats

in your mom’s home

 

the same ones she’s had since the late 90s

whose nooks and crannies

felt more like a loose assemblage of crumbs

than coins, or

 

pulled out of creased denim pockets,

        dusty and sharp scented from their home

at the bottom of our pale

plywood wardrobe

outlying,

in a bedroom too far for me to walk to.

 

I wish I could save all my time for you instead

of wasting it

 

I find myself angry with it

 

a bright white-hot shade

         of burnt orange marmalade

sitting stored in a jar inside of me

 

preserved

 

for the moment

when I can offer some of it to you

on a slice of toast.

Poetry Recommendations:

Diorama by Rocio Ceron

Rocio Ceron is a Mexican poet and spoken word artist that has always been incredibly influential to me as a burgeoning Mexican-American poet. Diorama is her only book with an English translation and it’s certainly not one to miss. Her vibrant use of visuals such as; “Candy and one ant. Brief asthma attack.” from her poem III is left imprinted in your mind long after you’ve turned the page.

A Coney Island of the Mind by Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Lawrence Ferlinghetti is another poet that has been incredibly influential to me, the tone and texture of his work feel incredibly American and equally sincere. My copy of this book has lost its binding from being read so much, I cannot recommend this enough. Accessibility in poetry is something that I find incredibly important and Ferlinghetti always championed for accessibility in the artworld. For that and his striking rhythm, A coney Island of the Mind has a special place in my heart.

You Don’t Have What It Takes to be My Nemesis: and Other Somatic Rituals by CA Conrad.

CA Conrad has one of the most refreshing takes on contemporary poetry coming out of America at the minute. Their use of poetry in conjunction with ritualistic practice brings to light our interconnectedness with nature and the cities we live in. As someone who often writes about both topics and who has her own set of writing rituals, I find their work incredibly poignant.

C+nto by Joelle Taylor

Another modern poet, Joelle Taylor is a London powerhouse. C+nto is a collection of poems about her experience within the LGBTQ+ community written through the visuals of vitrines, glass bottles and vivariums. Through her use of cinematic rhythm she pays homage to those she’s lost along the way. If you ever get a chance to see her read her work in person brace yourself for a large wave of emotion to encompass you.

This is my Goddamn Poem, and I Make the Rules: A Poet’s Manifesto by Micheal Kabasele

Creativity isn’t dead. It just lives in Micheal Kabasele’s head. Her incredibly funny poetry suberts the reader’s expectation about poetry and its structure by using imaginative references and rambling structures. Printed by Spun Press, this zine is less well known than its companions on this list but is equally worth reading.

Photo: @sickacidpuppies

Not Me by Eileen Myles

Oh Eileen, after my own heart. Not Me is the perfect series of ramblings from a New York haunt, with themes about femininity, sexuality and gender expression strewn across its pages in a stream-of-consciousness style. Each poem is equally as vivid and relatable as the next.

Pneumatic Antiphonal by Sylvia Legris

Sometimes poetry isn’t meant to make sense, sometimes it’s meant to evoke. Legris shows us this within Pneumatic Antiphonal as she utilizes anatomical language to evoke the movement of birds. Not for the faint of heart this book is for the language chewers. Read out loud, these poems will make you feel breathless.  

 

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