“108 degrees, honey” by Thanh Bui

there will still be humans, my lover says 
though we might not be included in that.
our kind isn’t just going to die out immediately,
to which i envision the skin of the ones who’ll
live. visit a Titanic museum—to predict which
persons will survive, you’d need to know their
statuses. an iceberg does not discriminate, nor do
fires, but people? we aren’t natural. did you know
the world is running out of sand? we’re not even
wealthy enough to know what to hoard, to hide.
for now, i can get water whenever, i am rich with
someone else’s thirst. our guide this summer
was from Quảng Trị, & didn’t know of electricity
until 2004. while he used candles, i moused
computers, i watched tv. during covid, i witnessed
my relatives pray for the vaccine already in my body
waters away. watching is another kind of pain.
that’s why they use it as torture, too. what’s as
un-human as having no power to change what’s
in front of you? bó tay as it all sinks. is it a good
thing i don’t know what species we’ve lost? which
cats are the last of their kind? my phone keeps
turning off, says it’s too hot to function. the summer
construction workers have a tip: turning off the AC
in their homes an hour+ before work helps them
acclimate to the heat. elsewhere, they’ve invented more
ways to survive. but we are a country of litigators.

Thanh Bui was born in Gò Vấp and raised in Dorchester & Alief, and is a writer & actor based out of Austin, Texas. She loves constantly.

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