aqueous memory archive

A collaborative collection of memories with & in water contributed by artists, writers, musicians, educators, & activists

Photo of a window looking outside with houses and trees beyond

Edward Gunawan

I DREAM OF WATER — Spoken word poetry and a single static photograph convey the confining isolation of the pandemic.

I DREAM OF WATER

The door’s locked, windows shut

the days and nights blend into weeks and months in a series of boxes

soiled take-out’s pile on kitchen counter-top

as half-opened deliveries line the hallway

and frozen screens crackle with static stutters

and I dream of water

Fires rage and ashes rain down

a mask and these four walls to protect ourselves

I hear the lapping waves call my name

palm trees swaying, sand underneath my feet

salty sweat on the tip of my tongue

as I dream of water

The earth’s parched and sky, a sci-fi yellow

swimming the deep blue with fishes and turtles

fingers pruning, a chill in my bones

breath on the respirator

a Darth Vader-rasp

I am in the water

May the rain wash the sticky soot clean

the rivers and lakes quench this dusty desert

and the ocean fill me up whole

House-bound,

I sit here

— and I dream of water

Photo by Sarah Deragon

EDWARD Gunawan • he/they • Jakarta, Indonesia | Oakland, CA

Edward Gunawan is a queer Indonesian-born Chinese writer and literary translator who authored two chapbooks—including the Start a Riot! Prize-winning The Way Back (Foglifter Press, 2022). They have also been awarded the Gabo Prize in Literary Translation and Multilingual Texts by the journal Lunch Ticket. Visit addword.com for more.


© 2026 Manon Wada as a collection, All content belongs to individual contributors