Eve Sedgwick's Other Materials' refers to a graduate seminar that Sedgwick offered at the CUNY Graduate Center entitled How to Do Things with Words and Other Materials. As its title suggests, her seminar advanced Sedgwick's enduring FASCINATION with MAKING UNSPEAKING OBJECTS of all sorts, which elsewhere included the body's organic and inorganic waste. Taking a cue from her teaching, I suggest that, while critics have extensively detailed Sedgwick's contributions to literary interpretation, sexuality, gender, affect, and performativity, we should also appreciate her writings as theorizing queer material relations. This observation is pertinent given her rethinking of psychodynamic object relations theory alongside her creative writings on THE WASTE PRODUCTS, or the matter we ceaselessly produce. My argument thus anchors its claims in a close non-Kleinian reading of her poem Bathroom Song, which also offers an unforeseen take on paranoid and reparative idioms of psycho-material being. How waste matter facilitates this unanticipated insight is one of my essay's - and Sedgwick's - subsidiary concerns.