Thursday, December 31, 2009

My Eleventh Hour


I caught my own breath in my hands
and took the time to breathe it back in--
sweet and satisfied, stale and strangled,
spangled with lavender and sour milk
and what it means to be nationless.

Tell me you smell something different.

Tell me I'm bound to what I give
but never to what I am given;
that I can choose when the balloon pops,
when my corpse falls earthbound;
that the rushed and eager touches
I collect under my bed
can be quilted into
a sickening new height of love.

I can't remember who told me
that I wasn't young anymore.
It might've been the stout cashier woman
who proclaimed me a thief when I
slid a Snickers bar into my pocket.
It might've been my Playboy Mommy:
she warned me of the sins in my blood,
of her own obsession
with a woman's power to unveil.
Or maybe God told me on the day
when he made me suddenly
wretchedly
unequivocally alone.

On this ancient earth, I'm rarely glad to seem young--
until I'm tangled in sheets
and limbs I can't get out of,
until the simplest mechanisms of
a beating heart lose their intrigue
in my stoic desperation for blood.

Tell me you smell something different on my breath;
Tell me I can choose to be boundless.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Turbulence


This is more of a ranty, confusing piece of random than anything else....

I was reborn in a storm— power out, phone lines tied; the weather too shitty to step outside for much needed air but this house had a roof so it was alright. They had a great survival pack for this type of thing: cans of beans, a bottle of wine and matches—many little matches that lit many little candles around the house that cast many little shadows on the family photos that lined the walls. My father said to her, “you know, honey, we’re running out of time.” So she sat on the floor and she spread her legs and she pushed for a minute until I finally gave in and came back to her.
For a second she thought they’d soon get the power back in their empty house. When I was reintroduced to this world, she says that I illuminated the living room for a moment— bringing an instant of light to the darkest corners of what was once a mortuary. They are the ones who chose to stay in the house where they once prepared their dead, not me. So I collapsed under the phantoms they insisted on avoiding— that I saw in their faces, shrouding me like loose skin until I was nothing more than their writhing baby on a hardwood floor. A baby with arthritis and crow’s feet.
But I learned how to crawl and I learned how to walk and I even now know what it means to run— even if only in the dark, down the hallways of my home. But out there— in a world where everyone else is chained to some greater good or their self-induced bad—that is where I insist to be chained to everything. Give me all the scriptures of the world and I’ll pick a few and scrapbook a mantra. Hand me a single dollar bill and give me a dare—I promise I can do more evil without even spending it than you think I can. Outside of that house, the haven from the storm, the midwife’s reluctant office, the place I once grew up— where they once put makeup on stone faces and still sleep in caskets, just in case—outside is where I run much too fast.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Untitled: suggestions?


He was never mine, even after the seasons melted into one another and his favorite photograph of New York’s highway 95 tarnished at the edges. He took me there once; he showed me why he left. I thought it was beautiful while we stood on that overpass, fingers interlaced into the chain link fence. We stood atop the grandest Christmas tree in the world, our porcelain faces radiating in the yielding darkness with our wings suspended behind us. We could have flown over that railing and headfirst into emancipated bewilderment but instead, we just glowed. I wanted to laugh as toy trucks zoomed beneath our feet, their momentum gently rocking the traffic lights, our gracefully dangling ornaments.
In my admiration for such a place, I nearly missed the looming apprehension sprawled across that angelic face of his. We weren’t in the city because I wanted to see the pretty lights beam at me and I wanted to beam back. Ethan made me get in the car and I headed north as he slept in the back seat with that photo evenly placed between his palms, draped in some sort of serenity that I only ever saw when he was unconscious. I drove three hundred miles with him like that, careful to turn and break with great care so we could maintain the first silence we’d shared in recent weeks that couldn’t be sliced with a sharp enough blade.
As I approached our exit, I reached behind and grabbed his leg, shaking firmly to wake him. “What way?”
“What way gets us across the Hudson from lower Manhattan?” he groggily questioned.
“You’re the one who lived here. You wanted to show me this.”
He suppressed his belligerence with a low grumble, that sound he always made when he didn’t want to give me an answer. The closer to when he’d woken up, the lower his octave and the higher my dissatisfaction. Somewhere between four and five PM on a Monday, Wednesday or Thursday, it was always tolerable to hear him groan like that. I’d pour the remaining capsules into my hand and count them in pairs, and he’d grumble again. It didn’t matter if he danced in circles around too many Prozacs or how many hours of sleep he’d gotten the night before.
It was the nights when I knew exactly how long he’d slept when I closed my eyes and suffered through that incomprehensible mumble. Fucking inertia. We went from a hundred and ten in a residential to zero; we were endorphins and synapses firing blanks from muskets. I never would have wanted a little cabinet for me, a reliable change of clothes at his place for my morning drive home, regardless of what I usually came dressed in. Although I didn’t know much, I knew a name, a face and a folder of psychological records—enough to take all appeal out of smelling like his natural scent and somehow adapting it for my own.
I often made coffee while he slept since he was somehow unfazed by the sunbeams crawling inside from every unprotected doorway or window. He didn’t have a single grain of sugar in his entire apartment, and that actually mattered to me then. I stood ten feet from his bedside and took a quiet moment to admire his shoulder blade illuminated from the horizontal slivers of light emanating through the blinds. Once again irritated with my sugarless coffee, I then I woke him.
That’s when the grumble came, when I flew over the dashboard and through the window and onto the street. I even skidded a few times, and I still have the road rash on my hands to stand for it. Fucking inertia.
“Ethan, this isn’t okay.” Grumble. “I don’t think we should do this anymore.”
“Oh hell, should we do this. I trust you ‘cause of it.” He coughed while sliding closer to the right side of his bed, having strayed from that familiar territory sometime in the early morning hours. He slid farther from me.
“Why though? You talked to me fine.” Grumble. “Why does it change anything? I don’t want this.”
“Yes you do.”
“I don’t, though.” Another grumble. “I really don’t. I don’t want to be the shrink who can’t help anybody, so she does this.”
“I hate that word.” He muttered with the majority of his mouth still pressed against his pillow and slightly open, his eyes closed. After a few moments of silence, he opened them again with unbelievable speed, the lens open and ready to capture the instance of weakness he knew I would have. With a blink, he clicked, and I was caught on film as raw as I ever come.
I pressed my shoulders together behind, adding a little more dignified strain in my collarbones. “Psychologist, fine. But I’m not-- I’m the shrink who can’t help anybody so she fucks.”
He’d grumble, and I’d pick up my keys from his nightstand and walk towards the door.

I then soon discovered that Ethan made effort an unmade bed and bleached socks. There were more Vicodin prescriptions in his glove compartment than on the shelves of the pharmacy that gave them to him, yet their plastic seals were all unbroken. He swallowed one aspirin a day that almost took the sharpest of the edge off in his shoulder, usually right after he combed his hair, one hundred exact strokes each morning.
Yet those unopened pills started two weeks after I did. I was a better psychologist in the early stages than I’d been my whole career and he never spoke a single word to me once we left my office. I became him at night; he resonated through my insides and pulsed through my veins and out again, as syncopated feeling and thinking and believing. The code was quite predictable: fast was anxious, violent was angry, deliberate was inquisitive for passion. I began to know him in those weeks right before the real pills. Ten years of spherical coffee talk and elongated silences, and I finally knew him.

“Is there anything you can tell me about where we’re going? How to get there’s a start.” I anxiously rubbed my thumb along the inside seam of the steering wheel.
“I only vaguely know where we are right now.”
“That doesn’t mean I know this city; you do. I just want to get there so we can grab a bite up here before we head back.” I hesitated. “Can’t do that unless we get there.”
“It’s really not that exciting, and food can wait,” he said, audibly shifting his weight in the back seat.
“I’m hungry.”
He coughed. “So am I.”
“Where the hell do I go?” I snapped. To know Ethan, I figured, was to gain real understanding of your own patience.
“Right in 2 lights, I think.”
“And then?”
“I’ve got to see it,” he said with a hint of irritation in his voice. “I can’t see it from here.” He paused. “At the speed you’re going, I’m surprised you’re charging me by hour instead of by mile.”
“Who says I’m charging you? I think of this as a courtesy thing.”
“I always assume you’re charging unless we’re at my place,” he said dryly. I heard a faint shuffling from the back seat as he sat upright.
It took me a moment to tame the heat rising up into my chest, so I let his words settle before nearly whispering, “that makes me feel like more of a whore than it should.”
“That’s not what I was getting at at all.” His voice lightly quivered. “At all.”
“The point is,” my fingers clenched, “that this is a courtesy thing.”
I could feel his eyes burning through the back of my head, through my hair and into my brain, as if staring at me as intensely as he always did would somehow make my mind more easily legible. “Are we friends? Really?”
“You’re my client.”
“Am I some kind of lo-“
“No.”
“Lover?”
“No.” Silence. “Where to?”
He gave me an intersection to plug into my GPS and then retreated back into his sullen disquietude. The psychologist told me that I just filled him with an overwhelming sense of emptiness that you can only feel when losing something you never had to begin with. The lover told me that he just abandoned the game, the fruitless chase because the mouse finally ran into that hole in the wall and the cat was left in the open with filthy paws.
We eventually got to that overpass, and I truly did love the view from up there for a while. It liberated me, the warm and intensified light that shone upon the green exit sign and somehow found my face: white, pure and not the least bit menacing. I stood atop the greatest of all edifices, and I alone was illuminated for whoever bothered to look up at me. It was him and me, alone, atop the grandest Christmas tree in the world, but for all I cared, it was me alone who radiated.
He broke my captivation: “I don’t like it here.”
“I think it’s quite beautiful, actually,” I stated, seconds before jolting back into full-fledged consciousness, etching the outline of the manila folder in my office with his name on it into the forefront of my mind. “You don’t. Why?”
Grumble. “I don’t want to be here.”
“Then why are we?”
He leaned forward into the chain link fence, pushing all his weight against the rusted iron while gripping the threads with everything he had. His eyes danced in their desperate attempt to follow each passing car, darting from one to the next until he finally fixated on the fast lane. As each car brightly flew underneath us, Ethan involuntarily blinked, jolted by such an imposition ruining all the black.
He smirked: “why not?” His knuckles grew paler.
I watched him for a few minutes. That face said it all, now that I know why he clung onto that fence like he did. It was the best of times to observe him, while his upper lip retreated further and further underneath his top teeth with every moment we spent there in silence. I could feel him in that surreal way again; I could feel his pulse rising to catch up with the speed of his eyes, still chasing after whatever they could below us. His eyes were losing.

“You know how every kid is scared of roller coasters for a while?” he asked. “I fucking loved ‘em. I wanted to design them or build them for a while, I loved ‘em that much.” He looked at me for a split second and with my nod, he focused on the cars again. “Everyone can scream on them and that’s what’s supposed to happen. And if you’re the one not screaming, no one gives a shit because they’re too busy enjoying the ride. No one’s gonna look at you like you’re crazy because no one’s looking at you at all.”
“You don’t like to be looked at?”
“I’m alright with it now.” His grip loosened on the chain link fence. Car after car weaved in and out of the dotted white lines and he kept chasing them. “My parents used to look at me too much because they knew I’d just stop for a minute or two and they wanted to wait it out with me. But sometimes I’d drool and that’s when other people would look. A few times I shook, but just a tiny bit. Everyone hears ‘seizures’ and they think of these crazy convulsions. I never had those but I had a ton of seizures.
“And I could almost feel them coming, I swear I could. It’s this split second of anticipation that’s almost scarier than the thing itself. I don’t know if I just didn’t have enough time or if I didn’t have the balls, but I hated myself for not shouting or something, letting people know what was going to come. That’s so much of what’s weird about them—you can’t prepare yourself to lose all control. It might’ve been relieving that way. It wouldn’t have plagued me… but that’s another thing, how people seemed to think that they could catch it or something. They’d get unnerved when I randomly went still. They acted like it was so traumatizing for them to not know exactly what to expect out of me, even my teachers did. If I could’ve warned them, then it wouldn’t have been a damn plague for any of us.
“But I grew out of them. All kids do when its absence epilepsy. But I was always scared of that feeling. It’s nauseating. I don’t wanna feel that ever aga—“
“Ethan, get down.”
He had slowly ascended up the fence and when I finally noticed it, he already had one leg over the railing. He swung his other one around and fully faced the freeway, ten feet above me on the chain link fence. He was the one with all the potential in the world to radiate, now a dejected porcelain angel with all the Yuletide lights fighting for him. They make porcelain look paler.
“Do you know what it’s like?” he paused, stealing a huge breath of cold life from the city, “to feel insane? I tried,” he began, “to be nobody else’s problem anymore. But I swore I felt that feeling while I was driving on this overpass and I hadn’t felt it for over twenty years. But I’m telling you that it happened and I would’ve had one, I swear to God. It’s nauseating, it makes me want to die… I didn’t want to have them anymore and I didn’t know what to do and there was a car in front of me and I didn’t want anything to happen to him and— it seemed right to drive off.”
The angel cried.
“Marissa,” he began, softly tilting his jaw towards me. “Marissa, there’s a cross down there for them. Amy Sanford, thirty-four, and Michael Sanford, three. I walked out with a shitty shoulder.” Digging his heels deeper into two holes within the fence, he held on to it a little tighter.
“Give me one good reason to get down.”
The psychologist told me that it was my job and moral duty to save any patient from his or herself. The lover didn’t speak because she knew that she was never much of a lover at all. For the first time, he was listening to me:
“Of all of the people in this world, you chose me to be here to watch you die. Get off the fence. You have living to do.”
I drove home alone.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Arachne


Your first mistake was to smile at me:

I remembered how to spin again,
darting in and around
and through,
weaving the softness in your eye
into infertile veils
of love
that the wind will carry with it.

But you never knew
that Itsy Bitsy can't cough water
when she's spitting out blood--
that she weaves and she weaves
with no fingers left to prick.
So I spin and I spread
and I learn to live thin--
I asphyxiate you in gold
and I am sorry.

Run from Arachne--
She spins on eight broken legs
if you only
almost
love her.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Old Habits Die Hard


I eat and I sleep so I can eventually
spin:
My arms to span east and west
To their corners of some sea,

my legs to launch heart and mind to heaven
and the Souls of my feet far in hell.

And the rotation begins,
I do time in suspension

all the time I gave up
So as to pollinate you.

So I spin and I spread
and I learn to live thin

Since loving you isn’t enough and
you’re so good at hating me first.

This is my body, given up for you.
(and I don’t think I know your name)

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Green Means Go

I never wanted to care when the light turns red. I always have that choice that I never seem to take, when I drive and drive and I pull another slim outta the glove compartment and I drive some more, puffing away and watching the smoke rise and then I see the light. It is yellow, smirking at me like I have no balls and it knows it no matter how many stogs I smoke and lines I blow.

"Betcha can't run right on through me."

I smirk back but that doesn't do shit to wipe the taunting yellow glow off that face. I push down harder and harder to go faster and faster and breathe softer until the recessant pounding against the walls of my skull is nothing but the soft beats of a heart that I instantaneously believe has beat faster before. I'm alive to say it.

My heart starts going pretty crazy just thinking about all of it while stopped at the red with one hand firmly dedicated to the wheel. I watch some guy in an F150 as he takes an extra long drag and I think, "that smoke sure is pretty."

That yellow sure did want me.
That last shot of blow did feel damn good.
That fucker did have really good hands.

Nostalgia won't have the time to hit once the light hands me some fresh excuses.




Green means go.

Gold Dust


It makes the pocketwatch far from
My pocket
Tick against my thigh
At the type of speed
My heartbeat misses. It's like
The rain can't be wrong today
If it's dropping gold for me
From the hands of a man
Birthed in foreign fields--
Expelled from a womb
That still tells her wives' tales
In terms of pasos and siestas.
It's "adios" to that
For the man
Who now loans me the dollar
So I forget how to nap--
Forget how to eat in a world
Taking it too easy
In a world
That won't stop moving
In a world
Bound to a clock
From some world
That can't tell when time's up.
I choose to roll in gold dust
In a world
Where I can't be golden.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

A Biography



It feels so good to be cold again.

But this is more of a lukewarm,
And yet it still makes me smile--
A little less than last time
And even less than the time before that--
All in reminiscence of my first
Aspen winter.

I was a September baby
And you can't ever let me forget it.
I tasted a morsel of summer
In the
Lukewarm
Rays of a dwindling solace
Until that something of a dreamer
In me
From you
Saw something simultaenously
Frozen and aflame.

Everything licked me at once
And I was smothered
In such "abrasive"
That I can't have all to myself like you can.
They changed me with their sticky tongues,
The moon and
The sky and
The coastline and
The mountains and
The look on your face when your heart was breaking
All over again
While you sang to me
The words you once wrote.

Its all encapsulated,
The things that changed me--
All of it encapsulated but
Me.

I got through one hell of a winter
With the promise of living again
In the heat

But on lukewarm nights
When the sky doens't cradle me
Like it used to,
I hear your voice and

I desperately miss the shiver.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

The Beauty of Hidden Moonshine


A lady in the sky tonight is telling me that I am meant to be this convoluted. I buzz towards her, captivated by the idea of licking the remnants of her from between my fingers. I reach out into the night, gingerly at first, whispering, "I know you don't wanna come out, sister honey, but I bet you taste so sweet."

I can hear the moon smirk at me but no one else can. They see her sitting pretty behind the cold front of steel gray masses that makes her seem cold, too. She's warm and I can feel it, but not when she smirks in that way that only I can sense, penetrating my blood and bone. The moon wants to make me feel crazy, and she knows I'm crazy just for her and her alone.

I come out here every foggy night, no matter what I have going on behind the closed curtains. I couldn't care less when the sky is perfect-- I'd rather be draped in the limbs of a very imperfect lover, or even sprawled on my bed alone and bare as one big unworthy and utterly predictable mess. There's something about my sister that drives me to her side like a worker bee to raw pollen. I could make something beautiful out of her, I assure myself, as I reach out farther and farther to the silent clamor of no avail.

Sometimes, I hear her in my dreams, when the night breathes her in and her vapor awakens all senses. Her voice lathers me in buttermilk:

"You can be art, too, if you keep your chin as high as your heart."

Monday, May 25, 2009

Death Row is a State of Mind


The day I decided that I was no longer living for you, I started my slow descent to the bottom of the Dead Sea. Buoyant force doesn’t do shit when the atmosphere feels as heavy on your head as it actually is. All this pounding in my ears and implosion on my skull makes “light as air” simply not good enough; I want it to be lighter. I want a long drive at its best with somebody who has nothing to talk about, a Yuletide most celebrated without plastic garlands along each banister—but I crave casual conversation all too much now, and Christmas just can’t be Christmas without halls decked in holly.

You have come to show me that death row is a state of mind, a sense that cannot be shaken by that feeling you’re supposed to get when he holds you, or when your little boy paints a pretty picture and tells you to keep it. I’m the one of the two of us who sees beyond the plank, searching for heaven out of a seven-forty-seven window and finding solace in the wiser words of foolish men. You’re the one with September nights that have morphed into witching hours, blankly tapping the heavyweight bag twice with your left fist, soon after swinging around with the right.

And the truly amazing thing is that I can watch you without sensing each blow now. I’ve got a heaven and a hell to find and a way to find them: through midday moons and gasoline, red-tailed cardinals and dogwood.

The truly amazing thing is that you’re the only one with sore fists while I can finally see every star as the Northern star.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Bonne Hiver, the third chapter


I wrote this to be a personal narrative for a creative writing class-- the only problem is that it's too personal and not quite a narrative. Here's an... esoteric memoir, if you will.

___________________________________________________

My name rolled off her tongue like honey. With her, the four letters that constitute who I am didn’t have to puncture the sweet still of silence lingering between us. Her tongue twisted the word just enough that it eased between her teeth and lips and into the emaciated air, her breath flowing freely to me from across our desks. The quiet was interrupted by something far too beautiful to consider a burden: the softness she expelled from her lips became my mantra; it rang to me in that transient moment and rings to me still.

“Dani,” she said, her voice slightly quivering, “tell me everything.”

And I did. I shakily recalled the worst moments of my life, choking in my attempt to exhale each syllable and string them together in a way that might make sense of my desperation. I told her what I knew of that sickness she had studied, the one so ancient and cross that no crucifix could ever fix it quite enough. I told her that I was happy and healthy and free, all while my heartstrings stretched and eventually shredded under the mere thought of return into open empty arms. After minutes of the most honest communication I can remember having with another, I made a point to assure her that I was just fine—plain old fine, one big step ahead of it all.

Yet, she still asked the question: “Are you afraid?”

I hesitated, and then my eyes climbed from my feet up to her face, and then inside of their counterpart within her own: “Yes, I think I am.”

I tattooed it to the inside of my mind, the way she looked at me after I was finally revealed. That stare targeted my eyes and spread like wildfire, the synapses between my every thought and bone firing signals left and right until my toes were alight. I fueled her somehow, resonated to something inside of her that I know someone else riled up a time or two. Her eyes held no questions of whether or not that moment was the one in which she should expand herself to some greater purpose; she knew it, her certainty emanating through the most convincing of charcoal irises from beneath a velveteen layer of tears. I could sense that I was being analyzed to every intricate detail of my makeup, for eyes like that discover scrolls of scripture, witness the crumbling of our modern Egyptian Alexandrias and always feast upon the simplest mechanisms of a beating heart.

It is in that stare that I fell in love with being loved.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

April Ramblings


Here are two short "creative rants" that I have written within the last week.



No Direction Home (April 11th, 2009)

I worry about you so unbelievably much, but that stoic face tells me that I have better things to spend my time worrying about. It’s not as concrete as you’d like to think I believe it is—the chiseled nods of approval, the eyes carved out of limestone. I am lying against your shoulder like I am because I like it here and because the empty exasperation in your sighs breaks my heart every time they escape you. I know you—you don’t write because it’s cute. You don’t inharmoniously sway to “Like a Rolling Stone” with tears in your eyes out of some glorious life revelation that comes to new light within the subtle twisted twine between Dylan’s barely-there notes. I see it.

and I can’t do a fucking thing about it.



Writer's Block (April 15th, 2009)

I guess the worst time to write is when you need to write the most: the words that mold together to form the fibers of one’s very being pound against an empty skull, the old contents now vaporized when met with the ceaseless heat emanating from an angry heart. It is then that I want my passion and intellect in some sort of equilibrium. In these moments when I cannot escape my painfully visceral state, my right wing fruitlessly grapples at the air surrounding it, beating tirelessly for the purpose of justifying all those things it can feel until all it can feel is plain old tired. The left wing mechanically rises and falls the same distance every time, always to an identical time table. It cannot sense how fervently its partner works to lift me higher and higher, into some state of revelation that one can only pray will eventually become mediocre art. The left wing has a job to do: it stretches as far as it can away from my body and beats on until it is driven into the cold, cold ground.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Cocoon


I dealt with my cocoon:
Birthed from the ancient alabaster columns
Of a long lost civilization;
Draped under a star-spangled banner
In a poppy field;
Encompassed by city lights
In every which direction—
Bound by the size of the bills
In my neighbor’s stuffed pockets
And chained,
At the end of every day,
Under a blank name and face.

Yet such a cocoon served me well,
Kept my arms from spanning wide enough
To tug too hard at my heartstrings.
I was situated just right
So that I could pluck them,
To itch that scratch—
Scratch that itch that was fed
Every time I had nothing
To cradle
Or be cradled by.

“Play for me soon,” they cried,
And I would. I’d play anything
To hear the slightest of empty sighs
Escape them,
To feel the faintest skip
Of a heartbeat or two
Disrupt the gentle sway of the room
We stood in.

The transience once fueled me.
It asked to persevere;
It wanted the single instance in time
When a specific note I played
Was a little prettier than the rest
To sit quietly at the bottom
Of an underground box,
Awaiting revival—
A time when my blank name and face
Became beautiful
While I tried my best to explain
The ugliest things
I have ever seen.

I used to deal with my cocoon—
When the claps drove me past the poppies
And the frayed flags on every
All-American wrap-around porch.
I dealt with my cocoon
Until the ugliest things
I had ever seen
Had nothing to say to me anymore.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Duchess Falling



I can’t sleep when the bed sheet fights
Its way back to your side
And you’re not even there
To pull it over you again--
But that cannot keep me
From tiring of the tireless nights
You grant me,
Or the dazed days when I want
Nothing more than to know
Who you are,
Or the dawns that make me smile
With the golden rising orb
You love to hate and
Hate to depend on--
Setting at dusk
When your prideful moon rises;
When I can watch, breaking,
Knowing you will never be
The duchess to rise
When all else goes black,
Or the woman to stand straight
Just because she wants to,
Since you’re no woman to thrive
As a transient nomad,
But the only one I know
Who tells me she can
While laying cradled
In stronger arms.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Gift


I would have, and would still
Give anything to catch you.
I would fold the sky into my palm
And place it in your pocket;
I would chase the sun
All the way to the sands
To be the one to hear your heart
Palpitate
To the sound of the sea breathing.

I would dance for you,
I would change for you;
I would weep in the glory of
Giving the tiniest star your name
And flying you there,
Where it won’t seem so tiny anymore.

I cannot move earth
And heaven:
The Great Ceiling is boundless
With not an edge to fold inside itself;
The sea holds in her hands the
Bewilderment
You cannot yet face;
The tiniest star might just be
Not
Quite
Tiny enough.
I'd leave more on your doorstep
Than a heart and a head
If I was more than that myself.

Please, as you wander now,
Often watching me wander,
Seeing every bright streetlight
As the newfound Northern Star—

Know that
I will still dance for you,
I will always change for you.

Whenever you wander,
Maybe watching me wander,
Remember that I can always
Write for you.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Bonne Hiver, the second chapter


I look at you now and hope with all my being that you’ll remember me, even when you get distracted and could easily forget to.

My stomach couldn’t quite find the energy to churn while I sat next to you, arm pressed against arm. It should have, given the circumstances. It was unbearably difficult for me to comprehend that you actually followed me into the dark just to be given the chance to pull me out again. Yet, we listened and we learned. You looked at me every once in a while, scanning my face for any signs of unease that I could have told you didn’t exist. I was, after all, with you, arm pressed against arm like we were. I could smell something in you that I finally could breathe in with my eyes closed, taking in nothing but the glory of experiencing who you are.

I wish you knew how much it means to me, how glorifying it is to be able to look you in the eye and claim that I know you. You don’t like making decisions. You prefer to cross your right leg over your left. You hate yourself for your fervent love of dependence. You like to write notes on your left hand. You work very hard to suppress your cynicism every day. You’ve had the same haircut since high school. You love debatably more deeply than anyone I know, but you don’t express it unless you genuinely trust someone and even then, you make it difficult to decode.

In many ways, it is safe to say that I know you. I want you to want to know me. I pray every day that you sat next to me that night for some greater reason, that you felt so inclined to walk me through the fire only partially because the fire once burned you.

I want you to love me. I promise I will love you, that I will make you feel useful and appreciated. I promise I won’t have to use words to tell you. I will just let myself grow overwhelmed in your presence and you will feel it somewhere in the corners of your consciousness, and that in itself will be enough.

I want you to know what it feels like to be needed. I want you to need.

I look at you now and hope with all my being that you’ll remember me, even when you get distracted and could easily forget to.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

An Ironclad Life


I once could laugh at the worst moment
Of a porcelain life,
When sourgrass stung
The scrapes on my ankles
And I was free to seek
A siren’s song.
I could tilt back, aglow,
Spinning in this chair of mine,
While laughing at the sound
Of laughter
Until the porcelain cracked
And made webs out of me,
And soon, a porcelain life was shattered.

I tried to laugh at the worst moment
Of a copper life,
When I savored the
Deepest of solitude
and dreamt of drinking in
The years deferred.
But I would curl up, ashamed,
In this same chair of mine
While sighing at the sound of laughter
Until the copper corroded
And made rust out of me,
Leaving you to find
My silent grievance:

I cannot laugh,
I cannot sigh
While leading an ironclad life.

The Day I Saw Star Clusters


Once,
I skimmed both ends of the world
With brazen fingertips
And somehow reveled in knowing that
I could never grip both sides,
Nor get the chance to
Flip the earth in midair and call
Heads or tails.

Yet somebody whispered in my ear today
That there’s a Soviet flag on the moon
Where ours is supposed to be,
That cathedral bells will swing at noon
Because a timer told them to,
That the look on your face when you laugh
Hides a person more empty than those
You laugh with.

I could have seen star clusters in the daylight
While underneath my roof, under layers of linen and lace.
I could have rolled that globe between my fingers,
Personified life and death,
Made a heartbeat and a steady breath
Finally within grasp.

I firmly held the earth between my hands today,
And held less between my palms
Than I had in either of my pockets.
I’ll learn to let the earth fall free from my hands today,
And remember life chose me, after all.

The first of typewriter ramblings


TO BREATHE THE FIRST LIFE
,one step two step
;maybe, just maybe a spoken word
of seesaws and trombones
(is it just me, or do they shrink
?/grow)
the pacifier between your lips --
a dress size every year
;then the stop.

i can count the stains now
#one beer two beers
TO LAUGH AT THE WORST
MOMENT
of a (porcelain) life
;i try,
;i tried

i see no maybes
.infinitely.
"quotations dont matter,"
"i don't matter,"
That
.infinitely.
matters.

i try,
i tried
TO LAUGH AT THE WORST
MOMENT
of a (copper) life
;rust lingers
where you can only feel
the -green-
where the -green- only matters.
Rust
.infinitely.
matters.

i cannot decay
before sinew hands && hollow
bones

i try
; i tried
to live an(iron) l i f e
.

"To be a poet is a condition, not a profession."


Lately, I've realized that I've become a person whose constant exterior battles have outweighed what I consider to be the most important battle one will ever fight. I have lost the overbearing need to chafe away at my thoughts and values until I am left with a raw form of self wholly fit to criticize and reflect upon. I have lost the sense of urgency in my chase to improve and more fully understand what I have found to be "me" and I've come to realize that it is solely due to my lack of writing lately.

Therefore, I feel like it is more important than anything else to restablish both my appreciation for literature and my own application of this expansion of the written word into my own writings. The following quotes have truly sculpted my reliance on poetry and prose, or at least clarified my assertions of it. I'm not quite a "poet" yet (although I pretend to be one), but these quotes revive all faith I have in becoming one. I'm only posting this on Facebook and Blogspot to remind myself that I CAN'T BACK DOWN and downplay writing's significance in my life, especially now that I've publicly declared it. Also, I know there are so many of you who understand the introspective power of literature and need the reminder as much as I do, or who might need the push to see beyond the intellectual and into the emotional.

_________________________________________________

Poets are soldiers that liberate words from the steadfast possession of definition.
- Eli Khamarov

"I've been know to say, 'Oh yes, I do want to be in love. And yes I do want to be a loving, loving person. And yes I do want to be the mother of many children.' But at the same time, there is part of me that says 'I am also Lillian Hellman and I want to write the great novel of all time.' I want to go on the beach with my silent typewriter and I don't want anybody to bother me... because I want to enhance this planet. I came here for a reason. I didn't come here to be a mother. I didn't come here to be a nun. And I did not come here to be a cleaning lady. I came here to be a poet."
- Stevie Nicks, 1983

"Poetry may make us from time to time a little more aware of the deeper, unnamed feelings with form the substratum of our being, to which we rarely penetrate; for our lives are mostly a constant evasion of ourselves."
- T.S. Eliot

"Poetry is all which gets lost in translation."
- Robert Frost

"A poet is an unhappy being whose heart is torn by secret sufferings, but whose lips are so strangely formed that when the sighs and the cries escape them, they sound like beautiful music... and then people crowd about the poet and say to him: 'Sing for us soon again;' that is as much as to say, 'may new sufferings torment your soul.'"
-Soren Kierkegaard

"We don't read and write poetry because it's cute. We read and write poetry because we are members of the human race and the human race is filled with passion. And medicine, law, business, engineering, these are noble pursuits and necessary to sustain life. But poetry, beauty, romance, love, these are what we stay alive for."
- Dead Poet's Society

A poet must leave traces of his passage, not proof.
- Rene Char

Bonne Hiver, the first chapter


I want to bask in
A beautiful winter beside you.
Walking with our minds
Interlaced
Like his and her
Fingertips brushing
In their first contact,
Blushing
in some type of
Reverie
Even the greatest of loves
Never knew.

And you,
You're like a
Beautiful Wisconsin winter all
Over again
As I step inside from your doorstep
and regain feeling
In those fingertips.

Because I saw you as
Black ice
from the moment I met you
and God,
How I want to misstep and
Sweepingly glide
Across such a magnificent terrain.
Maybe I'll get lucky and
Slide across a crack, and
We'll plunge headfirst into
Liquidated darkness
Where its impossible to discern
Why such a beautiful person
Froze over in the first place.

If you let me in,
I might
Swim towards the surface and
Amidst the shiver
And the fear,
Bask in the chance
To see the light emanating
Under the wake
To see through the same eyes
You do.

Coffee Talk


I looked her in the eye that evening and spoke some of the only truly honest words she'd ever hear out of me. This time, there was no intricate detail I'd thrown aside and no implication curved out of the corners of my mouth. I was ten times smaller than her for that instant. I slowly crumbled into the remnants of blueberry scone that had fallen from her lips moments before. She didn't notice it then, like I doubt she noticed me all over again. She wasn't staring at a body across the table anymore, but a soul: save of expanding lungs and that void in my right eyebrow, of scars.

The words had escaped me: "I am not a strong enough person to throw my cards in and settle for a polite handshake and coffee talk for the rest of my life."

Oh, and of course she told me that I was wrong, and that I was the strongest person she knew. Of course she jabbed at my ribs and reminded me that I can hold my breath until every last molecule of oxygen inside me has been robbed of all its worth. She brushed her fingertips along the scar underneath that faulty eyebrow and quietly requested to hear the story behind it again. She remembered hearing about glass, she whispered. There were so many things I wanted to whisper back.

I left her at that table and frankly, I wanted to believe that I'd made some huge mistake and being a survivalist really was the ultimate test of self-empowerment. It wasn't a matter of weakness, I told myself, if I continuously held that lighter to my face, or even just kept fighting like the senseless warrior I had became. I, after all, am a survivalist.

She'd know strength if she would stop looking for it in every action I take, or lack thereof.

I'd know strength if justice meant nothing and happiness meant everything.