Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Private Eye
When we stepped out on to the porch we stepped into a world of ice, white sky, and creaking branches. We heard the world breathing. Sight had become a vestigial appendage. We sensed the world's dimensions by echo-location. In the weeks since the first ice storm we'd had two more. Limbs and twigs cluttered streets and anyone with any sense avoided walking under trees.
I told the Eye we'd better consider crawling to get from A to B, but Eye scoffed, pointing to his Vibram soled boots with an arch finger. Fine, I said. We'll chance it. Don't come cryin' to me if your ass breaks.
I thought maybe the thing to do was find a cache of sand somewhere and strew it ahead as we bestrode the sidewalks and parking lots of Amberlack, but that good idea was faulted with the lack of a known cache of sand.
Eye and I were pursuant of a very small and bent over old lady who had taken off from her senior apartment the day before and hadn't been seen since. It was feared she'd slipped, and possibly hit her head, or simply couldn't get up, and thus was in danger of death by freezing. However, there was hope; she was known for her persistent attempts to escape from her daughter-in-law's well meant supervised habitation to a senior center in Avram Heights. It had, as we knew, because the old lady told us each time we apprehended her, a pool table, where a cute little asian man smiled at her as he banked his shots, his white socks shining love at her flower heart. So she said. We didn't share this with Norma. We had a bread-buttering routine, a cycle, a round, a ritual, one of many among a constellation of regular escapes and apprehensions.
We found the senior village a rich well of minor troubles. It was our specialty.
Saturday, March 6, 2010
When I had Time and Hope
I used to be the kind of person who got excited about things—secretly, so as not to play the fool out loud—the kind of person who had ideas, who thought, “this time, it’s all going to turn out right!”
I had exclamation points in my thoughts, roses of hope blooming in my chest, a vision of how happiness was possible if you only just glittered, gestured, hummed in exactly the right way so as to alter the universe’s nasty tendency toward imprisonment.
Was it the universe that was so dead set against I or anyone, really, ever having a moment’s rest from worry?
If things were all right, how long could it last? If things were bad, was there any hope? Would hope’s emissary slip past without my noticing? Could I keep my eyes peeled and all my senses alert for the magic animal, the force to be harnessed?
Even awash in gloom, I clung to the dim glimmer of time’s expanse. “Not now,” I mumbled, in a barely audible voice, grey with exhaustion, “but someday. There’s still time.”
I wonder whether or how much any of this has to do with my beginnings, the stories that first formed when I tried to explain to myself why things were as they were. I came up with reasons, and then, to make myself feel a little more secure, I gave myself the power to alter the facts to make them fit better.
I was of a temperament to want to fix things. Maybe it was just the discomfort of being there when someone was in pain.
Bipolar disorder, aka manic depression, runs in my mother’s family. My Auntie Sandra was the first I knew of to stand on the corner in her pajamas cursing passers by.
My Uncle Nate had an eye tattooed on the back of his left elbow. It was supposed to keep him safe from harm by scaring off any bad luck that might try to sneak up on him. He’d gotten it in the Navy, possibly from one of his mates, since the eye was the sort a child of a certain age draws, with a perfectly round pupil resting in a perfectly symmetrical pair of arcs, and fringed all around with evenly spaced eyelashes. “I kept seein’ Uncle Nate’s elbow comin’ at me,” Auntie Sandra said, with a mild, medicated smile. Her once brilliant blue eyes were washed out from thorazine to an almost colorless yellow-grey.
Auntie Sandra took me to the store in downtown Calumet, using a shortcut. “We used to go this way when we skipped school, smoking cigarettes and wearing red lipstick,” she said. She gave me some makeup she wasn’t using any more.
I knew, or at least suspected, that she was trying to make me feel like a human being, part of the world. But it was impossible for me to feel like a part of the world. As far as I knew, that had always been the case. It wasn’t that I wanted to be apart, it was that I could see everything from the outside. How I longed to swim in experience, riding emotions from wave to wave, graceful and nearly effortless. I imagined other people weren’t in such a state of exile as I was, though you’d think the opposite would be true, that I’d assume everyone was in the same boat as I. But I observed that nearly everyone I came across inhabited themselves with ease.
On Being Painted Over
I have lived many dreams-come-true in my life, which is an accomplishment, after all. Let me say that up front, so as to remind myself of the fact. Dreams can be lived. What you long to find you will find.
What I am is an arrow, a beam of light. My eyes aim. My mind aims. My interest and attention aim. I am an instrument that measures my perceptions against my desires.
What is an animal but a perceptual device? A window for a god to look through. An idea, caught in the ether and unable to take form, rides the life of a bird, a girl, a snake, searches for it's chance to exist.
The world of forms is a world of windows and ideas. A world of passages.
What is an animal but an alimentary tube, with a mouth on one end, asshole on the other? A slave to necessity. Equipped with senses designed to promote survival. Prodded constantly to move, to get, to have, to let go. Tricked into reproduction, or not. Life promotes life, after all, without favorites. Let us celebrate the embroidery of the plain facts with pleasures and inventions.
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Tragic Bee
The teacher had a block of wood
with different items attached to its sides;
a pipe cleaner, sandpaper, a cotton ball;
including a soft furry bumblebee
stuck on with a pin.
It was a lesson about touch.
When I told my mother about it
she lamented the bee as though it’s living body
had been cruelly impaled by my heartless teacher,
never considering that the bee
might have been a treasure my teacher found
and wanted to share with us.
This was a story my mother told me
over and over again,
the spin she put on
every experience, mostly I guess
because it was a good story, full of pathos,
with clearly defined victims and villains
and haunting regrets.
The hero always dies, beautiful and tragic.
It was and still is extremely important
that I understand the suffering of innocents
and do whatever I can to save the world
by knowing everything there is to know,
but no matter how hard I try
I will still discover a tragedy I failed to prevent
or one I will soon cause by my selfishness.
I, like most of the others, was afraid to touch the bee
even though it was dead
and the teacher assured us
it could no longer sting,
but I touched it anyway, and it was very soft..
Our teacher was young and new to the job.
It was the beginning of the school year,
and she was trying out the things she thought of
over the summer to make teaching
new and fun. She was surprised, amused, and a little disappointed
that our imaginations were so powerful
the mere thought of a stinger
made us shiver, depriving us
of the beautiful softness
she wanted us to know, but she was soft.
I felt disloyal. Maybe my mother
was trying to be sympathetic to my squeamishness.
What I said wasn’t what I meant.
I wanted to know if it was safe to try something new and scary.
The answer was, not unless you want to crucify someone.
Thunder
Dreaming each night of thunder
the small girl floated in the air.
The window by her bed
had an invisible ladder
to escape the flames of the burning house.
Between her bed and the wall
were bags of what she’d take
things she could sell, maybe,
on the road to some great adventure,
some deeply felt existence where fear
dissolved into home.
She wore her clothes
under her nightgown, so she’d be ready.
Before she slept she went over in her mind
the route she’d take down the roof,
leaping to the ground unharmed.
She poked through her bag, examining
each thing, deciding again
what was essential, but began to feel
there was nothing there
she could use, there was nothing anywhere
that would ensure her safe journey,
the disaster she waited for
had already occurred, she was too young
to hit the road alone, and there was nowhere
she knew of to go.
It must have been sudden,
the change from plans for escape
to resignation, to digging in for the long haul,
watching for signs everywhere that would mean
an end to the suffering.
“It’s time to begin your life,”
the signs would say, “go ahead and stop
being afraid, stop
hiding your face, slouching
against walls and in corners, hiding
behind your long hair.” She pretended
she was grown and nothing could harm her,
grew a bright shell
that despised and defended
weakness, a life-like shield
made from clothes that seemed
to protect her, a stance
and expression that prevented
attack, words so quick and clever
no one thought to wander behind them to see
who was there.
Still, she always slept in her clothes
and kept her bags packed
and all her favorite stuff close,
in case a family of gypsies or acrobats
gathered under her window
and called for her to come home.
Whose Large Eyes Catch the Light
I’m throwing open all of my windows and doors,
singing a song to the cold night air,
a beautiful song, to invite all the animals in.
I want to live with the furred and feathered,
the wild, the sincerely ferocious, the always hidden,
whose large eyes catch the light.
Small, soft animals will look cautiously out
from the pockets of winter coats.
Birds will nest in old shoes, in the morning
they will fly up to perch at the top of the bookcase
to see what I’ve been reading.
When I sit at the kitchen table
eating a bowl of cereal,
slurping the sugary milk
from the bottom of the bowl,
I’ll look up and see a large crow
flying across the room
saying “Caw! Caw! Caw!”
Little birds will cling to my hair,
their feet will poke my head
when they ride along to the store.
Foxes will cough from shadows.
I’ll sleep with bears
dreaming of stars
and caverns.
Bobcats will sit on the roof
looking out over the city
thinking their high up thoughts.
When wolves howl a river of sound,
I’ll ride along.
When I tell people stories
about my lucky life full of wildness
everyone will wonder what voice I used
to call to the animals so convincingly.
They’ll think, what’s in her heart
that makes her so fond of savage beasts?
Does her house have a dirt floor, is it
mossy and crowded with rough branches
crisscrossing the rooms and reaching past
tables and lamps and couches and chairs?
Do they hang their wet scarves and mittens
on twigs by the fire?
Do stars peek
through the open roof between boughs?
When I’m sad
love and warmth will surround me.
I’ll be soft as fur inside,
and won’t need words,
or lies.
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