Wednesday, October 20, 2010

My Best Man

I had a vision
because 'dream' seems like
too much a word here-
too improbable, maybe-might-not
come to happen...
Visions, like the world hanging from
a branch. Ripe,not flat like a table
between us- visions come to men
of a sure cadence.
Anway.
I saw myself,black lapels of a suit
pointing like compas needles, hour hands
away and out from heart.
I raised a glass, raising a voice
to you, to the many tables
to the chandelier which leaned in to
listen to the five words that shaped my life.
Do you want some rum?
Led to Do you want a cigarette?
Led to Do you want some lunch,
a future, a hug, to meet up with me later
Led to this day in my vision.
Do you want some help picking out a ring
for Her?
Led to, Yes, only because you helped me
pick out one for Him. Pick out names for Them
Led to christenings and backyard barbeques
and the table of brightly wrapped everythings
on a table before you filled with all the things
I wish I could give you back-
all the things all the things
You gave me years ago.
Now tell me really this time- Do you
want some rum? Or, maybe this time
Will a champagne toast do just fine my friend?

Friday, October 1, 2010

This is my Dream, It Really Hurts

I want to be going gray haired at the temples and just too old to bother with contact lenses, with one too many light blue polos or silk ties. I will have great claves and a sleek, stainless steel coffee maker and kitchen knives that I hardly ever use or maybe use daily.
There will be bookcases, vases. CD's and pictures frames to dust, plants I will forget to water and that goddamned carpet I just couldn't talk him out of.

My daughter will cut her hair red hair off at age seventeen and never regret it. She will obsess over whether or not the resurgence of polka dots applies to her and where she ought to apply to college and for what. She will nurse a secret crush on the lanky boy next door who is growing taller, who plays the trumpet and who brings us our mail when we return from vacation in New York. Their fingers will brush when she answers the door and the envelopes pass hands. My daughter and I will exchange excited smiles later on over dinner. His name will be Terry or James and I will catch her doodling it all over the borders of her magazines as we sit at the DMV waiting for her to take her permit test. I will not know what will make me more nervous- her cautious driving or her driving away from me. Her name will be Jane.

My son will be sensative. A swimmer. He will smell like chrlorine and we will lap swim sometimes, never nearly often enough with my bad shoulder. He will boast my breastroke is better, but his butterfly will be graceful. He will move through water and crowds with confidence.I will yell, daily, for him to not leave his goggles in the bathroom sink. Dogs will follow him,lick his hands under tables. Girls will watch him from the corners of keggers and he will be kind enough, and complacent enough, to pretend not to hear his name whispered in huddles behind bathroom doors at parties. He will sleep with the same blanket, even when he returns home from college his first winter. He will take up smoking and join me on the damp back porch one morning and expertly toss his butt in the coffe can next to the door right after me. He will break my heart, make me proud, hold the door for me. I will let his father name him. He will name him Jonas,for my favorite novel and because the men in my life will be true Givers.

One night, before college comes and they will fall into the routine of videochats this night, phone calls to us this night, weekend stays and care packages on these dates and that- they will leave together for a party in a carpool. It will be early october,barely fall. She will ask for advice on how best to wear her new rouge. He will borrow his father's old denim jacket from the hall closet. Me and my husband, my wonderful man, will sit on the deck out back and smoke a sticky spliff. The house will be wonderfully warm and we will slowdance once back inside to "Namesake" by Anais Mitchell at full blast across the hardwood floors in the living room. He will still be in his work things- an oxford buttoned down to his navel, sleeves up, gray slacks and shiny black shoes. I will be wearing cargo shorts and a sleeveless tee shirt from our sons long ago basketball camp. No shoes, just socks,and I will barely wince when he steps on my toes. I will barely breathe when he dips me, suprisedly, and for no reason. The lamps on either side of the front window will glow golden and I will smell like earth and mums or grass and he will smell like midday cologne and my tobacco.

We will undress each other as we crawl up the stairs and not make it halfway up before we fuck, right there, suddenly and quickly, like we did while the kids were younger and only down for a quick nap. We will both remember this instance and familiarity and forget if we had done exactly this back then- because time has moved so oddly since then. He will grip my left shoulder- the bad one- from behind. I will place my hand on it. Downstairs, Anais will be singing "1984".

When the kids come home, at different hours, smelling like two different brands of lite beer, they will pause outside our half open bedroom door and see us half asleep in the blue lights of the tv screen. The sound will be off- Lucille Ball's Mame will havenever been better. Jane, then Jonas will pause, smile, say I love you Dad, goodnight, wake me in the morning?

I will say I love you too, goodnight and yes- bagels and shopping with Aunt Kate? They will head off to bed. I will nuzzle deeper against the clipped black hairs of his muscled chest. He will have fallen asleep, upright against the headboard we paid too much money for, his mouth half open, head to one side.

Tomorrow, we will look for antiques- I will already have all the pricelessness in the world.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

In Vitre

The Republican Party has traded again and again on the conjured idea of an American golden era, circa 1945 to 1960, after boys who were ripped from the arms of their virginal sweethearts and sent to another continent to fight a great war against tyranny and despair, had returned home as men, as heroes, and set to work, every last one of them, making babies with doting wives and grabbing the American Dream with both hands in the dawn of suburbia. Scientists in white lab coats and square, black-framed glasses toiled away to make American astronauts the first on the moon, and to fill all the pretty new homes behind perfect white picket fences with fancy, new-fangled household gadgets to make life easier and more fun. Teenagers hung out at sock hops and neon-lit diners, girls longing for lavaliers and boys wondering how to get laid. Elvis' pelvis was considered a scandal, and Marilyn Monroe a bombshell. Dad had a pension and the promise of a gold watch at the end of a long career with a single firm, and Mom had a Frigidaire. And everyone was happy.

Republica! Vote for us—and we'll give you that!

It's an empty promise built on an illusion, carefully constructed to conceal that America's so-called golden age was imperfect like any other, and perhaps even more so than most. Half a million of those boys who went off to war never came home—and some of them weren't boys at all, but men, who left wives and children with desperate struggles in the place where their husbands and fathers had been. Some who had come home were never the same, their bodies or minds damaged beyond real repair. Women who had been called to duty in factories were forcibly driven back into domesticity, segregation was a legal fact, every gay had a closet of hir very own, mental illness was treated with lobotomies, McCarthy was on his Communist witch hunt, and we fought an all-but-forgotten war in Korea for three years and lost over 35,000 soldiers. There were back-alley abortions, and the KKK, and Elvis and Marilyn both died of drugs.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

15 was too long ago

I have been begging my name back from the five year long night for hours now.

I have begged it back from bottles, from ashes, from plastic wrappers and the mouths of men whose names I don't know and whose numbers I've lost, from pictures misplaced.

No one should ever own this many books, this much eyeliner, this many shoes that aren't going anywhere- have been nowhere.

Is this post-trauma? I have walked from car wrecks, diving wells, runways and woods. I have sat on train platforms raised above the scar of my hometown and said Jump. Stared at the beams of my basement and said GodamnIt.

Who who who is the the way and where where where is his name.

Friday, July 9, 2010

After an abscene, you will dig tunnels

A woman with toast colored skin
asked me once "Why do you wear
shoes that make so much noise?"
And I could only say

Because I like to be heard
ahead of time.

A man with hair like candyfloss
gave me a look once and between
the expanse of bodies trying to
stay standing on the subway
I wanted to call back Its not
an affectation- its just a
goddamned sweater.

A boy of seven said to me, just
recently, "Only girls wear two
earings!" and I gave his mother
a smile and said

He's right, but my head feels
unbalanced enough already.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Post Block Party (from the course 'Fiction Writing II', Fall 2008)

Awake: the left side of his head sticking to the filthy table top. Beer and sweat and drool taper down his shirt like a Pollack painting. The sun comes through the blinds, hurts his eyes. Awake and still drunk. The living room smells like stale smoke, bits of glass bottles scattered everywhere as though a car wreck had just taken place in the center of the apartment’s squalor.
He hears the sound of wind chimes from somewhere outside. Wipes crumbs from his hair, unglues himself from the stiff back of the chair, peels off his sweat-stiff socks, his shirt, his grimy slacks. He stands, one hand on the tabletop, fingers splayed for support. A naked man, black chest hair curling like bits of paper in a fire.
He knows that she is outside, chain smoking on the stoop. Her pastel skirt hitched up above her knees like a frosted cupcake. She is probably fanning herself with a crumpled magazine, the smoke from her cigarettes blowing back around her head like a halo.
He hopes that this ring of mystique, this fog around her frosted, bleached hair, will distract men walking by with their moist underarms and shiny leather shoes. He hopes that the grandmothers, laboring to push stroller up the baking street will be distracted by her impossibly slender and smooth legs.
He hopes that the heat of the day will not give away what he has done in the heat of the inebriated night.
She hopes that her sunglasses, dark as the shimmering, scorching street, will hide her black eye.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Two Poems from High School (2006, age 18)

Grace

This is the way
it was meant to be:
plastic bags and newspapers
neon signs and symphony
of homeless wind.

There's this girl screaming
"I'm never gonna let go of this balloon!"
So I guess it must be Mars
rising over us later on Main Street
Like the way your face shown
the first time I said your name
Under the sun on the best day
to ever grace the Park.

Sprawled in grass
bathed in the borrowed light
of our watches and windows up high
reminds me of a fish out of water
and I think of how I want to-
but there is this man whsipering against
the nape of my neck, saying
"I never want to let go of this
balloon!"


Finis.

The down is up. We wait at the dockside
since midnight. My 18th, threshold
of nothing really, but cigarettes and lottery tickets,
neigther of which I celebrate
and instead of parading down the lapped shore,
tightfisted and unruly, I have been calling my name out
to the water's edge for hours
begging my youth to remain attatched
to my branches like unripe fruit.
I hope I listen.

Simple

I missed you today
Similiar to how I miss
Jolton Joe and martinis
stirred, dry and never shaken.
Almost the way I miss
Marilyn, Billie, and Bette Davis
and the way "What Ever
Happened to Baby Jane?"
made me give you a stern
and steady look as if to
say "If that was us-I'd kill you."

I missed you today
the way Kansas missed
Judy in that little dress
before she went
Hollywood and Liza
hit Boradway like a fever.
I miss you in that way
where I know I'll never

see you again.

Leather & Let Her

I.
You will always misplace keys,
important documents, wallets
and remote controls. But there
will always be an abundance
of random,
useless pennies and my great
worry.

II.
My Life as a Novel:
I woke up and then
something happened.

My Life as a Poem:

happened.

III.
On a plane ride across
oceans across languages
and tanlines that cut flesh
like cookies on a sheet,
a dear friend wrote me
words for the new year-
a simple recipe that I have tried
to follow and gain taste for-
"I hope love is your only addiction and
that you can be your own ambition."

IV.
A resolute chin and a
boxy-ness that lacked
any spring...I told you
the wind would shimmy
down this way. I told you
that the seasons
would alter, puker up and
malaise like women becoming
handbags digging in their handbags
for handcreams and photos saying
"Look here! New Zealand! Look here!
A cruise!" Saying "Look here!
A handbag for my hand in a bag
and I am digging out the bottom
of myself every day for sixty years!"

Lipstick collected in
the crevice of Marge's
bottom lip and offset
her wig. I wonder if she
found love, kept pennies.


V.
My life as a commercial:
Smile- it happened.


VI.
You will always
misplace key things.
They will always be
at the bottom
of everything.

For Mitchell Candreva IV

One
I walked-and not many men take that miracle as it is:
to walk, to take that split second between footfalls
where we are bent forward yet backward as if ready
to tumble this way or that-
I walked in the way that I thought would make you proud.
That is to say, I walked with a smile on my face.

Two
I slept
and that says enough-that I could find the time to lay to rest
without the heat of your chest
and dreamnt of the shape of your arms around my neck.
A noose that gave warmth instead of taking.

"From the streetlight outside your window" or 'A Moth's Song'

I.
How much could I get for my eyes
on the black market? They have never
failed me in the dark.
Or my legs- they have carried me far
and away and yet never at all.

II.
How much would I pay for your
shoulders, headrest for my sad
thoughts.
How many pieces of silver
could I exchange for a golden
morning in your sheets
Light coming through fibers to reflect on
skin to wake us but no

III.
We don't wake and you-

You are priceless.

'Alice' and 'All of This'

A bottle that said Drink Me:
Bottle, your eyes- what's the difference?
I had a long draw and grew so high
I could mistake it for flying.

A sweet that said Eat Me:
A frosted cake, your kiss- who's to say
they are not one and the same?
I had taste, followed by a feast
and shrunk to a world where all
I wanted was more and more and more

A book that said Read Me:
Printed pages, the soft skin of your
body- pick and choose the finer points
but I read your body while you slept
fingered the fine printings of hairs
and pores, scars and steel muscles.
I studied- but there are things I have yet
left to learn. This is the story I read in
dreaming- the thing I yearn to study
the most.

A Queen that said not "Off with his
head", but a Queen that said:
"Take my heart, you have all of it
in exchange for your Wonders."

Three Moments in the Life of a Bird:

1) I am skirting around brick streets, bobbing up, bobbing down
around the edge of a man's vision. He wears black leather- I can barely fly.

2) I am re-hatching but not from an egg, but from the dark in the folds
of green sheets. This is what happens when you say you love me.

3) I am picking the worms out of myself and offering them to you, building a nest I am proud to lay in. Singing your name your name your name your name...