Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Riding The 'L' Again

That same black man was on the train again today
asking for money.
Only this time
he needed a thirty-day pass.
This time
when he finished his speech,
no one gave him anything.
And this time,
I didn’t feel guilty.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Red Velvet

Come and see
the pink flesh.
You know the one
I speak of.
Curved and soft.
The forbidden.
Run your finger
over it.
There.
Yes.
Go slow.
Slow.
Or you will miss too much.
Do not be afraid
to touch,
inside.
To learn what makes it move.
To hear its secrets,
all of them.
You say it can not speak.
I say, you are not listening.
Come closer.
Closer.
There.
Now can you hear?
I thought so.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Acts of Culpability

So, this is how it is.
All my efforts
falling
on
not just deaf,
but severely deaf ears.
The family,
hard at work
casting votes
for their favorite child.
How sweet it is
to be
the one
incapable
of responsibility
for acts of culpability.
Spending run amok.
A closet full of dresses,
sandals,
and handbags,
all with the tags still attached.
Room after room of purchases.
A candy store
sickly sweet
with the smell of new.
A kitchen pantry
stuffed
with exotic teas and oils
from around the world.
A refrigerator imploding
with watermelons,
spinach, goat cheese, lettuce,
lemons, pineapple, and quail,
all growing mold
and rotting
while new deliveries arrive
to take their place.
Can they not see?
The pleas
keep coming,
to offer dollars,
help,
funds,
in her direction.
“She has no one.”
“Don’t be so hard.”
“Do you want her to starve?”
How many times have I heard their arsenal
used against me?
How many times have I been made to be
the hard-hearted one?
Yes,
I admit,
I am the responsible child,
living off rice and beans,
wearing old t-shirts and socks
with holes in them,
saving when I could spend.
But I do not begrudge my thrift.
I savor it.
I thank God
I do not have
her desire,
her disease.
I am satisfied to read
a book
on a couch
with a cup of tea.
Listen to the water lap
at the shore.
Watch minnows in search of sustenance.
Yes,
I am content in my plainness.
But I do not understand why I should be punished
for my mindfulness.
Am I not entitled to enjoy my half of the pie
at my own leisure?
Savor texture and flakiness and fruit ripe with sweetness?
She has wolfed down her half
and now has her eyes set on mine.
And what if I gave in?
In the morning she’d be hungry for more.
And all I would have would be a clean plate.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Riding the 'L'

The black man on the train
entered our car and in a very loud voice
asked for money.
Twenty-three dollars for a seven-day bus pass
so he could have transportation to go look for work.
He said he didn’t drink or do drugs and didn’t want to stand
on the corner begging for money.
He said he wanted to be a social worker
and he had resumes with him too.
When he was through with his speech,
everyone on the train sat with their heads down,
glancing at one another uncomfortably.
Nobody did anything.
Then, some touristy-looking white guy in the back handed him a dollar.
When he passed by me,
I didn’t give him anything.
I was pissed off.
I hated that he made his speech.
I didn’t want to hear it.
I didn’t ask to hear it.
I didn’t get on the train so I’d have to listen to his story.
I just wanted to make it back to my apartment
with my tofu noodle soup before it all leaked out.
Now, besides trying to get home,
I had to feel guilty.
I know he goes from car to car giving the exact same speech.
And I know someone on each car is giving him something.
Otherwise, he’d quit asking.
But what makes me so mad,
is that I don’t know what to believe.
Maybe he really is who he claims he is.
But maybe he isn’t.
Everyday, I pass by the same homeless people on the streets of Chicago.
Each one seems as bad off as the next.
And I want to help them all,
but I don’t know if the money I give would be going to drugs or cigarettes,
or if they own a house in some nice suburb
and they do this on the side rather than work some crappy job.
And that’s what makes me feel so bad -
I can’t trust them.
I want to do the right thing.
But I’m not sure what the right thing is.
I wish I had asked the man on the train to show me the inside of his pockets.
What if he already had twenty-three dollars in his pockets?
What if he had two hundred?
Then what?
Then he’d be a liar.
And I wouldn’t have to feel bad.
But I didn’t ask him anything.
Neither did anyone else.
Seems to me, if someone is going to make an announcement and claim all these things,
we should have the right to ask some questions.
But instead, we all just sat there with our heads down,
feeling guilty and annoyed and mainly guilty.
When the train stopped the black man made his way
through the emergency door
to the next car
and began his speech again.
Three gay looking guys sitting near me
laughed and snickered about him
and about how hard life was
and about the manicures
they were going to go get.
They were so mean-spirited about everyone and everything
that they annoyed me
much more than the poor black man.
At least he was sincere.
I stared at them, wishing
they would get off the train.
They did.
Three more stops to go.
I felt my soup slosh in its plastic container.
Next time, I’m taking the express bus.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

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Sunday, June 10, 2012

Crossing Delaware

To be honest,
there isn’t much I can
say
about ballet shoes
pointed
in first,
or the way some dancers
comb
their hair
into
big
round
buns.
Mine never holds.
It flops from side to side
like a geriatric breast,
until it finally breaks loose
sending the hair down my back,
in long embarrassing curls.
It’s easy to say
you understand
why note follows note,
or why silence comes
without warning.
But when the Nigerian cab driver turns left without looking,
and you are standing in the crosswalk,
none of it
will matter
anymore.

Thursday, June 07, 2012

River Man

My man moves like the river.
Arching.
Bending.
Twisting
into space.
Arms and legs curving,
wrapping around me,
finding
the tiniest crevice
to slip inside.
My man isn’t shaken by adversity.
He keeps flowing
knowing there is nothing
that can keep him
from going
where he wants to go.
He will grow silent,
and still
for a time,
Sullen.
A brooding mass
pooled up,
and infinitely deep.
A green
I cannot see into
no matter how hard I try.
His power is more fierce
than any warrior’s.
His presence
can be felt
from miles away.
I know he is there
without having to look.
And when he is near,
I long to touch,
his body.
My man moves like the river.
An endless river.