Thursday, December 26, 2013

Who Loves The Sun


The lump on my neck is getting smaller.
The doctor shot it with cortisone
last week.
Well, he didn’t shoot it,
his nurse did.
Now, when I reach up
to touch it, it feels more like a pea,
than the dime it used to feel like.
I don’t know why I get these lumps,
or red dots, or scales.
Maybe it's because my mother had them.
I remember watching her sit in the dermatologist’s
office in Houston, getting things frozen
and burned off and thinking how weird 
all of those little things on her body were.
Now, they are mine.  
We have the same skin.
It’s pale and thin and doesn’t like the sun
and it wrinkles more than it should.
I have my mother's skin
and I don’t like it one bit.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

See Ya Later, Alligator


Sitting at the table
with Bobby Charles
I could dream
a bit longer.
The bread pudding
thick in my veins,
the rum sauce,
a heroin
of sorts
making its way
straight for my brain.
Abbeville,
fried alligator
and catfish,
fighting in my stomach,
keeping time to a slow slow
drip of gravy
running down my legs
as I sopped up his every word.
This man,
broken and battered
as the fish on his plate.
A loner.
A fixture,
at table twenty three
day after
day.
Looking out on the restaurant,
holding court with the waitresses,
who pocketed his big wad of money
by the fistful
and brought him gin after gin.
Heart disease wouldn’t dare clog his veins,
not Bobby’s.
He sat,
fat
pouring over the sides
of his chair.
What life had taken from him
was long gone.
See ya later,
alligator.


Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Here Goes, Jack


O.k.
So here goes,
Jack.
I know you’ve heard it before
and I’m sorry.
Really I am.
But I have to,
you see.
I have to
just one more time.
Now,
don’t try and stop me
because it’s coming,
it’s squirting out of me like
a grapefruit,
all fleshy and sweet
and juicy.
And that spoon,
the one with the jagged edges
is digging it out of me.
There’s nothing I can do to stop it,
even if I wanted to.
But I don’t want to.
It’s gonna come.
Make no mistake.
It’s coming.
And when it does come,
it will be bigger than anything
that’s ever come before.
O.k.
Get ready.
AHHHH!
There.
You see.
There,
on the ground.
Writhing and wriggling,
and shaking
all perfectly jelly-like.
It’s out.
Out in the open now.
Right there.
Right in the middle of the room
ready for everyone to see.
There’s no mistaking it.
You can’t look away.
It’s right there.
And I’m not taking it back.
No way.
No how.
I’ve held it in long enough
and I’m not going to hold it in any longer.
It’s staying.
Right where it is.
It’s your turn now.
Or yours.
Or yours.
It doesn’t matter to me
because
I’m free of it.
I’m done.
I told you.
I told you it was coming.
 

Friday, July 19, 2013

Out Catching Flies


She is out catching flies,
out in the garden,
away from the mustard yellow walls
and polyester bedspreads with the little red flowers,
away from the pull cords
and dark-skinned women with thick
Brooklyn accents.
She is watching the water
fall,
pool up and fall
across the cracked cement
she is not allowed to walk upon.
She is out catching flies
catching them one by one
in her hands
grasping at air,
swatting the invisible,
seeing what nobody else
can
see.
At night,
she will bring her bounty to her room
and put them in a sealed glass jar.
She will watch them climb the glass walls
over and over
only to slide back down to the bottom.
She will watch them do this
until they are too tired to try anymore.
Then,
she will watch them 
suffocate
and 
die. 

Saturday, July 06, 2013

Time


It is a strange sort of thing,
time.
Moving in waves,
forward and back,
picking up steam
in one moment,
lifeless,
and crawling
in the next. 
A stranger deep in song.
Measured by wet roads
and branches,
pinecones and snow,
birthdays
and Christmases,
and the tarnishing of rings.
A possessor of sounds past
and destroyer of innocence with deeds.
A friend bathing in water.
A mirror left hanging
in the doorway
we are too frightened 
to look into anymore. 

Friday, July 05, 2013

August


The knowledge of August
resists the senses,
resists the crystal flakes
of snow
that wait in the sky
yet to be discovered.
How wrong it is to gaze
upon summer
and long for another season.
A chill.
A meditation in moonlight
reflecting nothing.
A building in the wind
full of nakedness.
Raincoats left behind,
drying ever so slowly.
I hear the insects come
thirsty
for new flesh. 
And I listen
to the pretty misery
of the toad’s song.
For now,
green is everywhere.
The rest
must wait. 

Tuesday, July 02, 2013

One At A Time


The wind outside my window
is blowing hard now.
It’s telling me of years past.
In Frat rooms.
On boy’s beds.
Hands on thighs.
Lips on necks.
Danger in flannel.
Spread into positions
I shouldn’t be in.
I remember,
vaguely,
that night.
His hand over my mouth.
Six feet off the ground.
Held captive in a bunkbed.
The sound of music
on the other side.
People dancing
unaware.
My own screams,
muffled.
The smell of gin on his breath.
His promises.
My buttons undone
one 
at 
time.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Red Dolls In Heat


From the 4th to the 5th
and back on the 10th.
Moving days like chess
pieces
to accommodate outcomes.
None of them good.
My back against the wall
like so many
red cardinals.
Four days is too short.
Five days is too long.
I suffer the consequences
of snoring,
bad beds,
and hotel doors
slamming
all hours of the night.
How many times I have gone
only to arrive
and learn
I am unneeded,
unwanted.
Perhaps I could survive better
half-filled.
Ears stuffed with the music
of others.
Red dolls
in heat.
Strums of disconnect
in minor.
A fury of beats
drumming out
the voices in my head.
Yes.
It will be a waste.
It is always a waste.
And still,
I go. 

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Nervous Kitty


I knew the green tea
was a bad idea.
Like licking wallpaper,
or pulling my eyebrows out
two at a time.
I am too nervous already.
Too ready to jump
like the cat
who sleeps beneath
the shed in my backyard.
But I did it anyway.
I drank it after noon.
I drank it knowing my mother
was going to the hospital
and I was going to have to wait
for my sister’s call.
I have been through this before.
The I.V.’s.
The blood draws.
The X-rays to see
what is wrong.
The two green lights blinking.
My mother confident
she will die if one of them goes off.
Barking dogs.
The sundowning.
The yells and restraints.
The biting of tongues
and arms
and residents.
The shaking of heads,
and endless marveling
at the strength of one
so small.
I am biting my nails now.
Waiting.
Always waiting. 

Sunday, June 23, 2013

The Phone Call


It often starts so benign.
The distant acknowledgment.
The casual pleasantries expressed.
The daily chores expounded.
Groceries, and laundry.
and trips to the store.
Talking to her
is like talking to floral wallpaper.
The surface so sweet
you can almost smell the gardenias.
But once peeled back,
the walls expose a toxic glue
on the other side.
The turn,
the change in timbre,
a subtle shift when
all becomes clear.
Gone are the days of laughing and swings.
Racing against one another.
Each one set on out doing the other,
in innocent rivalry.
Now,
there is just one desire-
to pull the other down.
 

Monday, June 17, 2013

Shadow figures


There is a fence
separating
us from them.
A wooden dog-eared fence with slats
allowing
breath and restricted view.
Half-faces,
eyes and hands,
dark bodies,
dismembered.
Abstract paintings of figures
unknown.
Kept out.
Each one never fully understanding
the other.
Shadow figures
running past.
Their voices loud with beer
late into the night.
Our heads
aloft on white pillows
safe asleep
on the other side. 

Sunday, June 16, 2013

The Safety of Flesh


I feel sorry for you
wrapped tight
in his arms
fighting to find your way out.
You, who know sorrow
better than the rest of us.
You, who drink tears
without end.
You will never know
what they know.
Feel what they feel.
Arms wrapped tight around you
for love
and only for love.
The safety of flesh.
Voices whispered in your ear
of train rides
and balloons.
A hand to hold
in the night
when the nightmares come
and the trees bang against the windows
begging to come in.
A hand bigger than yours
to wipe away your tears
and leave you
laughing.

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Twenty Seven Across


What isn’t there
is the sound of metal on metal.
Coins falling into silver trays,
scooped up into plastic buckets,
and carried down carpeted hallways
like found pirate treasure.
The excitement of counting,
one quarter at a time.
Hands on black handles.
Cheers rising into the air,
then dissipating leaving only the sound
of spinning and clicking.
What isn’t there
is women in sequins and boas.
Men in dinner jackets.
And the illusion of glamour.
What isn’t there
is my father,
standing at the crap table,
throwing hard on the come out,
then soft,
as he tried to “make” his number.
My father saying, “Twenty seven across,”
to the croupier,
then doubling up and up
till he either made a fortune
or they took it all away.
My father,
wearing his lucky red flocked paisley gambling jacket,
the one he was photographed in during
most of my childhood.
My father,
throwing for hours at the table,
thighs chaffed from rubbing together,
surrounded by crowds
who marveled at his fearlessness,
his technique,
his stacks of chips on the table,
growing higher and higher.
My father,
at the black jack table,
a bigger draw than any celebrity filming at the same time
in the same room.
My father,
who for over a decade,
was treated as a kind of royalty in Vegas,
and we, by association,
an extension of that royalty.
The First Family of craps.
Our every move eyed by pit bosses
who knew what we spent.
Knew my father by his first and last name.
Knew everything we wanted,
and gave us everything.
Free hotel rooms.
Free meals at the finest restaurants.
Free buffets. 
Tickets to the hottest shows.
Ringside seats for
Elvis and Diana Ross and The Supremes.
Shows my father would invariably walk out on
after just one song,
leaving my mother to sing, “Hound Dog,”
all by herself,
while he went back to the dice table,
to try his luck
one more time.
My father.
My all-powerful father.

On Sunday,
I was in Vegas again
for a wedding.
I hadn’t been there in over twenty-five years.
Whatever magic Vegas held for me as a kid
disappeared with the removal of the coin slot machines
and my father’s red gambling jacket.
Now, when I walked through the casino,
all I saw was one soulless person after another.
Desperate people and stupid tourists.
Not one of them knew how to play black jack
or how to twenty-seven across,
like he did.
Everything I loved about Vegas is gone.
Now, it’s just one lousy overpriced buffet after another. 

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Leonard


Perhaps Leonard can bring me out of it.
Visit me with stories of orange and green,
flowers on the walls,
and pictures of children
with sad, lopsided faces.
A church on the hill,
empty and forgotten,
ringing its bell,
assuring me that
I am
still
here.
Perhaps he could hold my hand
and sing to me
in his deep
New-York-City voice.
Urge me out among the broken glass
and condoms,
and into that dark Chinatown restaurant
with the soup dumplings.
He’s done it before.
Taken me.
Pushed me into beauty
I never knew existed.
Made me feel,
with the flick of a poet’s tongue.
If only the needle
were near me now.
I would set him loose
upon me. 
                                                     

Monday, May 20, 2013

Hathaway


Each day the hurdles come.
The phone calls.
The sleepless nights.
The pull of faces and lives
I have no business knowing anything about.
I sit in the chair.
A twisted wreck of arms
and legs
each one determined to find its way
out
in the opposite direction of the other.
Here at my desk
I listen to the robins’ call
and watch the grass grow taller.
Words I once thought had meaning,
stare back at me
like lost children
desperate
to find their way
home.
It used to be so simple,
sitting and writing,
like picking figs from my grandmother’s
backyard.
Cramming
the sweet purple flesh
into my mouth
and dropping the skins on the lawn
for others to eat.
The Texas sun,
hot on my little girl legs.
My Sunday-school sandals
white leather new,
with the shiny silver buckles
running from fig to fig
as if I were gathering secrets.
My collarbone long healed
from the fall
I took in the 
Bob's Big Boy restaurant. 

Thursday, May 09, 2013

Big Black Bird and Little Brown Bird


Big black bird
kills
little brown bird
right before my eyes.
Grabs him,
and snatches him,
and carries him
to the rooftop across the street.
Plucks him
like a worker
in a chicken factory.
Feathers 
fall 
on to the ground below.
One minute alive.
The next dead.
Not the day he expected
to have,  
I imagine. 

Wednesday, May 08, 2013

Furious


Once again the fuckers won.
You know who they are –
The liars.
The phonies.
The ones who know how to shake a hand and smile.
The self-effacing ones with the secret egos.
The spineless.
The ball-less.
The ones capable of standing before a group
and presenting their argument with calm pathology.
The ones in big cars,
who care more about their children’s Red Wagons
than they do about mine.
The ones who will do anything,
say anything,
to get their way.
I am furious.
Boiling.
Ready to make war.
Ready to roll up my sleeves and let my veins bulge.
Ready to see blood.
Red and black and green.
Colors swirl before my eyes creating a most hideous effect.
Ugly.
Deep.
And dark.
Yes. 

Thursday, May 02, 2013

Sweet Margaret


When the silence comes
across me,
it is like a flood,
deep and blue,
taking me under
for hours.
The cup of tea,
the one on my desk,
sits beside me,
hot and foamy,
a constant friend
to ease my journey.
It will be there
when I come up for air,
cold and hard,
all the sweet honey
settled to the bottom,
stuck in one place,
like my grandmother
in her coffin.

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

What Comes


What comes
isn’t what I want to come.
His hand.
My leg.
His mouth.
My tongue.
The grass rising higher outside my window.
Untouched for two weeks now,
a stranger to me.
The tall thin blades
reaching for the sun,
as he presses against me,
burning
his body
into mine. 

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

A Life Underground


The little black hair under my skin,
the one that comes from being waxed,
lies curled up tight in a ball,
like a snail in its shell,
protected
by a thin layer of skin.
I cannot get it out.
No matter how hard I squeeze,
dig,
or poke
at it.
It is content to burrow further
into my body,
to make its way to parts
of myself
I will never reach.
Determined
to live
a life
underground. 

Monday, April 22, 2013

The Pill


I can not take these pills,
shove them into me
and wait for them to
take affect.
These little pink pills,
harmless looking candy dots
that can make a woman
change.
Make a woman stop doing
what a woman
does.
The doctors tell me it is, “for the best.”
But they do not care about the acne,
nausea, migraines,
or endless thoughts
raging out of control.
They do not spend their nights with me.
Or watch
my legs ache
during the night as if being remotely controlled
by some dimpled toddler.
They do not sit across the breakfast table from me
witnessing
moods that change
with the rise and fall of the tide,
or with the spill of a glass of juice.
No,
they are back in their offices,
back in their homes,
out on their decks,
eating shellfish,
with Chardonnay,
while I am here,
alone.
Is this their only solution?
Of course not.
They have other
“alternatives”.
Like ripping out a part of me,
and leaving me forever altered,
like some defaced statue in a public square
someone scrawled graffiti over in the dark. 

Friday, April 19, 2013

Drowning in Puddles


My brain is
waiting for Sunday.
Trying to touch bottom,
unsure of
where bottom is.
Down into the deep,
the blood and the cold
sink further,
always hoping,
there will be sand.
It’s like that now.
I float without end,
lost in a birdbath
that barely contains an inch of water.
Drowning in puddles.
How absurd,
that I,
a grown woman,
capable of opening doors and
windows,
can not make sense out of loss
or cold.
I sip nettle tea,
shovel meat down my throat
and pray
to reach bottom.
But further I fall.
The helicopters come
spinning their blades at me,
shattering my silence.
My blue sky.
Still I fall.
As if I could change a thing.
The last robin bathed
for the night.
The ceramic base waits empty
full of water.
Tomorrow,
they will be back again, 
just like my blood. 

Thursday, March 21, 2013

The Instigator And The Agitator


The trouble is
I miss those days.
Driving through the canyon
with the smog in my hair.
Having lunch with a friend
on the beach and wearing short cotton dresses
all year long.
It was easier then,
when all I had to worry about was the page.
I spent hours walking along the sand
trying to come up with the perfect line.
Lost in dialogue and banter.
A mirrored goose.
Arms freckling in the sun.
The never-ending sun.
Laughing.
His father holding court
while we egged each other on
just outside of Beverly Hills.
The instigator and the agitator.
I never could remember
who was who.
We were both some of each,
I guess.
His buttery hands
always warm to greet me.
The smell of brisket and Kugel,
in the oven,
while he sat at the kitchen table,
ready with a quick one-liner.
It is all too quiet 
now.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Weed Child


She
is blood ribbons
and lace.
A sticky
weed child
yanking at my skirt.
Night after night
she
comes
into my room,
plum-faced,
barking anxiety
in spoons.
The silent womb,
I occupied,
violated
in flannel
and paper.
The decay of spring
one
robin
at a time.
She
hangs up the phone
on her way to
eat. 
A hostile
oeuvre
never to be replicated
in ferocity of word
or deed.
The backseat of Texas
burning
my thighs
red.
She
places her head
upon my shoulder
and sucks at my breast,
one gulp
at a time,
until all that is left
is my hanging skin. 
 

Thursday, February 21, 2013

What There Is To Learn


What there is to learn
comes in between the sobs,
the dark glasses,
the furious emails trying to explain and explain.
It comes after the sleepless nights
and endless hours of stomach flips.
It comes in dreams,
anxiety ridden dreams of fathers
wearing wigs and suits,
they have never worn before,
hiding in closets,
molesting their daughters.
It comes in foreign languages,
where words have two meanings
and you can’t understand either.
It comes in backrooms of libraries,
books on the floor,
phones silenced like electric heartbeats.
It comes by saying, “no” when you want to say, “yes”,
and ,“yes” when you want to say, “no.”
It comes in chasing when you want to walk away.
It comes when abandonment takes the steering wheel
and drives like a lunatic across town
to feed an ex-boyfriend’s dog a burger.
It comes when you finally get quiet enough to listen,
to hear that part of your self that knows why it aches
so badly,
and why it can’t get present inside its own body,
no matter how hard it tries.
It comes with the knowledge that learning never comes
easily or without painful stimuli,
unless you’re fucking blessed.
It comes when you realize that
“they” aren’t the ones,
“their” actions,
“their” words,
don’t matter.
What matters is the wounds.
Only the wounds.
It comes when you finally understand
that the reason you are acting so crazy today
started years ago. 

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Just A Girl


There is a knife
I like to push
into my chest
over and over,
over and over,
A bloody rose
to keep me
feeling.
Without it
I would be, 
just a girl. 

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Forever Yours


Were my lips yours,
I would kiss them
all summer long
against the rain
and the sun
like a dance with no end
and no beginning.
Were my eyes yours,
I would open them,
and see
Heaven
out my back door.
The roses in bloom,
perfectly alive,
like newborn babies
unblemished and pure,
forever soft to the touch.
Were my ears yours,
I would hear the sweetest of notes.
The lark drunk with sound,
making his way to sorrow
to nurse his forgotten wounds.
The boulevard of plums
bursting and ripe,
waiting to fall.
It is not madness to believe such things.
To feel so close
to another,
your heart beats as theirs,
your arms,
your hands,
your legs.
Thoughts kicking in twilight
against the backdrop of your face,
a soft wing beating
in my hand.
Forever yours, 
I am.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Oh Sylvia (for Sylvia Plath)


Oh Sylvia, Sylvia,
dead in the oven.
What became of a girl
such as you?
Hair twisted and curled
like a cinnamon roll
glistening sweet with collegiate innocence.
Oh Sylvia, Sylvia,
where did you go?
Was the air too much to breathe?
Too heavy a weight for your
pretty pink lungs,
the morning dew unfolding
round you,
taking your smile,
with the sun.
Oh Sylvia, Sylvia,
a sensitive girl,
taking no pleasure on earth,
The bearing of children,
the bedding of men,
left you alone
with nowhere
to turn,
when turning is where you began.
A student, a scholar,
a daughter to envy,
carrying words in your satchel.
A smile couldn’t hide
your dark
bloody mind.
Or keep the New England cold
from your skin. 

Thursday, February 07, 2013

Your Crippled Past


There will be a time when
you will leave it all behind –
your crippled past.
And you will limp into the present.
Your life
here and now,
on the floor,
legs bent,
arms overhead,
sucking in your stomach
like a dying starfish.
And you will forget the tears.
The nights on the toilet
sobbing,
over past lovers,
who have hurt you,
done you wrong,
with their lies,
and their lips.
And you will remember
only what is –
The carpet beneath you.
The fluorescent lights.
The smell of the ocean
pressing in to you.
You will realize,
you are different.
You are someone
you never thought you
would be.
And you stop eating grapes.

Wednesday, February 06, 2013

Seventy Two and Sunny


I am trying to let myself be free.
Trying to give myself permission
to get in the car and drive seven hours to Florida.
It’s supposed to be in the seventies there this weekend.
So, it seems like a nice time to go.
Before the crowds come
and before spring break.
But, I’m hesitating.
It’s absurd, really.
There is not one good reason for me not to go.
There is nothing keeping me here.
No job.
No kids.
No dog that has to be fed.
And yet, I can’t seem to make myself go.
So then, being the overly analytical person that I am,
I start asking myself questions -
What’s really going on?
Do I not deserve it?
Am I unworthy?
After fifteen minutes of doing this,
and a cup of green tea, 
I conclude that some part of me must think that I am.
Yes, that's it, 
I don’t deserve to have a good time.
But that’s crazy,
utterly crazy.
If it were someone else,
some friend who asked me if they should go,
I would tell them to go in a second.
Take a few days off.
Enjoy yourself.
Walk on the beach.
Feel the sand on your toes
and the sun on your back.
Relax.
But it's not me talking to some friend,
it's me talking to me.
And I am no friend of mine. 
Relax?
I haven't relaxed in years.
I don’t know how to relax
or enjoy myself.
While normal people start packing and looking for sun block
when they are about to go on a trip,
I start making a mental laundry list of
all the things that could go wrong:
I won’t like the bed.
I won’t like the food.
Someone will bother me.
There will be noisy neighbors.
It will be too cold.
It will be foggy.
I’ll step on a jellyfish.
I’ll get in a wreck.
I’ll get a speeding ticket.
I’ll get food poisoning.
I’ll trip on a conch shell.
I’ll get eaten by a shark.
I’ll feel like I made a mistake.
And then it hits me.
"Feel like I've made a mistake."
I know that one. 
I always feel like I made a mistake.
I might as well feel that way
sitting on the beach where it's 
seventy two and sunny. 

Friday, February 01, 2013

Ready To Begin



I am the spiral staircase.
Ham on rye.
The bottom of the bowl
licked clean
by my teachers.
So many hands on my body
I can no longer tell
which ones are mine.
The girl in the back of the room.
The shy one,
who knew all the answers,
but was too afraid to answer.
Yes, that one.
I waited in corners,
shadows of my own making,
and hoped someone would
come.
Now, you are here.
Pushing me out with your broom.
Telling me I can be more
than I have been.
Wrenching the strength from my arms
with your measured brown eyes.
Refusing to accept my protests,
or believe my little-girl tears.
I would curse you if I could,
but it wouldn’t change a thing.
Tomorrow, 
I will be at your door
again, 
ready to begin. 

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Falling Apples


I’d like to go back to bed this morning.
Curl up under the layers of down
and cotton and rest my head
on my aging pillow,
the one that’s got nothing left inside,
the one that I still reach for anyway.
But there are songs to write,
and scripts to begin,
and a poetry book I have been threatening
to compile for years now.
Still, the white-sheeted bed calls to me,
if only for a minute.
But I can’t get in it,
because if I did get in it,
I would be like my mother.
My mother’s in bed right now,
sleeping her life away.
And I don’t want to be like my mother.
Even though I seem to be becoming more like her
every day.
My hands are starting to wrinkle like hers.
And my skin is becoming thin like hers.
It cracks in winter, like hers.
But it’s not just my exterior taking on her attributes,
there are things on the inside too,
things that I swear
do not belong to me -
The occasional racial slur,
or judgmental barb,
the kind that I would have barked at her for saying years ago
are now, suddenly, coming out of my mouth.
Besides her dermatological and verbal issues,
I seem to have inherited her depression,
her stomach’s inability to seemingly digest anything,
and her need for reading glasses after reaching a certain advanced age.
But most terrifying of all,
I seem to have developed her penchant for falling.
I’d been in bed for the day sick with a weird stomach flu,
asleep for several hours in the afternoon,
and woke up just in time to catch the evening news.
I stumbled out of bed, disoriented and hungry.
At the last second,
I chose the bathroom over the kitchen,
and stepped on a plastic door stop left on the floor.
My ankle turned beneath me, snapping like a piece of celery, 
and sent the rest of me twisting forward.
Hands out, wrists bruised,
left knee smacking the ground.
In a second,
it was over.
I sat up in complete darkness,
unsure what had just happened.
All I could think about was how much I felt like my mother in that moment.
How much I was turning in to her.
I was having the kind of day she would be having,
and it didn’t matter how much exercise and good eating I have been doing,
or how many vitamins I have swallowed,
or how much meditation I have sat for,
or how many yoga classes I have attended.
I was turning into her.
And there was nothing I could do about it.
Later that night,
as I lay in bed icing my ankle,
I called my mother.
She too, had been in bed with a stomach flu all day.
But she hadn’t fallen,  
at least,  not yet. 

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Vision Loss


The “awesome” freaks of the world are killing me.
You know the kind, “Everything is awesome.”
“That was so awesome man”.
“Did you see his jump? It was awesome.”
“Totally awesome.”
“That show was awesome.”
Everything is “awesome”.
The word is so overused.
Like, “like”.
And, “so”.
“Awesome” has no meaning now.
You might as well say something was
so “paper.”
Or “Bookshelf.”
Or “Envelope.”
“That was so envelope.”
“Yeah, totally bookshelf.”
Nothing has meaning anymore when everything is
“awesome.”
Brilliant and average walk hand in hand
along the same street of mediocrity
with neither being singled out. 
But there is a difference.
I wonder about the “awesome” people
of this world.
Have they lost all perspective?
Or are they simply so superficial
they are incapable of really feeling anything?
Can they no longer discern
when they are experiencing an event that is worthy of a deep response 
versus something fleeting and insignificant?
“Did you see that pigeon poop?” “It was –“
Yes.
Totally.
I wonder what kind of world we will have
when our society is incapable of recognizing
what truly is 
"awesome."