Thursday, December 13, 2012

Nostalgia -



Listening to the song
It’s an older one
I rock my foot
It’s slight
Filled with nostalgia
I think of the person I used to be
Of you
Of the dreams we shared
Of the fears we revealed
Crying in winter coats
We are just specks on the earth
And the hell bears in
Hungry with teeth like marauding consumers
Un--satiated
And we think about how we can ever escape
With remnants of our soul stitched together
Like crafty dolls made with a hope and a pain
Then the moment slips away
Gone like a whisper carried on furious winds
Screaming
You’ll never be the same again
And it slips away
Just memories carried on wonder
Of how we’ve gotten so far
Without doing much at all
And every moment
Every voice
Every puff on that goddamn cigarette
Carries the same sound
Regardless of cancer it causes
That this is only the beginning of the end
One more fucking memory
To carry in a tattered scrapbook
And we call it a song
We sing again. 

Friday, August 5, 2011

Somalia

90,000 children in Somalia died
It was the drought, they said
It was the famine…I knew
And still it continues
While I fill up my shopping cart
Open the door to my home and sit
Comfortably hot with the fan on
And have the luxury of my favorite beverages
To cool even the least intrusive of humidity

Then in my mind I squabble over the purpose in my life
Wondering if I am going where I need to be
Pining over things I want to make me feel a better person
Selfishly filling three journal pages with thoughts
All about me
And the person I wish to be
While far away, in conditions I couldn’t imagine
A young mother cries
While dehydration steals the last breath
From her youngest child

Oh woe is me

And I stand at the cash register
In the retail store
Serving with a smile
While the bourgeoisie shoppers
(Who can afford a $40 t-shirt)
Can you imagine?
Scream at the lack of a wash room
And throw their chubby fists because we don’t have the size that fits
Then they threaten to call “corporate”
(Big word, don’t you think)
Because we won’t return the shirt they have washed and worn
All the while screaming
They are out fifteen dollars
But just ate at Red Lobster\

Somewhere, under a sun cruel and hungry
An impoverished infirmary is too full
In the back room the nurse is crying
They lost another one today
And tomorrow they will lose more
The boy was seven years old
He had a name
Although she has already forgotten it
The thought caused her too much pain

She hasn’t really eaten in two days
But she whispers to herself
She must not complain
Those portions, feeble as they were
Helped save four lives

Her only wish is that it would rain.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Chapter 7 begins

So this is the beginning of Chapter 7 in my novel. Keep in mind it should disorient you because you have missed about six chapters, but...you can figure out who the characters are by going further back in my blog. If you are a friend on Facebook you can find the work there, too. Keep in mind these are only snippets, but I hope you enjoy. As always, let me know what you think.




Chapter 7: Ghosts in the Wall

Nadelline sat on the couch and began to recount for Bella the moments that led to her sin. It was information that Bella may have known if she pushed forward with Nadelline’s book, but the calm that soothed her kept her away from the bright binding and story within. Now, it seemed, the storm found her regardless.

“My mother died a month ago,” Nadelline said as she lit a long cigarette. She took a drag while Bella’s face contorted. Nadelline knew the coffee shop girl was trying to search for the words to say and felt love for her because of it. That love intensified when, instead of saying the usual “I’m sorry,” Bella simply shook her head, bit her bottom lip and looked at Nadelline in the eyes. Her eyes just told Nadelline to go on, to let the poison out, and Nadelline did.

****

“I don’t know how much of my book you read,” she began, pouring herself another glass of the brilliantly colored (and no doubt alcoholic) liquid, “but it explains quite a bit of my childhood in there. It leaves out pieces, of course, because many people would be bark raving mad to broadcast every dark shadow in their life. I did my best, though. Now I am going to tell you everything. You have to understand that this is hard for me. I have never told anyone everything.” She set down the glass and put her hand on Bella’s leg. Bella jumped a bit, not because Nadelline touched her but because the room was electric with tension. Bella looked at Nadelline’s hand, so delicate and pale against her brown corduroy pants, and put her own hand over it. Then she looked at Nadelline and smiled. Nadelline’s heart became somewhat full at the smile and the touch and in that fullness her strength grew and story began, this time without interruption.

“I was playing in my room once when I was four years old. I remember that I was four because in September I would go to Kindergarten and I was so excited to meet other kids and get out of the house. I was practicing my writing upstairs, because Mom said no son of hers would be the worst scribe in the class. My mom was a reader – a heavy one and she often judged on character by vocabulary. So I wanted to make her proud, because what child wouldn’t want that? I remember I was using a bright blue crayon that probably had some ridiculous name like Aquatic Adventure or some shit,” she said, dragging on the little bit that was left of her cigarette. She butted it out, lost in the memory.

“That was the day Henry lost his job. It was the day I lost everything I loved. Nothing was good again for a long time after that day. Playing in the snow wasn’t nice anymore and I hated snow angels. I didn’t smile when I saw the sun. I lost all interest in warm cookies. In other words, little Bella, I was a freak. Henry made me that way almost from the start. He came into the bedroom. I was young but I knew he was drunk. You could tell he was drink by the way his eyes swirled in his head. They darted everywhere – they never stayed on one spot for more than a second. I was sitting in the floor, but I think I said that already, the carpet was this horrible green color that makes me think of the Exorcist now when I think of it. His cowboy boots were brown. He walked by me and the contrast of the brown boots on that green carpet made me giggle because I thought it looked like the baby poop I saw in my young cousin’s diaper once when mom was watching her. So I giggled and he got mad. He got pissed. Before I knew it his red face and crazy eyes where right near me. His breath made me recoil a bit, because it smelt absolutely horrific. That made him madder. He picked my up by my shirt, which was blue and had little red airplanes on it – you see, I wanted to be a pilot when I was really young so everything back then had to have some kind of plane or helicopter on it. Even my sheets had planes on them. He threw me on the bed, on my back, and he slapped me hard across the face.

‘What are you laughing at you little fucker?’ he screamed. I mean screamed. I thought the neighbors must have heard and would come running in and save me, but they never came. I told him what I thought was funny, because I thought he would understand. I was only four,” Nadelline’s hands began shaking. Bella squeezed the one still on her leg and watched as Nadelline tried to put the glass to her lips. Finally Nadelline succeeded, after much fear on Bella’s part that the damn thing would spill and Nadelline would lose whatever seemed left of her sanity. She wet her whistle, put the glass down, gave Bella’s leg a little squeeze and kept on dancing with the demon ghost.

“He didn’t understand. He was too drunk and I was too young. It was a bad combination. It was a frequent combination in our house, though and that was the beginning. It was also what seeded my life decision to become a woman, but that is beside the point I guess.” At that Nadelline let out a small chuckle, picked up her glass and took a deep sip of the poison. It was almost empty now, but they called it liquid courage for a reason and tonight Nadelline felt like she needed all the strength she could get – so she sipped again. Bella squeezed her hand, gently, coaxing her to continue her tale. But the plain girl with the relatively vanilla life was secretly hoping that Nadelline didn’t find her courage, because there are just ways to know when the next moment is an ugly one and Bella knew this one was going to be a dinger. She knew that whatever came out of Nadelline’s mouth next was going to change her life. Screw being objective, like they taught her in college, there were certain things she couldn’t get her mind open enough to process. Bella was never a religious woman and she didn’t bode well with bible studies or commandments, but she believed in sin. She believed in the dark, hollow dangers inside a human soul. She believed that people were capable of things she could never imagine and would go to lengths she couldn’t comprehend and those lengths were cloaked in stench and filth. That was what Bella believed a sin was and she knew, beyond all doubts, that Nadelline was about to explain a sin against her person. Bella also knew, because unlike most people her age she knew a great deal of herself, how she would react. Any chance of getting out of this news without a black scuff (or a mark on her permanent record as her high school teachers and principle liked to say, which, for the record, Bella thought an unethical way to talk to gullible children who believe the bullshit and find ways to guilt themselves over “bad behavior” for years to come) was improbable. In short, she knew she would help Nadelline with what Nadelline needed. Strangers don’t call “coffee shop girls” out of the blue just because they need to rehash a murder and then let them on their way. Or maybe they do? Bella didn’t know, but she was pretty sure what that charming phone call was leading to was a plea for help and after Nadelline’s confession (she was whipping up more liquid courage now and Bella, lost in her own thoughts, hardly noticed the hand on her leg fall free) she knew she would help. How? Because, for the most part, she knew herself. She sighed and took notice of Nadelline’s absence, which she took as a sign from the Universe to make herself a little bottle of the bravery potion.

Nadelline’s kitchen, much like the rest of her apartment, looked like it came straight from the 1980’s. The walls were white, adorned with neon lights and set off with black trim. It was the neon that made Nadelline look like a silhouetted angel when she answered the door and now, standing beneath a Pabst Blue Ribbon neon that hung over the stove that Nadelline had her ass to the thought of a CocoRosie song came to Bella’s head again. “If every angel is terrible then why do we welcome them?” It repeated over and over – like a skipping record stuck and that one line and Bella smiled in spite of herself. Nadelline, still leaning against the stove and searching her drink for some kind of clarity must have felt the energy change, because she looked up and questioned Bella’s smile, but only in her head. She wasn’t about to make the one person who knew her secret leave.

Bella shook her head at Nadelline and told her a song popped into her head and she was struck by its relevance.

“Ironic,” Nadelline muttered and continued to look deeper into her glass.

“No, it’s not. People use that word wrong all the time,” Bella said. It was short and definitive but good enough for Nadelline, who made a mental note to look up the meaning of irony. Bella was opening the cupboards, they were black with bright pink handles. “Where are the glasses? I would like a drink myself.”

Nadelline snapped out of her trance and went to Bella, placing her hand on her back.

“Go sit down, coffee shop girl, I’ll make you a drink for once,” and with that Nadelline rushed her back onto the black leather couch.

Bella, now left to her own devices as much as Nadelline had been in the hours before her phone call to the coffee shop girl, found that she didn’t like the spaces in between her busy thoughts much at all. Here, in a strange house decorated with an almost offensive use of neon and pop art, Bella had no homework to look to or records to listen to or stories to read that would take her mind away from the places she had come to fear most. While Nadelline clinged and clanged in the kitchen Bella thought of the time she had said no, or would have had the opportunity presented itself. She thought of Johnny, who she undoubtedly loved with an affection worthy of prose and she thought of the ways he so consciously violated that little gift. She thought, despite the ugliness of his actions, that his biggest offensive wasn’t the act itself but the fact that he could commit such an act knowing that she cared for him the way she did. The biggest offense, she thought, was the blatant misuse and disregard of love and trust, which is so frequently built on structures as fragile as sugar cube castles. Her own hands began to shake, but she was saved by that terrible angel with two, not one, glasses in her hands and Bella knew why she welcomed her.


Sunday, November 14, 2010

Insomnia

This is where we leave the world behind…
In our dreams
The mad places that no one else sees in visceral colors
Like cherry blossoms during a thunderstorm
A contrast of violence and beauty
Birth and destruction
The place where our demons, dark and furious in their hunger
Beckon at our minds with tongues sharp and vicious
And those beautiful, stunning angels stand by
Calming the storm with terrible voices of power we wish of

This is where we welcome the dawn
With wide open arms and a promise of tomorrow
Tucked between a violet and pink sky
And through the day we wait with patient fervor
For the night
Glorious in its possibilities
Where the lights are turned down low
And no one, ourselves included
Can see the flaws and scars of years gone by
With memories so lucid they pinch your skin
To wake you up
When you weren’t dreaming to begin with

This is where we open our eyes.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Mid Morning with a Beauty Magazine

I walked past the mirror today
Fought the urge to look in
And tear apart everything I am
The magazine said my hips were too big
So I imagine sawing them off
Then it said my hair was too curly
So I iron it flat

I still hated what I saw
So I threw the magazine out
And laid on the floor to watch the ceiling spin
In harmony with my thoughts
How I wish...
(Be careful what you say)
How I wish...
I could melt away ...
Send pieces of my generous skin to places
Where consumption isn't in

I crawled to the record player
And listened to it skip
The way my heart skips when I'm torn down
To being nothing more than just another fat girl
Trying to be somewhat beautiful in a deluded world
And I poured another glass of wine
Because I thought numb was better than broken
The ceiling went schizophrenic in the kitchen
Where I taped the refrigerator door shut
And promised today would be the day
That everything would change

But I still found a million stitches of discontent
A million ways I could be better
An infinite string of possibilities that would make me more
But never more than my soul
Always more than the face I had
Or my walk when I weave through a crowd
Or the frizz in my hair
The scar below my breasts...

But never more than my soul

It was sold before I was born.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

The lost island

I went to the edge of the water to stand unobstructed. I went to watch the tide, and to see myself there above the waves like a moon reaching full. I wanted to shine in the freedom of having faith in the uncertainty that every moment brings. I couldn’t do that standing front and center in the city while hundreds of anxious eyes peered around -- searching for something more or less than them. I couldn’t breathe in the air like it was gold, because their minds were wearing heavy on me like the way a thick fog that covers the windshield of your car while you are running at 70 down a country road. High beams only make it worse.

So I escaped to the water front, and I felt natural there. I took in the night, deep and full, into my lungs and I became the moon. I watched everything below me with an earnest tranquility that slowed the tide - or made it rage. From the sky I saw myself, just a small girl in a small world that was placed in a very big Universe. I was like a little speck of dust, another piece of sand that blended right in with the rest of the shore. And that made me feel better; it made the worries melt into wind while my hair danced around my face and my skirt wrapped itself around my bare legs. It made me release the breath I subconsciously held.

In the middle of the rat race, double pace, break back scatter I was just another piece of the ground that makes up this earth. My actions held consequence and caused a ripple in the lake, but they did not destroy he, she, or me. They simply existed as another small part of a very big picture.

Sea-sick but motionless

wave of degradation - you pour over me while I stare at the sun - blinding me I want to be blind. Why? I want to taste every last comb of your honey and I hate that - I hate you for making me want you. Where was your permission or your right? We are not what we have, but what we crave. You make me fake like plastic dolls that I want to mutilate. You make me feel so safe it seems unjust. How dare one person feel so fucking good when there is a world of hurt? Who am I to smile so large and wide that my cheek bones practically splinter and crack like fragile fire wood that we throw in a fire in mid-July while we take back a bottle of wine. Who am I?

What the fuck am I so afraid of? What could hurt worse than knowing that at the end I didn’t even gather up enough strength to try? Why do we fall so fast and so hard like a psychotic spiral that spins ever out-there - out of control. Why do I want you here with me now when I barely know your face.

Yet I see it when I close my eyes.

I make myself want to vomit. Pining over the next move you make - it makes me fall down and spin like an out of control ferris wheel - it is a long way down and you have no right. Smearing me around your skin like the sweat on your brow. You have no right staring at me like the moon kissed my forehead and there is some kind of hypnotizing shine. You have no right.

But I want more.

You feel like a tattoo - you burn when you bite my lip but I keep craving more - what can I say? I like the way you dig your nails up my legs. What does it all mean?

Sleeping alone in an unknown city - it feels right here, but I keep encouraging this suffocating panic. Where and when and how did I fall so far from myself? Or did I fall into myself so deeply that I forgot how to let someone fall with me? Really, I am sick right now - my stomach feels like a tunnel that leads to nowhere and it is conjuring up bile while I sit here and think of your face. This isn’t what I wanted, but I know it is what I needed.

I need to face this overwhelming fear of intimacy. I need to face that little fucker that screams “you are the one worth leaving” in my ear - little bastard burns me every time I pick up the phone. Bottom line is that I hate the way I want to memorize every last imperfection on your naked body. Fuck.

Does it all come down to that?

You make me fucking crazy, and I am getting addicted to the way that you look at me. I know you want to trace my face

“making a masterpiece”

Isn’t that what you said?

I want to be your wildflower - so tall and proud and bright - uncontrolled like a field we dance in when our bodies crave the movement of freedom. Are we free or prisoners of our own fears? Desires? Lusts?

Did we seal our fate so early? Pre-ordained.