1.i’m going through changes.
my body has never been at once so familiar and foreign. looking at her body go through it’s swelling and knowing what that belly holds, what precious DNA from this paired generation, returns the gaze to myself and how much has changed and how little has. i still don’t look like what i imagine myself to be, even after 31 years of looking.
2.nights like this.
nights like this are full of dead space and yearning for sleep. perpetually restless like the urge for a cigarette but knowing that the bitter smoke will never again cross these lips. it’s almost as if it’s become out of fashion to myself more than anything else. i’d love to have one, but i don’t know, the will to smoke seems dull now.
3.shorter than the rest.
shorter than the rest and happier for it. quick and not terribly incisive either. reading websites revolving around Ellis’ PLANETARY. Good stuff, not too heady but hits all the right points. i could have done stuff like that if i only had the attention and stamina for it. it’s always been a question of stamina.
4.he walks in to a bar (something i do often).
he walks into a bar and comes up to the stool. he looks around it for a bit, spins it with his left hand. he bends down close to seat and listens to it whirl. the bartender is cleaning beer glasses when he notices this guy. he shakes his head.
it just dies there.
5.of all the things.
of all the things i could have said, of all the things i could have wanted, there would have been something like this, a lake, a highway, a tree, of all the things that could have been, part of the telling and the wanting, of all the things, just these few, a dress, a table, an apple, of all the things i should have said, should have wanted to say but for the exhaust and the storm and the laughter, wanting to tell you of all the things; that surely would have been something.
Monthly Archives: January 2004
Somehow the butter rolls
1.
And somehow the butter rolls are the best in the morning with a cup of hot chocolate and a bit of a chill. Sometimes even an arcade game while big burly men talked about lumber and cement or something. They were big and fat and wore beards. I was always invisible and always on the way to somewhere else. In the morning, when the rolls were at their freshest and the world had only just begun to roll itself out into the light.
2.
And I can be very good at this, when things come together, when the traces of the logic begin to appear it gets exciting the way this used to, and it’s quick enough and simple enough in its design that, although the task might seem daunting at first, it’s ultimately done the moment it ever appeared. And what makes it more precious is the fact I’m the only one doing it and although I’ll brag there’s a secret rush and peak of joy that I cannot translate with gloating. And it’s good.
3.
And truly things cannot be better save for the lack of money, wouldn’t it be great to have a couple of bucks more, ok, maybe a couple of thousands. Ok, a million and then it’ll set everything straight.
4.
And The West Wing, while the banter is missing, a very keen sense of tension, drama and cinematography has filled the void Sorkin has left. At first it felt very technical, but as the season has moved forward, its gotten more slick and while I’d like to write emotional, it’s not, but rather empathic, less obvious stresses and just beginning to test the waters about what it’s characters are supposed to raving about.
5.
And although the nights are certainly strange I feel a new change come over me, slow and sure but I’m not sure if it’s for good or bad, another degree of coldness and sterility, and it doesn’t quite feel like that, something else entirely, as if each cell is being slowly replaced, which its supposed to, and where does the soul hang out anyway if not in your cells and isn’t quite entirely possible that every seven days or so, every three years or so, you’re an entirely different person from the cells up, even from the soul up. Shouldn’t you change? Wouldn’t you?
6.
And a baby shower tomorrow. And women and presents and laughter. And possibly children and the hope for. And later men, men and their tales of their wives giving birth to their children. And when it’s all done there’ll be just her and her belly and me, my wonderful life locked away within the heart of this woman who is about to offer our child to the world. And to the world I say, I beg, I plead “Please be kind to this child and all the rest if we’re lucky again, please be kind.”
7.
I still dream of horrible death and anguish. I still run with his death heavy across my eyes.
Drove against the sun, against time
1.
every once in a while you get the urge and you stick your hand down your throat and make sure you don’t throw up in the middle of it and try as hard as you can to get a piece of it but you never do it’s always there that gnawing that there could have been more there could have been something else, some one else, you could have been someone else and how much longer can you yearn for it and how much longer can you write it out, ride it out and it all comes down to having said this many times too often and you wish it was as dull as that but there’s an absence there where there should be something sturdy and strong like the hole a tooth makes when it gone missing.
2.
And it doesn’t come to me as easily anymore the eyes are starting to puff, dull over, and I have my hand on her belly almost every other night, whenever I can and I don’t really know what to make of it, this baby she is making, this baby that was somehow made and will be made throughout my life, but I put my hand there whenever I remember to because that’s my skin in there too, and something of me is growing inside of you while I’m out here dying and the cycle continues, here it is lurching forth bursting at her seams. Look at it, belly abounding.
3.
I love her more than I ever have and I could have sworn that I loved her then as I do now and it all appeared to me then as she crossed the room and here we are now eight years later after a lifetime as children, with a child growing between us between the cover throughout the night, she walking belly first, baby first and ain’t that something all this out one little drop that found all the right angles and slopes to get through that little crack.
4.
Of course she wouldn’t appreciate that one at all.
5.
My father turns to my mother and in front of my wife asks about where his niece’s invitation for the surprise baby shower was.
6.
It’s amazing how increasingly surreal life is working between daylight and moon light, names of days disappear, the week flows and stutters then >snap< just like that, it's gone. Days off filled with silence and loneliness and the nights are prisons, especially now without the smoking, and I run at the gym and still cannot catch my breath, but the days bleed and the nights wear on to a dawn that is relentless and unforgiving.
7.
And I used to dance in crowds to feel alive and I drove against the sun, against time.
a wooden one will crack if you miss
1.
It all ends and begins in tears doesn’t it? Tears of joy, of sorrow. Tears seeping out of the eye duct. Tears along the placenta, the uterine wall. Tears along the aorta.
2.
And they said unto him, ‘You will be promised many things. You will live with the knowledge that you are meant for greater things. You will live under the shadow of vast accomplishments you have yet to undertake. And it will be impressive. But take heart: the moment of your arrival will never come. You will wake everyday thinking that today will be the day of your eternal greatness, but it will never come to pass. You will sense at the edge of your fingers that you could have done something great today, but you never will. You’ve been graced only with the anticipation of what could have been. It will always nag you, it will always hang at the edge of your perception. That sense of more, that sense of greatness, that sense that you too, could have been a god, if only you weren’t you…�
3.
Barely the third day and I�m already tapped out. The fear of the meta-writing, the direct “I can’t write anymore” writing. No, none of that, but it isn’t easy. This was never easy.
4.
I wanted to spill out onto the floor like sunlight in an empty house and fill rooms with warmth and memories in the corners of walls and have stars of dust kick up and shimmer and the edges of staircases soften to the touch and the glass of the panes would not stop me and the floor boards would not stop me and even the foundations would greet me.
5.
How about a her? How about her? How has she been? Alright I guess. You don’t talk anymore? Of course we do, we’re married aren’t we? Well, you�ve both been getting around… It doesn’t mean we don’t talk, just that we don’t fuck….. Ok, that didn’t really work at all.
6.
Try again, try harder. From the book, a scribble: She collects the rent. It�s become a full time job between dropping off the kids at school and picking them up. Her routes weave in and around the West Side and she’s figured out a way to always been within striking distance of the school should the dean or the headmistress need to contact her. She also keeps an aluminum bat in the car because a wooden one will crack if you miss. It’s gotten its fair share of use, scratches criss cross the length of the shaft and the blunt tip is pock marked with craters and specks of what could have been blood. She keeps it in the trunk under the blanket that covers the spare lest the kids take it by accident and she finds herself needing it on her route. At least once a week if not a day. But today she shouldn’t be needing it all, just a stroll in the park, literally.
7.
But what happens here is, I get bored. Or I can’t see it further.
and yet another life
1.
Ghosts of the past are sure to haunt me. Watching Hardwicke’s Thirteen. Who wants to ever have a girl, or children even in general.
2.
Working nights back end of the week. The days disappear, lose their names. Then longer empty days the front end. Without purpose, without direction. I used to make something of all this, I used to make things that were built and crouched up on twos, steadily rose up on four, sniffed about me, wandered off through the door, prowled away into the world.
3.
Danger from all sides of the streets, insulated ever more, where would I have ever gone without you? When did I stop going anywhere? How come I can’t stop going? Stop, stop, go further. There are times when I stop dreaming and I no longer hope when I’m awake. There are times when I dream and it’s cut short by the day. Then I twist to stretch a leg and my back goes beyond repair. I’m hurting myself to paralysis now. I barely walk like an old man. I barely walk at all. Out of dreaming and in with the pain.
4.
And here we were thinking we had come to an impasse, that all the forks in the road where folded into one another and the horizon was clear. Chasing the sun, kicking dust, long summer falls.
5.
I fell when I was nine and put a gash in my left cheek. Younger I ran down a driveway and slipped and skidded along my hand. Between then and the thing with the cheek, I was tossing souvlakia sticks and stood too close to the concession stand, there was aluminum siding, or plates of aluminum on the side, silver and slightly bent. I nearly took off my finger. At 18, just when things were beginning to settle down, we were by the library and mistaken for someone else. I got hit with a pipe along the ribs and stabbed right over my heart. I was stabbed first and then hit with the pipe. I had a coke at the pizzeria and lit a cigarette. It took a paramedic and a cop peering into the hanging bit of meat to convince me to go to the hospital.
6.
As each day passes, another possibility folds away and the crease disappears. Another ghost suddenly appears, vivid, and rushes to fade. A spark in the daylight, shimmer along the pavement in the sun. I could have been a lawyer. I could have been a poet. I could have been an FBI agent. I could have been a criminologist. I could have been a painter. I could have been a musician. I could have dreamed harder. I could have lived.
7.
It’s not to be confused with regret, but rather the bracing of one’s mortality in the face of the life one has begotten. It’s the judgement one makes of one’s life when one has decided somehow, one’s life was worth enough to bring forth yet another. And yet another.
skidding across pot holes
1.
There are many things to write, one after another. It�s hard to keep track. It�s hard to keep all the things in one place long enough to put a word to it. So then it comes down to lots of words. Like a parking lot. A lot parked of words. A lot of parked words waiting for their trunks to be opened and one thing and another fit in, one after another. Too late, too late, like a highway. Try to catch a thought at eighty miles an hour for a center spot in a lot like this.
2.
A March baby. The ides of March. Ioanna of the winds, in like a lion, out like a lamb. Will you cry and keep mommy frayed at the nerves? Daddy�s like a cut tree: rootless and felled, hard to move at the sound. I dreamt you and of you. Still not real even with my hand on your mother�s belly in the dark, every night and morning.
3.
Eighty on the way home, surreal state until someone else swerves, or the tires feel like they�re going to buckle, then it�s jagged edge and fear and more surreal than ever. Will I ever get home? Can I stop here? Or maybe here? Sunlight over the edge, shot through the eyes, skidding across pot holes, home stretch and the last cigarette of the night plumes the lungs.
4.
What will I pass down unto to you? Ted says his two sons are remarkably different already. The child is born made, not molded. Already and the oldest has only just broken four. The younger is barely two. And you can tell, even from here, you can tell. Already different, one listens the other�s unruly. One plays with you, the other finds you in the way. Barely an impression, or at the very least, it doesn�t seem that there�s been an impression yet to have been made. Already there, marked distinct, fingerprint of God.
5.
She could not measure the heartbeat, the fetus would not hold still, no markers to be made of this child. You got a wily one here.
6.
You are no longer strange to me and I find a pocket there that I would like to snug into, crook in your neck that I want to nuzzle. A little bit of beast for you that has been tamed. And I can only go on like this for so long, putting it to words before I realize the immensity of not being able to put any word to it. At any angle, the skin tone is the same: always soft, full hue, fresh and thin skinned, as if fresh skinned, rice paper, delicate but never fragile. You�re my crumbly girl, but you endure. That�s what you�ve gotten from your mother, a quality of perpetual endurance.
7.
There was a time I could bang out a page in under five minutes. It didn�t always make sense, but there was a stream, a well worn stream, but something to dip into nonetheless. It�s taken over forty-five minutes now in 2004. You�re only two months away.