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Wednesday, May 3, 2017
Check It Out
Go there, be square, buy a ton ----
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Monday, April 3, 2017
Thursday, March 23, 2017
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
placentas in jars
Sal is always drunk
and showing up at Mike’s.
Ruthie is home; she
shows me jars of kombucha she is brewing.
Like a big placenta
in a jar. Green tea kombucha, ‘it’s a fungus’.
Ruthie digs out a
piece of the placenta and places it in a plastic bag to take home
with me, ties it up. Now I can make green tea, sun tea, and jar
kombucha for free.
Ferment 7 days and
begin again.
I take the kids
home. They always rebuke homework, in magnet programs.
I get them to do
their math by going shopping at the thrift store.
Two hours of digging
in used clothes, labeled by male or female and occasionally colors
but unorganized. They scream at the thought, until now, until the
‘thrift shop song’:
‘I’m gonna pop
some tags. Only got twenty dollars in my pocket.’
When I pick up Zane
from school, he’s excited about losing a tooth –
said it popped out
into this girls afro.
Chelcey begins
texting me from the university bookstore.
One after the other,
“don’t reply yet”, she says.
I’m gathering 15
novels together. Twenty years of school;
ever since the
community college course years ago,
sitting on the San
Jacinto River, backdrop of industrial smokestacks,
the World War II
Battleship, and the sound of the ferry.
The toll of its horn
as it carts the vehicles back and forth.
Miles away, near the
Houston/Pasadena border – the underground tunnel used to leak, drip
river water down its tile walls, curved and rusting.
When we were
children, we used to hope the tunnel would cave in while we were
driving, crack and drown the old steel cars; water pushing against
the windows, wondering how long before it came inside, wondering how
long we could hold our breath before we were crushed by the cement
worm.
Long before I
realized ‘near-death’ meant – no one cares if you’re lying on
a sidewalk somewhere, they will walk past, unless they can get a
piece of ass out of it.
Chelcey lives in an
apartment in the inner loop:
- the firemen and coroner are next door
- it smells incredibly bad
- the old lady next door has been dead for several days and they just found her body
- the cat is over here at my house
- I’m going to have to leave because of the smell, stay the night somewhere
- I can give you one of my cats to keep the dead ladies cat company
- No
- I think I should go with pink instead of purple. For the restaurant, pink underneath. It’s a bit more modern. Do you think I’m too old for pink hair?
- Like manga. It’s horrible here, I have to get out, glad I’m working a double.
- They know it’s too late to get rid of the smell. You’ll have to burn the apartment down.
- No
- I will
- No
- Someone needs to burn down the whole neighborhood. And get rid of the cops. Just riot and kill. Clean up the streets, know what I mean?
- No
- Fine. You’ll come around one day.
Saturday, February 25, 2017
mom
Sometimes I take on the persona
of my mother,
The one who never knew
poverty & insecurity among
middle-school peers.
The mother of vacations –
pale flesh, cute fat toes, chubby
cheeks, and “perfect family”,
dishes with lids, color-coded and
labeled system of perfection,
clothes neatly folded
swim wear, beach toys, and sunglasses.
He wouldn’t keep her at the house by
tampering with the car today.
She wouldn’t be insulted at the
office
by the old men and the old men’s sons
of old money
dominant money of the oil elite
oil, gas, lumber, rodeo.
She expresses her freedom through
smiles and “ok’s”
as we wander off with bikes or sand
buckets.
Or maybe it was me who was free –
no one to climb into my bedding.
my sister – always cartoons and
sodas.
my children crash the waves
sit in the sand
Zane says, --- “Life is like a wave –
you either catch
it or you don’t.”
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
Sunday, February 19, 2017
(excerpt from Antidote)
(His
scarf, skinny junky arms, clammy hands, and leather jacket.)
- I remember guys like you. The metal kind, you prefer blondes and breasty beasts while I'm thin and titless, (and they are beginning to ban the physique of women like me in some countries). I'm the English major, you're the rock star and I'm a f*&king clown. Sexy doesn't come easy to girls like me, strutting nipples of a 12 year old boy....
...Like I said, you're a rock star and I'm a f*&king clown…
You'll find me in the back of the bus, off to the side at art shows, on the front row at concerts, in the dark alleys, roaming Wal-Marts at 2 am. People like me don't even go to clubs because we aren't sexy enough. We mar ourselves, maim and war with our minds. (F you rock star.)
It's a junky Christmas; I should have done a background check on this one, the I-pad card swipe in the club - name, social security, and license – hold on a moment. Silent but deadly. My own prefab delusions withstand hurricanes from the Gulf, tornadoes in the Midwest, the wet insulation of the roof causing the ceiling to droop, to crash in suddenly as if a surprise. The shingle needed to be replaced. Programs of the world are designed for lowering expectations. They begin in our youth, in poverty, in 9 to 5 routines of socially constructed slavery, in ads promoting the miraculous drug of consumerism. You too can be happy if you have the finest clothes, the latest technological advancements, the boob jobs, face puffs, lip injections, tummy tucks, butt tucks, alcohol, cigarettes, fastest car, largest home; watch how the masses crumble with anticipation, scrabble with attainment, push and shove for just one more hit of the goods. Then come the guns, the thievery, the medication and the nightmare pill.
We pack up and drive, drive as far away as we can from the negative madness that is Houston. Fuzzy blankets, pillows, coffee, and whatever we can cram in a bag. The house will smell like shit when we return - four cats battling for domination, for control over the litter box, and pooping on floors.
Kira
mumbles 'Iron Man'. I'm thrown back to high school, mid 80's, the
weekend with the church, the gym, and racquetball. They left a
handful of preteens alone in a gym. We snuck off to the racquetball
rooms. Yes, I kissed him, my first kiss, it sucked he had nasty
breath and chaffed lips, I did it again wondering why television made
such a fuss over two people pressing faces; halitosis and slobber. I
told him to swallow, chew gum, and maybe we'd just hold hands. We
spent weeks on the phone, late night conversations with me doing all
the talking. Silence. He'd say, listen to this, play Iron Man. Duh
duh duh duh duh... 'I…am…iron man'...the words drag and linger.
He always ran out of things to say and Black Sabbath filled the void.
Richee; it’s like high school with a 40-year-old incompetent junkie. He brings 45's of hair bands; those metal 80's of bleach blonde. I'm like a tit-less clown again; guys notice me when I make a scene, scream at someone, get kicked out of the bar. I play tomboy on the yellow bus at camp, smoke cigarettes and try to act 'cool'. Zip the hood up higher and think maybe they'll appreciate me for my voice, my song or my literacy. My freak show is like GaGa without the cute. The prepubescent possibilities wear off after the aging, the wrinkles and cavities – not marketable by Hollywood standards.
Richee; it’s like high school with a 40-year-old incompetent junkie. He brings 45's of hair bands; those metal 80's of bleach blonde. I'm like a tit-less clown again; guys notice me when I make a scene, scream at someone, get kicked out of the bar. I play tomboy on the yellow bus at camp, smoke cigarettes and try to act 'cool'. Zip the hood up higher and think maybe they'll appreciate me for my voice, my song or my literacy. My freak show is like GaGa without the cute. The prepubescent possibilities wear off after the aging, the wrinkles and cavities – not marketable by Hollywood standards.
He
plays the 45's on my record player, his clammy hands and metal head
scarves, his highs. He watches Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, too
arrogant for small towns, too deceptive for trust. He doesn't talk,
doesn't answer questions asked, doesn't care to lie next to me. Days
later, after my constant attempts to text him and connect with him,
he says, "You don't know me."
"No
shit, well it helps if you talk."
(R.I.P. Richee - sorry man)
Saturday, February 18, 2017
Kira
A mess in the
kitchen with the dogs should be the title of my new piece. Of broken
promises and forgotten checks. Of slaving for weeks and then denying
you promised me anything, denying you could have given more. We were
lost in the moment. …. in the home=made gin in clear casks along
walls, fruit floating along the top of the clear and forbidden
liquid. The wedding party that never arrived. Jim built a fire pit
and we gathered around. For warmth, stupid conversation and ways to
adjust to the ever changing threat to our meager existence. Where
they begin building bizarre inner city planned communities of
condominiums and homes side by side like brick pile ons. With their
windows open they fake as if they've been there, they can relate to
the suffering, the reggae love songs, the temple songs, the songs of
death and war and separation – songs of isolation. They deny their
existence while their kids play ball in the streets, make fun of
other girls, climb into inflatable balls to roll around in the man
made park with a man made pond and spouting spring. The taco truck
park expanded.
MLK used to be for
the underprivileged, for the black americans, and those separated
from the whole of white society. It's where my ex and I rented our
first house for less than 800 dollars. And I was working at the HEB
down the street. My gin and tonics from the Lounge, you know, the
Aristocrat Lounge where I drank gin and smoked Marlboro reds until
that one day, the day I was sick to my stomach and knew, knew that
something was amiss, not right in my body. So I crawled into bed for
days, came out fighting, telling my ex that he needed to die and
crying over the goddamn entity I could feel growing inside my womb. I
could not remove her, knew she was special, was to be born on a high
holy day. The first day of Rosh Hashanah. My ever loving egg grown to
fetus grown to exploding from my womb in a mess of after birth. And I
cried again. For all of us; for those of us born and forced to live
in this beautiful reality. For me and my mother who cannot stand
me. For you who needs scholarships to graduate from the most
prestigious of schools.
And I curse those
around me; need you to keep me sane. Need you more than breath. My
god child; my first born. Please don't forget me; I'd die for you.
Thursday, February 16, 2017
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
“You make a great Mona Lisa – but you’re not one of us" he says
they will break me
down.
Their glitz,
glamour, cherub fountains, Vegas strips, and plastic surgery
The flickering bulbs
and rush of traffic. Asphalt, high-rise, monuments, pole dancers,
slot machines, mixed drinks, and posh hotels. The whirlpool Jacuzzi.
All the glamour of
90210.
The judges line up
like game show, like who wants to be a millionaire, who’s got
talent –
a specimen of (is
this a prize breed?), the cattle prod –-
they’ll inspect my
ass, thighs, teeth, stock. Am I prime stock? Grade A prime beef? For
your liking or taking. Is my pussy tight and smooth – a playboy
model for the mansion. Is my skin exquisite enough for swimming pools
and movie stars? My luscious tan and youthful plump.
Comparisons will be
made – to blonder, taller, fuller breasts
DNA sampled
A nightmare.
As I’ve grown
accustomed to doughnut shops on back alleys downtown, cheap gasoline,
and drunk lovers. Learned to take moments watching the sugar dissolve
in my tea. Read the books of ‘mon ami’ as I lie in his bed with
bugs. Little scars on my leg, he’s out cycling, in a race I knew
nothing of.
Grown accustomed to
being nobody and no one –
Crushed, overlooked,
off to the side for sex or pride and revenge –
“damaged goods”,
they say.
Maybe that’s’
your next big heartfelt hit, ‘damaged goods’
The girl left behind
like butterfly effect, flies to the body bags of decay, kittens or
dogs tossed out on the freeway – thinking, ‘who would do that?’
‘why?’
even the simplest
things evade me – that warm bellied body, (full bodied taste) on
trips out of town. The lie still why do you need sex with every touch
of the hand, the caress of greying hair, the cock ring to keep it
sturdy.
Assets, assets, and
bank accounts in an elitist world --- I am ill adapted to
(complaining I use profanity while on the phone in the back corner of the coffee shop)
you drive expensive
vehicles --- and I have to say, I love drinking craft beer in a dark
Irish bar throwing darts, my shoes off – as the bartender lights
the outdoor heat lamps, you’re buzzing and staring at me; that look
of mild intoxication and adoration. So I throw a bean bag and your
glass shatters on the brick. Do you think these people would give a
shit if we were living a high school drama; a punk rock fantasy
novel? That maybe all the money in the world couldn’t buy intimate
pulp fictions of imperfection in their nip and tuck, chauffeur, news
articles, reviews, and camera flashes, flashes, expensive tastes and
questionable ethics.
Imperfect,
Tainted,
‘damaged goods’
after the party’s
over
as if they would
understand --- grocery shopping for chocolate at 2 am cuz im moody
and sad, beer tasting, sweaty summer on the couch Netflix movie,
rearranging the closet, changing pillow cases, throwing out old
toothbrushes, cleaning the studio, and awakening in the middle of the
night to look over and smile sleepily as we pull our bodies close--
for warmth,
for life.
Tuesday, February 14, 2017
valentine's is for lovers
Even
though you’re just sitting there handsome, silent and motionless,
I’ve
created sitcoms for you in my mind –
You
– the John Holmes lover in my big, cheesy porn debut,
holding
your monster-truck up to my dirty, open mouth
eyes
coked up in slits, nude and oily wet.
-
A rock-star with your hair slinging
while
striking your flying V guitar with the seduction and angst
of
a teenage speed-freak rebel. Yea, you contributed to rock history,
so
all those small town punk-rock smelly tattooed boys can piss off,
you
got a page in Rolling Stone, with your shades on.
You
were the schizophrenic staring at walls, talking to paper towel rolls
and
Styrofoam cups down and out – need a mother lover recovering
alcoholic needle-pusher,
detoxing
on 30 year old couches with beer-gutted men and skanks like me.
You
were in an Alice Cooper cover band,
harbored
in the desert, chasing scorpions growing your beard out,
eating
organic, passing around pictures of you and Alice
to
other 40something washed-up musicians in hotels,
selling
insurance, working at auto-shops.
You
sat at the bus-stop in a greasy mechanics shirt, head in your hands,
no
ring on your finger and losing your hair.
Then
you were that young, skinny and compulsively lying Canadian
cowboy
with snap-up shirt and jeans dancing beneath the fog and lights
at
the ancient discotheque, with young scenesters hoping to be famous
in
an oil town of industry.
Later,
you bought Italian shoes, put in hair extensions, wearing polyester
I
did not dry-hump your leg; you were everyone’s dance-slut.
You
were the peeping tom at the gas-station next door
watching
me pump my gas – 1, 2, shove the nozzle in deep
wait,
pull it out and drive away.
You
take notes near the window, in a yellow steno-pad.
You
were the rock-n-roll hot-rod cruising bachelor
in
70’s Starsky and Hutch sunshades. Yea, dynamite –
I
play hooker, you give me a free ride.
The
beatnik son of god, doing yoga, strumming out a tune on your steering
wheel
parting
the waters of my thighs with your free hand,
you
burn a bush better than Moses.
The
wind whips through my hair; sink down,
90
miles an hour on hot pavement.
There’s
a big-bang in my gut – I birth 3 uninhabitable stars that become
planets.
The
aliens create monkey farms, come down to mate with them,
attempt
human match-ups and tattoo hieroglyphic messages down my spine.
You
are beyond mankind – within the orb of my chakra of … (f*&#)
and
it’s been so long for me that your little tiny weenie
is
like -- Godzilla -- fighting off gill headed fish creatures,
breathing
hot flames and trampling ALL of Tokyo.
Yeah,
you’re probably just some stupid idiot,
but
I’ve turned you into many things in my mind.
(p.s. thanks for the 2006 show in houston B-Head, it really changed my life.
p.s.s. these are ALL yours... get a lawyer.)
Sunday, February 12, 2017
in the industrial trenches
If I could be just
like a young babe, curling my toes on the couch,
playing with keys,
sunlight through the window strikes. Rain.
The darkness. The
secret sermons in basements
where they hid from
the women, the 'eastern stars', the southern hair.
The lodge was solace
and deception, You saved flavored tobacco in pipes, in the garage.
Always garages, of
metal and trinkets and toys for the elder men.
Always crummy foods
of packaged and processed, the spam, the Cheetos,
the canned and waxy
vegetables. I look away. You mow the yard.
What is that black,
that void when I close my eyes and all is lost beyond the grave?
I must have died
during the birthing process.
Left a hole large
enough to escape from and yet never returning to.
This flesh born of
my mothers, this skin grown in a womb dish like a baby pup,
the wad of goo
growing arms, growing legs – when does life begin?
When the sperm hit
the egg; it never became anything.
Like snapshots of
summer, stacking in our subconscious.
Lemonade stands and
death in the streets.
Fire hydrants and 4
a.m. Gunshots, the drunks around the corner up all night
high on cocaine and
shooting guns into the air.
My father was never
a country boy but pretends he was, on the edge of the mechanical
city,
the industrial
suburb, the steel nights, the pipes breaking.
The air is thick
with working gloves, safety gear, and sweat.
They slave in the
factories, like animals tied to posts, strapped to machines to feed
their babies.
The lies of the
founding fathers, keeping us locked in the trenches, keeping us at
each others throats. The sweat of the grandfathers at the chemical
plants, the wrench turners, the odorous clouds,
they push me down to
their level.
He has a book book
cover over his I-pad, tells me how him and his wife still read,
how he carved a hole
in the book to propose. She likes science fiction. They compliment
each other;
he explains
interlocking puzzles.
I tell him how my
grandmother has become infantile, her generation of meticulous
categorization.
How the twenties
bred an organized state of placement.
File cabinets were
labeled, coffee cans, labeled bins, bowls with names,
and specific items
for a specific purpose.
Back when the goods
were sparse and to buy a couch or table or something other meant –
forever.
They kept their
household belongings forever.
Even their spouses.
Til death do they
all part.
Thursday, February 9, 2017
for the love of Oil
( - ode to Houston)
They line up their
jewels in magazines,
shiny covers of
elitist goods.
So elegant. I need
their glamour, their sparkles.
Tell them how you
acquired it all. Tell them –
Oil and gas. Oil and gas. I love oil and gas, I love killing just for
sport. Just in fun. I love killing just for sport, just in fun. Oil
and gas.
“I love the hunt;
I need the hunt and the kill. I remember when my father put that
first gun in my hand, when I was only 5.”
Fourth generation
riches.
With your beautiful
wife and gorgeous house in River Oaks.
I live next to your
factories, to your chemical plants. That smell from the time of
birth. I am your mutant; your plants are my home. Your smokestacks,
pillaging of the earth, your greed. I got your toxic waste, your
decay, and chemicals.
I receive your
dumps, your buried waste, your contaminated rivers, water, and soil.
We play outside
while the ‘cloud makers’ make us fresh goods, polys and metals.
You like a good hunt
and sport. Your Museum of Fine Arts parties. Glamour.
---Swamp.
---Glitz.
---Toxins.
---Golden
---Deadly poison
---Let’s go for a
drive with the top down, lets travel to Europe.
---Shut the windows
and doors, something burns my throat
---Shiny black cars
---Eating the paint
off, corroding the walls
---Cheese and wine
--Why, mommy, why
can’t we go into town and play?
---Theater
---We have a crappy
television set.
---America! It’s
like God.
Tuesday, February 7, 2017
valentine
Aunt Sue was the
first to marry someone whose parents had a backyard in-ground
swimming pool. When Pasadena was beginning to boom, millionaires
lived close to the refineries, near the oil-building mecca. We
overlooked the stink from the fresh cash. They bought a nice house,
guns, hunting dogs, and went out dancing occasionally. Until the
cancer. She moved after his death to a condo across the street from
my high school and kept a stash of marijuana in the kitchen in a
cookie jar in the upper cabinet. She taught me how to country line
dance, dragging me to the dance floor of a country dive bar and
leaving me to be rustled off by big buff drunk country men. I learned
to two-step trying to get away. Then Gilley's closed down, then the
metal bar closed down and people began to move away. I’d park my
car at her condo, take breaks in between classes to walk across the
street and smoke her pot. Replace later with a low-grade crappy kind.
We had our first winter snow that year, took pictures and stole
nativity scene babies. I learned that kittens crawl into car engines
to warm up, by hearing one have its neck cut by a fan when the car
wouldn’t start. Carmen, my age, tall, her dad in Vietnam and losing
both his legs, and mom a cute hippie, lived next door. Not sure how
we met. The library was down the street and an old tree in the
parking lot of the condo. It was the post metal days and nineties. I
should have stopped dating older men after Billy and losing the pizza
job. I’d be a waitress for years to come, wearing thrift store
clothes and someone’s dead mother’s jewelry. It was a year of
midget Elvira, art class, and setting bathrooms on fire. We called in
bomb threats to cancel school and smoked cigarettes back behind shop
class; the punk rock girl and metal boys. A time of innocence, of hip
hop breakdancing, church friends listening to Christian rock and
having birthday parties full of boys, of metal magazines and new
wave. Exchange students brought different culture here and there –
it was the city, when we got bored, we’d just take the bus to
another side of town.
The cul-de-sac was
lit up with Christmas lights. For every string of color, I’d buy
more black - black pants, a string of lights along the driveway,
black shirt, a string of lights along the roof top, black
trench-coat, a brightly lit reindeer standing in the front lawn.
Candy land Christmas. I make myself throw up the beef for dinner -
after I named him Bob and he came home dressed in white packaging and
masking tape with red writing. Junior prom sucked because all the
guys in school thought we were freaks, wearing stupid clothes and
carrying around rats. So we took our best friends, and were labeled
lesbian. God, we were hot together. And my uncle’s secretary
brought me a hundred dollars party money for the after prom. That
Christmas hell, the frat boys yelling obscenities and tossing things
over the fence, me saying – I’ll cut you and eat your dog.
He should never have
touched me, almost twice my age. She should have been a friend.
After Aaron shot
himself in the head at a suburban party, little Aaron I used to drive
to school in my fancy Olds-mo-beel. Carmen invited me to a ghetto
party of wanna be gangstas, and her Hispanic boyfriend, and I was
terrified of them so told her to hook me up with her cousin just to
get out. Barry had a car and a job and I had no idea he was thirty to
my eighteen. Andy transferred to art school after Melissa left for
Nevada, because her mother was a topless dancer, and I made him pass
out behind the flower shop. The day we thought we killed him and
spent about 30 minutes paralyzed trying to figure out what to do with
the body. Where does one dump the body of a teen - Flower shop
dumpster, bayou, someone’s front ditch?
The creepy locusts
chime in the trees, vines growing over and through chain link fences,
water puddles sitting for hours in the sun; we watch creatures crawl
to them, to squirm in the dirty pool.
As the snow began to
melt, the fires dwindled and school resumed. It always felt as if
someone was watching me, as if a neighbor or old man was just around
the corner. We never knew who drove through the cul-de-sac, they came
from miles around to see the lights. Blinking, moving heads of
reindeer, waving Santa’s, and Christmas carols echoing through the
dark night.
The garage doors
were down; we were tucked away inside in our pajamas watching through
the blinds. It was an Mtv New Year with gifts of stuffed animals that
turned inside out. It’s a Beaver, and now it’s a yellow ball with
writing on it, and you can stuff a t-shirt or pajamas into the
Beavers butt.
I’m supposed to
start college; creative writing classes, but keep trying to replace
my prom date. Have a real high school. Shake that eerie feeling of
someone watching.
Barry took us to eat
Chinese food. Next door to the gymnastic center of tap and jazz and
dance mats, next to the pizza place. The days of tight blue leotards
and breasts that never grew in, just skinny limbs and a big fuzzy fro
of eighties hair, always halfway between girl and boy. A roomful of
halfway teens waiting to bloom, hoping to become something more –
but mostly just awkward, too tall or too short or too fat for the
parallel bars and high beam. Mats that smelt a cross between sweat,
stinky feet, plastic, and cleaner – we did tumbles and flip-flops.
It was the year of Frogger and Ms. Pac-Man - convenient stores and
city suburbs in sprawl. They were building corridors and beltways
around the city.
It was dark in the
restaurant, he took us both, Carmen and I, and I took all the fortune
cookies. Later that week was Valentines Day, I showed up early and
she made snacks while waiting for a phone call, and I waiting for her
cousin. So, we both sat in her room all night.
No one came.
Later around 10, she
finally broke it to me – that her cousin had a girlfriend, someone
nearer his age.
Fires are
therapeutic – they’re great for burning old journals, secret
letters to guys who fail to recognize your existence, garbage at
grandpaps old house, trash-cans in school bathrooms, for writing your
best friends name on the bathroom wall to impress her.
And for when you
decide your friend sucks balls and you should remove your clothing,
spray yourself with hairspray, and set yourself on fire in her room
just to piss her off.
So it went.
A brief smelly
hairspray fire, some screaming, a tad bit of singed hair, and a burnt
nipple - for you Carmen, and your cousin and stoner mom and
condominium and the swimming pool always full of leaves and debris
and your goddamn O.C.Dism. fuck you.
Monday, February 6, 2017
where you can stick it - (To Flynn, I thought you were my friend)
there are trees on
my curtains,
black and white
spaghetti heads on forks bundled
like back packs on
street punks
their hats or guitar
cases on the ground begging for change; their imperfections from a
pedophile induced and fed middle class stigmata
breasts too small,
legs too skinny, legs too fat
breeding out the
imperfections like death camp exterminations
and experimentation
like you – to the
left
you – to the right
stacked in trains
led to mass graves
naked
their beautiful pale
tushes facing the sky
ass up, shot by
machine guns
the lucky ones
to suffocate beneath
beautiful
beautiful
pale dead bodies
long locks
intertwined
vines growing
through chain link fences
metal fences of
pre-suburban back yards
American border
collies happy to see their master
Blanketed by
children
Run to the woods,
dig through tunnels
Exiled-
And I have no care
to write about the stick or the sand or the salt
While I am freeing
the dead…
for my grandmother, the late and great Wanda
“April
24”
Just one
lucid event is all it takes.
A snap of
the fingers in the face, cars slam and the crash-n-crunch of metal;
squeal of tires, shattering glass. Post traumatic stress disorder.
She’s got Willem Defoe lips.
Gunshots
on the fourth of July, falling out of your first tree and landing on
your back; what if you die? Tire swings on humid rainy summers… We
never saw them land, never believed in anything beyond hot-dogs, bad
day-time television, and the train whistling in the night as its
metal wheels to track screeched in the silence. That orange
Volkswagen bug always breaking down.
Mother
let me go, let me go please turn me loose, you’re feeling neurotic
and I need to run, to scream, to fly. I did once when you weren’t
looking, flew, at Meemaw’s one weekend, jumped onto a passing train
car. I held the ladder, rode up the tracks, then let go and flew for
just…
Snapshots.
Back before the 6 million, before the light rail and gentrification –
cleaning up means pushing out. Too many cars, an overgrown stream. We
used to catch fireflies, put them in jars, and their squished guts
caused our hands to glow. I don’t recall disappearing as they said,
on the camp out.
It’s
55 degrees in April; conspiracy theorists claim the government is
tampering with the weather. Once there were just lights, and another
time a ship which split in two and then returned as one. On a
rooftop. We hear many stories, many sightings, matchbooks, untold.
Estranged elderly wives on back porches in small towns brewing
coffee. Medicated elementary teachers enduring the struggles of their
students. Lonely and tattooed musicians – love will not fill the
void. We stuff the holes with drugs, drinking, bodies, and babies.
They hide
beneath the folds of the universe, tucked away and tampering with our
minds. Our gods. Our hours. Snack trays and art parties. Hacking into
cell phones and interrupting internet. The new wave of cyber bullies
of anonymous.
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