25 February 2012

A Zipped–up Grace in Transit

I was on the Orange Line, riding into town from Malden Center, trying to straighten out my thoughts. I had a speaking engagement that I was going to and was trying to turn the meandering, convoluted mess my head was in into some sort of structure to speak, hoping to deliver a message that was coherent, if not extemporaneous.

My afternoon had not gone well. It was the Sunday of the Columbus Day weekend, where, as I had written in a poem years before, there was a "rich October burn: When the sun plays across the face like a lover's smile upon parting." It was that rare last weekend of flush.

Despite such sentiment, I was dealing with a different parting, and focused as such, was overlooking a fortuitous joining. Per usual. I had just shown the apartment I was to take over to a future roommate. I was moving back to it in East Watertown, but my wife was moving out to leave the state.

"So, do you think she's really going to move out?" he asked.

I looked around. Half the apartment was boxed up. The rest was staged for packing. "Looks like it."

He thought the room was small, and I knocked twenty bucks off the rent. He didn't have a job. I was desperate to get out of Malden. No way I could afford the place, even at half the rent. I wanted my books. I wanted my technology stuff, my zines, my comic books. I wanted Missy Loo to sleep on my chest, snoring and purring. Anything to get me out of Malden.

He took the room. I rode the bus back to Harvard Square. I was speaking later that night, just around the corner from the apartment. I had a couple of hours to kill. I was going to hang-out, learn some HTML, write or something. I didn't even have money for one cup of coffee, but was hoping I could jump on someplace's signal. At Harvard I discovered everyone had similar ideas; it was packed, and after my experience at the apartment I felt vulnerable. I went back to Malden.

It took quite awhile to get there, and once in my room, I dropped my bag on the floor with hesitation, latently worried about bed bugs. But relieved that the bug that was my current roommate was gone, I stretched out on the only piece of furniture I could trust, because I had been dutifully spraying the mattress down with 91% alcohol to kill the bugs and eggs, and liberally applying talcum powder to it afterwards— cuts the bastards that survive to ribbons.

I don't know where I drifted to; I didn't doze or really dream. I guess I went back to SF, down in the Christmas Tree Warehouse; laying alone in bed, shivering, drunk, visions of Yankee Pot Roast, and Oven Broiled Chicken, Suckling Pig (with the apple in its mouth) drifting by overhead like in an old Merrie Melodies cartoon. The room came into focus again, I was surprised how much time had past, but it still wasn't enough. I got ready to go back to Watertown.


So, back on the T, rolling out of Wellington Square, I noticed this young woman in a hijab sitting three seats to my right. She had a small leather-bound Koran in here lap that could be zipped shut. But it was open in her lap, and her lips were moving, forming the words, but making no sound. I watched her mouth, curious. She was very attractive, and I had been in a phase of admiring how a well-chosen stylish hijab could frame a lovely, exotic face in a way that the hooded sweatshirts of her New England peers couldn't.

Somewhere around Sully Square, her head raises to look out the window across the car from us, and her lips are still moving. She's praying, I thought, not that unusual as I had been making my petitions on the train lately too, except it was my little "screw you" to everyone else who had their noses in their phones. I had begun to worry if that diminished the intent of my humble requests for an intersession.

But when the Orange Line travels between Sully and Bunker Hill Community College, there is this long stretch where passengers seated as the woman and I were, can see out across East Cambridge and the Boston side of the Charles River. In the evening hours the sun, as it sets, takes up a good portion of this space, and this balmy October evening it was taking a long rest like it was trying to catch its breath. It hung there in some fiery hue between crimson and a harvest orange.

I snuck a quick look at the girl, she was growing on me. She was still praying as the light filled the car. I was shocked to find that a corona the same color as the sun had encircled her face. Little tongues of flame licked about her cheekbones and jawline. It seemed she was transformed into a beautiful saint with all the ecstasy of the longing of Rumi.

Now I am sure there was a practical reason for this "illusion", based on the angles of refraction between the observer, subject, and light-source. I'm sure the glass had something to do with it. I thought about rainbows; sure you needed to be in the right spot, the antisolar point, and the bow appears at an angle of   41° off the line that connects the head of the observer to their head's shadow...and so on. But the reality is that that rainbow that you see, is yours and yours only; it only exists because you are there to observe it. Even the guy standing next to you, he may see a rainbow, but it's not yours. Rainbows only exist if there is an observer, or its surrogate like a camera, to witness them.

And so it was here, I had come a long way already. The Presence of the Mystery. This was affirmed to me by this beautiful woman, who for a few brief moments on a October weekend was in grace— the belief that despite all worldly appearances, the universe makes sense, and reality is on your side. And if reality isn't on your side, you have made this choice. Reality does not choose sides, people do. Get yourself on reality's side, and be in its perfect alignment. I was present to recognize it, to bear witness to it, and to partake in her state of grace. This was evidenced by the fact the kid sitting next to me on my left had gone on the nod, in the middle of a text message.

08 February 2012

Posted on The Haiku Wednesday Fiasco: Memorial group for Leah Kane




The Haiku Wednesday Fiasco



as I restructure
I understand less but am
gripped by others' Grace



I remember the
lost I was finding in you
just being near me





death by one thousand
bites an ecstascy of one
revealed by hindsight





lice cough loudly now
jack of the harpsicord in
the loop of the hanged





fly gets what he wants
in time butterfly flits on
nowhere maggot wins





always the bagman
cardoor slams squeals sidewalk strange
street light dims rain begins





to hold back today
is to slash and curse the waves
who soon bring Wednesday







studying only
I swat a fly buzzing then
see love passing by





the Earth bears the weight
the whole Cosmos grinding down
so you won't suffer





you are unfolding
like a mandala to me
and am left longing





overcome greatness
and be the Fool of the World
idiot mystic love





see you and quicken
Presence of the Mystery
learn to be mortal





Karma is a flirt
slaps your ass when not looking
old game Cosmic tag






triumphant footfalls
horses' hooves cats' paw paddings
Nature's gait is yours





selling of my heart
fake gold watches on street corner
losing self-respect






simple passerby
your presence is a sparking
sets my world aflame

04 February 2012

I introduced my Anima to my Shadow Aspect; now they are sleeping together behind my back

You are my sucking wound,
My sweet oubliette
(my little place of hiding),
For you to turn to ash in my lap,
A rarefied immolation.
How engulfing your arms,
Your legs of smoked ham,
so sweet— done to a turn,
how consuming.
Prone, your eyes are wells,
And I brink to fall
Padding through holes
Enmeshed in webs
Of candied pitfalls
And your trappings.
Your whiskied throat
Sings fine victory atop me,
And your ballast seeks to
Sink me back down deep
Into you.



Even then I would
sit down on the curb
cracking wind-fallen
acorns open between
crooked teeth and spit
the shells in the
gutter which was
swept in autumn.
Did I look up
even in spring
to see the limbs
twisted in vernal dance?
Could I see them apart from
the dangling of leaves
like earrings on stretcht lobes?
Could I see then how they would
embrace me like they would when I was
drunk and sick on the lawn?
No, even then I saw them
shed with all vanity,
delivered to the passing
of the seasons,
their fancies and their patience.
So, I became used to being curbside
picking at sweet discarded meats.



Far down here in the rag & bone shop,
poison nitre drips down from some
unknown ceiling and it is thee who
moans as the foundation settles upon the chest.
Here we are occupied in the vocation of
sputter and fume and less concerned by the
trivialities of clutter and gloom,
unfortunate byproducts which damn us
here apart from those we've already forgot about,
but no matter for there is much work here
so far under where filth grows beneath the boot.
Maggots cease to thrive and fungi falter,
for here the gravity is so heavy eyelids fall
but sleep cannot come. The mellowed air
that falls down shafts and passes for a breeze
hits the lung like that of a surfacing free-diver's
first breath over and again, but you and me
friend, we labor where light cannot escape the
source and who knew the silence of dead air
could be so distracting and unwelcome,
but we are so focused staring at the
little patch of void tattooed on each others
forehead. These things matter little in the
evaporation of thought, for who could not
fix a gaze on a more lovely sight than a blemish
from which not even black can flee much like
you and me.



I come at night, for as she sang;
"The moon has nothing to be sad about".
I come to see you drop lazy stars from your
opened mouth, crosst your lip, and hang in
your hair like servitors, as your lifted hip
and thigh bone become the cosmos.
To see you blow smoke-rings of cirrus
clouds filled with violet & abandon,
as you lay to become the verdant range
that makes the valley.
But the bracken that breaks beneath
my boot cracks out like hell-to-open,
and there is nothing but axes and bone
to cleave the air with which you hide
your face.



She whom Lilith bore to Adam on his first
day in the garden, one of thousands, would
jump up on gangly brown legs to pluck
fruit, always missing, asking snakes for
ten fingers.
She who would tickle Onan's ear with
tongues and affected pleadings for her
want and wanton.
She who reduced Solomon to a boy,
wrenching wizened whiskers which
dropped from his bald face into her lap.
She, Theodora's consort and bondsmaid,
how the Empress blushed yet yielded like
pale grass to flame.
She whom Papal Courts would douse and
fire, yet could not quench nor kindle.
She with aquiline nose, showing expatriate
Frenchmen, couriers of the wood, how hares
would leap between her legs to be crushed
by ochre thighs.
She, giving haven under a thatched roof to
Brits and Austrians on a folly,
an emissary of deepest peace,
in Bonaparte's madness.
She, who over a glass of ginger beer,
for a nickel touches the knee of a lonely dirty
dog-face, so he may raise Ol' Glory,
long may she wave.
But she, form seemingly so liquid or
wrapped in rice paper, cannot be
emptied as a bottle or ashed in a tray,
she is pungent vapors and plumes of smoke
that can drift out of doors, as well as in them,
and is more likely to stain the air, like it was
clothing, with wafting scent that leaves
none too quick.