29 December 2013

Boom! Goes The Drum - December 2, 2013

The love of friends gathered in cacophony
Nonsensical, sensual, and so fucking endearing you wonder why the hell you spent
TWELVE YEARS
Being someone else
When it is profoundly good to be about this and of this and doing this

Musicians, gay, riotous, being
Inspiring awe even in those who feel the music of their own hearts
Beating in thousands of bodies across America
Who can’t be here but are
Represented: lesbian, gay, band, music, friend, love

Together in a circle, to praise, to worship
To sound a barbaric yawp lasting to the end of our days.
Our melodies issue in quavers and halves and, when confident, wholes.
The continuo sustains, quietly authoritative.

The heart we create is a magnificent organ,
Each beat full of sound and blood and substance,
Filling nature’s cathedral.

20 November 2013

The Regular, October 23, 2013:

I was walking in Piedmont Park today, reminiscing about the weekend past.  The Big Gay Band was on the Active Oval, music geeks marching on the jocks' soccer field, wearing the olive leaves, taking a victory lap, in time, all right turns.

Tears welled and the sun brightened, magnified through them.  Each tear was like a tiny lens created by nature expressly to amplify light and flush out dark.  Tears have a way of acknowledging as one memory's joy and sadness.

As I walked I could hear “the regular.” He’s a crazy dude - tall, eloquent, toothless.  The couple I passed nodded at me in knowing agreement.  Yes, he is crazy.  “He’s a regular,” I told them, myself a regular.  We smiled, complicit.  How wonderful not to be insane like him was our silent affirmation.

As I moved toward him, smiling in the light of the sun, he looked at me and kept talking, now directing his words at me.  “I see you.  I am of this universe but not the same one you are in!”  Then he knelt as I approached.  Oh no.  “I am a Negro and I kneel before you.” Oh god, this is embarrassing.  He is acting out centuries of pent-up rage, me his convenient white man target.  “No,” I shook my head.  “Please don’t kneel.  I’m just like you.”   After rising from his bent knee, he said, “I am a Negro and I kneel to honor your spirit, which I saw.”  I felt calm, acknowledging to myself that my assumption about this man’s actions bore its own ugly stamp of racism.  He wandered on, preaching to his ever-renewing, invisible audience.

I would accept this honor, this revelation that I too had a spirit strong enough to be felt - or imagined - but why?  I think it because I somehow knew that our journeys were similar, jumping in and out of this now, this here, for other times and spaces of the imagination.  I also knew that his journey had been longer and more rigorous than mine.  Having seen much, he saw nothing wrong with me.  To him, I was merely a fellow spirit on a journey, and that alone had merit.  Such simplicity made him credible.  I believed him.  In his universe, maybe he had just nodded to a passing couple, silently affirming my insanity, but appreciating it rather than judging it.

Compassion and empathy are no longer merely words.  This is the wisdom of a psychopath.

17 November 2013

Winner, Janice or How Well Do You Know Your Dead Mother? September 18, 2013

On election night, 2008, shortly after news outlets called Obama the winner of the Presidential election, I received a text from Janice.  This young woman was my mother’s best friend, and knew her perhaps better than anyone else - maybe even better than her blood family.  The text was fairly common bigotry from the time:  “We have just elected a Muslim as President.”  The subtext was clear to me and anyone with at least one eye and a brain, even as she threw back all manner of rationalization, notably the “I am not a racist” catch-all for use anytime a non-white person is the subject of a racist story.  Then she added, with the mournful honesty of someone drunk, “Your mother would not have wanted this - not this!”

How dare she imply that she knew my dead mother better than I knew my dead mother!  If I didn’t know her, then my mom’s would be the biggest betrayal of all.   This fresh wound bled nicely, but as a southern woman who innately understood the properties of salt, Janice loosened the shaker top and poured:  “You didn’t live here.  You didn’t know her.  She told me that she just agrees with you because she don’t [sic] want to argue.  You know that sweet lady just wanted to keep the peace, so she would tell you and your daddy one thing, but tell me the truth.”  That is exactly what my mom told me, about her.

In the campaign for a dead woman’s affections, I wondered which of us really knew more about my mom.

Would my mom have wanted a woman to be the next President of the United States?
Would a Hillary win be a betrayal of my mom’s own worldview?  Was that worldview more like mine or like Janice’s?  To fool ourselves and those around us is to survive when we see no other way - all three of us did it - but to see another succeed, one such as Hillary, can be deadly, if it we backtrack from self-worth and into the land of comparisons.  Is this all I did with my life while she went on to rule the world?

Would my mom have wanted to travel to the places she had already visited in books?  To her, safe travel often meant never leaving the bed.  I can confirm this.  I remember that New York made her a paralyzed voyeur to a mugging across the subway tracks.  It was the forced voyeurism of chance but, to her, it must have felt like a rape by proxy.  She trembled as though she were the victim.  Worse, her world-view was confirmed: No one tried to help the victim.  Everyone looked away, so not to see a problem in need of a solution.  Through her tears afterward, she never mentioned the mugger or the crime, she only said, “They just stood there.”  Maybe she did mention the crime.  We watched Dreamgirls that night on Broadway, but my mom was still on the subway platform.

Would my mom have wanted to read about her shame had I given her the books?  She read about horrific stories of men who died from AIDS.  I put them in her hands because I demanded that she know and feel this and not just smile, smile, smile.  It was an outrageous demand that I made.  She hid them under her mattress to keep them hidden from my dad.  He wouldn’t understand, she maintained.  Maybe she was right; maybe truth can be so energetic and blinding that it needs the dampening effect of a mattress.  Or maybe she understood nothing.

Would my mom have wanted to read openly if she knew that victim-daddy-husbands talk to everyone about anything that results in sympathy?  Or pity.  Pour that poor man a drink.  Would she have wanted to know that personal experience makes people far worldlier than does any book-based adventure?  Still, when you have no choice, you’re going to use the only key you have to escape, which for her was a book.   My mother taught me about keys.

Would my mom have wanted to know that her son knew and thought about all of these things?  Would my mom have wanted a son not quite so adept at survival, like her?  By the end, she knew that survival strategies work only so long before the stress of their maintenance opens the door to the real killer.

I didn’t want to destroy my mind’s image of her, so I let things be.  Some arguments are not worth fighting.

Winner, Janice.  She needed it.

01 September 2013

Then The Separation Ends, August 13-September 1, 2013

We all wonder what really happens back there
Behind the eyelids
Where we desperately long for dry and crusty
Until the swelling of tears reminds us that
This cannot be a barren land.

That place behind the eyes sees
That truth, floating through time, a given day’s reality,
Fades into truthiness or lies.
Protective walls built against the world overflow
Truth breaches interior dams again and again, flows downstream into false lands
Making room for other truths, different realities
And I am lost in this land, always asking
Who am I?

But enough is enough, no more questions.
Who am I to know anything with certainty?
We all lie, love, seek truth, even revolution
We all try to do better, well not to do worse.

Multiple perspectives to unanswerable questions
Given purchase by seductive words and arguments and substances,
If not pinned to authenticity, transform
Honor and integrity into tools of punishment
               For me if not for you
Split from you, split from me
“Who am I?” now “Who are we?” causes a flood of tears in my not-barren land

Careful - questions might be heard as wishes.
Fear and grandiosity make learning the End Days.
But I did not sign to rewrite Revelations, this Personal Apocalypse.
“I did not ask for this!”  ("Yes, you did," replies the God-complex.)
Thick-walled dams, strong with time, failed.
Experience enthusiastically teaches a pain-pig
Opens him wide
A born-again whore of Babylon made to pass through the mirror
Not live in it.

From pain, the Who-am-I becomes pleasure:
There is no secret to life, only the living
Only the wonder
I am all of this but none of this
Free will set in motion
A universal duality, where two are one
Light and dark blended into gray, whole
Compartments without walls, dams blown to bits -
Then the separation ends

03 August 2013

Please Pick Up, June 14, 2013

“Eddie, this is Jon.”  It is February 2012, maybe.

“Can I call you back in a few minutes?  I’m in a quintet rehearsal.”

“No.  Please. I really need to talk now.”

I could already feel the need to hide the conversation that was about to follow because, with rare exception, the to-be-hidden kind was all we ever had.  Our conversations were always either too intimate, scary, or just superficial.

“I’m heading upstairs.”  “OK, what is it?”

“Steve is dead.”

Silence.

“How?  When?”  I’m so sorry was not my first response, but it did come, eventually.  I had already gone into cool professional mode.  Jon was upset, crying.

“The police found him in a hotel room in Columbus.  He drove there last night and killed himself.”  He said he would never go to jail.

Memories from the evening before rushed into my head.  Steve had been in the hospital.  He must have cut off the monitoring device on his ankle and left.  The numbers on my Caller ID yesterday were unfamiliar, but I knew it was him by the second call.  I absolutely knew it, but I didn’t pick up the phone.  When I listened to the message, it was Steve’s voice:  “Hey Ed, I know you don’t pick up when you don’t recognize the number, but it’s me.  I’m calling from a friend’s place.  Please pick up when I call again.”  But he did not call again.

When I spoke to Jon a few hours later, I told him to call his mother because mothers always know what to do.  To call his mother!  I never comforted him.  I sent Chris, his boy, a sorrowful text.  A text!  Attending the April memorial service that Jon had organized was out of the question.  Fear quashed that.  They were out of my life.

Then my mind broke. (Didn't it?)

“Would you like to come work for me?”  It was some time later, though I don’t know when exactly.  I was high.

“Is that you, Steve?”  No answer from my computer screen.  “Yes!”  Tears streamed down my face.  I sobbed.

So began a months-long journey down the rabbit-hole focused on remembering the past and imagining a shared future.

[stop, renegotiate]

What if I had answered the phone? 

ringing

“Steve?”

“Ed, I’m going away, but wanted to call to say good-bye.”

“Please don’t do what I know you intend to do.”   I would plead with him to reconsider, to drive back to Atlanta, to get help, to make right this thing that had gone so wrong.  I would wail some sort of metacry to all the dads in my life not to do any of those things that are now done.

He then might say something along these lines, but in his own words:

I know I’d only hurt you
I know I’d only make you cry
I’m not the one you’re needing
I love you, goodbye

I hope someday you can find some way to understand
I’m only doing this for you
I don’t really wanna go but deep in my heart I know
This is the kindest thing to do*

The words would ring true in my heart - even the part about “doing this only for me.”  Suicide is never done for anyone else, but the words formed in his desperate mind were meant to be caring and helpful.  I would accept this and forgive.

I would understand that the ability to hold two very different perceptions, often in direct conflict, is where release and absolution lie:  I love you, goodbye.

The connection lost, the line silent, Steve would continue on his way west, bypassing Columbus in pursuit of the setting sun.  I trust that he found his way.  Maybe he really was a creature of the night.


______

Post scriptum:  Obviously, it did not happen this way.  I do not know exactly what happened, though it surely involved a coroner, a hearse, a cremation, and a memorial service.  Memory is selective and seductive and in some moments, illusory,  the product of what I needed to survive, whole.  

Additional Note:  Jon, in the story above, committed suicide one year later, in February 2013. 




*From I Love You, Goodbye, by CĂ©line Dion.

20 June 2013

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18 June 2013

Three Haiku, written April 29, 2013

ONE

Bombs bursting in air
Four Eighteen, mocking Revere
Logan’s Run Monday

Note:  I wrote this just after the Boston Marathon bombings, which happened to be on the same date Paul Revere issued his famous warning.  The opening echoes the National Anthem and the closing, a film about life ending too soon.*

TWO

A sailor’s delight
Marching in like a lion
Aunt May deflowered

Note:  I combined three unrelated adages, from folklore.

THREE



Cloudy wet mirrors
Swallow things without question
Reflect truthiness

Note:  This last was inspired by a walk in Atlanta’s Piedmont Park, where I noticed city buildings reflected in the moving waters of Lake Clara Meer.  The lake swallows everything in its path, and then spits it back as altered reflection - as true, but not.  That struck me as a great metaphor for addiction.

-------------
*Some say that poetry should need no explanation, but that seems like an unnecessarily pretentious reason to keep my mouth shut, so I didn’t.


16 June 2013

Kitchenette Set Realness, written June 16, 2013, Father’s Day

I just had a 20-minute conversation with my dad, which for us is something of a record.  We talked about yards and yard work, property taxes and how he won’t have to pay school taxes next year because he’ll be seventy-two, how he’d almost gotten back his 20-20 vision after two eye surgeries, and about his difficulty breathing because of the heat and humidity.  I suggested that smoking might play a part in the latter, which led to him to issue a brief yet conclusive statement that he will not see a doctor because of the possibility of cancer and he’s already seen his wife and eldest son die of that.  I could not argue the point.

While he talked, my mind reimagined earlier days.  I remembered a battery-powered white helicopter.  Since these were the days before wireless anything, ©Whirly-Bird was tethered to a control box by a hard-plastic line.  It could only move forward, even if in circles, but that was enough for this kid.  Then I remembered the toy train that greeted me after I had jumped off the Blue Bird bus and hoofed it up our gravel driveway.  The engine was already chugging and pulling the cars along, they too in circles.  My dad bought and assembled these moments of happiness.

Then another virtual keepsake of sorts popped up, from just a couple of years ago.  Greg and momma were already long gone.  Daddy and I found ourselves in a rare moment of realness at the kitchenette set.  Our vinyl-covered chairs allowed most things to slide right off, but not all things.  He didn’t say much, but these words stuck and became one of my most treasured memories:

When you and your momma were down in Atlanta when Greg was real sick, she’d call me and keep me updated about what was goin’ on.  We knew he was gonna die.  I used to sit right here at this table and pray to God that he would take me and not my son.  ‘Please take me,’ I’d beg.
His eyes were cloudy with tears that affirmed every word.  In that moment, I knew that I already loved my warts-and-all father.

Happy Father’s Day.

14 June 2013

Love, Unfallen

For too long, the past has consumed me.  It has felt smothering and abusive, unwilling to give me my freedom.  I did not want this, and still, it happened.  Some things are beyond our control.  I do not know whether I am free.  I may never know.  Yet, some experiences are clearly behind me and so I can say, if hesitatingly, “This part is done.”  Some can retrieve the past, I’ve seen it happen, at once wanted and unwanted.  Magical powers are great, and dangerous, and healing.  For me, now is the time to look ahead and leave you to muck around in who I was or perhaps never was.  You make those decisions, and I will do my best to abide them with either joy or forgiveness.  I deserve nothing less.

Love, Unfallen (Inspired by Enigma’s Return to Innocence) written June 13, 2013

The aging young man dreamed on this long
Midsummer’s Night
Of persimmons and lemons and raspberries
Unpicking, causing
puckered lips to unsour

Roads drawn in chalk on blacktop, rain-soaked
Unsplatter; multicolored paths appear with signs that say Stop and Yield and Go
An orange bicycle with a tall flag rides the broad highway drawn by HIS hand (you thought I meant God)
Unpiloted, unremembering what happened in the house overlooking his quickly designed Way Out
Uninviting what never belonged

Penciled words on a page
Unwriting; erasures leave forever-tainted traces
A man with a scythe in a field of cut cornstalks
Unslashes; severed pieces reconnect with root planted firmly in the earth
A unicorn plays nearby, wary, but mindful of the sickness to be healed
Grace and purity quietly at war with a looping background

Rain from a dog’s fur: Unshaken
A stone across a lake: Unskipped, unrippled
Pottery to clay: Unmolded
Wine to grapes: Unstomped, unfermented
Blood to vein: Unweaponized
S.O.S. to sand: Unwritten, unshifted

Tongue in mouth, Unkissed
Pain inflicted, Unhurt
Love, Unfallen