Monday, January 25, 2010

An Argument that Never Happened

"Maybe we shouldn't do this."

You mean maybe you don't want to do this.  Based on nothing more than your own doubts, neuroses, and personal hangups.  Things that you search for so keenly in me because then you don't have to feel so guilty about having them.

"We're not going anywhere."

We've already come so far!  But maybe you're right.  I'm not willing to get hitched and get you knocked up so you can fulfill your dream of living without any clear means of supporting ourselves.  Sorry I wasted your time.

"I thought you would be the one to turn it all around."

And I thought we were meant to accept one another, faults an all.  I wasn't aware you needed fixing.

"I think I give up."  "I'm too tired."

Me too.  I don't know what else to do if "I love you" doesn't work.  If showing it doesn't work.  If I haven't convinced you by now, I don't know if I ever will.

[A dark day in January, 2009]
[Which is truly worse: The things we say to the ones we love or the things we only say to ourselves?]









Friday, January 15, 2010

Against the Light

In New York they walk against the light.
There'll be no delay of our daily pursuits
No insincere righteousness to fix us
to someone else's worn, bitter road.

Why should we walk when our goal is flight?
Why should we stop?
For a little thing like danger?
A little thing like fear?
A litle thing like failure?

For a little thing like the loss of life?
Which, until we stand to lose it
we have no idea of its true value.
And what would a life spent be worth
having never walked against the light?

[5:40 PM, watching the sun set from 5th floor window at Filene's Basement across from Columbus Circle. Also inspired by waiting at interections, holding Merri's hand, and wondering....]

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Book Lists

[January, 2009 - Giving myself plenty of time to buy gifts. All of these were chosen using What Should I Read Next]

For Erica

"Staying Dead" - Laura Anne Gillman
"Fire Me Up: An A isling Grey, Guardian Novel" - Katie Macalister (Book 2)
"You Slay Me" (Book 1)
"Light My Fire" (Book 3)

For Merri

"Asleep" - Banana Yoshimoto
"The Nature of Water and Air" - Regina McBride
"Homeland and other Stories" Barbara Kingsolver
"Pope Joan" - Donna Woolfolk Cross
"The Woman Warrior" - Maxine Kingston

For Mom

"Love Medicine" - Lousie Erdrich
"Homeland and other Stories."
"The Woman Warrior"
"The Women of Brewster Place" - Gloria Naylor
"Ceremony" - Lelsie Marmon Silko
"Saint Maybe" - Anne Tyler



Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Cunt-Junk-thief-eye-tease

So now I'm sitting in the Lobby at St. Luke's wondering what hot sin I could have committed to earn this latest helpiong of Pink Eye.  of all the songs we used to sing during primary school devotions, "Be Careful little eye s what you see." was the one I took the least seriously.  Its actually one of my favorites to ignore, right up there with "be careful little hands where you go."  But after Janelle Usher unceremoniously swatted my hand off her thigh in the middle of Infant II language arts class, I was much more careful with  my hands, and a whole lot freer with my eyes.

Before you ask, my little hands did not wander into my ass, and then into my little eyes.

...at least not consciously.

[January, 2009.  Waiting in the Lobby of St. Luke's Medical Clinic]

Eulogy Time

Its the beginning of a new year. Or the first month, at least. In my prime (which I hope has only lagged behind, rather than past) It would be the time I close another writing journal, banding up another Moleskein or twisting the cheap notebook out of the make-believe leather covering. And before I'd start fresh, letting the ink sink into the first unsuspecting pages of my replacement, I'd look back one last time at what I'd written, attempted to write, or failed to complete throughout the year.

Because its always somewhat bittersweet, and because the memories soon fade and are replaced with new ones, much like new life replaces death, I called it 'Eulogy for a Journal.'

But, I haven't quite been performing like i was in that prime lately. Not only have I failed to exhaust my journal, but through some wonderful folly, I wound up with two journals. One, the same faux leather covering over a stiff, simple, easy to carry notebook. The other is something I picked up at a Borders in New York. Beautiful hardcover, magnetic flap, and covered with elegant, driven scrawl. A speech by Abraham Lincoln. In the one that's easy to have everywhere, I have the thoughts that I have everywhere. Including many of the banal things that I simply have to write down. In the other beautiful, writing inspired/inspiring book, I have my beautiful writing. Or, what I try to write, at the very least.

It works out well, I suppose. Two books. Two blogs. And going back and seeing the failed attempts, or the poor successes, has always lead to great things, in my mind. So I'll be having a eulogy for both. Check in here if you want to know some of the foolish, boring, insane, truthful things that went through my mind in 2009, and check Eulogy for a Journal, if you want fiction, poetry, and pretty words that don't quite belong anywhere. Lets remember that year together.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Missing Mojo

I only JUST realized why my messenger bag was so light this morning.  I didn't have time to worry about it at the time.  I didn't have time to pack my laptop before leaving the house this morning, nor did I have time to root around for my cell phone or my wallet.  Yeah, its that kind of morning.  But just now, when I decided my time would best be used getting out more of 'Against the Light' as everyone's been requesting, I suddenly got a mental flashback of a cold-as-hell saturday morning spent in my mom's bedroom (the one with the TV) and getting up only to take both my journals out of my bag and scattering them on the bed throughout the day.

I also played the harmonica a bit.  Only I can't get the blues out of that thing for the life of me. 

So now, faithful reader, I'm afraid I'll have to subject you to an unrehearsed completely impromptu blog, complete with interruptions and train of thought derailments.  This sentence was an example of both.

I payed for my CUNY applications finally.  It feels like a huge accomplishment.  Or maybe I should say it SHOULD feel like a huge accomplishment.  I have no reason  to believe I won't get in there.  And school in New York would be...amazing.  I'd get to try a thing or two at the Bowery as well, assuming I don't pussy out again.  The prospects are exciting.  The same goes for Trinidad (because yes, after hearing about a $20 egg and toast breakfast in Barbados, I've settled on Trinidad.) and the Lyric Lounge.  I just...can't seem to summon the excitement.  Perhaps I won't feel it until it actually happens. 

There's also that other fear.  What if I never feel it again?  What if I've lost my passion and all that I have now is my current dissatisfaction and mere want?

Yeah, I've completely lost the train of thought now.  I do know one thing.  My love life (And being with the love of my life) hinges on me doing SOMETHING with my talent.  And that includes sharpening and keeping it honed.  So I'll write.  And I'll make a move.  And I refuse to get stuck here.  That's enough of a passion, I think.

The strong give up and move away.
The weak give up and stay.


Wednesday, January 6, 2010

When the left brain dreams

I had a dream, and I feel horribly guilty about it.  Yes, its silly being guilt  y about a dream.  Its just a dream afterall, all in your head.  But among those cursed to never taste the waters of forgetfulness on their way out of Morpheus' den, there's an understanding that the things we do in our dreams mean considerably less than the way we feel about them upon waking.  That's the only thing you can take away from your dreams: the emotion that you carry in you.  The way it makes you feel.  The dream itself might be an illusion, but how you feel...thats the real deal.

I was in my office.  It was my office, of course.  Why else would I be working late there.  Why else would would it be scattered with papers that I was reading, working on, sifting through.  it felt like my office, and by rule dreams that was enough to make it my own office.  And in she comes through the office doors, smilling her smile and swishing and swaying her walk.  Even in jeans and a simple blouse she looked elegant somehow.  I think that's become my type.  Elegant.  Womanly.  But this person was...just a friend.  She had that feel of 'just a friend', whatever her name was.  And this was in spite of the attraction or sexual tension.  That's part and parcel of having attractive female friends.  That's something I'm used to.

The details now are hazy.  I can't remember our conversation but I remember her.  We spoke as friends do, she reminded me about a party, and she left behind the Chinese takeout she brought me before leaving.  Walking away without a glance back.  I know because I watched her go, wary of her turning back and catching me in the act.

Do your dreams move along like movies as well?  Ignoring the elements like getting in the elevator, of getting dressed, of the actual content of the small talk?  Is that just me?  Anyway, I took the drink in my hand.  Scotch of course.  Which meant I didn't drink it straight away.  I usually just let the smell of it waft its way up into my brain.  Its a lot more pleasurable than having it burn its way down my throat anyway.  I was with what's her name and whats his face, two inconsequential extras playing the part of background chatter to her big entrance.  Which in actuality was as simple as a tingling touch on the shoulder, the neck, the cheek.  'Happy New Year' she said and then, without warning she brought her glossy lips to meet mine.  We kissed, in the sense that she initiated, but i followed through.  Those few moments were so surreal.  Her lips wer warm, and climsily placed.  This wasn't something we were used to doing.  This was a first kiss, and just sloppy enough to be real.  But it set my mind on fire.  At once I felt her arms held fast in my hand.  I felt my palms sliding across her thighes.  I felt the weight of her, th pressure of our bodies.  I was lost in her hair.  I was dazzled by the smell of her.  The taste of her.  I felt the millions of lurid possibilities between us.  A moderately long and successful career as lovers.

But that wasn't where my guilt was.

She smiled, satisfied, and I realized that she'd taken a risk and been rewarded in the simple fact that she was not rejected.  It had her loopy.  She said she was going to get a drink and while she excused herself i turned back dazed to Whats her name and What's his face, who were staring at me with eyebrows raised in equal parts amusement and amazement.

I took a large sip of my Scotch.

The scene changed to a much more crowded room, the party in full swing.  We'd had our first kiss only moments ago and already we were like old lovers.  While we rubbed elbows and chatted with other friends, we found each other across the room every too minutes, looking up at the exact same moment and finding one another's eyes, then smiling.  Has that ever happened to you?  It feels good doesn't it?  Do you know why though?  I'll tell you: Reciprocation.  We take that risk of looking desperate, of admitting that this person is on our mind nearly constantly.  Finding them looking back means that we are on their minds as well.  That's the good feeling that you can't quite identify.  That's what we look for all through our young early love lives.  Just a little reciprocation.

But this had gone on long enough.  Any longer and it would cement itself.  Or perhaps, I would cement myself, burried and founded deeply enough to make us real lovers.  Or to come to that point where we might literally become lovers.  I read somewhere, that a measure of a man's strength is in knowledge of his own weakness.  I didn't know for sure, but i wasn't sure id be strong enough to stop myself once the partiers were all gone and we were alone in a room together.  So, I sought her out.  My hands found her wrist through the crowd.  I'm ashamed to say i held it a bit too tenderly than I ought to have.  "Can we talk?"  I said, breathlessly nervous, and nodded my head toward the balcony.

She was beautiful out there.  Her hair was fixed in a tight bun that the wind couldn't undo, and so it played with the silk scarf around her neck instead.  Her brown skin glowed warmly in the moonlight, and her dark eyes twinkled with the playful lights of the city.  Most beautiful, though, was her smile.  It shone clear and white.  Young.  Expectant.  Happy.  Pleased with her evening so far and with the way she thought it might end.

This would hurt us both a little.  But she wouldn't care what it would do to her.

"I have a girlfriend."  I said.  Blurting it out seemed the right thing to do.  I had kicked around a few preambles in my head, including the ever inappropriate 'I'm not quite sure how to say this.'  But they all only seemed to cruelly prolong the tension and expectation.  And I was right.  It did hurt.  Even more upon seeing the damage I'd done to her smile.  It died slowly, and the corpse of it rotted into a frown.  A look of disappointed confusion.

I felt myself thinking of my girlfriend.  Of Merri.  Of what she might have been doing at that moment.  And I felt my left brain, my logical mind, slowly rousing.  And that's where the guilt came in.  I was lucid, aware that this was only a dream.  More than that, it was my dream.  I had control here.  And I was exerting that control, I realized, when she said the clearly logical 'Oh'.  I made her say that.  I could make her say anything.  I could make her say 'Oh.  Okay.  I'm sorry, i didn't know.' or 'Oh.  But...why didn't you tell me sooner.'  Or even 'Oh.  Well, that's okay.  I don't mind.'  And the truth was, any one of these would have been acceptable.  Yes, even the latter, I'm afraid.  My logical mind was at work, reasoning and explaining away reprecussions of it all.  I could have fallen in love with this girl.  Or at least in lust.  And I would have been okay with it, given enough of a logical argument.  And i would have enjoyed it.

And that's what's left me feeling so guilty. 

The in-betweens

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