Monthly Archives: September 2006

nine days

In nine days it’ll be five years.

I know attaching specific emotions to arbitrary time frames is irrational, but it’s also human.

I find myself thinking, once again and not for the last time, about that first plane and how my seven co-workers might have felt. I hope there was a moment of peace and acceptance at the end, if only for a split second.

I think about how they eventually found the remains of at least one of them, and how the family fell out about whether accepting their return was important after they’d “buried” her already.

Acceptance…an odd word, but it seems better than “closure” to me. I think this wound/door will never close.

I think I’ll go back to the memorial garden at work on the Monday and visit.

As I wrote that, I became aware of how the events may have contributed to my desire to leave — how I dived into delivering the “grief counseling/travel seminars” at work in the days after, even though I couldn’t shake my own grief and anger.

I am still angry at them back at work for never understanding how I felt; how the event had shaken my delicate balance of depression and rage. After all, I didn’t “lose anyone.”

But I took the calls from family members that morning. I ran around making sure my close friend Katie wasn’t on the plane (she changed to get frequent flyer miles at the last minute). I stayed for hours calling old associates who’d moved on to tell them what had happened — some of whom were in NY that morning and were thanking God that everyone they knew was safe, until I called them…

I was one of many who sang “Puff the Magic Dragon” to Neilie’s daughter at her funeral, and I’m the one who still can’t hear that song.

Most of all, I’m the one who learned that despite our long rift, Tara had sent her sister to me for advice because she respected me so much. And I’m the one who knew that and never stepped up to tell her how humbled I was by that.

I know — all is forgiven, and I’m not someone who suffered as others have suffered.

But I still think of these things. I still toss and turn.

And no one tried to help me at work…I was just expected to suck it up and do my job. Which I did…

I did.

NOTE: For those of you who’ve responded, I haven’t written back individually, because I think it’s easier to say collectively: Thank you for your thoughts. Musings like this help me; knowing you’re reading and responding helps me too, as I hope it may help you.


Remembering the Palm Gardens, 1981

What Ed at the door said was true: they were all tired, all the time.
Tired from pushing themselves through double shifts
on behalf of houses, children, better lives —
whatever they had to have.

Half the dancers were former high schoolmates
so there wasn’t much mystery about why they were there.
Half the reason we came was to pay to see
what we’d once tried our best to see for free.

“Brandy” used to dance
to the most radical rock songs she could find.
I saw her dance to the MC5 once. She made me believe
the revolution will be a miracle of taut thighs and dissociation.

You push a commodified body
against the pulse of commodified rebellion long enough,
something begins to happen.
The ones who watch them don’t usually see it,

but I never met a stripper who didn’t understand
the balance of power in any give and take relationship.
What it took to gain power, what was inherent,
what could be assumed, what was the coin of the realm;

all was there in the tall shoes and the soft tummies
of the dancers who didn’t speak
until you’d set them up with a drink or a couple of dollar bills,
who then told you everything in high brisk voices laughing now and then

at some drunk who’d gotten crude with them earlier in the night.
I’d sit there secure in the knowledge that they’d never say that about me.
After all, I only went there for the sociology and the irony
and I told everyone that, even when I couldn’t stop staring

at Sharon from my math class who whipped my ass in every test,
at “Brandy” and her hip-pulsing anger, at Ed
whose scars and meathook hands welcomed everyone
to the Gardens, even at myself in the mirror behind the dirty bar.

NOTE: This isn’t remotely finished. I’m just tired of looking at it for now. Critique welcome.

NOTE THE SECOND: Nah, it’s done.


there are some things

that are very good for your soul, no matter how evil they may be for your flesh.

— a couple of long leisurely drags on a well-rolled joint
— settling in with a cigarette after that
— a jello shot with tequila, orange jello, and grenadine (a tequila sunrise jello shot!)
— many ideas for good poems percolating
— a couple of hours with a guitar in my lap, working out the chords to “Young Americans” and a few other songs while “Law and Order: SVU” plays soundlessly in the background
— heading off to sleep fairly early on a Saturday night


Anthem

if it has no direction
if it has no rules

if it does not rise when oppressed
if it does not know how to define rest

if it changes clothes to hide
if it revolves around fallout

if it recognizes color and responds to light
if it rejects the far ends of the spectrum

if it barks when it smells panic
if it pants and rolls over on the neighbor’s lawn

if it bites its own hand
if it chews and never completely swallows

if it is a country
if it is a great power

if it is alive
if its surface well described reveals its interior

if it is anything like its surface
it is hollow


Transference

while driving home
the teenager passed as always
the house where his ex-
girlfriend lived.

his habitual angry honk
startled a possum
who was crossing the road.

the possum froze on the center line,
and the boy swerved toward him
but thought better of it.
at the last minute
he straightened the wheel
and drove on.

when he finally pulled into his own street,
the boy was still unsure if what he felt
was regret
or relief.