Monthly Archives: August 2008
Exhausted
And my AM shuttle to the airport comes at 5 AM.
So therefore…off to bed…
More tomorrow.
Boring, eh?
Progress of the Journey? BORED. BORED!
ANNND, now, posting from my least favorite place on earth: O’Hare Airport. At least, stuck until the flight leaves at 1:30. I got here at 9:30 AM.
I’m bored.
A couple of Tecate beers are helping with that, at least for the moment.
I do usually run into some one I know, or at least some kind of minor celebrity, at O’Hare. No sightings yet.
Austin, it’ll be good to see you.
ALSO: new spoken word streaming station is up! Some Duende this week, as well as a couple of other folks you may know:
http://vocalizedink.ning.com/xn/detail/2034477:BlogPost:19481
Ok, this isn’t fair…
I am going to Austin for work on Sunday. (Sorry, Austin crew — no real time to socialize; the last two trips have been whirlwinds so I’m not even going to try and make plans…they inevitably go awry.)
Which means I don’t have to choose between two killer events on Sunday night in Worcester:
One — the mighty MOLLY MEACHAM will be at the Poets’ Asylum at Jumpin’ Juice and Java, 335 Chandler St, at 6:00 PM;
Two — the equally mighty YOMO TORO and FRANKIE MORALES are playing for free at the Latin Festival on the Common, 7:30-9:00.
I adore Yomo Toro, sometimes called the “Jimi Hendrix of the cuatro,” an instrument I’ve been fascinated with for more years than I can recall. And to see him with Morales and crew would be wonderful.
Here’s a clip from YouTube:
Ain’t he the coolest cat since sliced bread?
Only the slammers will understand
why I’m posting this…
In fact, it’s a very sad story. Be warned, those of a sensitive nature:; some of the comments people post here in response will likely seem, um, irreverent:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/08/15/shaken.baby/index.html?iref=mpstoryview
Several aborted fetuses refused to comment. (I warned you.)
Trainer
Christ, I want to put other voices
into the heads of these people:
put a strong woman’s voice into
the head of the jock at the back table,
the one who won’t talk, who juggles his facade
of listening to me with his fascination
with the Blackberry; make that redhead next to him
do more than nod, switch out her monosyllables
for the chirp of the little guy at the front of the room
who has a story for every thought anyone utters,
and they’re off point, every last one; because I think
she’s with me and I want to know more about her, how she thinks,
what she has to say about work and how it goes for her
in meetings where it’s always like this, with the loudmouths
doing all the talking or the ones whose attitudes come through
without saying a word and whose attitudes color the atmosphere
in this breakout space with no room to do more
than sit nearly in each other’s laps and take the measure
of how the middle aged trainer is handling the pressure
of the long silences, of them sitting on their hands
every time I ask a question designed to get at something,
how it is for them, do they get what they need
at work, do they let their employees speak up, ask them
who they are, how they are, what they want, what they need.
The whole world loathes a trainer. We even loathe ourselves: too often
we bore ourselves with what we have to say. We’d rather
shake them, walk out when they’re silent,
toss a slide into the regulation Powerpoint
that suggests that the key to good leadership is to shut up and pay attention
to what’s around them, get to know their people
as if they were people instead of collections of aggravations —
which of course, is just how I see them right now: just faces, types, full of disdain
for the guy asking them how they think and feel,
trying to get them to turn to each other and say, “Yes, I hear you,
and it’s that way for me too — we need to talk more and remember
who we are no matter how we dress or talk.” I earn my living this way
and there are days I hate it as much as I hate anything
I have to do: comfort the unwilling, dance for the blind,
make a monkey of myself to get them laughing; I’m just another clown here,
and I don’t know how to get out of it,
to start being worthy of the role,
to start acting like I really mean it when I say
we have to be more to each other,
we have to give a shit about each other.
Hell
sez he
don’t say we didn’t warn you
remember
if you don’t take heed
to where you’re going
you’re likely to end up
somewhere you never wanted to go
sez i
s’ok
i kinda like it here
whereupon
the Old Goat
exploded
i was left staring
into a field of skulls
twined up with dark daisies
brown eyed lamia
but they sang such lovely
songs that
i worked up the nerve and
i sez to one of them
if you know medusa
tell her i said
stone is strangely more comfortable
than flesh
and i don’t regret the sight of her
the singing never stopped
it fell on my rocky ears
and my voice softened
with no more myth
of the Old Goat
to scare me
i came right in
on the one
and it was
perfect
Window
face
and shadow of face
whoever looks into
a broken window
finds a broken confession
looking out
Self-Portrait
mea culpa
for the insincerity born from fear
for the backstabbing born from a desire to be loved by all
for the seductions born from a need for power
for the pigments made by crushing and grinding
mea culpa
mea culpa
for half truths told
because they moved others more
than full truths
for lies and deceptions told
because they were more true
to my self-portrait
mea culpa
mea culpa
for the inadequate activism
mea culpa
for the righteous display of old scars
mea culpa
for my beard’s natural gray
portrayed as worry’s hue
mea culpa
for small murder
mea culpa
for cult fascination
mea culpa
for incessant chatter
mea culpa
for the overdeveloped skill
at smooth blending of brushstrokes
into a false photograph
for my treasured album of someone else’s memories
mea culpa
for the stink of my body unexcused by hard work
mea culpa
for the scornful honor I accord to my lazy fatness
mea culpa
for the image
for the green magic smoke
the red knife
the black black ordinary clothes worn like a difference
mea culpa
mea culpa
for the rough wooden frame around
the gold-swollen artist’s lust in my heart
for the hanger that holds me out from the dirty wall
for the vulgar displays
of the performance enhancing poems
mea culpa
all of me
is my fault
take a knife of your own to me
I will suspend before you
the only thing I’ve got
with which to defend myself
that it all was done for dumb
and not for evil
and
(mea culpa)
even that
is no defense
for I have signed it
M. C.
NPS recaps, Bar 13, and the sickness
— Reading the explosion of NPS recaps from the last couple of days: I’m glad I didn’t go. It sounds like all the stuff I typically loathe about the event was evident in full force, and would have negated all the stuff I love about it (which also seemed to to be present in full force, to be fair). Personal issue, nothing else. I’m glad you all had a good time, though.
— nerak_g: Hey, what do you mean saying that the only musician who should be playing behind a poet is Jerome Deupree??? I’m telling Faro you don’t love him anymore. 😉
— I still wanna know how I made the Tattler three times without being there. And someone BETTER have a copy of that cartoon…
— NPS suggestion for next year? Have it in Tlibisi. I hear there’s less conflict.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
–Never made it to Bar 13 last night. I got to the hotel in White Plains Sunday night much later than expected, had a lot of trouble sleeping, got up at 5:30 and then ran an extremely long and frustrating day of training on Monday, got sick early in the AM which lasted all day (as in, my session ended up with more bathroom breaks than any other), and by the time we were done, I was just too tired and crappy inside to contemplate driving into the city, seeing everyone, and then making a late night drive home. So I just went home and crashed. The right decision — I’m much better today.
So sorry, louderARTS. Another time. I really wanted to read the new poem, “Witness Tree,” there since I wrote it for the bravery challenge, but it will have to wait for another time.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
javabill — got your call while I was on the Merritt Parkway, and couldn’t return the call due to the traffic and the cops. Will talk to you tonight if you’re around — maybe come up for a coffee and some ferret time?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Maybe more later, maybe not. I’m kinda tired of LJ these days, frankly.
Witness Tree (revised)
The Wall Arch falls in Utah
after spending tens of thousands of years
holding itself up against erosion.
A locust tree falls in Gettysburg
after one hundred and fifty years
of holding itself up against
bullets and cannonballs and blood, after
holding itself close to Lincoln
as he spoke there.
The poet Shannon Leigh falls into dark water,
holding herself against the need
to see her life through
once she knew that it had been enough
to live as strongly as she had.
Ken Hunt falls, Angela Boyce falls,
Pat Storm falls, Lisa King falls, Scott
Kirkpatrick falls.
Some days it seems that everything is falling.
All the poets are falling, all the natural wonders
I’ve known are tumbling down head over sole
leaving me with more answers than questions
than I was willing to ask when they were still among us,
upright, appearing as if they would never die;
and now Mahmoud Darwish falls as Palestine falls, years
of people crushed, starved, burned;
people fall in olive groves and fail in shanty towns,
raising his words against their dim future
in order to recall
how things can change
even when they seem most
immutable.
In the August night I stop for a moment to say
that I fear I am no arch, no witness tree,
no name others will use to conjure hope after I’m gone.
The ground itself shakes me into terror daily
as I look at the way I live, the way I have lived:
coward, passer-by, content more often
to marvel at the courage of others
and the endurance of the Earth
than I have been to pull my own bravery out
and try it on;
set-up more often than punchline,
killer more often than savior, mayhem in my voice
more often than healing; give me strength, I have said,
give me strength to be the rock that doesn’t crumble —
forgetting that to crumble is the way of all things,
and that what endures is not the thing itself
but its spirit, its flavor carried forward
on the wind of the planet.
I am no hero, not in this life.
I am no wonder
worth seeing, not today.
But things can change.
NPS is over, and that’s sad, but…
when it comes to the impact a poet makes in the world, this is far sadder:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/08/09/poet.darwish.ap/index.html
In Jerusalem
by Mahmoud Darwish
Translated by Fady Joudah
In Jerusalem, and I mean within the ancient walls,
I walk from one epoch to another without a memory
to guide me. The prophets over there are sharing
the history of the holy . . . ascending to heaven
and returning less discouraged and melancholy, because love
and peace are holy and are coming to town.
I was walking down a slope and thinking to myself: How
do the narrators disagree over what light said about a stone?
Is it from a dimly lit stone that wars flare up?
I walk in my sleep. I stare in my sleep. I see
no one behind me. I see no one ahead of me.
All this light is for me. I walk. I become lighter. I fly
then I become another. Transfigured. Words
sprout like grass from Isaiah’s messenger
mouth: “If you don’t believe you won’t believe.”
I walk as if I were another. And my wound a white
biblical rose. And my hands like two doves
on the cross hovering and carrying the earth.
I don’t walk, I fly, I become another,
transfigured. No place and no time. So who am I?
I am no I in ascension’s presence. But I
think to myself: Alone, the prophet Mohammad
spoke classical Arabic. “And then what?”
Then what? A woman soldier shouted:
Is that you again? Didn’t I kill you?
I said: You killed me . . . and I forgot, like you, to die.
