Monday, June 13, 2011

Chapter 7: Boundaries and Waters

And a family of loons came to me in my dream and spoke in hooded whispers like a quivering wail that floats over shrouded hills. They told me stories of fog that had rolled onto waters still as polished mirrors, and how this fog spilled into my mind, mixing sanity with insanity in a turbid mess of thoughts.  - b.c.d.

Dreams had riddled my night as they always did. I awoke to the comforting campfire smells and sounds of the sizzle and snap of bacon fat, rough coffee grounds swirling in their heated aluminum cups, and an eerie chorus of mallards and loons gliding over glass-smooth Minnesota waters. For a moment I couldn't place the calls in reality or in my dreams, but the impossibly cheerful face of my father poking through the front tent flaps convinced me quickly that I was indeed awake; that another day of endless paddling and dusk flavored hot cocoa was in store. 
"The perfect day!" he said animatedly, grabbing my ankle and shaking it for extra emphasis. "Up and at 'em!"
"Uhhhhgggh," I responded eloquently to no one in particular. My sleeping bag still held me in its warm cocoon embrace, and the way my father's breath still lingered in my tent after his disembodied head disappeared outside told me there was no rush to get up. In fact, getting up seemed pretty overrated at the moment, and I rolled over in an attempt to slip back into my dreams...their cries echoed in ripples of rapture across the lake in my brain and it was not until I felt the curling icy fingers of these waters slip around my ankles and hold firm that I realized it was only a dream, and I heard the sirens smooth laughter as they receded into depths I cannot understand...
Fully awake now, I could see the hard V of my tent's vinyl roof ruffle slightly in the rising morning's wind. I didn't know whether to be more stunned that I had survived the siren's song another night, or that my dad had let me sleep an extra half hour. "Incredible," I muttered to myself, unwillingly unzipping the sleeping bag in a reluctant gesture that let out my snug warmth and dreams simultaneously. A burst of sound, flurry of movement and explosion of energy found my brother in the tent suddenly, yelling,"A bear, a bear! It came to our campsite last night, did you hear it? Did it bump into your tent like it did to ours?!" 
"Uh, something else visited me," I responded, half-awake still and oblivious to the startled mouth of my brother stopped mid-sentence. "Their fingers were freezing and songs warm," I mumbled while I got dressed, ignoring my brother's "whatever" as he back out into the thin morning sunlight, heading eagerly to chop wood for the campfire.Outside, one of my cousins had already begun the careful process of extracting a leech caught from an early morning swim, my brother swung a hatchet happily over hapless pieces of pine-wood, and my father sang hymns softly to himself while turning pieces of crisp bacon and popping morning sausage. The air, notes playing through trees like a soft woodwind symphony, and tinged with moss, thin smoke, and tree-sap came and swirled around my head in a perfect good morning tune. I saw strong sunshine seep and wink through thousands of branches from oak, maple and pine trees, leaping into areas previously covered in darkness. I saw our family's four eight foot long canoes resting upside down against each other a little above the water line like a jumbled group of yellow slices of watermelon. I sensed rather than understood, the tranquility of these waters with their ripples expanding out wider and wider as I dipped my feet in a shallow part clear and slick with river slime. I was not to know until much later how violent peace can be.
It came languidly, the way a depressing day slouches towards you and before you realize it are locked in a firm embrace with sadness. We had been paddling for four hours, hat brim jammed down low to shade the wrinkles formed from squinting into a blazing day reflected in a million dancing stars winking at me from the water. Sunscreen, now baked and old, gave the sweat on my arms a tangy smell, and occasionally I rested the paddle between my legs and dipped my arms up to my elbows into the cool surface of the lake to stay sane. We were strung out like an army line formation gone wrong, crooked and out of place, with my father and I "bringing up the rear" as he would call it. It was because of this position in line that I kept looking backwards or down at the sides, expecting someone or something to be following us. Did sirens attack the lost, sick or old, like lions to a stray wildebeest? Did you hear their songs before or after you're swept downwards into the water? Was their beauty as ravishing under the water as above? I could not answer these questions, and despite an unhealthy amount of imaginative curiosity for someone my age, did not want to find out. Too young for the anchor position, I had been placed in the front of the canoe, and glancing back for the eighth time to reassure myself there were no fins dipping in and out of the now slightly nervous waters, it was then my jaw went slack. My father is a man of extreme wisdom, and I credit him even now with not saying a panicked word to me as he quickly double-checked what had surprised me, and began to untie the strapped down ponchos, tossing mine into trembling hands. Where before the sky had been painted an extreme shade of lapis lazuli, it now frothed and churned itself into the same color I saw when raking out dead ashes from our fireplace at home. A few hundred meters ahead, I saw the rest of our two families pulling in their paddles post-haste as they heeded the warning calls from my dad bellowing above the rising wind. 
"Cinch the straps tight as they go!" he yelled, his paddle making small cyclones in the water as he shot our canoe forwards, strong angles meant for movement and not finesse. I could see my sister's scared eyes, and my mom's hair now clinging to her neck from the fine mist preceding the boiling mess behind us. "Head for that island at two o'clock" he roared to my uncle in the front of our line, miserably holding small ground as the wind began swirling in different directions like the times I watched my mom's spatula spinning and mixing cookie dough. Except this was black dough, and we were in the bowl. My brother's small yet strong frame leaned into the pull of the paddle, making inches of headway even as the wind pushed him a few more back. Our own canoe made small headway, yet we inched forwards even as the winds went still, and it was then I heard the singing. Locked into a rowing positing, fighting the current and feeling raindrops the size of small black beetles hit the back of my neck, I looked down and saw them. Sinuous shapes coiling and uncoiling beneath the surface, flicking and flipping their way around and below our canoes. I thought I had gone crazy, even as the storm broke into its full fury, unleashing walls of rain so thick I could only see ten feet in front of me. The island my father had pointed out moments earlier now seemed a distant dream, while beneath me reality spun and swam its way closer to the surface, melodies intertwining themselves skillfully between the rain, thunder and thunk of my paddle ceaselessly moving to pull us forwards. At least I thought I was paddling, though my dad later on told me, under a pine tree's branches heavy with rain, that he saw me, incredibly calm, reach my hand into the water as if to grab something that had sunk just out reach. My half-hooded eyes belied the maelstrom and panic around me, seduced by something he could not understand. 
The landing jarred me, throwing me and the clump of sea-grass clenched tightly in my hand onto the sand swiftly turning to mud below our canoe. Leaping forwards, over plastic-wrapped canvas bags and tightly rolled tents, my father came down beside me and helped me up from where I had fallen, back on the shore, legs bent over the gunwale in weird angles. I stared intently at the grass I held tightly in my fist, whispering "I almost had them, gorgeous songs, emerald-green hair..." My father half-dragged me and the canoe up the shore, abandoning me and my mutterings to help the others fight their way onto an embankment quickly disappearing.
They came again that night. Later this time, deeper. My sub-conscious slaved itself to their songs, and I sank further into her warmth.
---
Last night  in my dreams my wrinkled palm opened. Slowly 
inching towards loss in a nameless way; I saw her –
absorbed in an ash-gray house –
charcoal and green vines.smoke.stones.
drifting quietly across my blind nightmares...  
she found my nightmares laughable,
crinkled her eyes in mirth
"no matter for the morning queen,” teasing
            - stepping into the midnight house.
swirling into an eternity lasting seconds in my embrace.
Now I'm a widow to this swirling mass, witness to an exquisite universe spiraling in my wrinkled palm.
So vast, so vast my morning storm. 

Sunday, June 12, 2011

A Clinging Angel (Poem)

I collapsed onto my knees,
jolting my skin into pain,
watching small streams of blood begin to seep.
The room where I knelt held no light,
save the luminous sheen of a myriad of feathers,
strewn haphazardly from corner to corner, a blanket of sad white.

Handful after handful I picked up,
shoving the quills so obviously plucked with pain
down my throat,
the taste of blood from when it was wrenched  a metallic red on my tongue.

Startling tears gained the edge of my mouth as I gazed upwards while eating,
and saw,
clinging to the ceiling, a wingless angel.
She stared down at me intently as I ate hundreds of plucked feathers,
her pacific eyes spoke of limitless sadness,
her naked form, etched with a deity's certainty,
caught the pallid glow of the feathers in a light-less room,
and threw it to unbidden corners that howled under its beauty.

Her arms, dancing in ink, stretched towards my bent form,
each finger a different shade of silence beckoning me upwards.

Now standing,
Now numb arms pulling her down,
Now dry lips closing over an ocean.

Happiness shredding my body open,
as feathers seeped out of my skin and reassembled on her wings,
magnificent flight from a darkened room.

Vespertine Hours (Poem)

I awoke as the day rose with no dawn.
She looked like she would have a cumulonimbus smile and release
raindrop laughter.
The sky appeared terrified of itself,
shuddering in terror at the clash between
Machine and morning irrevocably melded.
Lashing out with speed,
I raced her to a horizon that wept endless miles into my path at a volume that thundered its way into my brain.
Her smile split and sliced my dawn,
With white forks spiking their way down gray ladders and smashing their way into damp fields of peat meters to my side.
Me, a challenger? I think not.
Her lucid laughter dripped into my boots,
Down my neck and coiled itself between my legs,
Where it pooled in a lustful circle awaiting release.
Standing underneath a concrete umbrella,
I grew tiny at a dizzying speed,
Laughing at my own adventure into loss,
Releasing myself to a day with a suffocating wind.

Miles later I fell asleep to a dream
In which I patched broken souls with a whisper
And penetrated different skies with a tantivy punch.
No stranger to the torture of dreamworld
I shook my vision to the rataplan on my visor
And accelerated into vespertine hours.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

She Motioned (Poem)

Sometimes it's difficult to see where the puzzle pieces of my life are placed, or if they've been lost in the endless marathon of moving days, continent changes and switched schools. Other times a day comes along that shines in just the right way, and awakens me with just the right slow warmth, hiding the approaching storms from me with the smiles of pine trees. And then there are these days.

Laughter in an earth’s splendid day–
a stream of broken sky in her brown eyes;
hushing
tears, as words:
      all I am in a few moments of harmony
      comes from a brilliance I don’t have, born
      a religion that crumbles cornerstones. 
today, fitting together pieces of me
I
replace her tempest of fitful rhythms.
I
defend my forbidden night ego,
I
watch still stars cover unblinking nights,
then mingle like a sob in a sandstorm.
      gently sifting…from above, watching
bursts of orange sunshine wrap a fierce day,
curl worlds with forgotten girls’ hair. 
Then she laughs,
lights up her skin in just that way –
and there’s my fitted sky–
slipping on a sunset’s lick…
diving towards earth,
arms bent forward like an old man shaking with laughter.

Chapter 6: Treehouse Therapy

"Start with why you broke curfew," Dr. Corgan stated quietly.

My therapist was about a foot shorter than me, and dressed in five shades of brown. She had that tight honey-colored bun of hair, the type for people obsessive about their appearance yet incapable of hiding the same meticulous personality behind the clipped and calm words during my one hour session.  

"I wanted to climb through the false roof and be alone," I whispered, eyes staring at a rug colored and designed to quiet worries. Even then, the rug began to blur as my skinny, seventh grade frame, hair rumpled and appearing windblown, crawled with infinite care along the cinder block walls holding up the foam ceiling on all sides like a sea of white and gray. "Truthfully, I wanted to run away, but I would have left behind my brother and sister, and my dorm-dad would have beat me to within a half-inch of my life. Either way, I couldn't figure out which one was worse, and headed towards the exit of the roof a few meters away. I knew that if I could get outside, the tree-house would only be a short sprint away and I would be alone."

"Yet you could have been expelled?"

"An acceptable loss at the time," I countered, wondering why the image was fading on the rug, and sensing as if for the first time my therapist's perfume slowly crawling towards me from the short span between us. "You can't understand. I needed that tree-house badly; I was escaping from the death cage I had made earlier that day with Jeremy, from the guilt."

"Why the tree-house? Why not a call to your parents? Or visit to your sister?"

"Are you fucking kidding me?!" My mirthless laugh and obscenity surprising me even as I spoke it. "The curfew is total. No phone calls, no visits, definitely no climbing. Which is exactly why I did it."

"What guilt were you running from?"

"I ran from the war cage. The aquarium sitting in my room as a silent glass sentinel, the poisoned wolf spiders an eerie contrast to the tangerine orange millipedes embalmed in the other corner. I ran to my tree, a coiled and thick pine tree at the corner of our dorm's soccer pitch. There was only one way up this tree, a secret route between branches and up a steep portion of the trunk to reach the main tree-house sitting area. Once there you could throw down a rope ladder, but that wasn't my intention that night. I went to rel-live the deaths of millipedes and spiders, the ones I had pitted against each other in an aquarium that now only held two insects, each plotting the other's death. Ascending the tree was slight work compared to crawling on bloody knees and scraped palms along cinder blocks, and once I got there, my feet dangled out over space where light was shadow-play between branches and street."

"And you say that night your dreams followed you to the tree?"

"Yes. Like last night when I remembered stories from my boarding school, whispers from a dozen years back that brushed against my body. Like this one.

Among these cluttered dreams, one would call my night
a seer, a prophet...
sifting between a dozen muttering dreamscapes
I discover an anomaly, a nightmare - at the edge of my brain's world.

approaching this vagabond I feel my skin glowing,
warming in a vicious way,
and I notice my anomalous nightshadow
turn its hooded head (could you call it that?)
shuddering slightly, preparing my cold lips
caked in day-balm talking
I usher out a short cold puff of chilled air-
a question
"where are you leading me?"

trembling I looked down to see my tattoos dancing around my skin
re-aligning themselves in mixed swirls of ink
now a country's outline
then a crow's outstretched, clipped wings
and snap my gaze towards this nightmare, who silently crouches,
pointing.

Slowly, hobbled to an unflinching midnight
I see daydawn begin to bleed across my dreams
awakening me...
Sadly, I turn my body towards my companion,
my back upon daylight, and
recede into eternal shadow.

PART II

Eternity within the unkind space of a moment
harbors me, and watched me walk, exhausted
towards this nightmarish gloom.
lidless eyes carefully stare my way, blinkless
veinless
assessing my vulnerability.

I wrinkle my brows together in worry,
and reach out for my guide's hand
shunting aside embarrassment.
His fingers, bones of anxiety and fear
curl around my thumb,
and with a hiss pull me further, faster
than I thought possible
where gray slants into slate into granite
and sexy sunshine is stamped out
an endangered luxury... 

...with pings in the mud
with creaks as breaking ice under a heavy burden
soft sunlight creeps into this dark corridor
as my terrible guide flees!
in his own scream,
scrambling against sharp sides of this dreamscape.

There, shyly smiling is hope
stretching out horizon-long fingers of blue and vermillion
reaching into my mouth, pulling my tongue, body following
flying forward into a room squeezed from
Nile blue skies
chameleon green scales
and ruby-throated afternoon." 

 "You tell that as if you were truly there," Dr. Corgan commented. "You have a way with words that took me into your brain's world, a confusing place, a distorted place. What were you running from? What did that tree hold which gave you answers?"

"I was lost in boarding school. I was suffocating in its rules like the baby chickens we fed live to our pet boa Alex. I had begun falling into depression as wide and dark as the barrels we filled with cockroaches and exploded with illegal cherry bombs. Don't you see that I sough death in the crook of those branches? I went to learn why I hadn't seen the spider's lightning attack, why millipede poison infected in seconds, paralyzing the wolf spider's body twitching in its last throes, and why I hadn't fallen off the cliff on a previous day's hike when the wind slapped me in the back while staring over the edge. Why?"

She sighed, taking off her blue-rimmed glasses in a gesture I was becoming familiar with when our sessions never produced answers. Rubbing her eyes, I saw the late afternoon's city lights dance across her face, making her suddenly older than I had ever seen. 

"I just thought my flushed face
would fade away.
Like an amber night, Fall ochre
minute death," I mumbled to myself, waiting on her to collect her thoughts.

"What was that?" 

"Nothing, just a line a I made up," I responded. "We're out of time aren't we?" I asked, pretending not to have seen her casting a quick glance to the small clock on her left.

"I'm afraid so, but I want you to think this week about places or people you might have run away from. I want you..."

"Good afternoon then." I was already walking out, watching false ceilings swirl back into view, and sinking into a memory full of smoke and sulfur.