a journey in four parts
i.
hands, bright like the sun,
painted in a frenzy of orange and gold,
beckon me closer, like a child intent on sharing a humble discovery,
to see what they contain
and I went, without expectation,
only to discover the source of life,
a blazing star cool to the touch,
but electric in my eyes
worn pages barely four years old
covered in the fingerprints of an eager explorer,
words well-loved, well-lived, well-learned,
the great Lady Disdain, bandying wits with he who is governed by only one,
unafraid of the power she possesses
I awoke, as if from a dream,
and remembered myself -
a girl from long ago whose own hands
protected secrets
ink in my veins, blood on the page -
no, not blood -
life -
the pulse of choice, maybe chance,
all change
to an orderly chaos
in the gaze of the Master
every book is left with blank pages
at the end
because the story does not really stop -
it continues with every step that we take
we stack the books in tilting columns
to hold up the story of our souls,
configure them into a staircase that we ascend
in order to climb atop the roof of conceived possibility
and gaze at the stars for a while
somewhere in the universe is a you-shaped hole,
the world in negative,
thrown into stark relief by the gray light
of a paper beacon
ii.
haloed by the warmth of blinding anticipation
with face painted up to distract,
to make the world forget for a moment
and rest in this suspension of reality,
I stand, alone and unafraid, in a crowd
of ghosts
whose lives are colored by the heavy pleats of blue velvet,
whose footsteps trace a pattern in the sturdy boards of oak
I observe their silent dance
with dark eyes and light spirit
I am a curator
of memories -
I pick and choose the story that will be told, the pages that will breathe new life
I paint the scenery as I see it,
I resolve -
restoring harmony to the spirit,
posing questions to the soul,
especially the ones you are afraid to answer -
I am
A mirror. A reflection of all the things you believe you are,
the things you want to be, the things
that may already be a part of you, but which you fear to see.
What is fear?
A name. The name.
The name we give to the truth we wish
to avoid,
the title we give to the scapegoat, the one we say is ravaged
by the disease of hatred, sick with self-love,
while we conveniently ignore the infection in our souls, the falseness in our bones,
but I am unafraid -
because I know that beneath this paper mask
is a heart that beats for truth -
and if I cannot be true to it,
the lights will fade
and even the ghosts will cease to be
iii.
every exit accounted for,
emergency plan in place,
and you are already on friendly terms with the stewardess -
her name is Andie -
as you feel the familiarly foreign rumble beneath you,
you realize you've not had the time -
or impetus -
to craft a will -
it is no bother,
the only things you would want to give
are not the kind that you can leave behind -
you glance out the window
and see the sweet solidity of the earth slip away,
and suddenly you exist on nothing but air -
well, air and fear -
air and fear and anxiety -
air and fear and anxiety and
you glance out the window
trying to remember
the proper way to put on an oxygen mask,
but your mind is stilled by the unexpected beauty
beyond the pane
the sky is glowing pink -
this is what it must feel like,
you think,
to wake as a bumblebee in the center of a rose
the whole cabin seems to be filled with the blushing blossoms,
and for a moment,
you are part of the sunset -
there is no fear, no roar of the engine,
only an ineffable lightness,
a budding joy
you are no gleam,
but a radiant star
traveling across the cosmos
to better and brighter things
the journey may be long,
but the life you will create at its end
will be worth far more than you can possibly imagine
iv.
losing consciousness of outer things,
I see only the space between us -
a chalice, formed by two silhouettes,
filled with every word we've ever spoken,
every thought left pulsating in the gap, the quiet interval,
the unavoidable lacuna -
and I wonder
if you can see it, too -
this bridge we have fashioned
out of casual banter
and bitter tears
and open hearts stitched onto the sleeves of our favorite sweaters -
sometimes, I loathe mine,
and tear it from my sleeve,
leaving only loose threads
and a painful hollowness behind my ribs
the first time, I patched the hole myself,
with embarrassment and regret
and a burning ache, an awareness
of my solitude
the second time, you offered your assistance,
but my only reply was a smile
that didn't quite reach the corners of my eyes
the third time, you didn't bother to ask -
you simply took up the thread and the needle
and began humming a song
unknown to me, but home to my soul
by the time you had finished
I scarcely knew myself
...
the color of the thread
did not match
the color of my shirt
and when I turned to ask you why
I saw that it had come from yours
and once again,
for the first time in my life,
I understood what it was
to love
another, myself, the world
...
I have found myself
between the pages of a book,
on a stage,
or a plane,
crossing,
somewhere along the way,
a river -
of time and choice and swirling doubts -
collecting pieces of a puzzle that I never want to finish
I have cried,
I have lost,
I have hoped,
I have worked,
I have laughed,
I have smiled,
I have loved,
I have come home, at last,
by way of you
and you
and all of you
only to find myself anew.
You are here -
You always wonder how you got here.
Biologically, you know, but
ever since the moment you were born
thousands upon thousands of stories have been waiting
to be claimed by you -
though only one will ever be yours.
There are so many could-have-beens,
would-have-beens
and vividly imagined should-have-beens,
but all of that needs to be forgotten right now.
You are here.
There's no large red dot to accompany that statement,
but it's unnecessary, anyway -
You feel the stark awareness of
your own blurry existence
and imbibe the nectar of your mind's own reality -
But in all this there are
questions that have woven themselves
into the lacy patterns of your soul:
Who are you,
and how did this here
come to be yours?
You already have the answer.
You are those coat-hanger sculptures you used to make in kindergarten -
except the coat-hangers have morphed into solid steel
spun into a carefully crafted mess
displayed in a lush garden
with many paths
that people walk day after day to admire the glittering twists and curves of the cool metal
in the sun and the rain and the haze that settles over everything
when Mother Nature can't make up her mind what mood she is in -
Remember the stories you would write in third grade?
The ones about how you and the boy with the 72-pack of crayons -
complete with sharpener -
were simply meant to be?
It turns out you were right -
for a whole month, you sat side by side
basking in the gentle glow of perfect harmony -
until you broke the red crayon.
You might not be able to recall
the name of that particular shade,
but in your heart you can feel it:
Bittersweet.
Yes,
you were right -
except,
no one ever told you that meant to be
doesn't mean forever.
Think back to the day you started high school -
when you thought you knew everything,
well,
maybe not everything - you've never been that arrogant -
but you were sure of many things -
until you weren't -
Until you walked into class
and became physically ill
at the realization of all the
knowledge you lacked -
Until you walked out of that class
torn between
elation and despair
with scrawny embarrassment tugging at your sleeve,
begging for his share of attention, too.
You settled for a walk in the wrong direction -
the best decision you never knew you made.
Then, you were seventeen
and in love
with words and ideas
and life.
You constantly craved new additions
to your vocabulary,
taking the time to taste each syllable
until you found exactly
what you were never looking for but needed desperately
once its existence was made known.
You traveled through worlds hidden in the power
of suggestion -
constructed out of ink
and imagination
and necessity -
Sometimes, your green eyes got the best of you -
hunting for words, you gave your heart to
a foreign tongue,
and forced her to hand over her valuables,
words you wielded meanly
without ever knowing what
they really mean.
Today, you are older
and standing
at the base of a tall pine tree,
limbs stretching as wide as your imagination will allow -
You trace the eddying pattern of the bark
and wonder at its likeness to your fingerprints,
a swirling code that holds the secrets of your story,
some of which even you do not yet understand.
The wind carries you a hymn -
a tune you do not recognize sung by the voice
you know better than any other -
and so you climb
until your breathing is labored and
you are dizzy with a joyous disbelief.
You are here.
Why do we say that
the sky's the limit?
the hell with the sky -
I'm reaching for a heaven
invisible to all but me.
it's something like a book,
if books were made of starlight
and sunshine
woven together
it's something like a quilt,
if quilts were fashioned
from the sweet caress of a spring zephyr,
and the brisk kiss of a winter's gale
it's something like a hug,
if hugs thrust you past the outer reaches of conceived possibility
and cloaked you in the mystery of the universe
the sky's the limit?
i don't believe that for a second.
Patterned
If we never meet again,
remember -
we met.
And in that meeting,
we changed.
Each of us added to the mosaic of the other's life
a tile,
or a stone,
or a small glittering something.
Perhaps,
we gave assurance,
or lent strength,
or inspired joy.
Maybe,
the worn red converse you let me borrow
were actually the golden Talaria,
carrying me swiftly toward my best tomorrow.
In a febrile haze,
you once called me
Artemis,
mistaking the moon's glow
for a halo,
believing that I would,
could,
protect you.
I promise I tried.
If I have not succeeded,
then I pray
I have at least helped you
transform the broken little
used-to-be's
into a work of art
as beautiful,
and competeless,
and authentic
as your soul.
I know you have made me an artist.
Did I return the favor?
True Vision
I have known many
with open eyes and closed hearts.
Prejudice and hatred and fear
make them blind.
You.
You are not like them.
You see with eyes
as clear as truth,
as bright as joy.
You color your life
by laughing,
and holding warm, rough hands
familiar and strong,
by memorizing the rain's songs
tapped out in morse-code on your windowsill
or your head,
by creating vivid worlds made solely of words and dreams
and your persistence.
Perhaps the way you see is different,
and sometimes,
hard,
But it is no less beautiful.
On the Death of Hamnet (or Hamlet’s Birth)
Sorrow born of love was muse and mistress
While flesh and blood and tear were ink of choice;
Both nourished mirror trees to stand as witness
And give a ghostly life eternal voice.
Truth composed of dreams and wishful thinking
Tempered by the holy light of day
Served as illness, tonic, and an inkling
That yearning one day soon would be allayed.
Haunted by a future nonexistent,
He filled the interlude with actors glad;
As if through heart and hope persistent,
A mortal chain would link the two comrades.
Immortality proved an ample lodge;
A worthy home after such deep mileage.