Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Window Shopping



strip mannequins of their painted
pride skin their Ray Ban eyelashes
feathers to your macaroni
project trade their clammy palms
for cheap jewelry drink the metallic
mixture your platelet brew
that breeds monkeys and porcelain
dolls dressed in t-shirts that tattle:
Race is an Object not a Color

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

June 23, 1953


Young scared blushing
Her lace bodice cage
A white backdrop
To the bouquet in her hands

Her daddy’s arm
Guides the drooping wing
While her veiled frown
Watches carefully each carpeted step

Three meet at stage bottom
Her pale bile cheeks face
His concerned paperclip grin
The back of her father turned now

Towards the stained altar
Where three candles loom on display
And a lit match
Stains the white tablecloth

Her blush drains as he places
The tip of his waxy pillar to the middle candle
His eyebrows heighten
With her added flame

The marriage candle screams
It’s flame pointing downward
A wax trail etched 6 weeks prior
By the tears under her veil

Hearing the white of her gown
Her parent’s naïvely smile
During the hackneyed union of two wax people
In whose basement I was already placed

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Astounded




You show me the love of Christ through others and it makes me unravel, melt and shrink back in overwhelmed gratitude. The reckless love of Christ is nonsensical to man. You have recently shown me this love through Zach. Zach has been spending time with me while I have been sick, and each day I am burdened with my inability to receive such radical love. I want so badly to show him that I appreciate him when he puts a cold rag on my forehead, drives me to the doctor or tells me to go back to my room and rest because he can see I am feeling miserable. I want to visit him, bring him coffee, cook him dinner, take him to see James Maddock, do his laundry… Burning inside me is love for this man, and the inability to show this love is murderous to my heart. Yet I need to be sure that I am not basing my frustration on a lie. Will Zach know that I love him even though I can’t show it? I am physically unable to do so at this time. The truth is that when I am able to love Zach and do not, this is when he will feel unappreciated. His ability to love me, to give to me, when I am in desperate need is fulfillment enough for himself. He understands that I am unable, and is willing to give over and over again. I need to be willing to receive. But when I am able, Zachary, I will love you ridiculously.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

They are Screaming



My room has become a blank page. Yet it is filled with many different words. Pictures, desk, pen, charcoal, sketch pad, disposeable camera, alarm clock, chips, apples, thank you cards, wardrobe, post it notes, two yoga mats, laundry basket, two mirrors, fifteen boxes of tea, Poland Spring water bottles, white board with a dried up marker, phone, a collection of books on my windowsill, easel; acrylic, water color and oil paints; refridgerator, microwave, bed, a computer, two desk lamps. Words that fill the space that appears blank to my eyes. I do not see these words due to the comfort established through dwelling daily in their midst. This world – alive – now muted due to passive living.  

I no longer hear these words that once spoke. I can find my pop corn when I want to watch a movie, I can locate my sketch pad when I have an idea, I can pull out a book when I have time to read; but I hold the flashlight that shines on the items I need. Darkness falls in the corners of neglect. My desire brings these words out of the dark page into which they are pressed. No longer do these words sing, or scream, or play or bother; they noiselessly sit and consequently fade out of my sight. I am struck not by any tune beyond my set playlist. My comfort produces blindness.

There are many rooms in my life; the streets I walk on, the doors I open, the buildings I walk in to, the path from my bed to the toilet. There are many words within these rooms; the desk drawer I reach in to, the window I daily gaze out, the pain brush on my notebook. These words are intrinsically created with a voice, and side by side they speak and sing and beat against our ears if we let them. They scream, they hurt, they praise, they grunt – they want you to listen.

My room, my life has become silent; a space where comfort has calloused my eyes and ears to remain unaffected by a simple tune.  The birch tree I walk past each day to class, I do not greet in wonder at its changed branches. The raining sky I shield myself from with my North Face hoodie, I do not dwell in awe at its provisional flood. The words want to sing to me, but I cannot hear their song through my passive eyes and calloused skin.

I have neglected the truth that the rooms of my life are created, beautiful and heart wrenchingly inspirational. Comfort is the lens I have allowed to rob me from experiencing the simple symphony, making this world mundane.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

20 Years on the Job




zip up your fly
and don’t forget to shave
change your flannel
horse raddish from two saturdays
ago     disgusting
readjust the knot
yes, it’s necessary.
class is society’s love language.
apple cores to champagne
riddles to Shakespeare
troll belly trumps flat abs
every shmeverybody
rhinoceros tears
save them for your mother
mine always knew
I’d grow up to be a janitor
trash I thought, yet
here I am