Tuesday

Thanks for the Short-Term Memories, or How to Get Back on that Unicorn and Ride


I know you're thinking I'm stuck in the past, but if you knew me now, I don't think you would see that.  In fact, I'm not the kind of person who even remembers the past.  If it weren't for the old boxes of notebooks and journals that I saved (most of which haven't even been opened in 20 years), it would all be lost to the ether.  I can keep friends forever, but I don't hang on to memories.

And thank god for short-term memories.  When you're young, growing into new skin and falling in love every two weeks, it really helps to not remember every humiliation that naturally follows.

But I remember enough to tell you that 1985 was really great.  In '82, '83 and '84, I had been mesmerized by unrequited love like sparklers at a birthday party. 1985 was full-on Fourth of July fireworks.  I'll be honest - it was my best year for romantic adventures and real, requited love.  Finally, what all those poems were for, right?  It was "The Rise and Fall of the Love Empire", as I called it, and I had a lot of muses.  [All right, that sounds bad, but come on!  Do you really want this story to end without love, and, at long last, some randy romps through the garden of earthly delights?  After all I've been through?]

I might say something earnest, now, about how I learned something from each lover along the way.  This is true.  I had a lot to learn.  But the most remarkable thing about '85 for me was that I felt free.  Coming of age felt good.  I was self-confident and eager.  I was graduating, going to college, and the whole world felt like it was opening up to me.  I still went through some sad, teachable moments; but in hindsight, I can't complain.  There's a lot I did that year that I won't recommend to anyone's children.  For example, AIDS was just beginning to come into our consciousness, so throwing caution to the wind didn't seem like such a gamble.  But at some point, I have to admit it was just plain fun.  Exploits that my parents would have called "irresponsible" turned out to be a blast.  24 years later, I'm here to say that there was no harm done.

The adventures that I regret - the ones that hurt me the most - were all related to slavish devotion to men who would never love me the way I felt I should be loved (although, to be honest, the door swung both ways).  There's plenty of that in my future, by the way.  By comparison, the shallow trysts and the roads-going-nowhere, the "friends with benefits" and the well-meaning infatuations (followed by well-meaning changes of heart) were really just fine by me.  It was all great while it lasted, and it kept my spirits up and out of the gutter of depression that I tended to sink into when I was bored.

And through it all, I kept writing, as prolifically as ever.  My book was nearly complete:  "Poetry:  100% Pure Beef (or Vice-Versa)".  Complete, but never sent out into the world.  Typed, bound, and left on my desk, along with a whole host of good intentions.  But I'm not going to get you down just yet.  For now, enjoy 1985 in all its glory.  It was the best of times, I'm sure - even for someone who can't remember.


Monday

Poetic Justice


Chills,
Thrills, and Spills
My soul is wriggling
beneath it's skin:
"Let me in!  Let me in!"

It's so sad to be Anonymous
and even I, myself, mistaken
I am shaken
to the bone
By Metaphor, Persona, and Tone
I am filled 
beyond my limit
with Symbolism
and Imagery in it

And just today, I've made my choice:
the world will know this poet's voice

So let the critics speak their fear
that yet another poet's here
And gladly starve, and gladly rot
for after death to share the spot
within a textbook, or a journal
or a placemat, or a paper
and though fame is known to taper --

Let me clearly be defined 
with little numbers by my lines
and little footnotes, stand to reason
when my speech is out of season
that professors will interpret
just the lines that they see fit

And happily, I'll face the hunger
both above and deep down under
but from the world, I do command
one single, solitary stand:
That in life, we be acknowledged
for the labor of our poet's hands.

- Dec. 16, 1985, A.D.

Wednesday

The Hour of Relative Impermanence


The hour of relative impermanence
slips by like a ghost --
kind of hazy and midnight blue;                kind of
soft and satisfied

I lower myself onto the paper
it takes me;
we breathe together

Listless river of night
soothing pond of time
we dream,
we use our words in the silence to say 
yes.
Yes, we know them well

Yes all will be complete
it's a dream, you know
don't be afraid to face it

we make these dreams
the day is functional
the night is cerebral
we make these dreams

We sift ourselves in time
Is this me?
Or, it could be this
notations and footnotes
I could be an essay
I could be a piece of cheese

But no, I am a Yes
I am a sultry Uh-Huh
moving smoothly down that placid stream
with a persuasive mellowness,
I communicate with my existence

Sensations unite
it's the hour of relative impermanence
I dream,
alive
and in this dream
I write an essay               And it says
Yes.

- Dec. 11, 1985, A.D.

Monday

Vac U


They believed in what it was
They followed the path that the others
had laid out
They learned how to live in the vacuum

I wonder
If I was ever alone
in my rebellion of it
I believed I was different
I believed I was alone
But here, I see I suffer with the rest

There is something terribly wrong 
in the Institution
It will suck you up
if you don't rebel
But it's the rebellion that kills
It drives us to our half-dead state

Our teachers can't teach
Our students can't learn
Education is dead at the State U

Perhaps
there is a place for me
Perhaps I don't belong in school
But then, who does?
Who belongs to the death?

Perhaps they will tell me
that I am at fault
I can belong, but I don't

They want to help me learn
to live in the vacuum
If I go to them,
they'll let me know that they care

But why?
Why do they exist?
Why must I shake away part of my mind
to reach goals of prosperity?

I'm already believing
that what I feel is not unique
Next, I will learn to work in spite of discontent

Then, I will lose my life
I will believe in what it is
I will follow the path that the others have 
laid out
I will learn how to live in the vacuum

- Dec. 2, 1985, A.D.