Wednesday

Fear and Loathing in the DQ, '86


You know that saying, "You're going to have hell to pay"?  Well, this was the year the bill came due - the hangover year, where people would tell me later how fucked up I had been.  They didn't have that phrase, then: "whatever happens in Vegas stays in Vegas".  Or in my case - Mardi Gras.  I didn't know I was just supposed to sow some wild oats, go to confession, and come home free and clear.  Instead, I had to keep it.  I had to carry Mardi Gras around with me for the rest of the year; a bug in my ear, telling me to live free at any cost.

But that's the problem:  There was a cost.  I had already gone home with the first man who asked me to stay.  I was in love, for sure, but I didn't know what to do with love once I had it.  The other part of me - Miss Free Love 1985 - was furious, and she wasn't giving up without a fight.

After my trip to New Orleans, I stopped trying to be good.  I dropped out of school, fell into love triangles, had an affair that I wouldn't stop talking about, got engaged way before I was ready, got drunk and did interpretive modern dances in rooms full of strangers at parties I wasn't even invited to. . .  you name it, it was that kind of year.  If I told you everything I did in "poor judgement" in 1986, I don't think I'd have your sympathy.  There were some prize-winningly bad ideas, which sent me well on my way to becoming a true asshole (in case I wasn't already).  

Out of college, and with no other prospects for the future, I tried vocational school, followed by a summer in the back room of Dairy Queen, washing dishes and dipping dilly bars.  I found myself relegated to that humiliating position because I was completely incapable of pouring the perfect 6-ounce ball of soft ice cream with the curly-q top that DQ was known for - just as it had always been done.  In the fall, I advanced into a soul-sucking waitressing job at a pizzeria, where I worked the day shift (who eats pizza during the day? NO ONE), served the same homeless man with the dark eyes that pierced my soul every day, and couldn't wait for the night servers to come so I could flirt with them before I headed home to my fiance.

That was all bad enough.  But the worst part was how stupid it all made me.  The writing nearly stopped.  I lost the poetry that sustained me through so many other hard times, and I had nothing to show for my supposed brilliance except for a wildly dysfunctional relationship and a barely decent restaurant job.  At least, that's what it looked like from the outside.

If the fall of '83 had been the first shoe to drop, 1986 was, most assuredly, the second shoe.  '83 brought the painful reality of growing up, and being ultimately alone in the world.  '86 was all about learning to function once I was out there.  For a radical dreamer, these were the hardest lessons I'd ever confront - lessons that keep coming back to me even now, in so many reminders that I need to be present in my life and responsible to the real people who count on me.

Even though I wasn't writing much, the Vision was still guiding me.  The Vision was what I called the voice that came to me in my dreams, and spoke through my poems.  It gave me my poetry, but never asked for anything in return.  It was a part of me, but distant.  Not wanting to live anywhere near solid flesh, the Vision just floated around in my subconscious, waiting for me to get out my pencil and write.  It seemed harmless enough.

But something happened.  I had a bad mushroom trip.  Nothing terrible came up at the time, except I saw ancient spirits of the forest in the wood paneling of my boyfriend's apartment.  But an incredible sadness fell over me after that.  A darkness possessed me, and I felt that the Vision was suddenly pulling me under water.  I wasn't depressed in a way that I could write about, this time.  It took me a long time to figure out it was suffocating me, and that I might need to send out a flare or search for a life preserver.  In my previous depressions, I had let the whole world know, and friends came to my rescue.  But this time, I didn't have the words to call out.  I couldn't define it, but I felt that it was trying to kill me.

Then one night, I had a dream that it - whatever it was that possessed me - was a big, fat, poisonous spider.  I took a large, hardcover book and smashed it against the wall until the blood spurted out of its abdomen.  And that was it.  I woke up, and I knew it was gone.  It WAS gone.  The unknown curse was lifted.

As much as I call myself a dreamer, deep inside, I've got to be in control.  That's probably the only thing that saved me back then.  I didn't have a prayer to call upon, but I had my stubborn will, and once I realized the ground was slipping out from under me, I willed my way out.  I did it in dreamtime, because that's where the whole scene was going down, but it had a tangible effect on my life.  I started to breathe again.

If you think this is when I turned the corner, it's not.  Surprise, surprise. . .  This is actually when I stopped writing.  I decided that if the Vision wanted to kill me, I'd rather be a pathetic, drunk, love-torn waitress than a dead genius poet.  If the Vision wanted me to suffer for my art, then I was just going to skip it.  I was pretty sure I could live without the glory, but I knew I didn't want to live my life without love, and a shot at happiness.  Even if I fucked up at it for years, even if I hurt a lot of people along the way, I wanted a solid chance.  I couldn't give up on my dream of a happy ending.

So, ironically, I had to ditch the love poems in order to feel real love.  I stopped being "a writer", and set myself to the task of being human.  I'm maybe halfway there.  I've even learned to speak, instead of containing all my feelings on a piece of paper, and slipping it under a door.  The language of people talking to people - the listening, understanding, and the constant adjustment - still eludes me at times - but it's the best work I've ever done.  I still, in fact, have the pencil to paper connection.  (As you must know, this isn't the end.)  But now, I nurture my life, and hope the words will follow.  You are why.  You are the reason I'm still here.  Whatever this is, whatever I have since I woke up that morning in 1986, unbound and imperfect - it is for you.


Thursday

Happiness Lies


I used to be
so moved
by the stars

I believed 
I was struggling,
then

but now 
I am fighting
to save my world

Happiness lies
in the ability of a woman
or a man
to maintain
their world of illusions.

- Nov. 6, 1986, A.D.

Monday

Just A Feather on My Lips


I want to create an image
of Venus and the moon
of a wet night 
under a weeping willow
in the shadows of a park
and under the light of la luna
and the image of a god 
who is human
and a human -
a sad, sorrowful, wet 
me.
When he touched me,
it was all over.

How can I create this image
to be real
when it's a dream,
just a dream to me?
How can I bring him to life
when he is more than life?
the moon's light is in his smile
and there is Venus in his eyes
and his touch is warmth to my entire body
and his kisses are electric

How can I make anyone believe
that he ever happened
when I can't be sure, myself?
I can feel him, still
or is it merely the caress of a warm breeze
against my shoulders?
or a feather on my lips?

It is only a dream
and I am a dreamer to believe
that my memory is worth anything.
Even if I were to paint this picture,
I'm sure 
that the other lover -
the one who is kissed by him -
could never be me

(fall, '86)

Friday

Drifting, Discovering the Undertow, then Finding Release


From my journal, July 25, 1986, A.D.:

Another disturbing dream. . .

We came in our yacht, unto an island, small and pleasant.  Other islands lay beyond.  This was our glory.  We came unto an island at the bottom of the earth.  It was warm, it was wet, it was so wonderful!  Many people came and converged upon that island.  We had bubbly bubbly champagne.  and herbs of wild and rich aromas.  And opium that smelled like grape bubble gum.  Tropica - oh, tropical dream!  Where freedom lies!  Where comfort lies!  Oh, land so small!  Oh, sun so near!  How can it be so good?  No drug can last forever!  No sleep can be eternal!  Aye! - there's the rub!  For in this sleep of death what dreams may come when we have shuffled off this mortal coil must give us pause. . .  That undiscovered country from who's born, no traveler returns, puzzles the will. . .

Suicide.  Suicide, suicide, suicide.  Why?  I fear death.  But suicide, I find very sweet, indeed.

I have wondered for quite some time, now, what the vision is and whether or not it is such a good thing.  It feels very evil.  It makes me dream of death so fearsome that I am afraid of life.  It wants me with it inside the world of dreams.  It hates me for having fallen in love.  It doesn't want to be shared with anyone or anything.  It hates my world of reality.

And I can't help thinking that it was the drugs.  They brought me to the vision - each time stronger.  They showed me the incredible shakiness of reality.  And ever since the mushrooms, I have been sure that I am possessed.

I am very frightened.  I'm so frightened that I would plead with myself to become a Christian.  But my faith is only in myself.  My fear is strong.  I must fight, fight for my life!

This isn't the first time.  But the fear is more real than anything I've ever felt before.

I HAVE ALWAYS TRUSTED THE VISION.  I don't want to abandon it for sanity or for love or for happiness.  BUT FOR MY LIFE, I have to fight it if I'm going to keep it.  If I love A., I will fight it.

It will show me what it showed Dali, Hesse, Pirsig, Plath, Burroughs, Escher, Lennon and Waters.

Ahead for me is to find out if I can leash the monster for my own purposes - or if it will kill me like it killed the women poets.  Perhaps the vision is particularly harsh on women.  

If I can only remember one thing:  I AM NOT ALONE.

A. and I have to bring each other higher - I don't know how, but we must be, feel, do so much more.  We must love everything.  We must love so strongly that the only path is up.  No hate.  No hate at all.

I MUST HANDLE THIS VISION.  IT WILL NOT BE SO HARSH ON ME.

- Sharon



Next entry, Aug. 13, 1986, A.D.

[based on another dream]
I killed it, Babe.  I won't go to bed crying.  It was only a spider - only a spider, with a belly full of poison.  I killed it, Babe.  It was nothing at all.  And now, all I've got is hindsight and an analytical mind.

- Sharon

Tuesday

A Very Curious Random List


I have no idea what this is about:

Sunday

This is a Documentary


This is a Documentary

that says
I'm a lucky sleestack
and a trenchcoat full of lies
I'm a brisk and sun-dappled,
persuasively mellow, 
Hitchcock heroin
sun-bunny
and I'm alive!


This is a Documentary

that says,
Yes, I know I've got the vision
inside of me
Yes, I know that I will marry
my dreams

But you know,
it's not always so good --
I've got nicotine fingers
and weary eyes
the vision gives me
a bad dream or two
I love,
and I am forced to make a
life decision
I love,
but still, I lose

but


This is a Documentary

that says,
I will survive.

- May 18, 1986, A.D.

Friday

Poetry: 100% Pure Beef (or Vice-Versa)


Someday soon, I hope to become
that soft piece of rubber
with a Taoist look
and bounce
and bounce.

I am ready to take the first bite
of my quarter-pounder
I am ready to begin.

I'll take the low, low road,
but I'll get there, to the dinner party
eventually.

I'm doing it --
I'm taking the bite
"How is it?"
"Well done."
Why, thank you.

- April 25, 1986, A.D.

Change Your Fate


It's fate, that's all --
my usual state
It has to happen
It has to hurt, too
But you can turn it around
I always do.

Why, this feels perfectly right for me
A melodrama, meant to be
You can do it, and you should --
Turn the bad around to good
Turn the arrow, facing up
The sky's the limit
Come with me.

You need some pain
Come on, don't deny it
You need some fate
Just look at me
Don't I look good in my agony?
Don't I glow against the gray?
You can do it, start today
I'll conjure pain enough
to share.

It's fate, that's all
You know, destiny
And with my help, you can have some, too
But you can turn it to good --
I always do.

- April 25, 1986, A.D.

Saturday

Deep


And now, would you like to go a little bit deeper?
          I didn't even know it was this deep
And now, would you like to go a little bit deeper?
          I had no idea that it could be this deep
And now, would you like to go a little bit deeper?
          How could I have known that it was this deep?
And now, would you like to go a little bit deeper?
          How could I have ever known that it would go this far?
And now, would you like to go a little bit deeper?
          O, god, how much further could it go?
And now, would you like to go a little bit deeper?
          O, god, please - NO!
And now?. . .

- March 29, 1986, A.D.

October


Every night
that you are gone
I lie in my bed
and I imagine your touch
and your warmth
I think how nothing opens me up more
than your caress.
The wind whispers outside, in the dark
and I feel your kiss against my neck.
The breeze in my ear
is your breathing.

Warm, bare-skinned bodies
your chest against my arm
your thigh on mine
two bodies, intertwined
your hand moves softly, gently
across my skin
your kiss is on my cheek
you pull me in closer
outside, leaves brush against leaves
lips brush against lips
they dance and fall from trees
as your hand moves down my spine
the wind presses the windowpane
against its frame
you press your body to mine.

I was never so alone
until your branches
got tangled
in my own.

- March 29, 1986, A.D.

Wednesday

Just This


It cannot be counted
unless in hugs and smiles
sometimes I lose myself -
deeply-
in your eyes

It could never be measured
with a list of pros and cons
my love is for you, lover
it goes on
and on
and on. . .

- March 26, 1986, A.D.

Saturday

Photo '86


Tribute (to e.e.cummings)


e.) amazed, daz
zled (inconcievab
ly strange)
half warm and
half co
ld (e.)

play how you
play oh (is i
t only) hey now
hey now i
s this (a ga
me) how you
th (cummings)
ink?

(early '86)

Sketches '86


Wednesday

I'd Rather Smoke


[note:  if there was ever a tune for these lyrics, I don't remember them.]


I walked out on the street
I walked this way and that
I tried to think of a reason
why you treat me so bad
I went on down to the store
and bought a bottle of Jack
(spoken) Baby, why are you less gratifying than a cigarette?

I walk the dog in the daytime
in the night I call the cat
I've got nothing to do but eat
and now I'm getting fat
I hold a sweater in my lap
and slowly pick out all the fuzz
(spoken) Baby, why can't you give something more than that old nicotine buzz?

Cause I'm lost for the reason
that you make me so blue
(spoken) Baby, why would I rather have a Camel than be with you?

I'd rather smoke
ooooh I'd rather smoke
I'd rather smoke
yeah yeah I'd rather smoke

(early '86)

Saturday

The Floodgates


I can't stand to be with him
for we have barriers
I have barriers
He has barriers
and I have endless notations in my mind
instead of love

And in the dark
we hold each other
we clench fiercely
and make love
for here, we believe we can find
what we have lost
but in the light, 
we are blank faces

I can't hide in the light!
I can't cover up my fears
I must fight
to look so indifferent
I must pull at my cheeks
for an occasional smile
I must turn away with my eyes
just before they conjure water
because I can't talk -
I'm so afraid of what the truth might be
I can't tell him 
that I'm so confused

There's too much water
pushing against this 
battered dam
why have I been holding out?
when there could be so much love
I must release the pain
in order to relieve the pressure. . .

Floodgate 1:
A father with a mind to my failure
he has never believed in my dreams
telling me I'm wrong
Am I wrong?
Was I wrong from the start?
Will I be wrong again?

Floodgate 2:
A self-centered poet
who wants herself more than anything else
who has devoted her life to love
who talks of pain,
but who cannot stand to feel it
who talks of love,
but who cannot stand to feel it

Floodgate 3:
A set of ideas
of what a person should be 
that would stop the love
if it could
that would make me wait
for no less than a god

Floodgate 4:
A lover who I love
but who falls short of the mark
who has no words to love me by
who's so discreet when people are around
that I sometimes wonder. . .

Floodgate 5:
A need I have
to share and to receive
that the public may know it
that world may know it
a need I have 
for some devotion

Floodgate 6:
A necessity for attention, sacrifice,
that primordial touch
and an understanding of love.


Now that the floodgates are known,
let them open, and release the river
so I can claw my way 
to solid ground. . .

- Jan. 4, 1986, A.D.

Application to the Forgiving for Consideration in Love


Dear Sir:

If I could know love, then I could love.
And perhaps I do. . .

I am a young woman, five-foot-six, with dyed black hair and green eyes.  When I was a child, the profile of my nose was like a ski slope.  I have a spot between my eyes from when I had chicken pox.  My lips are fat, but my cheeks are fatter.  I don't like how I look without make-up.  I always wanted to get compliments about my eyes, but I hardly ever do.

My body is confusing.  I have no waist, and my hips are too high.  My stomach is always a little fat.  My breasts hang down in a useless sort of way.  But worst of all are my thumbs:  One is longer than the other, and they're both too short.  And my fingernails are flat and boring.

Dear Sir, these are only the externals of what you will have to overlook in me.  I am cold, but emotional.  I am pretentious.  I am ungiving to the depths of my soul.  Deep within me is a calloused, dark thing that could cause me to deny your existence someday.

Shall I go on?  I'm self-centered and self-serving.  And self-righteous.  

Do you love me still?  I am demanding.  I am moody.  I am reserved.

If, kindly, you will give me a chance, however, I might be able to find what you want.  For I do have a smile.  And I do have a look.  And when I dress up to go out, I really can look great.

And I've got a strength.  I've got a power.  I am intelligent, but not obnoxious.  I enjoy happiness, but I have serious concerns.  I love doing things for people.  I love people.  And life.  And this, I might share with you.

Dear Sir, please, take this hand, and hold this wretched thumb.  Take my eyes and behold them as emeralds.  Take my heart, and feel the strength and the energy that pumps my blood.  My love beckons you.

Dear Sir, please overlook what I have learned to overlook in myself.  If you will bear the burden of my shortcomings -- if, in fact, you will see some beauty in me -- then I am yours, all yours, for eternity.

- Jan 4. 1986, A.D.

That Deep, Begging Bed


That deep
begging bed of grass
rather soft
rather irritating
it's where I lie
most of the time, these days

the snake got me early 
so I ate from the picnic basket
it's no wonder I had to
share it with you

with a severed lip
I made love to you
on solid ground
and now
we torturously cling
to the edge
of the cliff
and I want to mean well
but the skin of my fingers
is coming off
how can I smile
when I'm trying to hang on?

you don't understand
why I bite
because I hate the infant
but I love the child

so roll over
I need some room on
this flat earth
we'll find the missing sock
tomorrow
we'll toss the grease out 
another day

don't you worry
just keep looking the other way
and you're bound
to miss it, again

- Jan. 4, 1986, A.D.

Intermittents


I can remember, now
I feel it again. . .
That pitch black blanket of time
flowing in, flowing out of reality
limbs, entangled --
whose limbs?

Flowing in
a blackish gray movement
adjustment
then, a definable motion
tentacles, smoothly sweeping over
my grayness
my tepid --

Flowing in
I check again
is it skin?
There is something
blocking my aloneness

Flowing in
it's something 
completely outside of me --
foreign
but as gray
almost as familiar
adjustment
it moves again

Flowing in
my god, it's a hand!
Oh, yes, of course
it's a hand
warm, defined
I find a hand, myself
I move it across they grayness
in front of me

Flowing in
it's him, again
we stir
I entertain a thought
What is the time?
I keep my eyes closed

Flowing out
no matter
no worry
no more thoughts
warmth and stillness suffice
-- and the vision

Flowing out
quicksilver going down
a fountain
some words I'll never 
remember

Flowing out
into blackness
and streaks of colors
Heavy, heavy
Here,
I have no grayness
to call my own. . .

- Jan. 4, 1986, A.D.