Wednesday 9 April 2014

NaPoWriMo Day 7

Prompt: Circus Act

I can see it so perfectly now,
the chocolate stained benches, stools.
We turned them into a stage.
We turned on the patio lanterns,
cracked plastic setting the tone.

I was always the director
arranging the others into acts,
considering how two songs had to be
interspersed with a joke or dance or
gymnastic display.

I really did want the others to shine,
but the main event in our circus was
the final medley.

My parents shouldn't be surprised that I
keep finding myself on stages
this isn't a new trend or fad.

I feel at home under the cracked
plastic lanterns from Grandma's porch.
I feel at home with a broom for a microphone.

This is just a different kind of circus act,
balancing on tip-toes
instead of
swallowing swords,
expanding my repetoire
of tricks and shows,
showy,
show off under the big top.

Monday 7 April 2014

NaPoWriMo Day 6

Prompt: Rain

It was holy when the wing
dipped and surged
and all I could see was ocean.
Again,
it was holy when I
stepped toward the sky train and
first smelled that salt lick air.

It was raining
prayers and prayers:
each droplet a quest for mercy
each droplet forgiveness.

It was holy on the walk to the drive
that cherry blossom bloom
exploding.
Again, it is holy how many
people are here
feeding the streets and parks.

It is holy here if you need it to be.
It is holy here because of
spring and
growing and
metaphors.

Sometimes different is the only characteristic of holy.

Because the open sky at home is holy too,
if you need it to be.

Are new and holy synonyms?
More importantly,
why am I out here looking for God?

Saturday 5 April 2014

NaPoWriMo Day 5



Prompt: flying
 
The messy haired girl
sprawled out stretching out the morning
there are so many kinds of people in this place

where the wings send us over peaks
and tidy plots

flimsy, bitty seat belts holding us
safe in the air

I like to watch as we take off.
I like to watch the wheels squish into the pavement
as stomachs do that underwater
summersault thing

I like the 1/3 can of ginger ale
and the garlic sticks and
to watch who’s looking out the window-
who’s overcome by the wonder of it all

I don’t like when the clouds take over,
when the ground disappears from fog/smog/night
I like to see where we could crash.

I think if I flew planes
I would insist on stepping on land after every flight
call me superstitious
but I don’t trust our science.

Feet kissing ground thankfully
those rubber tubes aren’t enough to ensure we’ve hit the ground.

Inside:
Busy bodies with no place to be
pacing
or sipping
or listening intently to a series of commands,
or melodies filled with questions
impatient

Those security pat-downs aren’t as intimate as they could be-
The woman didn’t even smile at me.

Everything is shiny and everyone who works here says they
don’t eat airport food

I make my own breakfast suggestion
swallow the yokes down with a beer
because at 10am in an airport you can
and maybe should drink
before you whisk off again.

This doesn’t feel like flying should.
There should be something mystical in it all.
There should be a sacredness during this take-off

instead
we put in our headphones
pull out our books
anxiously await
in-flight service
wonder what airplane bathrooms look like
and how two people could ever fuck in them with good
conscious
(nothing subtle there-
maybe I’m just on planes too small).

I don’t fly much.
I’m grateful.
I can’t turn this commercial endeavor into a religious experience.
I don’t even know how to get to baggage claim.

Friday 4 April 2014

NaPoWriMo Day 4



Prompt: Write a poem for a person who crossed your mind today (stranger or otherwise).

I remember packing with a ferocity,
hoping that the boxes would mask the dull ache
of you:
absentee.

I don’t think of you very often anymore
but the days sometimes bend in your direction
and I wonder how fall felt on the lake
and if you’re still parking your car on the
fourth floor of the car-park
two slots from the stairs.

Did the adventures you chose without me
quench the frenzy under your fingernails?

Do you still cook hotdogs for breakfast?
Do you still go home every Sunday for
homemade wonders and blessings?

I can’t hear your voice inside my head anymore.
I don’t remember what you sound like,
the way your skin chaps.
I can’t remember our last kiss.

I’m not sad when I think like this.
Mostly curious,
there is no stinging anymore
maybe just a slight bump-
a lesion that suggests that at one time
I felt pain.

The scar-tissue
miniature,
but still there.

This is not a love poem
or a love/lost poem.

This is a reflection.
A curious,
how are you doing?
that shows up maybe
twice a year.

I’m not going to call and ask any of this myself
and tomorrow
this fleeting thinking time will have passed
a new stranger/
lover/
visitor
will occupy my thoughts.

Absentee-
I know I’m that to you too.

Thursday 3 April 2014

NaPoWriMo Day 3



Day 3 Prompt: Choose a book and flip to the 52st page. Find a word (or words) you like and use that to inspire your poem. I used the book "The Supervillain Field Manual" by King Oblivion PH.D. (As Told To Matt D. Wilson)
 
“Most times,
supervillainy is a solitary profession.”

this might be the quaintest of advice,
the simplest of perspectives
but my wrongdoing tells no lies,
the truth is in the action
and I’ve been liking the truth/action
less and less
and less
lately.

The first step is admitting one’s own
supervillainy
The second, not being so evil that you won’t hear advice
third,
live solitarily.

I was hoping for a giant castle with black
heart fire places
and black marble floors
and black statues that everyone else thinks
are frightening but I find kitschy and endearing
the kind of castle that Dracula lived in
or Frankenstein was conceived inside
or where the Adam’s Family lived
but like,
with daisy curtains to throw people off or something.

Instead, I’m sitting here in this cramped apartment
(with carpets and a cat)
plotting my increasingly extravagant rise to power.

No.
There are no friends in supervillainy.
Just delicious stepping stools along the way.
I have a solitary black heart,
filled with solitary black joy sitting here in my
solitary overly white apartment
(why do they never paint the walls?!).

I think it’s time to move.
This place isn’t ominous enough for my wrath,
this place came with a wall decal that says:
“Live Well, Laugh Often, Love Much”

Wednesday 2 April 2014

NaPoWriMo Day 2

Prompt: Things I know to be true



I know that I spend far too much time
eyes tilted upward
that cars are the only reason I hate winter
that I’m happiest when I’m reading books.

I know that God is something I’m not able to understand right now
that I couldn’t survive a hurricane
that a good tube of lipstick can lift you out of a depression.

I know that you should never put a bra in the dryer
but that no one ever washes them by hand.

I know that my hands aren’t weathered enough
that my feet aren’t calloused enough
that I’ve stopped trying to fix either of those problems.

I’ve stopped trying to fix a lot of things.
I’ve stopped a lot lately.

I know that I haven’t been taking enough time to write poems
I haven’t stopped long enough to find them in the tree branches
and long walks home
in the curry bubbling
and showers-
there are a lot of poems that I should have stopped and wrote in the shower.

I know that I should stop dwelling on all the things I’ve
missed or
broken or
wrecked
since I stopped.

I know that I am probably not going to wash the dishes in a timely manner
that I’ll forgive myself anyway
that dishes mean so little at the end of the day.