What is divine?
I draft maps,
a list of landmarks:
birds,
flames,
the stars
to calculate distances,
the travel needed to meet a deity
I can live with
I consult a lover’s lips, the way
his tongue slips with ease
between my thighs-like silk
through the eye of a needle-
softly shaking
the skin’s layers awake,
until the quakes kick in,
breaking the great sepulcher
of the brain from its foundation
You consult altars, the way
beads weave between,
becoming fingers. Replicate,
reiterate, to venerate ancient deities
with hymns and prayers,
Our Father who art in Heaven
with knees raw,
forgive us our sins
with submission, pleading for redemption,
lead us not into temptation
a stone cradle rocks you, softly, asleep
but deliver us from evil
in the bare branches of surrender
Are we merely blood-letting?
Purging the stagnation from our veins,
driving bad humors away by
redefining renunciation so that
Light-headed,
nearly syncopal,
I lie, tethered to iron,
You bow, wedded to wood
To take precautionary measures
my lips
lock into my lover’s neck,
teeth gnawing leather
yours
ripple in chains of prayer
before the fits
And, revelations, through skin or stone,
prayers or moans,
happen.
It’s the way our eyes roll back
to search the brain
for something familiar
It’s when we, tremulous, release screams that climb
octaves in taut gasping breaths
belly pulled in
pushed out
hard and supple
fist and palm
denying and inviting
breath
It’s the final exhale that snaps
the diaphragm
free of its core
Before you flail and fall to the floor,
with a final Hallelujah,
flapping arms like an epileptic
Before my lover’s body, brackish and damp,
slips along my back
so, like salted slugs,
he and I stick, then melt
into an unmade shape
Over the Transom
Uninvited, the words waltzed in and helped themselves to wine and cheese. They caroused and cajoled, offended and pleased, and were such fun, we locked the doors and wouldn't let them leave.
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Apotheosis
Friday, March 12, 2010
The Driving Lesson
The rain had been following us for days,
continued to linger overhead
as we drove in silence to the cemetery entrance
where he stopped, threw his keys
into my lap, “You drive”,
he said, although I’d only done it once before.
I straddled the gear shift, the pant cuffs
baggy around my gangly legs, catching
an old soda can, the radio knob. He strolled around
to the passenger door, sat next to me,
head matted from the wet world outside.
The key felt warm and heavy
as I slid it into the ignition.
I looked over for a reassuring nod,
a confident smile. Nothing.
He just looked forward, with the coldness of a stranger,
unfazed, with a stillness (common these days),
the presence of a ghost.
I drove us up the windy roads toward mother’s grave
taking round-abouts two or three times over
to extend the journey.
Inside, to myself, I started to laugh
at ridiculous scenarios like what if I hit a tombstone,
releasing spirits, like the water of a fire hydrant, cut loose
from capture. The rain drops (the dead, spitting?) began to lessen
as I pretended that my dad and I were really going
somewhere, to a life beyond this one
where no one knew our names
where our histories faded with lack of recognition,
where sorrow escaped as the identity that locked it in,
kept us wedded to it, disintegrated.
I begin to weave the car
back and forth and back
on the maze of
empty roads framed by neatly mowed grass,
the verdant life cradling stone.
I started singing. He smiled slightly.
I think I saw his foot tap. And for a second,
a freedom caught us in a forgetting
of where we intended to be. My left arm tingled,
tickled by the rays of the sun’s escape, a fleeting
reprieve from the dampness
that had us cloistered for days, in front of the television.
And, we ascended
the gradual incline taking us closer to the sky.
My foot pressed on the gas pedal until
we began to slow
I started screaming, I kept pushing. The car felt heavier
and heavier, its corps hardening as I begin pumping the pedal,
to resuscitate, to bring breath back into this feeling,
as the hand of the fuel gauge
unapologetically dipped below the red line.
We stopped smiling. Stopped tapping.
I pressed my forehead into the steering wheel,
cold, the leather like clammy palms.
Slamming my fist into the wheel’s heart
the horn’s wail chased the sun’s rays
away, abandoning us
to the clouds merciless melancholy.
We opened our doors
only to slam them shut,
to walk, in silence
through the rain
to find my mother’s name.