Monday, March 02, 2009

Regrets

Did I play it too safe? I've been asking myself this question for a bit now. It used to be that I thought I was too loose, too rebellious when I was young, and that it hampered me later. If I could just go back, really concentrate at school, ask out the girls I wanted without hesitation, whether it worked or not, not drink as much but write twice as much. I thought I wasn't serious enough. Then I watch Star Trek tonight.















The episode is "Tapestry" of ST:TNG. It begins with Picard being brought onto a medical table, Crusher desperate to save his life. He dies and is met in the afterlife by Q. He is given the chance to go back and relive his youth. So he plays it safe. Doesn't get stabbed by the Nausicans. Sleeps with his best friend. Saves his buddy from making a fool of himself. All is good.








And Q brings him to the present where he is no longer Captain of the USS Enterprise, but instead a Lt. Astrophysics officer who spends his days filing reports and charting stars. He never took a risk and now he's bereft of passion and imagination. All he wants now is to die on that table the man he wants to be than live out his years a man he could have been.


I wonder if all I do is chart stars, rather than braving them.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Things I find surfing the interweb

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Talawsohu



So I'm beginning a novel. Here are some of the tidbits that are driving me:
Asrai biography

A phase out of step with most people, Asrai grew up under strained environments. Her mother was a caricature of emotions, so asphyxiated by responsibilities that Asrai was left without her. Her father tried his best, but she grew distant from pained people. She liked to explore as a child and constantly read books beyond her understanding. At one point, her father abandoned all hope of sheltering her innocence and allowed her mind somewhat open grazing grounds. She had trouble understanding why people acted so irrationally or hypocritically, but their rhythms inspired her. She often played with frogs and toads and water bugs and other animals that existed in-between. She genuinely disliked television. It never told her why. Asrai was very pretty, but often muddy.
In school, she began to hum slight rhymes about her slips of mind, to the amusement of her friends (but not her teachers) and always with a small drop of honey breath. High school was easy and without rivalry since she never crossed with the competitive people. She kissed a boy, maybe two, and made out once after drinking a beer, but it bored her. She had no incentive, only a flirt. Boys never understood why she always smiled and laughed, but always the same to everyone. Her father’s health declined. Asrai didn’t want anymore room for pain.
From her first morning unpacking at her dorm room, she was well-liked and ogled. I should point out that Asrai was now in full glory, a punk skirt without the aggression. She was a bit tall, but only that people could not avoid her eyes. It can be argued that she was slight in everything. Slightly tall, slightly aloof, slightly amused, and slightly dangerous, although Asrai didn’t know this. Her hair was short and cropped and gypsy dark. Asrai’s jeans were always patched and her one clothing possession that wasn’t disposable was her red leather jacket she received from her father many years ago as a way to single her out in a crowd (as he was very protective). The only make-up she could stand to bear was glitter above her eyes. Asrai liked the distraction it caused in others. Distraction was her hobby, a friend once said. She smiled in such a way that only she suspected it was for an audience and not a guide to her own state.
Asrai dabbled and flitted around many classes, but it was history and art that brought her into herself. She began to perform at coffee houses and small open mics and even dorm hallways on loose Sunday evenings, since that was expected of artists. Once night, and her only night attempting it, Asrai picked up a guitar and sang out her poem, “Another heart’s claptrap.” The strings cut very deeply into her fingertips, causing scars that grew bold with age. She refused to accept that pain is a necessary part of experience. Good things could remain soft and still function.
She became infamous among writers, artists, and drive-by dabblers in the liberal studies. Only half of them were in love with her, the other half understood why they couldn’t be. Her fraternity party occurrences were brief and not repeated, but surprisingly friendly. Among her workshop class, however, there developed a small cadre of folk who attempted to discourage her probes into others through language and rhythm. They thought her dishonest and worse, naïve. They wondered how she could comment on raw emotion and relationships when she was so barren in both. Asrai responded very simply that “our personalities are like oil slicks on water; always beautiful and vocal, but could only survive in one medium.” The mystery she was curious about was why certain fruits were preferred over others. As usual, the teacher defended her, although in his defense he thought only once about sleeping with Asrai, and that was after a long whiskey night over his cross country wife and son.
Because she trusted no one fully, Asrai turned adown housing and roommate offers; instead, she found a crippled house on the shore of the bay to rent and explore. Her father was very scared, but let her go. She was not very scared.


They are all different, and all the same.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

100-word Story a Day Challenge (pt. 3)

Story 3

For a day the queen and vagrant posed as each other. The queen smelled pigeons as the vagrant bit into strawberries. For lunch the queen was kicked in the ear; the vagrant had the eunuchs. Orchids showered the park as her Majesty found relief under the petals. Ink splattered treaties while Turk ambassadors dogged the vagrant. They did this every season.

At supper, the queen bathed in the tavern toilet water. The vagrant fainted into the Baths of Gratzi with their thousand swans under the lunar eclipse. Behind the gates, they made love knowing it would next be under snowfall.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

100-word Story a Day Challenge cont.

Story 2

A single blue crab gripped the inside of the cage Eric hauled out the Chesapeake. His boat mimicked the dance he made around Nati-Boh cans, sloshed in starlight. Eric dropped the cage onto the deck and did not care it was broke open.

The 20ft vessel shook as its outboard started. Eric darted between buoys and slurred his daughter’s name into the spotlight. She would be in front, waiting for another boat ride, if he could say her name sober. He focused into the distance and opened his throat. Eric yelped as the crab’s pinchers tore into his sandaled toes.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

100-word Story a Day Challenge

The fine folks at the Fabulist have issued a challenge to their readers, the writing portion doing with posting a 100-word story a day (for how long I do not know). It sounds like way too much frolic and fun to pass up, so...

Story 1

Silas jerks the stirring wheel and pain rips his shoulder. He stops the truck; the slender figure from the trail darts into the underbrush. “Goddamn deer,” he exhales, climbing out of the Rover. He turns off the CB as park chatter spills out. Silas hears faint, rushed breathes, smells jasmine on the air, feels humidity between trees.

Silas carries his first aid kit to where the bush quivers. Instead of snout he sees small white palms. Instead of antlers he sees moth wings. He falls into the laughing woman. Crows avoid his corpse long after the woods fill with flashlights.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

A little something...

I've been trying to do some songwriting but I get distracted by poems that don't want to complete themselves, like Golden Gate Bridge suicides.

Kitchen
after Frida Kahlo

Refrigerators envy me
for my ability to preserve passion
and serve it chilled,
proper on its plate, a lime slice neighbor
best hinted at, rather than thrust
burning onto the tongue.

Stoves envy me
for my ability to cook at the precise degree
and never let pink the pain,
unless someone feasts too early,
nor blacken its meat
when they forget to turn me off.

I envy the sink for its relief
at being emptied and attended to
when looking its worst.

I'm also on a huge Laura Marling kick at the moment:


But then I get distracted again.

Farm kitten

A year or two after the divorce,
living with my dad in the officer’s neighborhood
of Aberdeen Proving Grounds,
he brought home a farm kitten.
A black coat and white fur underwear
And eyes that feared shadows
And paper bags.
She would sleep at my feet, my blankets thin
(my father next door, my brother a yard away),
and play catch with my toes
and her claws.
6 ft high in the bunk bed, I tossed her
like a Molotov cocktail
believing she would ignite the anger
I dared not on my mother.
She would shake and climb again
the slight wooden frame
that was my fort above the unlawful world.

And I would think of my mother
coming home from the vet clinic
where she volunteered,
taking soft steps towards the closet,
peeling open the fake bamboo shutters,
and pouring the oval package meats
of cat-square bits and hard dog crumbs
into the dishes.
After stroking their fur,
she would smirk at my brother and I, slide
the can-opener towards our small monkey thumbs,
and gesture at the cabinet.
She thought we were smarter than our pets
And, thus, deserving of less pity.

My farm kitten nestles between my covered
calves and waits for a twinge of toes.

Before she ran away into the artillery hills
0f rundown Russian tanks and leaking condiment gas,
I began to wear heavy blankets
even during the summer.

I had more to fear from winter
Than any fire.