Monday, September 7, 2009

After Viewing Rafael Lopes’ Bobeirasa

“I say, 'let it show'
And continue to write and play my guitar
Out, my hurt does flow
Onto the paper and from the guitar
This is how I let my hurt go
And soon by what people read
They will know
This is how I let it go”
-This is How I Let Go, Amy Parkinson

Shadows rest
in blackened corners
of a darkened room,
masking the vision
of a name unrecognized
a voice unheard
Willing inspiration
to dwell in outstretched fingers
Crawling up and down and stairway of steel
Leaving rhythmic footprints
on the hollow, wooden skeleton, lying below
Anticipating the moment of glory
to be found.

Unsung Man

To the rhythm of the whispered song
he strums out every melody
and sings the story
of every life
but one.
Disregarding his own
reticent song,
to pump his blood into
broken, empty hearts
Neglecting the soul
that lies inside
hiding behind
a misread heart
which pulses out a
muted melody-
humming softly
barely beating
as if it could fade away into
Silence
Having sung the story
of every life
but one.
Who will sing
for the unsung man?

Self Portrait As Richmond


Marked with a star on every map
Chosen to lead in its precision.
History of thousands who flocked into the seven hills
in anticipation of freedom and life.
With motherly arms, she raised her children,
who starved from the barren fruit of oppression.
Strong as the mountains-
true and lasting.
As pliable as rivers-
accepting and adapting.
A piece of me forever,
this city holds.
Luminescence glowing from the heart-
bright and bold and flashing with life.
Supporting bones-
rustic and feral,
tranquil and genuine.
A sturdy heart.
The dazzling face of youth.
The restless spirit of revolution.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Now and Then

I came to the place
where the sun shines down gently
like lazy, luxurious, sleepy mornings
and the waves crash passionately
like the restless nights that have passed
Where were came
so long ago
lost in our own selves
Alone in togetherness.
I came to the place
where the water gently quivers
distorting the image
of a delicate, gentle face
reflected in the glittery, silvery mirror
lying beneath the water
I came to the place
where the last of
summer’s sweet symphony
still sounds clearly
echoing a wordless melody
that only we can know.
I came to the place
where the wind blows
cool and crisp
running its gentle, seductive fingers
through my hair
and against my lips
breathing a name
into my soul.

Television

This tiny puppet theatre rests
on the table in my living room.
Black, still, lifeless.
Who would imagine
that, with the click of a button,
the sleeping city
will come to life?
The puppeteers,
behind the magic,
are never seen,
nor heard from,
as if they don’t exist.
No painted faces
No ghostly, glass eyes
No strings attached
to abandoned bodies
So that the little puppets,
living inside the little box,
seem almost alive.
Perhaps, these
living marionettes
have a secret world,
all their own
and keep to themselves,
living in
the little black box.
Now click the button
one more time, and
their whole world
disappears.

excerpt from an unfinished novel

My love,
Yesterday, it was so beautiful out. I remembered how much you used to love the fall, the leaves changing. You told me how, as soon as the first leaf changed color, we would take a walk together and listen to our feet shuffling in the crumbling leaves, blanketing the street. It might be chilly, you said, so you would hold me tight as we walked, until I was warm. That could take a while, you said, because it’s supposed to a very cold. I thought about that all today, wishing it could be.
I decided to take a walk that afternoon, as soon as I came home. It was the time of day when the sun is still shinning brightly, but its light is slowly fading away into a thin layer of golden dust, that sprinkles the tops of the trees and lines the clouds. You know what I mean, don’t you? It was stunning. The wind blew lightly, a cool breath. Every time the wind sighed like that, the trees began to rain, and dropped their multicolored raindrops on the ground.
Mr. Dailey was outside raking when I came out the door. He saw me, and I watched as he gave my lawn a disapproving look. Maybe, if I wait long enough, he’ll come and rake those leaves for me, since it’s such a burden for him to see them. I see no point, though, in trying to fix something that isn’t broken. You can rake your yard anytime of the year, but it’s not too often that you can step outside on a bright, beautiful day and walk through a rainbow scattered over your lawn. Besides, you can rake and rake and rake, but those will just drift back to the exact place they started from, and you will have to do it all again. I wanted to tell Mr. Carson this, but I don’t think he would understand. I’ll probably rake the yard tomorrow.
I walked down to the lake. It was still and quiet, as it usually is, you remember. The only movement was an occasional ripple from a fish jumping or an acorn plopping into the water or the wind slightly rocking the surface, creating gentle waves, that lapped up the shore. I sat on the dock for a while, throwing rocks, watching their ripples spread throughout the entire lake. It was just me there, which is sometimes a sad thing; I like watching the children playing and the older couples, strolling around the perimeter of the lake, hearing their voices. It gives me something to concentrate on. Today, however, it was nice. No disruptions or noises or anything. I sat there, under an oak three, a few feet away from the water and watched.
I dreamed of you, but it seems so far away now, I can’t remember anything, except that I woke to the sound of a dog barking. I shifted my weight in my sleep and felt something crunch underneath my weight. My eyes snapped open. I had completely forgotten where I was. In a moment, the sound of water sloshing messily against the shore, the coolness of the grass against my skin, and the crunching of leaves and sticks underneath me made sense. It’s so easy to fall asleep there, completely absorbed in my own thoughts.
I wiggled my toes a few times, then slowly stretched out my legs, letting the life seep into my bones, and travel up my spine and into my arms which spread far out to the side, slowly uncurling my fingers, until sleep finally released itself from my lips through a yawn. I pressed my fingers against my neck; it was sore from being propped up against that tree for so long. I hadn't even realized that I was tired.
Time can do that, you know. It can leave you in its past, without you even knowing. Then, when you finally catch up to it, you realize just what it has done and that you have no recollection of all things thing you’ve let pass you by. What a sneaky thing it is, time. Then, there are other days when the loneliness weighs down heavily on your shoulders, and you wish that time would hurry up and skip ahead, so you could finally be out of that feeling, but time has its own mind, and of course it doesn’t listen. Such a sneaky thing. I’m sure you know just what I mean, especially now.
I realized the darkness had set in, now that I was awake, the sun completely hidden by the moon. There was nothing to focus on, nothing to distract me, and suddenly the darkness seemed thick and dense and endless, and I was scared of being alone there, by the lake.
I have been coming to the lake for so long; I could probably run through those woods with my eyes closed. I sprinted, just staring at the darkness as I ran into it, as if I could break through it, if I ran fast enough. The low, thin branches clawed at my face, but I pushed them away, and kept running. I could hear myself breathing loudly and inconsistently, and I tried to steady my breathing with the sounds of my footsteps, but I was running so quickly, so mindlessly, that my feet slapped the ground heavily at random, sporadic intervals, no pattern or consistency. I could feel my throat starting to burn, as if it was trying to stretch open, to let the oxygen enter my body. The muscles in my legs began to ache as well, and feeling it, I pushed harder, trying to outrun it, endure it for a little time as possible, knowing that I could do nothing but let it pass.
Oh, no. I have done it again. I’m writing too much, aren’t I? I’m sorry, love, but who is there to talk to now that you are away? You must be bored out of your mind reading all of these silly letters, endless tails of a girl’s boring, lonely days. Maybe you find some comfort in them, perhaps? Same old me, I guess, rambling on for days about small matters. I know you are laughing at me for this, aren’t you? But you can’t really blame me, can you? Nothing seems so insignificant anymore, now that I realize how much I have to lose; I want to write down everything that happens, so you’ll miss nothing when you come back.
Please hurry,
Me

Little One

To a beautiful, precious, unborn child, from the bottom of my heart,
We will not meet for many more years, but I feel as though you are already part of my soul. I think about you often and pray for you everyday, in hopes that you may have a wonderful, blessed life.
When I see children playing outside, or hear a baby crying during Sunday mass, I wonder what you will look like, what you will like to do, what your voice will sound like, what your name will be, and I think about how incredibly excited I am to meet you, little one. I do not know you yet, but I know that you are mine and that you are waiting to come to me.
I hope that you always know that you are loved… by me, by your family, and most of all, by your creator. I hope you will grow to know God’s love and to feel Him in everything you do. I hope your faith will always give you everything you need.
I hope that you will be happy. I hope that waking up every morning will excite and thrill you, thinking of the wonderful things to come in your life- and there will be many.
I hope that you will learn. I hope that you will have an unquenchable thirst for knowledge and will use your intelligent, wonderful mind as much as you possibly can.
And I hope that, like every child should be, you will be silly! I hope that you will run through the sprinklers on hot summer days. I hope that you will catch snowflakes on your tongue during the winter. I hope that you will laugh until you cry more often that not. I hope that you play in the mud and cover yourself in the icky, brown gunk that is every child’s dream after a long springtime rain. I hope that you will jump in puddles, climb trees, learn to swim and ride a bike. I hope that you have bubble-gum blowing contests. I hope that you will get to eat a hot, gooey chocolate chip cookie, right from the oven. I hope that you will feel a puppy dog’s kiss and hear a kitten’s purr. I hope that you tell silly stories and dress up in funny clothes, put on puppet shows in the living room and play make believe. I hope that your imagination runs wild, baby child. Don’t ever stop dreaming. I hope that you will feel the scratchy whiskers on your grandpa’s face as he tickles you with them when he kisses you. I hope you will know the soft, warm feel of your grandma’s magic hugs. They can cure anything. I hope that you will meet and know and love the many people who have shaped me into the person I have become.
I hope that you will be passionate. Find that thing you love to do, whether you are good at it or not, and never stop doing it. Be passionate about life. Try as many things as you can. Never have regrets.
Please, little one, know how much you are wanted in this world. You are God’s precious gift, His child. Never doubt your purpose or your significance. Know that I love you and will always love you and love you now, while you are still in Heaven, waiting. Know that when I am angry or disappointed, that you are still a wonderful human being and that I only want what’s best for you. Know that I am human too and make mistakes, but that I will try to always do what is best for you. Be true to yourself and always do what is good and what makes you happy. The best thing you can ever be is yourself, just the way you are.
My love, my life, sweet baby mine, welcome to the world.
Mommy

The Boy

Gripping the pencil tightly between his fingers, he presses it against the paper. The lead cracks and crumbles, leaving an ashy trail. His hand glides over the page so gently, and I envy his effortless. Messy gray marks stain the pure white paper. Line after line, movement after movement, each scratch begins to connect. They blend and melt together into brilliance. The world goes on around him, but he does not notice. He does not care.

Determined to stop feeling like a failure, to never see another face disappointed by him, the boy looks up at the chalkboard in front of his English classroom. Lazily, he scribbles down a few notes and begins to work, trying. It never takes more than a few seconds before I notice his eyes wandering about the room. He can not help it. He thinks of other things and other people, and slowly the work on the page becomes his art, once more. It seems as if the page calls his name, and he has no choice but to answer. It is the same everyday, and I watch him.

I watch him let his life blow around in the wind with no direction and no purpose, allowing it to settle wherever it pleases, no care in the world as to where his life is heading. What a shame it is, I think, how he wastes himself away like that on his paper, on a textbook, on a gum wrapper, on the back of his hand. He creates with whatever he has, and his creations scream from the page. They are so loud and force me to stop and look at them. I almost want to talk back to them, to answer them, to reach out and touch them. There are haunted, beautiful faces staring back at me. Sometimes they smile, and sometimes they do not. Sometimes, there is no face at all, only a body and a head ducked down low, hidden. Sometimes, I see creatures and objects and words. I can never help but notice a certain similarity in every picture. I never manage to put my finger on it exactly, as the bodies and movements and faces change from image to image.

There is something about his pictures, as if the same life burns behind every one of them. It is someone I do not know, but I feel as though I am looking through a window into their life. I can see it, especially when there are faces. Yes, I can not help but notice a resemblance in the faces. No matter what or whom I see on that page, it is that same life every time. I see emotion and thought. I see talent and skill. I see wasted brilliance. I watch him live through his pictures, letting reality slowly drift away until there is nothing left but the faces.

When the pictures are about to bounce off of the page with life, the boy sits back and watches them. I wonder what they say to him when he listens like that. Do they tell him a story? Do they make him smile? Are they friends? Do they taunt him? Is that why he is compelled to tell their story day after day? Once their silent conversation is finished, the boy lifts the page and turns it over. He begins to draw a new picture. This picture, however, is different. It is not like the others at all, at least at first. Then again, it may be very much the same.

“Dear James,” he begins. “Sorry for all the sketches on the other side. You know how much I hate English class, and drawing is the only thing to keep my mind awake. I am writing to you now, because you are all I can think about. Even if you never write back to me, I just need to talk to you, even like this.”

The letter starts the same everyday, “Dear James,” and everyday he writes. I catch glimpses and pieces here and there, from my seat behind him. I am too afraid to let him realize that I can see and that I know. I wonder who else knows. I wonder if James has ever read any of the hundreds of letters that this boy writes to him everyday. I wonder if James knows at all.
His secrets are forever rooted into his pictures, and I think that this is what he tells them when they have their silent conversations. They may be the only ones who really know. Until the pictures share his truths, I will just continue to watch every day. I will watch in silence, at the brilliant boy who wastes his life away. I will watch the brilliant boy who has so much to say but keeps it hidden. I will watch the brilliant boy whose only real companions are his drawings. They are the only ones who know.

"Three days had passed, since they found the body..."

Three days had passed since they found the body. I stared at it from across the room. It smelled like death, if there can even be such a scent. The smell was bitter, disgusting, like chemicals and rotten meat, but what can you expect when you have a job like mine? This is strictly professional, I thought to myself, pulling on my latex gloves. I hadn’t told anyone yet, so why shouldn’t it be my job? I was the best, and this case absolutely called for the best.
I took a look towards the stainless steel table, isolated in the middle of the room. I watched my reflection twist and stretch, distorting itself in the curves and corners of the table as I slowly stepped closer to it, and reached my hand out to white sheet, covering the body. My hand shook, terrified of what I would see.


They would notice something was wrong, soon, when the data was due. This shouldn’t have been so hard. It was just like any other day at work; another pathetic soul, another life lost, another cold, dead body waiting for an answer.

But this was different. I already knew what happened that night. I knew exactly where he had been. He had called me only hours before to let me know. I told him not to. I did. I remember, but he did he listen to me? Did he ever listen to me? No, and look where it got him. But I did know. I knew his secret. He had made me swear not to tell. He told me that it would be fine, that he knew exactly what he was doing, and, like always, stupidly, I listened to him, hoping that, this time, he was right.

“You’ll know the rest later, okay? Just don’t say anything yet. Please. Just don’t say anything. This has to be done. You’ll understand later.”

So now I had a few options. I hate having options. I’ve never been good with making decisions, and this decision, particularly, was throwing big red flashing lights my way, screaming at me to get away! But it was too late. I had to do something. I couldn’t just walk away.

Option one: I could lie, pretend I didn’t know him, examine him, announce the cause of death unknown, keep his secret, and let some other unfortunate “expert” try to solve, what I knew was, an unsolvable case. Option two: I could tell them how I knew him, tell them his secret, solve the case, stop the villain, be a hero, and deny his dying wish. Thinking over my two, equally unpleasant options, I forced myself to throw back the sheet, and stare at my brother’s face.

Hell Week

The pressure is on. Only two more weeks before the big night. Tensions are high, adrenaline is flowing, and actors are running on their last nerves. “Take it from the beginning of that scene!” the student director yells again. It’s 7:30 pm and the actors have not been home since they left for school this morning. A loud, thump, is heard throughout the auditorium, as a metal wrench is thrown on the stage. “This is ridiculous,” a skinny blond boy, mutters to himself as he walks offstage. “Places... and… go!”

“Sandy?” The scene starts with the pink ladies and the burger palace boys, enjoying a relaxing time outside of school… or maybe not so relaxing, as tensions between characters rise.” Empathy, you could say, but as rivalries heightened within the play, rivalries between fellow actors rise as well.

A month before, anyone would have killed to have a part in Grease. How could you not? The show tunes are unforgettable. The attitude is immense, and the plot line is classic. Now though, the actors question why they are here. No sleep for the last five days and none to come. This is what is known as hell week. Drama is all fun and games, some might say. It’s being silly, playing, singing and dancing. Why, you pretend to be anyone you want! How hard can it be?
Muscles are aching, voices turned to whispers from the stress of the notes. Dancing and singing, two very challenging skills to learn. Now try them at the same time, while plastering a smile to your face, and, at the same time, stay in character, and avoid thirty other moving bodies whirling around. Wait, don’t step a second out of beat, or the whole company will crash with you. “Until it hurts!” The actors hear this everyday.

“You take back all those nasty things you said about me!” Sandy yells at Danny. One sly comment from Rizzo is enough to break even sweet Sandy, and she lunges on Rizzo’s back, arms and legs waving wildly, yelling and screaming all the while. Rizzo swings her arm back, and…

Pause. Nothing is said for a moment, as Sandy steps back, clutching her face. “Oh, my god!” She yells. No one says anything for a minute. “Wait, is this supposed to happen?” someone whispers. “Oh, my god!!!” she yells again, a little louder. Rizzo runs over to her, the only one sure enough to make a move. “I’m sorry. Oh, my god. I’m sorry, are you ok?” Rizzo says, guilt welling up in her. Sandy, slowly lowers her fingers from her face, and screams when she looks in her hand. “Ew, there’s blood. Oh, my god. There’s so much!” For a second, it’s almost funny hearing her shock, until you look at her face and see the red dripping down her chin and the fear in her eyes.

Sandy is rushed into the bathroom crying, Rizzo finally cracks under the stress and guilt, and the rest of the characters, look around nervously. “What does this mean?” “Is she ok?” “Can she perform?” These questions are asked all around, but no one answers. “Everyone!” the director’s voice booms from the foot of the stage. “Everyone get of the stage. The paramedics are coming, it’s ok. I need everyone to sit still, and be quiet. I mean it.”

It’s funny how one little incident, on top of the stress and tension that is already steaming in everyone can set you off. The actors tell each other how the whole play will have to be canceled, how Sandy will not be able to act for the rest of the play, how she was rushed to the emergency room. Fears and tears fill the room. It’s too much. It may be a little silly if you are on the outside looking in, but from the inside… this is hell week.

The actors sit in the audience; some get the sleep they have so desperately needed. Some eat their first meal all day. Some just vent from all the pressure, whether it’s yelling or crying or a mixture of both. They sit there, waiting, unsure of what will happen, and too afraid to ask. Will the play continue? Will Sandy make her grand entrance a week from now? Will they ever get their cheers and claps, they have worked to hard to achieve. All of a sudden, “taking it from the top” doesn’t seem so bad, anymore.