
|
|
accounts for the need of gun control
One day a man decided to kill people. |
all the loose endsshe bought her son enough clothesto keep him tied over for a while, made sure everything was in its place;
she went over to her parent’s house
after she died did her parents come
his teacher could think was that |
apathyThe crowds were screamingOne side of the stadium in orange and blue The other side in red and white Thousands upon thousands standing, cheering, doing the wave, screaming for their favorite team
Pom pons were waving
Except for one
He didn’t care |
arrowheadyou’re used to seeing it, you knowpeople killing each other one the streets
all of my friends carry guns
the blade looked like an arrowhead i was tough for a girl, i guess
i’ve only killed one person
there’s one mad rush of panic
that’s why i’m in this house, you see they’ve taught me a lot here
at first
and then
suddenly i knew
i learned |
|
plush horse stories ice cream parlor, candy shop, bakery, 1986-1990 work stories
ask me if i’m a truckso i worked in the summer timepart time with about ten guys (since guys were stronger, they could scoop ice cream better, that was the idea). but they all screwed off when they were at work. they’d always write up signs and tape them to each other’s backs. Once i wrote on the back of candy box paper, "i’m a boy with raging hormones" and for about an hour every customer had a good laugh at matt’s expense. but my favorite was put on john’s back once. you see, john used to tell everyone the same joke; he’d say to you, "ask me if i’m a truck," and when you’d ask him if he was a truck, he’d look real perplexed and say, "no." like, why did you ask him that? so anyway, we got a sign on his back once that said "ask me if i’m a truck" and when all the customers did he got real confused. it was hysterical. |
at least i have thishow far will we push each other? i wonderas we sit in the living room, waging this emotional battle, knowing that in the end it will still be with you having your sex with me, leaving me when you’re through with me. that is what i’m here for. that is my function. but at least i have this, at least i can make you fight me a little more for it. i know you’ll win in the end, but at least for these few moments, these few fleeting moments, i have this control over you. and then the pain of being with you comes back, and you win. but let me have this. just this. i know i’ll get no more. please. |
brushes with greatness
|
|
plush horse stories ice cream parlor, candy shop, bakery, 1986-1990 work stories
cashewsonce, i was working behind thecandy counter and matt came up behind me while i was serving this customer, this young guy ordering a pound of cashews. he was a heavy-set guy, this customer, that is, matt was thin and quite the womanizer at the ripe old age of sixteen. well, matt walked up behind me, while i was with this customer, and he whispered in my ear, "fuck me till i bleed," then he walked away. i was sure the guy ordering the cashews heard him. I stood there, candy scoop in my hand, staring for a brief moment, then i said, "oh, the people i work with," trying to hid my blushing, and finished scooping cashews. |
changing the locksand the childrengot older, borrowed the car or got picked up by friends to go out
and when one was leaving
she was going to change
they never did that, though |
i’m really going this timei pack my bagssay i’m really going this time
you throw my bags
before you get more violent
i’m sitting in my car
see you at the window
why do i have to think
why do i came back,
what you’ve done to me,
you’re about to lose.
you’ll call me once
forgotten. other times,
i’ve come back. but i
to the ground, strangled.
lost that night, i’m
remember that you
i’m really going this time,
carry this with you,
the pain you’ve given me. |
chicago, west sideshe knew who they were coming for
she crouched in front of the window
on the window right about at her eye level.
the snow was no longer falling on the
she gunshot was ringing in her ear
hear it. for these few moments, she had to
all she knew was that this time, when |
Child Molesters and the Government: Big Brother is Watching
|
Children Flying Airplane and More Government Red Tape
|
cocktail hourI remember when I was littlewhen dad would come home from work, mom would always have two gin martinis ready for them. She’d put the glasses in the freezer, with ice cubes in them, an hour before he was due home. That was their time to sit together, talk about their day. Sometimes they’d joke, is it cocktail hour yet?, and they’d look at the time, 4:55, close enough. So little vermouth that some- times they’d pour a capful of vermouth in, swirl it around in the glass with the ice cubes, then pour the extra vermouth out. I never liked gin; the smell is too strong. But I always think of the end of the day when I smell a martini. And at restaurants, too, dad would always order for them. two dry martinis, on the rocks, with a twist. You know, some things just flow off your tongue when you’ve heard them said enough. two dry martinis, on the rocks, with a twist. |
cry for meshe never like to see her daughter cryit would make her cry too
“you go in there, talk to her”
i remember once
my sister tried to come in
then my mother knocked
she came in, sat on the bed
but it was nice |
decorating the palm treesmy motheralways started trends in our neighborhood
take christmas,
one christmas
and strung them along
dad even put me in the
next year,
the year after,
then she bought
next year,
the year after,
my mother |
domestic violence in america
i have had my cheek bone |
domestic violence in america
according to accounts, her husband |
dreams turned into nightmares
|
especially at breakfastmom was always cooking things, eating thestrangest things, especially at breakfast. some mornings, felling especially groggy, i’d walk down the stairs to find mom eating a plate of cold pigs’ feet. only my mother. |
everything was alive and dyingI
I had a dream the other night
and then a raccoon came right up to me
and she spoke to me,
and I said, you know they don’t II
Then I walked a little further III
And I walked deeper in to the forest
when the wind tunneled through and leaves
I walked
we’ve been on this planet for so long
and I said, but I don’t do much, IV and I woke up in a sweat V
so tell me, Bob Dole VI
Do you even know why
did you know that medical researchers VII
You know my motives aren’t selfless
I’d like to find a cure to these diseases
You know, I know you’re looking at me VIII
everything is linked here and you tell me I’m extreme
and these animals and forests keep calling out to me
and I’m beginning to think
we live through the guilt
maybe shoot ourselves in the head
in the wild
now that we’re civilized
maybe when we have all this power
and so we do |
filled with such panici heard a woman jumpedfrom the john hancock building, fifty-something floors. i work on the thirty- second floor of the civic opera building, it’s older than the john hancock, and we have regular windows there. you see, the john hancock has bullet-proof windows that don’t just open up, whereas we have windows that just slide up and down, like the ones you have in your own home. sometimes i open the window, stick my head out and look at the street. the wind is so strong when you’re up that high. sometimes we spit out the window. a few times we threw a paper airplane out the window, watched it soar down wacker drive. i never stick my head out past my shoulders, and i’m one of the more adventurous ones at my office. i can’t imagine looking out the window, then going out past the shoulders, opening that window all the way, and just going out. i’d be filled with such panic. i did the wrong thing, i’d think, then i’d struggle to find a ledge to cling to right before i’d start to fall. |
for c rathis is a mana thinking man
he wants to be condemned to hell
he feels the plight of too many
these are the words
remember this, my friends:
this is his pain
does he know
he lives life so fully
remember this, my friends: |
|
plush horse stories ice cream parlor, candy shop, bakery, 1986-1990 work stories
four syllablestuesday nights were regular working nightsfor me, and in the winter time the ice cream parlor never had any business. so i worked with vince, a regular guy, like me, well, regular, like me, not like me because he’s a guy, because i’m a woman, you know. wait, so anyway, i’d work with vince and john, and john was like a marine wanna-be, a real tough guy that obsessed over his body. not a real intellect. harmless, funny in his machismo, i guess. so once we were sitting around, i’m talking to john and john’s got his back to vince, talking to me, and i must have made some sort of cut-down to john, and i knew he wouldn’t understand what i said, but then he looked at me and he said, "elaborate." and vince and i just burst out laughing, and i said, "ooh, johnny learned a new word at school today," and vince was holding up four fingers and mouthing, "four! four syllables!" john never saw vince. vince and i were both so impressed, john had a fifty cent word. we were laughing so hard. |
chess game againwe all watched the case on the newstogether, the case where a man on a subway train opened fire on passengers in the car. nine people dead, i think.
they caught the man, they had their
day he would come into the courtroom
spree and now had to look him in the
the woman to the ground, put your knee
a man would respond, “it was you.” some
the jury to arrive at a verdict. they found
and never apologized. the judge told him
that are fed to us through our television
faced with the man that has brought them
sorry? most of them sat there trying to
|
getawayHis wife told him that he had to go onvacation, that he was trying to do too much work and it was taking a toll on him, that he was letting wall street put too much stress on him, that he was neglecting his family and that he probably just needed a break. Besides, he had time coming to him from work and he deserved it. So the two of them went off on a little vacation, to a little island where there is nothing to do, there are no televisions, there are no telephones, there is no civilization. "The perfect getaway from the hustle and bustle of every day life," the brochure said. And it was
They sat on the beach, just a few feet
He barely spoke to his wife the entire
He got to work early. He found stacks
His secretary walked in ten minutes later.
"That’s what I get for going
"Aren’t you glad to be back?"
"Yes, I am," |
Growing Up Female
|
guilt
|
hancock suicide, chicago, december 1994so me and the guyswere just taking a break from the construction
on the hancock building.
there, right? they put
fence, and they’ve been
on some tile work and
and three other guys,
sort of, and i’m at the
the grout work, so i just
of the guys says he heard
sound, but much heavier.
the other guys did and
next thing i knew there was
hit me, like wet concrete
and i opened my eyes and looked
and there was just this
to realize that a woman jumped.
stuck on the fence and the
the police had to take all of
glass at the fiftieth floor, i don’t
and the one thing i noticed was
her face together. funny, she
i won’t hear about this on the
and they say she was handi-
to break the window and throw wanted to die.
it really hasn’t sunk in quite yet,
ready to think about it yet. |
hard of hearingAfter Barbara finished the joke, everyone laughedeven her brothers Dave and Brian, who never seemed to give her credit for anything she said
But then she turned to her father, who sat there
His furrowed brow framed his eyes,
"Maybe he didn’t hear you, Barb," |
have a partyif there was ever a timewhen all the kids were going to be out for the evening, and dad was going somewhere, too, and mom would end up alone in the house for a while, she would say that she was going to have a party while everyone was gone, and she’d smile |
headachewhenever i get a headacheit’s right behind my eyebrows and it’s a dull, constant ache
so whenever i say i have a headache
he pushes his thumb
immediately. but eventually
hand now hurts. he lets go, |
helping men in public placesso it was new year’s eveand we were standing on forty-second street and
the avenue of the americas
view of times square. and
i was just in new york for
standing with i don’t know
climbing up the light poles,
police officers on horseback
bag fell apart in the rain, so
us he needed to go to the
in the street, no one will see
he asked if i had a bottle, so i
his job he closed up the bottle
the train after the ball dropped,
to go real bad, too, so i pulled
window with your coat and i
matter at hand. i’m amazed that
commute, our first of the new
i ended one year and began |
here it goes againmaybe this is what i deservethis pain but i can’t let you go
even if there is someone else
i need that connection to you even though i’m alone when i’m with you
i guess i feel
so here it goes |
|
plush horse stories ice cream parlor, candy shop, bakery, 1986-1990 work stories
his mom’s carthere was this kid who started working at the plushhorse, he was this fat little geek, thick glasses and everything, and most of the guys that worked there were older and not so awkward. well one of them, matt, decided to make it his personal goal to make fun of this kid whenever he could, god, i don’t even remember this kid’s name, something like mark or something, but i really can’t remember. i guess it doesn’t matter.
but this matt guy really didn’t like him, and no one did,
and he says that someone keyed his car, messed up
yeah, that’s what i wrote on your car. and i remember
so then two weeks later i went to the grocery store with |
how to please a womani saw a movie oncecan’t remember what movie it was, but i remember this one scene: it was after the protagonist couple made love, and it was the middle of the night, and the man got dressed and went outside, and no, it was not to leave (i know half of you were thinking that, admit it)
but he went outside, into the garden
now, i know it’s just a movie,
i don’t want to tell someone how to
sure, it could be flowers, i guess, but don’t think
we want you to tell us we look pretty
we want poetry written for us: the sun rises |
hurt/coldhimagain
complaining
like
She
splash
she
jacket
She
empty
November
ice
She
grass
hurt
She
She |
i am the woman who loves paini am the woman who loves pain
i look for you one of you
i know you’ll all do the same things
they tell me i should find someone
but i’ve never felt love
i swear it is |
I remember
|
i seem to know animalsi seem to know animals. so here i amin the middle of a cafe and there’s this dog here, it’s the cafe owner’s dog, i think, and he’s just walking around trying to get some food from the tables and he stops and looks at the nachos on my table. and he looks at me. and i say, "oh, i know." and he looked at me for a second, and then he walked away. |
i wanti want a big house with filtered central airand i want a big lawn so i can recreate nature and i want a big fence so i’ll know what’s mine
and i want the evergreens trimmed into neat little
and i want to spray chemicals on my lawn ***
and i want a plastic lobster bib and don’t forget the hundred dollar champagne
and i want a big fat car, and i want
and i want the two kids, one boy, one girl
i want to be famous
i want it |
i want lovei’m laying here in bedand i’m looking over at him
he’s sound asleep
you know, i can’t remember
he has no idea what i’m thinking
i decided to spend the rest
he’s my best friend
damnit |
|
plush horse stories ice cream parlor, candy shop, bakery, 1986-1990 work stories
ice cream stainso steve, a real flirt (it always annoyed me), oncenoticed that i had an ice cream stain on my shirt, from working, and it was right at the center of my chest, and he said, you know, i bet you have it there just so all of us will look at your chest. and i thought that this guy was just trying so hard to be funny, but wasn’t. |
i’m really going this timei pack my bagssay i’m really going this time
you throw my bags
before you get more violent
i’m sitting in my car
see you at the window
why do i have to think
why do i came back,
what you’ve done to me,
you’re about to lose.
you’ll call me once
forgotten. other times,
i’ve come back. but i
to the ground, strangled.
lost that night, i’m
remember that you
i’m really going this time,
carry this with you,
the pain you’ve given me. |
|
plush horse stories ice cream parlor, candy shop, bakery, 1986-1990 work stories
in a cardboard boxso we were talking about out sat and act scores,because were were all the same age and were taking our college entrance exams. so i asked steve what he got on the act test. it’s like a thirty-six point scale, and upper twenties is good enough for a four-year college. and steve said, i got a nine; i tied with the chimp. what a card. then we were talking about this party, and i told him that he should have a party, and he said he couldn’t. why not, i asked, and he said he was homeless, that he lives in a cardboard box. and i said, then why do your parents drive a lincoln town car? and he didn’t have an answer. and i wondered if he sat at home at nights and rehearsed these clever lines for the next day, or if they just came naturally. |
leavingShe walked over to the thermostat again.“It’s hot in here,” she said to him again, but the temperature still read a cool 68 degrees. He started complaining to her about something, like he did before, like he’d do again. She walked into the kitchen and started to splash some cold water on her face.
“Could you get a can of sardines while
She walked a mile and a half in the cold
She walked to the center of the field. |
gas stations and gun dealersthere are more gun dealersin america than gas stations
in california, more children
the rate of violent crimes
gun shot wounds
a young person
five hundred thirty-eight of
my niece was over
and she said to me,
guns scare me and i was more scared
there are more gun dealers |
letter, 4/14/95 oneI’m kind of dead in the water. My burger-flippin’ gig fell through, or I fell through it. The morning I was to start, I put on my idiot uniform & got into my car to make the gig, & I COULD NOT DO IT. Big time anxiety attack. Telling myself that if I don’t get some bread together I’m gonna end up in various kinds of hell did not work. is this what I’m reduced to? I can’t go through with it, I can’t, I just can’t. I deserve better than this. More. Some thing rewarding, something fulfilling,
something not so empty, useless, life
anger. Numbness alone isn’t enough to
emotions to I still have to go through,
|
picking my friendsI had a friend while I was inhigh school, her name was Kim, she was a bit... progressive, shall we say, a bit outspoken. She was the type that followed rock bands with hopes to get a photograph or sleep with them. She had bright red hair in a mohawk, wore dark make-up. I remember once she came over and dad looked at her and said, are you going to sue your hairdresser for what they did to you? Well, anyway, I spent a lot of time with her while I was in high school, and while I didn’t chop all of my hair off (I was too insecure to make a statement with no meaning at fifteen), our friendship had an effect on my well-being. She was often ill-tempered, and I found myself getting into arguments with her, feeling stressed because of her. And mom saw this, and long after the fact Sandy told me that mom considered telling me I couldn’t see my friend anymore. But she decided not to, thinking I had to make my own decisions about which friends I had, and besides, if she told me I couldn’t see Kim, I’d just want to see her more anyway. And yes, I learned, and I ended the friendship soon after the trouble began. Well, I know I’m not supposed to know about that, but I’ve always wanted to thank her for the trust, for letting me make my own decisions.
|
the Fourteenthgrade school, lace and construction paper cut outs -mimicking our hearts with school glue, a sixty-four pack of crayons, a doily, perhaps, and a child’s scribblings, “Be My Valentine.” The beginning of every cold February the classes of children are taught to make enough little hearts for everyone, so that no one may be disappointed, so that everyone can be your Valentine. Nonetheless, one little child’s construction paper mailbox come February fourteenth always had less than everyone else’s.
And then it gets easier as the years go on
Every fourteenth, second month
And the card shops get fuller this time every year
And the flowers seem the same, don’t they? Carnations
A girlfriend said to me once
And the women getting lonely
And the woman looking at the carnations on her
|
let’s goOne summer day in August, I wassixteen at the time, Sandy and I were in the house, it was an average Thursday, mom was out golfing, dad was at Bob’s form yard, doing something man-like, cutting wood or something. The cleaning lady was at the house, I was getting ready for a summer job interview that morning. The phone rings, I answer it, suddenly there’s this strange voice on the other line talking, asking, "Is your mother there?" and my first instinct was that it was Greg on the other line, a friend of dad’s, he always liked to put on a fake voice and try to fool the kids. So I put on my most cordial voice and said, "No she’s not, may I take a message?" and then the voice starts going on about how he’s cut his finger and he has to go to the hospital, and then it finally occurs to me that it’s my father, and he was in so much pain that he could barely speak. So he hangs up the phone and Sandy and I try to call the golf course, hoping to catch mom, but she already left, and while we waited for her to come home dad came home to get us and bring us to the hospital with him. His hand was wrapped in a shirt, half-soaked in blood. Sandy got in the wagon, but she told me to wait at home for mom. So dad whipped the car out of the drive- way and down the road, And I stood in the driveway, watching him drive away. I was so distraught, I started to cry, but I had to keep myself together, because I didn’t want to make it sound serious when I told her and make her more nervous. I didn’t want her to cry, he cut his finger, he’d need stitches, but he wasn’t going to die. So I waited at the front window, and when I saw her car drive down the road I went to the garage. When she pulled in I hopped in the passenger side before she turned off the engine. "Come on, let’s go," I said, with a smile on my face. I tried to preface the story with "Let me just say, that everything is fine," but you just know when bad news is coming up. But I tried to make it sound funny, like dad the klutz cut his hand. I hope I did a good job. For eleven blocks I was the one that had to make sure that everything was okay. I hope I did a good job. |
letter, 4/14/95Now it’s just sort of a daily refutation of going ahead and cutting my wrists. But I really don’t want to die. The intake dude at the clinic asked today, "Well, are you in immediate trouble? Are you into killing yourself TODAY?" "Well...I have IDEAS about how I might pull it off, and yeah, man, I do feel AWFULLY bad." But the doctor wasn’t buying it enough to see me before Monday. I guess I should learn to froth at the mouth & pull a razor blade right out at the beginning of the interview.
i keep seeing reports
government waste,
agree. I think, why can’t
you, and I wish there was
if this is the last piece of
when she hears that a person
take knowing someone to
to avoid pain. I feel your pain,
I could give. Not medication. |
letter, 4/14/95I haven’t worked in 8 months. I CAN’T. The despair & shame & guilt & sorrow & hopelessness & despair are immense. My family thinks I’m jerking off. They’re TIRED of me being a problem. & they don’t have the wherewithal to help me. What more can anyone else say? “Don’t die. Get some help.”
Every time I’ve felt the despair and pain
and I would be fine. I feel so lost now. I
only wishing I could take your pain and
I don’t want to see you go, damnit, I
My hands are tied, and the despair &
I don’t want to be a victim, too, by having
some help. Don’t die. Get some help. |
letter, 4/19/95The depression is so fucking bad I can’t work. I’m applying for disability, but that may take months. I’m losing this place, & where I’m going is anyone’s guess. I have a shrink appt on Tuesday, but how I’m going to pay for the medication is beyond me. It hardly seems worth it. I know I have things to accomplish; my soul knows it. But the doors of possibility are slamming closed one after another, & I’m not sure I can hang on much longer.
your soul knows it. hang on.
all eternity, searching for peace
not the way. you have so many
extra six-pack stuck in the back
take you to the next day. do that
but don’t stop searching. things |
letter, 4/19/95I’m kind of dead in the water. My burger-flippin’ gig fell through, or I fell through it. The morning I was to start, I put on my idiot uniform & got into my car to make the gig, & I COULD NOT DO IT. Big time anxiety attack. Telling myself that if I don’t get some bread together I’m gonna end up in various kinds of hell did not work.
is this what I’m reduced to? I can’t
something not so empty, useless, life
anger. Numbness alone isn’t enough to
emotions to I still have to go through, |
Letter on Religion
|
letters from war time
|
leaving for workyou’re walking down the street, it’s morning, and a man tries to mug you with a knife. it’s a nice street, you’re thinking, there’s no litter here. their garbage day is the same as your sister’s in the suburbs. how strange. you pause, don’t know how to react to this mugger-guy, and another guy walks up behind you, another regular joe, he’s not with the mugger-guy, trying to jump you, he’s just walking down the street, probably on his way to work, like you, so then the mugger-guy tries to mug him too. so the other guy pulls a gun, this regular joe, and then a lady from a house on the street calls 911. |
meant to beEvery day for two yearsshe thought of him
Every day for two years
Every day
One day he knocked on her door
“It’s nice to meet you, Marie |
medicine
|
more than storiesyour grandchildren come over nowmy nieces, nephews excited to see grandma
you give them a treat
they’re not pickles
the stories i’d hear
i love her now
but you see,
they get to see you
they know your face they love you now
but remember
they’ll always love you |
musicalshe never wanted to sing,dad was the one that was more musical, i guess, she always said she sounded just awful, and dad even agreed. he’d make a humorous threat, like, be careful, or i’ll make mom sing. but one thing mom was always musical at was yawning, i think she could hum a song while she yawned. usually, though, she would just start her yawn with a high pitch, then change key by key for five or six notes. the most unique yawn i’ve ever heard. sometimes we’d all just be quiet watching television and out would come one of mother’s original scores. it would always make one of us smile. |
My motherMy motherMy motherWe went to see my mother this weekend. You see,my mother has cancer, and we decided to go across the country for a weekend to surprise her and see how she was doing. it was breast cancer, so it really was the best case scenario, i suppose, so i managed to put it out of my mind until we actually had to fly there
The night before i couldn’t bring myself to pack. it was
i kept telling people at work, "well, you see, I have to go
In fact, when my sister told me the diagnosis, it
that I managed to postpone even thinking about it until
It shouldn’t be this way, and I knew that, I knew that I
But I wasn’t supposed to think that way, things would be
So I finished packing at four in the morning and the next
and everyone was so happy to see each other, it was
and the sisters and dad walked into the front room to
so I suddenly became serious and sat down next to her |
new vacuum cleanerElizabeth was only fiveshe thought she was doing the right thing
She accidentally sucked up the goldfish
She was going to surprise mom and dad
But she had to try to save the fish before
Now mom and dad have to get a new carpet, |
no consequencesthe average child,watching the average amount of television in their lifetime
witnesses eight thousand
by the time they are
and they laugh
or
suddenly there’s no no pain, no remorse
we’re the mtv generation
we’ve learned life by watching it
"have you killed people?" how funny, what wit
they witness what are we teaching them?
suddenly there’s no |
on an airplane with a frequent flyer"I was once on a flight to Hawaii and I was waiting in linefor the lavatory. There was always a line for a flight this long, you know, it seemed the washrooms were always on demand on a flight this long. So I finally got into the washroom, you know, and I looked into the toilet, and someone, well, lost the battle against a very healthy digestive system and left the "spoils" in the toilet, stuck. Maybe it didn’t want to go down into the sewage tank where all the other waste from this long trip went to. Can you imagine all the stuff this airplane had to carry across the ocean? Well, anyway, so I saw this stuck in the toilet, and I went to the washroom, and when I was done i flushed and it still wouldn’t budge, and so I opened the door and walked out into the aisle of the plane again. And there was this long line of people waiting to use this cramped little washroom, and I just wanted to tell them all, ’you know, I didn’t do that.’ And then it occurred to me that everyone, when they leave the bathroom on that plane, will think the exact same thing." |
over my skin with such easeThe satin sheets were stained with blood.Her face brushed up against the pillow. The satin cut into her face as she tried to relax, to stifle the tears. He walked out of the room. "I always loved spring," she said as she leaned over toward the flower bed. There was no smell. "I have to tell you something," he said. She didn’t listen to him. She touched the daffodil to bring it closer to her. The stem sliced her palm. The deep red blood thickened as it trickled down her wrist. She looked up. He was gone.
The tears burned into her skin.
The memories flooded my mind. |
packingthere are too many timeswhen i’ve said this before
never thought i’d really leave you
in this apartment
eleven thirty at night
it looks too clean in here,
so i decide to take a trip
into the bedroom, time to start
pairs of shorts, shirts, loneliness,
it’s amazing how much of your life |
paint a suicide pictureto the family of Jocelyn Burn
September 23
October 1
October 3
October 4
October 11
October 16
October 18
October 20
October 22
October 23
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people’s rights misunderstoodI had a dream the other nightI was walking down the street in the city and a man came up to me a skinny man, he lost his hair and he walked right up to me and told me no one cares anymore and he took my hand and asked me to care about him "I’m not supposed to be like this" he said "I’m not homeless, you know I have AIDS" and I wanted to tell him that someone did care, that he didn’t have to die alone, but you know how sometimes you can’t do things in your dream no matter how hard you try, well, my mouth was open, wide open, but no words were coming out
and you know, I’m afraid to go to sleep tonight
I’m afraid I’ll be walking down that street in the city
and I’m afraid that I won’t be able to
why do my dreams have to be
I’ve got to stop dreaming |
perfectonce when i was in floridavisiting mom and dad (i think it was a sunday) mom asked me, "what do you want for dinner tuesday?"
and i thought,
i wanted to tell her |
philosopher at the blue notehe seemed so interested inphilosophy, which seemed strange, sitting at a bar at about one-thirty in the morning, it didn’t seem the time or place for philosophy. but i asked questions anyway, so do you believe in a god, and if so do you believe in a mono- or polytheistic religion? and he answered by saying that everyone has a god, whether it be their soul or an icon they pray to every night before they go to bed. and that it doesn’t matter what form the god takes for a person, because the moral values are similar in most every religion, what matters is that we have a god of one sort or another. that most people don’t pay attention to their spirituality, who they are or what they really want. no, they don’t, i thought, and was amazed that this drunk man was able to formulate cohesive thoughts at two-thirty in the morning. but then, of course, he had to mention something about sexuality, and then i realized that it was all one long, drawn- out come on, then he asked me for my phone number and i gave him a fake one, and then he tried to kiss me, and i pushed him away and he ended up running out of the bar. so much for phil- osophy, i thought, and i went home once again, alone with my morals, or values, or whatever the hell you want to call them, wondering if there is anyone out there like me. |
phone calls from brian tolle
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picking my friendsI had a friend while I was inhigh school, her name was Kim, she was a bit... progressive, shall we say, a bit outspoken. She was the type that followed rock bands with hopes to get a photograph or sleep with them. She had bright red hair in a mohawk, wore dark make-up. I remember once she came over and dad looked at her and said, are you going to sue your hairdresser for what they did to you? Well, anyway, I spent a lot of time with her while I was in high school, and while I didn’t chop all of my hair off (I was too insecure to make a statement with no meaning at fifteen), our friendship had an effect on my well-being. She was often ill-tempered, and I found myself getting into arguments with her, feeling stressed because of her. And mom saw this, and long after the fact Sandy told me that mom considered telling me I couldn’t see my friend anymore. But she decided not to, thinking I had to make my own decisions about which friends I had, and besides, if she told me I couldn’t see Kim, I’d just want to see her more anyway. And yes, I learned, and I ended the friendship soon after the trouble began. Well, I know I’m not supposed to know about that, but I’ve always wanted to thank her for the trust, for letting me make my own decisions. |
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plush horse stories ice cream parlor, candy shop, bakery, 1986-1990 work stories
please drive throughjohn once askeda pair of construction workers for their drivers licenses when they ordered scoops of run raisin.
they actually gave them
he said, |
poker faceevery once in a whilemom would play cards with us but her poker face is just awful
she’d draw a card,
look at it down her bifocals
"ooh, ooh, ooh!!"
we all knew then |
precinct fourteenit was a long night for us, starting outat your apartment with your roommate’s coworkers coming over and making
margaritas until two in the morning,
and so off to the blue note we went,
first time i ever did that, closed a late-
and i know it angles, and you can see
but i’m sure the light was green, and not
trouble that night, no insurance, no city
over a year now, a cracked windshield,
and all they did was write you a ticket,
you drove me home, and the cops met
was a lot of fun, even with the involvement |
realistic dreamsI had a dream the other night; my dreamsare different from other people’s dreams:
other people’s dreams aren’t realistic, but
that way, they make you think they really
wanted to hurt me; they wanted to hurt me
same town as me and one day I was standing
there, talking to someone else, on the other
around and started running, ran down the block,
and kept running. I don’t know how far I ran,
is what I was running from. |
reason to standThe dying weeping willowlooked like a thin, frail old man
trying to stand in the wind |
resurrecting the deaddo i ask for too muchdo i expect too much
i know it will be the same
something will go wrong
do you expect me to pick up the pieces
am i supposed to watch it all
then make everything
you never give me
you think someone else is better
and soon
and i’ll come back,
resurrecting the dead |
sadnessShe looked down at the little kittensin the box. Her neighbor was trying to give them away. Why did she have to knock at the door now? Why did she have to come along now? Her husband might get upset if she talks to her neighbor too long. Something might give him away. Her neighbor keeps pushing the box under her nose, to try to make her look at them. "If you look at them just once," her neighbor was saying, "you won’t be able to resist them." She finally opened her red eyes and looked down at the box. There were four grey kittens and one white one. She looked to the white kitten. It wasn’t just white, but it was stark white, as if it had never been touched by the outer world. Suddenly she imagined that the kitten grew, and jumped out of the box, into the air, landing on her face and tearing at her flesh. She imagined the bright white fur turning a dirty deep red as the silence was broken by her screams.
She closed her eyes, then opened them. |
Seeing Things Differently
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some people want to believeso we were sitting there atdenny’s in some suburb of detroit, i don’t know which suburb it was, but we were there at like ten in the morning eastern standard time, i was grabbing a bite to eat before i crossed the ambassador bridge and travelled into canada. you know, i really only associate places like denny’s with travelling now, i always stop at some place like denny’s only when taking a road trip and just stopping for some food. i think if i went into a denny’s and i wasn’t travelling, i’d get really confused. well, anyway, like i said, we were at denny’s, and it was morning, so the both of us got breakfast. being a vegetarian, i ordered eggs with hash browns and toast, right? and the waitress says to me, like they always do in some no-name town in the middle of america, "yuh don’t want any MEAT?", like it’s so unheard of to not eat meat at breakfast. so i say, no, no meat, thank you, and then my friend orders pretty much the same thing, and we sit for a while, and talk and stuff, and then the food comes. so then she asks me, "you’re a vegetarian, right?" and i say, yes, and then she goes, "but you’re eating chicken." and i’m just like, well, no, i’m not, an egg is an animal by-product, not animal flesh, and i was about to say that that was the difference between being a vegetarian and being a vegan, and she says, "but if a chicken sat on it long enough, it would become a chicken." and i’m just like, well, no, it’s an unfertilized egg, there was never a rooster around that hen, so it could never become a chicken. and she’s like, well, it’s a chicken, though, and she just couldn’t think that this wasn’t a chicken. and i’m just thinking, my god, does she really think that a chicken can lay eggs without them being fertilized? like only worms and stuff can procreate without two sexes present. so our voices start getting a little louder, and then it ends up where i’m saying "so are you having an abortion every time you have a menstrual cycle? are men who have wet dreams mass murderers?" and she’s looking away and saying "i’m not listening to you -"
and then i realized that some |
soothe me just this oncewhen i called you from the pay phoneat the hotel after he hit me
i got your answering machine
a woman came up to me while i was
that’s when i realized i was scraped
please just tell me you’re at home
you think i brought this on myself,
pick up the phone, listen to me |
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plush horse stories ice cream parlor, candy shop, bakery, 1986-1990 work stories
sparkleso pete came into the shop one night, he workedthere, but he had the night off, and he comes in saying he’s really drunk and can he sleep on the couch in the manager’s office in the back for a little bit and sleep it off before he goes back to his parent’s house? and marty, the manager, says sure, and so pete goes to the back and before you know it he’s out like a light. but john was working that night, and pete and john were good friends, so john wanted to get him, so he got a bottle of sparkle glass cleaner, the only glass cleaner that’s purple, and he started spraying it on pete’s crotch. pete didn’t wake up, and after a few minutes of john pressing his luck pete’s blue jeans were soaked with sparkle. we were buckling over, laughing so hard. pete finally woke up, mad but too drunk to do anything about it. he had an extra pair of pants in the car. |
squidonce i was sitting in the living room,i just got home from school, and i said i need to go wash my hands. so i walked upstairs, went over to the kitchen sink. mom, sitting in the living room, didn’t mention that the sink was half-full of raw squid for her dinner. I shriek. mom laughs. "are their beady little eyes looking up at you?" she asked. the little devil. i’m upstairs, in the kitchen, shrieking, and she’s laughing. it is kind of funny, looking back. |
still no answersthe parents refused to believethat their son would kill himself. it’s not like our son; he was not
a quitter. the police believed the
just before he went into his own
of his violent actions; maybe he
in jail. no, no, his parents said,
opened when they discovered only
or dying, before he got to the
to survive. this was murder,
on his shirt, did he suffer, did |
sunriseThe last time I actually remembered seeingthe sun rise was at my junior prom I was in a car, getting a ride home All I could think was that the sun was in my eyes, my dress was uncomfortable, and that I wanted to go to sleep
But this was different
Dennis called my name
I think it was the most beautiful
"I didn’t know this apartment came with a view" |
taking out the braini’m a med studentand for the past few weeks we’ve been working on a cadaver
at first
i had a hard time
it’s not so hard now |
tanya’s story
|
tell me
|
that dressboth years i went to promyou made me my dress the first, pink and mauve
i looked like a parade float,
the next year,
you made a dress
i could take the jacket off
you know,
but i’ll always keep
i’m leaning my head
i loved that dress |
that’s not what i’m here forevery once in a whilei want to talk to one of them see if they’ll actually listen
but i’ve learned by now
what i have to say
they think they’re using me
but what they don’t realize
maybe that’s why
but i still use them, they use me |
the carpet factory, the shoesi heard a story todayabout a little boy one of many who was enslaved by his country in child labor
in this case
he managed to escape
put the people from the factory
and eugene complains to me
now i have to think
will somebody have to die |
The Christian Coalition and the Religious Right
|
the missing onionEvery Fourth of July mom anddad would have a party for all of their friends. Sandy and I at night would get a ladder and climb to our rooftop so we could see the fireworks from neighboring towns. Well one year, at the party, mom was getting all the food together, she always made so much food for everyone, and she was finishing the salad, but she realized that she was missing the onions. "I know I cut an onion for the salad," she said. "Help me look for it." So Sandy and mom and I were walking around the kitchen looking for an onion, cut up. Frantically searching. Not on the counter, not in the refrigerator. "It’s coming to me!" mom yelled out during the search, and we all stopped for a clue toward finding the prized minced onion. "It’s... it’s in tin foil." Okay, so now we’re looking for a smelly ball of wrinkled metal, this is a good lead. And we’re all just laughing so hard because we’re looking frantically for an onion mom misplaced this morning. Well, mom finally gave up and left the search party because she had to bring the salad outside, with or without the beloved tear-jerker, and so she starts to toss the salad, but something is heavy on the bottom. "Oh, silly me," she says, and pulls the aluminum foil- laden vegetable out from the bottom of the bowl.
To this day, whenever we |
the state of the nationmy phone rang earlier todayand I picked it up and said "hello" and a man on the other end said, Is this Janet Kuypers? and I said, "Yes, it is, may I ask who is calling?" and he said, Yeah, hi, this is George Washington, and I’m sitting here with Jefferson and we wanted to tell you a few things. And I said "Why me?" And he said Excuse me, I believe I said I was the one that wanted to do the talking. God, that’s the problem with Americans nowadays. They’re so damn rude. And I said, "You know, you really didn’t have to use language like that," and he said, Oh, I’m sorry, it’s just I’ve been dead so long, I lose all control of my manners. Well, anyway, we just wanted to tell you some stuff. Now, you know that we really didn’t have much of an idea of what we were doing when we were starting up this country here, we didn’t have much experience in creating bodies of power, so I could understand how our Constitution could be misconstrued
and then he put in a dramatic pause |
the twin within
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they never ask mei get up to find my clothessometimes they stay asleep sometimes they wake up
"why are you getting dressed"
they never ask me to stay |
this is my burdenI managed to find a seat on the eltrain, for once, I was going to work early enough
so that it wasn’t very crowded. And
some people reading a paper, a woman
out the window at the aging, rattling
nearby buildings. Ordinary day in
just to avoid eye contact with other
we have to somehow keep our
I hear a bit of a scuffle behind me,
nothing to ponder over. Then
a glimpse of two men struggling.
I crawl down to the floor in front
no idea who has the gun or which
if this seat in front of me could
the gun occasionally going off.
am afraid of being in the line
in an effort to stop the gunman.
or just someone on a shooting
and now comes the question: do we
gunman try to escape out the doors?
and now none of us even knows
don’t open. I hear a few gun-
A barrage of policemen cover the
Many more screams. They don’t
gunman, shoot him before he could
hours were spent on the train and
to offer them; I barely saw what
argument but a man trying to stop
the man that survived the struggle
told me that the gunman walked
and aimed for my head. That was
was out to kill me. But I’ve never
need to know my reply, just wanted
This man’s intentions were to kill
And now I think of this every day,
have this burden to carry with me,
this event, and in a way I couldn’t
And this is my burden. All this pain. |
this is what it meansmy son was shotnow he lives in his wheelchair I hear him creek as he rolls down the hall
he’s a brave boy
he can’t feel from the waist down
once I came home
and a laundry basket
drag his snacks to his room
I held back my tears
people don’t understand
reach inside of him
this is what it means |
to be differentEveryone was mulling around, making smalltalk, laughing, having fun, doing all the things that people are supposed to do at a well-executed party. It was his birthday, and there was a ring of people around him. He was glowing with delight. She looked at him from across the room and realized that he might have loved her, but he knew nothing about her. She looked down at her dress. It was a strapless red satin dress, with sequins bordering the top and bottom. She suddenly wanted to be wearing her flannel and long underwear, sitting by herself with a book, or a newspaper, or her thoughts. She just wanted things to be different. |
too farWhen he met mehe told me I looked like Kim Basinger long blonde locks but as time wore on I knew I wasn’t her and I could never be her and I was never good enough thin enough pretty enough I got a perm straightened my teeth bought a wonder bra but it wasn’t doing the trick I bought slimfast used the stair stepper ate rice cakes and wheat germ but I wasn’t thin enough I only dropped twenty pounds so I went to the spa got my skin peeled soaked myself in mud wrapped myself in cellophane bought the amino acid facial creams but I knew they didn’t really work so I went to the doctor got my nose slimmed my tummy stapled my thighs sucked
thought about |
top of the mountainso we were in the car together, Lorrie driving, Sandy in the back seat, the humidity from the Southwest Florida night seeping in through the cracks in the car windows. And it was quiet for a moment, and the lull in the conversation prompted Lorrie to ask, “so if you had an Indian name, what would it be?” and I was completely lost by the introduction of this question, I mean, where did it come from and what kind of Indian name was she talking about? Sequoia? And then Sandy says, “you mean like ‘Fucking Dogs?’, and Lorrie laughs and says yes, a name like Running Bear or Soaring Eagle. So sandy didn't think Fucking Dogs should be her name, so she came up with “Teacher of Children,” and I thought for a moment, tried to encapsulate my life one catchy little phrase, and finally I came up with “One who Rests at Top of Mountain.” Lorrie then explained to us that the names were actually given to Indian boys as a rite to manhood by a mentor of theirs, often a grandfather-figure, and the name was a reminder to them of what they should become. So I changed mine to “Patient One,” but you know, looking back at that night, driving through the musty sticky night, I still think that it is better to say that I shall rest at the top of the mountain. |
tryingtrying to revitalizethis old, tired marriage
once I wore a black teddy
walked up to him while
sat on his lap
and he looked at me |
tuesday nightstuesday nights were the nights dad wentout with the boys in the builders tee club and it was just the girls at home. i remember a story of when mom and dad were younger and dad would come home late on tuesdays, drunk, and one time mom decided to scotch tape the front door lock, and dad tried and tried to use his key but just couldn’t get in the front door. well for me tuesday nights were spaghetti nights, because dad hated spaghetti but we loved it. there was no meat in it, i could hear him saying. but when i was younger, i remember thinking that my favorite day of the week was not saturday or sunday, free from school, but tuesday, when he had spaghetti or elbow noodles in a milk and butter sauce and it was the girl’s night together. |
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plush horse stories ice cream parlor, candy shop, bakery, 1986-1990 work stories
under his jeanspete was trying to figure outhow to trick matt; they were always trying to trick each other
and so pete had the perfect plan.
of the night, to yank his
matt that they were going to do it
vince, vine knew to act like
and matt and pete started to
turned around all at once
where they tackled him and
wear is half ripped off, and
well, i’m wearing a miniskirt, |
was immuneI went to the outdoor courtyard todaythe first time in i don’t know how many years
i used to sit there, in the mornings
and he would come up and sit there with me
it’s the first time i’ve been there
i knew him
potential for being a monster
stolen hundreds of thousands of dollars
been in a gang
but I thought I was immune
I thought I could change him
I thought I could be safe
a thief
I knew him, but I thought I was immune
I see all the places
and they make me cry |
watching people playmom and dad’s home in florida is right acrossthe street from a pool and a pair of tennis courts. in the mornings, if mom was already out of the house when i woke up, i’d get dressed, maybe a swimsuit, maybe shorts and a t- shirt, and walk outside, down the driveway, across the street, through the fence and past the pool to the rows of brown bleachers that faced the courts. dad might be playing, or maybe there’s a tournament with our neighbors and friends. and i’d sit next to mom, both of us with our feet up on the fence around the tennis courts, just sitting in the sun. that’s how we spent our mornings, watching people play. |
what we need in lifeI don’t know where this roadI don’t know the right lines to say I don’t feel the things that you’re feeling I know this ain’t the way
nothing ventured
but you go your way what we need in life what we need in life
I watch the ashes from your cigarette I think this fire will die down I think I now see what is happening here I have to say good bye
nothing ventured
so you go your way what we need in life what we need in life
I can’t stay bitter and lonely I can’t be here with you I see the red in your eyes I’ll take this road alone
nothing ventured
you go your way what we need in life
what we need in life |
when you’re gonei know you’ll be backto take more from me
i always wonder
sometimes i wonder
but i always do
when you’re gone someone else
i know it |
where to goIt was almost sunset, and therewas no one on the beach. She went there just to see the sunset, just to try to calm herself down. She had to get away, she thought. She couldn’t take it anymore. His affair. Her job. The kid’s problems. Her weight. The vacuuming and dusting. So she went to the beach.
The waves gently lapped along
The breeze started to feel stronger
She stood up. She couldn’t |
wouldn’t have towhenever i hurt myselfplaying when i was little, roller skating or bicycling in the driveway, mom would usually do one of two things: she’d either try to make me laugh by asking, "did you crack the cement?", or say she’d cry for me, or get mad for me, and then she’d pout, so I wouldn’t have to |
you’ll like themmom was always cooking things, eating thestrangest things, and trying to convince us to try them. just because she likes hot peppers or pickled beets or pigs’ feet or oysters doesn’t mean we do. so once mom cooked some garbanzo beans, wanted me to try them. "you’ll like them, they’re low in fat." no, thank you, mom, i’m not hungry. "but they taste just like peanuts." no, thanks, mom, i’m really not hungry. "they taste just like peanuts." sandy and i start a conversation. "just like peanuts," we hear her say again from the kitchen. i start to laugh. she’s still in there, trying to convince me to eat these things, and she just keeps repeating that they taste just like peanuts, in that cute little high-pitched squeak of hers. "just like peanuts."
"do they taste just like peanuts?" i asked. |
Pornography, an Essay
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