I. All great literature is one of two stories; a man goes on a journey or a stranger comes to town. – Leo Tolstoy
The first time I left home
I was too young to make it out.
My desire to leave
the improbable mix
of culottes
stuffed animals
a book
chosen through tears and the reverberating rage of invisibility
amused rather than frightened my mother.
I had come to her, wanted, bidden, prayed for and well-tended
but remained unknown.
Dismissal of pain, shouldn’t that be the third story?
Or maybe the only story, the one underneath the other two –
the reason one must leave home
or cleave to the stranger.
Every time I left a home
I was the seeker
for what no one around me sought.
I journeyed and became the stranger.
Two story lines nuzzled and intertwined in perfect union
my legs and arms drew tight the pillow
against my belly.
Pretending it was a lover
I could fall asleep.
II. The universe isn’t made up of atoms. It’s made up of stories. -Jack Kornfield
My life is made up of stories
and that cannot bode well.
Stories need arcs, plots, characters, dramatic tension
and, if we will care at all,
some kind of growth:
our heroine encounters obstacles, finally overcomes.
And what of the unheroic protagonist?
The one too frightened to change
who creates characters out of lovers
rails against one-sided villians
with explanatory models that fit part of what happened
blames others for how she fails to overcome
meets the same obstacles over and over
adheres identities – hers and others’ – in an arc she wills to satisfy
blurs the truth
in a wide swath of near-delusional self-protection
omits the way she perpetuates her own sorrow
pushes away those who want to get close
inverts the harder facts she wishes weren’t true
and doesn’t allow in
a story we don’t really want to read
as it rings of injustices
vibrates a little too familiarly
rises like bile
sinks belly-ward
through the cracked windowpane of self-doubt.
What if the stories that make up a life are ones we cannot keep reading?
III. Every story is us. That’s who we are, from beginning to no-matter-how it ends. -Rumi
Love, storied, sounds like:
you made my heart quicken with anticipation, slow with longing
your eyes were deep brown-green pools I swam in
your need rose and fell.
Love was the story I wrote over and over
rhythm as comfortable as childhood verse
we made love in iambic pentameter
I waxed poetic that you filled my heart with love.
Yet, the heart cannot be filled.
It is a hollow chamber
made mostly of water
an interchange for byways
a vessel to be filled and emptied
contracting rhythmically to its own accord.
I told the trees behind the house
and the tomato plants tipping with late-summer load
and that crafty squirrel who hung upside down to snatch birdseed from the “Squirrel-buster”
that you filled my soul.
For surely souls are fillable
filling
flowing with passion and intensity
energy and essence
entwined spirits dancing
the spritely waltz
the bluesy sway
my arm on your bicep
hips, shoulders, thighs whispering their own conversation.
I wanted love embodied
tangible
permanent
but incorporeal souls and hollow heart chambers
would not comply.
IV. “A little truth seasons a lie like salt.” ― Jacqueline Carey
I liberally season the steak that sits on the counter
oil and salt encrusted
where it will mingle with air and time and anticipation
defying present-day dictums to prevent bacterial growth
limit sodium
reduce ecological waste to produce something
luxurious and unnecessary
a one and a half-inch thick marbled ribeye
the way it will fill my mouth with temporary reprieve
that this love has ended
the sacrifice of the sacred cow
and the unsacred wife
swirl like blood and grease on the plate
yes, every bite was worth it
wasn’t it?
V. Translation is at best an echo. – George Borrow
You, too, wrote a version of our story
in a language and dialect so familiar
I tended to forget it wasn’t my native tongue.
I translated your words into my own
until nothing remained of your story
but the echo of silence.
It remains, this absence
resounds the walls of my chest
pulses the veins in my eyes
an occipital pain I used to associate with us
but I must have misread this
because you have gone
and the pain echoes on.
VI. “This story is about love, which means that it is also about hate.” ― Philip José Farmer
We are cautioned to hold off
make no art
until the wound is healed
lest we paint a scene
sculpt a form
craft a ballad
with the raw ugly energy of hate.
Hate, we say, has no place here.
Despite time –
poetry
therapy
music
friends
meditation
journaling
letting go
gratitude
reiki
somatics
Nature
God-
what remains has yet to transform into compassion
to dissipate
to soften to pity
to arise as mere shudder or wince
to lay dormant as ill feeling from a decades-old gut punch.
Yet what story should I tell in the meantime?
Your words carved fissures in the story of innocence
your loathing erased the earliest drafts of desires
your need sprayed across pages
smudged a body freshly inked into womanhood.
When ours was first a love story
I loved you
I loved you before I paid the price for loving you.
I loved you while paying the price
I loved you complicitly
as do all who love
the smells and tastes and sensations of your body
the sounds of your deep resonant voice
the rhythm of your heartbeat
the promise of you loving me
me loving you
the becoming that was foreshadowed.
Waiting makes us complicit
with political terror
racist walls
closed borders
hate speech
criminal disregard.
I will wait no more.
VII. “…when you enter another language and speak with its speakers, you become a slightly different person; you learn a different sort of world. -Kate Grenville
Soon I will leave again.
To lands unfamiliar
languages lyrical and elusive
inviting me into a different world
and oh, the siren call of being slightly different.
And yet
no longer am I tempted by the promise of being different –
none becomes different enough to please –
I have made peace with old self-loathing
self-hate has no place here.
I will speak other languages
taste and feel other worlds
lay my head on unfamiliar pillows
open my writing notebook
I will be the newly-welcomed guest
changed by the what comes next
deepened
clarified
revealed
polished
bits of not-me falling away
extraneous marble dust
riffled by the master’s hand.
I dwell within my first home –
the unnamed essence
the soul that defies being captured
by a single image
poem
story.
Sweet Jesus, this is so good! And so it begins. ;~}
Thank you! Yes, it has begun (probably began a long time ago)…