Tuesday, June 28, 2016

I'm sort of happy most of the time


Blackberry mint julep up on my tall back porch watching the last drops of red sunset drain down off the mountains, and the bats and stars and fireflies come out. Week two of my chest-splintering cough. Today at work, I really slayed it. Then I broke into Chris's house by crawling up through a tiny bathroom window, came home, and made some excellent homemade Indian.

Indian. I think I'm learning that closure is the party you throw for yourself, not some beautiful moment that is delivered up with all the grace and justice you thought you deserved. Every day, I am learning that I am more capable. And I know what's next, and I'm almost ready.

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Shit, I might read a book this summer

The myth of rescue
The myth of young men
The myth of the hair in their eyes
The myth of how beauty would save them
The myth of me and who I must become
The myth of what I am not
And the horses who are no myth
How they do not need to turn pegasus
They are winged in their unmyth
They holy up the ground
I must holy up the ground
I sanctify the ground and say fuck it
I say fuck it in a way that does not invite death
I say fuck it and fall down no new holes
And I ride an unwinged horse
And I unbecome myself
And I strip my poison suit
And wear my crown of fuck its

-From Lunar Shatters by Melissa Broder's Last Sext

Who will love you? Who will fight? Who will fall far behind?


Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Some shit I love this season

-dahlias
-prosecco
-tacos (all kinds)
-idealistic lace confections in lieu of proper structural bras
-quantum cascade lasers
-substantive female friendships
-finches
-enchantresses
-bread
-army surplus bags
-see-through tops
-waterway camping
-hot weather
-berries
-no reading
-A+ tomatoes growing
-pup wriggles
-lightning
-mix cds
-margaritas
-vegetarian food
-staying up late
-getting up early

Monday, June 20, 2016

Sunday, June 19, 2016

I was unborn when I was younger


I guess when it finally happens for real, you don't think to make a big thoughtful blog post about it. It just is. It clicks, but not on the thousand little torturous centipede legs that come creeping on sometimes, especially late at night. It clicks like when you learn something new. You find yourself using that piece of information without even thinking of it. Suddenly, a new tool. I've been learning a lot of new things recently; some of them about myself, and some of them about like... how the electrons in memory-storage semiconductors work. 

Or maybe it never happens; you just make a little room in yourself. Scooch.

I'm alone in my parents kitchen, making a kale and feta frittata and drinking coffee. I need the coffee; I have a little bit of a headache from the bonfire last night. I'm looking forward to going home to the Valley this afternoon. My pretty friend texts me a video of herself tossing around the surplus of unders and bras that we champagne-drunk-impulse-bought together last week, which have evidently arrived. It reminds me of that silly scene in Gatsby. "It make me sad because I've never seen such--such beautiful shirts!" I hadn't bought superfluous unders with a girlfriend in years, but I used to when I was 19.

It's getting hot. I love this weather, though I don't really tell people that. I like being heated through. I love the fireflies and the blackberries and the way everything smells.





Sunday, June 12, 2016

I gave what I gave

Today, I got home from South Boston. I went for a run in the noon heat, I watered my plants, I showered. I cleaned house. I meditated on speed and efficiency while mopping my floors. I cooked chicken Florentine crepes, which I paired with a buttery lemon sauce and a hellbright viognier. I left myself 43 minutes to write. Freewrite day: anything I wanted. Ongoing literary projects, fancy blog prep, this secret bust-up blog, Yan stories, smut, whatever. One of the things I wrote was this. I won't tell you the other thing.

Tomorrow, I start a new job that could possibly change my life in a lot of substantial ways. "A big girl job" I would say, although I question the popular definition, the same as I think "adulting" is a silly phrase. I haven't been a child for a long time. (Furthermore, if working two jobs while maintaining a 4.0 in grad school hasn't already required me to learn something of that station, I doubt a job with a security clearance will.)

I've been wriggling around how to say this for a while. I have this sort of Puritan fear of saying my life is going too well, least I invite chaos and persecution. This blog is sometimes practice at saying things I like about myself. (Check out that cute, furtive humblebrag about "working really hard in grad school." ~le eyeroll~) I know I couldn't have done any of the things I've done without the help and support of the great people in my life.

Back in March-April, I decided there were things I was unhappy with in my life. So I changed it. It's possible to do that. I'm writing and publishing again for the first time since 2011. A couple weeks ago, I found out that I won a pretty exciting poetry prize. It won't change my life, but it certainly was a nice little splash to come back on the scene with. (Plus, you know, paying my bills for two months.) One of my poems is getting published, and another few are out at other magazines.

I finished a new piece last week about going back to Isaac's farm, to the Little Otter river and Falling Creek, after four years. These days, I'm feeling more comfortable writing about personal things and putting that out there. A lot has happened to me that I want to write about. I think it's been healthy to own those feelings instead of burying them in vagueness, or the noble death march of the high road.

Anyway, it feels good to stop whining and move forward.

Monday, June 6, 2016

I'm the hidden bug in the tall weeds, lightning fires no one can see

Accident Report in the Tall, Tall Weeds
by Ada Limon
My ex got hit by a bus.
He wrote me in a text to tell me this.
____Now will you talk to me? I got hit by a bus.
He even sent me a link to the blurry footage on the news.
I never wanted to see him come to harm, or watch it.
Oh maybe a little cockroach infestation.
____Little aliens all over the clean, misleading counters of his life.
My ex, a few exes before that, died
____of a heroin overdose.
After someone hurts you, it’s easy to imagine
him fading into the background of the bad film’s revenge plot.
It’s the joke, right? I hope you get hit by a bus.
____I swear I never thought it. No seed of transportation deviance.
No tampering with the great universal brake wires.
I wanted this rusty mailbox,
out here in the boondocks, this man, and this dog,
a little money now and again, some good news.
I’m the hidden bug in the tall weeds,
lighting fires no one can see.
*
When we moved out here together, I kept apologizing
for everything, like a poor orphan in the film about my shame.
He had to tell me to stop. And for days, (maybe weeks?)
I’d hear it in my mind and have to hold it there,
stuck like a cockroach under a glass,
waiting for someone braver to kill it.
Mostly, I enjoy my failings. Until I don’t.
In the text from my ex about the bus, he sounds almost funny.
____Like isn’t it ironic that I got hit by a bus, when all I ever wanted was to
disappear without a trace.
*
When the plane went down in San Francisco,
I thought of my friend M. He’s obsessed with plane crashes.
He memorizes the wrecked metal details,
____the clear cool skies cut by black scars of smoke.
Once, while driving, he told me about all the crashes:
The one in blue Kentucky, in yellow Iowa.
How people go on, and how people don’t.
It was almost a year before I learned
that his brother was a pilot.
I can’t help it,
I love the way men love.
*
I used to pretend a lot. I’m very good at it.
I bought a creamy corn-colored rotary phone
and I was so fabulous.
I’d sit and tell you about my phone, but the truth was
____it didn’t work very well. It made me not want to talk to anyone,
but rather be in a picture, holding the phone, pretending to talk.
That’s not unlike some of the people I have claimed to love.
I’d rather tell you about them, stranger, in hot words
____than tug the cold satellites closer for warmth.
*
I imagine the insides of myself sometimes—
____part female, part male, part terrible dragon.
What I saw in the men who came before,
____sometimes I don’t want to say this out loud,
was someone I could hold up to my ear
and hear the ocean, something I could say my name into,
and have it returned in the inky waves.
*
Why are we forced into such small spaces together?
____This life in a seedpod.
I remember once, my ex and I, driving in his van.
He pointed out his ex wife walking.
She looked like me—not her blue hat, or her smallness,
but how deliberately she was walking away from the speeding vehicle.
Now, there’s a twisty summer storm outside,
and I desire nothing but this storm to come.
The calm voice on the TV tells us to stay safe.
Says, Stay safe and seek shelter.