Monday, November 28, 2016

Morphling

I rise with the tide. Turning quick
on the globe, wrestling with cyclical

logic. Lately estimates turn vaporous
before even being shelved. I rummage

through doubt, combing akimbo strands.
No amount of looking in the mirror

turns you into a hero. Else it would be year
of the ghost, whenever it likes. Which driver

drove out the darkness? No development
glimpsed beneath bandages. Those without

homes evicted from the riverbank, orange
faded abode must've gotten tangled

with burgeoning sleek expansion, bridging
one cluster of technic centers to the next.

Nearby, elementary school teaches refugees,
gets tagged by violent graffiti. Little ones

walk to school in procession as security
reinforces hallways, peeling their eyes.

I choke on gimlet acts of courage.
Summoning inner rider to trample

the dusty root that snagged my foot,
claiming revenge that only festers.

Noting pearly wind streaking
in gusts through segregated streets,

thinking again of unrelenting change,
being chased through maze, the shriek

of exhaustion, bracers holding back
gush of torpid fluid. Even in leisure

my brain wheels in circuits, leaking
a little concern. Scalding water gives

asking price for my ransom. I reach
for the nozzle, like touching the face

of a lover at night, never escaping
water. Water floods the farms, will

not be conciliatory. I wake water. I water
mailbox. I carry water to shiny bank

of water. Though all water, some of us
wetter. When walls swelled to splintering,

and vices pried open every latent scar,
at what point did you see me waving?

Sunday, November 27, 2016

In The Way

Tease of the word 'sometime' is unshakable
apprehension that it could be now, if only

the persistent hum-drum sticks its foot
in gum, melts the gook in relentless furnace,

furnishes first-degree burns with compliments,
startlingly sincere. Sandbags crush every

attempt at rising, heavy with images. Seasonal
arpeggio flatlines, fingers find the neck

of fever-dream phantom. Wicked lines erupt
around a weathered smile, fizzling out

when no one's looking, returns mismatched,
glad to be looked on, caught, cautiously

optimistic. This morning's coffee was free.
Surely someone will be paying for it

in feeling. Think of spells which forge
silken armor, songs which compel cocoons

to hasten their delivery, or rituals
bristling with tried-and-burnt blisters.

Doesn't hurt to work here but it helps
to be satisfied, to look forward to what's

in store, to be bread. Bored of overload,
stinking of assorted apathies. Watching

spaghetti-eaters through the window,
signing for a package, again delayed.

Friday, November 25, 2016

Nice

Polite problems were once rung up
as clearance for grander scheme, as layer

of cream skimmed off scalding surface,
the rest emptied into sink. I think the problem,

one professional says, is that you are always
looking at what isn't there what hasn't

hatched, embedded, you venture to make room
for. Holding carbon copy of proposed constellations

with back welded to floor, someone's floppy
disk rejected by discerning soft palette. Drifts

of powdered quiet tickle the nose. Rejecting
another sun-cycle of disseminating information,

listening for stamp of guarantee. Fasten straps
over snapped branches to allow mountain-melt

whisk you downstream. Where waiting rewards
no owl but stuffs morning's mouth with grisly

treats. Where waiting rewards no photographer
but scissors the time-lapse into cross-generational

paper-dolls. Waiting never worked for courtiers
brimming the court with bells and whistles,

courtyard peppered with trimmed topiaries:
a king-sized bed, a barge, a prickly throne,

each manicured reminder of the mystery
cut short. Maneuvering with clouded step,

we discretely fold the treaty at its corners,
douse our constituencies with black coffee,

suspend across the drop a mossy bridge.
If the uprising ever succeeds, thank nothing

except the architect of superior fates, setting
the table with tremulous hands.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Thunderstance

Happens like that, when waves
propagate crushing headlines.

Pacific reams of vital sheets
stack over each other. Unreal

sequence brought to the rim
by inner bubbling of distance.

Wavering close of unbearable
scene, curtain's called well after

strike. Look, if you tilt your head
sideways and anticipate the sunlight's

blocking, see barely etched there:
mama sea turtle's eggs, buried.

Slightest shifts in the sand summon
saliva rain from circling vultures

lurking beneath awnings of cliffs,
advancing through sea-spray haze.  

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Holiday

Another year hangs the ornaments too early.
Itching to celebrate, we thought poison oak

would make a nice stocking stuffer, so wrong
we were. The tree looks reasonably happy.

Though we punched holes in the calendar, thinking
butterflies would fly from the void and melt

into our mouths like friendly kisses, our tongues
make no sound but the jilted click of undercut

prosperity. We waded through a narrow river
to cut down decades of growth, reaching

past sleet mesh to splinter some handles.
We should have never left the house. Stirring

steamy beverage, soaking in bath-salt tinsel,
sending supply package after supply package

to violent epicenter of trouble. I turn red
from scratchy fabric, a renegade elf refusing

new identification. Sleeping on sandpaper
to whittle my shoulder-blades into box-cutters.

The snow melts into rain over masquerade,
a smoky, festive scent. The bridge of my nose

shatters under weight of such deep drags.
Giving thanks to banks for their surplus trimmed,

pupils dilate to ease passage through the mountain.
At the top of the tree: a golden tarp tucks itself.

Tough call, which way to believe. When to pop zits
or when to desiccate an out-of-place poplar.

This flavor of fame tastes like a locked room.
Mount antlers too quickly, hear strings

tremble through walls as a wail escapes
from the stag my language grazed.

One drop of maroon floods the fir.
It's dark, darker each ride through slush,

thinking of the prism that redirected us
when we hardly held each other's names.

Filling my crown with sanguine metal,
scrambling circuits of joy-machine,

feel asbestos wheezing. Stick with me
if silence is your fire-place. Poke the ashes,

expect some deity to emerge, fall
asleep waiting for ambulance to arrive.

Monday, November 21, 2016

Frayed

Frustrated with language,
with the busted-strap luggage
of pre-collision lunge.

Flooded with aimless noise,
lulling myself to death,
not fast enough.

Fuck, this anxiety
bites chunks out of me,
nothing else doing.

Forgetting which toys
used to bring me rage,
light, a range of existences.

Funny that angst
angles itself into a poem,
though my mind is melting.

Sunday, November 20, 2016

Too

Too proud of parcels.
Too locked into place.
Too thankful for morsels.
Too suspicious of race.
Too willing to wallow.
Too fractured by grace.
Too obvious like the willow.
Too stricken from space.

Some say too serious,
others ask for the clown.
Some days too forward,
too scared to back down.

Too much my mother,
often too much my dad,
but never too myself,
and if that's a bother, too bad.

Friday, November 18, 2016

Brad's Obituary

Looking up dabbing,
the dance,
since mother asked,

finding instead brad
has died,
boston terrier

that went downhill
fast.
In a couple

minutes
will
finish

whitewater
rafting
through rougher

channels
than this. 
Lays siege to the

cliffside,
lashes out against
arcane crypts,

forms rifts
between kneeling
birds, tweets

adequately.
Elsewhere mother
tosses the news

upward reaching
her daughter,   
the dog has died.

Thursday, November 17, 2016

The Once and Future Dayspring

VI.

Glittering

prison of snow
wraps 'round the globe.

Pacing
creature, eroding
a trough fit
for midday milkweed,

hurry up already.

Scurrying

over the gym, gentle-
handling the bars, 
losing a shoe 
in gum.

Proddingwhat belongs?


Feeling

poor,
more foolish
than usual, 

watching flakes 
melt.

Plucking

eyelashes, making
decisions.


Dayspring

bored
even as a vision.


Some Devils

I trick myself into loving defeat,
spewing sermons at the altar.
Some devils you can't wait to meet.

Folding into purpled pleats,
I can't bring myself to fault her.
I trick myself into loving defeat.

Terror rises beneath sheets.
Normal freezes into shatters.
Some devils you can't wait to meet.

Demanding ear of the elite,
our outrage topples and totters.
I trick myself into loving defeat.

Spirit of falling sweeps the streets,
rises though again we'll falter.
Some devils you can't wait to meet.

Earth undertakes a daring feat,
smoothing broken skin with water.
I trick myself into loving defeat.
Some devils you can't wait to meet.

Monday, November 14, 2016

oh god—

Oh god America.
Oh god. Oh lord. Oh my word.

You know not what you've done.
You must be full of regret.
Grasping handfuls of straws,
there's so much I don't get.

Where should we resume?
Let's start with the elephant in the room,
all sixty million of them.
The dejected, the fearful, the privileged poor,
the battered ventricles of the heartland.
This has all been very uncomfortable.
So get comfortable.

Them who liberals like me lump together and tease.
Them told over and over about their life of ease.
Them dealt in by deindustrialization.
Refusing to accept there's no room for them in this nation.

I get it, actually, I get it,
I was only being dramatic,
check explanations at the door.
There are some thoughts I want to share,
though some you may have heard before...

I get it's unlikely for a party to reign longer than eight years.
I get why it's hard for some to look in the mirror.
I get that conservatives had the Supreme Court to consider.
I get that young progressives felt disconnected and bitter.
I understand tons of disenfranchised voters felt finally addressed.
I understand there are worlds outside of myself.

But face it, sixty million trusted a con-man with the keys.
The one who said, that'd be a pretty picture,
you dropping to your knees.

But hey, back then he was on TV.

Was on TV when he said they're not bringing their best.
I'm sure you remember the rest.
Was on TV when he said he'd bring back worse than water-boarding.
Now is the time for anger you've been hoarding.
Was on TV when he said the military would bend to his will.
Claimed terrorist's wives and kids are fair game to kill.
Was on TV when he asked black people what do you have to lose?
Maybe I'll go back to drinking booze.
Was on TV when he accepted our highest office.
The man who preached, we can do anything, and they let us.
Was on TV when he said Planned Parenthood does wonderful things.
Was on TV when he gloated for being right after the Orlando shooting.
Was on TV when he alluded to the size of his dick.
Which Trump? Which Trump? Take your pick.

For so long we treated it like a joke,
sort of like laughing when your friend says my mom died—
because you thought they were kidding.
Life skids and burns.
Swearing with conviction
won't make it true. Believing— not enough.
Smug and sure, we dismissed concern
and said "you think you've got it rough?"
I the worst among them.
I owe those closest to me an apology.

I have a skeleton to pick with this country.
I have bones been chewed to marrow.
Starting to see the whole body of democracy.
Starting to see again how much I don't know.

Which Trump? Sixty million votes cast
for sixty million Trumps— sad.
Which Trump? Barking up the patriarchy,
basking in the warmth of the climate conspiracy.
Which Trump? Grabbing, shaming, promoting,
mocking, lying, disgracing, nothing stopping voting.
Which Trump? Playing footsie with David Duke.
Which Trump? A conservative 'fluke.'
Which Trump?

See though America changes, sure and slow,
those who oppose just tell us where to go.
Their triumphant strategy: suppress the vote.
The Voting Rights Act of 1965,
the one people marched for and fought for and died,
got stripped of its teeth in 2013
by our Court they call Supreme.

America do you see my plight?
The House, the Senate, The White House,
all can be reclaimed.
But the Supreme Court is our national shame,
and will continue to tilt from our favor.
They don't want you voting if you're not white.

158 fewer polling places in North Carolina.
New ID laws in Wisconsin and Virginia.
Poll workers in Pennsylvania and Michigan
telling lies that folks need a photo to get in.
How many weren't told to sign an affidavit,
and decided instead it just ain't worth it?
How many in Ohio missed the golden week,
where you vote as soon as you get on the registry?
How many? How many?
We rejoiced Obama's win four years ago.
They got to work gutting access to the polls.

Not to say this wasn't our due fate.
But when so many are turned away,
and in such a close race,
we are right to be outraged.

Yeah, the Democratic Party led us astray,
it fooled us, it raked in monstrous donations,
it tried too hard to sell us the jolly-good way,
but brought no good news for the swing states.
I will bring your jobs back, they wanted to hear.
We told the truth, they're never coming back,
and that's part of the reason we ended up here.

Those who feel that Sanders would have won,
I can only say:
Hillary won the primary by 3 million votes.
Reality aside, maybe Sanders was the solution.
But Democracy does not always reward who is right.
We learned that lesson on Election night.

Those out protesting, I salute you.
I reject that protest must meet measurable goal.
I reject you are not making America whole.
My words, my rambling heart, they are with you.
They are but parts— "Any thing is but a part."

Fight so our neighbors feel safe.
Fight to tell the world, this is not okay.
Fight for the faith of our conscientious electors.
Fight for the worldwide rights of protestors.
Fight for rasping breath of the Earth.
Fight for every person's dignity and worth.

If the Electoral College is meant to help us,
why does it strangle consensus?
Twice this century is two times too many.
Give us the democratic power to appoint.
I mean, no matter where you're comin' from,
this is the reason people say, what's the point?
In these dying times there is no room on the fence.
We are losing patience.

America I am on your side.
It has hurt me in ways I can't describe.
It was always like this, we know,
we know this country was forged
in the foundries of violence.

Who's got the time?
Who's trying to prove how free?
Who's not falling asleep?
Who's seen the Statue of Liberty?

What does it mean, to root for your enemy?
What does it mean, to dare see what they see?
What does it mean, to make excuses for the wicked?
What does it mean, to stand naked in public?
What does it even mean to love your neighbor?
Does it mean talking, and laughing, and strolling, and listening?
Does it go beyond some person you care for?

Some say, it might not be so bad.
Some say, wait for what the future might bring.

I say the future's always happening.
I say the picture is pretty clear.

We the people must never give in to fear.

Friday, November 11, 2016

Never

Never stop believing that fighting for what's right is worth it.
                                                                                         -Hillary Clinton

Never thought it'd end up like this.
Never's the word that's severing my instincts.
Never hurt.
Never know just how much you're worth.
Never mettle with the hissing kettle or pull the lever that's marked Pull When Scared.
Never stop combing your hair.
Never trust your bed to know your body.
Never trust humanity to be somebody.
Never go where the corners fold.
Never forget what came before.
Never have I ever been more lost.
Never have I been more ready to accost what spits in the mouth of dignity.
Never felt better if better is a weight that crushes my skull into dark, brute shape.
Never knelt lower, slammed harder, wept fiercer, gone farther.

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Rise O Days From Your Fathomless Deeps

How Democracy with desperate vengeful port strides on, shown 
through the dark by those flashes of lightning!”
-Walt Whitman


            “Excuse me, can I trouble you for a glass of water?” I asked two women standing in the yard, hands on their hips, watching their kids push trucks on the sidewalk. I passed them just a couple minutes before, saw their apprehensive look, and veered a different way. They were not my Target Voter, and I was flying through the list my tablet gave me. Those were early days. I brimmed with optimism, but hadn't yet grasped the mechanics of carrying a water bottle. One of the ladies ran inside and returned with the water, and they asked me some basic questions while I drank. “I’m out here supporting Hillary Clinton,” I told them, prompting one of the sidewalk boys to shout “Hillary for Prison!” I shook my head, still smiling, trying to imagine what middle school would be like in this climate. “No, no, no.” I told him I was out here trying to make her President. When he asked why, I knew I sounded like a DNC official, but when you mean something, you don’t care how you sound: “Because Hillary Clinton has never given up on anything in her life.”

~

             For the sake of sanity, I decided in the baby days of 2016 to put my faith in Hillary Clinton. Faith. A delicious word that melts on your tongue. My support for her coalesced just before Super Tuesday, for a number of reasons. I saw every Republican debate where Trump ran roughshod over so many experienced politicians. It was clear before the snow had even melted that Trump would be walking off with the nomination, and whoever would face him ought to be battle-tried, well-tested, indomitable. The way I saw it, no one in government fit that description better than Hillary Clinton. I believed it enough that I looked for any excuse to support her. The more I looked, digging under the grime that coated Clinton’s public persona, the more I found someone to believe in—the more I saw a person who deserved to be President. I guess it would be fair to say I really needed someone to believe in. Yet it is equally fair to say that Clinton has worked her entire life to be that someone.
             I got the call just before heading out the door. I was off to wash dishes like I did every Saturday night. Though I'd started to ignore most calls, I picked up the phone, discretely hoping that the library position I had applied for a couple weeks earlier realized their terrible mistake in not hiring me. Turns out I wasn’t terribly off the mark—opportunity was on the other line. My friend Sally recommended me to Project Fair Share, to canvass for the election— later I would learn she was recommended by our friend Karla. I was ecstatic and told them, yes, I would be interested in going in for an interview. I didn’t even realize that it paid. Sitting on my hands was beginning to cut off circulation to my conscience. I went to wash dishes, grinning. I felt foolish, even a little ashamed, that I had not applied myself. Already I was bent on seeing it through.

~

A child was waving at me through the window. I waved back, hoping whoever came to the door would be as friendly. In the driveway next door, a thick man in a tank-top was fiddling with the back of his truck. As the door began to open, I did a mental coin-flip: mom or dad? I struck dad, and began my familiar questioning. "If the election were held today, would you be voting for Hillary, Donald, or are you Undecided?" I was using my outdoor voice, but when he leaned out the door, his kid in his arms, to make sure his tank-truck-loving neighbor wasn’t listening or looking our way, I realized the position I had put him in. He kept his voice low, and said something like, “we’re on your side.” I matched his volume, asking him to sign our pledge. Still holding his kid, with the child who waved to me hiding just behind his leg, he pledged to vote for Clinton. Thank you for the work you’re doing, he said as I turned to leave, deriving a special satisfaction out of his phrasing— it was the exact sentence I used when our roles were reversed.

~

                You see, in a way, it feels like every tangle of fate, every decision made, every turn was to ready me for this. Feels silly to say, and even just feeling it shows the way I inflate my role in this election. Everyone’s a botched balloon, inflating themselves. I know my actions and the time I spent on the streets had little impact, by even the most generous metrics. That is why organizations make good on their etymology: organizing the time, action and energy of many into one focused cause. I leaned on this cause. As I said, it felt almost like I was made for it. As my existence has taken root in this world, my being wraps itself in curious quirks. The loss of my driver’s license years ago forced me to rely on my legs for transport, and in the process overdeveloped my stubbornness for using them. I balk at asking for rides—that is, if the distance is not too great. Walking has become unparalleled proof that I am healthy, that I am strong, that I am all I will ever need.
               I also have an affinity for strangers, or at the very least, I enjoy playing personality roulette. They don’t seem so strange to me. Or perhaps they’re so strange that I feel like the stranger, the outcast, the guest star on someone else’s episode. Holding out for an interesting thought stuck somewhere, maybe, waiting for it to be let out. Regardless there is, as always, a disconnect between thought and action. Believing we are all the same—or at least desire the same, blurring distinction— does not mean striking up conversation with every person I meet. Though in my top form that is precisely what I want. I am overwhelmed by the gorgeous variety. I s'pose it wasn't always like this, but at some point I had been caught by the net of Whitman’s question:

             “Stranger! If you, passing, meet me, and desire to speak to me, why should you not speak to me? And why should I not speak to you?”

My presence clings to a pendulum between this and social anxiety. I am still answering the question.

~

The only thing I needed to excel at this position was the desire to affect the outcome of the election. I had that in spades, spades, and spades. I had a whole shed full of spades dedicated solely to seeing this election through. Thinking backward over the year makes it remarkably clear the stakes I drove into this election. When my days were consumed by compulsory labor, I checked the circus every hour. When I forfeited my job to research chemicals and competitive gaming, news of the election was the only reality I acknowledged. When I got another job and drowned in the transition, thinking quite often about stuff that scared the shit out of me, I spent untold hours scanning forums, reading articles and hundreds of comments a day. Emerging from the deep, what tossed its light my way like a lighthouse was the 2016 election. Some have likened it to end of the world. It kept mine going.

~

                         Out of the aluminum brick stepped an enormous man. His stature was so immense, he had to duck his head to clear the doorframe. I stuffed my flight response into a bottle and sent it down river. I was ready for a fight— of ideology. I asked the titan who he was voting for. He slowly replied that he was Undecided. I expected him to wheel around, then, creating a thrust of wind from the force of it. Yet he stayed, hearing what I had to say. I felt immeasurably small, but because he just stood there, listening, it felt like we were standing eye to eye. I started to rush, worried that what kept him there was beginning to dissipate. If he coughed I thought that might send me running. He listened to every word. I said thank you and left, wishing that I had taken my time, and been less afraid.
~

The bitter reality of the job did not shake me. I had taken a job canvassing before, when I was living in Boston, freshly graduated and desperate for a way to remain in that draining city. That time, though, I canvassed the street for Planned Parenthood, which meant rooting myself to a corner and watching the people flow past me like water around a river stone. Three years I had been living in Boston, and I had never stopped for a street canvasser. No one stopped. They knew I was a mugger without a weapon. Even the most ardent supporters of women's health care had their limits. It was unpleasant business: after the third day, I couldn’t bring myself to go.
Knocking on doors seemed like a rotisserie of soirée’s by comparison. If no one answered, there was nothing to feel bad about. You crossed one off the list. If the person who answered was having a bad day, you could turn tail and hit the next one. Very different from street canvassing, where every member of the group sets up shop on the same block or two (so that you can all fail together). Having a “turf” of your own gives a palpable sense of agency. You set your pace. Chasing nothing but your own ghost, moving through the dimly-lit hours, door by door. Any unpleasantness melted on the back-burner knowing a man away from home need feel no shame. I took deep breaths, studied the clouds, and with occasional lucky altitude, looked up toward distant mountains.

~

The first day the three of us worked together was our journey to Greeley. It was, we were told, part farming town and part college town. If it weren’t for the landscape, and the sole-hour car ride, I could have believed we were in Iowa. It certainly smelled the same—like shit. Or, as my relatives from Iowa would joke, like money. The smell was only the first layer of determent. In a display of obnoxious aggrandizement, our Field Manager had been lauding Greeley's shortcomings the entire ride up there. You don’t necessarily need to work in canvassing for six years, as he claimed to, to see why it’s harmful to fill your team’s heads with worst-case scenarios. He lacked basic tact, along with much else. I had been in his group once before, and already knew that most of what came out of his mouth smelled worse than the air in Greeley.
Despite distrusting the source, words have a way of seeping into your confidence like carbon monoxide. Wishing I had a cigarette to smoke, I grew anxious in anticipation of what was built up to be our toughest turf yet. When my anxiety became apparent to Karla and Sally, that didn't help either it did not bode well that I was nervous. I had already sold myself as some kind of natural, which can only be described as a carefully construed con. I had certain advantages, no doubt. But when it came down to it, believing that I had advantages worked more in my favor than the advantages themselves. We headed into the streets of Greeley, armed with images of wife-beaters, snarling dogs, and trailer parks a sea of disenfranchisement.

~


            Most of the doors knocked went unopened, just like everywhere else. The ones that did open, however, often revealed a Hispanic family inside, sometimes watching the TV or congregating around dinner. I summoned what tasted like Spanish, but nowhere near sharply enough. Yo tengo un pregunta, was the best I could manage. Clinton o Trump? The question of the year, and I could see it furrowing into their brows. Siempre Clinton. Perhaps I had gotten lucky in the turf I was assigned, but I hardly ran into any of the caricatures we were warned about. I thought that if one in twenty, or even one in ten, people were rude or horrible, it was logically bankrupt to give them any credence. Didn’t Ghandi say a thing about not letting a few dirty drops spoil the ocean? This realization should have come as a relief. But like a dense, intimidating book you’ve heard so much about, I was stuck on Chapter One. I couldn’t move past the setup, the introduction, the bleak description of what seemed to be just another, though slightly more populated, rural town. Considering our Field Manager hailed from Arkansas, it grated on me all the more that he would short-change the area as much as he had. As the sky darkened, so did my mood.
             One of my advantages was one I had grown accustomed to— being a white male. I maneuvered through dark streets without having to expend any additional thought energy for my safety. This advantage was at the fore of my thoughts when our group text began blowing up after sunset. Neither of my female classmates felt safe at all in this place, and I could see why. Certain areas lacked sidewalks. Long stretches of broken pavement had no street light whatsoever. And while my hopes for open exchange colored my interactions, it only takes one jagged soul to fracture your optimism, leaving you to pick up the pieces. It only takes one set of wild eyes to make you feel unsafe.
             I kept knocking.

~

             I am walking my thoughts. Or—my thoughts are walking me. With every step, I re-determine my purpose, sharpening my psychosis into a sharp, singular point. I look to the sky, appreciating the breadth and depth of clouds. What poem or painting does anything justice, I wonder. Every step, I think inspiration and expiration—singing songs for Hillary, wandering the desert to stop Donald. My steps sound like: Donald. Trump. Donald. Trump. I am struck by the image that wherever I go, I swim in the wake of the Donald. Journeyer through his aftermath, stepping across his giant footstep, there is no place for me to go but where Trump has left his slimy, boisterous mark. I determine, am determined. Eager to shatter what remnants of esteem he is grasping at. Eager for him to join the list—of Romney, McCain, Kerry, Gore, Dole—the democratic tradition of losers. The Clintons win, I told myself. The Clintons will make winners of us all.

~

            A man with more hair on his chest than his head approached the screen door. The room was washed in a whitish-blue from the TV nestled in the corner. I sucked in a breath to prepare myself for any reaction he would have to my presence. I assumed that anyone over fifty would despise me by default, simply for the way I smiled. They would think I had so much to learn about life, if I smiled like that. Like sharks and blood, the stink of my youth should be enough to turn any geezer rabid. It was not like that, though. He was forthcoming with me about being Undecided. Like with so many others, I let him know that he was not alone—that despite the clear contrast between the two candidates, there were people who felt they were not being heard. His principal issue was Obamacare.
It should be noted that while we were out there in support of Hillary Clinton, the “persuasive” part of the campaign had wrapped up a few weeks prior. Our stated mission for knocking on doors was, at this point, to get out the vote, and to do that we were required to hit a certain amount of doors in a night. To this end, we were told to keep our conversations brisk and to the point. But I couldn’t resist a meaty conversation, especially when so much of the night involved staring at closed doors. I didn’t ask, but guessing by the tone of his disappointment, it seemed possible that he voted for Obama, at least once. Like many others, he seemed let down by the reality of the bloated legislation. I made my case in direct terms. “To be honest, at this point,” I began hesitantly, skirting toward an ugly truth, “Obamacare, at least in many states, is here to stay. So the realistic question is, do we elect someone who will work to make it better? Or do we elect someone who claims he will repeal it, with no stated plan for how to do so?” 

~

These were the conversations I was knocking on wood to have. The moments of clarity I wanted to see in the faces of people who had been left behind. I believed— yeah, wanted badly to believe, that these were the moments that, if multiplied, could save these States. That was the story I sold to drive one foot in front the other. I wasn’t in total Fairyland, either—the people I spoke with, the troubled lives I was allowed to hold, were the ones clamoring to be heard. It’s just that the disaffected in Colorado were not the ones who held the scroll. It was the decaying towns of Ohio, the long-ignored panhandle of Florida, the hollowed-out pockets of Michigan. Enormous portions of our people have been left out of the conversation, and on November 8th were given the chance to be heard.

They voted.

~

             In the sweeping rouse of this election, I had few opportunities to pen down all that I was experiencing, gathering, and absorbing. I wished I had been more diligent, and said all I wanted to say before being gut-punched by politics-as-usual. Now, I stand alone in the crossroads holding half a manuscript, watching tumbleweeds roll by with a self-conscious humor. I guess this is the West, after all. The people are fewer in number, with elastic hearts that allow plenty of room as they go. I listen to the wind make music by rustling chimes of memory. I know that failure compels more strongly than victory. I know what I must do, but I don’t know how to do it. Spilled water cannot be poured back, I remember, and start the work of lending my voice to others.

~

             I think of the woman in Arvada asking “Who is it?” before opening the door, which was covered by a black Halloween tarp of sorts. She apologized for treating me with such caution. “Normally, I’d look through the peephole, but—“ pointing to the tarp, she trailed off. She was a curvy woman, with a voice that rang out in the dark. Her children scurried in a room of mostly wood behind her, making nations of noise. She was Undecided, and I was grateful—as one of my last houses of the night, I now had a reason to stay and talk with someone, who was so easy to talk to, reminding me of my mother. “I’m a project planner,” she explained, “and I like to look at all of the evidence and make the most informed decision possible.” This meant she had made up her mind that she wouldn’t make up her mind until the big day. I tried to not shiver from the cold while I offered my perspective: that our planet will die without treatment, that all our debts will go unpaid, that so much of what we take for granted can be ripped away by the same benevolent mechanisms. She seemed moved by my reluctance to leave her doorstep. I wanted to stay, to pore over the evidence with her until she was sure of her decision. But it’s almost bedtime, she said, adding a thank god with a laugh —I laughed, feeling that too.
             That was the night I lost my map. It had sprang out of my pocket somewhere, maybe hoping to catch a glimpse of the world that had been imprinted onto its face. Not realizing this, I was careless with my phone usage, teetering at 1% around nine o’clock, which was the time for me to be extracted from god-knows-where. I had not memorized the extraction point. I shot a text to my Field Manager, describing where I was in the briefest terms, but the screen went blank, leaving me in apprehensive mystery. Stranded, I gave in to panic, sprinting around the outlines of where I thought I was supposed to be— sometime after nine, my faith evaporated. The dark streets seemed more foreign than before. My breaths became short and rapid. I cursed my confidence, and the luck that held both my phone and map for ransom. I felt a fool for walking streets like they were my own— for acting like I am from this place, like I belong, like I was anything other than what I was—a stranger in a strange land, knocking on the doors of strangers. I did not even have a home to return to. My body hunched on the lip of the curb, wanting it to be over, feeling, in an eerie forecast, like I was going to cry.

~


My last day canvassing was an uncomfortably warm day in Westminster. I met many more folks who were either under or over-whelmed by their choices. I can only say that I was glad to be at their door. Feeling the urgency of their decision in my throat, I made my emphatic case for Secretary Clinton. With the too-close sun cooking my back, I tried incorporating weather into my skit— “in case you haven’t noticed, it’s pretty hot out here for November,” etc. I flipped from friendly to serious in seconds, often partway through sentences. Like a traveling doctor, I came to their door with a grim prognosis. “The reality of this election is that we absolutely need to move forward on Climate Change. Hillary has the right idea when she says America should be the ‘clean energy superpower.’ If we elect Donald, we are sentencing ourselves to four years of guaranteed zero progress— and worse, we will probably accelerate the issue.” No one was buying my medicine more than I was. The longer I was out there—and on this fourth, final day, my aches had been put away—my conviction hardened into a cast around my bones. The cracks in my judgment, though, were beginning to show.
 So many mothers betraying the kids in their arms. So many who looked me in the eye and felt bold enough to say "I'm not voting this year." This year. As if their vote in four, or even two years could be difference enough! Though I recognize the right of each person to abstain from voting if they choose, I also recognize our planet's deteriorating condition. Maybe apathy and ignorance was worth defending at some point, though I couldn't tell you when. Incredible how many folks feel justified in their complacency. At least the Undecided ones were brave enough to admit being lost. Though there have been widespread reports of voter suppression, and those that tried but fell short have my endless sympathy-- 47% of eligible voters sitting out fills me with mouth-foaming shame. Those who shrugged their shoulders should be the first to be swallowed by the ocean.

~

             Though the divide is wide and deep, some still can’t see which side has a place for them—so they fall through that open space. The Undecided baffles: half of Democrats believe Republicans are dangerous, and it goes the other way. To be Undecided, at this point in our history, is to think that neither are dangerous—or that they each bring their own set of dangers to the table. I have heard some pretty galling things said about the Undecided ones—but theirs is the path out of partisanship. Sure, some may have an issue with listening, but some are listening more than most. There is no way forward that doesn’t demand deep listening. To each other, to the things unsaid, the patchwork existences that over and over shout I am here, and I am valid. We grow comfortable when we’ve figured it out—and comfort kills progress.



~

              I dream of standing in a dark hallway. Exceptionally wide, with no wall of windows at the end to show how long. The hall a river of darkness, endlessly flowing. No one knows I am here, flanked on both sides by doors, so many doors. Nearly unperceivable slivers of light hover above ground, lighting my path like the aisle of an airplane, miniscule cuts in the darkness. My feet silently scrape the ground, but I cannot will them to move. My heart thumps in my throat, my mind rifles through the rhetoric, my hands slump in my pockets. I know that even if I knock on one of the doors, no one would answer. The election is over. The only sound in that space is the haunt of a hundred screen doors, shrieking, sighing, all opening and closing to the rhythm of my breath.



Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Words for the Ninth of November

Hard to return to the valley of hope when the skyline burns. Hard to return my words to that place of understanding. Hard to think of how long and how hard I hoped for the outcome I didn’t just want—but believed so much that we needed, to have any chance of saving our failing future. We know, we are better than this. Better— and bitter. So bitter.
My first instinct is to shut it all out. Shut out the stunned news anchors and politicians. Shut out how our President feels and what he says, and what he wishes he could say. Shut out how she must feel—to have worked so hard, to be so qualified, to care so much about this country, and still be rejected in favor of fear and ephemeral solutions. Shut out my memories of Clinton supporters, and Trump supporters, and third party voters, and undecided voters, and more than any of them, shut out those who looked me in the eye and said “I’m not voting this year,” as if their vote in four years could ever be enough. Some bodies go their whole life without feeling the ache of urgency. Until death creeps up from the toes, only then do they realize they should have shared the space of the living. It is too late to save the day.
Saving our planet—it really is up to us, now. We may have failed to elect someone who understands how desperate the situation, but surely golf courses in Scotland, too, will be flooded sometime. All a matter of time. Time— is it ours? Was it ever? I feel in my bones that whatever alternative we didn’t achieve—would that have been enough? Or was it just the slightly less flooded path, leading to the same sunken chamber? All the world is water.
It is painful to grapple with dark history. We expect the present to be full of light, for all that the present moment gives us. Breath, hope, the blessing of presence. Though they have not gone anywhere, it dawns on me that it was always like this—wherever there is war yet sunlight—wherever the stench of death mingles with open air— the mechanisms of life persist. Hard times look plenty soft from the outside. Clichés crowd my brain, making it hard to cut through. My tears crash like waves. All the world is water.
The smell of flowers tickles my nose. I want to stuff it with smoke. I want to squeeze every last sound out of the alphabet. I want to wet the bed. I want to keep going, I want to quit breathing, I want to keep going. I want to find something strong and wise to say to my little sisters. I want to walk the whole way to the ocean. I want to collapse. I want to hug every person I see. I want to stop feeling so absurd. I want to open this thank you. I want to make sound with string. I want to kiss someone, aye. I want to taste. I want what detaches. I want what predates predators. I want what predicates peace. I want to save, save, save. But all the world is water.
Save memory from tearing out the inside. Save our Earth from being sucked dry. Save loved ones from permanent good-bye. Save. Save. Sigh.
I must give this story a rest. For now, at least. For a little while. This is the shock we must absorb, the trial of our tenacious experiment. Never a better time for blankets, and breathing, and gentle touch. Never a better time to love every arch of your body, every word out your mouth, every molten work you create and hold proudly in your chest. Today the first— not the easiest or hardest— but the first of thousands ahead. This, the first page of your best-selling self-help book. This, the first day for an age of radical self-love. Whitman whispers, These are the days that must happen to you. Call it all home. Love pours light over shame. All the world is water.

Good For Who

Enjoy your victory before it melts like everything else.
Enjoy your ample delusions and illusions before they twist and die at your feet.
Enjoy the sun as it sets on what you once thought was…

Good for rural America.
Good for deep pockets.
Good for somebody, surely.

Good for God.
Good for God-fearing folk.
Good for the academy of tears.

Good for pipeline.
Good for county fair.
Good for the local casino.

Good for fear.
Good for brain-freeze.
Good for dignity’s strip-tease.

Good for corn.
Good for monarchies.
Good for soul that’s torn.

Good for nothing.
Good for half the folk.
Good for some universities.

Good to you.
Good if you could.
Toward good we strive.

Half the hearts break,
the other half
delayed, celebrating
for now, but
will soon
like the rest of us
break.

Friday, November 4, 2016

calm

Poetry in your palm,
each line and indentation
an open invitation,
an archive of calm.

Thursday, November 3, 2016

extra

extra, extra,
the hot word of the new generation.

it means special, i guess, not extra
as in additional, rather extra as extra-

ordinary, or i s'pose extra ordinary,
starting to think no one knows.

i am catching my own midnight edition,
reading all about my vacuous day.

why can't i break out of meaning?
why don't my words make sound?

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

BLESSING FOR ARTISTS

Bless self-appointed arbiters of beauty.
Perennial spring we inhabit, bless our lives.
Bless every peace-maker in the after/before.
Every brave silhouette, bless.

Bless create, bless create, bless create.
Bless hearts that beckon, create!
Bless sound of levity, flesh-frozen clarity,
bless what cuts quick to the marrow.

Love unusual utterance, love audience undeterred.
Bless expression undressing its meaning.
Love exaggerated touch, love exasperated look.
Bless panoramic snapshot proliferating.

For anyone who cries at the crack of an egg,
for anyone who has competed with the sun,
for anyone lost for words at the family reunion,
your solace
 a bubbling reservoir.

Bless implosion and explosion.
Bless the god-catchers in their silk pajamas.
Bless bedraggled, unalienable artifacts.
Bless technicolor tantrums for sale.

Broken windows beside blessed murals.
Whoever overrides impulse with craft, bless.
Whoever supplants craft with impulse, bless.
Shaken spirits rise to obliterate indifference.

Bless force for change and vain reflection,
brush away feats and external markings.
Bless omnivorous eyes framing the next feast.
Expression disproving death
 bless.

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

parcel tongue

Forge my stunted signature
with a flick of your tongue.
My mind lies across the tracks.

Soap dispenses foam
of foreign office,
sudsy, untranslatable motes.

Dare to lick derelict
palm, attract soiree
of sorbet parade.

Catch me, I'm fawning.
Lust after swamp,
stuck in consumption.