Posts

Stay.

I imagine bending over backward, my body like a wet olive leaf, until just my feet and ankles and calves are upright. Until my hands touch the hot earth, and my eyes see the world turned around, upside down. I imagine his words flying right above me, across the space my torso just was. So they miss me -- no contact. "Stay." No contact. Instead I'm silent. What do you say to that? Yes, I'll stay. Of course, you're in charge here, you say you want me here, I'll be here. Instead I'm silent. Silent as I walk to our door, a hole in our earthen wall, and silent as I choose the pomegranates and onions in the cacophony of the bazaar. Silent as I keep walking from the bazaar and as I reach my lady's house. Silent as she lets me in and makes the phone calls. Silent as I board the bus, as I see that little brown head, not yet two weeks. Not yet mine. Silent as I shiver, silent as I wipe my face, silent as my vision blurs then clears, then blurs again. ...

Teeth

I picture her sucking one of those cold, red toned fingertips into her square mouth, the tip hitting her straight white teeth, pulling it out and wiping a smudge of ink off my temple. Her name is Margaret, and she's 45 years old, possibly older. A strong woman, a professor, feeding us knowledge like apples. “Hello Emily.” Margaret's stopped between the music and sociology building to say hello to me. Straight bones lined up from hips to her collarbone, and just one more reason I feel so oddly unlike myself when she's near. Are those bones lined up so straightly or is that just the impression from such upright posture? “Hi Margaret.” Oh god, I should just have called her professor, I think, but I want her to step closer with that healthy looking body and those heavy black clogs. “Are you enjoying this beautiful weather?” Who else says that, ‘this beautiful weather?’ I know, of course, my mother. I feel sad that Margaret had to ask the first question. Yet I love it. It...

Two Leaves

By me. I wanted the rain. I pictured a sea in navy blue rolling above, a fragment of moon still haunting the day. I got instead: a cold, blank sky and a sun hiding somewhere behind it all. When I left the hospital room, I looked down at my lap, my pale green gown bunched on my thighs like so many wrinkles on an old, disused woman. My legs motionless beneath it. They have men and women and other survivors come and talk to you in track suits, or pin striped business suits, or linen pants and pink cashmere sweaters, to tell you about life after an accident. “It’s been a blessing, really, losing my legs.” Or “Since my own accident I see everything differently. It filled a hole in my life I never knew was there.” But her voice is raspy and it sounds like her holes have found their way into her speech instead. I’m supposed to visualize me walking again, or kicking a soccer ball. I’ve never played soccer. And my visions don’t include me with two working legs. My first day back...

Writing Excercise

The egg beater, so small and untidy, laying among it all. The flour, that huge bag, sagging under its own weight, flour leaking from its coners and those eggs. All neatly in line, but two-two empty spaces there. The tiles beneath are glossy, and I know will be cold. Egg yoke spilled, just more gloss on gloss. My dishwasher open, the lid hanging loosely. The dishes inside somewhere-behind in the dark. And my fridge. That big mass of stainless steel, but not so stainless after all. There, in the corner, a smudge. Grey meeting black meeting grey.

Speckled

Speckled There was bright light in a small garden, and shade beneath a few trees. A small nun sat speckled dark and light, on a bench beneath a tree, space on all sides of her. Soon a taller nun joined her. Here they sat outside of the sun, knees almost touching. Their faces were plain, unassuming. They looked the same. Anonymous under black robes and wimples. ‘It’s God’s gift to us.’ The taller nun shifted her wimple, showing dark hair that framed the white of her face. Dark circle around light. She moved closer to the small nun. Their feet touched. Their knees. Their shoulders. Their bodies angled together. Heat rose to pale cheeks, marking them both. ‘A gift, or a test? ’ She paused, then, ‘If Mary knew-‘ ‘Mary won’t.’ ‘She’s the head.’ ‘God’s the head.’ ‘That isn’t any better for us.’ The color slipping away, then, softly, from beneath curled shoulders, ‘It’s not natural. This is not natural. We. are not natural.’ ‘No. God always has chosen special people. The Israelites, the Apost...

Spilt Milk

Devin had rituals, you see. To ward off bees, to distract Thomas, to bring sun. He grew up in a Catholic home; perhaps this obsession with rituals is not so hard to understand then. But it was not Hail Mary’s that Devin said. It was not the Lord’s Prayer. Devin repeated maxims he had read in a book called ‘Small lives, Big Lives’ found in a garbage near his house. Devin and I grew up in Scarlton, an area that smelled of rotted wet wood and grey smoke. There was row after row of buildings, houses, shops, and somehow they all looked the same: blackened, with holes in likely places, and window panes missing, or filled with shattered glass. I met him from the other side of a broken window pane, as he touched with one dirt stained hand each of the four corners in turn, saying, “Don’t cry over spilt milk, don’t cry over spilt milk, don’t cry over spilt milk.” I didn’t even have to ask. “I’m keeping Thomas away.” Thomas. The boy who has my lunchbox, who put the tear in my dre...

Goaroba-incl. my last day at Iracambi

Hoje eu fui a caoceira-I went to the waterfall fall today-with Fagane and it passed the day sweetly-like waking again at 6.30 am and seeing more of the beautiful Brasilian sky and mata and talking to Mona easily-sleepily-loosely about who knows what because I can´t remember-the tiredness around my eyes distracts my memory a lot these days- I read over my journal entries as another homeless dog got to know me in this soft heat in the Brasilian evening in Muriae- and read my famished road again-and it almost made me cry because I relate bits of my life to the books I read during that time and the Famished Road belongs to Iracambi and Marcelo and thunder like war.. and say goodbye to the Iracambi gente- once the car of them left in Gustavo´s cute little for Iracambi and Iracambi´s homemade bread in the mornings and afternoons and nights with peanut butter and that special white cheese and goiaba and for Iracambi´s life and breath -I didn´t feel it jump me until it hit my throat-sadness an...