Since

day after day

It’s day one twenty since I smoked my last –
a quarter year since I vowed now’s enough.
And since I met him, nine full months have passed
(gestation out-of-body – not too tough).
Selections made have brought me to today
where I in choosing couldn’t clearly see,
for prescience has never been my way;
that’s why I call the future “destiny.”

The circle is circumference, nothing more
than shape the edge of radius denotes.
And “since” is just a point I can’t explore
for points have less existence than the motes
of dust that dance in beams of morning light,
or squiggles seen when eyelids are pressed tight.

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Marks

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She always wears black cloth to exercise:
a sleeveless Tee and pants of cotton knit.
She sweats from every bend, and when it dries
the signs of salt are quite appropriate.
So there’s a chalky circle near complete
upon her chest, at back and waist a dart,
and where her upper thighs and belly meet,
her perspiration makes a perfect heart.

She senses moisture moving down her face,
amassing on her fingers as she works
the pedals of a bike that stays in place.
She feels the sweat, the rhythms, and the jerks,
but only seldom and through sweating eyes
does she remark the marks of exercise.

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Seeping

labychartfloor[1]

My own metabolism’s acting mean –
what is this one pound loss a week? A drop
of nothing in a bucket. I’m the queen
of calories; my chemistry can’t stop.
I cherish my obsession with my weight
more tenderly than children, for I own
this baby utterly, without a mate –
I play with it whenever I’m alone.

If there’s a wisdom in late parenthood,
perspective in the place of energy,
I postulate there’s recompense as good
in having one more turn at pulling me,
frustrated, through the coils of a maze
I seep to conquer in a thousand days.

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My Own

Pike_brassRing_2

When I begin to make a miracle,
I have to fight the urge to pray for strength
and use that energy, instead, to pull
me to the starting line and walk the length
I’ve mapped out for my personal crusade
(my loving cup becomes a grail I’ve grown),
for when I later look at what I’ve made,
I want it to be mine, and mine alone.

I’ll make the effort and I’ll take the prize;
although I know the work alone could be
sufficient answer to my earnest tries,
still I will reach beyond sufficiency
to grasp the golden ring I barely touch,
for that’s the endless end I want so much.

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Lego Community

IMG_9103 (2)

When Molly was young, she used Legos with her brothers. They constructed tidy villages or irrational towers out of the colored plastic bricks. This was in the olden days, before all the kits and specialized pieces. Before mini-figures.

Now she plays with her grandsons. They consume Lego sets on every occasion and whenever their allowances accumulate the purchase price. They are bright boys ages nine, seven and five. They acquire the sets and build them, once, per the instructions. After that the pieces are tossed into one of four large bins, to be used again and never reconstructed.

In the beginning, Molly tried playing Legos with her grandsons the way she had with her brothers. She selected bricks and started building. No sooner did her structure become interesting than an admiring boy would begin appropriating parts of it or restricting her access to similar parts. Molly’s a good sport, but she isn’t going to play long at an unfun game.

The main thing the grandsons want to do is wage war. They long to construct creatures and do battle. Maybe it’s a gender thing. Molly is not classically feminine, but she has no interest in fighting.

So began the mini-figure project.

Molly is an orderly person who has never minded a sorting job. She was searching for long bricks that morning, to add to the ranch house she was attempting to build, and five year old Finn was claiming the desired pieces as soon as she found them, when she turned her attention to torsos and heads. She pieced them together and looked for legs. She didn’t attempt to create matching, as-designed figures; at first she just pushed parts together to make them bigger and less likely to fall to the bottom of the bin. But then she got into the work: seeking out legs and snatching up accessories like little prizes.

She saw much disability. Some torsos were missing arms (nine year old Ollie told her the boys had been calling the arms “sleeves” and thought they could trade them, and then discovered after wholesale removal that only Ollie had the ability to replace them; Lorenzo and Finn just threw them into the bin (immediately or after a Mom-demanded floor cleanup), where of course they gravitated to the bottom). Many hands were gone, because Finn used to like to remove them with his teeth. The hands are so small that they were even more evasive than the arms, sometimes wedging into the underside of a brick where they had to be pried out with a Lego spear.

But Molly found arms for most of the torsos. She found helmets and hair and caps, weapons and horses and many sets of legs. She got into assembling a motley crew. Ollie was the first to join her, splitting his attention between figure-building and small-piece hoarding. He brought a plastic rack of drawers from his desk and spent some of his time sorting small pieces into them. Finn helped with the figure-building but also kept flying his Bionicle dragon around the air space, hoping for an opponent to battle. Seven year old Lorenzo acted as a true partner in Molly’s project. He brought over the biggest base plate he could find and began setting the completed figures on it in grid formation. He and Molly deemed a figure complete if it had head, torso, legs, and at least one arm, and then revisited some of the amputees as they found spare arms and hands.

“We have sixty-three, Grandma” was his first tally, after they’d been at the project for about an hour.

“Awesome, Lorenzo.”

“Let’s go for one hundred!”

“That’s a good goal. But it’s going to get harder now.” They’d gleaned pretty well from all the bins by then. They had to either take the trust-testing step of dumping a bin and “committing” to the consequent cleanup (Molly was too experienced with the boys to leap into that option), or start really raking the plastic pieces for the smallest, most elusive items at the bottom (they voted unanimously for that one, although Ollie and Lorenzo kept mentioning the dump alternative every time a minute or two passed without a find).

They continued to populate the base plate.

The four broke for lunch and then a parent-mandated walk and trip to the bookstore, but they returned to their project that evening and again the next day.

They assembled one hundred and kept at it.

Their grid became a bit disorderly due to crowding.

By the time the boys’ mother, Molly’s daughter-in-law Jill, joined them, there were one hundred thirteen characters on the base plate. “Some of the figures are missing arms,” Lorenzo told her. “And hands too!” came from young Finn.

“Well, people don’t need arms or hands or legs to be people,” she said. “What about Lefty? Or Wheelie Will?” The family is into punk culture, and many of their adult friends have been in horrific motorcycle accidents.

No one disagreed with Jill. But the boys and Molly knew you couldn’t make a mini-figure apparent on the base plate if it didn’t have legs. The figure can’t hold a weapon if it doesn’t have a hand. Lego hasn’t yet developed prostheses for its figures. Then again, Lego is all-prostheses already.

The boys called the project their Lego army. Molly referred to the assembly as a community. That’s probably another gender difference.

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Strategic Love

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I didn’t love him then, and I don’t yet,
for I am so protective and resolved
that I’ll be warm as love, but I won’t let
my selfish heart be suitably involved.

“You never love your lover,” says my friend,
who stands so close she disinters my fears,
interpreting the purpose I intend
and brushing off the salt and sand of years.

The birds of dream in tight formation fly
and clouds become the pigment of the breeze.
A new Tiresias divines the sky
with sightless eyes, a new Cassandra sees
enough to know her words will be ignored,
and still makes prophecies to no reward.

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Trolling

day after day

Within a recessed niche, inside a cave
along a waterway, beneath a hill,
abides a creature ugly, lonely, brave,
whose job is guardian. His monster will
is focused like a laser beam, refined
on treasure mined for me with my own hand
and bound by my own dreams, and kept in mind,
until the spirit grows to understand.

Within a project, hidden by the curve
of weeks unraveling from out a year,
there bides the prize I labor to deserve.
There poises dreams of me as I’ll appear
as soon as I from out my recess move,
and by my motion metaphysics prove.

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Third

day after day

A pair of days have passed since I began,
and they are not behind me, but within.
I ventured with a purpose and a plan
and not to keep the parts would be a sin
against my energy, a weakness in the goal
that dooms to failure and another try
the process I’m determined to control,
so I will treasure up the two gone by.

I’ll keep the two and add to them a third,
a fourth, a fifth, a sixth, a seventh day,
until I have amassed a solid week.
That sustenance may seem to be absurd,
but I’ll construct on it this chosen way
and build it to the destiny I seek.

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Hydrometer

hydrometer

They say the rain has stopped; I don’t agree.
For though the drops don’t fall today from high,
there’s water in the air surrounding me
and fog fills up the space from ground to sky.
As if the earth can’t take another drop,
as if the air is weeping tedium,
no rain can fall when bottom’s wet as top;
we sweat in wettest equilibrium.

I almost see the rain fall up from ground,
and just as clearly nearly see it float
in horizontal currents that surround
and bathe existence with a liquid coat.
More rain in all directions I would see,
but fog is blocking visibility.

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Writers’ Conference

Eucalyptus

We were an odd assortment of semi-competent writers, and we performed variously at the conference. But we all agreed that it was a terrific experience: to be consumed with narrative for three straight days, with no distractions or interruptions.

Our food was cooked for us; our beds were made. Public phones were few and cell reception was poor. We met in our assigned groups for about four hours a day. The rest of the time we read or wrote or walked on the property or talked to our fellow attendees, but the subject was always narrative. Nobody followed the news.

We are Alan, Bev, Chris, Deb and I. Each is white. We’re all between 50 and 60. One is male, straight but celibate. Two are lesbians married to non-attendees. One is a married heterosexual with an only son. One is me.

Each of us had a hangup. Alan was stalled till he could come up with the perfect title. Bev was a free-verse rambling kind of gal, amiable and well-educated but not creative. Chris was naturally sardonic, short-sentenced, born for a career in satiric journalism if that career still existed. Deb and I wrote elegantly but had trouble coming up with plots. Or character development. Deb responded to the problem by always including and then cranking up the sex, drugs, and violence in her stories, just like the escalation in porn. And I, humble I, stuck to fly-on-the-wall close descriptions.

Alan and Chris landed in the group headed by the humor novelist. Bev was placed with the memoir-specialist. Deb and I joined the dozen attendees who looked to the female short story writer for guidance. Our class was crowded; our instructor was the biggest “name” and apparently there were too many powerful or poignant requests for her that couldn’t be refused. We packed the room and tried to wedge our chairs around the table.

I’m the author of this page, all-knowing and powerful. I can make Alan flirt with Chris – I can even put them in bed together, and make Chris forsake her wife for a dangler. I can turn Bev into a gifted writer. And more. I have authority.

Except that’s not true. I may not know plots, but I understand characters. As soon as one is created, he begins to reveal himself. And with each revelation, he loses some of the traits or tendencies that would contradict those revelations. He has to be consistent enough to be sane, or the story will lose cohesion. Authors are gods (especially in third person). We create characters with enough free will that they can then surprise us, if we’re not paying attention.

The truth is, Alan and Chris spent a bit of time together. They were in the same group at the conference and that led to conversations as they left the meeting room or when preparing for the next class. Everyone brought a piece to work on, but we were also spot-assigned some little exercises: impromptu, as it were. Alan didn’t make progress on his opus, or even on the perfect title search for it, but his spontaneous pieces were without titles and with promise. Chris is never intimidated by a blank page; she created some cute op-ed pieces while there and also worked on the series of stories she’s amassing about the characters she and her wife encounter at their country place, in the Sierra foothills. Alan and Chris did not become a couple in any way, but they were spotted together regularly, ambling on the dusty/spongy ground beneath the eucalyptus trees. Both of them are tallish, formerly thin people who are acquiring bellies now, slouched in posture, pale of hair. They looked more like siblings than a couple. They acted more like siblings than a couple.

Bev was the one from our group who was alone in class. She seemed to enjoy the memoir and journal guidance, but she didn’t improve as a writer. She’s a lovely woman, the oldest of us and showing it with corrugated cheeks; anyone can tell she was a beauty when she was young. And she’s a nice person. She always murmurs feedback when we read to her, chuckling at the humor or sighing at the pathos. Her behavior is attractive, encouraging. She’s a perfect audience but a lackluster performer. I think she got the least out of the experience, but we were glad she was there.

Deb and I are old friends. We met on the commute bus and immediately recognized fellow punsters. Our humor always meshed even though our lives don’t. She’s married with a young daughter; I’m divorced with two teenage sons. She was beautiful as a young woman but needs a gym and dermatologist and better bra now. I was always attractive enough but no head-turner; I’m growing into a relatively handsome old woman. Deb earns okay money but as a legal secretary, stuck with egos and time pressure and no power. I lucked into a consulting career that pays well enough and doesn’t require any overtime.

After the conference ended, we all agreed that it was not without stories. Things happened. Bev started to understand narrative even though she was in the memoir class, and it occurred to her that her wife’s story wasn’t holding together. Sandy’s answers about where she spent some evenings were overly elaborate or strangely evasive. Her character, as self-presented, lacked motivation. Bev started to fret. She paced regularly through the eucalyptus grove that abutted our dormitories, sometimes making bouquets of flayed bark, and the gullies in her face deepened. As it happened, she and Sandy split up soon after our return.

Alan didn’t have a title revelation, but he received motivation to make some changes in his life. He’d had a neurotic break when he was in his early 20s (his red hair was then as fiery as his attitude, but now it’s ashy orange). After trying shrinks and psychotropic medication, he’d opted to treat his condition with an abstemious Catholic life. He didn’t drink or do drugs. He attended mass weekly. He was almost fundamentalist in his beliefs, which made his love for his two gay sisters interesting. Not to mention his expectation that he would be reunited in heaven with his suicidal mother.

The second (and final) night of our stay, there were unusually strong winds even for the coastal slope on which the conference grounds stood. Alan’s room, a single because so few men attended, was located at the top corner of the two-story dorm. When the eucalyptus tree crashed down that night it took out part of the roof and Alan’s dorm window, and flattened his bed. If he hadn’t been out watching the storm, he would have been hit. He might have died. In the afterglow of survival, he decided to try marijuana again. For the first time in decades, he started to consider the acquisition of a girlfriend.

My epiphanies were shallow. I’d brought a piece to work on that was in memory of loving horses, of bareback riding, when I was 13. Our instructor acknowledged that the adolescent-girl-with-horse thing had been done and done before, but she said (wait for it) there was always room for it to be done again, if it’s done well. She looked at me when she said that, with her chin up like she raised it when she lectured us, but when she lectured she tended to close her eyes, as if we were a distraction. I basked.

I also backed away from the table. There were too many of us to sit around it; an attack of modesty made me join the three others who formed a kind of second tier. I soon realized it was a good move for me. It made me less of a dominant personality in that room. It let me listen to arguments instead of leaning into them.

I attended to conversations about plot, but there really are just seven, and I’m tired of them. I heard statements about character development, but we all know that everyone’s a sucker for the prodigal son story – it’s so easy to manipulate the reader with a bad boy who’s seen the light.

I toyed with my pen and I pondered. It’s an important tool for a writer of course. Back when I was in college, in the olden days before laptops and smart phones, before even fiber tips, I used a fountain pen. They don’t require pressure the way a ballpoint does, so your hand is less likely to cramp. But they do use wet ink. I learned to hold the cap in my left hand while I wrote with my right, because sometimes the ink leaked into the cap when the pen was closed, and then if you placed the cap on the back end of the pen to write, you could get ink on your hand.

My pen at the conference was not of the fountain type. Since my college days fiber pens have come into availability, with no pressure required and also no cap. I was using one of those, fine-tipped, blue-inked, at the conference. In fact I had two identical others with me. So when the instructor wanted to borrow mine, I readily allowed. And when after use she admired it and boldly asked if she could have it, I surrendered it with grace.

` It was a forgettable moment. I learned at the conference that’s what I want to write.

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