Friday, December 19, 2008

Letter to Myself



You are still your mother's daughter.

You are always barking up the wrong tree.
Lodging lozenges down your throat; you don't even have a cough.
The tall boy with the hidden heart and half smiles
offers only limb by limb; he is not a tree for you to climb.

You've shelved your past in parades of white dusted
off addictions to love, lines, words, hearts, cats, homes;
don't build a home in anyone's hand; they will
throw out your toothbrush and clothes.

You will never finish that book you once picked up.
The ending was already written. You were never meant to know.
You will try and wear every dress shoe.
Nothing fits you. You are destiny's barefooted wanderer,

rummaging through garage sales for used parts of hearts,
lock and key in hand to the wrong latch-key boy
who grew but never for you.
You tie knots in your belly instead of your heart.

You say you remember your mother's freckles; no, it must be
that you remember her face
the bars behind her eyes,
jailed in with the wishes of un-wishing the past
jailed in with lust giving in,
losing love and
child who is never

just loved.

You find the pieces of her,
scaling your imagined mountains.
They are never taller than your
father,
your lovers.
And still,
you cannot climb them
cannot climb past
the marks left by the last traveler
resurfacing,
beached jellyfish stinging, string lacerations.
The current that runs through you is
a ring of engagements to self
a ring around the rosy,
the kind that plagues your black death heart.
You wait for a new start,
you always bend at the knees
heels in the starting blocks
waiting for the starter gun
to go off to find a bullet wound.

Bare and open,
skinned fruit
flesh sun-singed
too ripe for any touch.

No one will eat you; no one will have you.
In passing, they will graze their fingertips over
your fertile flesh,
lick their lips
and say, You would've been good long ago.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Dating



He asked me once,
"Why are you so crazy?"

"Baby, I'm not crazy."

My eyes are fishbowls with two fish.
They are always trying to eat each other.
When I'm sad, I begin to pack.

"Where are you going?" he asks.
I shrug.
"I'm not crazy."

I'm packing my things now.
Socks.
I wore no socks when I ran away from home.
Humid air dotted my bruised forehead.
Shirt.
My father sent me a plaid tank top before my 7th birthday.
I wore it in the snow, a frozen gibbon, hanging on the black knobs of
grandmother's gate waiting for him
till the day passed.
Shorts
It was winter when my mother packed my things
into a shopping bag and left.
It was still summer in her head. We were still a family then.
She had packed only shorts, 2 pairs of underpants and a t-shirt.
Books
I drew my mother and father's faces over every couple, child voodoo.
Ineffective.

Journal
The pages I tore out are called Dear Mom:

"Dear Mom,
I'm not mad, but
when you come back to get me
will you remember to bring my pants?
And an extra pair of underpants?
I wore this one inside out. Twice.
P.S. Grandma's chicken Ggo Ggo scares me.
She eats her own egg.

Dear Mom,
I'm not sad, but Dad can't make it and
Santa?
Well, I think he may have moved.
Or forgot I moved. I wanted scented erasers and pencils for school.
Never mind about the pants and underpants.
Grandma gave me hers.

Dear Mom,
I'm not worried, but I think I'm being sent to America. Grandma said you
are not my mother.
I told her, 'Nuh uh! She has a scar on her belly. I saw it. It's where I
came from.'
She said, 'That woman had surgery for something else and lied to you.'
She lifted her shirt, showed me her belly.
'See? If I had a scar for each child I had,
wouldn't I have four?'

She scarlessly scarred me for life.

Dear Mom,
The woman I live with now is Dad's wife. America is not bad but cheese
gives me gas.
I eat bananas all day. I was trying to save you one, maybe send one back to
you, if you'll forward me
your new address.

Dear Mom,
The woman, I call her New Mom. But I don't mean it. Because you are not
old; you hate to be called that.

Dear Mom,
I drew you in class today, because I couldn't remember your face. Teacher
Hill got mad. Sent me to the principal's office.
There was trouble at home. I was trouble. I'm watching the mirror like it
is television. New Mom said I was just like you.
My eyes are puffy. My cheeks too. Why do tears and fists puff your face?
I'm pretending I'm a boxer. Dad likes boxing.
It's too bad he missed it.

Dear Mom,
I'm getting good grades now. English is not so hard now. I'm writing your
name over and over in my English notebook.
Large letters look empty as houses.

Dear Mom,
I'm not angry, but
the years build and wind upwards.
A spire to the abandoned cathedral.

There are shells
of bullets or
of sea
I hold in my fist clenched
called memories.

I can either
hold them up to my ear and listen
seashell sounds, calming or

or
bite the bullet and forget.

I'm constantly packing and unpacking
all my belongings
waiting to leave
before being left.

I have my right arm stamped "For You"
my left leg stapled to the next boy I see
I call him NOT DAD.
HE WILL NOT LEAVE ME FOR ANOTHER WOMAN.

I'm not sure if it's the stamp or the way I look at him
whenever he walks out the door that makes him uneasy.

It's just.
He keeps calling me
crazy."

CVS



I shop
like a born-again Christian,
Korean mother
attends church,
repeating my list
prescription, tissues, paper.

I pass two old men in the cold and flu aisle.
Their baskets are biographies.
They are sick; they like mint tea.

The men share their home remedy for cancer
as I compare before and after
sale prices.

How do you hold your future together,
life and death placed in the same basket?

Before the cashier calls,
"Next,"
we will pray to the milk and juice aisle to nourish us.
Ask the vitamins to bless our bellies and bone with long lives.
In the confessional aisle of seasonal shopping,
we will whisper how lucky we are to pass another holiday,
how we go too long, undecorated
waiting all our lives for the perfect pumpkin to go on sale.
We will open the box of chocolate hearts.
The first one we bite into will be a cherry of our
last love's kiss.
We'll sing hymns to the Christmas lights until
we bring in the new year
always brighter than
the one before.