Monday, August 5, 2013

Memory

I am often adrift on memories. Memories are odd things. There are some that cling to you so tightly they pop up often and intensely into your mind like they are coming up for air, to stay alive. There are some that rub softly in your thoughts, leaving the trace of a feeling that you can't quite place. They are strange things, these memories, but beautiful things. Some are haunting things. Some wash over you and and leave you toe to toe with your mistakes. Some embrace you in the soft light of morning, and cause you to keep your eyes shut for as long as you can, even though you are awake. They are elegant and harsh, like the glass appendages of  a long forgotten chandelier. I am thankful for them. I could not recall my grandparents without them, or I could not recall the time I walked the riverbank behind my childhood home in winter alone, when the muddy shore was crusted over with ice. I couldn't remember first crushes, then first loves, and then first heartbreaks. They are stubbornly tenacious things, these memories. I am glad of that.


here is the way
I remember you
I wait for a lonely sky
black with stars forming
constellations that are
as obvious as words
spoken out of turn
lovely words falling
with a hollow sound
into conversations
where lovely words
don't belong
here I remember
you in this twinge
of self consciousness
of trying to pick up
from the ground
the things I've said
and placing them
somewhere inside
the folds of night
they are after all
words not meant
to be forgotten but
just lost in a cascade
of seconds tumbling
one after the other a
ceaseless onslaught of
time lost I place these
traces of memory where
I hope without knowing
you will stumble over
them and be caught
in them and be compelled
to remember me

Monday, July 8, 2013

Tides

The cobbled road of broken shells
lead her to the edge of the ocean,
a dividing line of high tide 
from the unencumbered sand,
then another line, where the surf
had broken and left a loamy trace
of white. She drew her toe
through the lacy imprint, 
where water had traced 
proof of existence as pretty 
as doily. A small wave
came, a remnant of 
something reducing
and reducing like a number
dividing into infinity.
It reached for the sand, the
fold of a transparent sail trying
to snare the slightest wind.
It removed the mark she left,
erasing the small valley that
sought to prove she was there,
on that small expanse of sand.
A shell caught in the intake of 
the ocean and rolled ridiculously 
back toward the water. How many
times had it been carried to the land, 
then to the sea, falling over itself
in the rise and fall of tides until
its outside was smooth like a
layer of curved glass? She 
said, that is a pretty one,
then let the sea take it.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

The Last Stop

Embellishing old memories to mean new things. It's a sort of re-purposing of words... taking a discarded thought and making something pretty out of it.



Sadness is
a swimming
pool, rimmed
in a thin fingernail
of cement.

Sitting, at night,
on its edge,
the water was
Illuminated from
underneath.

Feet naked,
thoughts jagged,
I thought you could
save me.

I stared
into the bottle
of a drink I
didn't want.

I handed it back
to you. I didn't
speak when I left.

I searched for my
shoes as my footprints
evaporated behind
me on the sliver of
concrete, an erasing of
existence.

It felt like
that. Like I
had never been.

I doubt you
turned to watch me
leave, vanishing
footprints, behind the
wooden fence.

There was nothing
in the alley but
my empty hands.



Monday, March 25, 2013

Relic

Thinking about Kentucky, and all the old things out of which our oral history grows.


Salvation still lives
On the forest floor
Bound up in patina,
Sheathing the old
Claw foot tub like
The shiny lining of a
Tide battered shell.
It has rested there
Since before my
Memory, the tub,
A motionless
Ship clogging the
Narrow vein of a
Mountain creek.
Many times have I
Passed it, walking
With my mother.
She takes quick breaths
Amid bewilderment.
My grandpa was
Baptized in that tub.
That was the story-
And I forget how the
Tub made its passage
From a house to
This joint in the
Mountain to become:
A trough for the cattle,
A vessel for rain,
A small rusted dam
Covered over with
The things that burrow
Into the promise of
Life everlasting.
Jesus is found even
In the loneliness of
Places.