12.26.2011

Stained Thoughts



If I’m awake, then my mind is dancing around you.
In circles, in squares, in ellipses. A waltz.
If I am dreaming, then I’m already with you.
So I’m stuck with you, our twin eyes scouting
separate planes,
but my thoughts stained with you
like the white table cloth with cranberry juice.

Guy Walks Into a Bar

Guy walks into a bar on Christmas Eve. No punch line awaits him, no drum badum-bum to the joke that is his life. Who goes to bars on Christmas Eve? Junkies and whores, the sick in the head, black in the lungs, dead in the liver. They've missed their last couple of AA meetings, the crazies in this bunch. They've missed the past multiple years of church services, the candle light of cathedrals never characterizing their Christmases. This is not a jovial bunch, not a "Merry Christmas" is heard in the place, unless the word "fucking" is used preceding the greeting or wrapped within it. There is no cheer to be found in this particular bar, this dive bar on this back street in this shitty part of this dark and quiet city on this holiest of nights, amen.

No, there isn't a smile to be found here.

Guy walks into a bar on Christmas Eve, musing about the celebration that is upon the world. So some baby was born in a barn. So he was supposed to save the world. So where is he now? thought our guy.

He ordered a shot of Captain and felt his spirit warm with its hot spice and tingle. Jesus, he thought. How does Jesus celebrate Christmas?

Guy walks into a bar on Christmas Eve, all right, and his whole life is in fucking shambles. His girlfriend of three years left him last week, emptying drawers of their contents and then filling them with bitter curses and tainted memories as she left. She broke all his liquor bottles open, pouring their contents down the drain, muttering and crying, the shattered glass scattering, running to escape her overwhelming sadness, her waterfall of hot tears. She broke all his liquor bottles like she wanted to break his bones, like he had broken her heart every day for nine months now. He was a broken man, a dead man walking with unseeing eyes and a careless, glib tongue, and an affinity for belligerence (but not every night, he justified). Ever since he had lost his job, ever since his girlfriend had miscarried, oh the world had ripped at the seams and the bottle had been his only comfort. It had all happened in one unlucky thirteen day period, and yes, ever since then, our guy at the bar on Christmas Eve had been a different man.

Guy walks into a bar on Christmas Eve, broken beneath his ribcage but not a crack on the surface, wondering, Didn't Jesus hang out with fuck ups like me?

Our guy was four shots deep and barely getting started at 8 pm on the Eve of the Blessed Birthday of our Lord. Somewhere across town, there was a family having dinner together, rosy faced from the egg nog, hearts full of good will, an entirely different kind of drunk.

The neon sign hanging over the bar's cavernous mouth flickered a little, flashing iridescent red on the pure, fresh snow.  

Guy walks into a bar on Christmas Eve, and this guy was once only a boy. He had a mother and a father, as so many of us do, and a heart full of dreams and deep desires. When he was five, he wanted to be a fire fighter. When he was eight, he wanted to be an astronaut. When he was eleven, he wanted to be a rock star.

Children do not understand the terms "unemployed" or "alcoholic," and none dream of becoming such.

But our guy had become the worst. No session on a mall Santa's lap, no prayer to the Christ, no Christmas dreaming, could have saved him from this fate. Jesus himself could not (or was it simply would not?) lift him from the bar stool and restore his wondrous, sober innocence.

Our guy was six shots deep and feeling a buzz in his fingertips at 8.42 pm on the Eve of the Day he once had Dreams of. Somewhere across town, a group of children were opening presents, flabbergasted by Santa's generosity, satisfied parents and grandparents looking on, dreaming of the upstanding adults these children would become.

The bar's neon sign drenched the snow in warmth. One letter on the far right flickered madly and then burned out.

Fast forward to 11.25 pm on the Eve of the Day that our guy now Damned and Dreaded. He could no longer remember how many shots deep he was. He stared at the wall of liquor bottles before him, the bartender, his hands. He marveled at his own weary existence in this funny, cruel world. He thought (or prayed), Jesus, where are you? Can you do me a favor and help me out of this mess? 

On the other side of the world, a mother screamed, murderously distraught, holding in her arms the now-soulless body of her starved child.

Even on Christmas Eve, the death toll goes on.

The red neon drenched the white pavement in a bloody low light. Flicker, flicker, and then the sign went black.

Fast forward to 1.14 am on the cold, dark morning of the Mass of Christ. Guy's body in bed, shallow breathing, stomach lurching, heart struggling. Vomit aspiration on Christmas is not a romantic way to give up your spirit, but our guy wasn't a romantic. He was a realist. And realists die faster.

Guy walks into a bar in the middle of a Christmas night. He is a wraith, a mist, a spirit, and he has stepped into the Other Side. Dead on Christmas. Too much to drink. He marvels at his still-weary existence in purgatory or hell or wherever he is (he can't figure it out). He sidles up to the bar and sits down next to a man, bearded and robed, dark in complexion, sympathetic in the eyes. A laugh plays at his lips like he knows the punch line to the joke, and he says to our guy, "Will you buy me a drink, buddy? It's my birthday."

12.17.2011

A Story Full of Errors

Big favors and small talk
Loud car rides and one near-sleepless night
The room was full beyond our bodies' borders
I really wasn't expecting that

One dance in the beginning
One bottle of wine in the end
All I know is, I don't want an ending
Things remind me of you, but I don't need reminders

If ever there was a story full of errors, it's this one
Tripped up, sprawled out, face planted in what I didn't know you were
Taken aback by what I didn't think you could be
Smack dab in the middle of what could be a tragedy

So I waited too long
So I didn't see the train coming
So I forgot to expect that the best things are unexpected
So, what now?

So I'll admit I'm already crying
Even though we haven't laid the miles down
Between your place and mine
Real estate is all about location, location

So I'll admit that I give no shits
So I'll admit that I'd give up convenience
And good sense, and my better judgement
So I'll admit I'd choose you over anything now

No, really, you can laugh
You don't take anything seriously
And I wouldn't expect you to feel this gravity
But it's pulling me towards you

No matter where you are,
That's what matters now
And it sounds crazy, and my sorrys wouldn't mean shit
But I'm sorry for how much I'm not sorry
For how much I want you

Am I too late?

9.26.2011

Read Me

Finding words was easy
We've been on the same page since moment one
We met in the center of the book
To avoid you was impossible
To feel a disconnect was impossible
To ignore you was impossible

We were made to sit on that bench that day

You stuck out like a dog eared page
On the warm first of September,
the light first of September
In the solitude of my summer,
the margins of my misery
Somehow you started a new chapter

You were unexpected

How long is the duration of this conversation?
It's been three weeks that have stretched like three years

You read me like a book
Speak my thoughts like script and poetry
Pick the important parts first
And my endless library feels finite with you inside

Hold carefully the spine of me
I'll reverently underline
The parts of you I want to remember
Until all of you is chosen
All of you is important

I feel I know you
Better than I do
There lies the danger

Throw caution to the wind as I come unbound
I won't keep secrets
I can't be anything but open for you
This open book to read

My hand over your hand
over a pen pressed to a blank page
We're in this together, somehow
Let's write this one together now

8.18.2011

Bring Me

Bring me your judgements,
and I will harshly judge them.
Bring me your hatred,
and I will seamlessly match it.
Bring me flint and a knife,
I'll set fire to you.

Bring me your criticism,
and I will play the rebel.
Bring me your weakness,
and I will play Jezebel.
Bring me your script,
I'll write my name into it.

I can fake.
I can act.
I can play make believe.
I can protect.
I can guard.
I can retreat.

Bring me your heart,
I'll reciprocate.

Bring me you,
and I'll bring me too.

8.03.2011

We're All Mad Here...

I.
                I followed the White Rabbit into a land of wonder…what is love if not a dream or an illusion? It is a world all its own, it’s a world I no longer know. I fell into it, certainly, but you can’t fall out of what you fell into. It was a long climb up, and though I wish to go back, there’s a wall behind me and a vast Wasteland before me. Wonderland never existed? Surely love cannot end that quickly…surely the rabbit hole can be found and tumbled down again.
                I followed the White Rabbit into a borrowed story book and stumbled away worse for the wear. Why did he run from me? What color was his waistcoat? What time did his watch read? I have forgotten the details of him, but I remember when I remembered, and I want nothing more than to remember again.


II.
                When the tea cup was half empty, in those days I would move down the table to a full cup again. Dissatisfaction suited me, even rewarded me, and when the love seemed to be running out, it was immediately replaced by more. “I like what I get” was quite exactly the same as “I get what I like”. I meant what I said at that table of riddles, and I said what I meant, and those were the same, and we were the same, and we didn’t need anything but to be the same.
                This is how I remember love being, but I have forgotten what it feels like, and my cup is empty.


III.
                It was no business of ours, yet we readily played croquet with the Queen of Hearts, and suffered for it later. Our smiles were disgustingly huge, and how were we to know that to trust the Heart was to lose our heads?
                I giddily went to my execution grounds, you know, thinking nothing of sacrificing logic to stay in love.
                Madly in love, yes, and crazy for love, we described ourselves as such so often, but did I realize that when I checked into that game, I relinquished my sanity? The game is over, the Queen chased me away, but my sanity has not yet returned. The cost of being in love, you know, is never knowing the real truth again.


IV.
                I bring before the court my evidence. I didn’t steal the tarts, your majesties. I didn’t steal his heart, your majesties. He gave it to me. But I lost it.
                “A lifetime of servitude to replace this heart,” the judge said, and his gavel came down three times on the stand.
                Servitude?
                Yes, of course.
                Servitude to madness…


V.
                We’re all mad here, you know.
                Without madness, there is no love.
                It’s maddening to know that your happiest madness is an unreachable spot on the timeline called “The Past.” It’s as if being a part of someone and having them be a part of you is merely a dream you’ve woken from, or a fairytale you once heard. You can hold your ground and say, It was real! We were just in love last week! But last week turns to last month and last month to last year, and then you begin to question your own memory…Did I really love him? Did he really love me? Did I ever know him? Does he even exist?
                We’re all mad here.
                I never stopped being mad for Wonderland. I never stopped being mad for that love. But it is too far behind me now. I can only make out its colors. The details of it disappear into the other details of it, its edges blurring slowly into the sky.


VI.
                Here I am, walking through fields of flowers. I see beauty where I once knew that it would speak to me. It just isn’t the same thing.
                In this place, the daisies look at me with withering exhaustion, uncaring and cold, as if to say, What do you expect us to say?


VII.
                I settle for memories when I have the heart to settle, and I recall that Tweedledum and Tweedledee told us cautionary tales. I remember that our curiosity was expected in those days, yet they told us to ward it away. Curiosity, they said, will devour you. They warned us of age, too, but we never feared it.
                Am I to lie to myself and say we never made a mistake? I never made so many mistakes as I did with you. I never hurt someone so many times. It wasn’t all beauty. It wasn’t all good. But it was Wonderful.
                I go back to Tweedledum and Tweedledee, now they click their tongues at my stubborn inquisitiveness. Suddenly I am wondering but never knowing, asking questions without real answers. Will I ever love again; will I ever know him again? The answer is a resounding NO, but I cover my ears to it and wish for new answers to the same old questions.


VIII.
                I don’t know the truth about anything anymore, you know.
                I can’t get back to Wonderland.
                I miss it.
                I miss you.
                I love what I remember you to be.
                I hate your shadow, still cast over my habits and words and thoughts.
                I don’t know what is real.
                I see only myself through the looking glass now, and I am terrified.