Sunday, March 28, 2010
Just Words: The Vulcan Man of Iron
We forewent the elevator and took the stairs like men because we didn't know we'd be climbing over one hundred feet. We emerged from the insulated stairway of cement and cinderblock to find it was as the lady who had come down before us had said: windy.
But oftentimes words betray true feelings. We were one hundred and twenty-four feet in winter's air, where it felt at least twenty-four degrees colder than on the ground. I have never felt a more malevolent force in my life—perhaps the god of the forge and fire directly above us was angered by our audacious curiosity. The wind whipped my back as if I was a recaptured convict and it ricocheted off the cagey railing with the fury of forty prisoners with chattering teeth, rattling their bars in an Arctic penitentiary.
David had gone ahead of me on the octagonal outlook and shouted a couple of things back to me that I couldn't hear, but I deciphered the most important statement: it was less windy around the bend. As we looked directly onto Birmingham's evening skyline, my freezing fingers fumbled with my camera, only to take a few noisy pictures at ISO 2000 and higher. There are still plenty of instances where the human eye is the master of clarity, just as the human mind is the master of deception and doubt.
As I stood momentarily hypnotized by the string of lights across the city, I imagined what would happen if the wind pushed me over the railing and hurled me to my death. Perhaps I would land on my feet like a cat and have my kneecaps explode from their sockets like two kernels bursting from a bag of Pop Secret. Perhaps I would fall flat on my back and have my bones disjointed like a dropped tray of uncooked french fries. Or perhaps I'd fall head-first and explode like a negro's watermelon, creating a picnic of juicy blood and black and translucent seeds of unfulfilled desires and potential for which scavenging crows and frigid ants could feast.
David would have the common sense to take the elevator down to see if I had survived before he notified the authorities. I'd probably do the same, or I might have sent a Facebook message out to those he loves and cares about and then jumped from the god's pedestal in fitting pagan fashion.
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Kiss Me. I'm Irish...
What is an Irishman but a nigger turned inside out? - from "The Proposition" and all the places it's been mentioned beforehand.
Peck me on my right cheek
Somewhere between my fiery freckles
And the patches dark as the Atlantic
Wet my lips with your tongue
Once over my skinny upper lip
Twice over my protruding bottom
Nuzzle my nose like a fellow dog
But be careful because the front juts
Though the sides are broad and bulbous
Run your fingers through my hair
Red like potato skins never peeled
Nappy like cotton just freshly plucked
Whisper bittersweetness in my ear
Tease me with what now means nothing
Tell me that which still means everything
Saturday, March 6, 2010
More Snow
is the jagged icicles dripping by day and freezing by night
looming longer and longer until they either fall and shatter
into a thousand fragments or evaporate like holy disembodied souls
is the aching backs of neighbors who couldn't wait for the snow
plows to arrive exactly one week too late
is the fractured hip of an elderly man who tried to clean
off his car and run an errand
is the remains of a roof that collapsed on a new $600,000 fire truck
that exploded and engulfed the rest of the station in its wake
is the blood stains left as fateful evidence on an icy city sidewalk
is the criminal and the justice
looming longer and longer until they either fall and shatter
into a thousand fragments or evaporate like holy disembodied souls
is the aching backs of neighbors who couldn't wait for the snow
plows to arrive exactly one week too late
is the fractured hip of an elderly man who tried to clean
off his car and run an errand
is the remains of a roof that collapsed on a new $600,000 fire truck
that exploded and engulfed the rest of the station in its wake
is the blood stains left as fateful evidence on an icy city sidewalk
is the criminal and the justice
Monday, February 15, 2010
Taboooo
His dark brown hair slicked back
His bifocals on the smaller side
His red turtleneck tucked into his roundness
His khakis revealed his white socks as he sat
His black shoes steady on the floor as his gaze across the table
His date: perhaps a memory of Valentine's past
His dish: chicken cacciatore with two rounds of garlic bread
His ire: raised by the “Fuck”ing by the boys at another table
His mouth: opened to say “Excuse me, could you use polite language?”
His beverage: beer
Monday, February 8, 2010
You Left
This behind, roommate: an abandoned black knee-high sock
I tried it on.
It almost covered my right knee—you long-legged loon.
I laughed.
I frowned.
I saw the speckles of bleach: white in the middle
And red around the edges.
Like the cut I got that one time: my right knee
Scraped the shiny wood floor, but I kept the ball in-bounds
So you could hit that clutch three to win the game.
The bone was white before the blood.
Or the cut I got that other time: that little white lie you told.
It remained white for a time. Then the blood crept. And crept.
I damn near died from infection.
I peeled off the sock
And I put on my blue GAP hoodie and got ready to leave.
And then I remembered
I left my black GAP hoodie for you.
Many times, we used to wear the hoodies when we went out
Like fraternal twins.
Standalone, the letters G and A were nonsensical
Like a baby’s goo-goo, ga-ga.
But that P was embroidered over our hearts like a promise.
I checked your closet before I left for winter break.
The hanger was there
The hoodie was gone
I tried it on.
It almost covered my right knee—you long-legged loon.
I laughed.
I frowned.
I saw the speckles of bleach: white in the middle
And red around the edges.
Like the cut I got that one time: my right knee
Scraped the shiny wood floor, but I kept the ball in-bounds
So you could hit that clutch three to win the game.
The bone was white before the blood.
Or the cut I got that other time: that little white lie you told.
It remained white for a time. Then the blood crept. And crept.
I damn near died from infection.
I peeled off the sock
And I put on my blue GAP hoodie and got ready to leave.
And then I remembered
I left my black GAP hoodie for you.
Many times, we used to wear the hoodies when we went out
Like fraternal twins.
Standalone, the letters G and A were nonsensical
Like a baby’s goo-goo, ga-ga.
But that P was embroidered over our hearts like a promise.
I checked your closet before I left for winter break.
The hanger was there
The hoodie was gone
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Timelien
Depending on the route I take, I often drive by a church's grounded marquee sign on the way home. Today's message was: PEACE STARTS WITH A SMILE. I chuckled as I thought about the statement hypothetically. By my estimation, by the time I'd stop smiling, I'd be toothless and the present timeline would end in either BD or CD.
In good faith, I'll say BD.
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Dead wood Red wood
Many times I've pondered
Humanity hate love
Life death indifference
Many times I've driven
Past a pristine scene
Seen sun rise rise rise
Stop Start my heart a
Flutter a-shudder to
Think of another dark
Day to walk to stand
Rather than to quicksand
Slowly wholly holy soul solely into root.
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