Category Archives: poems

Night-blooming datura

It’s the time of year when the night-blooming datura starts flow­er­ing again.
On the cor­ners of West Selden and Mor­ton,
right next and across from to Apollo’s Fine Fur­ni­ture,
where you can “Rent-2-own, down-pay or buy.“
The smell of Pit Stop B-B-Q’s char­coal per­fumes the air,
that and motor oil and ozone from the auto­mo­bile shop
whose bay doors stand open, even at eleven at night.

You’ve never been able to drive in the right lane,
not just past the night-blooming datura– you’ve got to switch to the left,
because the col­lards at Pit Stop– they are amaz­ing.
(And don’t get me started on their chopped beef.)
The double-parked cars in the right lane,
the ones that don’t use their haz­ards?
They’re there for good rea­son, all down the block.

When I first started dri­ving through this part of town,
the weedy patch was just one or two flow­ers,
flopped-over white tubu­lar blooms,
deep green palmate leaves fad­ing into the black of the night, the dark of the dirt.
(I don’t think the peo­ple who planted it could afford the grass seed for the cor­ner patch, too.)
The cops were always out, deal­ing with some shoot­ing,
a staged crash, a domes­tic or some­thing, while cur­tains twitched shut and store­fronts stared empty.

Now, though, there are new awnings, beauty par­lors and restau­rants, phone ven­dors and “all ser­vice” places.
Peo­ple sit out on their stoops.
And while you still can’t drive in the right lane–
(the mac and cheese is as good as the col­lards, and did I men­tion the chicken?)
The night-blooming datura has spread from those first three weedy flow­ers
on one cor­ner to two– thick, vibrant patches, knee high and wide, spread­ing over the bounds.
Someone’s planted more night-blooming flow­ers in orangey col­ors, and the night isn’t just black and white anymore.

Take things deliberately

I should be rest­ing, I know, now while they don’t know what’s mak­ing me woozy and weak
but I need to do some­thing when I’m not used to lying here idle,
and I’ve got friends com­ing soon.  I’m look­ing for­ward to see­ing them, ever so much.

Cleaning’s not an urge I get often, so when the urge comes, I’ll take it.
Broom, plas­tic bag, recy­cle bin, check.  Stor­age bins, maybe,
and at least I can put stuff into piles so I’ve got some idea.  I can make lists.  I like lists.

I can’t for­get a fan, a ban­dana, an open win­dow,
a tall glass of water.  It is mid-July and even with the rain of this morn­ing, it’s awfully humid.
Still, it’s more than time that I got on top of things.

The finan­cial papers– so long unlooked-at for that wave of panic at all things legal-financial
are all scat­tered across bags and boxes. At least I can put them into one box,
con­dense them into one place Pan­dora, and Hope that I can deal with it soon.

And the old clothes from the old job I’ll never go back to, the ones that need clean­ing–
the ones I’ll do what with?  Sell?  Give away?  I’m not sure I can afford the dry-cleaner’s bill for them all.
At least they can go into bags to shove into the closet until the company’s gone.

The win­ter clothes I’m going to keep can go into con­tain­ers and down into the base­ment, Christ­mas orna­ments too.
The dust and dirt can be swept and tossed if I’m care­ful about lean­ing over– take things delib­er­ately.
The books can be sorted into keep and not-keep.  Sell or donate– that I can decide a lit­tle bit later.

The party clothes from last summer’s wed­dings– the ones I barely made my way through,
so mis­er­able as I was, heav­ier in body and soul as I pasted a smile on and wished them the best–
I’ll send those to the cleaner’s, they won’t fit any more, meta– or physically.

I’ve changed, for bet­ter or worse, and at least I’m aware of that fact.
This last year’s at least brought self-consciousness to me,
even if hap­pi­ness is still some­thing I’m chasing.

Clar­ity– or grop­ing towards it, I guess comes first in the effort.
And for some­thing to be clear, you do have to move the clut­ter off of the sur­face,
wipe off the grime, sweep off the mouse-scamper of I-am-afraid-and-don’t-make-me-face-it.

My jew­elry box is also a mess– lots of pins I won’t wear again on suits I won’t use,
lots of pieces my mother gave me that I never did like and never did wear– except when she was here,
some­times, and not even then, because it wasn’t my taste and she never did learn.

A small part of me wants to throw all of it out, since right now I’m angry,
but there are pieces I do like and which some­times I wear.  Just because I need a break
doesn’t mean I have to toss every gift she ever gave.  Some were quite valu­able– I do know that much.

And that red suit, and maybe the bright cobalt blue.  I could have them tai­lored to fit my new, smaller frame.
Most of them should prob­a­bly go.  I could use the space and could get rid of some emo­tional bag­gage.
But I always sus­pected a spic-and-span house.  Why should I toss all of my past, when not all of it’s painful?

And if some of it stays in a box for just a bit longer– well–
I’m still going to pat myself on the back for the con­den­sa­tion of things, and the fact that I even looked at
it to begin with and I know that it’s there.  I’ll delib­er­ate upon it some more as I make room for my friends.

Something/ that more or less/ kills me/ with delight

Last week, I was email­ing with a friend– she was hav­ing a hard time, and I sent her this poem.  I was minded of it again this morn­ing, on my drive back from the Trader Joe’s, as I was pick­ing up a house­warm­ing gift for our hosts for a week­end away.

Mary Oliver’s “Mind­ful”, from Why I Wake Early-

Every day
I see or hear
some­thing
that more or less

kills me
with delight,
that leaves me
like a needle

in the haystack
of light
It was what I was born for–
to look, to listen,

to lose myself
inside this soft world–
to instruct myself
over and over

in joy
and accla­ma­tion.
Nor am I talk­ing
about the exceptional,

the fear­ful, the dread­ful,
the very extrav­a­gant–
but of the ordi­nary,
the com­mon, the very drab,

the daily pre­sen­ta­tions.
Oh, good scholar,
I say to myself,
how can you help

but grow wise
with such teach­ings
as these–
the untrim­ma­ble light

of the world,
the ocean’s shine,
the prayers that are made
out of grass?

There was a motor scooter behind me in traf­fic, rid­den by a man in a dark plaid shirt and khakis.  He had on a hel­met, wore loafer-like shoes.  They were Clarks or Mer­rells or some­thing sen­si­ble– prac­ti­cal– com­fort­able.  He was headed toward Boston’s med­ical area, and could have been any­thing, any­one.  A doc­tor, an admin, the per­son who cures can­cer or dia­betes or just keeps your med­ical records in order.  As the lights cycled and changed, he came up on my right, then pulled to the left and in front of me.

On the back of his hel­met he bore a prayer made out of grass, the thing that killed me with delight. He’d dec­o­rated his sen­si­ble, full-headed hel­met, com­plete with a visor, with the fol­low­ing sticker:

Mending Wall(s)

Mr. Frost relates that “Some­thing there is that doesn’t love a wall” and the con­trary opin­ion, “Good fences make good neigh­bors,” in his poem Mend­ing Wall– it seems to be frost heaves and win­ter and grav­ity, the upheavals of win­ter, weather and cows.  He talks not of insid­i­ous creep­ers like ivy or bit­ter­sweet vine that grows thick and wild in the wood and with its gor­geous color and tap­roots digs into stone and cement and tears things apart, instead talks about things seen such as Hunters and unseen like Elves that his more prac­ti­cal neigh­bor is unlikely to humor.

The poem, on its face, is about their once-a-year meet­ing and mend­ing of stones that have fallen over the win­ter from sources known and unknown, how they nearly need magic and have to work hard and closely together to get it all bal­anced between them again.  Frost’s char­ac­ter won­ders at the old-fashioned stolid­ness of his neighbor–

There where it is we do not need the wall:
He is all pine and I am apple orchard.
My apple trees will never get across
And eat the cones under his pines, I tell him.
He only says, ‘Good fences make good neighbors’.

and then

Before I built a wall I’d ask to know
What I was walling in or walling out,
And to whom I was like to give offence.
Some­thing there is that doesn’t love a wall,
That wants it down.’

before his final reflection:

He moves in dark­ness as it seems to me~
Not of woods only and the shade of trees.
He will not go behind his father’s say­ing,
And he likes hav­ing thought of it so well
He says again, “Good fences make good neighbors.”

I used to agree with Frost’s mis­chief, because wouldn’t you want to be open to peo­ple, as open as pos­si­ble? Now I think more like the neigh­bor– ironic in a woman who keeps a blog and bares large parts of her life open to stranger as the only real means she has of real self-reflection.  And yet.   There are things I don’t share, and bound­aries I am try­ing to repair.

I’ve been think­ing about energy con­ser­va­tion and bound­aries and walls of the per­sonal type, namely those of time spent with fam­ily and friends.  How much is enough?  How much becomes too much?  I have always been a per­son who lives too much in my head, and clearly too much intro­spec­tion is quite bad for me, but at the same time, I have a ten­dency to be socially anx­ious and awk­ward (when I’m not being hypo­manic and there­fore incred­i­bly funny and witty and charm­ing and ON, which in itself is a bit of an iden­tity cri­sis, because I know it’s not my default state, so hey, yeah, no, I’m not really that funny all of the time.)  I’ve been feel­ing much bet­ter from my most recent crash and resur­gence, but work­ing retail’s exhaust­ing and I’m often sub­ver­bal when I come home at the end of the day and I don’t always have two days off in a row.  It leaves me one day to myself, often taken up with errands and doctor’s appoint­ments.  Spend it with friends?  Or take that time to myself?

And if I spend it with friends?  I feel guilty, only see­ing them for two or three hours, but still– I get tired.  Over­stim­u­lated, exhausted and all-of-a-sudden-bratty-short-tempered even when I’m with just one per­son, because it’s a lot of focus to pay all that atten­tion to some­one else still at this time– and the fact is, I’m still not quite myself.  I’m still rebuild­ing all my social mus­cles.  It’s good to get out, to see peo­ple, to get re-acquainted, to re-make con­nec­tions, to decide even whether to keep them, because peo­ple do change and good­ness knows that I am chang­ing each day, but still– I am try­ing to be care­ful, to bal­ance those stones on the wall so they don’t fall imme­di­ately over.

So yes– there is some­thing in me that doesn’t love a wall, because part of me would love to have all the energy in the world to spend all day with you and more, to laugh and hang out and chat and do what­ever you want– but part of me still needs to wall myself in, wall out all your well-meaning ques­tions and needs, because, well– I’m still tired and frag­ile and I am not yet ready for a whole day of walk­ing the prop­erty lines, talk­ing of hunters and elves and agree­ing with you that yes, there is noth­ing there to take offence at, and if even you did have cows, they could roam at will.

Every­day truth, though, is never so sim­ple, and that bit­ter­sweet vine is a pain to pull out if your wall’s not care­fully tended– even if it is pretty to con­tem­plate as you sit all alone in your hut in the fall, watch­ing it blos­som and grow.  Leav­ing it there all on its own ’til the spring will only bring trouble.

Unre­lated and yet not:  This arti­cle in yesterday’s NYT about cen­sor­ing your own life online.


Extra time on the meter

Some­times it’s just a lit­tle extra time on the meter,
that first bulb of spring show­ing yel­low or pink,
that one per­son who says, “that’s a lovely neck­lace on you.”

It makes a dif­fer­ence, that moment,
between tears and laugh­ter,
giv­ing up and car­ry­ing on.

Karma, grace, bless­ing,
call it
what­ever you like.

I know some­times I’ll for­get,
and flow­ers don’t bloom on demand,
but I can try keep com­pli­ments and quar­ters ready to go.

(Thank you to Mrs. W., who com­pli­mented me today on my touch-up of grey and com­pli­mented my weight-loss, all unknow­ing, and said that I “didn’t need to lose any more, I was a lovely girl as I was.”)