Friday, June 29, 2007

volant

Summer here was always sticky sweet. Like morning dew on flowers, we sat on the rotting wood porch sipping tea. Us sitting here reminded me of a sickly, small town cinema shot. I had just come back yesterday, flying in through Dayton before I rented a car and drove down to Madison. It was different being here, away from the glimmer of streetlights and advertisements, but I needed to be here. I heard the wicker chair creak as Tara turned to ask me, “You think he’d like the stars tonight?”

The first time I remember him flying, we were both twelve. His dad, or what we call a pathetic excuse for a man, left his mother earlier that year for a younger woman in a county over. He knew Tim’s mom was pregnant, but what did he care. A couple months later, Tim’s mom lost the baby. Course this was after months of complete disregard for Tim. He could have not existed for all she cared. So when Tim jumped off the roof of the schoolhouse, we knew he was angry. Not so much that he wanted to kill himself, but so he could feel something other than his hate. I couldn’t blame him, it was under the most unfortunate circumstances.

Tara propped her feet up on the porch fence. I watched the splintering paint crumpled under the weight of her heel as she reclined. “I think he would. He’d be right here telling us how he’d rope us the moon.”

“Yeah, he always dreamt in stars didn’t he?” I admired how Tara could keep her composure. She had after all taken care of Tim after his mom went crazy. She was just too good of a person to let him waste away.

Tara was a wonderful family friend of my parents. She never married, but then again, she never wanted to. I remember when I had just entered high school and she took me out shopping to buy some new dresses. It took some convincing, but my parents agreed. She used to baby-sit me in middle school, so she had a way with them. My parents are actually very supportive. They decided to leave Madison after I left for college. They wanted to be closer to me and knew that I would eventually find some big city, so we had no reason to come here anymore. But here I was, sitting on Tara’s porch, reminiscing because we had nothing better to do.

When Tim was 17, he decided, since he was going to be his own man pretty soon now, he’d be an astronaut. Actually, he had decided that a long time ago, but now he was going to learn to fly a plane. He already registered and was driving to Dayton taking lessons. It had cost him six months worth of wages, but it was worth it. He told me when you were in space, it felt like being in the lake, floating. I laughed at him saying, I’d rather be in the lake because at least I knew I could come back home quickly.

I never thought Tim was crazy, just strangely ambitious. We all have dreams. I still thought that the second time he tried to fly off a roof. He had these ridiculous wings made of wire hangers and plastic tarp. We all thought he was messing around, but when he looked at the sky and the sun haloed his head, I just knew. That boy is going to fly.


Sometimes, when I'm alone in the city, I look at the rooftops of old cathedrals and giant skyscrapers, and imagine what it would be like to be that high. What would the wind feel like up there? Stronger, breezier? What would the world look like at my feet? Insignificant? What would Tim think of these faded gray, brick church with Gothic angels on pedestals.

I remember that last night in Madison, I was leaving for college. The summer air was sticky sweet like tonight. Tim had finished his pilot lessons by now. I remember him promising me that he’d take me out on a flight when I came back from school. By then his arm would be healed. Tim wasn’t going anywhere because his grades were pitiful, and what little I could help him with, he managed only to get a C. I told him that he could take classes at the community college, but he told me not in living hell. Apparently, astronauts don’t learn to fly in college.

We spent that last night sitting on Tara’s porch. He told me that one day, when he made something of himself, he’d come find me, in his own private jet, and propose with the biggest diamond he can find. I told him, we’ll see.


Tomorrow will be the last day I see Tim. I'm told that they made him up well enough that you can't tell he has any broken bones. This last time he jumped, I'd like to think he knew what he was doing, even if gravity decided otherwise. But as he is lowered into his earthy grave, I know six feet can’t keep him from the sky.

I wish I had come back to Madison, to Tim. Then I would tell him there's so much more out there than hiding behind clouds. That it's okay to cry, to fear, to be angry. I just let it pass because I it was easier being distant.

Tara smiles and whispers, "Aww, honey, he knows. You were good for him. He knows." I muster up half a smile and lean into her shoulder. At least I know now in heaven, he will truly be flying.

...

I know I haven't been too good here, even though I have been reading my daily dictionary words. It's just been a tough adjusting to a crappy roommate (to be fair, it's applicable to me too), finding time after work and getting my creative soul (or lack there of) to come out behind this confusion.

But I have decided, I'm going to do thoughts for a word on a weekly basis instead. This way I'll be able to keep up, have more words to choose from and stimulate my brain, and then I can really develop the "stories".

Friday, June 15, 2007

Cassandra

Those who love the smell of flowers


When we were younger you thought I was perfect. You thought it the first time when you decided your afternoon was worth wasting just to wait for me. Outside of an old building, you sat in hopes to see me again. This was when we'd innocently approach each smile because we were just learning about love. You, how love feels when someone loved only you. Me, how love feels even with a second-rate heart. We walked to your car and all I could see was rich purple irises and emotion, nevermind the supermarket bar code. You didn't tell me then, but I knew. I could tell it in your eyes.

That was when we fell in love. When nothing else mattered because we couldn't understand otherwise.

You told me I was perfect while laying in bed contemplating my questions, secretly contemplating your future. I could feel the sheets smooth my skin as I rubbed them between my toes. Layer upon layer soothing me into sleep. You laughed at my childhood habit because you loved my quirks. You said I was perfect, gangly tall, puffy belly, button nose and all. You said that you didn't think you were good enough. I would smile and tell you you're perfect. And we agreed.

You surprised me with irises on my favorite holiday--the one that singles despise. I took photographs to remember the smell of the flowers.

Later, when you took me out, because I have fancy dreams of dresses, you showed me I was perfect, even though it was all my idea. You let me know how beautiful I always was, and how wonderful things were over dinner, even in dress shoes and ironed shirts. We pretended to be Four Seasons rich. This was when you would drive 180 miles to see me. I was worth the hours alone. My excitement was enough for the both of us.

When I traveled two lifetimes to see you in the city of youth, you reminded me that I was still perfect. You didn't tell me as I ran to you from the plane, as we waited out the taxi ride, as we opened the door. Despite my objections and disposition, you took work time and surprised me with more flowers.

There were numerous moments when you told me again how perfect I was, how lucky you were. I must have believed you because I started thinking ahead. You started taking care of things for me. The last time you bought me flowers, they arrived all ruined (perhaps an omen), and you helped me have them replaced. I knew you wanted them perfect but only because I expected it.

We will never know the moment where my imperfections broke your rose-colored glasses. Maybe it was when you stopped kissing me goodbye, or maybe it was when I ran away downstairs with the cooking spices, or maybe it was even when you said you'd buy me a necklace on your trip but you didn't. I could only hide for so long in your pink shade. I could only hide for so long how uncertain I was, without your affirmation. I wanted to be everything you thought I was, but I couldn't. I was unhappy with myself, but you could never help me. I covered myself in smiles. You still can't understand.

This time I bought my own flowers, like the first time when you and I became us, supermarket irises, beautiful in their own right. I didn't expect you to do these kind of things anymore. I didn't want to ask either. I had forgotten what flowers from you, from your heart, smelled like. I bought them to liven up the apartment for our impending graduation. These were the only flowers I received.

You were never supposed to disappear, but we started fading into the walls. And I became alone again, unwilling to share that hurt. Maybe I should have not yelled from a friend's house. Maybe I should not have cried in the bowling alley. Maybe I should have waited to really know. Maybe I should have decided before. But I wanted to pretend just for a little longer, that I could still be perfect.

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

bevy

oily marks appear on walls where pleasure moments hung before the takeover, the sweeping insensitivity of this still life


"Look at you, you're beaming," she said when I saw her since the semester ended. This was when I still dreamed in movies and pleasure moments. I'd imagine my arrival greeted with a bevy of flowers and 2 1/2 week-old touch. Meticulous plans to blend our transition into fluid. I kept pretending.

Her smile was so comforting, when ignorance was easy. She congratulated me asking, "When are you leaving?"

If she saw me now, just a few days later, she'd wonder what happened to that girl. Where did I lose my smile? Through the empty mob I pushed through to the walkway and hailed a cab. She would never know the four bags worth of weight. She would never see the power of being crushed.

Sunday, June 3, 2007

syllepsis

We decided to have a picnic with tea, jam and unresolved resentment. Excuses were common enough, like the ants crawling nearby the quilted blanket. He curled his middle fingers in anticipation to flick an unsuspecting guest, but there were too many. As he rid of one ant, another hopeful successor would arrive.

We should have moved but we couldn't. We were stuck in this in between, the other unwilling to give.

Friday, June 1, 2007

concomitant

My mother-in-law was folding the baby blankets by pushing the air out of the soft fleece and stuffing them into the box for Goodwill. I watched her carefully tuck away little socks she had knitted, little socks she wished she could darn. My wife remained calm and maintained perfect composure as she sipped a glass of wine, something she had sworn off over a month ago. This was the subsequent mourning of loss.

I wanted to yell and break this stupid silence. Throw clothes everywhere and shake my wife. Cry woman, cry damnit.

I remember when the blood ran out, after my wife had fallen to the floor in pain. Her hands were clutching her stomach. I held her head in my hands, stroking her hair as we waited for the ambulance to come. I remember how wet my hands were with her tears. So much pain. Too much pain.

She's looks wearily at me through the glass. It's okay, I promise. Just cry.

ne plus ultra

They wouldn't understand it, this masterpiece he created. Overpoweringly perfect, so much so that no critic would see what it represented. He crushed the clay with his right hand. They wouldn't understand.