Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Trick or Treat?



But the dead never stop talking and sometimes the living hear.
            -MJ
¿Quien manda aquí?
            -MR

Sometimes I get dulled down. Sometimes my heart won’t beat. Sometimes I could dry up like a puddle on dry sand: evaporate into nothingness and heat.
Was I ever here?
It all makes for a lack of guile: the ego opens itself up unprotected to check the landscape, to check the wilderness, to check anything—to touch just to feel. Fantasyland consumes reason, reality nags. I want to live in reality or escape it, one of the two, but living as a ghost marks a terrible cost. How real is real?  
I help her get ready, my hand on her back. She smiles. And the vertigo wild, the tender excitement she approaches him with so soon afterI know I lost the chance to make that excitement. And yet it stays buried in me deep that the chance was there. It’s a mirage, blurry and elusive, flashing across the desert. Is it better to die staggering towards the flash above the dunes? Or standing still? 

Or is the absurdity of grand delusion what kills me?  

And the midnight ravers come telling me, motherfucker you thought you was special?

You know, I can’t even put it into poetry; all I have is weakness and pain. All I have is hunger for someone whose body matches the eternal potential I see sometimes in words. All I have is starvation. At the end of it all, the words are meaningless, of an amateur, have no potential at all. At the end of it all, I can’t think.
Lately my words are ugly.

Lately I’m ugly too: withered by the swirl of sand choking everything under a yellow sky.

Was I ever here?

Maldita sea.


Wild Hopes and Dreams

Las ciudades como los sueños…

A belief in things not seen.

Can't concentrate up in here. cause of her. how she looked at me and asked me about las mujeres in Boston, how she mentioned her breakup abruptly, nervously, how she smiled when i gave her the cd, how she was excited to see me again before i left...

I want to talk to her as much as if I were a damn crackhead trying to get high. Fuck man, it hits me deep. and probably she feels none of it, but obviously she feels it a little bit or else she wouldn't try so hard to get me to visit, she wouldn't be talking about travelling with me, she wouldn't be having beers with me, all this with me, the dude who wrote her crazy love letters and started showing up to the coffeshop by her house like I had a fucking job there ... fuck man, i need to chill, right? But why do I get the feeling I need to not chill too, to act? ay que sé yo, esas chicas son fulaaaaa coño.

Heritage

Now there's a look in your eyes
Like black holes in the sky...   

            writing to keep words moving.

            composition conundrum.

            the energy of this place is fatal. the trickle of a cattletank-garden oasis, pecan-shells crunch and I'm wondering what it means to write raw. All the bullshit run-up, all of the energy-in-expend whirl. Nonesense becomes poetry, revised and filed down until it's sharp.
            I'm rooted here, even though I haven't lived here. The walls call out to me, crisp pages of books and wrought iron windows with the handle painted green, a cleanness I admire, fresh fruits and sizzling garlic. A sophistication that is my sensibility because it birthed me. And a rejection too of what feels failed.
            It's here that I want something more than ever, because it's here that I find myself trapped in the patterns that foreshadowed my own innovations and my own dreary trudge to nowhere. The potential scrawled in the dirt swirls up, but the sky is empty here.
            Meditate to the pomegranate trees and soothe sayings behind the mud-bricks; pray to the saints. There are moves to be made. The tangles of confused ambition need clearing, so the light can shine through. 

I want nothing because the future is big.



             

Vampiros

Hace calor en la Habana mi hermana...

            I live two blocks from the ocean, and people sell bananas outside my door. The sun is hot.        

            Havana is a distorted city, where everything is too cheap or too expensive. If you let them, prices gravitate towards ones paid by rich foreigners—pale people with big cameras and strange ideas, wearing shorts and Che Guevara hats as they come in daily from cruise ships or from Europe. They look in Cuba for heaven and hell. A woman and her friend sit near me as I use the internet at a fancy hotel. She's from Michigan, retired in Miami. "I'm so glad I found a piece of revolutionary art," she explains, glancing at CNN on the flat screen TV.
            Other prices settle towards the demands of almost-middle-class and almost-extremely-poor Cubans, all of whose disposable incomes are low, who hang bags down from fourth floor balconies to pull up powdered milk, who yell out of windows to other windows, who talk to everyone and resolve everything. They keep heaven and hell across the sea. Some respect the saints.
            I ask MS what she wants to do with her life. "I want to do everything I can't do," she says. She lives in a two-bedroom apartment with 7 other people. The ceilings are high, and they've built extra rooms, like tree-houses, halfway up the walls. Yemaya, the black virgin from Regla, looks on from a shelf.
            There are days when I go to the slums. A dirt path down from a bridge leads to a neighborhood, a well-designed, cement house with blue tiles, sinks into a wide, sweltering expanse of wood and metal shacks, hundreds, connected by alleys and bootleg electricity, bootleg constructions that get better with sweat, barrels of improvised water, people from the provinces, no libretas, no dollars, no power, but not kicked-out, yet. Men make charcoal by the river. They tell me they sell it in the busy part of town.
         There are nights when I jump into one of the thousand ancient, bulky, fifty-cent maquina-cars, where you aren't supposed to slam the doors, and the driver blasts romantic bachata from the stereo and sings obnoxiously, riding towards Capitolio, towards the breathing, colonial ally-streets of Jesús María, the neighborhood that people tell me to look out for, where the watching people in reconfigured maze-buildings, tell T I'm coming before I get there.
            T's mom cooks me yuca and garlic chicken, and tells me about the saints, Yemaya and Ellegua, Ochun. A is dancing crazily in the street outside. T and I wander out of the barrio, flag another car to meet the piquete--C, or O, or I--out to the wide, quiet avenues of Vedado, a hidden discoteca, or down Galeanos, past angry transvestites, people fighting, past sheep-looking tourists with shiny phones and shiny clothes, us out for drinks and music, leaning on someone's soon-to-fall balcony, tapping out beats and dancing, sweating, in and out of love, and, later, to the malecón waterfront with a big yellow moon over the soft, disintegrating city skyline.
            It's a cartoon skyline, twisting into the jet-black ocean, and a cartoon moon, shining onto a far away ship. Vampiros, I'm thinking, are in la Habana. And I've got a 5-cent bag of popcorn, some cardboard-box rum, and someone with me singing out of tune to a ringtone beat. And que bola mi socio? And coñooooo acere. And que va, que va.

            People talk about saints, and the saints are here. They play tricks and distort the world, opening paths. And other people tell the more savvy tourists that it's not heaven and it's not hell either. Now that I have almost 30 years of life I'm starting to suspect that heaven and hell can be almost anywhere. And I'm starting to suspect, too, that this blurry, distorted, dreamworld city is actually a comic book version of heaven and hell both, tangled up in a knot. More than that, it's a path that's open.