Friday, February 11

{ Our Lady }


Today New York has dressed herself
In snowy chiffon
And icy diamonds fit
For balconies and lamposts,
For archways and rooftops,
Fit for the delicate web of tears frozen on
My windowpanes.

And today
The muck and grim
The debris from the years modernity spent abusing the
Sidewalks
And alleyways that
Serve as the veins running through this city's slender body
Are covered,

Hidden under the elegant skirts that
New York dawned last night.

But the soiled past that seems hidden with morning's glory
Lurks around street corners and storm drains,
Where the white left by midnight has been stained by
The boots of a thousand spectators
Greeting our lady
With the chilling breaths issuing from their mouths
As they gasp for the warmth they felt under evening's
Sheets.

Still,
This city
Has prepared for her day of rest,
Her day of solitude,
As bundled bodies shuffle through her thick locks,
The carefully woven avenues flowing from the crown of
Her head.

And shrouding her grey eyes,
Twigs coated in a frosty mascara
Hide the depths
Of her
Ambition
Coy glimpses of sky peaking through the façade
Of rooftops and towering
Steel glass
Walls.

And though the sanitation workers,
And the street shovelers,
And the relentless plows marching up and down her
Arms and legs and hands and feet
Will all try to defile the gown she has put on for
The new day,
Even they will not be able to strip her
Of her splendor.



Thursday, January 6

{ Beginnings }


It started with a glance.

The subtle reading of eyes--
a newfound dictionary of a langauge accented
by anxious hands
and trembling voices.
The elation of skin brushing skin
for the first time,
an exchange of names
bridging the vast expanse of
the unknown to reach the known,
where the elusive
becomes what is near--
becomes what is
close.

It led to a month.

Of exploration and declaration,
of mistaken assumptions formulated on the premise that
what she said
was what she meant
and what he said
was not.
Of familiarity carved out of late nights spent
together on park
benches
while the whispers of tomorrow were
lost in the songs of today.
When what was hidden
was slowly revealed to an audience
of the one--
only.

It held through a year.

As the fantasies of what could be
were given up for the rich reality
of what was.
When the meeting of hands became
a sacred thing--
and the parting of lips meant
more than a kiss.
Where the eyes of this man
knew the eyes of this woman
and the days spent together began to form
a pattern of rote that
was untouched by the
mundane.

And it created
a life.

Where no dictionary was needed
because the movements of each body
were defined by
the other.
And the origin of each incarnate word was
traced amid gathered
sheets.
Where the thought of a life
apart
was not entertained.
Where each passing month
marked the progression of glances giving way to gazes
of steady admiration,
And where the impossibility of a
goodbye
was confirmed with each morning's
hello.

Because it started
with a glance,
with a word.

It started with
a him.
And it started with
a her.

And that led to their
beginning.



Wednesday, July 14

{ My People }


My people
Came the deep and soothing tones
As God Almighty uttered the words to those whose ears had been attuned to listen.

And from His mouth came the history of nations,
A story of matter formed ex nihilo--
Of flesh carved out of clay.

My people
Came the clamoring roars of a voice grieved by betrayal--
Stained by anger--impregnated with longing.

And from His thundering heartbeats came a rhythme of judgement--
A proclamation of punishment,
A warning of destruction--
Because His people had turned away
And become strangers before their God.

My people
Came the whispers of a broken body
As His limbs hung on splintering beams of shame.

And from His cracked and swollen lips came the words of a lover
And a savior--
Came the words of a healer
And a victor--
Came the words of a God whose name is Immanuel,
Who dwelt among the same people who had deafened their ears so many years before.

My people
He will come to say with the regal voice of the King known as I AM.
And on that last day His people will answer.



Monday, July 5

{ American Dream }


Tightly regimented hours of self-indulgence,
Mixed with pixilated chronologies
Of minute minutes
Seasoned with generous helpings
Of absent todays
Spent mapping out tomorrows:

That is who I am.

Wispy plans for years to come
Pervade the murky sidewalks
Of my memory lane
While I sprint towards the distant intersection
Of wanton excess.
But I never seem to reach the elusive goal that is
My future,
Because--
For some reason--
It is always
Now.

But Now is not a currency I am used to dealing with:
I am not content with the moments on my doorstep--
Cannot focus on the seconds surrounding my body--
Unable to grasp what it means to live in the here--
To live
In the Now.

Rather,
My eyes are fixed on that fluorescent light--
The one at the end of my tunnel--
Where I will burst into the paparazzi-filled arena
And experience the comfortable victory
Of the realization
Of my plans.

I can feel the pulse in my body beating to the rhythm of instant
Gratification--
Of permanent
Relaxation--
Or everlasting ease in an economy
Fixated on me,
Me only,
And me always.

And so I will strive
For a prize I know I can easily attain--
An empty victory coated in caramelized commercialism--
A bucket of disappointment at the end of
My credit card
Rainbow.

And when I have done all that--
When I have wedged myself into this
Confining
World of self-indulgence,
When I have given up on the life I thought I wanted,
When I have shredded all the blank checks
I used to write my future,
And when I have set fire to the 401K
I thought was worth having--

I know
You will not forget me.

I know
You will still be waiting.

And I know
You will still
Love me.

Because that is who
You are:

A cleansing breath of the Majestic
Amid the all-consuming narcissism
Of my American Dream.




Tuesday, June 29

{ Little Letters }


It only took four sentences--
Seventy-nine words--
And in a moment I was reminded
Of how very much
I miss you.

And it only took twenty seconds for me to skim the lines
You had scratched out
Telling me you are still there--
Still digging your toes into the moist soil of an old continent--
Still that person I remember from the hazy yesterdays
Of our younger years.

And I only had to glance at the name on the letter
Before my heart
Leapt against my ribcage--
And my mouth
Drew back to reveal a girlish smile--
And my eyes
Glowed with a gentle warmth--
Because that
Is who you are.

That is who we are.

And that is why,
After all these years,
I can still say
I love you
And mean it.



Friday, June 4

{ A Manhattan Workout: Dear Upper East Side Mothers }


Start with the neck:
Slowly move it side to side,
And watch the people
You all too often ignore on your daily walks
To the store.
A stiff neck will serve you worse than aching joints
When age has finally caught the express to
Your body after years of
Traveling on the local.
Remember those are mothers on the sidewalk--
Not obstructions.
And those are students in the station--
Not pests.
And those are conversations you are hearing--
Not static noise.
There is a world of lives surrounding yours.
For better neck muscles,
Start noticing it.

For stronger biceps and forearms,
Pick up your child.
Lift him up each time his hands reach for yours,
Clutch him close enough to smell the lingering scent
Of Cheerios clinging to his body,
And rock him to sleep each night
As if it's the last time you will ever
Get to hold him.
There will come a time when--instead of picking him up--
You will only get to pick up after him.
And those will be the days when you wish
You could have held his small body
Just a little
Longer.

For your abdomen,
Laugh until your sides hurt.
Crouch down to talk to your child--
On his level.
Roll on the floor with him,
And see the world from the only angles he knows.
Chase after him with smiles,
Scoop him up off of the sidewalk,
And swing him around and around and around
Until his laughter ingrains itself in your ears
And you cannot help but join in.
Do not let his younger years
Be spent wondering
What joy sounds like.

For better posture,
Play dress up on occasion, and dress for you--
Not for fashion week.
Wear your confidence like you where your bra:
Make sure it fits and holds you up,
But let it pass unnoticed by the people you meet on the street
Who are led to believe
It is natural.

And instead of jogging on a coldly calculating treadmill,
Take a walk down Madison with your husband.
Don't forget what you've learned so far--
Realize you are not alone in this world.
There are other stories being intertwined with yours.
Walk with purpose,
Not impatience.
Remember you have already got to where you are going
Just by standing
At his side.

And to exercise the rest of your lower body,
Well,
You know what to do after that walk.

For elegant hands,
Practice hearty handshakes.
For healthy feet,
Use them to go to the places you actually want to go.
For fuller lips,
Smile every morning before you leave your home.
And for younger skin,
Let your husband leave his kisses along your
Neck and your shoulders and your elbows and your hands.
Let the vibrancy of his affection serve as the blush for your cheeks.

And if you yet need radiance,
Remember,
You are loved.



Tuesday, June 1

{ Anything at All }


Is there anything I wouldn't do for you?
He asked--
He interjected--
As the tears dripped from my lashes and filled the creases in my face.
Is there anything I wouldn't give you?
His words filled my ears with the roaring of lions,
With the magnitude of ocean waves colliding against the salt-sprayed rocks of a misty coast.
Anything at all?
And again my senses were overwhelmed with the beating of my heart against my ribcage--
Harder, as the deafening noise of his voice struck my ear drums once, twice,
Three times I heard the question.
Then again--

Is there anything I wouldn't do for you?

No,
Came my breathless reply.
I don't believe there is.

My mouth is parched,
Trying to articulate,
Trying to formulate,
Trying to make myself understood
For the first time--
Tears still clinging to silver-lined lashes,
Still clutching the lines in my face,
Still oozing down my pale cheeks in an attempt to make known
The thoughts bleeding out of my head.

Anything at all?

No! No, there isn't.
I understand.
But my tongue is caged behind my teeth.
I cannot answer, and so I am silent--
On the outside,
Shrieking--
On the inside,
Trapped--
Within my body,
Longing--
For release.

I heard you.
You would do anything for me.

But my heart refuses to let such information penetrate its guarded walls.
I can't handle the knowledge that I didn't earn it--
Cannot lose it--
Unable to deserve it--
That kind of love.

Yet every fiber of my being wants to work for it and prove I am enough.

Is there anything I wouldn't do for you?

No, there's not! I get it.

I heard you the first time
And the second time
And the third time.
I heard you when you knelt by my side and cradled me in your arms,
Heard it when you whispered in my ear and comforted me with promises I knew
Would not be broken.
The forth time
And the fifth time,
I heard you when you held my hand in yours and led me away from the explosions,
Let me away from the land mines that had been planted in my bedroom
And my hallways
And my sidewalks.

I heard you.

But I cannot hear you.

Anything at all?

Stop saying that! God, I'm tired of hearing it.

I don't want to hear it.
I don't want anything,
And I don't want everything
I--

I don't know what I want--
What I want at all.

I'm just so tired of the ache that fills every crevice of my chest when I'm not near you,
Can't handle the gnawing acid of my own depravity,
Sick of waiting on my own two hands to change the makings of my soul.

Is there anything I wouldn't do for you?

I heard you. I heard you. I heard you. I heard you. I heard you.
But now I've found a voice to answer.
And before I can stop them, the words slip past my lips--

Would you break me down until there is nothing left of me?
Would you burn the pieces of my heart that have infected my soul?

I try to stop my reckless words, but they gush over my tongue and saturate the air--

Break me. Break me. Break me.
I need you to crack the bones in my body--
That's what I want.
Let me fall to the ground and smell the soothing scent of soil against my scarred and weathered cheeks,
Feel the moist earth next to my cracked and bleeding skin,
The harsh gravel cutting into my side.
Take my limbs and make them submit.

Would you do that for me?

Anything at all?

But then would you make me whole again?
After you've broken me, would you--
Would you stitch up those gashes and force those joints back in their sockets and repair my fragmented limbs?
Would you pick me up and hold me on your lap so I can see what you see and feel what you feel?
Would you let me lay my head against your chest and listen to the thumping of your heart against your ribcage?

Is there, he said,
Anything I wouldn't do for you?

No.
I don't think there is.

Anything at all?

No.
You've given me more than enough.

Anything at all?

No.
You're more than I could ever deserve.

Anything at all?
He said.

And then I said nothing.

I said nothing.

I said
Nothing.

But now

I hear him.