Saturday, April 14, 2012

after reading about how creativity creates

DESCRIPTION OF DOGWWOD FLOWERS ON A SPRING NIGHT WITH MOONLIGHT

You glow like strange eyes in darkness,

like hearts o aliens,

like light under water--a pool at night,

like the inside of light,

like burners on a stove in the darkness,

like a hundred tiny flashlights,

one tenth of a lightening bug,

like cream puffs on fire,

like whipped cream neon,

like you know who you are!

like you come awake in darkness,

like your language is luminance at night,

like fountains of water reflecting sunshine,

like a word so clear, it hurts the ear,

like silver essence,

like magic that was lost with youth,

like otherworldly blood,

like white mud,

like pure white sand on fire,

like a baby’s voice,

like summer’s choice,

like a household flame,

like fireworks in the rain,

like a death door’s jam,

or a electrified man,

or my mother’s love,

or the reflection of a dove,

in a window of a church,

where jesus lives,

and gives his love,

and pearl earrings hanging,

above a creamy neckline,

and the whites of the eyes

when reflected by a fire.

You glow on

until the sun.

Out that window,

where I am home,

glide and glow,

on the end of your limb-O.

A landing pad for fairies, bats, and bees

up, up, up in the dogwood trees.

Language all your own

comin through a mega-phone.

Drinkin the moon.

Glow like the famous worm.

Get some of your own:

a glitter strata zone,

a start on a branch,

the color of ranch,

(like the salad dressing)

your glow is your singing.

I dig you true.

I see you new.

Every spring you wind me,

you spin me and refine me.

I’m new with you,

wanna do what you do,

wanna shine in the nighttime,

and smell fine in the sunshine,

age like wine,

swim forever in my own brine,

bloom a new doom a boom a silver spoon,

a new name,

a new day,

say all I wanna say,

with a glow,

and a slow flow,

hello flower, hello.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Just a though I had today:

Writing is like my mother’s kitchen sink. The drain stopper is a little dented and bent. When you want to fill the basin with water, you have to turn the spigot on for a few moments and then watch to see if the water remains stagnant or if it begins to slowly, incrementally drain away. If so, you have to wait til the water empties, adjust the stopper slightly, and try again. Sometimes you can never lock the stopper into the drain in the exact way to damn the water without a leak no matter how many times you twist and retwist it. You can end up wasting a whole lot of water—all of it unused—watching it slink away and magically disappear through the cracks.

Or like waiting on hold for about 42 minutes. Phone crushed against your ear—no speakerphone. You wait and listen to the bucolic music and the recording that intermittently recurs, “Our representatives are still helping other customers. Please, continue to hold.” All annoyance, anger, expectation dwindled to nothing more then the endless jazzy fake piano notes of the continual tune. Sometimes an occasional glitch in the recorded music makes your heart beat faster; you think a friendly representative is about to speak to you. But the music returns, not acknowledging its self-interruption, and you return to empty waiting.

When a voice suddenly materializes in your aural system, stimulating the eardrum and sending faint messages to your brain, you’ve forgotten almost everything you wanted to say as you fumble for memory and words to return to you.

I don't know why I've chose to focus on writing. As an art, acting was so much simpler.


Thursday, March 15, 2012

Reflections

This is a long one. So, I'll just post the story:

Reflections

Caaan’t beeeee uunder

myyy aaaaple treee…

His lips formed the words of the tune so familiarly that the abrupt lapse of memory fell sudden and heavy upon him; the ensuing words to the song vanished somewhere in the darkness of his brain. Anxiously searching for the tune’s lost thread, he clutched the armrests of his chair, but the lady in white—the one who always called him sweetie—interrupted. Her weighted presence hurried by, stopping to place a shiny object on the flat wood next to him. She passed him, and moved in an accelerated lightning bug style—more lightning than bug—through a mass of people inhabiting the center of the room. A television screen held the attention of some; others stared out the large window or slept. He sat alone in the dimness of the room’s edge beside the flat wood, his hands rubbing themselves while his forehead shriveled with concern.

What were the next words to his song?

The television rambled, and the people invading the center melded into a cloudy chaos. Human features popped out among effervescent gray vapors; their presence disrupted his concentration. In a click of the television’s remote, he abandoned his pursuit for the words to the song as he nervously searched among the others for a face he knew, the face of his son. Ryan’s recognizable smile was impossible to overlook, even in such a haze. But these faces only served to confuse him. Ryan not among them, all strangers, his baffled focus fell upon the flat wood and the silvery object resting there—a glinting spoon.

Sunshine reflected off the shovel’s clean blade.

The room’s glow alit on the spoon’s metal. Gazing into the dull light, he beheld the room’s reflection within its silver concave as the words to his song returned unbidden to his lips. Within the shiny surface, other images appeared.

Caaan’t beeee uuunder…

The shovel slammed down heavily, and bit into the soil. His Father’s thick fingers grasped the tool; right hand clasped the handle and jabbed downward, left hand pulled up on the fulcrum. Each movement in accord with the heavy shovel, designed to form a dark hole in the ground for the young apple tree.

myyy aaaaple treee…

The house stood through the copse behind his father like a fairyland. His small hand clutched the slim sapling with its twisting roots exposed. The roots formed lines, tangles, and intersections; little pathways lost themselves within a greater mass of tree, earth, and confused solidity. He nervously awaited his own task.

with Joooohnyyy…

Father’s creased forehead and uncompromising eyes presided over him as his adolescent hands worked the soil and covered the roots. He looked up. Father nodded once. “Good” he said. His heart floated skyward in company with the rare parental tribute.

Aaaapleseeed.

Looking up from his contemplation of the spoon, he was surprised to see her sitting there across the flat wood from him. Maybe she’d just arrived. Maybe she’d always been there listening to his song. This disturbed him—his vacillating awareness of her—but her solidity, whenever he encountered her, both thrilled and calmed him. Her appearance damaged, once again, the thin connection he had to the song. The melody slipped away unacknowledged. Without concern, he studied her.

Her face, reminiscent of so many experiences and indicative of several other versions of itself, appeared distinctly familiar even habitual to him. But what was her name? Behind her stood the large picture window. Occasionally, the room’s other occupants shuffled through on flimsy legs or rolled by on metal chairs like shimmery ghosts. Her chair was made of wood. The window gazed out on a lonely line of bleak, leafless trees sparking a memory that fizzled before he could grasp it. Gray afternoon approached dark evening. A chill infiltrated him, and he teetered on the edge of hidden terror. Abandoning the window, he looked back at her. She remained undisturbed, intent on him alone.

“Hello,” she said, and her voice aroused excitement.

“Hi!” Enthusiasm vibrated through his words. “Well, hot dog! I didn’t think… well… you know… I really, really, really….”

“How are you today?” She spoke with a smile that somehow seemed alien; it was one thing about her that didn’t feel honest.

“I’m fine!” His response revealed his eagerness. “How’re you?”

“Good,” still smiling.

“Good… It was good, oh boy! I planted it… Father was there….” The words escaped him like water spitting from a crack in an old garden hose. Wishing to continue but unable—no language presented itself to convey his message—he nodded instead. Her implacable smile remained but tightened at its edges. Despite that smile, the familiar face thrilled him transforming his desire into song.

Yoooou caaan’t waaaalk…

He delighted in her attention.

Down looooveeer’s waaaay…

And then she laughed and held his hand leading him through the spring-lush copse to the just-burgeoned apple tree. The tree’s sweet aroma engulfed them as they ducked their heads under a flowered limb. When they straightened their necks, he examined her. She seemed so tall and her legs—silk-stockinged and long ending in shoeless feet mysteriously beautiful through the gauzy material. She noticed his admiration of her. Laughter erupted again in the form of nervous giggling. Her face reddened. But incongruous to her seeming embarrassment, she took his wrists and pulled him under the sweet smelling branches of that tree into a deep shade, and he imagined himself encased in the silkiness that covered her extensive limbs.

with Joooohny…

He let her guide him, his innocence obvious, a spring’s gentle breeze stirred inside him. His sensations felt conjoined with the tenderly swaying pure-white petals above.

Aaaaple…

He looked up. Tiny blossoms and light shimmered through brown branches like a brain’s electric connections, and he squinted through that brain and caught the sun in his eye as it glinted off a spoon in his hand above the flat wood. The lackluster shine a small fraction of the brilliance emanating through the brain-tree.

A different version of her watched him now.

Her long shaded legs.

He knew her so well.

But what was her name?

He squeezed the spoon, and it pinched his fingers painfully. Looking down at his hand, he noticed a face within the spoon gazing back. At first, he thought Ryan was coming home. His heart quickened, and he leaned his head closer to the spoon as the face widened. But the face in the spoon’s bowl, upside down and squinting, appeared too old. It reminded him more of his own father’s unforgiving eyes beneath a stern forehead.

He tried to rotate the wrinkled face, but no matter how he manipulated the spoon, the image remained awkwardly inverted. “Pop?”

“Good,” his father said.

“Cal…” Her address surprised him. How long had she been there? He met her gaze. She laughed pulling him down. “Your father died a long time ago”. The meaning of her statement seeped into his awareness slowly, it was more the face she displayed that centered him, allowed him to mull over his reaction to her news. Surely his father wasn’t dead. They’d just planted that tree.

“He died?”

“Yes, Cal. I’d guess, forty years now.”

He seemed to recall a lifetime with her, episodes of existence shared between them, Ryan included. But had so many years passed, been lost in time and in mind? Hadn’t he and his father just planted that tree?

He looked back into the spoon at the frowning pout. The unpleasant expression facing him could only be the distinctive features of his father’s severe visage.

“No,” He told her almost disappointed. “He’s still here.” He held up the spoon, offering it to her. She sat there smiling at him, but her eyes didn’t smile.

“It’s all upside down.”

She’d always been tall. Everyone had always thought she was taller than him, but it wasn’t true.

“Snack time!” The white lady’s voice emanated from some hidden corner of the room.

His reaction startled him. Immediately his body responded to the words with affirmation; hungering with such forcefulness, it contracted in anticipation. Annoyed by this distraction to his thoughts, he experienced a feeling of disgust scoffing at his body’s ridiculous Pavlovian response. At the same time, it embarrassed him, shamed him, to feel the need for food with such fervor, especially while she watched. Yet his arms pushed down upon the chair’s armrests, and his legs began to straighten themselves. Although it belittled him, he couldn’t resist his compulsion to stand. But something blocked his upward movement thwarting an attempt to rise. Peering down, he saw a metal chair.

Her chair was wood.

A plastic bar ran from armrest to armrest obstructing him. He began to fiddle with the damned thing. He’d always been mechanically handy. He’d reinstalled bathroom plumbing, repaired car engines…

Ryan, eager to help, leaned over him with steady flashlights.

But the white bar refused to budge. He couldn’t believe failure would occur at this moment, while she sat watching him. His desire to impress her made concentration on the task even more difficult. His demeanor changed, agitation showing on his face.

“Are you hungry?” she asked him.

He only looked at her again as he fumbled around with his chair trying to understand why he couldn’t release the mechanism, and set himself free.

“Shine the light over here,” he directed Ryan.

“Cal…” She leaned in toward him before continuing. “Don’t you want a little something?”

He wanted freedom.

Feeling trapped he fought with the chair for his release.

It wasn’t only his desire for food that troubled him. He suddenly became disturbed by his inability to approach her; the distance between them struck him as odd and unnatural. It seemed that he should be able to stand and walk toward her if he wanted, but he was confined. He jerked the plastic bar upward over and over again. It slapped against the chair’s metal making a clinking sound like dull chains. At the edge of perception, he heard the white lady offering refreshments. The world verged on disruption. His hands wrenched the bar more forcefully.

In the midst of the metallic rattle, she began speaking, slowly at first, but soon with conversational ease. Her words held a soothing mellifluous magic, and after a moment, he began to settle down forgetting his endeavor for liberty and relaxing into her steady voice. Every now and then, his desire for release rekindled, but her oration extinguished the flame of his efforts. Soon he completely lost himself in the enchantment of the words.

She talked of people she seemed to think he knew; she told him how the Andersons had had flooding in their basement and the amount of money it had taken to clean it all up; she described a trip she had taken with her sister to Atlantic city where she had won 12 dollars and eaten lasagna at a nice Italian restaurant on the way home; she went on to tell him about clothing drives, changes in the weather, a new building going up in town, and more. He didn’t follow all she said—couldn’t quite grasp the meaning behind her feminine ability for discourse. But, occasionally, he felt compelled to answer her with a response: ‘You don’t say?’ or ‘is that right?’, uncertain if his tongue and lips actually produced any sound. Unchanging features remained upon her face. The stale smile never wavered, even as she spoke with a vocal elocution mesmerizing him so deeply, he let go polite responses, imagined or no. His song returned to him, harmonizing with her words in his mind. In the middle of her oration, he opened his mouth to add his voice to her tune.

uuunder myyyy…

He sat alongside Ryan under the apple tree, their backs against the tree’s stout trunk.

“Here’s some applesauce,” he heard the white lady say. “Thank you,” the other woman answered, pausing her conversation.

aaaaaple…

Beside him Ryan’s head leaned over and lay upon his arm.

treeeeeee.

Ryan felt warm against him.

She reached for something on the flat wood. “Look Cal, applesauce,” and she returned to her gentle flow of melodious, meaningless words.

Sitting next to his son, he knew this moment for one of those experiences to be cherished in life; unlike the universal first steps, first words, and first days of school, this moment was special to him and Ryan alone. Unlike episodes that upon later reflection offer a priceless memory, this moment burned with historic gravity even as it happened. They sat against the apple tree and watched as the wind sent ocean waves through the thick copse. The old house peeked out through shimmying verdure like some great barge or pirate ship. The sounds of cicadas entranced the boy as he stared into the swaying green limbs. They wore jackets in a matching blue—which she had bought them somewhere—and witnessed the coming of autumn, there in that significant moment, when the ocean-wave wind traveled through the treetops and susurrated past the house. The apple tree above them got caught in the wind’s tide, and it shimmered making red smears amongst the green. Together their necks arched backward to view the spectacle in the branches above, the scratchy bark solid against their spines. With a final gross shake, the tree released one ripe red apple which fell Newton-like to earth landing directly in his lap, a present from nature. With mock mundanity—pretending as if apples fell into his lap every day—he asked his son, “Are you hungry?”

“Aren’t you hungry, Cal?”

He nonchalantly handed Ryan the red fruit while the line of his son’s mouth wiggled into a delighted smile. Ryan’s smile remained and endured even the stretching of his lips as he parted them to take a bite from the apple sent from above. He laughed and chewed…

The applesauce entered his mouth and banged into his taste buds disrupting his vision and sending his eyebrows sharply upward. His throat emitted a delicious Mhmm. The soft, pungent sweetness of the sauce disharmonized with the crunching apple that Ryan joyfully devoured. She hadn’t been there under the tree as autumn arrived. Now, she stood over him administering dessert as if it were medicine. She continued to relate, in her gentle and mesmerizing way, any small piece of information she could think of, any tidbit of simple life to sedate him with. He ignored her words, eager to utter his own dialogue. He possessed an awareness of her—what was her name—that made him certain she’d want to know about that moment with Ryan under the apple tree. He knew the revelation of such a small but touching event in Ryan’s life would be an unexpected, but precious gift for her as the fallen apple had been for his son.

But unwanted applesauce kept coming. Falling fruit. Each time he finished swallowing and opened his lips to describe the scene, she delivered a new spoonful of dessert. Stretched smile. His tongue delighted in the taste. His jaws worked to chew. Matching blue. All the time, words tumbled from her into the air around him, language striving to dull his determination. He struggled against the onslaught of her words, and dessert, fortifying his grasp on this single memory.

Those leaves thrashing, that red apple quivering, Ryan’s smile stretching…

Her once soothing words became noise pollution, sounds of traffic, car horns blasting away at his thoughts, bombs exploding against memory, shrapnel distraction.

Ryan’s clean army boots as he boarded the bus…

He swallowed another sweet glob but then ceased to comply, tightening his lips with assertive refusal like a readied soldier.

Ryan smiled from the departing window.

Suspending in the air above his nose, the applesauce willed him to part his lips, extend his tongue, accept its deliciousness. He continued to refuse.

The bus disappeared into exhaust and distance.

“Finished already?” she asked, with her unreal smile taut across her face.

No! He was not finished. He hadn’t yet begun.

“Try and eat more.”

He shook his head vehemently holding onto the scraps of his thoughts with fervent determination.

Stretched lips…

She seemed to struggle. The smile fought to remain intact.

stockinged feet…

The spoon’s intoxicating scent hovered in the air

clean boots

“Come on Cal, there’s only a little left.”

Ryan departing…

“NO!” he tried to say, but as soon as his mouth opened to produce the simple sound, the spoon dashed inside, and sweetness assailed his tongue. His hands shot up in the air; a muffled growl came from his throat. Fighting a deep addiction, he spat the stuff out erupting in song:

Til HEEE comes MAAARCHING HOOOME…

Hostility halted her speech. The spoon and container of applesauce dropped from her hands landing with a clatter. Tiny particles of spat applesauce stuck to the sleeve of her blouse and littered the flat wood. With controlled movements, she turned away, looked through the window into the barren night outside; the smile melted, forgotten. He hadn’t meant to offend her, but his energy had surged within him uncontrollably. He wanted her to reconnect, wanted her eyes upon him still.

“Hey…” Her gaze remained stubbornly intent on the bleak, colorless landscape outside the window. He reached for her, but she moved away from his outstretched hands returning to the wooden chair where she continued to examine the outside world. If he could have remembered her name, he would have called her by it, used it to garner her affection.

“Hey there…” he said to her unresponsive shoulders. Implacable disconnection extinguished his original intention; all concept of the rediscovered memory dissipated, dispersed, disintegrated into impenetrable darkness. Had he succeeded in attracting her attention, he would have had nothing to offer her.

What had he been trying to tell her?

Because he’d lost the core of his thoughts, he continued to examine her, watch her watching. Soon her absorbed focus drew him in. He found himself also inspecting the window’s scene. Because the sky had turned ebony, the window revealed the line of shadowy trees outside while reflecting the room. The two worlds juxtaposed, causing ghost-like figures to move among bare, brittle branches.

Other visions began to appear. Bellow the dance of half-seen wraiths, he discerned Ryan’s separate, less spectral form walking down the path away from him into the overgrown copse. Although the sight exhilarated him, dread lay somewhere within it. Not wishing the display to continue, he attempted to turn from the glass, but the power of his son’s incarnation in the window held him more surely than the white bar locked across his chair.

No tune emerged from his lips.

“Ryan,” he whispered.

Through the window, his son began to disappear into the line of trees.

No longer able to see clearly, he tried to stand. The ensnaring structure of his chair held him down. With delicate determination, he began to twist his body in a concentrated effort for release. All the time, he focused on the window’s double image; Ryan had now moved deep into the trees, no longer discernable within the wood.

If he could bend his legs in the right configuration, he could detach himself. Then, he’d pass through the window and follow his vanishing son escaping from the coming doom and remaining with Ryan within the reflective surface. But this time, he felt the memory slowly swell like a recent wound. If he could have compressed it, covered it with a well-dressed bandage, he would have. But it intensified, demanding him to bear its evocative manifestation.

Snow lay upon the ground contrasting with the stark brown of the trees. The usually clogged copse stood desolate. Through it he could make out the similarly austere apple tree. The air turned colder. Through the distracting lens of the thicket, he could see the apple tree, its branches as empty as the winter around him. He stood alone beneath it and a gray sky. Wherever Ryan had gone, it was not under the empty tree.

The chair rocked dangerously. Despite the plastic bar, he had somehow twisted and manipulated his body into an awkward, upright position. His arms reached out toward the impenetrable shoulders of his wife. She still examined the vacant landscape, her attention never returning. His fingers shook as he extended them to their furthest reach. Focused intent shifted the cloudiness, and into its vacuum something like clarity bloomed rearranging the room and people around him.

“Alice,” he called in a feeble voice. The chair teetered. Somewhere in the room, the nurse looked up from her daily tasks. Alice turned in reaction to her name. In an instant, she was up, moving around the table, and beside him again.

Alice’s arm wrapped around him. He leaned against her. She released an invisible catch, and his waist came free from the white bar as it unhinged. He fell into her slightly. The nurse advanced forward. He pressed his face into her body to block the windows wide-open glare, the visions he had seen there disintegrating into the night. There were no memories left that he wanted to relive, no music from his lips.

Standing in her arms he felt tiny.

“You’re sure tall,” he said.