Today marks 14 years of my daily writing practice —
I've written at least one poem a day since a snowed-in morning
(rare in these parts on the eastern seaboard, probably even
more rare now because of climate change) in 2010 when I drifted
over to Dave Bonta's microblog The Morning Porch, and where
I read his post that day - and was moved to respond in the
comments box in a poem. I did that for a few more days
afterwards; though I'm not sure I posted all of them in this
same way. Dave noticed, and invited me to post my poems
on Via Negativa — and I've been doing that ever since.
Out of my daily practice, I've learned some helpful things
about myself and my process; and I've put together 4 books
and 4 chapbooks from the running review (and the revisions)
I do of my writing. At least, these are things that I've found
to apply to myself—
- Writing is the best way to keep writing.
- Before any thought of publication, there's the joy of
meeting yourself on the page.
- Doing this (above) reminds me every day that writing
is an opportunity to play; to follow ideas down rabbit holes,
discover things, pay attention in this space of writing,
no matter how brief every day (I typically do 30-45 minutes).
- Writing poems, I've found, is my preferred form for
"processing" how I experience the world: in language, in images.
- Despite what anyone will tell you about "published is
published in whatever form," your writing is yours.
Especially in the last 2 weeks, I feel even more intensely
how poetry has the capacity to "save" me - from utter,
unfocused distraction; from utter despair...
I'm very grateful for my daily practice, and I'm very grateful
for the additional writing community I've become connected
to through the years, through Dave and Via Negativa.
If you click on this version of this post on my website,
you'll also see some photos from the poetry zine workshop
session in the undergraduate+grad Advanced Poetry Workshop
I'm teaching this fall.
Small Spaces
When we moved into this house, soon
it became clear: we could learn to live
with the uneven spackle on the ceiling,
without doors for the built-in closets.
And soon we realized our heavy
dining table, even without the removable
leaf, barely fit in the dining room.
Those who sat on one side had their backs
right up to the wall, and those on the other
could lean their arms on the counter. We sold
the table and bought instead a smaller, plainer
one which freed up some space, just a little.
But how happy we were to find our coffeetable
in a dusty corner of a thrift store— for a song,
as they say: solid wood, only scratched in two
places. What is furniture after all but the props
in a play for which we've had no rehearsals;
or little spots of color where we'll put up our feet
at night? We invite students to join us at Thanksgiving,
friends for potlucks. There isn't much space but there's
rice and bread; so many stories, savory things. Someone
always brings dessert. Whatever the next act, it's bound
to be interesting. So much in the world is terrible;
but here, I don't want any of it to end yet.
Last Day
Extremity brings things into sharper relief.
But when Annie Dillard says spend it all, shoot it,
play it, lose it, all, right away, every time, I don't
think she's talking about maxxing out credit cards
or going for broke at the slot machines because the world
is ending tomorrow, or if not tomorrow, very soon after that.
She's talking about the writing life, the life of creation
and how even there, the economics of scarcity seems
to prevail. In summer, we watched an apocalyptic film
in which scientists warn everyone about a comet crashing
into Earth; no one believes them, until of course it's too
late. At that point, when the end happens, I too would like
to sit at a table with the people I love instead of scrambling
for a seat I could probably not afford anyway, on the last
spaceship leaving this planet. Someone will praise the wine,
and we'll try to guess the secret ingredient that lifts
the roast from merely good to amazing. We'll savor each bite, pass
the bowl of lemons and the basket of bread like they were holy.
Muscle Memory
When you are born of immigrants,
the memories that live
in your mind and gut aren't just
your own. Damp t-shirts and towels
dry in the sun on the balcony
railing— these too are flags
of the country of your first
education, reminding you
of your ancestors and kin
who knew how to bend to the soil
and bow to the rivers, when
to stand up with others and when
to bide time; when to slip, watchful,
into the simmering background.
Their hands know how to wield
the hoe and transplant the fragile
seedling, how to guide the gleaming
scalpel in the operating theatre
with precision as it enters
subcutaneous tissue to start
the work of regeneration.
You will try to keep this
knowledge alive in your own hands:
memory of touch, firm memory of when
it is necessary to quarter and loosen;
memory of how to keep life alive.
When We Gather
It is a small miracle we can still hold
gatherings around the kitchen table,
share meals of soup and bread and rice
piled on breakable platters. Here are
perhaps the first of those days we thought
would never come— war at every window,
drought kindling fires through evergreen
forests; men in suits and ties trading
our bodies and freedoms for a world
shrunk to the proportions of their minds.
But here we are, offering prayers to our dead,
sharing what they taught us of ritual and
remembrance—fruit for sweetness, water
and oil for balm; garlic and onions for strength.
Ode to the Tidal Bore
Tonight, I am on a Zoom call with my old friend
from graduate school. She tells me about wanting
to move, in the New Year, to Canada. She wants to know
if I've ever heard of the tidal bore at the Bay of Fundy
and how, as the tide comes in, outflowing rivers
rush back upstream in a forty-foot swell. What I
want to know is, if going against the current
is a thing that exists in nature, couldn't such
a force also reside in us? In other places
at the juncture of rivers and bays, waterfalls
seem to reverse at high tide, pushing back inland
through narrow passages that led to the sea, rocking
back and forth at least twice a day as the moon pushes
and pulls, a rhythm older than any of us understands.
Will
The banners we tacked on the wall
are still there from the last
celebration. What is time
anymore? We thought that in the end,
we'd choose the desire for good
over the desire for cold assertion. Oh
to touch a future that could break
in no other way but blossom. What
will we do, I ask my daughter.
We will go on, she says.
Complexity
“All that has dark sounds has duende.”
~ Manuel Torre, via Federico Garcia Lorca
It is cold and the windows rattle.
On their surface, reflections of indoor plants—
those heart-shaped leaves with holes
through which the old questions leak,
and they wait to see what you might do
with these old-new sorrows.
I want to pump my fists and yell
into the air I don't know, why do you
think I should know what to do, then
collapse in a heap like my mothers
when spent, at the height
of their own upheavals.
Then someone might come
to help them into bed or feed them
a drink of water, stroke their hair,
hold their hands; after which
their sobs might gentle
into fitful sleep.
And still they knew they would need
to wake, gather the fragments of old-
new wounds into a knot, pat their hair
back into place; wield the kitchen knife
over the scarred back of a wooden
chopping board, so a mosaic of mutilated
onions would tinge our stews.
Birch: A Ghazal
I recently learned that Björk is a common
girl's name in Sweden, and it also means birch.
Once, some students were playing a game in which they named
each of their professors after a singer or a band; and I got Björk.
I was amused, and wondered: did it mean they imagined me
with a live swan draped around my neck like a scarf, like Björk;
or thought I was cool, avant-garde, in a class of my own?
In a forest of elms, oaks and chestnuts, a fragrant silver birch.
Bright green and saw-toothed at the edges, leaves turn
amber in fall. In fading light, a grove of silvery birch
is beautiful. Lorca, who taught about the spirit and power of duende,
was dragged out of a house and shot in an olive grove, not birch.
November, Aftermath
At the women's gathering,
the lecturer from Ukraine tells us
how her daughter's Mexican tutor
tenses up when she asks her how she
has been doing this past week.
*
Overnight, wind gusts
have shaken down
almost all remaining
leaves on the trees.
*
And it's been weeks, but
I'm still unsure what animal—
badger, coon, or cat—has been
leaving its scat at the edge
of the deck.
*
Will we have to learn
secret gestures, secret
words, as part of keeping
each other safe?
*
Part of me feels
it's futile to start unboxing
the Christmas lights;
but the dark is even more
dark now, everywhere.
*
Somewhere in the world,
rigiht now, there are people
who call each other by name,
knowing they exist.