Monday, April 28, 2014

Para la Reina de las Américas


(There's a full and final sound of a glove connecting solidly with a heavy bag.  It's here and gone as quickly as the punch that causes it.  It's the sound of the blink of an eye.

There's something about athletes who bless themselves with the sign of the cross before an event.  It's a bit of magic that touches the primordial.  The gesture is eternal, the edge is internal

It has been said that Spanish is the Loving Tongue.  I think Spanish is the true language of prayer, and the only language the Higher Powers recognize.  I don't know why that is, it just seems to be true.

The sound, in parentheses, can't be said.  It has to be the sound of a punch hitting the bag.)

















Para la Reina de las Americas

(Whap!)

Dios te salve, Maria,
Llena eres de gratia,

Estas son mis manos.

Y esta es la verdad.

(Whap!)        

El sonido de la verdad.

(Whap!  Whap!)

Esto es yo.

(Whap!)

Madre de Dios  (Whap!)
Madre de Dios  (Whap!)
Madre de Dios  (Whap!)

Esta es la verdad
El sonido de la verdad
Estas son mis manos
Y esto es yo

Ahora y en la hora de nuestra muerte.

(Whap!)

Amen.  


For The Queen of the Americas

(Whap!)

Hail Mary, full of grace,

These are my hands

And this is the truth.

(Whap!)

The sound of the truth.

(Whap!  Whap!)

This is me. 

(Whap!)

Mother of God  (Whap!)
Mother of God  (Whap!)
Mother of God  (Whap!)

This is the truth
The sound of the truth
These are my hands
And this is me

Now and at the hour of our death,

(Whap!)

Amen.


Monday, April 14, 2014

GRIEF'S IRATE COMPANION


"Consider how much more you suffer from your anger and grief, than from those very things for which you are angered and grieved."

When I told Reggie I wanted to start doing a boxing warm-up she may have been surprised that I was going to get up off my duff and do something, but she was not at all surprised about the boxing part.  She said that, of course, boxing would appeal to me, I'm angry, live right along the border of Violence and Vine, and it's an outsider's sport.  As usual, she was right on all three counts, but I'll leave the outsider bit for later. 

Let's talk about anger.

The root of the word "anger," is the Norse word, "angyr."  It means, distress, grief, sorrow.   Grief manifests as anger, and anger as violence. I don't want to assign that motivation to every act of violence, or every angry person in the universe, but there's a lot of truth there for me.  Psychologist Carol Staudacher calls anger, "grief's irate companion."

I lost my birth family when I was still able to fit inside a bushel basket, and play with clothespins around its rim.  It's a long story, was an economic issue for them, and the conventional wisdom was the kid was too young to notice.  My birth mom and dad were traveling from Erie, PA, out to Seattle, in search of work, and as they had twins to take with them, my uncle and aunt offered to take care of me until they got settled.  Lessen the load.

My uncle and aunt never hid the fact that they were "legal guardians," and I had parents in Seattle - wherever that was.  I even traveled back while still of kindergarten age.  My dear Aunt Therese took me out by train.  Before long, though, she was back to pick me up.  My mom recognized that I was one depressed kid, and not adjusting, and I think the one smart thing she did was get me back to her sister.

I killed my parents over and over again.  Usually by sending them flying off a bridge in a spectacular car wreck.  It bought me a little sympathy and kept the explanation to the  "why do you have a different last name," questions to a minimum.

Abandonment and death, real or imagined, real enough for a little kid. They don't want me, fine, I'll kill them.

Grief and its irate companion.  Irate enough to kill,

When I was seven, my best friend - also Richard, also seven - died.

Sorrow and its companion.  Angyr is loss is anger.

When I was thirteen, my uncle died.  I was devastated.  Teenage alcoholic, high school flunk out, US Army.

Loss and sorrow batter you down, anger pushes you up, but you're fighting against phantoms. 

Grandmother, godfather gone.

Another best friend, another Richard, best man at my wedding - gone.

And to everybody else, and to quote two songwriters,  I said, "don't ever leave me, don't ever go," but nobody "stays in one place, anymore."

Buddha said, "I teach suffering, and the cessation of suffering." 

Loss equals grief equals anger equals a total greater than the sum of its parts - suffering.

I didn't even know I was angry until somebody told me, and then I denied it.

I used to think sorrow defined me.  I used to think I was one of the least angry people I knew.  Wrong on both counts, working on both parts.

And so, I sit.

And so, I write.

And so, I punch.


Dharma/Punching.

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

ALL THE HUNGRY GHOSTS HAVE SMART PHONES

Art by Katie Vautour (permission pending)

2002: I was at a cocktail party in New Delhi, and over half the people in the room were on their cell phones.  It was as if the party were happening somewhere else.  I started calling the people in the room that I knew, and when they answered I'd invite them over to chat; they thought my behavior odd, I thought theirs a little frightening.

It was the year human beings began the de-habitation of their bodies; the advent of disembodiment.



I wrote this couplet:

Afraid to be alone
I clutch my cell phone.

2014:  Holy Christ!  You know what's happening, yuppies waving their arms, shouting into the air, people walking into traffic staring into the palms of their hands, text message car wrecks.  At the movie theater last night, one big screen, white and empty, a hundred little screens shining light onto their owner's faces. The party continues happening elsewhere.

Truth be told, it wasn't the advent of the cell phone that, pun intended, disconnected us.  A good case could be made against the automobile.  There's a devil's device if there ever was one.  The first thing it did was remove us from physical contact with the planet, and its exhaust has since managed to choke entire continents - if not the world.  Then, we jump to television:  a hypnotic-addictive drug that comes into us through our eyes and ears, renders us speechless and immobile, and sparks desire. 

We're not only out-of-body, we're out of our minds.  Vampires and zombies are cultural memes, but our own hungry ghosts keep us enthralled.

I'm just as much an out of body mess as anyone, pretty much out of my mind as well.

January 2014:  Three months at the gym.  I'm walking down the street, and in a flash moment there seems to be a different me on the concrete.  I'm rolling through my feet, striding, and feeling the mechanics of every step.  Not only that, I'm balanced.  I have this feeling that everything inside the envelope has been readjusted. I'm feeling a little like Travolta, "Staying Alive." I'm physically and mentally present, the walk is some kind of new dance, and I have never felt as good in my life. 

I'm in my body and laughing out loud.


LOL, my dears...