Monday, September 19, 2016

Dear Wind

Hello my viewers. It has certainly been a long time since I last wrote on here! I have had a spur of creativity and am writing much faster than I have been in the past. So I thought I would add another poem to the mix. This is a poem called Dear Wind. I hope you enjoy it.

Dear Wind

Hello wind
Good afternoon, breeze
My dear friend, the cool air:
I hear you!
Rushing to greet me,
Racing through leaves and brambles
To blow through my hair
And tickle my cheeks.
You have never been good
At surprising me, dear wind.
After all, my close friends,
The trees,
Enjoy warning me of your approaching
Through the song of their branches
Swaying,
Humming like some ancient instrument
You might hear echoing
In the tongues
Of an amber fire.
You are never far from me,
Lovely breeze.
You are always there
Waiting to gust past
My bare arms.
Making me chill long enough to know
I am alive
Before you race and hide away
Like a boomerang.
Hey ho!

Dear wind!

Monday, April 25, 2016

I Am All Girl

Just some of my thoughts for the evening. Happy reading!

I am all girl.

I giggle,
I feel,
I lust.

I laugh loud,
I love fast,
I don't trust.

I am overlooked,
I am forgotten,
I am brushed off--
I am a girl.

I fear
The loneliness
That haunts
Me
At night.

When thoughts
Of abandonment
And desolate
Isolation
From  
Love
Spear my inmost being.

I cry out,
I lift my face,
And because I am strong 
I fight the
Voice
That tells me
I will never be
Anything to
Anyone.

I am all girl.
I feel every word
Think every thought
Fall every time
Way
Too
Hard.

I wish each day
For that knight,
For that Peace
That throws aside
My fear,
My doubt
To come quickly.

Yet.
He is here.
He hears me.
He knows me.
He loves me
He tells me:

I am all things
Wonderful
Powerful
Worthy
and
Significant.  


I am all beloved. 

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

From the Hapless

So this is a super long post. It is an essay I am turning in for one of my classes. So if you can muster through to the end, good job! I love your dedication! I apologize to my classmates who have already read this (I kind of like it and someone asked me to share it here). 

From the Hapless
OBLIVION: noun  obliv·i·on  \ə-ˈbli-vē-ən, ō-, ä-\
the state of something that is not remembered, used, or thought about anymore; being unconscious or unaware; the state of being destroyed.


It happened in a coffee shop.

What exactly happened is a matter of perspective. Some would say my sanity finally broke that day in a coffee shop; some would say my mind was opened to something beyond myself. I do not know with whom I agree, only that something happened that day…in a coffee shop.
It happened as I sat in a thrifted chair with my nose in a book and a pen in my hand, the smell of a latte curling in the air about my senses. Specifically, it was a thought that dawned on me. The thought of a place, far, far from where I was sitting in that thrifted chair. A land constructed entirely of what I chose to make of it. I used to call this place Oblivion.

Oblivion was a fantastic place. There, the horizon was silent of unnatural noises, forming a sort of cocoon of whimsical quiet where one could hear the wind tousling the trees in a playful humor. Amidst the chattering trees the sparrows sang free songs to freed men, while just beyond that the sound of waves softly caressing the beach’s sand in a lissome, rhythmic murmur reached one’s ears. Upon nearing the crystalline waters, warmed by the vibrancy of a hot noon day sun, one was greeted with an endless blue. The kind of endlessness where one cannot really tell where the sky and sea are separate, mostly because one does not really need to know.
Oblivion really only looked like this when I was living through the American winter months. While the snow blew and drifted at a raging force, Oblivion was serene and quiet, a kind of solace for the weary of heart. I would often find myself yearning for the smell of the ocean while the putrid smell of gasoline exhaust was forcing itself into my nostrils. Or I would yearn for the freshly harvested taste of banana, mango, or avocado while so consciously swallowing a stale spoonful of cereal back at home. In my city where the throbbing headache of radios, televisions, car horns, and mechanical noise filled my ears I could not help but look towards the East where the starry skies and celestial songs of crickets and mourning doves would harmonize with my soul.
I would use this place as my escape. In the fight or flight method of going about the ridiculous tasks of my day, Oblivion acted as the place to which I would fly. You see, the rocky terrain of being mortal in a place called earth often times required looking within to find escape. Especially when everything was crying for attention or had replaced joy with an idea of mundanity (the destroyer of all things fun). So when work, social excursions, and my own aspirations became confused and out of order, I could slip into a future of hopeful bliss where these things were simple and neat.

However, the thought that came to me that day in a coffee shop, the one that caused various responses from passerby, was not the thought that created Oblivion. No, it was the realization that I had been forgetting it all along. In the process of growing up and taking more adult like responsibilities, I had forgotten this escape and forgotten how to find fun. The droning roll call of daily to-do tasks marching through my mind like an army general’s platoon had been keeping me occupied and grounded. And it was as if by being grounded firmly of the earth that I had been living and never really experiencing my life. The tapping, persistent philosophy of Husserl’s and Heidegger’s phenomenology (a philosophy I myself am yet discovering suggested my reality was not really understood. Rather than being alive in the first person, I was living objectively and unattached; I was not present in the phenomenon of the moment.

Of course, by process of elimination and a few basic algebra skills, seeing once again the Oblivion I had forgotten led me to its beginning, to its creation. To be frank, Oblivion did not always look so normal because I was never a normal kid. Before the groves of mango and avocado trees filled the countryside, before crickets and mourning doves were the mariachi band of the land, this place was filled with a more youthful magic and chaos.

Giant elephants used to graze beside giant, furry tarantulas on the sweet, nectar like grass. The moon used to be close and look like cheese. The sun had red and orange rays streaking from its center and cries of ‘hallelujahs’ could be heard in the breeze if one listened closely enough. Lions were the transportation of choice, as horses were too common to be riding on in those days. Monkeys and daffodils scattered the fields, grapes grew on purple, twisted vines, and everyone slept in houses perched in the knobby canopies of castle like trees. The ocean shimmered with hues of blue and green as children played in the warm waves, sometimes choosing to ride on the backs of iridescent sea monsters or whales. The night was filled with games of glow tag when the children would dip their hands into pools of stars and run about splashing one another until sleep descended upon them like dandelion wisps.  
I had loved being in the Narnia like land with giant, grass eating tarantulas. I spent much of my time roaming the pastures, petting monkeys and innocently holding hands with friends. However, in recalling the land of my childhood I was overcome with a depressing nostalgia. As I sat in that thrifted chair in that coffee shop, I began to see my own existence like that of my half empty latte: lukewarm and not nearly as satisfying as what I had hoped.

There are two wrongs to be had in the idea of Oblivion. In the hapless routine where worth is measured in literal things like currency and success, one could completely ignore the idea of an imaginative world. Or one could completely embrace it and live entirely in metaphors and analogies. Each would be equally abusive towards one’s purpose and existence. Which means there must be a balance to be found where the dreams of one’s imagination are brought to life through one’s existence.
I have seen such a Nirvana of worlds only twice in my lifetime. One was in a dear friend of mine who, in his own Oblivion, raced the wind on the wooded roads of the mountains. Oh how he dreamt of being a great runner! He would often talk of achieved runners and how he looked up to them as role models for their speed and obstinacy. I would sit with him as he told me of his dreams of being faster, breaking records, and reaching the Olympics. He would speak of going just five seconds faster or making the mile in under four minutes, how he would then be one step closer to the shadows of his heroes.
I never fully understood the difficulty five seconds could pose, but on the day he told me he finally ran faster I realized the work he had put forth. The outpouring of all his power and exhaustion would help him run fast, but the determination and heart made his Oblivion real. I watched as he made his dreams into a thing he could do, a thing he could accomplish. In his excitement and thirst to run again and again, until he had left the wind and noise behind, he became inspiring.

My mother was the only other person I have known to make her Oblivion real. Her escape was never normal, much like my own. In her younger years she dreamt of adventure. One day she would dream of moving to a big city and the next would be packing, as she thought her Oblivion looked like a daring, spontaneous change. Or she thought her dream was to travel, so she left for England and met prostitutes in bars, little boys in love with candy bars, and women with incredible gardens. Her life was always filled with thinking, creating, and achieving.
My mother believed she had her Oblivion figured out, until she came to a similar realization I had. She found herself yearning for a much deeper escape and saw her soul was filled with dreams of a husband, a family, and a home smelling like cookies. When she married my father her Oblivion began to become real and she found her escape in the innate grasps of a child’s fist on her finger. She became inspiring.

I am not inspiring. I have not found my purpose. I do not fully understand the hungry call my soul cries out with when I stare at my life through the half empty latte. But I am lucky. I have realized my own folly in forgetting my escape, my purpose, while others go through life and wake up in the last moments. They awaken when death is gripping their flailing and helpless limbs, pulling them into a permanent depression, separated by a great chasm from the Abraham of their Oblivion. You see, to have seen and believed before this moment of self-abandonment is to glance into the eyes of wisdom and know one’s escape is incomplete.

Maybe my own Oblivion is like that of my dear friend and I am meant to run for something. I am meant to carry a flag for rebellion, injustice, or the dissolving freedom of man. Maybe I am meant to pour out my heart in my sweat and my blood to race with the wind as songs of the freed sparrows are sung in the chattering trees. Or maybe my own Oblivion is like my mother’s, filled with bedtime stories of a place where children ride on iridescent sea monsters and play tag with pools of stars. Maybe like my mother, I will find my heaven in a family I do not yet have and I will find my other half, my missing part, my muse in a person I have not yet met.  

To be frank, I have never been normal and therefore, by process of elimination and a few basic algebra skills, my Oblivion will not be normal either. My dream will be something I discover slowly and as it is needed. I know my world will come into balance. I have felt it as I have felt the words I write flow from my fingers to the page, like the blood flowing through my veins. So as I sat in that thrifted chair, with my nose in a book and a pen in my hand, the smell of half full latte curling about my senses, I realized I was made for something so much more. I realized my imagination was not dead and I could not let it die because then my Oblivion would be dead too. And so it was then, in the phenomenon of the moment, that I finally realized I was alive.   

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

When I Feel Beautiful


When I Feel Beautiful

Every so often...
I catch a glimpse of a face,

                        Of whom I am nearly unbeknownst,

And on which words,

so seldom spoken,

Are written in her eyes…