Friday, September 12, 2014

The Philosopher



“How could they see anything else if they were prevented from moving their heads all their lives?” – Plato, The Republic

The philosopher got on the number 34 bus heading east, making his way to the very back.  The first step in his journey.  Grabbing a forgotten newspaper on the seat next to him, he turned to the obituaries and smiled as he read the statements families wrote for their deceased. 
“Oh Death, the Great Equalizer,” he murmured audibly, only to see several heads turning back towards him. 
People stare, he thought, they have nothing better to do but stare.  The obituaries comforted him, though.  He wasn’t going to give up that morbid pleasure for the mere sake of others.  Although the philosopher believed life had no intrinsic value or meaning, there was something fascinating about those who believed in an afterlife – that there was more to life than just merely existing.
****
He called himself a philosopher, just to make things simple.  His worldly vocation was as a baker, but spiritually, he was a philosopher.  He had been one since his second year of university.  It saved him time from thinking of a possible use for his degree when people asked what he planned to do after graduation.  To ignore the fact that he worked as a baker in his last year of undergrad, with no intention of moving on, he told people that he planned to be a philosopher.  It was his way of saying that all he wanted to do was sit in his black leather chair in his dreary basement apartment, reading, and drinking organic fair trade coffee (to add a little do-good mentality to his existence).
Taking an intro to philosophy course in his second year changed his university experience.  He came from a small town where he was known as a god – admired by all.  Moving away to the city, though, belittled him; made him of national unimportance.  Learning all kinds of concepts and notions in his lectures opened his eyes to see the vanity within himself.  Believing in existentialism caused him to re-examine his life, and through a set of ironic circumstances, the once worshipped teenager of a small rural town, soon became a nameless face in an urban environment.
The philosopher felt it best to remain uncorrupted by the world around him – un bon sauvage, in his own terms.  All the books he read screamed the message of “Man is Beast”.  To abstain from this concept, he had given up on worldly goods, or so he thought.  Giving up his television and video game consoles seemed like enough to constitute a set-apart lifestyle.  Living with only a bed, a desk, a desk chair, a coffeemaker, a fridge, a microwave, a stove, a lamp, a bookcase, and a small collection of books to fill it – books about how Canada conquered the West, the Civil Rights Movement, and philosophical works about the massive period of global decolonization – added to his abstinence from possessions.  A minimalist with a cluttered mind. 
His apartment was small.  Sometimes it felt like he lived in a cave - unaware of the world around him, watching the dim light of a candle flicker, casting shadows on the walls.  The grey paint screaming mediocrity and dullness.  The walls acting as a subtle reminder of how confining a space can be.  It wasn’t that he was pious or hermetic; no, far from it, but he believed that one could only obtain true knowledge when one devoted one’s mind to rise above consumerist desires.  Knowledge was something one attained without supernatural aid.
For all this separation from possessions was worth, though, he was weak when it came to his shoes.  He always needed an expensive pair, a stylish pair.  He didn’t have the money to spend on shoes, so his credit card became a great friend in those moments.  He dressed in hand-me-downs from his dad with the intention of looking aloof from society, but his intentions worked against him when people were drawn to his ripped, dirty, sweaters and expensive loafers as signs of an indifferent musician.  The philosopher liked the attention.  It gave him a sense of purpose when existential angst invaded his very core.  He continued to feed his vanity by buying new shoes that gave people the impression that he was rich, yet uncorrupted by wealth.  He tried to fight against his narcissism, but every compliment he received was one more reason to persuade people into thinking he had the answers to true happiness.  He did feel odd walking around the mall when his beliefs told him to stay away from consumerist institutions, but he only shrugged.
The philosopher had a wise, mature face.  It looked old compared to the rest of his athletic body.  He had protruding green eyes that seemed to have found the elixir of life.  His eyes glazed as he listened to his professors’ speak, his mouth pouting in a Trudeau-esque manner.  He looked like a poster for a political campaign.  Young, but old; trendy, but stark; alluring, but aloof.  He would come in late for every lecture, run up to the front, and plop himself down in the seat, causing the whole row of theatre seats to shake.  A minute before class finished, he would raise his hand to start a debate with the professor, keeping students against their will.
The philosopher would be graduating in a few weeks, but had two final papers to write.  Any normal student would call it procrastination, but being a philosopher, he had to liken it to deeper human emotions.  So, in what he considered a moment of genius, he called his problem “the genius time-constraint syndrome” to justify his lateness.  Time is always being constrained, and he did not see the need to conform to the time limits set on him by capitalist society.  Despite this belief system, he still had two papers due in a few hours for his back-to-back lectures, which he hadn’t started.  In a moment of brilliance, he typed away on his laptop, a consumer good he mildly overlooked for its usefulness, finishing, printing, and stapling one paper in about an hour.  He placed it in his backpack and breathed a sigh of relief.  He would finish the other one later, but now he had a chance to reward his success with a new pair of shoes by killing time at the mall.  He preferred to buy shoes online, yet there was something about the mall that appealed to the philosopher.  It made him feel rebellious.  It made him feel like he was illuminating himself to the real world – that seeing all kinds of people pass by would enter him into the realm of understanding and goodness.  He thought making this journey to the mall would give him an opportunity to encounter himself.  That’s what philosopher’s did – they studied, they gathered wisdom.  He put on his expensive brown leather loafers, and left.
****
After looking at his newspaper on the bus, he decided he would put it aside and look out the window.  He loved to watch people pass by.  The colours of the world around him gave him inspiration.  The people on the streets were his muse.  He loved how they dressed.  He loved how each person was unique, an individual.  He hummed loudly, causing those sitting nearby to look over with menacing stares and scream at him with their eyes.
As he continued to glance out the window, he noticed some sort of bright green thing coming towards him.  He looked up, only to notice a young girl wearing a black tutu, black tights, black wedges, black tank top, and bright green straight hair with black headphones adorning her crown.  She sat right next to the philosopher, taking out her iPod, listening to strange sounds at an ungodly volume.  The philosopher deciphered this as techno music.  He gave the girl a disapproving glance, as techno music was not part of his lifestyle.  Rather than applaud this girl for making a non-conformist statement and find inspiration from her, the philosopher looked at her as though she belonged to a different species.  I can’t believe someone let this girl out of the house like that, or that she even let herself out.  Maybe she should go back to that yahoo-land she came from.  And figures she’d come sit next to me and blast that strange synthetic music. 
The girl took her headphones off her ears and turned to the philosopher, “How do I get to Jamieson’s Library from here?” she asked shyly.
He responded with a warm smile, trying to sound authentic, “Oh, Jamieson’s Library?  You’re actually on the wrong bus.  You have to take the 37 North to Jamieson Street and then you’ll see it on the left.”
The young green haired girl looked confused, as though she didn’t expect to be given those directions, but she quickly got off at the next stop, thanking the philosopher abundantly for his help.  As he saw her run off, he smirked, thinking that was too easy.  He’d never have to see her again, and could enjoy his peaceful bus ride to the mall.
The deed was done.  He had conquered her in a battle of wits.  He could sit in peace for another three stops.  He could think about less trivial subjects than green hair and techno music, and focus on grander things, like finding one’s place in the universe.  
The philosopher pulled the string to indicate he would be getting off at the next stop.  The bus doors opened.  He quickly ran out, shoving the newspaper in his backpack.  He loved to be downtown.  Smelling the fresh spices of Indian cuisine, hearing the melodramatic tunes coming from the trumpet player on the sidewalk, seeing the bright colours people adorned their bodies with.  The sidewalks were crowded.  It was a philosopher’s dream.  There was much to absorb, and he liked to think of himself as a sponge – taking in all kinds of qualities from others in order to squeeze out true knowledge – impart his wisdom.
He saw a homeless man on the street corner, holding out a dirty baseball cap, waiting for change.  The philosopher saw people pass him by without as much as a second glance.  He was disheartened by their lack of sympathy.  The philosopher walked towards the homeless man.  The man had a mature face, leathery in texture.  His skin was dark and weather-beaten with deep-set wrinkles.  He lacked freshness and youth.  He lacked grooming and personal hygiene.  People were appalled, rather than drawn to him.  As the philosopher walked closer, the homeless man mouthed something to him. 
“I don’t have any change to give you,” the philosopher answered kindly, while interrupting the man.
“I just said good morning to you,” was the man’s reply.
He looked down at the philosopher’s shoes. 
“I had a pair just like that when I was young.”
The philosopher smiled and nodded.  He looked down and noticed the homeless man was barefoot.  A pair of dirty ripped running shoes lay beside him.  He didn’t know what to say to the man, so he just walked away.  At least I talked to the guy, he thought.
“God bless you!” yelled the homeless man to the philosopher, as he continued to walk away.
Like God’s blessing will help me, he sarcastically thought, chuckling to himself.   
The philosopher made it to the mall.  He felt odd going inside, as his beliefs told him to stay away from consumerist institutions, but he needed those shoes.  Why should one expensive pair matter anyway?  He never bought anything else.  This he thought was a great philanthropic act – refuse to buy for oneself to leave more for others.  This to him was the same concept as loving your neighbour as yourself. 
The mall amazed him.  The grandness of it all.  He was breathless as he stared up the escalator, dazed as to where to start.  Several floors filled with any consumer’s dream.  The mall covered many square feet.  His feet would certainly ache in the process.  He would need a new pair of shoes after his journey from store to store.  He found a store on the fourth floor.  He tried on a pair of brown leather boat shoes.  A perfect fit.  Comfortable.  Stylish.  Weather resistant.  Definitely a necessity.  He charged it to his credit card and walked out.  The bag from a designer store standing in stark contrast to his father’s grey Canadian loon sweater he now appropriated.
The philosopher returned home and put his new shoes on.  He walked around his apartment admiring the comfort his feet felt, all cushiony inside.  He wouldn’t be on a boat any time soon, but at least his shoes were trendy.  He sat at his desk chair and started to think about his day.  He thought about how he could better himself in order to surge up in the world.  He thought about how his journey had been a success – he saw, he learned, but more importantly, he had a new pair of shoes.
The philosopher walked towards his desk.  It was now time to finish his last essay.  With only an hour before his first class started, it was time to buckle down.  With a cup of fair trade coffee brewing, he jumped onto his leather black chair and started to lean back.  He quickly typed away.  In forty minutes, his essay was complete.  He never relied on notes, but trusted in his intellect to get him through.  He printed his essay.  Ten beautiful double-spaced pages on Sartre and ontology.  The Times New Roman font was crisp.  He stapled the pages together, and placed his essay on his chair.  He walked over to grab his coffee mug.  Lukewarm – tasting like vomit in his mouth.  He threw the coffee down the drain, and brewed himself another cup.  This time it was perfect bliss; the perfect temperature, smoothness, and richness in taste.
While walking back to his desk, he noticed his shoes again.  How stylish they were.  The effort that went into making them.  The material from which they were made.  He smiled, as he was proud of his purchase.  Those shoes defined him.  Leather boat shoes.  Slip-ons with laces.  His shoes cast the perfect image; the image of a hip, young, wealthy man with wisdom far surpassing his years – outdoorsy, yet business-like; one of excellent taste, yet detached from the world around him. 
With the mug in his hand, he quickly walked back to his desk.  He didn’t notice a lace come untied.  As he hurried back, his foot fell upon the untied shoelace dragging across the floor.  He tripped.  His coffee flew in each direction.  Landing on his clothing, skin, laptop, desk, desk chair, and his freshly printed essay.  Ten beautiful pages on Sartre soaked and stained.  He grabbed a cloth to clean his desk and try to salvage his essay.  Unfortunately, for the philosopher, white paper and black coffee have never seemed to get along.  He threw his essay in the trash, and went to print another copy. 
His essay would not print.  In his frustration, he kicked his desk as hard as he could.  Out of Paper, he read on his printer.  He forgot to buy paper.  He roared.  The walls vibrated, as though they would soon cave in.  He searched everywhere for extra sheets, but all he had left were a few pieces of lined paper.  Something did not seem academic about submitting an essay on lined paper.  There was no time in between his lectures to buy more – time had run out - so he’d have to make do with what he had.  In anger, he ripped his shoes off his feet, and catapulted them against the wall.  There they stayed, as a taunting reminder of the never-ending fleet of self-discovery.  He had been defeated.  He printed his essay on the lined paper he found, hoping that by some miracle, his professor would overlook the sloppiness.
Class was about to start in ten minutes.  He stapled his essay together, all ten shameful pages, and threw it in his backpack.  He bolted towards the door.  The first step in his journey.  He rushed wildly through his apartment, like the west wind - bringing new life to the decay surrounding him.  Running out the door barefoot, he left his hellish cave behind.  The sun blinded him as he walked.  But as his eyes adjusted to the light, that good sun surely led him. 

Skeleton of Suburbia



Version One

I
passion hurts.
to be passionate you must leave (something behind).

death waits. at every corner.  muscles ache
where. they. nev. er. have. before. 

Comfort (vb.):

your body longs for.

II
that house was clean.
far.                   from the nightmare of my past.
but something was not right -
left safety behind.

III
up and down i walk… tired… hungry…
nowhere
to lay my head.
O Son of Man, o, o, o.
no compassion. 
pain.
they walk away… drifting…

IV
kept moving…
brok/en
ab.an.doned.


lost.

V
no one to care for me.
i was Their product,
Their guinea pig.
i am a skeleton of Suburbia.

Version Two
 

I
Passion hurts.
To be passionate, you must leave something behind.
It is rewarded by spitting, evil stares.
Death waits, muscles ache
where they never have before.
Your body longs for comfort, the refuge of city lights.
The place where thousands make their home.

II
That house was clean.
Far from the nightmare of my past.
The passion I desired.
Pashhhhhhunnnnn (the word – a phantom, a dream).
No longer woke up to the orchestra
of death's devastating screams.
But oh, mon dieu, something was not right.

III
Up and down those roads I walked. No where
to lay my head.  No song to sing.
Now I lay me down to sleep, sleep, sleep.
Pray the Lord my soul to keep, keep, keep.
Like a game from my childhood.
Have compassion on we, Your people.
Your sheep. 
You had counted 99, but somehow forgot me.

IV
I kept moving.
Pursuing passion.
Pashhhhhhunnnnn?
I am broke
n.
Abandoned.

Lost.

V
No one has to care for me -
I was their product.
Their guinea pig.
I am a Skeleton of Suburbia.




Untitled.


And there before me lay a wasteland.
Remnants of a great nation.
A nation who believed a lie,
A lie that brought about destruction.

A garbage heap lay in the middle of the ruins.
Strange creatures circled around the garbage,
Licking their lips, sharpening their claws, waiting for the word
To be given.

The creatures had the body of a wolf
And the face of a man.

As I was carried closer,
There before me in the garbage heap were
Millions of body parts.
Slim arms.
Slender thighs.
Silky hair.
White legs, brown.
Blue eyes, green.
Strong bones.
Luminous skin.

The word had been given
And behold! The limbs began to rattle
And shake. And shake, rattle, roll.

An army was beginning to rise.
White legs joined brown arms.
Long hair joined short torsos.
Body parts were wrapped in glowing skin.
Body parts enticed the creatures
To come closer.
The beauty of their features was ravishing.

The creatures began to wet their lips -
The bones let off a sweet aroma –
They jumped up and down in their arousement.
A demonish look crossed their eyes.
A war would soon commence.

As the creatures’ lips and teeth were ready to consume
Their eyes spoke of unspeakable sadness.
The word was spoken.  The trumpet sounded.
The armies rose.
Creatures gnawed at the bones, jumping to
Overtake their prey, wanting closeness, to smell
Sweetness, to taste goodness.

But as the body parts began to fight back,
Only to turn back into rubble,
I realized that with neither heart, nor brain,
They never stood a chance.

Black Bars



We called them the black bars because that’s what they were – black metal bars right beside Dwaine’s house.  The only black bars in the neighbourhood.  Painted black once a year.  A shiny top coat.  It was here that we made potions from the poisonous berries on the bush beside Dwaine’s house.  We played house, while mixing our potions on top of Dwaine’s air conditioner, beside Dwaine’s house.  We did this for years, until one day Dwaine came outside his house and told us he’d have to get a new air conditioner.  Some kids had been throwing dirt and sticks and berries and grass into his air conditioner, making his house dirty.  We nodded at Dwaine and went back to playing at the black bars, swinging, and sitting, and talking about Dwaine’s broken air conditioner.  We scratched the black paint off the black bars beside Dwaine’s house while we talked.  Underneath all that paint, afterall, was just metal.  Metal bars painted black.  The only colour that would do for the bars beside Dwaine’s house.

Frontier



They called it the last frontier.
A place for daredevils, thrill-seekers, wild childs.

The natives saw it as something different.
An evil spirit, to steal your soul.

Biting into your fresh flesh,
It entices you, trickster, gagster, gangster.

Nature as a god -
Unknowable.

Oozing skin, little volcanic eruptions.
An epidemic.

Red axe marks on your albion shore.

George Williams Affair



We were not like you.
You thought of us, a race; a species.

Burn! Burn! You yelled,
But you didn’t know who.

An inferno of cords and keyboards ensued.

We sat there peacefully,
Asking for a little equality.

Was it our hair?  Our ancestor Cain?
Blackest black, muddy brown - mascara shades.

Or was it you?

Riot.  Racism.
The computer lab the peaceful thing to do.

Home



Io o o o o.
I am not like you.
You.  Uterus.  Us.
Seven hills,
Yet none my home.
Flesh of your flesh,
fleshed out,
Cold seeping in my blood.
The blood spattered on the maiden snow.
That force of nature, that femme fatale.

Roman fever was it?
More like two wolves muzzling against my face,
smelling the rotten flesh, waiting till the fire went out,
till I die like Perpetua, holding a baby in my arms,
like the baby I once was, flesh of your flesh, bone of your bone.
And the wolves gnawing at my bones.

That great fire started by one of your ancestors to burn
and purge and pillage and rape.
You kept saying ‘tewzday’, the obvious sign of your age.

And those wolves raised me,
I wrapped in their fur, no longer a lamb.
A wolf in wolves’ clothing.

Razed then braised.  Mais  on.
My home, my cassa.
La famiglia è la patria del cuore.

Jenny



Jenny was crazy.
Jenny raved about Immortality.

So when Jenny’s old man started seeing visions,
And her young brother followed dreams,

Jenny knew.

Apocalyptic cataclysm.
A man foretelling and selling her future.

So when Jenny raved about Immortality, she
dragged her feet to loosen the shackled pain.

Jenny prayed.
Jenny in her solemnity.

Waiting to see circles of light dancing before her;
Virgin light.

Jenny buried her father and brother.
The man waited in miry depth.

Jenny rose away from Immortality.
Jenny focused on immorality.

Untitled.



Young people, young people, doctors and ballerinas and firemen, come over.

I never had any friends, nor
complements.

I paint my picture to feel famous.

How should a person be? A celebrity?
I live a simple life – only one.
Dying to be as famous as one can be.  My image start
ling and
magnetic.

All fame, an illusion.  Who I am, who I am, all specks of dirt,
all on this earth.

New Year



The girls lined up in their prettiest dresses. 
Hair long, and shiny, and dark. 
Gentle faces, heart-melting smiles. 
Their laughter could be heard down the river and across the way…

Today would be a beautiful day. 
Celebrate old blessings and the new things to come. 
Young girls were ready. 
Womanhood had marked them in its own
haunting way.
Yet the promise it brought made this New Year’s celebration attractive.

Men lined up across,
Enthralled by the beauty of these young goddesses. 
Their bodies not quite fully developed. 
Fresh, and innocent, and ready to learn.

The first girl held the ball in her hand. 
Hands trembling.
She knew her time, her childhood, was coming to an end. 
Womanhood crashing against her abdominals,
Reminding her it was time to leave her father’s home
And to make a new name, a new family, her own belonging.

Bravery possessing her little frame,
She threw the ball to the other side.
Silence shrouded the celebrators.

Waiting for fulfillment.
Waiting for answers.
Waiting for joy.
Waiting for rejection.

She wasn’t as beautiful as the others. 
She was put first to get her out of the way.
To be someone else’s second.

She prayed to her ancestors for favour.
To be looked upon as worthy.
Worthy to make a name for her new family.
Praying for someone who would reciprocate the action.

Someone she could love.
Someone to protect her from the darkness within.

The ball falling closer to the ground.
The girl’s heart falling with it.

The man across the way caught the ball. 
He the same age as her father.
His hair slightly greying. 

His wife dying in childbirth two years ago. 
He needing someone new.

The two joined together, a purchase would be made.
His dark eyes watching, ready for her to be trained.

The ball continued to pass from girl to girl.  Some chosen, some not.

The last man in line caught the ball.
Girls met their future with a hesitant smile.

Sad goodbyes, yet exciting beginnings.

Some feeling relief, others a loss of face.

She heard womanhood’s silent whisper, and knew that the pain she was feeling was just the beginning.

Orion's Belt



Orion’s Belt shone over your rooftop.
You thinking its symmetry granted you three wishes,
like a genie,
put your finger on a star, the one towards your left, press, release, to activate its power.

Like three magi, lighting your way.
Coming to bear their gifts.
Bestowing their knowledge of the skies.

Yet you forget that the stars come out every night.
Like the screen on your window (open it up for fresh air),
they are dusty and old and ready to explode.
Little white polka dots poking through.

You wished for immortality,
Making sure this time you were smart.
You asked for eternal youth as wish number two.

Yet still you felt yourself decay,
insides eroding, wrinkles performing,
collagen, elastin - spoiling.

And you knew your wishes did not come true.

The power to loosen his belt did not belong to you.

The laws of heaven were not yours to behold, dear mortal.

Throwing withered hands up to heaven,
you yelled to be restored, to be saved. 
O God, do not leave your people abandoned.

Orion’s Belt did not shine over your rooftop.
It was June, and you had one wish left.

When winter came you struggled to rise from your bed.
Orion’s Belt greeted you, but you cursed its name.
One wish you made - the wish to die.

No longer looking to the sky for confirmation.
The ground was where the answers lay.

The gateway to immortality
was under your feet, plush and soft.
Memory foam adjusting to your shape -
an accommodating place to die.



Society



Society locked you behind those dismal grey bars.
Beat you down.

You an adulterous woman who needed to be stoned.
A scarlet harlot waiting for the first blow.
A stander on street corners, street corner preacher next door.

You’re a savage, a beast.
Need to be conformed.
A brute.  A menace.
An attic maniac, biting through wool.
Rabies and scabies
Scalped, scathed, scarred.

Beaten down,
smell that rotting flesh.
Dark-skinned with purply, black craters.
Leprous excommunication.
Bruised, broken, bloody goo.

You are disgusting, a band-aid won’t do.

The Seafood Dinner



The pale skeletal anatomy of a small jellyfish wrapped in toilet paper floated above the sapphire blue surface of water.  Her vibrant, high pitch screams echoed across the vast Mediterranean Sea, scaring the young children around her.  She had only been in Israel for a week and finally had the opportunity to go fishing with her mysterious uncle and heroic father.

            She and her father drove for over an hour in a cramped rusty car to visit family she had never met before, and partake in a ritualistic seafood dinner.  They finally arrived at a small home enshrouded with flowers and fruit trees, and the young girl felt sincerely welcomed by her aunt and uncle’s embrace.  She could not understand either relative, but their actions proved them to be loving and gracious.

            After being toured around the home and becoming acquainted with the live chickens in the backyard, her uncle decided it was time for the three of them to embark on a fishing adventure.  They piled into the rusty car like a package of salty sardines waiting to be eaten.  The drive was thrilling, but after the first hour went by, the girl had a blasé attitude towards the scenery around her.  She tried to amuse herself by playing games with her imagination, but the lines of rich emerald olive trees soon wore her out.  She opened her window and allowed the fresh air to dance around her, making her feel like an escaped convict breathing in the smell of freedom.

            After the car was parked, the three began to walk towards the sea, passing awe-striking mountains and getting lost in their beauty and mysticism.  The ocean soon lay before their naked eyes and the young girl was shocked by the purity and innocence before her.  She held tightly to her bottle of Coke and knew it was time for the adventure to begin.

            Her father and uncle began walking towards the shallow end of the sea, when she realized she needed to catch up.  The men held their fishing poles with pride as if they were prepared to battle for a king.  Small fish floated by the girl’s feet as they continued to walk.  Seaweed wrapped around her ankles, as she struggled with Mother Nature to break free from their hold.  As they walked, the shallow end of the sea dropped magnificently, forming a small waterfall.  The two 6’4 men threw their fishing rods into the deep sea and waited until a fish would bite.  Massive waves came crashing through, but they stood their ground, holding their heads with pride.  A red bucket stood between them, having one fish in its possession.  The girl enjoyed watching her family catch fish as though it was part of their history.

            Waves kept coming, getting higher every time.  A few more fish were caught and the bucket filled up nicely.  The girl walked over to the edge where the sea fell, looking down with anxiety at the drop before her.  Her father and uncle had to scream at one another to be heard over the waves creating a symphony of devastating sounds.  She watched the waves roll with a sense of boredom, until she saw the biggest wave in her entire life.

It was moving fast.  There was nothing she could do.  She stood there with apprehension.  It was higher than her dad and uncle.  Faster and faster it came, until it hit.

            The two men were completely knocked over from the severe weight of the wave.  The fell straight back and on top of the girl.  She had the weight of two grown men on her fragile ten year old body.  They both felt a sense of shame and embarrassment for not holding themselves against the wave, but they soon rose up, regaining their dignity and poise.  The girl was told it was too dangerous to be around them, banishing her to the shore.

            She was exiled into the world of the mundane and boring.  Her father was supposed to be her hero, but he wouldn’t even allow her to try her hand at fishing.  She finally thought she had the chance to prove she was worthy, and as she sat solemnly on a rock thinking, all the colour faded from her face.

            Soon, a man in short blue shorts and a white t-shirt walked to her place of misery holding a dirty Styrofoam cup.  He dipped the cup into the small section of water beneath her feet, pulling up little grey minnows in one shot.  She was captivated.  The man filled up several cups of small fish, and eventually left without a remark.  She sat bewildered and decided it was her chance to fish.

            She picked a cup floating beside her, and dipped it into the water in the same manner as the fisherman.  She lifted the cup with a big grin on her face, only to find that the cup was empty.  She tried again.  No fish.  She decided to try again.  Still no fish.  The man had to have taken all of them.  A sense of disappointment swept over her, but she put her cup in one last time, hoping for something worthy.  When she lifted it back up, it was heavy, and she knew she gained her prize.  A small, transparent crab was stuck inside the cup.  She had made her first catch. 

            Her father returned with her uncle and she ran to show them her catch.  Her dad took the crab out of the cup and ripped off the claws with his bare hands.  This reminded her of her father’s gallantry, and considered him her hero once again.  He apologized for not letting her fish with them, but told her another day they would go to a safer place to fish.  She let her crab go on marble stone beside her, and the three gathered into the cramped car once again.

            That seafood dinner was the most wonderful meal she had in her whole life.  Although eating that fish reminded her of her almost perilous fate, she felt a sense of joy in how her father handled the situation even if it made her feel unwelcome.  She looked at her father with pride for being so brave when the wave came and when he ripped the claws off that crab so she wouldn’t be hurt.  Her father may have grown up in a different culture than what she was used to, but she knew he would always be a victorious hero.

The Station



It was written on your forehead, “Here lies a humble, obedient servant.”
You marched to the beat of a funeral procession, entering the hearse that would bring you home.

Before me were hundreds more like you.  In unison, you walked to the beat of a drum.
Your expensive leather shoes creaking against the ground.  A melodramatic percussion.  A melancholic sound.

You’ll lay six feet under your work, until you yell “Track 5” with the masses,
and know you are going home.

Untitled.



They named me Stephen.
Maybe to them it had meaning.
Maybe it was the name of someone great

Someone’s great uncle.
It could’ve had significance.
It could’ve been a prophecy.
Predicting my downfall.

Like that guy in the Bible
Who was stoned to death.
A rock, not a pebble, slowly lifted off the ground,
Catapulting at my head, speeds unfathomable
and then neck bent backwards, bones cracking,
blood gushing, rushing down my spine, falling to the ground.

Those people who named me
Thinking they were doing something kind.
Like my name could be sweet.
Just any old name could taste as honey.

Tonight, I got stoned.
I had nowhere to go.
Nowhere to lay my head.

Leaning against that wall, I slipped into a reverie.
An eerie embodiment of all I’ve ever held dear.
Like that picture on my wall of a woman
Wearing a white dress.  She looked so happy,
As though her dreams were coming true,
A fairy tale in the making.

I started to think about how that dream quickly ended
When her prince became a monster and two little birds
Poked her eyes out, blinding her to the horror story she found
Herself in.

She gave me that name before he left,
and she hid in that room wearing the skin of a donkey.
All I remember was how soft to the touch she was.

They called me that name out of love and anger and sadness.
It was mine, they thought.
As though a name was a belonging.  Like it was a
Possession to behold.

All those who came before me
Throwing their weight on my shoulders,
Together, a giant,
In this fight.

And a couple of stones would bring me
To my knees and kill me.

Dirty stones from the ground.  The ground
Where we all came.  Rough stones.
Raw, unpolished, heavy stones, hurled
At my face.

A martyr on the street corner.
Bruised and bleeding and dead.

They named me Stephen.
And it will forever be engraved on my tombstone.
It will be forever mine.

Time



Time is a funny thing
How it blows through the trees

Sweeping your secrets under the rugged earth.

I cleaned under my bed this morning
Finding an old grilled cheese sandwich,

Little green aliens bathing on crusted bread.

That explains the stench in the room
Mango Passion Island Breeze a saviour, a friend.

A box with your notes, dusty and grey.
I picked one up.  June 21.  A good day.

Before the incident.  An afterthought.  Parentheses.
Like never eating cheese before bed

A way to avoid nightmares.

And then the nightmare.  You disappearing for a winter.
An alien inside of you.

But Time is a funny thing
How it blows through the trees

And I lost you that day when you fought that alien off with whatever sharp things you found in your room.

Your insides mushy and rotten like the melted cheese inside my sandwich.