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    The Gospel of Breaking

    Page 3
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      worth leaving if you’ve got ghosts to chase

      or a tongue quickly turning to acid at the floor of your stomach

      ignoring the nonsense of small talk you reached for your keys

      patron saint of the urgent runaway

      patron saint oflet’s get the fuck out of here

      you fashioned a highway while i was making plans for a cliff

      you filled the tankgrabbed my hand and saidlet’s go

      like there wasn’t already an ocean on either side of us

      like all the walls weren’t closing in for good

      and the way you said it

      you made me believe

      joker

      when you finally decided

      to stop playing

      the joker

      you packed up

      everything and

      moved to the

      farthest city

      you could afford

      now you tell your jokes for a living

      and give your sadness away for free

      alphabet soup

      some of the words are yours and some

      of the words are mine in the same way that we have both held all

      the letters of the alphabet in each our mouths and

      never come to the same conclusion

      when I am angry you smirk and I am more angry

      except also horny now and backspace confused

      some of the thoughts are mine and some

      are not mine in the same way that I look in the mirror and try

      to erase my catapult-mouth error

      the aching moon at the gate of my throat

      if I turn to the side I will not disappear I tried

      to tell you I am not delete that kind of good girl

      if I turn and turn and turn if you unsee me

      if I pull the tangle of my hair from your fist

      ctrl make the meat of my thigh a ghost between your teeth

      maybe if I just keep spinningtill the words blur

      till the lyrics and the thrill and the taste mix up

      maybe make a wife of the churning

      if I press my eyelids close

      to any sleepy highway horizon

      lawnmower begginglock

      any beaded papercut

      make a spectacle of my own flesh

      spill typewriter ribbons from my shadow

      esc.

      seconds

      I bite my own lipcurse at myself (curse)

      think of how silly it is to have been chewing

      for 35 yearsand still be getting it wrong

      except tonightbefore my altar when flesh pierced

      rubiesat the jagged edge of my own tooth

      I whispered(thank) you(thank) you

      for an awareness of my own body from my

      own body(blessed)

      for gifting myselfthis blessed sensation

      I once needed from you

      it’s only a good ride if you can choose to get off

      or: to the people who would call robin williams a coward

      what dainty fish-hooks have danced in your heart

      dangling the whimpering shadow of which sadness

      what tiny worries

      that you would ask more of a man

      who has already given you all of his fresco-song

      the last of his flashlights

      emptied out for you his lashing laughter

      do you know what it is to think of the thing a hundred times before coffee

      to make the bed anyway

      have you designed the moment until

      every room you enter fills itself with sharp objects pointed in your direction

      to call someone a coward for surviving years of this torment is selfish

      to do it with a mouth full of their laughter is simply ungrateful

      what jokes do you tell

      which holy cities have you saved

      that you would string up the mask of a clown

      so you might be entertained

      what do you know of rest

      or the needing of it

      what do I know

      there is no measure for this madness

      that we should tell a man how much he can take

      how much more he owes us who have offered

      so very little to replenish what we readily consume

      did we expect this to be endless

      will there ever be a time when we do not ask for more

      they said we wouldn’t need these

      life jackets on dry land

      i.

      mama remembers herself a little girlturned away

      from a birthday pool party

      mama remembers herself a little girlturned away

      ii.

      Before we fly from trinidad to the small island

      we drive up the hill to stay in the BIG hotel

      now, NEWLY RENOVATED, it has stood on this

      same perch for the “better” part of a century

      mama remembers herself, a little girl turned

      away from a birthday pool-party because this

      big north american hotel didn’t yet let brown girls

      bathe themselves in full sunlightsomehow

      scared the world would be hypnotized by the shine

      probably even mama didn’t know she was a diamond

      in a pool of glassthe way they treated her

      when we reach the hotel nearly fifty years later

      standing new and shiny in the same cursed spot

      we learn that the pool is the last piece of the renovations

      it will not reopen until after we leave

      today I saw a small blonde-haired girl drift back and forth

      impossibly buoyant child carried upward atop

      a weightlessness so vast and deep that she could not touch

      her feet to the bottom of itthe big blue stretched out

      around her a clean white tile framing the scene in its perimeter

      mama was a little girl once

      once

      I was too maybe always will be someplace

      iii.

      After hours of travel

      I pull the tiny computer from my pocket

      eye each blue image pouring from its screen

      every one erupting new colour

      some unknown and still-beloved brown face

      smiling after another

      a newsreel of necessary medicine

      dancing dark girl pops her shoulder in my direction

      mean-mugs until the camera looks away

      brown-skinned boy and his father blow each other kisses

      with a tenderness that quenches my dreams

      the remedy is loving each other harder

      loving these black bodies more than waterdeeper still

      mama remembers herself

      mama remembers herself

      mama remembers

      (sugar plum)

      mommy sat down on the porch to put her foot up. She has so much to tell me today, about the iguana and how it could make aunty run, about the good bush that washes away the bad spirits anyone might put on me. I must take some to charlotteville and bathe with it in the ocean. She tells me too many times about the fish I am already sure I do not want to eat. But I listen. mommy is ninety-nine and she has earned all of her indulgences. So she tells me again about the house she built, how no man helped her do it. When I ask about her mother, she tells me her maiden name was murray. I want to know more about her mother, my great grandmother. I want to know what she looked like and how she smelled and what she did to stay alive. Was her hair long like mine, was her skin dark like /uncle/?

      mommy doesn’t talk much about her mother. Says she liked her mother fine, but she loves her /daddy/. So I listen to her talk about my /great grandfather/ defratis. She tells me he was nice, and fair, with beautiful hair. Half guyanese and half portugese. She tells me he had plenty money, was a rum dealer with lots of business, rum shops here and there. She tells me how he died at thirty and how a woman who wo
    rked with him told her the story. Some jealous man put poison in his rum so he could steal up all of his business. She asks me if I understand. I do, but as always I have a tough time telling the difference between truth and myth.

      Satisfied of my understanding she goes on. She tells me how she loved him. How she cried and threw herself down in the street, just a little girl of five, begging her /father/ not to go to work. She only met him this once, but she loved him her whole life.

      When she rolled around and threw a fit to stop him leaving, he reached for his belt, began to unbuckle to lash her into better behaviour, but he stopped himself. Picked her up out of the road and carried her into the store. He told the young woman in there to cook some food and share with her and then he was gone.

      mommy says that if her /daddy/ hadn’t died, she would’ve gone with him, travelled to portugal and all over. She says he would’ve left her some money and she wouldn’t have had to work so hard all of her life. Things would’ve been different. She would not have stayed in charlotteville, or married /my grandfather/, (she doesn’t say much about this but I think I already know he was a heavy-handed man). I listen. Eventually, in a moment of gratitude I say that if things had been different I wouldn’t be here, I wouldn’t exist. That’s what I’m telling you, she replies. My gratitude melts into a kind of passive sadness, she has already measured this option, has found it acceptable. I say, but what about your children? I would’ve had different children. She doesn’t say it with malice, but a tepid resignation. I repeat BUT I WOULDN’T EXIST!

      No, you wouldn’t be my child. It’s a reasonable compromise for her, a whole life, house, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren still, gambled on trust for /a man/ only met once, gambled on the kindness of her being fed, instead of beaten.

      I think about the longing I have suffered in my life. How I have stretched toward people who would not have stayed even if there were no venom.

      The promise of possibility is a trap that has kept me from the joys of my own life.

      And what joys am I missing, in clinging to a /daddy/ who is always going, always walking toward poison and away from food? What love do I dishonour and ignore, in searching for a face I hardly know?

      Let them go to their poison /great grandfathers/ and /daddies/ too. Let them go and leave behind children crying as they will, mourning as we do. Let them go, and let us see what wild plants grow in their absence. What medicines will spring from a line of women with lost /fathers/ and distant /daddies/? A line of maidens and witches who carry their own names and build their own houses, and birth their own bloodlines and cook their own food.

      black feminist

      In response to patti smith’s “rock ’n’ roll nigger,”

      in response to solidarity is for white women,

      and in response to my white, activist, feminist, poet friend who let slip

      from her mouth a humorous exclamation of “NIGGA, PLEASE!”

      They saidIcould be a feminist too!

      after all, they are going to need someone at the meeting

      who knows how to tighten up

      all those white-girl dreadlocks

      oh yesthey saidI could be a feminist

      that isof course

      as long as I don’t ask any questions

      try not to mention the dirty mouths of old icons

      or how proudly mother deities suffered themselves

      black and dirtyblue and bruised

      so they could use one of the really good words

      words made for the megaphone-mouths of punk rock stars

      words like nigger

      like everything that’s yoursis going to be mine for the using

      like didn’t you know what we were doing here

      likego ongive them your storyyou’ll see how it shines

      like fresh blood for the cameras

      there are going to be a lot of cameras

      and

      they said I could help must be good for something

      must be some big-toothed benefactor that would just eat me up

      articulate black girl such as myself

      just the right amount of mad

      Shhhhh!

      They didn’t mean it like that,

      no need to get upset!

      We’re all in this together

      alright then

      put me on the front lines

      give me your blackestmost brackish kind of weather

      this thick skin is just waiting to be goodfor something

      yesplease

      give me a nice big sign that reads

      ME TOO!or maybeme too?If that sounds better

      you know? They said I could be a feminist

      as long as I don’t talk about this black girl body

      about that cold red body of water

      about an inheritance so great that no one body could apologize it away

      as long as I don’t remind anyone where so many of the ideas

      for this movement came from anyway

      no one likes a know-it-all

      and yeseven in this progresssomeone has got to play the fuel

      all of us have to make ourselves useful

      and surelyno one has yet forgotten how sweetly and happily

      dark bodies take to making kindling

      they said i could help

      they said i could be the best kind of help

      and still you cannot touch it

      and what is it you think you will find in my hair? some secret

      weapon, or a wisdom you know you can reach for but never touch

      a knife, a key, a mirror?

      are you hoping to find yourself in there?

      a lineage to a history you have refused? forgotten

      the name of an ancestor who didn’t carry anyone

      away from their love of freedom

      what are you searching for so deep in my roots

      in the cold and glaring white of this security line

      some way to make me feel darker, smaller, still

      observed and counted, caught and branded

      should we go into the small room again?

      so that you can remind me

      which parts of my body belong to me

      which pieces will be mocked first, stolen later?

      is there some story you want to remember

      too long and thick to be believed

      some warm indigo hand on your face

      some sweet nipple you want to suckle

      when you dig your fingers into me

      WHAT IS IT?SPEAK UP!

      the room is fullmicrophones listening

      your own children can hear

      desires wriggling under the x-ray

      and your ghostsspeak clearly now

      what is ityouare hoping to find?

      in my mind there is a place where we are both whole

      Go to sleep little baby Go to sleep little baby

      you and me and the devil makes three

      don’t need nobody but the baby

      mama would lullaby me to sleep underneath the humming canopy of mango trees on the island where she was born

      it is my earliest memory bandana in her short black hair the flesh of island fruit ripening the air around us and the calm sound of mangoes dropping one by one

      branches shifted in the windcasting jigsaw-puzzle shadows on my newborn faceI remember the smellI remember the feel of the place

      or then maybe I only think I do memory is a funny thing and sometimes your mind plays tricks on you

      It is possible that I was too young to remember this at all that my only real knowledge of this

      was hearing the words of my mother’s stories fall happily from her lips

      I have read about the malleability of the mind and certain thinkers find that even the suggestion of a memory

      can create the belief that we ourselves were there

      perhaps it is a function of our humanity this natural tendency for empathy the ability to put ourselves in the place of another


      Likewise I have taken many things from my motherher boundless persistence in loveher tangled dreams and memories

      and this

      hungry disease that

      lurks inside of me

      the mementos that I know to be mine show the wear and tear of times when I had to be more mother to herthan she could be to me

      coming home from school to find her curled in the darkness of her room, crying and shaking like the wet twisted leaves of her mango trees

      running my fingers through her hair softly

      go to sleep little baby go to sleep little baby

      trying with ten-year-old hands to pull her back into the land of the living depressionit is the gift you never wanted that just keeps on giving

      and I think it is the disease of our memorieseither we remember too much darknessor we forget too much light

      in retrospections that I know to be mineI have found both of ussteeped in our own darkness smothered by it

      I imagine how she must have feared that it would grow fat inside my belly like a seedthis dark maladypassed from one loved one to another

      butmama if it is true that we can create in each other new and old and borrowed memories

      then I will plant you nothing but mango trees

      and warm island breezes and your daughter’s face looking up at you with all the love and life you have given me

      and your voice sweet as it could ever be softy

      don’t need nobody but the baby

      what forgetfulness is for

      i.

      Some say that the bond between lovebirds is so strong that if you separate two birds that have mated for life they will pluck out their own feathers to commit suicide it sounds tragic enough to be called beautiful though, I wonder if this is not an attempt at suicide at all but one last effort to remove whatever obstacle may have come between them

      to render the vulnerability of nakedness the simple need for skin on skin

      ii.

      like any good small-brained big-hearted animal I am a firm believer in the power of forgetfulness

      but I’ve been studying timelines in the same way I used to learn your eyes

      so meticulously that I could pick them out of lineups blindfolded so delicately that

      I could walk your lashes like tightropes hung from sky

      hoping to find the exact intersection where our lives first intertwined wanting badly

     


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