Thursday, October 30, 2008

Not So Much the Buildings

I was sure it wouldn’t be the people.

I was sure it would be the buildings which finally killed me.

Take for example the Albina Press, the new one on Hawthorne of course. (It would be madness to miss the old one, sheer, indulgent madness on my part.) Each time I remember the Albina Press the furniture begins to shift, moving left to right and rearranging like real life Tetris blocks. Tables pile on chairs, counters turn 180 to form walls and a bathroom where the front door should be. It’s difficult now to call anything bigger than a doorknob, solid. In the end it’s nothing short of an exorcism. The whole building runs down Hawthorne at a righteous clip- leaving behind a sorry trail of interrupted conversations and Sweet n’ Low- before jumping butt first into the Willamette. It sinks instantly.

October has more than her fair share of fire exits. Albina Press, Music Millenium, the back patio of the Moon and Sixpence, wasting away one square inch at a time. The loss is barely perceptible at first. My eyelids oblige, raising like garage doors and later both ears follow suit, offering an escape hatch for anything eager to slip free. It is only in November, when I can no longer remember the smaller details of Beulahland- the water dispenser or the cut of your head slouching against the back booth, which bathroom falls left and which right- that I finally admit to the loss. All those safety bricks, those planks and partitions infused with the home town taste of beer, of cigarettes and God-forbid, decent coffee, the very things I’d planned on hooking into, have turned to smoke and ghosts.

I am senile when it comes to buildings.

“What about Powell’s?” I ask myself, up to my armpits in romance novels at the local library.

“Of course you can still remember Powell’s, can’t you? The bookish smell of the front foyer, receipts slipped inside the pages of just-bought novels like crisply folded hospital sheets. The surly-faced chap behind the coffee counter, the Street Roots man with his cardboard sign, the way your shoes squeak too loud in the fiction section and people glare and you think, ‘Damn it, it can’t be my shoes. I’m wearing different shoes from last week. It must be my actual feet that squeak. Perhaps I should start walking on my hands when traversing the aisles of the fiction section, selecting volumes of Steinbeck and Carver with the un-socked toes of my right foot.’ Surely you haven’t forgotten Powell’s already, have you?”

“Not so much the moments,” I say to myself, “Not so much the moments, but the shelves are surely sliding so you’re unsure even what color the fiction room should be, though dear only knows how many million hours you’ve spent crouched and blissful under the letter S feeling the weight of literature burning in the back of your thighs.”

Scared of losing everything, even the sound of the speaker system announcing worship on the top floor, I make a list of the very best seconds and surprise myself. For these clever seconds on tenth and Burnside aren’t bricks or even books, but rather flesh and blood moments with mouths and teeth where the mortar should be.

1.The morning with the photography books when we told our stories in maps and pictures, racing from one rack to another, plotting a six thousand mile journey from home to Portland to the possibility of all tomorrow’s ships and planes. The way you smiled your thin-mouthed smile over black and white potato fields and I saw for the first time that your hands were spades and your teeth, far from perfect. Practicalities aside, this was a grand thing in my book.

2. The afternoon in the fiction section, right there under the letter T with Blankets in my hand, when I looked to my left and saw the man with tiger tattoos crawling up his arm, Thoreau splayed open in one hand. (Perhaps it wasn’t Thoreau. Perhaps I only imagined it this round and this good, but casual poetics would claim Thoreau a fitting choice.) I looked long and hard at those tiger inks clawing out from under the cuff of a blue, plaid shirt and that shock of black, dive hair emerging from the collar and I thought to myself, “Holy Hell, it’s a fat Ryan Adams.” Then lo and behold, three days later in the evening paper, I realized it was the fat Ryan Adams and I might have smiled at least for all the heartbreak songs of my student days.

3. The evening we three, dressed all in black with eyeliner eyes, turned up late for the wrong reading and sweated our way through two hours of cancer and climbing Everest: center right in the front row, with nothing but thoughts of escape fermenting in our doughy heads. And afterwards how we laughed and ran almost a block in heels, pausing to laugh at the lights as if everything had suddenly come loose inside.

4.Finally the late afternoon in the foyer, Carson McCullers breathing down the back of my neck and the feeling that I was shrinking into the soles of your shoes. How I steadied myself and thought for the very first time, “I could marry you right here in the foyer of Powell’s between the special offer books and new releases. I could stand on a pile of coffee table books to reach your mouth. They could shut the store around us and eventually we might leak into the literature.” How I turned away and felt my cheeks burning for I’ve always been too blunt for that kind of good fortune.

I have surprised myself, for each of these losses is neither bricks nor board, but rather flesh and blood moments with mouths and teeth and arms I thought incapable of such a very long stretch.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Tuesday.

October is cold when you cannot see June. Cleave to or cleft from this place that once seemed so strange. There, there will be a big backyard with a low sky swinging, trees to lean a spine upon. Read a book. That is the way I will walk home, and this is the route I take now, a gauntlet of gold and red boughs, leafmeal beneath my feet. Something is wrong or right. Possibility widens the window. Me, then you with our lives stretched before us like a Thanksgiving table, though sometimes I think, I cannot eat. Cannot enjoy the taste of anything. No, any thing you say can bring a smile. Old creeps into my bones every now and again. Sinews sewn taut and my limbs wish to run. Could I blink and be there? Across a table, fingers stretched to grasp a glass of wine. There’ll be time.

I worked the math out in my head, then killed the feeling completely. Cut down my hair. A new beginning, a naked baby-feeling. Lose my sex, my fingerprint safety net. [Been told] a man’s mind and woman’s red heart. Ancient soul with elastic skin. Pull on my too big overcoat, the wool one with all the buttons I must retie again and again, wear it like abstraction, obscurity. So this is what security feels like: a little too heavy, warmy, fusty, but necessary in case I am becoming too weary for the knowing. Am relying too heavily upon the unknown expanse of may be. Possibility. Like Emily, dwell there too willingly. Homebound.

Crashkill all about me, defeat the life that threatens to suppress the carnival spirit sense, the horses. The horses, the oats and apples unspent, the games we play to pay the rent. Reel back, reel in acrylic goldfish, time away from lovers and mothers, sisters, brothers, fathers. Ascetic assertion, just to make another day orange and bright with tries. Trying to make a home of my heart, only cinematically in technicolor and polaroid captures of the future fitting. Fitting that I should be so lost here among leaves that turn to crimson and copper waxshine.

And cake and wine was a picture of me, what I could be, lost too, lost to reality. never wanted just me or who would either? All black boots and a wool coat, broken doll eyes. Out at sea, a full fathom five gulf between you, and then me. Missing that self that is selfless and true. Pearls on a string, these loves I’ve left behind. Pressed round and shiny, all platonic ideals shaped and secured in the void, the ether out there, rising high to greet the stars. A bluehot kiss hello and then wandering on to elsewhere. Great big purple bursts poison the teeth. Leave a sweet residue that can not forget she bit his cheek. Drew blood. And it was love.

I miss the chance to create stuck on the paint desk






I am main street
I am alabaster
I am independence on the hillstar
I am the apricot touch on the paint desk

I am bored





I am summer breeze
the wasting sunblush,the soft haze
the planet’s atlantic mist
I am the alpine meadow wasting the planets resources





I do filigree, I do rich cream
I do enjoy toffee treat, rain cloud.

I do not enjoy my sailcloth
I do enjoy driftwood

I do not enjoy my job

I want brownie
I want mystic beige
I want grey slate.

I want to draw pure green
I want dapple
To make art rich raspberry
To live cocoa bean



a rich sapphire
a more olive grey
sustainable subtle skies
a lifestyle magical
a more cherry red

a more hospitable soft black






Heat up your cold hands.



Monday, October 27, 2008

Saturday, October 25, 2008

À la Recherche du Temps Perdu: The episode of the hot dog

Stomping through tall, weedy grass, my mother in the lead and I, about four or five years old, on the way to the college theater, to see that new “Ewok movie.” Those were our days of graduate student housing, walls of painted concrete block and linoleum floors that were cold to the touch. Just the three of us. My father still with shaggy hair and mustache, he used to take me to the Weinerschnitzel, a shingled, red A-frame, where "drive-thru" really meant it and I delighted in watching cars pass through the building. But we never drove, we just walked there and sat outside, at plastic tables, under plastic parasols, striped in the colors of mustard and ketchup.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Ten Months of Missing You

... if you have to miss something you love, (or at the very least, once thought you might love,) for more than a week it begins to smart like spliced Hell. After a month it's more like an amputation.

Ten Months of Missing You, is a crumbling attempt to capture some of the smaller things we might otherwise forget to remember- you know the smaller things like overdrawn American sitcoms and ticket stubs from the Trimet six weeks out of date and already disentegrating in your coat pocket. Like Raymond Carver or scrabble tiles or just the right song in the wrong place. Not to mention that thing he always said everytime you left the room or that thing you always said when he returned, missing toothbrushes and those sneakers hanging from the telephone wire. Of course you know these smaller things.

Perhaps we'll paint them or write them in long lines of slanted prose. Perhaps they'll make no sense to anyone outside our own shoes and this will make us happier than a full scale revival. Perhaps they'll form an anchor to this clear and present place or sharp little arrows shooting manfully forwards or looping into yesterday's fog.

Perhaps we simply need reminding of how very lucky we have been. If you have to miss something you love for ten months or more it's well worth saying so.