Saturday, January 25, 2014

Falling From Angels

In a snowstorm I saw angels. In a rushing dream I felt feathers against my hot cheek. Their wings and their voices brushed against me and left burn marks. The skin blistered and the scars along my back have stayed behind. They've grown white and crooked, like scrawled memories. They trace along me. When I sleep they sleep. And when I wake up they prick my, like the claws of a stretching tabby. Pain is a curious thing. It is the twisted root of an old pine, settling into my chest. And it pulls at my mind, drawing my blood into its breaths. But pain is not unique. This is what makes it so strange. There is nothing as common as the hurt that quietly gnaws. Men walk through the cold day with sorrow in their bellies, and they say nothing. 

That, I think, is the curiousness of hope. It is a wild thing, ready for the harsh desert. It is not soft or gentle. It has no beauty to it. Such a thing would be laughable to any tear-stained eyes. No, hope is mud-covered. Hope smells like old dogs and doesn't shave. Why should it? Far too often it has trudged slowly out to the edge of town. In a hissing winter rain it has walked into a ditch of mud and old trash, feeling in the dark for a hand. With a cut of lightning it has seen me curled up in a womb of tears and night and gone waist-deep to speak a word, to whisper like dawn. Slowly it has carried me back up, fought against every memory that burns and breaks. 
 
And when the new day cracks we are not clean, we are not even warm. But we can see the sun. Even in the winter, the dirt caked to our hair and under our fingernails, we can hear sharp and heavy laughter. It comes from a snow capped and wrinkled man, or an oxygen-assisted grandmother. They are giggling, coughing and chuckling because the sun has come back. It has reminded them of every birth they ever watched and every love they ever carried in their hand like a new and bright fruit. It is the old that make sense. It is their bodies that remind us who we are. Broken and forgotten, they heave in and out. They breath air thick with laughter and tears, air cluttered with the voices of parents and grandparents long gone. Why else would their breaths be shallow? There is too much to take in, too many days carried in and out at every moment. 

So here we are, covered in the night's mud, with tears and scars both still cold on our skin. Love is not clean, but it is warm and wildly alive. It is racing along the streets, a new scent and a new color caught up in the waking dawn. It will grip us by our dirty wrists and brush aside our knotted hair. Like wobbling children, like unsteady grandparents, we stumble on crooked roads. They look like our scars, they remind us of the cold nights. But we are stronger. We are walking.

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Winter

I'll admit that this is a selfish piece. I'm writing this because I want to remember what winter is like, I want to remember in 6 months this exact feeling. I want this to be real to me when I read it again. So how about I write a letter to myself. That's ridiculous. Nevermind. Perhaps this could help anyone who's living in the summer. Maybe I'll pass it off as that. Yes, I will. Here it is.

The grass is dull here. The grass looks entirely crushed, like a pickup truck ran over all of it. Everywhere. The sky too. Yes, a pick up truck ran over the entire sky. I'll admit that at night time the stars have been beautiful. Sure. But then I remember that feeling of night times after the beach. Of coming off a day feeling like a god. The beauty of the bright sun burning still from your skin. Like the sunlight is in your veins. Ah, how I love that. So much. But that's impossible now. Even on the same beach. Things are cold. Days are short. Distracting yourself from missing the summer doesn't go too bad, until you think back on it. Things are getting done, and school's being school. Skin. Oh, skin is the real killer here. Pale is more than normal. It's everywhere. People are bundled up. Whispered at by frost and nibbled by strange wind. And under it all our skin loses itself. It seems to draw in, to pull back like a dog from fireworks. How often to you even see your skin? You look down at your arms and realize how sad they look. You find yourself in a mirror and see the eternally-sleepy winter face on your head. Who ever thought this was a good idea? Winter? Sure, christmas is great. But what if we celebrated it by cooling off in an ocean and playing some solid beach volleyball? Perhaps there are small things that bring us smiles in these annoyingly bright winter days, but come now. Am I the only one who, when the sun shines in winter, wishes I could just go ahead and put the sun away in the top shelf of the closet. If it's going to be winter, let's make it real winter. Save the sun for when it's real. Save it for the summer sunsets. Save it for the days when you can almost hear the heat in the air, right behind the waves and the giggling sand. Save it to bleach hair and lighten paint jobs. Tell me summer, where can I go to find you always? And when you tell me where, can I follow that up? Can you find me someone to go with me? Always?