Archive for March, 2008

Our minds, our memories…

Monday, March 31, 2008

Our minds, our memories, work in convenient ways. Pain fades over time and we’re left only with the faint idea of what we’ve done. With occasional flashbacks. So quick, it passes us by in a blink unless we are aware, wanting to catch it.  Explore it. Rip it open. Back to the pain.

this is just to say | series (inspired by William Carlos Williams’ “This Is Just To Say”)

Sunday, March 2, 2008

this is just to say 1
he:

I have read
the poems
that were in
the inbox
and which
you were probably
sending
for lunch (by the wings)

Forgive me
they were delightful
so tender
and so refreshing

this is just to say 1
she:

i have eaten
your poeticsmiles
that were in
the mailbox

and which
you were probably
saving
for later (:time alone by the swings)

Forgive me
they were luscious
so lyrical
and so loving

this is just to say 2
she:

i have shared
your past
that were in
the treasurebox

and which
you were probably
saving
for forever (today)

Forgive me
they were precious
so bitter
yet so sweet

this is just to say 3
she:

i have felt
your lovesongs
that were in
the jukebox

and which
you were probably
saving
for tomorrows

Forgive me
they were wonderful
so soft
and so thesame

this is just to say 4
she:

i have eaten
the secrets
that were in
the deepestendofyoursoulbox

and which
you were probably
heldtightforsolongnolongerawareitwasclenchedinsotightaknot
for[(ever)tillnow]

forgive me
they were tenderprecious
so de-light-ful
and so puddlewonderful

this is just to say 2
he:

I have misplaced
the words
that were in
this vision of you
and that
I was planning
to wake
you with.

Forgive me.
A poem was
on my lips,
but I was tired
and so secure in your love
that I slept before it reached my
fingertips.

Please read the original William Carlos Williams’ “This Is Just To Say” here: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/15535

Pieces of Me

Sunday, March 2, 2008

On the one hand, I grew up with a strong desire to be just like my mother, Mama I call her. I had a deep, almost possessive love towards Mama to the point where my Onechan, older sister, would tease me, calling me a maza-kon, literally an abbreviation for mother-complex. On the other, I had an intense disgust for her weakness towards my father, or Papa, and prayed I wouldn’t be anything like her as a woman/wife. So dichotomous. So conflicting. A long-running love-hate relationship. As much as I loved and honored her generosity, her giving heart, I think my fear of ending up just like her, abused and powerless, gave birth to a righteous, maybe even religious belief in our differences. Language barriers. A generation gap. Her stubborn closed-mindedness. My stubborn open-mindedness. Her conservative need for stability. My liberal desire for growth. I’m constantly frustrated by her inability and unwillingness to step out to see me, devastated by her apathetic indifference towards me. My thoughts. Feelings. Values. Experiences. Even existence. I hunger. For recognition, maybe even validation. Not just cleanly sorted under her labels, “my baby”, “my youngest daughter”. She denies everything else that I am. But it’s not her fault, nobody is to blame. I’m left with my inner abyss, with this chasm between us. She may never really understand me. Ever. So I give up, it’s shoganai. “It cannot be helped, nothing can be done.” I abhor even the slightest possibility of my future regressing to resemble hers, so I do everything in my power to sail as far away as I can from her island of powerlessness and dysfunction. I bury my hopes in books and education. Wisdom will cure this curse running deep in our blood, our roots. I diligently embark on a journey for Independence, build a temple of self-respect, one accomplishment at a time. I have a relentless urge to metamorphosize into a stronger, surer self. And I choose to live in America, free from societal restrictions and filial obligation. So I think. I’ve run so hard, so far, for so long, yet it’s dawned on me that I may be running in circles. Or more likely, just desperately running away. Away from what is at heart. Away from really looking into my eyes because I know she’s there. I refused to acknowledge it because I feared the power of her voice. But not any longer. I realize this part of her/me I dread will destroy me, will never go away. Unless faced. She lives in me. She is me. A part of Me. Only quietly waiting for the best chance to take Me hostage. Little by little. Eating at confidence and esteem until nothing is left but a sunken face. Still hungry. Craving. Needing. Love. That me plagues Me. And I only empower it by ignoring it. So I look closer. Addicted to staying connected, like another sign of attention is a necessary stamp of validity. Another seduction of approval, a secret key to lock love away. A permission to be me. I feel like mother-earth is slipping under me. Am I losing control? Just so screwed up? I very much may well be. But I won’t ever unscrew these false convictions until I connect with Myself. All parts, including this me. Shifting inconvenient truths back into focus. Because I’m not so different after all from her. The way she gives all of herself to everyone but her self. That is me. How Papa and we, the kids, define her happiness. That’s me, too. Not so different at all. Pieces of Me ready to be acknowledged. Understood. (Consoled? No, not consoled.) Loved.

Excerpt from Essay “Remote Controls”

Sunday, March 2, 2008

The next morning would be as any other morning. Normal. Like what happened last night never happened. Like it was just my nightmare. Were they blind? Nothing was “normal” or “the same”. The new beat-up remote. Scratched. Cracked. All taped up as if to “hold it all together”. Inevitably, some parts were missing. Desperate strips of black duct tape camouflaged the damage, bandaged the wounds. It never looked the same. Never worked the same. No easy, one-touch commands any more. Now, it required multiple tries, with more pressure, even needed a little banging before it worked. It just never healed.

And I can say the same for my family. We were never the same. Or, at least, I was never the same. I resented this pretense of a “happy family”. And like the remote, I was damaged. I am damaged. And I will always be damaged. Maybe that is why I remember only in Fragments. Stream of specific but seemingly unrelated images. A montage of broken scraps. Just like Papa’s sporadic surfing, nothing comes to an end; nothing is whole. I feel incomplete because I am incomplete. Without knowing what exactly is missing. Without knowing what those nightmarish nights of fitful fights robbed me of. Love. Normalcy. Self Respect. Honesty. Affection. Dignity. Truth. Trust. Memory. Memory of my childhood I hardly remember. Maybe to forget. Maybe. To hide.

To read the complete essay, please click the link below:
http://www.heelpress.com/revisions/show/6004?sift=user