Wednesday, March 05, 2014

East of Eden 3: Mom's Eyes

Lately, I keep on returning to my mother's eyes.  They were this incredibly vibrant blue, like Caribbean Sea water.  They absolutely sparkled and shined as she pounced through her life.  There was this eagerness in them.  I share a trait with my mom of this overeagerness to please and have people like me.  Like, really like me and have this fondness of me.  Yet, I do not have those same eyes as she did.  I inherited my father's brown color, though I wish I had hers.  Even more, those eyes displayed her emotions as clearly as possible.  When she was happy, they were bright and eager. When she was down, they conveyed the same blue as a Robert Johnson song.  They were magical.



When I returned home from Japan, a week before she passed, she saw me and made this ridiculous comment.  I'll never forget it.  She told me that I looked just like her son, Jon.  Her eyes danced and flickered, although they looked watery and tired due to the morphine pumping through her system.  The eyes didn't seem to carry the cancer that intensely, yet they did carry a sense of frailty and desperation  It took a while, but I convinced her it was really me and I had come back from Japan.  She was pretty out of it, but had her lucid moments too.

The days, long, long days passed.  On June 21, 2003, the day before the equinox, she took her last breath and it was one of the most resonating memories I have.  To watch someone take their last breath after so much suffering provides a sense of dread and relief at the same time.  The dread is to be expected.  That woman, my mother, is not there anymore.  Yet, the relief comes because you knew that her intense moments of pain had finally come to an end.  We told her it was okay to move on.  It was okay to let go.  She was engaged to be married and her fiancĂ© didn't happen to be in the room yet.  We had called him earlier because we could sense it was happening.  She took all of us in, her breathing running in distant pants.  They were deep breaths.  Meaningful breaths.  Finally, her fiancĂ©, a man who went by the name of Tex, entered the room.  That was who she wanted to see!  The person she loved and was intending on being with for the rest of her life.  She could have never guessed the time would have passed so quickly.  She caught sight of him and her eyes lit up one last time.  Again, that vibrancy engaged with those who could see her, but most importantly, with him.  And then there was a last exhalation.  After a few seconds her eyes changed and they remained open, as if she had stopped in space.  The energy lingered for a moment and then they became this steely blue, almost metallic, it seemed.  

This image is one I need to let go of in some way.  I am hoping that writing about it and really "putting it out" here will serve some therapeutic and healing purpose.  It needs to be filed away somewhere I can't always find it.  It is a powerful and meaningful moment, but it is a ghost I really don't want to have such a strong inventory of that causes pain.  It is so odd how a day can be going just fine.  You're just walking down the street and then BAM that image pops into your mind and suddenly all feels flat and lifeless, something of an existence without a sense of purpose.  So, hopefully, like taillights on the highway, this image will start to streak on by a bit.  At least I hope that happens.  My mom was a pretty good soul.  If she were alive on this Earth today, she would be turning 71 next Wednesday.  She had 60 meaningful years, filled with extreme joy and devastating sadness, like all lives I guess.  I think reading East of Eden gave me the courage to actually do this and make some sort of attempt to let it go and forgive myself for staying in Japan as long as I did before really dealing with what was happening.  I truly hope it works.......

East of Eden # 2: Mom

Reading East of Eden made me understand death better.  Or, more so it made me remember that death  always rolls around.  We don't want it to ever come, but it does.  So, I'm kind of cleansing myself in a way.  Like East of Eden, I'm going to describe a death.  I'm guessing, like Steinbeck, this was a way to let it go.

This was my experience:

March 2003:

I got a phone call while in Japan.

While in Japan, I was making huge segues in sleeping/fucking this ex-swimsuit model.

The call was from Steve, my sisters's ex-husband Jon, your mom is not doing well.

Swimsuit model and me are now fucking.

Jon:  What do you mean?

Steve: Your mom has pancreatic cancer.

While in Japan, I was making huge segues in sleeping/fucking this ex-swimsuit model.

While in Japan, I was making huge segues in sleeping/fucking this ex-swimsuit model.While in Japan, I was making huge segues in sleeping/fucking this ex-swimsuit model.While in Japan, I was making huge segues in sleeping/fucking this ex-swimsuit model.While in Japan, I was making huge segues in sleeping/fucking this ex-swimsuit model.While in Japan, I was making huge segues in sleeping/fucking this ex-swimsuit model.While in Japan, I was making huge segues in sleeping/fucking this ex-swimsuit model.

That was all I thought about.

April 2003:

I came home.....and planted a bullshit garden of teas in her backyard.  Planted mint, too.  Herbs galore that she would never pick.

June 2003:

So, I made it back, one week before she died.

And this is where it matters: her eyes.  I have never seen anything like it, probably never will.  Her eyes were the bluest of blue, really pure.  When she took that last breath, they turned grey/slate/wide open.




Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Seven for a Day: First East of Eden Reflections

This first set of new haikus is a collection inspired by a myriad of things I have been thinking about in reference to Steinbeck's East of Eden.  I have read over 500 of the 600 or so pages of it thus far.  As usual, when I get near the end of a book I love, I start to slow down.  Yet, I have crawled to the finish line with this book because it truly scares me.  It is an epic tragedy and it feels like everything is preparing to erupt.  There are glimpses of so many life experiences in this novel; many of which are seen to be as great failures.  Yet, within those failures are these glimpses of greatness and love, if only fleeting and filled with brevity.  They are there though.  So, this set of syllabic poetry is self-referential, but also meant to encompass how the book has affected me thus far.  Later, I intend to write some prose and new verse away from haiku upon completing the book.  I will be forever grateful to my friend, Helene for giving this novel to me and telling me to read it at such a delicate time in my life.  Thanks, Queenie!

Far away from west,
this place is no great graden.
Teeming with evil.

So much self-hatred,
from deep within it does stir,
A spitting cobra.

If only there were……
More trees, love and a kindness.
Give authority.

Let me count the ways,
I feel remorse and some loss.
An ape-like regress.

These digits of mine,
that have touched so many things,
Now seem to fade numb.

I have wiped the tears
from both of our red faces
Oh, how they return.

That great temptation.
The strains of what could/n’t be,
will long torment us.

Monday, February 10, 2014

East of Eden and Work to Come

"A child may ask, 'What is the world's story about?'  And a grown man or woman may wonder, 'What way will the world go?  How does it end and, while we're at it, what's the story about?'

I believe that there is one story in the world, and only one, that had frightened and inspired us, so that we live in a Pearl White serial of continual thought and wonder. Humans are caught-in their lives, in their thoughts, in their hungers and ambitions, in their avarice and cruelty, and in their kindness and generosity too-in a net of good and evil. I think this is the only story we have and it occurs on all levels of feeling and intelligence. Virtue and vice were wool of our first consciousness, and they will be the fabric of our last, and this despite any changes we may impose on field and river and mountain, on economy and manners. There is no other story. A man, after he has brushed off the dust and chips of his life, will have left only the hard clean questions: Was it good or was it evil?  Have I done well-or ill"

Wow. There is a lot of work  based on that segment from this incredible book. Please do stay tuned, dear readers......,

Monday, February 03, 2014

A Dozen New Ones

Trees covered in white.
Beyond beautiful, pretty.
The drip before black.

Such a strong U-turn,
to feel and spin and rewind.
Reel (real) for a minute.

Countless sounds of snow,
from silent to violent,
based on how it falls.

Blue eyes, hair dyed black
and I think some black inside,
dying to see light.

Am I a monster?
Relationship Godzilla?
Only to rebuild.

It is bad out here.
The rent and such life constraints.
Yet, leaving is hard.

There is history,
torn down and reinvented,
to fall once again.

My fat cat on lap,
just licking my hand, salty,
cold and ocean dry.

Pigeons are rock stars,
for hours they sit asking
for one autograph.

Waterfalls and green.
But she would be left behind
as we look forward.

I raised a sweet cat,
lover of belly rubbing,
and some soft petting.

Some very long days
turn into very long nights
stuck in books and hearts.