Wednesday, August 31, 2011

The Chair



he feared the chair at the top of the stairs
he anchored his eyes away
he sang a lullaby under his breath
to make the empty stay

the chair was draped with the faltering rays
of sickly September sun
despite the danger he finally peeked
the feeling made him run

he woke one night from a cancerous dream
the sweat in his clinging hair
a child watched from the shadowy hall
as he now filled the chair

Monday, August 29, 2011

Hurricane, Part 2

We were in the Buffalo area Saturday. It was gorgeous. We spent most of the day at the Genesee Country Village and Museum (formerly known as Mumford), which is a place where they built an entire village with historic houses that they moved there. That was equally gorgeous. (It's like a miniature Williamsburg, but focusing more on pioneer, antebellum, and turn of the century periods. The last time I was there was around 1982, in the 6th grade.)

After dinner in Corning, New York (which took entirely too long, BTW), we started our race with Hurricane Irene. We hoped that the real nightmare weather would be in the middle of the night. Well, we were wrong. Driving in a hurricane is an interesting experience. Waves of rain passed our truck at around 50 mph. Rain hit like--bucket, pause, bucket, pause, bucket, pause. Trees, whipping hard, started coming apart. Luckily, no big pieces hit us. We did hit a few wading pools of water, but our truck is pretty big and heavy. Just after midnight, we made it home.

Of course, our neighborhood was the first that we noticed was without power. After at least 20 hours, we finally got it back on. Folks have it much worse than us, so we can't really complain. Despite a long, long day, which including a carburetor repair on our generator, we came through pretty well.

Hurricanes in Pennsylvania...and earthquakes. Interesting times.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Hurricane



Watching the sea foam
Waiting for Irene's visit
Ocracoke Island

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Beer Philosophers #11 - Absolute Zero



"Do realize you've been staring at the bottle opener for ten straight minutes?"

[…]

"Oh, you turned. That's good. You heard me. At least I know you're alive."

"Huh?"

"Do you want to lay down or something? It freaks me out when you sleep sitting up."

"I was thinking."

"Oh."

"About absolute zero."

"Yes?"

"It's the temperature when all motion stops."

"Right."

"It's true!"

"I feel like you embrace the state of absolute zero often."

"Think about it. Stillness…. Stoppage... Nothing at all, man. "

"Actually, you're wrong."

"No I'm not."

"No, really. Absolute zero is when all thermodynamic energy stops. Quantum motion within the atoms themselves never stops."

"See, there you go again. I'm the parade, and you're the rain. Why do you hate me so much?"

"Dude, I don't hate you! If the truth is out there, the truth must be spoken."

"You have a point."

"Wisdom, my friend, catch it. It's contagious."

"I'll tell you what, I'm going to be the first person in the history of the world to reach absolute zero. It's just a matter of discipline. Control."

"Dude, like I said. I've seen you there TONS of times."

"It just takes right breathing. The right focus. See? In…. Out…."

"Give me that bottle opener. You want another beer?"

"[…]"

"You know, I think absolute zero is horrible, really."

"How so?"

"Just imagine the work to keep it. The smallest particle hitting you…the smallest amount of energy…the smallest, most inconsequential force applied, and BAM, you've got heat."

"Hmm."

"It would like be trying to play king of the hill on a lump of mud. You'd spend the entire time scrambling back up after slipping off."

"I could stay cool in space."

"Nope. No good. Background microwave energy left over from the big bang would warm you like two degrees."

"Fuck."

"Give up the dream, man, for your own good."

"But I aspire to perfect nothingness! Don't try to tell me I can't get there!"

"Man, I swear, if anybody can do it, you can."

Monday, August 22, 2011

Monster Catfish



We anchored in a bizarre spot where the water plunges within a stone's throw from shore to 35 feet deep.

My older daughter had already racked up at least a dozen fish. My count: 0. Her sister's count: 0.

No one thought much of it when she hooked another. I became much more interested when I heard it take line and run after seeing the boat.

A slow, muscled turn at the surface made me blink. Did I just see that?

When we got it alongside, I realized that without a net, the only way this creature was coming aboard was if I could get my fingers up in its gills. The head was so wide, it would've taken both hands to get around it. That was way too precarious to attempt.

When I got it lifted, we all marveled. I certainly never saw a channel catfish that large in person. I estimated 10-15 pounds by the feel of it and at least 28 inches long.

Here he is. A monster of the Chesapeake Bay. That's the fisherman documenting her prize.

We let him dive back down to the channel depths and disappear into the murky dark.

Friday, August 19, 2011

Nos Morituri Te Salutamus



September creeps closer
with its metallic cold clouds
and sheeting days of rain
it thinks it's larger than me
this always-turn
but I am the mouse
that stabs the thorn into the lions paw
I will not be washed away

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Six Years



So here I am, arriving at my sixth anniversary of The Clarity of Night. That's something like 42 in blog years.

It's about time I had a middle-aged blog to match my middle-aged life.

The truth is, six years of anything on the internet borders on Twilight Zone material. Despite Facebook, and Twitter, and whatever else I'm too backward know about, I endure here, because I still feel that blogs offer more room and flexibility and control that anything else.

I'm not going to wax poetic this year or talk about how I've wrestled with retiring Clarity. I've accepted that these snippets of prose, poetry, and photography allow me to speak in ways that I otherwise can't. If you've been coming here to share them, then I thank you for being out there. If you just come for the contests, that's fine too, because I offer them in an open spirit.

I'll leave you with a little anecdote that seems somehow fitting. You probably know that the katydid is my patron night spirit/ambassador/bug. Each year around this time, I wonder whether I'm going to get an opportunity to photograph a new one for my blog anniversary. Then, around the first week of August, we invariably make one of our trips to the mountains, and low and behold, shy katydids are suddenly lining up to be fashion models. We have them at the campfire, we have them clinging to the cabin, we even have them knocking right at the front door. This fellow was one of those.

I'd like to think they know. ;)

Here's to six years!

Monday, August 15, 2011

Disorientation



They stopped on the forest trail and stared ahead. After a minute, they glanced back.

"I'm confused."

"Me too."

They stared some more.

"I know this trail."

"Me too."

"I know every part of it. I know the spot where we're standing."

"I know."

"But I don't know that." He pointed ahead where the trees reached taller and darkened. The trail dipped down out of sight. "There's nothing like that on our land."

"Could we have gotten turned around? Maybe we wandered off the wrong way."

"No. No way."

"I just--"

"I know this trail. I know where we turned onto it. I know every step we took from the cabin. I could walk this in my sleep."

"Still, we don't walk this particular one all the time."

"It doesn't matter. I've walked it plenty. I know it."

They stared some more. His hands were planted on his hips.

She looked up. "Did the sun just go in? It seems darker."

"But there aren't any clouds."

"And colder."

"Forget about that. Let's just go back."

"But that's where we're going! Ahead!"

"No. Not anymore. Let's circle back the way we came."

They turned around to face the other way.

She gasped.

"That's not where we came from," she said.

"Jesus."

"That wasn't there a minute ago."

"I'm seriously getting freaked out," he said.

"It's even darker. And colder."

"Does the sky look purple to you?"

A branch snapped to their left. A huge animal with a bristly blue coat stalked toward them. It had white wavy teeth.

Their necks tilted back as it approached. It towered at least fifteen feet high.

Some sort of growl rumbled low in its throat.

"RUN!"

Friday, August 12, 2011

Pyromania Ain't No Good



the forest fires are snuffed
and the dirt is just smoldering
but how much brighter
the flames used to burn and crackle
the quiet of the night

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Squirm



hatch a thought
microscopic
squish your invertebrate logic
into my ossified pores
your tentacles
are my calculation
and as I think
I will pet your protoplasm~
you bring the biology
I'll bring the Petri dish
to grow it in

Monday, August 08, 2011

Interlude



In those August weeks, he shed the worries of work and disappeared to where the roads were long and the only color, green. He put away the phone without messages and ignored the dwindling email streams. His friends would not think to miss him. They figured he'd be back soon enough, but part of him wondered if that would be true. The heat enveloped him, and farmland rolled over sharp hills. He thought of what it was like to be a teenager, without plans and without somewhere else to be, and found that part of himself still surprisingly close, despite the pile of years. In the sky, the crows flew too high to be heard. They would not roost until the red and yellow Earth faltered and the sun lost the strength to fight away the cold.

He walked the fences during those days. The ones that brushed the woods while horses grazed out in bright pastures. Their tails swished at invisible flies as high summer buzzed loudly in the trees. He forgot to care about the counting of days. He forgot their names. He also forgot to think in the words, and plans, and lists where one thing led to another. Now, a thing was there, or not there. Each expansive experience hit him all at once. Nothing more was needed to do or say.

It was on one nameless afternoon, after he had dived deep, when he was walking a forest trail. He turned a bend in the underbrush and stopped at the sight of shimmery black fur. A horse nipped at a patch of blackberries. Its muscled shoulders turned and flexed as it regarded him with large, dark eyes. It wasn't until a footstep drew his attention over to the woman nearby. Leather riding boots brushed the ferns as she returned to the horse, which nuzzled for a scratch between its ears.

He'd apologized for the interruption, and she smiled. He was taken with her long hair and how, like him, she looked both aged and young at the same time. Her eyes didn't drift from him very often as they spoke. A few polite words grew into more. Even when the horse stomped impatiently, and her firm hands steadied it, she watch him. She moved with the same fluid, animal strength that the horse did. She could have stepped out of a painting, he thought. She was that beautiful. But something else fueled the ease of his conversation. She told him her name and the history of the nearby farm. She told him how much she enjoyed the forest paths they were standing on. He asked her about what she saw and how much time she chose to spend there. Something about the way she moved drew him. He had strange thoughts, like laying a hand on her shoulder just to feel the workings of everything happening within.

She told him that he should visit the barn, and he accepted. He watched her mount and command the horse. He saw her pause in the field and look back. That night, he felt no need to the watch the fireflies. He slept because he was eager to be part of the rising sun.

The next day he met her under the shade of the barn eaves. She introduced him to the horses, and he touched each one. She watched his hands when he did. He found himself close to her, just as he wished, just as gravity wanted to move him. They talked, and she touched him when she laughed. She didn't seem to mind when he glimpsed at the feminine lines of her neck. He wanted so much to breathe in the skin where it disappeared beneath her shirt. If she read these thoughts too, she didn't seem to mind. Sometimes she stared at his mouth when he talked, and when they sat side by side and looked out over the fields, she pressed against him, from her shoulders down to where her ankles met his hiking shoes.

They didn't need to talk about how they would cross the last boundary between them. That is one important difference between adults and teenagers. The days evolved, as did the things they spoke to one another. Never did they need to stumble and test. It was midday when they finally made love. The loft in the barn hung rich with the fragrance of hay and large presence of the animals below. She shed that shirt, and he buried his face while her arms encircled him. Their joining was not obscured or tentative. It wasn't hidden under the veil of night. He kissed her nakedness in full light, and his hands touched earth and heat and the pounding pulse of life. Every movement she made since that first meeting, every turn and stride alongside him seemed now to circle toward the darkness between her legs. She drew the length of him against her animal heat, and she sighed, lips parting with a whispered groan. But their artistry was no abstraction. Not some academic composition of metaphor and forgotten geometry. When his muscles clenched with hers and their bodies undulated, the horses neighed and thumped into the sides of the stalls. The cicadas throbbed with their building motion, until their pace grew wild and mindless, to a final, panting gallop.

When she laid on his chest and cast a shadow in the slanting sun, his fingers trailed through her hair, and the day also took its own repose.

They remembered what it was like to be teenagers without plans, but unlike then, they knew there was no other place they would choose to be.

Friday, August 05, 2011

The Bullet-Eater



the bullet eater smiles
for a delicious meal
a knife and fork, not utensils
for his hands tucked behind his back
just level the gun and fire
he's always hungry for more

Wednesday, August 03, 2011

Midsummer




the trees are growing
although I cannot see them
the air does not move

the sun's shadows paint long
then short, then long again
the air does not move

the houses sleep
with their inhabitants away
the air does not move

I paint the scene with my mind
I choose the colors by touch
the air does not move

Monday, August 01, 2011

500 Miles



If you miss the train I'm on
You will know that I am gone
You can hear the whistle blow 100 miles
     --Peter, Paul & Mary, 500 Miles


The daughter set the rest of the box of photos down.

"Mom? Who's this a picture of?"

The grayed woman reached with angular, hardened hands. "Let's see."

"It's just a guy by himself. Under a tree. Here."

The photo met fingertips.

No expression flickered on the woman's face. Her eyes didn't blink. Everything in the room suddenly felt heavy to the daughter. Nailed into place.

"Who is he?"

"Someone I used to know," the woman said.

"There's something different about him. I can't quite see his eyes in the shadows. Where was this taken?"

"I don't really remember. By a house, I think."

"What was his name?"

The woman stared at the photo.

"Do you remember it?"

"Yes."

"He was a boyfriend, wasn't he!"

"Not exactly."

"Oh my God, this is juicy. Before you met dad? Did he know?"

The woman turned the photo down in her lap. "No, there's no story to tell."

"Mom!"

"Hey, are those pictures of you and your sister back in Minnesota?"

"You're not changing the subject!"

The woman's eyes dropped down to the folded hands in her lap.

Finally, her expression did change. Reflected light sparkled under her eyelashes.

The daughter's excitement evaporated. "Hey, you've got to see these." She grabbed back the box with a little too much eagerness. "Look, do you remember this one? I insisted on wearing my ballerina costume into the pool. You were ready to kill me that day."

The daughter managed to slip the other photo out of her mother's hands.

"I remember," the woman said, sounding far away.