22 fevereiro 2010

church cancels cow

Pheasant feathers in a plastic jack-o’-lantern–this is the way people decorate graves in October across from my house. In winter they tie wreaths to the stones like evergreen pendants in December. The halved-apple faces of owls on a branch will spook you, walking at dusk as I do with my dog who finds the one real pumpkin, small on a stem, and carries it off and flings it and retrieves, leaving on the pumpkin the marks of her teeth, the only desecration in these rows of tended plots.

Or not, according to the woman at the wheel of the red Honda Civic that appears from behind the Japanese maple and proceeds past the hedge of arborvitae where she slows and then rolls down her window to say, “You should keep that dog on a leash.” She says, “That dog left faces on my mother’s grave.”

When I realize she means feces, I say my dog didn’t do it. She says yes, my dog did it. I say, “Did you see this dog leave feces on the grave?” She says, “I found faces on my mother’s grave. I had to clean them off.” I say there are other dogs that walk here. I say my dog goes in the woods before the place where the headstones start.

I leave her talking to me from her car. I walk away with my dog in the direction of my house, and she follows in her car so I turn back around and lead her through the cemetery and sit down on a random grave and take a wire brush from the pocket of my coat and begin to groom my dog, brushing slowly from the ends up to the skin so as not to tug and hurt her. I stay where I am until the woman drives away, and I stay until she reappears. When she leaves the second time, she leaves rubber in the road.

For days I see her car across the street, parked on the little-used access road, her at the wheel just watching my house where my dog patrols the yard, unmistakeable dog. I write down her license plate number, so what. I pull weeds with my back to her. And after thoughts of worse things than bricks coming flying through the windows of my house, I pull off grass-stained gloves and cross to her car and say, “You know, I’m on your side about this. I have relatives buried here, and I don’t want to find faces on their graves.”

She says, “You have relatives buried here?”

For peace of mind I will lie about any thing at any time.

In fact, she says, she has counted three dogs the other day from her car. Like counting cows, in the game I played in cars when the family went out on long drives. My brother and I were told to count cows in the fields we passed along the way, me counting cows on one side of the road, my brother counting cows on the other. But if we passed a church, the person on whose side the church appeared had to start their count over again.

Why did church cancel cow? The question was not a question back then, and when I try to think why, the best I can guess is–because we were having fun? Until I mention it to my brother who says, “Don’t you remember? You don’t remember. It was cemetery, not church, that cancels cow.”

And why it comes to me now.

by Amy Hempel

17 fevereiro 2010

my truth

"Ok, I won't delay it any more. I can't talk with these people around. I don't feel emotionally secure, healthy or responsible enough to give you what you deserve. I am not well, which is why I need to go home. I don't feel well enough for myself now and certainly not well enough to give you the support you need. Come by tonight if you need to talk about it."

"Round and round, up and then through the streets of this town."

Some say you can't do it. Others say you can't feel it. Still others might argue you can't deal with it.

Loneliness, fear, insecurity.

Depression, down and down.

Quitting a life which was never there.

Uneasiness, numbness, music.

Some say you run away. Others say you don’t want to stay. Still others might argue you’re not strong enough.

Running, never looking back, half empty.

Invisible emotions, tender words, acts unfold.

The eyes cannot see it then.

Eagerness, take it all, leave nothing.

Some say you can’t make amendments. Others say you can’t take it back. Still others say there was nothing there.

“I want to stay in until tomorrow... don't have too much will or strength to care to face the world now, content to hide in from the cold. Give me a little time and I will come to you. (…) Let me be in stasis for just a little longer.”

Our truth is not the same.

16 fevereiro 2010

The hammer

If by clumsiness you beat yourself with it, fear not. It can break through stone on full strength but will also turn constructive in its loudness.

09 fevereiro 2010

my childhood collage