The slicing nature of
everyday things is
wrapped in foil, frozen
sharp at midnight. My
muscles part and shiver
in the burning cold where
there is no soft, only a
metallic grate into which
my heels press upright, as
quietly as possible.
Author / bcmiller2014
About Face
Surprised by my tears I
duck and hide behind
my hair, unsure
who this new person is,
living in my skin and
and borrowing everything
but my feelings about
the world.
Dear Me
My friend, for one who can be so quiet the voice you have is bold. I don’t know where you find the courage but invariably you own your words like land you’ve bought with blood. Heartsick, your broken drumbeat pounds inside the knowing all the breaking in the world. I always thought you’d be a cello, you know, instead of tympani, but then, your mother played the pipe organ like a Gothic god. It’s no wonder part of you is tuned to always hear the cracking of her bones. Her suffering was silent to everyone else.
Everyone else.
No one else. It made you alone to hear it and there was nowhere for you to go. Go now. Buy earplugs. Listen to woodwinds until the channel can change. Make friends who only drain you in the normal way, then fill you up with hugs and affectionate disagreements and eyes that see you crying in the rain even when it looks like the sun is shining bright. Even when you have to tell them but you can because they’re not the sort to faint at the sight of blood.
You are purple. You are complex, hot and cold and hard and softer than that silky white cat who saved your life when your brother died. You know how to leave but you always choose to stay. The world still needs you, telling squirrels you love them and seeing flower songs shimmering opal along the edges of the evening sky. It’s your legacy. You get to see and love, but you have to pay for the seeing.
Maybe it won’t always cost so much. Maybe you’ll be reimbursed. Maybe you are even more lovable than rabbits or marmots or baby dear ducking their heads in the grain fields. Maybe the strength that seems like it’s cruel, forcing you sometimes to keep breathing when you’d rather stop, is actually being kind because if you just keep breathing there will be beauty and joy and surprising comfort that will make all the extra breathing worthwhile.
I want you to hold onto possibilities with the same tenacity you’ve employed so you could take ownership of your words and live. Life is the goal. You’re not alone. You are loved. You are worthwhile and you have a lot to offer this crazy, fucked up world, but you (listen, you) are not fucked up. You are wounded, but you already know that’s not the same. A person can be wounded and be a rock star. That’s you. You get extra points just for breathing, because you’re unique and valuable and sensitive. Being you is good. Be you.
Patience
I wait, as we do, quite
often. I wait for my husband
as he bounces around the
city finding rugs and
furnishings and bits of
paper with pictures most
have never seen to make
a stranger’s walls look
personal. I wait
for the home where I can
see a tree instead of a
crane, both making homes
but one giving breath, as
well. I wait for dreams of
expressing my self, and I wait
for solid funding. I wait for
physical love. I wait for
understanding and for
things I don’t even know
I need to ease my inward
groaning because
there never isn’t groaning,
even if it’s only released
through the soles of my
feet. I wait to find out if you
love me. I wait to find out if
I love me. I wait and I
think and I wonder if ever
the waiting will end because
at some fantastic and
mystical point I will finally
rest in knowing the who I
am in me and you.
Something Lost
I’ve lost something but I don’t know what it is. I’m crying, all a mess, hands over my face and alternately grabbing for Kleenex. I saw a video about Orca whales. That started it, but I haven’t had any Orca-related trauma recently. I watched a video by a young man who researched the Bible for the context of six references to homosexuality. I cried then, too. I am asexual to a great degree, so I suppose I fit on the spectrum, but not anywhere that I catch flack for it. I’m married. No one really knew until I wrote this. I lost my seagulls last weekend, or at least, my assurance of their safety. That one hurt, as I’ve watched them hatch fledglings for years and given all of them names. But today was plain. I walked to a field trip, took the bus, taught a class, and received some books for a research project. Yet here I am, blubbering away, alone on the sofa.
If anyone knows what it is that I’ve lost, I’m open to suggestion. I think it has something to do with safety, and something to do with love. That’s as much as I’ve got.
I’m supposed to be researching for an upcoming presentation on the unseen costs of cheap production. Am I simply in tune with all there is to grieve in the world? Am I afraid we are losing the Orcas like we lost my seagull nest, tossed in the garbage for convenience? Am I sad at the long years I wasted, convinced that God held some special sort of antipathy toward gays? And how then did he feel about me, off the purple end and having no children, either? Why does this continue to shame me when I know in my heart it was the right thing to (not) do?
I do not know. I’ll keep the Kleenex handy, give up my books and have popcorn for dinner. Whatever I’ve lost, it’s taken my research drive with it.
Rejected Feelings
Rejected feelings, stick figures in a
full bodied world, find paltry places
in which to hide themselves, sitting
with their knees splayed out, their
elbows pointed arrows in the
directions I haven’t gone. Angry
buggers, and who can blame them,
dodging the out-flung expletives I
hardly ever throw? If I feel sorry
and feed them, will they thrive, and
then, what
will my penance
be?
Hope II
I am not done. My
story is not over. The
sunlight waking colors in
great swaths of green,
the thrum of human
energy optimistically
planning on unguaranteed
destinations –
I sit with my head low and
admit there is more that I
don’t know than I do, and
that is a reason
to hope.
Painful Love
They scraped away the seagull nest on the building across from mine. I was going into the kitchen when I noticed him, the maintenance man up on the part of the roof that no one had ever been on before. He stared at the green mound and then kicked it with the toe of his boot.
I’m not unaware of the difficulties associated with seagulls. I’m also not unaware of the difficulties associated with humans. We’re the ones who removed the trees, toxified the water sources and put plastic into the mainstream animal diet. Compared to that, I think a few issues with seagull feces are relatively minor.
The pair of seagulls who’ve nested on that site have been there for at least eight years. We’ve watched them take turns, never leaving the eggs alone. They’ve warded off eagles and annoyed a few humans who wanted to smoke on the roof. One of the most hateful grabbed a two-by-four and tried to strike the protective seagull down. Of course, I was yelling and gesticulating wildly in my unit across the street, wishing for a zip line over there so I could give that man a piece of my mind.
Every year we name the babies. One year I was especially worried that something bad would happen to the sole fledgling and I named her Fly, in hope that it would be a prophecy of sorts. Usually baby seagulls take time to figure out the whole flying business. The babies hop-hop-hop and flap their wings. Then they graduate to short trips around the roof before taking off after one of the parents, toward the Puget Sound. Fly skipped all the steps and went successfully and directly to full and comfortable flight. She looked around as if to say, “Yeah. I was born for this.”
Some years there have been three babies, and then I focus extra prayer on the underdog. One is always dominant, then there’s the head honcho’s buddy, and then there’s the free spirit. S/he’s typically a little more submissive. I worry about that one the most. But every year since we moved here, we’ve never lost a baby. I know it’s the same pair of parents, too, because the papa has a gimpy foot.
Seagulls are loyal, protective, and downright beautiful. I love them. I actually love most all of the animals. I can’t help it. I love the plants, too. I’ve been known to hug a tree.
Someone once said to me that if she loved all the animals as much as she loved the humans, she wouldn’t know what would happen to her. In the context of the conversation I think she was assuming that I, therefore, must not love humans very much. For the record, I do love humans. The fact that I’m infinitely grieved by the ways in which we selfishly despoil environments across the globe in our constant battle for economic supremacy notwithstanding, I love humans as individuals. I have many friends. I love my students, coworkers, and even my dear and difficult family. I guess then, that I am evidence of what happens to a person who can’t help but love with abandon.
I can hear the groaning of the earth, feel it shift in discomfort under my feet. When I hold a baby rabbit, which is one of my favorite things in the world to do, I am at once delighted by the sweet and vibrant life in my hands. I treasure the ears, the twitching nose, and the big thumper feet. Simultaneously I am deeply saddened because I know that this tiny life is fragile. Everything eats rabbits. They aren’t known to be hardy. It is guaranteed that this one precious life will suffer pain and cry out in fear. There is no way of guaranteeing otherwise. It’s the way of earth, as it is, and I do not believe it is as God intended. It’s a product of human intervention, and God’s way of compensating. Every time I see a freshly developed construction site, with its felled trees and uprooted daisies, I grieve.
Now, the point of this is not to say, “Poor me. How unfortunately perceptive I am.” The point is that there is a price to love. The truth is, every time we love anyone or anything we are opening ourselves to loss and pain. Those of us more inherently in tune with the natural world are perhaps most aware of this, because loss is so frequent. Nevertheless, it’s true for all. Some losses are more painful than others. My little white cat keeps nuzzling my hand while I write. Assuming she dies before I do, I will be wrecked.
That’s how I feel about my seagulls. If they rebuild the nest and maintenance decides to destroy it again and kill the babies I will be absolutely beside myself. I’ll probably have to take off of work. I think we may have to say goodbye to them and move, just to protect my sanity.
So yeah, I love just about everything and I deal with depression and anxiety. There are other reasons for this, of course, but my big love (for which I can’t claim credit, having been born this way) plays a part. Here’s the thing, though. I wouldn’t change it if I could. I can’t bear the thought of not appreciating all that is wonderful in the world, including you, even if it means I have to pay in the end.
I’m hoping I got this from God. I’m hoping he feels like this, too, and that somehow he’s going to make everything right. I’m banking on it, because if Love is the source of the universe, s/he’s not going to bear suffering forever. Someday she’s going to say “enough,” and all the rabbits and the seagulls will be fearless. And selfishly, the ever-ache in my heart will be gone. Until then I will groan with the world and keep learning to love more selflessly, because it’s the only reason to live.
Expectations
I panic when I cannot sleep.
I cannot sleep because I panic.
I know damn well that there’s no
real cause for alarm, but it doesn’t
matter. Controlling the process
is controlling the direction
of the wind.
I am sad when I see cruelty. Because of cruel people I am sad.
I know that these persons are
primarily hurt, but it doesn’t matter.
Controlling the process is controlling
the height of the waves as they wash
the shore.
I draw a circle and it is round. When I
see a round shape, it is a circle. It doesn’t matter. They’re one and the same and all of life is like this. We wonder, when it does not matter, which of all came first. Controlling the process is holding hands and expecting not to be strangers.
Pain
Pain creates a haze
most times, as
though there is no
handle on the door and
the whole great world
were a paper bubble
around itself, crinkling
frail with a few sirens
thrown in. That is, unless
it’s sharp, and the
moon’s outline is a
knife that cuts the
inked sky and lets
the dragons in.