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Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Boys secondhand pants

From a mother they came
to a mans son

Denim camouflage sheaths, for the two swords
of a boy
Legs that would carry him into battle with
lizards, spiders, girls, a fear of darkness and
even other boys.
Carefully stitched twice over by
likely
some other mother with weathered skin
and calloused fingers, in a noisy foreign factory
who smiled gently as she toiled, imagining her own boy
in the brand she couldn't afford to buy him.
Midway down, spacious spare pockets that would
inevitably
become airplane hangers, archaeological digs, boat slips, reptile internment facilities, holsters and
botanical gardens
and a cuff at the bottom
for lapping up the dust on the tops of mountains.

Who could ever know what is in store for
these cotton tools.

The running ladies of Myeonmok-dong


At quarter to eight in the morning in Seoul
there's a sound that is rather intriguing
a curious staccato that cuts through the bustle
created by leather fatiguing

Young women from Myeonmok, due east of the gate-
to Gimpo, just south of the Han
spent five minutes longer, perhaps than they should've
in putting their eyelashes on

So now they are racing to make it to stations
to clock in and sit and be functional
but busses and trains do not tolerate tardiness;
Korea's relentlessly punctual

Thus asphalt is clapping their flats on the sole
reminiscent of greenway applause
I do hope they make it in time to their office
avoiding potential faux pas

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Magpies

 It's been a grey day in Gimpo

Even the 까치 were wearing scarves
and whistling in minor 7 flat 5ths

Yesterday I was thinking of ways to sass the hot midday sun
for the offense of forcing an outfit change.

"I've known you since you were this high!", I'd say
with my palm facing the earth somewhere around my thigh-

just because I was awake before sunrise.
Now I find myself wishing I hadn't been quite so quick to draw my sword

Not so very far to the northeast the Han trudges by
head down, arms full of groceries

paying no attention to passers-by
sharing the last light of late afternoon.

Seventy eight more hours.

Monday, August 3, 2020

Sister camera

On occasion, if she takes too long to compose herself
I find myself quarreling with her for the tardiness
    -as if I had somewhere to be.

Cut from the same cloth, her and eye
but with different scissors

Her intricacies and quirks occasionally stymie but
most of the time clop along
side by side with mine, a sort of menage-a-trois
Bonnie and Clyde and Yoshihisa Maitani
I pick the radio station and she minds the map.

Being my senior
she pretends to know best but
we both know the grim truth:
there's a reason we rely on each other.

People who live in glass houses should
open the shutters, I guess

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Treaties


I have no right to hold you
     nor you, me
no birthright passage through
     your sea
There exist no treaties between the nations of your eyes
     and mine.

We are two planets
two bodies in space
rotating and
flopping wildly towards each other
an inexcusable collision
given the vastness of life

Still
what is it that coats your skin
what salt
on the rim of your transparent heart
that draws me in
mixes in my own watering mouth
and burns on the way down?

You don't belong to me
     as ever
Your arms are not
     my coat
to don when I am shivering.


Sunday, July 26, 2020

In Dads absence


Immortalized in my memory as the transient smell of sweat and leather, he (my father) exists as a sort of paradox. I think of him as a giant in his pilot uniform; as a boy, anywhere we went in the world people knew him. I heard strangers excitedly call his name in myriad accents, in busy international terminals and rural gas stations alike. However I am also keenly aware of his many vexations, demons that hounded him mercilessly for most of his life. In the end I envied him, laying emaciated in bed and riddled with cancer, for his inability to supplicate them.

“Come to the window, sweet is the night air!” penned Matthew Arnold sometime around 1850. One hundred and forty-nine years later, this lyric from my favorite verse would parallel my most cherished experiences with dad. After my parents divorced, we were living in Fulton County, Pennsylvania with mom and he in Manila, Philippines. From time to time he would appear, and stay at his sisters sprawling log/ nursing home half an hour or so away from our trailer, and I would go join for a few days at a time. Inevitably sometime in the cool dead of night, after the dew had begun forming outside on the hood of the car, he- jetlagged and unable to sleep- would wake me up. I don't remember ever getting dressed, just that at some point we would be driving east on Route 70.

There were never any passenger cars on the road at that time save for ours, an older Buick dad would borrow from my Aunt with a sort of black corduroy upholstery and square chromed seatbelt buckles. We would drive in silence at first, as I gradually woke up in the front seat, and he would begin talking. Not like a teacher talks to a student, or like a mother talks, but like a man talks to another man at a campfire as it fades into the night. He would tell me great secret things, the preposterous and unimaginable secrets of life, as if I already knew them and he was just acknowledging the obvious.

I would listen wide-eyed. He told me of girlfriends he had wooed before meeting my mom, he told me to “treat niggers and retards and poor people the same as I would treat him”, he told me about the time he stole a chicken from a neighbors farm and plucked it and cooked it over a fire in an orange grove, and about the time he woke up in the cockpit and thought the full moon was another airplane heading straight at him. Sometimes he would say “shit” or “fucking”, and I would feel very grown up.

Eventually we would reach our destination, which was almost always Little Sandys 24-hour truck-stop in Hancock, Maryland. It is a greasy, crumb-covered, loathsome place, but at the time seemed cooler at least than the finest Michelin dining. We would park our sedan somewhere amongst the gargantuan idling semis, where fat men snored or bargained with prostitutes in their sleeper cabs, and walk in. Imagine how my chest swelled! Being born in the south dad loved grits, a trait I failed to acquire despite his repeated entreaties, so I would get an omelet. The grumpy, red-eyed aproned matriarch would bring him coffee and me hot chocolate in thick, heavy ceramic mugs with stain rings they had probably been serving in since the seventies.

After eating and making sure I saw him leave a few dollars tip, we would thank the lady and exit, pausing to sit on a bench by the door outside. Dad would smoke a cigarette and flick the butt what seemed to me like halfway across the parking lot, while bemoaning the latest cruelty inflicted by his latest girlfriend (undoubtedly in response to some unmentioned cruelty on his part) and we would drive home in silence. I don't ever remember going back to sleep.

The last time I saw him, he was mostly bedridden. His fourth wife, younger than I, was cleaning and feeding him daily. On one occasion he opened his eyes, and began describing in great detail an experience from decades earlier. He had been hired to fly cargo on a south-westerly route, and as such experienced a much longer than usual sunset from the altitude of 27,000 feet. As he told of skimming along the tops of the red clouds, his gray eyes watered and his lip quivered. “I never told anyone about that”, he said simply, his voice cracking.

It must have been beautiful.