Monday, March 21, 2016

Dear Mr. President

Who are you?

Do you know who I am? I am a Cuban in exile. I have lived in this country since 1963. I was 8 1/2 years old when I arrived in Miami with my family. I remember why we came. We came to escape the dictatorship that betrayed the Cuban people and took away our rights, our freedom, our work, our land, our money. While that government still exists, pardon me if I don't feel joyous about your visit to my country.

While the media is talking up your greatness, I feel bereft. While you and your family parade around the island that is my childhood home, I am overwhelmed with emotions I don't know if I can describe. There's grief that can't be put into words. There's a wound that still hasn't healed. A wound that your ambition continues to re-open. It's not just the wound of having to leave your family and home, it's the wound of having your family suddenly and devastatingly become something radically different - father becomes bi-polar, mother works for a sweat shop, children become 'latch-key kids', I the 'mini-mom' for my two younger siblings. Nine years old, Mr. President. I was only nine years old.


This appears to be all about you. Your smile feels self-congratulatory. It doesn't matter what your
speeches tout as your humanitarian goals, to me it feels like neatly packaged political correctness. You say all the things some people want to hear. You say nothing to me.

You say nothing to us Cuban exiles who have sought refuge here, who have worked hard to rebuild their lives, who pay taxes, who have hoped for justice, who have been betrayed more than once by an American president, and yet continue to remain loyal to the system of democracy and individual rights of the United States of America. You say nothing to me and all the children who survive the exile today.

I feel ignored. I feel invisible.

Many think of you as one of the best presidents. I think of you as one of the worst. I realize I do not speak for the entire Cuban population. I also realize you're not a bad person. I don't hate you, nor do I engage in political debates with family, friends, or acquaintances over your policies. I'm simply letting whoever reads this know that I hold you accountable for ignoring a section of your constituency that lived through oppression and betrayals; endured poverty, imprisonment, torture, death; and risked everything in hopes of making a real difference in that one small section of the world only to be cast aside by political ambitions and economic greed. I hold you accountable for denying our pain, our truth, our wisdom through the inexpediency of your actions.

The Castro dictatorship may indulge your delusions, even your own personal delusion of grandeur, but I will not. I will continue to take a stand in my own way against the global theatrics of world leaders. When all is said and done, the Cuban people will not be any freer from the shadow of imperialism by this hedonistic venture than they were prior to Castro's regime. I believe that through you Cuba will once again become 'the playground' of rich, the tyrants, moguls, and the short-sighted politicians who view the island as ripe for exploitation. Money in large quantities will flood into the hands of the wheeling-and-dealing speculators and promoters...and the Castro regime.

It's sanctioned piracy - the legacy bestowed for centuries upon the people of the Caribbean. You open the door, Mr. President. And you say nothing.




Friday, March 18, 2016

For Gaia

Let’s start.

Yes, let’s start
With a murder of Crows
Picking clean the meat,
Sucking the marrow too
From the bones of our indifference.

Let’s take the next step and
Seek counsel from the parliament of Owls,
Beg that sentinel of wisdom
Sear through the cold shadows we cast
And hope for their benevolence.

Let’s find our ‘welcome home’
In the kindness of Ravens,
The soft curling edge of their wings
Wrapping around our wrath
With their impeccability.

Let’s finish the shameful dream
With an exultation of Larks,
A choir strung through the watery sky
Of well deserved tears
And merciful reclamation.

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Writer 2

When you decide that this writing life is for you, you are stalked by Doubt. Now imagine Doubt as a character - a boogey man, a gangster, a pessimistic critic. Doubt is strong, powerful, and undoubtedly famous. Or think of Doubt as fear appearing like a hideous demon with fangs like a shark and carrying a megaphone. To top it off, Doubt knows more than you. In fact, Doubt knows you better than you know it.

And yet you persist.

You don't know why you persist - maybe it's because your friends and family are kind enough to encourage you. Even though deep inside you know Doubt knows best. And yet, you refuse to follow his/her advice. That in itself makes you feel kinda stupid.

And yet, you persist some more.

Something about writing sparks you. You wake up, and before you go pee, you want to write. You need to get to work, but you write a few sentences, promising, like you do your cat, you will be back soon. When it's time to make dinner, you decide to write first. You don't follow your to-do list as closely as Doubt assures you you should. And now you feel guilty.

So you stop persisting.

Doubt has won the day. Except that one day, you sneak a piece of writing on a post-it note. Actually, several post-it notes. Maybe a poem strings out of you like cheap plastic beads, some of which you suspect could be pearls.  The start of a story spins itself out, albeit with no pay off ending for the reader. Fragments of a memoir spurt forth but you can barely stand it because of the grief. The Grief. So, you cry. Memories you didn't know you had over whelm you. Then periods of being stuck without a single word leave you feeling like a zombie. Doubt scoops you up like a clump of cat-litter. "Shame on you, wasting time like that."

But...surprise...Persistence doesn't leave you.

Persistence leverages Doubt. And so you gather the courage to face this mortal enemy. But Doubt is tricky. It shape shifts from boogey man to gangster to critic disguised as friend, teacher, wise guide. This has to be the worst thing imaginable. Until your writer grows up and notices you're not that important. The boogey man is not real. The gangster's got snitches to deal with. The critic has bigger fish on his radar. And you relax. Your problems are over...ah, not so fast.

Persistance slacks off.

You start to play around with the craft. You become distracted with practicing. You become enamored with the beauty of it all. That poem was a masterpiece. If you never write another poem, it's ok. Creating dialogue for the fun of it? It's like snatches of conversations overheard. You are happy to just eavesdrop. Memories are more colorful than words - forget the memoir. Who will read it anyway?

Doubt is back.

That sneaky sonoffabitch.


Friday, March 11, 2016

Writer

There’s really nothing I can say that will convince anyone that I am a writer. To most people, it means you must be an author. Have published a book, or articles in magazines. The word author is often coupled with words like prolific, original, masterful. But the era of electronics has changed this. Anyone can write and go public. I blog, therefore I am. A writer.

Before blogging I wrote journals. I have most of them stuffed in the window seat storage space of my bedroom. I rarely go back and re-read them. It’s all in the past and no longer who I am. I started writing them when I was 14. My journals are full of rants, and self-pity. I was a writer then because I needed to befriend myself. The journal is a mirror for that part of me that needs to be assured she can live to deal with another day. When life is shitty and incomprehensible, forget shopping. I journal.

Today, why am I a writer? And particularly, why have a chosen to write by way of a blog? I sure as hell have no intention of teaching anyone or sharing information. It’s simply fun. I blog whatever comes to me. It’s all different. There’s no specific focus or intent. I have no timelines, no agenda, no editor giving me guidelines to follow. I blog to be visible to myself. To have a party with all the voices that speak to me. Journals kept in dark musty storage spaces keep me hidden, introverted.

When I write I learn self-respect and self-acceptance. It’s a way of caring for the parts of me that have been neglected. It’s showing me the way to self approval and self love. I go beyond the social world of interactions and exchanges and find a vast landscape of living things with which to commune. And these living things love me back because I pay attention to them. 

These living things - starless days, a slithering snail, a wind whipped tree shivering in the dark. Half-rotten fruit, smokey songs, a cheeky squirrel, the symbolic slap-in-face, the 89 yr old man who hoards, baby thighs. Chia seeds, coconut caramels, cat food, the heat of the crock pot, an ice cube scented with peaty scotch. The runny nose, linen sheets, carpool lanes, marble steps, wet mulch, salty water, Bob Dylan’s harmonica. Aaaah. There’s more. And more. There’s always more. More love than any heart can handle. 

Through writing I’ve learned the writer’s secret answer - I write so as to never have a reason to be hateful. If my writing hurts, I question it. It may not be writing. It may not have joyfully lived, sung, or dreamed. I throw it away. Write something real. Something someone can relate to. Or not. I just checked my trash. It's empty.

Writing can be a sword. But only those needing to be cut and healed will feel it. Writing can bring forth tears. But only those who have not crossed the sea of sadness can be ruptured by grief. Writing gifts the lonely with solitude, the harried with something worth doing, the worrier with song. Be a writer and forget why.



Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Prompts

One day the Lord gathered all the people unto him and said,
“Surprise me!”
And the people took him to task.

They showed him 
Holy war and nuclear war
Utopian communities and peacemaking.

They came up with 
Worm filled graves and atheism,
Eternal life and reincarnation.

They created for him
Murderers and abusers,
Lovers and saints.

They put on a show of words
With anger and hatred,
With mercy and love.

They even made themselves
Sick and diseased
So they could devise ways to be healthy and whole.

The people did everything 
They could 
To surprise him.

And one day the Lord said
“Enough!”
But no one was listening.

So he decided
To surprise them
With a visit, or two.

He came among the people
As a man, as many men. 
And he came as a woman, as many women.

And he was surprise to find
That as a man his lofty words and elaborate works were glorified.
As a woman, tortured and killed when few words were uttered and much simple work was done.

So the Lord returned
To the place from whence he came, 
To the pulsing cave of the one who birthed him.

“What must I do?, the Lord wailed.
“I expected to be pleasantly surprised,
But I am shocked.”




The pulsing One breathed on the Lord.
A tender melting 
Dissolved him.

The folly of his desire overcame him.
And the Lord surrendered the word.
“Love me!” his body pleaded.

And from the pulsing cave
An undulating wave of many colors
Gushed forth with the sound of thunder.