Posted tagged ‘AIDS poem’

How Strangely The Mind Works

September 2, 2013

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How Strangely The Mind Works

She sometimes sounds, mornings,
like someone on quaaludes–
and my mind comes up with a neighbor once upstairs–
how they made him
lurch bang crash–
only Pearl’s falls–she’s my dog–
are more chthonic and never draw blood.

It’s her rump, see,
and the hind leg that won’t
support when the other scratches.

I feel sorry for her, sure,
but I keep thinking lately of Drew–that
was that guy’s name–years ago,
and how he would smear
his face along the stairwell pinballing up–

Pearl–she’d be 126, if human, while
he was young–and she’s a short dog, close
to the ground, so, although the falls are surely
not much fun–well, she’s not doing them for fun–
whereas this guy
had pretty good teeth, until, you know,
the self-hatred came along,
determined to take care of that smile,
one way or another.

It was the early 80‘s, NYC,
when AIDS hit harder
than any banging lurch,
and I wonder, now,
if there was something more
I could have done, remembering
the styled cherubic curl of his blond bangs,
and I always did say hi,
and he did too, sweetly,
and I never complained to the super
(though I know I kvetched to my boyfriend)
not even when he fell onto his stereo,
swerving the knob to deafening
while passing out–
not even when the firemen charged past
and water dripped down all day, actual jets
through my ceiling lightbulbs,
which was when, I think, he moved.

Sometimes I scratch Pearl myself,
holding her steady with my legs as I reach
around for the spot,
but it’s not so easy to get it right
when it’s someone else’s itch.

And I’m not making any comparisons here–
between the feelings of sorrow roused
for a much-loved very old dog
and a barely-known young man,
only thinking that life gives so many
opportunities for kindness that we just
don’t see, though when I think of that time now,
my eyes hurt, front and back,
flashing at their edges that rough-faced building’s door
in a neon night, you know how lights blur
in a photo, and I hope to God
that I said hi
with something more
than passing friendliness.

 

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Here’s a draft poem/sketch for With Real Toads and dVerse Poets Pub Open Link NIghts. I’m not quite sure how I might shape it differently but here it is for now. (For those wondering about the dog –she is 18–doesn’t seem to be pain as a normal mode, but is, well, 18, and increasingly cannot support herself standing when she scratches. )

Memento (Aide Memoire)

November 17, 2012

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Memento (Aide Memoire)

Tile–pure tchotchke – the terra cotta
Southern California’s sierra/
siesta/sonesta style, with snoozer in sombrero
beneath a palm.

Below, a jaunty “howdy” greets
at a slant, with a dashed
date from ’77, which make me think not
somehow
of ’77–though that the year when Grethe
Rask, Danish surgeon who’d worked
in Zaire, died so strangely–but
of the next ten years,
when thousands died, tens
of thousands, as politicians
of Terra Cotta, SoCal and beyond, snoozed
determinedly beneath waved palms, proclaiming,
when not plain silent, moral failings, medical
misinformation, howdy
 doody, their own
damned fault.

Sores
wept, bones
bared, lungs
drowned, and with the sores, bones,
lungs, were blanked
so many eyes and hands and hearts
that lit the world with sparks
and sparkling,
and those too who perhaps
lit only a few
dark nights, too few, too
many.

Honestly, I can barely stand
to look
at this tile, sun baked so carelessly
into its squared veneer, yet rub
my finger over its gloss
as if to trace there
that lost time; howdy, howdy.

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A rather emotional (sorry) reading of the poem:

Here’s a draft draft draft poem for dVerse Poets Pub Poetics Prompt hosted by the wonderful Claudia Schoenfeld, and featuring evocative photos, one of which I’ve posted above, by Mobius Faith a/k/a Terry Amstutz.

My nanowrimo novel, if I ever get it written, takes place in the mid-80s or so, so I’ve been thinking about that time, which was when the AIDS epidemic hit. Ronald Reagan, elected as President in 1980, serving till 1989, mentioned the word AIDS in only one speech in 1987.  I’m not saying this to be partisan; it’s a fact from a complex and very sad period. The CDC reports that in the U.s. there were approximately 50,000 reported cases of AIDS in the U.S. between 1981 and 1987, 48,000 deaths. Between 1988 and 1992, there were another 202,502 U.S. cases reported, 180,000 deaths.   Of course, there were (and are) many many more cases  and deaths worldwide and into the present.

I should add as a process note that Grethe Rask was one of the first confirmed cases of AIDS (in a non-Afridan) though the cause of her death was not known until a few years after her death as AIDS had not been identified as such in 1977.  She is likely to have been exposed performing surgeries in Zaire.