Every Day is Marne Gras

primer attempt no. 1

write a primer for dealing with your family

some of the format from this freewrite was, admittedly, nicked from multiple sources

when you walk into the living room
and they’re chain smoking in front of the Met game
they’ll tell you to dance for grandma
and you’ll need to play a song on the piano
and get the reference
before you can go outside.
when you walk into the kitchen
and they’re up to their elbows in a bowl
of grated potatoes
they’ll say they don’t need any help–
stand in front of the electric frying pan anyway
wait until they give you a spatula.
when they pull out the scrabble board
let them win
when they ask about boys say yes
when you visit in the winter
when the sky is dark by 4 o’ clock
bring your feetie pajamas
and bathe with them.
fall asleep between your brother and the window on the way home
hug your father back
when he carries you to bed.


something sappy about my grandmother

sometimes i wake up exasperated
that i still dream so vividly about someone who has been dead for so long
not a fantasy trip with flying and talking animals
or wispy visions tea leaves telling me where to go when i wake up
i dream of telling you i cleaned the bathroom before being asked to
we’re at graduation and you’re sitting on a folding chair in a peach rhinestoned track suit clapping
dream you’re in a mauve easy chair with the crossword
marking it in pen, watching the history channel special on the bataan death march and listening to my day
five years and then some i wake forgetting i took you out of my cellphone
that you died before i had a cellphone

when i think about my mother
and how one day she might be dead too
waking up empty like this is what i fear the most
a ring on a salmon pink manicured finger
reflects the morning sun into my eyes
i could have sworn it was real this time


write about being home among your people attempt 1

write about being home among your people

The beautiful thing about not living in New York for two years
Spending every holiday laid over in O’Hare or Newark,
sitting on an airport toilet realizing I haven’t breathed real air in seven hours
is that today it feels perfectly acceptable to walk
the sixty blocks from port authority to your hallway of an apartment
You say “I love being one train away from my job
but these are not my people”
and I think did you see the crocuses today
and
if your neighbors,
these people
are wearing black, walking fast, and not talking to you when you share public transit
then drape me in blue blazers and lacoste
and I’ll be from the upper east side too.
The sidewalks were beautiful today
I’m here now
let’s go get a knish.


A Good Fish

somewhere between nonfiction and not. prompt: put a goldfish in a story. prompted by the first chapter of I Am Not Myself These Days, by Josh Kilmer-Purcell

They finally give in when I turn seven. My sister is nine. She sleeps on the top bunk in our bedroom. The walls in our bedroom are white. Our carpet is pink. We are getting a goldfish.

Looking back, I don’t think it took so long for them to say yes because they wanted to protect us from early lessons on love and loss. I think they had been preparing to say no to a puppy and were thrown when we aimed low, but we didn’t want to go on walks in the rain and pick up steaming shit with plastic bags, either.

*

The notes start coming home in my backpack on my teacher’s happygram stationery. One at a time, months apart at first. Marne enjoys reading. Marne is a very bright little girl. Marne seems bored. Please call the office to set up a time for a parent teacher conference.

*

The tank comes when I am at my own birthday party. It is my birthday present! I am seven years old and my fish tank is clear with a pink lid. It has sparkly gravel lining the bottom and two plastic stalks of wavy seaweed, but the best part is that it is a Little Mermaid fish tank and there is an Ariel standing in the middle of the gravel, with her arms up high over her head. She loves this tank. We fill it with water from the kitchen and two goldfish.

*

They want me to take a test, because I can read. It is unclear whether or not I am actually “special”. I have the social skills of a three year old gorilla. I do not really understand two digit subtraction and I cry during the first few weeks of math lessons. But at reading time the class is divided into three groups: the slow group, who read Henry and Mudge, the fast group, who read Frecklejuice, and me. My teacher excludes me from our class’s weekly spelling tests. School is like eating breakfast: something I do with one hand, ignoring the ketchup dripping down my shirt so I can a better look at the newspaper. I am well-behaved and quiet; I am mostly left alone.

*

One fish is orange and black stripes like a tiger, but we don’t like the name tiger so we call him Pokey because his eyes poke out of either side of his head. The other fish is all white with one orange spot. He blows a lot of bubbles. We name him Bubbles. I feed Pokey and Bubbles twice a day. I don’t want to be one of those kids who begged for a dog and never walked it.

*

The test happens through a door I thought led to a janitor’s closet at my elementary school, in a small room with a grey table and two chairs overlooking the playground. A teacher I have seen before but never met asks me questions as I watch first the empty playground and then each grade go out one at a time for recess. She says the test stops when I can’t answer the questions anymore. I memorize and spell and point to pictures of rectangles. I miss second grade recess. I miss fifth grade recess.

*

I feed Pokey and Bubbles dutifully for a year. They live on top of my sister’s dresser. Our television set lives on top of my dresser, but the remote lives on the top bunk with my sister. Our window faces south and in the afternoon when I get home from school a square of light discolors the picture on the tv but makes the gravel in the fishtank sparkle. I imagine the goldfish are sunbathing.

*

No one tells me how I do on my test, and I don’t get to make up the recess I miss. I do get to go through the lunch line in our otherwise empty cafeteria all by myself, for an ice cream scoop of mashed potatoes indented for gravy on a styrofoam tray with a chocolate milk. I feel famous, and then I forget about the test. Ten years later I find a dot matrix printout I’ve never seen before hidden in the folds of my baby book. It takes me several more years to figure out how to interpret it, how to read the numbers on the bottom of the paper, and come up with a number that leaves me shattered and vacant for days.

*

I think Bubbles might be tired. Bubbles is cuddling my Little Mermaid Ariel figurine, nestled between her goddess perfect arms, palms raised towards heaven, warrior one. I would swim between those arms all day too if I was a fish, but three or eight days go by of Bubbles not moving from his lovely arm perch and even though it will be years before I experience the human equivalent (a 36 hour fuckfest in a Great Barrington bed and breakfast) even I know that either Bubbles has attachment issues with fishtank Ariel, or we have a wildlife emergency. I squeeze between the dresser the fishtank sits on and the wall, until I am behind the dresser, looking at our bedroom from the opposite direction, pleased by the novel view. Now staring at Ariel’s back, I can see that Bubbles is impaled on of her fingers. There is a gaping hole in his backside. Pokey has taken the liberty of eating most of his insides. I have been looking at an empty shell for days.

*

My parents go to school to talk to my teacher, possibly in my second grade classroom. Maybe they sit at my desk, which is a fake oak paneled top covered in dried up day glo glue, which I enjoy playing with when I am bored. My desk is full of crumpled papers, bits of broken crayons, old tests, and a few leaves, turned brown and disintegrated after a fall show and tell (By fifth grade I will become a neat desk perfectionist, spending my extra time in class cleaning the stray line out of my perfectly lined up notebooks rather than reading). Maybe they sit in our story corner or in the front of the room, where the spelling list is kept on the board in chalk. No one tells me about their conference, but later I gather that my second grade teachers loves me but thinks I should go to a special school.

*

I hold a funeral for Bubbles that my best friend and babysitter attend. I dig a hold in between two pine trees behind our house. I write RIP BUBBLES on a flat rock in crayon, and then we do the Ouija board, which my mother lets me take outside. I cover his grave with the rock. We say he was a good fish and we argue about whose hands are moving the Ouija board.

*

One parent, and then both ask me if I’d like to go to a different school. Casual but worried, in moments specially picked out for the nonchalant quality of the day. I say I like my friends. I like my teacher, she lets me read books during class I want to stay at my school is that okay? I imagine they feel relieved, but they are conversations I will never remember. When it arrives, the Stanford Binet envelope is tucked deep into the book my mother reserves for class pictures and report cards, and my second grade teacher gives me a book of phonics and the last four parts of the little house on the prairie series to work through. Nothing changes.

*

We want another fish, but we don’t want Pokey anymore, and we don’t want one fish, and they won’t buy us two. Little Mermaid Ariel grows filmy green algae in her armpits. I stop feeding Pokey until my sister and I finally give him away to our neighbors, two little girls who made an aquarium out of blue and green construction paper while they waited for their parents to give in and let them have their very own pet. The tank disappears. The next year we get a cat, and I forget about the mermaid. And the fish.


some thoughts on 23

Some Thoughts on 23

As of 1:22 this morning
I’m the number on the back of michael jordan’s jersey
the one that carried him to the 6 nba titles
the number the Miami Heat retired even though he never even played for them
I’m 23 like a box of crayons, like yellow and green chevrons on cardboard
vestigial crayon sharpener included
2 perfect straight lines of perfect color promising a perfect school year
minus a black or a cerulean blue or a brick red broken in two or lost before the first day
23 the cartoon network channel in the mid-90’s on long island,
US-23, a road running from michigan to florida,
or Christmas eve Eve,
Track 23, I’m La Vie Boheme on the RENT soundtrack,
my introduction to juevos rancheros and dildos
my sister and i shared a pair of headphones on the train into manhattan
my mother disbelieving the words on our lips ‘do you know what a dildo is’ she asked
on cue, in unison ‘a strap-on, mom’, and then we went back to singing out the window.

I’m a juicy, bleeding 24 oz. t-bone steak with one bite missing,
I’m the right for the district of columbia to choose electors for president and vice-president in the constitution as ratified in 1961
or Blackjack plus two for good luck,
I’m ten fingers, ten toes, this nose, and two furrowed eyebrows,
Psalm 23: Mizmor l’david; The lord is my shepherd i shall not want in the torah,
or 4 short of being divisible by nine (which appeals to me),
the number of petals on a daisy I tucked in my right ear last july
plucked off one by one when i was done wearing it
(except I’m making that up because daisies are dicots– flowering plants with two cotyledons whose petals occur in multiples of four and five and 23 is a prime number)
Today I’m a prime number
indivisible
unfactorable
a mystique undeniable, when we learned about them in fifth grade my legs quaked under my desk
thank god i was sitting, thank you teacher for my first erotic math experience.

John McCain was shot down on his 23rd mission in Vietnam
Julius Caesar was stabbed 23 times when he was assassinated,
23 the number of times i refreshed that page on wikipedia to make sure i’d gotten all the interesting parts right,
23– twenty and a half minutes longer than it took my first boyfriend, it feels good to be older
If I was the 23rd state to enter the union, I’d be Maine,
still pissed off that New Hampshire got “live free or die” first for their license plates.
The 23rd mile of a marathon
I’m one water stop away from some arbitrary goal that makes other people stop and turn around when they hear about it during a cocktail hour
Remember that time you ran a marathon and I called you on a cell phone you stowed in your water belt, a perfect four minute orchestration during your 23rd mile, sneakers melting into the pavement on the route through san francisco
just keep going, I’m so proud to know you
I cried when I hung up, wrote a letter I never sent it said ‘I love… marathons’.
I’m 3 miles over a school zone speed limit,
I’m the space between one and four, or
halfway to 46.
Today I’m two dozen minus one
egg scrambled for a bagel sandwich
or a lazy sunday single omelette
why don’t you stay for breakfast, how do you like your egg?
I’m 32 flavors and then some– backwards
nobody likes you when you’re 23
If 23 people are sitting in the same room, the probability that two of them share a birthday is 50%
I’m 5 days short of a February,
or every letter in the alphabet minus x, y, and z
I’m the number of seconds it takes blood to course through the human body,
think of me and count to 23 and i’ll have ridden a circuit through your feet through every single chamber of your heart through your pancreas– i’m timing you.

Today I’m seven more than the family record for most latkes eaten on any given chanuka without throwing up,
in fact I’m one night short of three chanukas
so bring on the candles did you know
Sex characteristics are determined by your twenty third chromosome.
Now that I think about it
there’s 23 chromosomes in a sex cell
Let’s come together and divide our twenty threes up
I am every inch of this 23 today
I’m practically his Airness,
I’m Michael Jordan,
I’m nothing but net.


The Grand Canyon State

“Do you mind driving the first part?” she asks, shuffling to the passenger side door. Her voice sounds like the gravel my car is parked on. I don’t argue. At 3am on day four of our impromptu jaunt through the American southwest I have already driven through four states, slept for a total of nine hours. What’s another two?

I keep telling myself that I just need to go big or go home; I am never, ever coming back to this state that is so far away, this state that is all sand and no water, and we’ve already driven twenty five hours and however many miles and we are going to go see the sun rise over the Grand Canyon and I am going to get us there, I can stay awake awhile longer.

Our hostel in Flagstaff is staffed entirely by foreigners, the kind from bad teen roadtrip movies, who sing drunken karaoke all night and have no idea where anything is when we ask questions like ‘how do we get to the grand canyon from here?”. Shann spends half an eternity looking at a map with the innkeeper from Australia, and almost as long talking about Grand Canyon hikes with the inkeeper from England. From these instructions, we are instructed to take a road that does not exist, and we are encouraged to hike to the bottom of the canyon. I wonder if they are trying to kill us.

Driving at night down through California was lousy; driving through Arizona, I realize just after we turn out of the parking lot, is terrifying and stupid. It isn’t stupid because I am mostly asleep, or because I have terrible night vision, or because I am a horrible driver (check, check, and check), or even because the darkness is like molasses or the fade to black at the end of a movie, obliterating all signs of life. It is terrifying and stupid because these roads belong to the elk, and they really enjoy foraging and nuzzling and doing other elk-y things in the middle of the highway, especially when it is dark out. If you hit an elk, one of two things will happen:

1. you will wreck your car

2. you will wreck your car and die

I am almost too tired to remember my only-somewhat rational fear of hitting one of these beasts. We bumble northward at a steady 40mph.  I don’t admit to Shann that I can’t handle this right now– I almost cried when I thought I couldn’t find my car keys this morning (in my pocket). I hope she falls asleep fast, I hope we don’t die.

A year ago I drove through Montana, and the mountains and the trees and the sky made me feel like I was the only person in the world. Besides offending my best friend sitting in the passenger seat, I felt so lonely my ribs hurt and I drove like a crazy person to get the hell out of Montana.  It felt like the rock cliffs and the plants and the gigantic forests would swallow me. 

Arizona is different. The sky is long and flat. Even in the dark  as you stare out your windows, seeing nothing, you know that there’s not much of anything out there to swallow you up; even the sand is lonely.  It’s an empathetic lonely, an understandable gaze at the moon til i lose my senses kind of lonely, or at least this is what I tell myself, smug, having no knowledge of southwestern flora or fauna. You can get out of your car and play your acoustic guitar and cook a can of beanie weenies on the side of the road and be mostly fine, I suppose.

My friend, my traveling companion through this ordeal is sweet, easygoing, tall, and so deeply asleep she is drooling onto her hoodie. I want to let her sleep, but I need some kind of noise to wrap myself in while I drive, and I stick a Joanna Newsom cd in, at volume level 2 or 3, barely on, I just need to hear a voice.

I hate Joanna Newsom, the twingy harp and the voice that could be an eight year old on a bad trip, but we listened to it driving east through california the night before and something about it was really perfect when you’re bobbing through the darkness feeling lonely, like driftwood.

Three tracks in, my staid passenger rustles a little under her seatbelt, opens her eyes a little, and mumbles something about how she thought I hated Joanna Newsom, and the energy of two awake people fills the car and suddenly this isn’t so hard. Sadie, track four comes on, and we get carried away in the song, quietly singing along. It bobs and sways in tone and feeling, gets loud and quiet and prophetic again, we have no idea what we’re singing. Eventually we will return home and I will fall in love with this album and we will sing this track especially loudly when I put it on if we’re driving somewhere to the point that she will ask if I put on this album every time she gets into my car, but I don’t know this yet, because we’ve only been friends for six months and I don’t know her very well and sometimes I think about whether we’ll even know each other in a year from now, or if she’ll be another girl I tried to graft into friendship and fell out of touch with, and that is what I am pondering when a large animal charges into the two lane road.

After it happens I will pull over and cry and she will put her hand on my head and tentatively rub my back and tell me that everything is okay, we’re fine.

It was smaller than it seemed the moment it entered my high beams. At first it looked like a bear or a sasquatch, sprinting for the other side of the road. Maybe the sand was sandier on the other side. When it thumped under my car I realized how small it was, a possum or a rabbit. I had never hit an animal with a car before. I cried for myself and the shame of killing an animal with my big dumb car and I couldn’t stop thinking about elk, even though I clearly had not hit one.

I pulled back onto the road and kept driving, shaking the rest of the way there. The sky turned a dark purple, and I begrudgingly sped up. Signs for the south rim of the canyon appeared, and my friend continued to pat my shoulder and tell me that I was doing fine.

We parked and walked and found a place to sit on a rock face overlooking the gigantic hole in the ground that is the canyon, and we watched what was indeed a sunrise, huge and crisp and beautiful, like texas toast. I took photos as the sun warmed an old, dying flower the color of butter, cast a shadow with the chainlink fence that kept eager tourists from falling to their deaths. We mutually agreed upon the beauty of the moment, turned, went on a short hike a mile into the canyon and back again, drove back to the hostel without incident, slept for nine hours in our hostel bunkbeds in the hot night without interruption for the first time since arriving in Arizona, dreaming of our survival.


saturday

written recently, about something not so long ago. i think this is the first part of something with more parts, except i don’t have those parts yet. had a prompt recently to write something in three distinct parts, and an idea i couldn’t get unstuck, and this is what i got so far.

saturday

One morning you wake up and you don’t want this anymore.
A dusky, dripping candy apple of a sunrise reaches through your window
warms your blankets and freckles the wall above your head,
but you lie knocked over, grey from the moment you stop sleeping
can’t stop looking at your hands
sure you’ve never seen those fingernails before.

Last night your body was a house.
A brick and aluminum sided compound with a weeping willow in the yard,
your raingutters pristine and clear of leaves,
you powerwashed your surfaces every spring.
But one morning you wake up and instead you’re
the sister crushed under it–
two fetid striped stockings in glittery ruby drag shoes
curling up and disappearing under all that weight
receding, someone else’s plot device, you were never here

One morning you wake up and can’t look in the mirror above the bathroom sink
as you step in the shower
taking your glasses off before you get off the toilet
brushing your teeth looking down at the drain
american standard white porcelain
you wake up and you’re a house with no foundation sinking into the landfill you were built on
we didn’t think it would shift, we’re sorry
you’re a foundation with no house
a bewildered basement, blinking, not used to the sounds of birds, the light
you’re a passive gash in the ground where a forest used to be
a pile of sand neighborhood children will be grounded for playing on.