Month: April 2019

Toot

Destitute.

Living like a modern day prostitute. 

Going crazy in this mental institut-ion

of bills to pay. $9 an hour isn’t living wage. It’s living with the rage of a world that only costs more as I age.

I’ve given up the dreams of picket fences and love.

My dreams now consist of keeping my head well above

Water, debt and the weight of my depression

Attempting to appear happy in my state of recession

Weakness and defeat are not the impression

I want to rely on when the days seem too long

It’s all goin wrong

Or I’m simply just not feeling all that strong

Instead I sit back, reflect on my day

Guess I can call it a win

Pat my back, toot my horn

Prepare to whore myself again.

Ode to an Old Barn

It is a place where animals roam free

In the woods the first time 

I felt love 

Beneath those crooked and rotting boards. 

It could be breathing that came as the wind blew,  5

On one of many panic attacks, alone, 

Where my thoughts wouldn’t be heard or judged,

By anyone 

But squirrels, they drop their acorns on me. 

Maybe it’s the place with decay, wooden floors, 10

That reminded me I live at my lowest,

Without a home or love, the world’s sound, 

Filling me,

When air escapes my teeth.

Where I spent nights with too much 15

Music, drinks, friends, a place we all knew,

Before we became stained with red 

Grading ink or blood,

We grew too fast for the rainboots on our feet. 

This old wooden structure was home to animals, 20

Whether it be my cherished friends or wildlife, 

And like the smell of watery grass or the distant train horn

We remember,

Though deep in the woods your grave lies. 

Cherished frame of wood older than my painted nails,  25

You are where loam and soil became a sapling, 

A branch, grew leaves and fruit and bark, your wood now,

A mighty tree,

A tree for they who knew you best, me. 

Money

No more hollow than a blade of grass, 

You praise your crisp horde, 

The filth and bones of the noble morning shift,

Raising you on your feet of stolen ivory, 

You praise the view of thinly sliced emeralds.

Sign Language

What I remember most about my childhood are the bells that would ring every Sunday morning. I could never quite make out what hymn they were playing, or recall the name of it I mean, but I could hum the entire song while they chimed. Blame that on the hymn book being beaten into my memory since I was barely old enough to mutter a gurgled “Jesus Loves Me.” But I remember walking to church, humming. Sitting in the pews, humming, because I was too embarrassed to sing. Always, humming, never singing. I wish now that I had sang.


I ring the bell and hear the answering sigh from the other room. That’s about the only conversation I get from my family anymore. Sighs and groans of frustration and a couple eye rolls thrown in here and there. They all mock me, mimicking my hums in high pitched tones. Just because I can’t talk anymore, they think I’m too dumb to realize when they do it. And just because I can’t walk, I get treated like I’m a chore. When my daughter walks in the room rolling her eyes, I want to roll my eyes back at her and tell her I just need the freaking fan turned up a little. I catch myself though before I do and realize that adults probably shouldn’t do that. So I barely stick my tongue out at her instead, which, I guess, I’m too old to be doing too. But I push that thought aside as the scowl that’s almost always on her face disappears as she lets out a lighthearted laugh. For a few seconds, I get my little girl back.


“What did you need?” When she asks me that, I almost can’t make myself point to the fan. I hate the act of just jabbing my finger towards what I need like I’m some sort of overgrown toddler demanding a sippy cup or a stuffed animal or an overdose of attention. But I point anyways and she simply turns the fan up before leaving the room again. I glance at the worn wheelchair, that is doing me absolutely no good sitting on the other side of the room. It’s sad that I can’t even walk a few inches to turn up the fan.


I keep working on my computer for another half hour, typing up a poem I know that I will never show anyone. My daughters always ask why all my poems are about God and I told them that just in case I die soon, I want to make sure I’ve built up plenty of points with him. Really though, I keep writing because it is the closest that I will probably ever be to words again.


When I am finished with my poem– more like when I’ve gotten too angry at it to mess with it anymore– I look up how to say ‘fan’ in sign language and I’m surprised with how simple that sign is. Yes, this is one I can remember. Rare, since my mind has been betraying me lately too. All you have to do is hold up your pointer finger and spin it in a circle above your head. Even though it’s easy, I try it a few times, spinning my finger in time to the video on the screen. I laugh a little at how much that sign represents my life right now. The daily cycle of waking up, eating, sitting, typing, and sleeping is enough to drive anyone crazy. But that is the cycle I am stuck in right now, which might be why I can’t control the laughing once it starts.


How did I get to this point? Like, what decided my fate would be getting stuck in a wheelchair starting at the age of thirty-five? What, after I go on vacation and I’m the one a random bacteria decides to infect? Me out of everyone else? What decided that I would lose my ability to speak at the age of forty-one? Why, just why… I think I ask that more than the people that dare to come up to me in public and ask what happened. All I know is I didn’t get a say-so in the matter.

It all started in 2011, after returning home from a vacation to Walt Disney World. One morning I woke up and tried to get up out of bed, expecting to just walk to the restroom as usual. Instead, I found myself face down on the floor as soon as I pushed off of the bed. My legs wouldn’t move, not even the slightest twitch. It’s like my brain didn’t understand that I was asking it to move my legs. That was the most terrifying moment of my life, because I didn’t know what was going on or where to go from there. Or how to go. How to go was the hardest question to answer. I had lost my voice that week and was unable to tell anyone I needed help up, that I needed to go to the restroom. So, until someone finally woke up, I was forced to lay in the floor. Sadly, by the time they did, there was no reason to go to the bathroom anymore. It was that way for the next few days. Each morning, I would try to stand up, only to fall again. My family begged to take me to the hospital but I have always been stubborn, so I kept refusing. I told them I was fine, that I was probably just over exhausted from our vacation and that I just needed rest. After all, this wasn’t the first time this sort of thing had happened.


Three days later, after laying in my own feces and urine every morning and being unable to stand to take a shower, I had a whole new perspective on what it must feel like to be in a nursing home, only being able to wait until someone noticed you needed help. After the third day, I couldn’t take it anymore and went to the hospital. Nothing was concluded. They couldn’t figure anything out. I prayed to God every day after that, asking him what was happening to me, what I did to deserve this, why he hated me. I always took that last part back every time. Growing up in a southern church, you didn’t ask why God hated you. You just assumed you deserved what you got and repented of sins you weren’t even sure you had committed. So that’s what I did.

The next week, I somehow recovered, if only slightly. Enough to use a walker instead of a wheelchair. This was a big accomplishment and I truly thought I had been right and I had just needed more rest than usual. A few months of using a walker allowed me to attend my mother’s funeral and walk up to her casket to stand by her side. She had been in wheelchair most of her life. I stood there weeping.


By the next week, I was back to not being able to stand at all. After that I spent months in and out of doctor’s appointments, trying to figure out what had happened and by the end of the year, they had figured it out. At this point when people ask what happened, I don’t have to use up the extra brain power to explain, because I have the script memorized as well as I have had the Lord’s Prayer beaten into my memory. A virus attacked my nervous system, leaving me paralyzed from the waist down. I have been unable to walk for nearly seven years, confined to my mom’s old wheelchair. More recently, when I lost my voice, I went through the same process of waiting to find something out, only to find out that once again, my nervous system had been attacked by a virus and that they were ninety-nine percent sure that I would never speak again.
So far, they have been right.

Now I struggle for words, but it’s not that I don’t know what they are. It’s just. Nothing. Comes. Out. Since I have never had the need before to learn sign language, I am only learning one phrase at a time and only as I need them. When I go out now, I can’t say the script I memorized because no sound comes out. I have no way of communicating my feelings or needs, and let’s face it. People are pretty much awful at reading lips. So when I say “can I go” and it sounds like “tomato”, things can get very odd. It all gets very frustrating.

When I can’t even do simple things, like turn a fan up, it is pretty hard to stay positive. But all I can do is take a breath and think of my mom, how she was unable to walk for the majority of her life. Yet she still managed to live a full life. So I stay as positive as I can. At home it still isn’t easy, but my family and I are slowly adapting and developing our own language, a mix of signs and reading lips and random hand gestures that would probably quickly earn us a trip to get a mental evaluation if someone saw us repeating them in public. Despite getting frustrated sometimes, I like our odd language and I like learning new signs. The first two I learned were “bacon” and “Jesus.” My daughter likes to joke with me and say she can see what my priorities are. She doesn’t realize yet that I just liked the flow of those signs, the act of making them, the fluid motions. It’s almost like speaking and having the words roll off of your tongue. And when you watch a professional sign things? My god, it is possibly one of the most beautiful languages that exist.

When I first lost my voice and my ability to walk, everything felt so hopeless. Sometimes it still is and it seems like I’ll never be the same. But maybe that’s okay. Most of the time though, I feel like losing these abilities doesn’t mean I have to lose myself. This just gives me the opportunity to find different ways to express what I need and what I am feeling. Signing can be just like speaking and stillness can be a wonderful thing. I am going to be able to do this. I can find my words again. Most days, I am hopeful of this. Today is one of those days. So when my husband walks into the room a little later and sees me, I sign the first full sentence I ever learned in sign language to him. I love you. And when he smiles and signs it back, I am able to see the world as one of possibilities. I can do this. I know I can.

The Beginning of the End

Larry reaches over to hold Sue’s hand. She moves away so it seems like the dog is pulling the
leash. It doesn’t matter that the neighbors see Larry’s car and know he’s spending the night,
there’s something about the neighbors actually seeing her with Larry and looking like a couple
that troubles her. This is just the beginning of their romance.

“Did I tell you about that student going on and on about how his short story is like Game of Thrones during workshop last night?”

Larry nods his head negatively, but says nothing, and Sue knows he’s nodding to let her know he knows she pulled away.

“Another student said that show used too much gratuitous violence, something we’ve been discussing this week, and an argument broke out about how people like the show for way more reasons than that, and, you know, there’s always those that get biblical about everything. We were getting sidetracked from commenting on his story and I blurted out that the Game of Thrones was like Genesis, except, since the Bible is supposedly true, when the father gets drunk and rapes his daughter, it’s real there, and stated as a fact, not as gratuitous violence.”

“Seriously, Sue, you said that? How’d that go over?”

“Not so great. A couple of students gave me a quick thumbs up and others were probably wishing they had caught me saying that on their phones.”

“They didn’t, did they?”

“Who knows?”

“I bet that was quite the class.”

“Maybe it is my last class and I will get my termination papers in the mail today. Joys of being an adjunct.”

Larry wants to say more but a neighbor walks by with his dog and Sue leans over to pet his dog while the neighbor pets her dog. The neighbor usually has two dogs, but the older dog hasn’t been doing well, and Sue’s not sure she wants to ask about Beanie.

The neighbor sighs, then says, “I buried Beanie last night.”

Sue reaches over to hug her neighbor and Larry feels like he should say something. “Did you put him down?”

The neighbor starts crying and walks off while Sue quietly mumbles how sorry she is about Beanie. After the neighbor is out of ear shot, she looks at Larry and says, “What the fuck kind of question is that to ask someone about their dead dog? Is that what you say to people when a family member dies? Do you ask them if they pulled the plug?”

They walk the next block home in silence. When Larry gets in the car and backs out of the driveway, they both know this is their end.

Stripped

It goes without saying that these sidewalks are never silenced. No matter how bare they appear in the darkness cast by the evening, the sound of parading and absentminded conversing has forever stained the concrete. The echoes of the traffic of the day passed rings in the man’s ears, barely quieter than his own rampant thoughts. More than anything, the innards of his consciousness begs him to get clothed.


A man rushes down the streets of Manhattan, bare from the peak of his bald head to the soles of his calloused feet. Nobody seems to notice, safe for him.


The air is crisp, swiping harshly against his sensitive bare skin with each gust of wind. One fatally positioned blow and the man fears he’ll float away, only landing onto the pavement as one of the many snowflakes garnishing his surroundings. Perhaps this outcome is preferable to the uncertainty of tomorrow.


The man doesn’t know what direction he is going; instead, he is only aware of what looms behind him and his animalistic desire to flee.


With his arms tightly wrapped around his shivering body, the man hobbles forward. He refuses to look up and acknowledge the stragglers accompanying him on this desolate evening, keeping his gaze trained on the hasty shuffling of his feet. He refuses to look upwards and catch their eyes, for he fears what they might see in his own. The man fears his own nakedness.


When he was a much younger man, a boy, even, his father used to tell him that he shouldn’t look down. “There’s a world of people to meet, boy, and you’re not weak. You look them in the eye, shake their hand, and say ‘nice to meet you’. You understand?” When the man was a boy, he never wanted to let his father down. Always, always greet those approaching. Smile at them, let them know you’re friendly, strong, passionate. For a fleeting second, the man regrets taking such advice to heart. Had he not smiled so widely at his wife the day they met, maybe she wouldn’t have fallen for him the way she did. Maybe, then the two of them wouldn’t have gotten married, and maybe she wouldn’t be resting in the warmth of his apartment while he wandered naked through the streets.


Just as soon as it arrives, the idea vanishes, and the man resumes the position of believing all of this was his fault. He deserves to be out in the cold, for he is the man and his wife is not.


No matter what she did to him, she will remain warm and clothed. She reassured him, drunkenly swaying, that nobody would believe him.


The man remembers the sharpness in her tone, the way he was struck by her voice almost as instantaneously as her open palm, almost as much as he remembers the nakedness of his body. He remembers seeing the rage in her eyes, so distinctly foreign in comparison to the resident softness present during the exchange of their wedding vows. He remembers how he begged her to stop.


For months, the man’s wife hid his clothes from him.


Of course, the man tried to adjust to the changes. He tried so hard to go to work, to go see his friends and to live his normal life without the comfort of his clothes. Nothing, however, could be normal for a man completely bare in the harsh winter of Manhattan. His suffering went unnoticed, his bareness avoided.


The echo of his father’s words stung his ears, the haunting taunt of “you’re not weak” reinforcing the opposite.
With nowhere to turn, the man left. His wife had been drinking and was experiencing a frequented intoxication-induced slumber on his brand-new leather sofa. With no clothes, the man braved the cold of the night.


She called to him while he left, her speech slurred and incoherent, telling him that she’d ruin his namesake. He was going to be sorry and would be running back to her when he came to his senses, but she wouldn’t take him.


It had been hours at this point, and the only sense he’d come to was that he should’ve left much, much sooner.


The man’s legs burned from the extended movement and with each stretch of the muscle, he could feel himself caving into the desire to collapse. At the end of the block, after hours of movement, the man’s legs failed him, and he descended to the frosted concrete beneath him. He’d find strength in this retreat eventually, but for now, the man sat, naked in the cold, watching as the world woke to brave the harshness of the proceeding day.

NOVUS Literary and Arts Journal
Lebanon, TN