Gestures

Feb 18 2009

Gestures
for Jan Holman
(July 16, 1965 – February 18, 1989)

1.
Practice doesn’t make perfect.
I wash my bowls, lie in the bed I make.
Sit up again, trying like hell
to make my back straight.

Spinning around and around,
trying to catch a monkey.
If only I could remember
the proper mudra, the one for mercy.

I admit I am still grieving.

2.
I looked for clues of you in pictures of our childhood,
beckoned you into my dreams, but you never came.
I waited at the graveyard for anything to happen,
damned you and God both, trying to get a rise.

I learned the semaphore alphabet and waved out to sea,
emptied every bottle that bobbed my way.
I am still waiting for an answer,
a sign, or a secret password.

I admit I am still a believer: sucker.

3.
Our father was drilling offshore when the call came.
Dolphins followed him through the thick Gulf water.
When the hard land started, seagulls took over,
flying in the shape of spades. He called your name.

These are useless gestures. Bag of bones,
I’ll see you when I see you.
Rotten, stinking, broken,
your hair and fingernails still growing.

I admit I am still living.

Shannon Holman, Oberlin, Ohio, 1993

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The Shape of That Emptiness

Feb 18 2009

The Shape of That Emptiness

How the road looked that night, we won’t know that,
if the sky was still black, or gray, or bluish-gray,
or if the light was starting up, the birds.
We won’t know what was said in the car,
if the radio was on, what station, how loud.
Or where you and Roger thought you were off to,
out past town, so late, so fast, not toward your home
or anyone’s home we knew. I’m stalling.

Near four. You swerved,
split the car on a telephone pole, were killed.
He was thrown clear.

Maybe a squirrel in the road, maybe a slick patch.
Or else you argued, he grabbed the wheel.

For a long time, because he lived,
it seemed important to think that.

Look: you were drunk. It was your fault.
I can say that.

*

I’m the first to enter your apartment;
I want to keep your secrets.
And catch your ghost? What I get
is this: imprint of your body
in the sheet’s hollows,
half-empty mug of coffee,
shopping list, unfinished letter,
smell of your skin on a red sweater.

*

At the viewing, I admire the parlor’s furniture.
On the sofa, a team of hounds is running.
Flags wave gaily. Our mother says,
you made my child a wax-doll.

I’m given warning: the process
of reconstruction, so delicate,
touching is forbidden. Even a finger—
they tell me—could spark the crumbling,
the collapse of all their efforts. We might have urges—
they speak so gently—we will resist them.

*

So cinematic, those first days.
Your life’s another story. Here’s all I remember: us driving
back from a party on the bayou, REO Speedwagon on the radio,
daquiris sweating between our legs (I try to call up your face,
but your long hair’s always in the way). And your arms,
currents of muscle under your skin.
And also, I’ve got an image of the last time I ever saw you,
but it’s just your legs below the knee, and the sound of the vacuum.

*

I was 17; you were 23. It’s been
eleven years: I’m older
than you were, than you will be.
Our brother has children, cats & dogs,
quail, even a raccoon—all the pieces of a life, and then some.
Our parents moved up North; their house now
has no doorbell to trigger Mom’s nightmares.
Dad loves the snow—it covers everything.
I guess you could say
we’re happy. Is that okay?
Is this what I’m supposed to do, give the news?
All’s well at Camp Earth. Send money.

My friend Laura’s brother died suddenly.
She makes these sculptures, large rocks with flour
dropped over them; and then the rocks are
carefully taken away, so that what’s left
is just the shape of that emptiness.

That’s what I wanted
when the house
was full of people
and ridiculous hams and casseroles,
pictures of you everywhere.
I turned them over,

went out to walk the dog.
The world looked
exactly the same
without you.

Shannon Holman, New York, 2000

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Reasons To Live

Nov 09 2008

You like spaghetti, George?  I like spaghetti?  I like board games.  I like grabbing the trifecta with that long shot on top.  That ozone smell you get from air purifiers.  And I like knowing the space between my ears is immeasurable. Mahler’s first, Bernstein conducting.  You’ve got to think about all the things you like and decide whether they’re worth sticking around for.  And if they are, you’ll find a way to do this.

Rube, Dead Like Me: Season 1, Episode 2

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Biologist Pan Wenshi Helps a Region and a Species, the Langur – NYTimes.com

Sep 23 2008

“Long ago, in the poverty-stricken hills of southern China, a village banished its children to the forest to feed on wild fruits and leaves. Years later, when food stores improved, the children’s parents returned to the woods to reclaim their young.

To their surprise, their offspring had adapted to forest life remarkably well; the children’s white headdresses had dissolved into fur, tails grew from their spines and they refused to come home.”

Lemur slideshow: http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2008/09/22/science/092308-Monkeys_index.html?partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

Biologist Pan Wenshi Helps a Region and a Species, the Langur – NYTimes.com.

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E. J. Dionne Jr. – Whose Elitism Problem Now? – washingtonpost.com

Sep 16 2008

And nothing more exposes the hypocrisy of financial elites riding the coattails of those who revere small-town religious values than a downturn that highlights the vast gulf in power between the two key components of the conservative coalition. Even cultural conservatives will start to notice that McCains tax policies are geared toward the wealthy investing class and Obamas toward the paycheck crowd. Even the most ardent friends of business have begun to argue that a re-engagement with sensible regulation is essential to restoring capitalisms health.

E. J. Dionne Jr. – Whose Elitism Problem Now? – washingtonpost.com.

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No Minute Gone

Aug 24 2008

The UK website If You Could is the project of design firm HudsonBec and asks this question: if you could do anything tomorrow, what would it be?  This week’s print series answers the question with wonderful prints from Rob Ryan and Jason Munn.

If You Could : Print Series : August 2008

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my bookmarks on wordle

Aug 19 2008


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Kiffians, Tenerians, and Awe

Aug 16 2008

A remarkable triple burial -- containing a woman and two children who were 5 (left) and 8 years old, their limbs entwined -- was discovered at the Gobero site during the 2006 field season. Pollen clusters found in the sand indicated the three had been buried on top of flowers. The skeletons showed no sign of injury and had been ceremonially posed and buried, along with four arrowheads. The image appears in the September 2008 National Geographic. (Credit: Mike Hettwer (c) 2008 National Geographic)

Stone Age embrace: A remarkable triple burial -- containing a woman and two children who were 5 (left) and 8 years old, their limbs entwined -- was discovered at the Gobero site during the 2006 field season. Pollen clusters found in the sand indicated the three had been buried on top of flowers. The skeletons showed no sign of injury and had been ceremonially posed and buried, along with four arrowheads. The image appears in the September 2008 National Geographic. (Credit: Mike Hettwer (c) 2008 National Geographic)

This morning I’ve been reading stories in the  New York Times,  Science Daily, and National Geographic, all based on the findings of Paul Serno and his colleagues and presented in a paper on PLos ONE.  They tell of people who lived and died in the Sahara when the Sahara wasn’t dry, and the articles gave me that awe-filled, castles-in-the-air feeling that was so much more common in childhood, when the whole arc of human history seemed to whoosh up and past like a train.

Says John Nobel Wilford in the Times article:

A girl was buried wearing a bracelet carved from a hippo tusk. A man was seated on the carapace of a turtle.

And in the photo above, two children reach out to their mother for thousands of years.

Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away.

Whoosh.

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links for 2008-08-15

Aug 15 2008

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links for 2008-08-12 [delicious.com]

Aug 12 2008

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