Sunday, April 28, 2013

Suggestible Minds



Suggestible Minds

allow me to welcome you
to stark minimalist staging
for composed ambiguity
& deceitful aural textures

whatever you do
do not look down

do not brave heavily armed
acquisitions with indifference

at least not of
your own volition

obey to expectations
willfully accept truths

allow me to address you
amply kept audience
on the acquired habits
of conscious conformity

suggestible minds
do not think for yourself

premise of absolutes
attempts to isolate

empirical measurements
are impossible to forecast

when you cannot deliberate
with your own private apathies

suggestible minds
orchestrated purposefully

suggestible minds
manipulated willfully

resonant frequency likely

**

As it always happens, the weekend flew by.  After a particularly rough Friday I arrived home to a pot of stew and Hannah overnight and a visit with Erica.  All, delights that eased my stressful noodle.  I slept like a log too because I knew I didn't have to wake up to an alarm.  Instead, I woke up organically, to the sun streaming in my window and ventured out for the day with Erica, enjoying a lunch and some retail therapy but I was mostly just happy to be in her company.  That was followed by a girls night of sorts at my eldest sister's abode.  Against my better judgement, I drank wine and I knew I shouldn't have because I was battling a headache I've had since early Thursday morning.  Because I indulged, I ruined my Sunday.  I mapped out a perfect artist date for myself.  Halifax in the sunshine with writing and browsing and peacefulness.  Instead I woke up with a migraine and wasted a whole gorgeous sunny day resting so my raging headache would subside.  Disappointed in myself for not heeding my noodle's needs prior to the wine consumption.  Lesson learned.

I'm feeling much better now but still have a dull ache hovering around the eyebrow area.  Just enough to be annoying.  I bought a new tea yesterday, Sleepytime Vanilla.  I just made myself a cup after finishing my laundry and preparing my lunch for tomorrow.  I found enough energy to tweak this poem  I started scribbling mid-week so I could at least feel like I was somewhat productive.  The tea is yummy and perfect for bedtime.  It's my new favorite thing.

Other delights of the weekend:  coming home from work on Friday to a swanky postcard from Haley and my amazon order that included the new David Sedaris book and the book about the song 'Hallelujah' I've been eyeing since Christmas.  I'm armed now with tons of reading material to get me through the next little bit.  I've read a few pages of each book already and I can't wait to get through both of them.  I plan to savor each though because David's stuff is SO good that when I'm done I'm always sad.  His stuff is incredibly smart and funny, so much so that sometimes I make a fool of myself if I'm reading it on my commute home.  I often take to laughing out-loud on the Metro.  Books, good books, rule.

As I prepare to retire for the evening I realize that while I am already missing Hannah being here, her silliness, our 5 minute dance parties and snuggles, I have so much to look forward to in the next while.  A lot of it is music, shows by Old Crow Medicine Show, The Stanfields at the Casino, Matt Mays on the waterfront which also coincides with Kiersten's visit and then Matt Epp at The Carleton come the end of June.  There's even an engagement party in there too.  I also have to get photos done for my passport application for next year's trip.  That time won't come soon enough.  I need out of dodge.

My goal for this week is to complete my current short story, eat better (because I've been bad again), exercise at least 30 minutes each day and try to get enough sleep.  Attainable goals, yes?  I think so.

My headache and I bid you a good night and successful, sunny week ahead.

Mr. Sandman, bring me a dream ...

In propinquity,
Nic

PS - Poem's moral?  Think for yourself and be mindful that when you use your words, choose them wisely.  Sometimes they hurt even when you don't mean for them to.






Thursday, April 25, 2013

The Company We Keep



The Company We Keep

above all other things love rules

the affirming rewards of friendship
might be muddled or indeterminate
by imposed anxieties weighing on us

yet

no matter how fragile we become
no matter how cauterized by grief

we are a gorgeous study of propinquity
knitted tightly together with visceral detail
to conquer all with collective courage

above all other things love endures

the nurturing gratuity of feminine bonds
describe the unmapped terrain of our nature
a nonlinear narrative asserts our united oaths

the company we keep pronounces our prayers
the company we keep sustains our constitution

above all other things amity enriches

deepens our faith
enhances our confidence
heightens our convictions
supplements our trust
eliminates our fears

no matter how breakable we feel
no matter how disheartened we are

the company we keep keeps us breathing

**


Throughout my lifetime, I have been fortunate enough to encounter a great number of tremendous humans.  Some of them stayed for the briefest of moments, some stayed long enough for me to learn something either about myself or the world and others have entered my life and are here to stay.  I am grateful to every single soul for their lessons and their love, however short-lived, transistory or lasting.  But it is to those who have planted roots, those constant in my journey that I dedicate this to.  You all know who you are.

Just a friendly reminder to you all, love your people with all of your might.  Appreciate them.  Support them and be kind.  Never slight or antagonize or lie to them.  Your people are your estate, treat them as such.  Build them up, encourage them and let them shine.  Life is too short to mistreat your treasured few.

I get by with a little help from my friends …

In propinquity,
Nic

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Unfinished Woman


Unfinished Woman

I am
by definition
an unfinished woman

a fragmented heart
an uneven dilemma

follow here

the perilous route
of a prosy poetess
defined only by work
on a theory of love

& when I perish

when the earth moves
they will discover my
bones embedded deep
within the rocky below

bones in the shape
of curious decrees
sentences stretching
for long distances

dispatching big words
transmitting veracities
indecipherable to the
average naked eye

I am
by definition
an unfinished woman

a tortured daughter
an uncompromised lover

follow here

my resolute advice
my unrivaled practice

write your failures brilliantly

**


So yesterday I worried I was facing writer’s block.  As soon as I completed my blog and shared it, I wrote a small chunk of dialogue for ‘Mute’.  Maybe saying it out loud helps?  I was grateful for the tiny flash and to have a small conversation set up the next stage of the story.  I also learned a few new things about my current characters I didn’t know before, that was exciting.  I employed the correct grammar too so let’s hope I make the grade.

I wrote the above poem yesterday.  It made me cry as I scribbled.  It came from a deep corner of my heart from the places I am most pure, about the pieces of me that so few know or who couldn’t be bothered to see.    

I’m still out of sorts today but it could be the gloomy fog and rain outside and the fact that so many of my people are in current states of disarray and I worry about them.  My wishes for them are peaceful breathing and optimal outcomes. 

Is it Friday yet?

Wild wild horses, we’ll ride them someday …

In propinquity,
Nic

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Tacenda


Tacenda

leave it to stillness
intentions unspoken
implications hushed

tacit

words better left unsaid
matters to be passed over

in silence

deafening silence

             inferred
            deferred

permit quietude
solemn gestures

oblique

matters not to be mentioned
emotions unable to breathe

stifled
sated

your truth
my truth

the whole truth

& nothing but

left to nothingness
purpose undeclared
words left to the wind

tacit

you and me
me and you

silent
broken

**


It may have happened; writer’s block may have set in. Just a little bit.  I suppose it was bound to happen after such a fruitful stream of creative writing.  When I started writing this current story, I slammed into a wall it seems but I’m hoping it’s just quick creative cat nap instead of an actual block.  I know the whole story now, I just haven’t been able to get it down on paper.  My noodle feels cluttered full of junk and work and worldly concerns.  Perhaps another news hiatus might be healthy.  With all of the goings on in Boston and the foiled terror attack here on Canadian soil, my thoughts before sleep aren’t of imagined characters and their colorful stories, they are deeply rooted in reality.  I need to find the way back to that creative space and turn ‘Mute’ into a full story instead of bare bones writing.  I am still scribbling notes but notes can only take me so far.  I need writing time, alone time with these people to do their story justice.  I also vow to stop bucking the rigid rules of grammar with my stubbornness and write the dialogue properly despite my intense hatred for that one little rule of the comma.  It is a rule I cannot escape if I ever have any hope of publishing one day.  Delighted though that Ruthie was the only person to ever notice it – just for her and for the sake of being correct, I will write with better rules and respect for them. 

I did manage to squeeze out a poem that I transferred from my writing book (which I spent several hours tinkering with over the weekend) to my Teapot.  Sometimes when I’m drained of inspiration, a few hours in those pages can really help.

Sidenote: it’s only Tuesday.  I’m going to try hard to quell my crank.  Try being the operative word.  An equal combination of idiots and outside static are grating on my last nerve but I will press on.  And smile.  It’s what I do.  The only way to battle hypocrisy and the grand double standard is to kill 'em with kindness.  

Who’s gonna ride your wild horses?

In propinquity,
Nic


Thursday, April 18, 2013

If You Love Me


If You Love Me

if you love me
be the one to
snare the sun

if you love me
be the voice to
sing the sweetness

of

sustained devotions
themed declarations

if you love me
be the hand to
touch my heart

if you love me
be the one to
trace the distance

of

the writing of your body
the writing of my body

if you love me
be the single face
that remains still

be the only one
to restore my faith
in a dark world

if you love me
if you love me

tell me so

**


Growing up the fat kid, clothes were always extra special to me because rarely was it I was allowed to buy new things and when something really fabulous fit I didn’t feel like the fat kid.  Case in point, my pink jeans I bought as part of my tiny 6th grade wardrobe.  This school year was particularly important for a few reasons, the first being they were placing our grade for that one year in the junior high building so that meant going to school as an elementary student with all the cool intimidating junior high kids including the grade 9s (who looked like giants to me back then and scared my socks off) and the second reason was, obviously, a boy.  My dear friend Kenny and I, in the last part of summer leading up to the first days of school at Eastern Passage Junior High started spending a fair amount of time together.  There were days when we’d be sitting out on the front walk way, batting eyes at one another and laughing at everything that was said, complete innocence of the time and my sister would poke her head out the door and whistle or tease us.  He’d retort by calling her a ‘faggot’ because he was embarrassed by being heckled but the one day she asked him if he knew what a faggot was (and he didn’t) he threw up her middle finger and blushed. 

Kenny was a sweet boy and at that time in my life I was sure he’d be the boy I’d grow up and marry.  So as you can imagine, I certainly wasn’t feeling like the fat kid but rather someone who felt happy and wanted to dress as such.  In my school clothes shopping, such as it was, I bought myself two pairs of jeans.  One pair were blue and black checkered and other were pink.  I was quite excited and for the first few days of school I planned my outfits very carefully.  The first day of school I wore the checkered jeans and my fancy white shirt.  The second I stepped onto the bus that morning of the first day, Kenny said, “I like your outfit.”  I’m pretty sure my feet didn’t hit the ground all day.  The day was only made better by the fact that Kenny’s desk was right beside mine, just as it had been for 4th and 5th grade.  Things were looking up.

I don’t remember what I wore to school on the second day but on our third day of school I selected my pink jeans.  I adored them and they made me feel like a million bucks.  I had no idea that the day would end in tragedy.  To make a long story short, while we were all waiting for the school bus to go to school, there was an accident.  I didn’t see it because it was down the road a stretch but I sure as hell saw the ambulance and police cars speed by and toward the general area where all of my friends were at their bus stops.  That morning, while waiting for the school bus, my friend Kenny with the long dark eyelashes and the most beautiful smile was struck by a car and killed.  I didn’t know any details about what happened until we were seated in our classrooms and announcements started.  I took full notice that he wasn’t in his seat but the rumor on the bus was that his sister had been hurt so it made sense for him not to be there.  Truth was, it was actually Kenny.  I will never forget the feeling when our principal delivered the news over the intercom.  I felt the world slow down and start to tilt.  At that age I had no idea what I was feeling but I bolted up from my seat and ran to the bathroom because I felt like I was going to be sick.  It was a tough days of heavy emotion that at my age, couldn’t truly understand.

At the end of the school day I was anxious to get home to my mother to tell her about my friend.  The bus dropped me off at my usual spot and I just started running, running so fast and hard my heart might explode.  Instead, I fell.  On the gravel.  I ripped a large irreparable hole in the right knee of my pink jeans rushing home to the comfort of my family.  It was the first and only day I wore my pink jeans.

I ran to the mall yesterday on my way home from work.  The Body Shop had a 50% off sale on all of their make-up and I was desperate for a new All in one Face Base.  I also treated myself to a new blush and a new kabuki brush for loose powder.  Body Shop make-up brushes are dreamy soft and since they are fairly pricey I thought I’d spring for one while the sale was on.  On my way out of the mall I did my usual walk-through at Winners.  I haven’t been feeling like buying new clothes lately but I strolled by the racks anyway.  There, on the rack, hung a pair of petite hot pink jeans.  In MY size.  I grabbed them and proceeded straight to the dressing room.  And, guess what?  They fit like a glove.  I have wanted another pair of pink jeans since the 6th grade and yesterday I made it happen.  I wear them with happiness and I have to tell you, the bright cheerful pink adds a bit of a spring to my step (no pun intended).  They make me feel like a million bucks and they buoy my spirit and they also make me think fondly of my friend whose bright shiny smile beams from an oval picture frame in my writing room and the same smile attached to my keys so that he’s with me wherever I go.

In writing news, I’m still plugging away at ‘Mute’.  Several things became clear to me yesterday on the drive home.  I just need to formulate the words and make sure I have the sequence of events that the characters have told me about in the proper order.  See, the end of the story was made known to me before any other part so it’s been hard for me to focus.  What a fun challenge they have become.  So, watch this space.

Happy sunny Spring Thursday!

In propinquity,
Nic


Sunday, April 14, 2013

A Thousand Kisses Deep - An Evening with Leonard Cohen


My bucket list is one item shorter.  Leonard Cohen played a sold out show last night in Halifax, almost four hours of his best work accompanied by a band and their gorgeous talents collected from all over the world.

The stage was set like a European dream.  Lush Persian-style rugs, red velvet chairs for the musicians and long white curtains cascading down and throughout the show turned all sorts of colors by the ambient and precise lighting.  He also had two large video screens for those far away from the stage.  Where we were sitting, in the nosebleeds, the show was projected on the white walls so we could see.  My seats may have been high up but we were next to the stage so I could see just fine, he was just a bit smaller.  It didn't matter much to me because I was sharing air with a literary hero and it served as a defining moment for me.  I've seen hundreds of shows but this one was miraculously different - it was life changing.  The pristine sound of a finely tuned band, Cohen's sub-baritone husk and his words, that poetry.

I was submerged in a quiet ecstacy while my lovely childhood friend struggled to keep her eyes open.  I commend her for going with me to something that wasn't quite her cup of tea for me to be blessed by the presence of a hero.  That's a good friend.

The show had so many incredible moments but they all blended seamlessly together with ease quelling any anxieties that raced through my body from my daily life.  In those soft hours, nothing else truly mattered except for Leonard's deep crooning and the intricate design of his poetics.

He is a tremendous performer.  Grateful for his audience he refers to as 'friends', respectful of his handsome band and dedicated to his extensive and extraordinary body of work.  He opened his almost four hour show with 'Dance Me To The End Of Love' and built an impressive tower of song until intermission.  The defining moment of the show for me, when the tears came streaming down, was his stunning spoken word delivery of  'A Thousand Kisses Deep'.  His band exited the stage, Cohen stood in a bright white spotlight and whispered the lines.  And of course, his launch into the universally beloved 'Hallelujah' was another emotional moment.  Perhaps one of the most iconic and celebrated songs every written.  The only other thing next to the perfection of Jeff Buckley's heartbreaking cover of the song that could ever compare is hearing Leonard Cohen perform it live.  A single moment really can alter your person, re-align your soul. cleanse your spirit.  

Cohen treated the Halifax audience to three encores and if he'd been allowed he probably would have played on.  It was a beautiful night and I not only walked away richer in spirit but with my arms full of amazing merch.  I rarely buy merchandise at concerts but last night I bought the program, a coffee mug and a limited edition Moleskine notebook with Cohen embossed on the front in gold and the quote 'stop writing everything down'.  The notebook was a bit pricey but I didn't just want it, I needed it.  I needed it because it is akin in a sweet way to the first few lines of my new short story denote a Moleskine notebook and its importance to my character.  In a silly way that only I would associate, it seemed like a sign.  I have learned hard lessons about following and not following signs over the past three years and this one was a sign worth following.  I can't wait to start a new story and start using my book to fill up with notes and ideas, some old and some new.  Maybe even a few borrowed.

I also was in love with his audience.  I bantered with several concert-goers and they shared their Cohen stories of their youth and mused about him and Joni Mitchell and other music that peppered the soundtrack of their lives.  And I loved seeing small kids with their parents taking their seats.  What an incredibly profound and culturally rich experience for them.  I recall one little girl holding her Mom's hand, wearing a pretty dress, black paten leather shoes and leotards carrying a long-stemmed red carnation in her hand.  It moved me.  The whole night, from the fun dinner Colleen and I shared at Midtown Tavern before filing into the Metro Center to the pure power of the show, was perfect.  

Cohen mused he hopes this one isn't a farewell tour and I also hope for the same.  I would do that all over again in a heartbeat.  I hope he returns.

My bucket list is one item shorter but I feel like my humanness has deepened and I left the venue vastly different than when I entered.  For the better.

Thank you Leonard Cohen, for being my man last night.  A gentleman.  You are absolutely everything a hero is made of.

In propinquity,
Nic

My loot.





Saturday, April 13, 2013

Writer's Room

(the newest 'rock wall' instillation - in progress)

I have a space.  A writing space.  And while it is currently without a working computer for all of my creative pursuits, it is my space.  My writing space is littered with things.  With books, music, photos, trinkets and momentos.  It's the museum of my life.  There is a little bit of everyone I love in this room, all of the things that have introduced me to joy, inspired me, elevated me and let me down.  This is my space, it is primarily where I create and where my most precious collections are.  Yes, of late I've been writing at work but it's more about finding the best use of my down time than it is about ignoring my safe, creative haven.

When I am in this room (that is currently without curtains but gives me a great view of a brand new window where a protective pewter dragonfly hang) I think, I sing and pace and sulk and cry.  I laugh in here, I make a mess sometimes and other times it's so pristine that I beam with pride.  When I am in this room I am safe and creative and I am my true self.  I know to some it looks like a hot mess but it somewhere I truly breathe and brainstorm.  There is so much to catch my eye, to cull ideas and the comforts of those who make me happiest and those times we shared, shows, parties, weddings, births and break-ups - it is my artist's home.

Tonight is a bucket list event.  I'll be seeing Leonard Cohen in concert.  He's a literary hero and I am beside myself with excitement even though I'll be in the nosebleed section.  I can't wait to absorb all of that energy and then come home in an inspired haze and add his ticket stub to my wall.  Today is momentous.  It is happy.  It is something that means a great deal to me.  I strong-armed one of my oldest and dearest friends to accompany me.  Perhaps a little of that old-school charm and grace will seep into her skin and she'll come away a fan. ;)

If you should find yourself on my wall, know you are loved.  If you don't see yourself chances are you are somewhere on the other side of the room.  That wall is almost full but still needs work.  If you want me to love you, let me know.  There's always room in my heart.

Happy Leonard Cohen day to ME!  Happy Saturday to you all.  Wherever you end up, enjoy.  Don't forget to love your people and offer kindness into the universe so that it comes back to you.  That, is poetry.

In propinquity,
Nic




Thursday, April 11, 2013

Rock Ranger


Rock Ranger

equal parts peace and promise
animate talent louder than bombs
& a pure hurricane-chasing heart

full throttle classic rock ranger
you were an exhilarating surprise
& fused unbridled passion in your stride

this extant twinkling passes by slowly
without your patient dreams dancing
& joyous flashes of musical quick fingers

on the back of a postcard from the road
it simply reads JS, we wish you were here

come back home Jay
                into the light

for you the pursuit of rainbows
on the other side of midnight

will never expire

absence will not quell your golden voice
it is absolute truth you will never be gone

in our bones your music remains


 **


I met Jay Smith twice.  Friendly banter ensued but mostly it me waxing poetic about his performances and him being graciously thankful I enjoyed it.  There may have been a pun or two in there as well, not from me though, surprisingly.

I saw him play several times, on stage with Gordie Sampson, Matt Mays and on his own.  I admired his natural ease, his raw talent, his love of music fiercely evident in his on stage antics and in his voice.

His passing made me profoundly sad.  Too young, too much left to do, see, write and places to play and people to wildly inspire.  Too much living for him to do.  I was so moved at how quickly our incredible tight knit music community here on the East Coast and Canada wide rallied together in both mourning and in celebration of their fallen brother.  I have the utmost respect for Matt Mays for finishing his tour despite their tragic loss.  It takes good humans to carry on and for that Matt and his band have my infinite admiration.

Regardless of the reasons Jay left this world, he awoke in all of us a certain kind of reverence, a great deal of happiness and the music that will continue to color the world and represent his truest essence.  For that, as a fan, I am grateful.

I attended a benefit concert on Sunday evening in support of his little ones, his family.  His musical brothers and sisters filled up the stage with emotionally riveting performances.  It was a love fest.  A celebration.  And, even though for much of the time tears came, there were warm moments of remembrance and tribute from his sister, his wife and his band. 

I’ve been trying to articulate for days what that was like to be a small part of that but I really still can’t.  So, I wrote a poem.  I’ve read over a hundred times and it feels cliché to me because there truly aren’t words beautiful enough for Jay.  But, I tried.

It is difficult to watch people lose their dearest friend, their son, brother, husband and father.  It is difficult to know someone so admired was in pain.  It is simply difficult to lose the things and people we love.  The trick is to know how to celebrate them when they are gone from us.  I will continue to listen and celebrate, for his life, his memory and those who loved him most.  And judging from the crazy amount of love he generated I am certain his gifts will be paid forward, time and again.

In propinquity,
Nic

Jay Smith
1978 - 2013
Rest peacefully, Rock Ranger






Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Do Not Look Back



Do Not Look Back

do not look back
I want to remember
you as you were then

instead of my fountain pen
pining for the invented figure

of you

traced in cursive on clean paper

do not take pause
I no longer wish to be
an unprincipled poet

subtracting love from words
deducting passion from lies

you told

do not look back
do not take pause

my world will do beautifully

without you

**

I have had a few people inquire, 'Why have you been so quiet on the blog front?'  Fear not, I'm pecking away at something but this week has been somewhat hectic and I'm still searching for the words to talk about the Jay Smith benefit show I attended on Sunday so watch for that coming soon. Until then, just a wee poem I saved for a rainy day and seems fitting for a blue Wednesday.

I have decided that an impromptu artist date is needed today.  I will park myself somewhere with a meal, maybe some wine and my pen.  I need to sit, be quiet, observe and breathe.  That's exactly what I intend to do.  I may also plug away at my current prose piece too but I'm going slow since it warrants some deep thought and heart.

Take it on faith.

In propinquity,
Nic

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Literary Scene



Literary Scene

a typewriter
one piece of paper
& a bottle of red wine

I rise to the occasion

a cadence of words
to wrestle with ambition
& a palm full of virtue

I accept the challenge

w/out trepidation
w/out extortion

I think
I drink
I write

**

Feeling a little blue today, a little blah.  So, a teeny poem (again) and I'll be on my way.  I didn't have the chance to peck too much at my new story so I'm only sitting at 788 for a total word count.  Nothing much to write home about, eh?  

I have an errand after work and then I'm throwing myself in my bed with a movie and some tea.  I don't know if I'm just lethargic today or I'm coming down with a touch of a cold.  A lot of sneezing from yours truly today.

Happy Thursday, folks.

In propinquity,
Nic

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Waste Land


Waste Land

barren mind
empty pockets
moral ruin

bankrupt art
desolate heart

you

were my only hope

**

Prose is kicking my butt again.  I started writing a poem this morning (not this one) and then it occurred to me that the lines would work in my new (I said new) short story, titled 'Mute'.  Prose is stealing my poetry!  How rude!  I don't mind so much though because I'm writing, the Muse is active and I'm enjoying this long stretch of creative energy.  

I confess that I've been thinking a little bit more about Greyson (see Half Windsor Knot) and about his back-story.  I feel like I will at some point return to him and hope he'll be more open to telling me what needs to be told.

I'm out of sorts today.  I have a gaggle of butterflies in my tummy and my hands feel sweaty.  I'm on edge for some reason and I can't explain why.  Doesn't help that we've been delivered another blast of wind by way of freezing cold, gusty wind and below zero temps. Braving the wind without earbuds today is going to be simply awful.  Let's pray my goofy winter hat his in the bottom of my work bag somewhere.

I purchased tickets for me and two friends to attend the Jay Smith memorial concert at Casino Nova Scotia on Sunday.  Smith was a young, vibrant musician and human being.  He died while on tour with Matt Mays and it has sent a giant wave of sadness through our community of artists and music lovers out her on the East Coast and across the country.  In loss, there is a tremendous amount of healing power in music.  I just know that room will be full of good humans pulling together in one long song for a fallen brother.  That's when you  know just how powerful music is, in its healing elements, in it's beauty.  One room, one voice, one human heart.

Not a lot to share today other than this teeny poem and the knowledge that I am yet again on another journey with a few new characters.  I am pleased as punch.

Long week, short blog entry.

In propinquity,
Nic

Monday, April 1, 2013

Yee Haw


Well, here it is.  I've been fussing over this story for awhile and I'm confident enough now to share it.  The introduction of Tillie Wiegers and Mouse is a perfect way to kick off the month of April.  This prose thing is neat and I'm still enjoying the challenge.  No rest for the wicked though, there's another idea brewing so stay tuned.  

In the meantime, enjoy Yee Haw.


Yee Haw

Most people will tell you that Tillie Wiegers is nutty as a fruitcake but I admire her.  Most would try and impart on you the quirky and mannish looking fifty-something proprietor of my favorite used bookstore is a bit hard to get along with but to me she’s a searing spoke of sunlight. Between her wild wiry sunburnt hair, wide grey eyes, burly broad shoulders usually covered with a flannel shirt over a vintage band tee and a quaint conceit, she’s a fascinating caricature. Her glut of eccentricities outlines her boisterous persona, her appearance is jarring but I think she’s a marvel.  I’ve never met anyone quite like her.

The first time I wandered into Basket Case Books she was engaged in a heated discussion with a fidgety middle-aged business man paying for three used copies of Wuthering Heights.  Her husky speech thundered, “Say what you want grumpy puss but it makes a helluva lot more sense to say teethpaste than it does toothpaste.  No one just brushes one tooth or one tooth at a time?  Who in their right mind would coin a phrase so stupid? You!?  Did you invent toothpaste? I’ll tan your hide!” 

Tillie punched her stubby fingers into the keys of the register to make his change.  He grabbed his books tucked in a small brown paper bag emblazoned with the store’s stamp on each side. Red-faced, he wheezed, shaking his head and called out as he escaped her combative clutches, “You old hen, you are crazy as a bed bug!  I don’t even know why I bother talking to you.  Last time I’m spending my money here! LAST. TIME.”

Pleased with herself, she chomped down on the end of her blue Bic pen already full of generous bite marks and hiked herself up on the tall stool behind the counter and laughed, “You said that last time, acking fusshole.  See you next week!  I’ll be here!  By then I’ll have your special order in.”  She looked over at me as I thumbed through a well-worn cookbook and pretended not to eavesdrop.  She wasn’t bothered because she said to me, “That old man right there is what you call a prefab character.  Sparse, dull, not very exciting but he spends a five-ton truck-load of money on my books and records, plus it’s easy to rile him up.  He’s a trip.”

I didn’t open my mouth.  She scared the bejesus out of me.  I quaked in my boots for fear she’d start to pick on me but she broke the ice easily and asked, “Must be your first time in, Mouse? Ain’t never seen you in here before.” 

I nodded like an idiot, timid as could be and forced a smile but not a sound rose from my throat.

“Cat got your tongue or something?  I ain’t gonna bite you.”  A fat mackerel tabby cat with a peppered nose jumped onto the counter settling lazily across the ledger.  The animal startled me.

“Gr..great store you got here.  I love books.” I stuttered.

I love books?  I was an idiot.

“You need anything just give a holler.”  She gave the tabby a meaty paw on the striped noggin and continued, “Me and Cat Stevens will be re-organizing this here shipment of vinyl that just came in.  Some real good finds in this pile.”

I would be affectionately known as Mouse from then on.

While paying for my very first purchase, a ragged and well noted trade paperback copy of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, I inquired, “Where did the name Basket Case Books come from?”

“A Warren Zevon song.  Know him?  Or are you too young to know the greatness that is Warren Zevon?”  I shook my head yes but I had no idea who he was.  She popped my receipt inside the book, bagged it and started to sing not to me but at me with her throaty tone and a rascally glint in her eye,

Dracula’s Daughter, Calamity Jane
smoke on the water, water on the brain
she’s pretty as a picture and totally crazed
my baby is a Basket Case.

If you hang around my joint long enough, you might hear it.”

The store itself is a masterpiece but from the outside you wouldn’t think so.  It is tucked in between Poky’s Laundromat and the Herb’s Deli in a lean strip mall on the local stretch of highway that leads out of town.  It is literally a stone’s throw away from the sign that says Thank you for visiting Dillon Hill Pop. 1,181 Please Drive Carefully.  It’s your run of the mill exit greeting, faded and unattended.  Basket Case Books looks grungy on approach but when you open the front door, step inside and hear the tiny bell ring to announce your entry, you have arrived at a voracious reader’s paradise.  There are so many books the shelves sag and beside them are books stacked to the ceiling.  They won’t support your weight should you get a sudden urge to climb and retrieve an item from higher up.  I tried it.  All I got was a bunged up hip and a bruised ego.  It’s a terrible mess but it’s easy to navigate your way through the inventory.  While dusting off dust jackets or record sleeves the lack of windows, objectionably dim lighting and the sounds of Dylan, Prine, Petty, Waits, Zevon and The Band on permanent rotation creates a comfortable, easy atmosphere for browsing and getting lost in thought.  Tillie Wiegers and her brass balls constructed of varying degrees of wisdom and pigheadedness may stand guard but the guts of the business she’s built is rooted in a pure unadulterated passion for the arts and a haven for collectors.

At first, I would duck into Basket Case once a month, that quickly turned into every few weeks.  Then I started going every other day after class until I was spending my lunch hours with Tillie and sometimes skipping whole afternoon blocks just to hang out. I felt like I was getting a far better education in the bookstore than I was at college.  We’d whittle the time away talking about all the town gossip, Herb’s long string of mistresses he keeps and then we’d talk about books and she would constantly try to broaden my horizons with recommended reading lists that included Lester Bangs and Adolus Huxley and sometimes she’d let me borrow records to listen to.  “You need to get yourself away from all that top 40 dung they play on the radio and listen to some real meaningful music.  I’m tellin’ you right now, the right soundtrack will change your life in ways you wouldn’t even believe.”

Everything Tillie ate was from Herb’s next door at the deli.  Considering she lived above her store in a small one bedroom apartment, if you could even call it that, was more like a storage closet with a shower, there was no real reason for her to stock a fridge when she spent the bulk of her time downstairs.  We sat one afternoon, me picking at my usual veggie wrap fretting over a school assignment while she bit into one of Herb’s specialty sandwiches with an Italian flare, the Herbinator.  Thick slices of salami, capicola, mortadella and roasted ham with mozzarella cheese, roma tomatoes, pickles, hot peppers, onions and in lieu of zesty Italian dressing, it oozed with mustard and on direct contact with the deli delight, the sharp yellow condiment dripped onto her t-shirt.  With a full mouth she spoke, “Never god damn well fails, can’t eat nothin’ without getting it all over my sheep teets.”  I laughed and she wiped mustard off of Levon Helm’s face.  “Small price to pay I guess when you’re stuffing dry-cured pork neck down your gob.  This stuff is dope. But you know what would taste good with this here sandwich?  Jack Daniels right outta the bottle.  Remind me to refill the flask would ya?”  She took another bite, this time stray onions fell from the fold of her sandwich onto the floor; Cat Stevens sauntered by to sniff them.

I was fretting over my writing assignment while we ate. I was distracted while Tillie yammered on about the absurdity of them Twlight kids in a movie based on Kerouac’s best work.  I was lost in thought but she wasn’t having any of it, “You ain’t listening to a blasted word I’m saying.  Don’t even know why you bother eating lunch in this here store, you’re always a million miles away.”

I snapped out of it, “I’m sorry, Tillie.  I’m having trouble with this assignment for school.”

“What the blazes are you working on so hard you’ve gone deaf to ignore the likes of me?”

“Oh, just a character outline for my creative writing class.  Our professor feels we aren’t creating characters that are vivid and interesting enough so we have been giving the task of outlining and describing the main character of our current work to flesh them out, to get to know them better. “

“I didn’t know you were taking a writing class.  So, what’s this here character like?  Test your outline on me, I’ll tell you the truth, if it’s dung or not.”  She stuffed the last bite of her lunch in her mouth.

“It’s about a female writer in her 50s.  I’m calling it Authoress, Catastrophe in a Teacup.  It’s … she’s … a dainty writer but something of an eccentric.”

“Yeah like me.”  She laughed harder than she needed to causing her to cough.  “I’m right dainty.”

“And eccentric.”  I smiled looking up from my notebook.

“Go on then, read me what you got.  I only have all bleedin’ day.”

I informed her, “It’s all point form so there’s no real flow to it yet.”

Tillie sat back and threw her feet up on the counter and crossed them.  “Shoot.”

“Ok, so Estrella Banks, mid 50’s is a delicate writer woman, radiant with eccentricities.”

“Which eccentricities?”  She asked while gathering the refuge from her lunch and tossing it in the trash.

“Let me see, impish sense of humor, bridled with strong moral obligations …”  I trailed off.

Tillie leered at me, “Do you even know her?  Strong moral obligations?  Like what?”

“Like fidelity and ingenuity and hygiene.”  I mourned that my statement might sound more like a question to her.

Tillie nodded and closed her eyes as if to picture her in her head, “Yeah, okay, go on.”

“Estrella is disinterested in the opinions and company of others, preferring her fictional characters to regular people.  She is highly intelligent with an intense curiosity and is prone to asking inappropriate questions for shock value and to keep people at bay.  Um … she has unusual eating habits …”

She peeked at me with one eye open, “What kind of unusual eating habits?” 

“Oh, like having to separate her foods on her plate so they don’t touch, eating items in alphabetical order, those sorts of things.”

“Well that’s just messed up.  How the hell does she eat salad or pizza?”

I shook my head and carried on, “She lives in a large house that is sparsely decorated, hates clutter except for her bookshelves.”

She nodded, “I hear that.”

I ignored her and carried on, “She’s a brightly dressed woman, lovely but kooky, demure but outspoken, contradiction of sorts.  She also has a exultant preoccupation with collecting pens, not biting them.” I teased,  “Eccentrics often do fixate on something like that.”

“If I didn’t know better I’d swear you were basing her on me.   Except you left out a penchant for midget porn and late nights hitting the hookah.”  She cracked herself up.

“You’re gross.” I threw a piece of bunched up paper at her playfully.

“That ain’t nothing, kiddo.”  She caught the ball and flung it back narrowly missing my left eye.  We laughed.

“Anyway, my goal is to build a really strong character that stands out.  An eccentric woman unlike anyone else, I want her story to be fascinating.”

“Yeah well, her story is only gonna be as interesting as she wants it to be.  You can’t fake her story or make it up.  She has to relay it to you.  If you force it, it’ll suck big fat hairy donkey balls.  You gotta trust Estrella before she’ll reveal herself to you and even more-so she has to trust you.  Don’t make shit up or pretend she is someone she isn’t or else she’ll piss all up in your Corn Flakes and eff up the tale.”

I hated when Tillie was right.  A few days later after working day and night on the story, I left her a copy on top of the ledger for her to read as she instructed me to do.  She said she’d read it and leave it for me in the store mailbox on the outside of the door so I could take in her notes the next morning before class.  She did and left a note attached to my manuscript she had decorated quite lovingly with a bright red pen.  The note read, Is that it!?!?!  You can’t end it there!  You are an asshole.  Write more.  Now.  Peace – Tillie Wiegers.

The more time I spent at Basket Case the more I came to know Tillie and the more she became curious about me.  Like I said, at first it was all small talk and chit chat, school work, town gossip, the customers and then she offered me a part time job.  I started working for her so she could run errands without having to close up and sometimes with her on Sunday mornings.  Naturally, things evolved on a personal level.

“So Mouse, tell me more about Freckles, this red-headed Ivy League boyfriend you got.   If you ask me, there’s nothing wrong with gingers, we are a spicy bunch.  I mean I’m a little more on the carroty side but it’s the same ball park.  One good thing about gingers, you never have to wonder whether or not the curtains match the carpet.   Nothing fake on a ginger.”

I wanted to die at her candor but I came to expect nothing less.  For a woman with sharp mental vigor, she talked like a red neck trucker.  I told her, “Benoit …”

Benoit?!  What the flame thrower?! What’s his last name?”  Tillie asked flabbergasted.

I hesitated, “Fitzwalter.”

“Lord dying Jesus, at least he gets points for having a minor Shakespearian last name but that first one is a doozy.  Ok sorry, continue. Tell me more about Ben Wah Balls.”   

I started to feel nervous about the direction of our conversation but continued, “We met at a concert.” I showed her a photo on my phone taken of the two of us in our seats; an unfortunate self-portrait washed with bright flash and closed eyes, terribly unflattering but too precious a moment to delete.

Tillie leaned forward to study us.  Engrossed in the story she asked, “What concert?  This is important to me for obvious reasons.”

I regretted my admission, “John Mayer.”

Tillie winced and recoiled dramatically, “Mary, mother of God, man!  You just went down several notches in my book.  Remind me to fix you another mix of real music later.  Jumpin’ hairy Jesus. My heart can’t take that kind of agony, it ain’t strong enough.”  She drew in a deep breath and quickly blew it out. Now, keep going.  But keep in mind, my current state is really fuckin’ fragile.”

I took a deep breath and kept on, “His seat was next to mine.  We were both alone.  It’s awkward to go to a concert alone.  We were both so shy at first but then we started flirting without words.  It was the sweetest thing.”

“Two losers stag at a douche nozzle’s concert, that’s the sweeeetest thing I’ve ever heard.”  Tillie mocked me and rolled her eyes.

“We slowly rose out of our seats when ‘Your Body Is A Wonderland’ started and then turned into silly dancing machines during ‘Why Georgia’. We were laughing and holding hands.  It was an instant connection.  Maybe even love at first sight.”  As I said it I knew it sounded naïve but I meant every single word.

“I think I’m gonna hurl. Don’t tell me, afterwards you two shared an ice-cream float using the same gnarly straw and then you sucked face at the front door until your creepy neighbor spied and you had to go inside?”

It was now my turn to trip Tillie.  I said pointedly, “Actually no, we went back to his dorm room and had sex.”

Tillie’s eyes bulged and she half coughed, “You knocked boots?!  A John Mayer concert made you that electric in the pants that you boffed a complete stranger?  Maybe I should start listening to him.”

“I didn’t even know his name at the time.  It just happened that way.  To be truthful, I had never done anything like that before.”

She scoffed, maybe a little too much, “Hellllls belllllls, I believe that.”

“I was in the city visiting with my Dad and he was being so difficult about me wanting to come back here to live with my Mom and go to school.  Things in my life had become so maudlin and predictable.  I just outwardly rebelled.  I felt sick and excited all at the same time. It was a big deal for me.  After the sex, we had breakfast together, introduced ourselves and ever since we’ve been attached at the hip, he’s been coming out here to see me some evenings and weekends when he’s free.”

“Attached at the stick and starfish you mean.  When do I get to meet Ivy League anyway?”

I blushed, “You want to meet him?”

Tillie jeered, “Does Pinocchio have wooden balls?  ‘Course I do.”

I bowed in agreement, “Then you will, next time he visits.”

Yee haw!  Give me a heads up and I’ll bring an extra stool down from upstairs he can sit his tight little academic buns on while I grill him about his intentions.”  She winked but I think deep down she was being serious.

Tillie got called away to help a groovy hipster looking for anything and everything she had on Allen Ginsberg.  I watched her shuffle around the store with him.  The contrast amused me.  A young boy waif in red skinny jeans and a large checked scarf wrapped around his neck that fashionably accented his leather jacket next to Tillie wearing her flannel shirt, rock t-shirt and camouflage cargo shorts with heavy socks and sneakers so worn in the toes curl up.  She was animated; talking with her hands, shaking her head, telling him God knows what.  That is when it occurred to me, under all of that gnarly attitude and eccentric behavior, she had a big heart and I wondered how she had used it during the years before I knew her.  No one goes through life unloved. I asked when the customer paid for his books and left.

Perched on my stool re-loading the stapler I opened up a dialogue I wasn’t sure would fly, “Now that I’ve gone on about Benoit it’s your turn to tell me about yourself.  Who did you love?”

Tillie tousled her wild hair as a knee jerk reaction to being put on the spot, avoided eye contact and habitually chewed on the pen that was hanging out of her mouth, “Nothing to tell here, Mouse.  Do I look like Danielle Steele to you?”  She held her flannel shirt open fully exposing her faded Eagles t-shirt.

“Surely you must love or have loved someone at some point in time in your life.”  I knew she was holding back by her lack of eye contact so I braved it and pressed her.  It’s true that there are questions to be asked that you only wished you did when it’s too late and sometimes by the time it’s too late you realize you have that many more.  I had this burning desire to let Tillie know someone wanted to know about her heart.

She sighed and reluctantly began, “Mousie, I grew up in the north end of Dillon Hill on Heartbreak Hill and it was just that for me, heartbreak.  Not a lotta boys wanna hop your scotch, if you know what I mean, when you’ve been beaten with the short end of the ugly stick. I was always a bit of a loner, didn’t play sports, didn’t go to dances, get invites to parties, I hung out in the library.  Books were my friends.”

I felt so bad for asking, “There must have been someone?”

“Oh, there was someone to be sure.  Rob ‘The Grave Digger’ Duggan.  I met him at the bus depot when I moved back here.  All six feet of him was slouched in one of them plastic chairs cleaning his fingernails with an X-Acto knife.  He wasn’t exactly lean and he wasn’t really all that pretty.  Had this here scar on the side of his face stretched all the way down under his earlobe and a head full of long black curly hair that went way down past his nipples.  So much hair I could hardly see his eyes.  At first I thought he was one of them long haired metal heads from some washed up 80s hair band.  The grungy leather jacket and dirty jeans being my clue but turns out he was a former middle weight boxing champion.”

“You said was? What happened? Did you two break up?”  I felt guilty.

She said flatly, “He croaked.  Massive heart attack.”

Tears rose to my eyes at her blunt delivery, “How long were you together?”

“I don’t know, what was it, five years and some I’d say.  He helped me get this here store going.  Two days after we opened, he dropped dead, right over there in that there nook.  Only seemed right to re-arrange my stock and put all the sports related crap there.  What do you call it? A memorial kinda.”  She nodded to the sports section.

I bolted up off of my stool, “He died in here!?”

“He ain’t Casper or nothing, doesn’t spook the store.”  She barked.

I held onto my chest in disbelief, “Tillie, that’s so terrible.  And you loved him.  He must have loved you too to help you with all this.” 

She pulled her wallet out of the back pocket of her cargo shorts, flung it open and showed me their photo.  There they were, Tillie and Rob standing side by side.  She stood awkwardly in his embrace squinting from the sun, Rob’s long hair covered his eyes but he was all smiles. “Love ain’t all it’s cracked up to be, kiddo.  Love is a four letter word.  It’s just an illusion and it’s fleeting.  Ain’t meant to last.”

“I think it does last and I truly believe that anything is possible.” I defended.

She quickly argued, “Yeah well anyone who believes nothing is impossible ain’t tried stapling pudding to a palm tree.”

“That is a terribly pessimistic take for someone so in love with literature and music.” I pushed.

“Suit yourself to think that but in my sad case, books and records never called me Quasimodo or a butch dyke.  They were always right there when I needed them and even when I didn’t need them.  It`s a certain loyalty you don`t get from flesh and blood, breathing, shitting, low life beings.  People suck.  Do you know why people read, Mouse?  Why they listen to music?  It ain’t for the sturdy stories or the sweet sounds, it’s for the company.  Plain and simple.  You think people read on a crowded bus for fun?  No, they read because even though they are in the middle of strangers’ stench, around people, they need something to keep them company, easiest place to be lonely is in a crowd.  Same with headphones, it’s to tune out all the crap and to be kept company by something soothing, by someone who gets them and will always deliver the goods. That’s how the lonely live and we are far better off than people trapped in loveless relationships based on unrealistic expectations.”

“I understand what you’re saying but I beg to differ, you had Rob. That was something real, he got you. He understood who you were and loved you for it.”

Tillie scanned the room, “Yeah, and where is he now? Gone and dug his own grave because he couldn’t keep off the hooch and the bacon. I loved him enough and Lord knows he loved me.  I’m god damn grateful for it all too to know I at least deserved love like everyone else.”

“Well of course you do. Everyone does.  You are too precious in your self-deprecating fog.  You do know that you are lovely, right?”

She cut her eyes at me and guffawed, “You do know I’m not a lesbian, right?”

I jabbed her in the arm, “You are impossible!”

“Listen, people who look like me would argue you that it ain’t all peaches and cream and happily ever afters.  I wouldn’t have known it without him.  My father didn’t care much for me and my Ma died soon as she squeezed me out.  Daddy didn’t want a daughter so he raised me like a boy.  That’s what I look like anyhow so it stuck I guess.  Didn’t take me long to high tail it off the old proverbial farm.  Went to live with my Ma’s sister, she was a dancer so I was on my own a good chunk.  When she was off working I’d be home listening to her records and reading her books.  I basically graduated from the school library to her flat to this here shop.  All the stuff in between was just survival. Couldn’t stand being anywhere else.  Except for the short period I quit my job washing dishes in a greasy spoon and went on tour with The Boss.   I sold t-shirts.”

“The Boss? As in …”

She pointed to the photo of herself behind the cash of her and Bruce.  The wall behind the register was amazing, littered with Polaroid shots of rock-stars and authors who stopped by the store coupled with old concert tickets and literary souvenirs. “Bruce god damn Springsteen.  Yep.  Best few months of my life, except for the time I had with Rob bumpin’ uglies like dogs in heat and spending my days here in the store.”

“I do suppose we can’t really call you a romantic.”  I popped a piece of gum in my mouth and offered one to Tillie.

She declined and said, “No, Rose-Colored Glasses, you could not.”

“I just have so many hopes and dreams.  Own my own business someday, to be married and live in a big house with a wrap-around porch and have tons of babies.  That’s all based in love and desire.”

“Those things float your boat, Mousie.  They don’t float everyone’s.  You’re dreaming of Prince Charming and a white picket fence. I wanted to be a diamond thief.  The best laid plans, strategically designed, well-prepared heists filled my days but then I’m fish out of water.  Most ladies dream of wearing diamonds on their wedding finger and around their dainty little necks, me, I long to steal ‘em and sell ‘em for a hefty payday.”  She changed her mind about the gum, stole a piece from my package and popped it into her mouth.
 
“You know what?  In so many ways, you remind me of Estrella, the writer in my story.”

“I know who she is dumb ass, I read the damn thing.  Maybe she reminds you a little bit of me. I’m sure people would call me an eccentric. I’ve been called lots of things to be sure but one of the nicer things would be an eccentric.”

“I gather most would think you unique.  But you’re wonderful just as you are.  That’s what makes you so likeable.”

“Aw shucks, Mouse. Likeable? You’re too much.” 

“You are always the source of such interesting stories, Tillie Wiegers.  You’ve had such an interesting life.”

“Have I?”  She grinned mischievously, “Or do I just know how to spin a good one? Had myself lots of time to practice.”

***

Happy rainy Easter Monday to those of you who are at home snuggled in while I remain at my work station until quitting time.

In propinquity,
Nic