Category: i wish

  • climate chains

    God, I feel so depressed about the American midterm results today. What seems clear is: the more frightened people become about the horrors of climate disaster, water wars, drought refugees,  the more they vote for these cowboys in the big hats who say: The Lord spoke to me personally, and told me… how to save us all.

    No matter how many studies associate extreme Conservatism with lower IQ… no matter how clearly we know that intelligence is dimmed by terror… we still reach for the Big Man’s Salvation in a crisis. Crises deepen and worsen on every side. Therefore we leap straight from 100% denial into “well, there’s nothing we can do about that now, it’s too late… batten down the hatches.” When oh when will we allow the love that is in us to rule our hearts, our world, our hearts?

  • bella Africa

    Beautiful African woman, standing with her back to the street in a luscious canary-yellow dress. She is facing the vast windows of a display of swank cars, why? The windows rise away into the night above her head like an airport. Ah, I see. Beautiful African man, whom I didn’t see until he moved, in the dark, standing with his back to the car he has chosen for dreams, she has her phone up, he is posing. They are built like gods and light the night. I walk past with my head down, my hands full of posies of stolen plants roots and all gleaned from the gardens outside the shopping centre which I plan to propagate rather than just steal, beautiful in my way.

  • his scarlet-helmeted warrior

    I had a pen name, once, after I wrote two excruciatingly awful romance novels thinking this would for sure be my road to steady income. Submitted them with great condescension to Mills & Boon and they wrote back, saying (and I paraphrase) “We wouldn’t publish this shite even if you paid us.” I was so disappointed cos I had this great name all worked out: Kenya Madresson.

    However I am proud that one of those trite novels was written in a week. I had flu and was down and couldn’t get anything done. Said to myself, I bet I can write a book in a week. So I did. Three terrible chapters every terrible day. This was when I was 26.

  • riverfeier

    Saturday night festival of explosions, fireworks and low-flying fighter jets scamming the river. I was standing behind five dark rows of people. Festive. Restive. Everybody chatting. The city stood lit up behind its bridge, then the fireworks started. Without hesitation the crowd bloomed like a field of poppies, dozens of tiny, high-held screens. Disbelieving, I looked around. Everywhere people were holding up their phones at arm’s length like you would hold a small child to show them a marching band. It was impossible to watch the world without seeing it onscreen and multiplied, as though we were standing in a broadcast instead of our lives. A girl near me held up her phone for so long that when the fireworks died the blokes behind her asked, “Aren’t your arms getting tired?” She tucked the screen in to her chest and began seamlessly typing and scrolling. No pause. “Imagine there’s no heaven,” I thought. “There was, and there still is, but who cares.” Watching her mouth tuck itself in at the corner I translated, out of the dim bitterness of my heart: At Riverfire. Amazeballs, you shd see it. Luv u Brisbane.

  • stolen man

    An African guy who lived in the apartments near me had the warmest smile always courteous and would wait on the pavement if I walked behind him so I could go by was taken away by police, five weeks ago I think, and the pot plants on his verandah are dying and now there is no cooking the evening meal on his tiny barbecue and no whistling to himself and singing as he pegs out his wash, always neatly, always pairing the socks, alone.

  • palace of wasted

    The number of times I have been sitting in some cafe and have said to the staff or even the owners, Gee, guys. Since you have all of this organic stuff and social justice ideology going on…. wouldn’t it be great to provide actual glasses instead of plastic cups at your water station? Imagine if you even maybe offered people a little discount for bringing their own containers for a takeaway? Or: Don’t you reckon your local cash and carry would get in corn-starch takeaway cups if you asked them? They’re easily available. The number of times owners and staff have said, Gee, yes. That is a really great idea. We should do that. The number of times they have actually acted on it. The number of disposable everythings sprouting from the council bins outside each venue. Are we doomed purely by our own selfishness? And not just us but every living thing bar certain bacteria and fungi and cockroaches?

  • a bit too helpful

    I went to my parents’ place to bring them a copy of my new book. Afterwards I left the house and drove uphill, as though I were coming up out of a valley, though my parents do in fact live on a hilltop. During the 2009 floods theirs was almost an island, floodwaters drowned the houses all round. Armies of volunteers descended afterwards with mops and brooms and buckets. My mother’s neighbour said, “They were a bit too helpful” ~ the Mud Army had thrown out some of her favourite possessions, things that though drowned in river sludge had essentially survived the flood: washable things, like the pyrex baking dish her own mother had given her on her wedding day. The feeling of having to guard oneself against the ill-spilling goodwill of people who don’t seem to mean to cause pain is one I felt familiar with.

    My parents bought their copy of the new book online, which was sweet of them and supportive I think. I rang and said, I would have given you a copy. O, my mother said, well I wanted to go through the motions and just make sure everything was working ok. Everything worked ok. Her book was #43, I numbered it and signed it and set it aside. I slid it into a paper bag and wrote in pencil on the outside, From Tochter: from daughter. We arranged I would go round on Thursday morning when they would both be home and bring them their book. She said, Bring it, but I was thinking, Show it to them. This was unwise, and not in an unpredictable way.

    My father was sitting at the computer when I came in. He turned his head to say hello. My mother advanced on me like a real estate agent ready to show the house, she looked immaculate, she was wearing a fringey necklace I’d not seen before. We hugged with the uppermost parts of our bodies like two woman at a premiere wearing the exact same dress. She made tea and set out the sticky gingerbread I’d brought, in a clockface on a large flowered plate. “It’s Nigella Lawson’s recipe,” I said, “only I put in twelve times the ginger and six times the cinnamon and also some black pepper.” “So,” said my mother. “Show me your book.”

    I drew it out of its paper bag and handed it to her. Changing my mind about the bag’s inscription I folded the brown paper and stashed it in the upper pocket of my overalls. My mother took the book and opened it. Prominently on the end table lay another book, written by an ex lover of mine who treated me with breathtaking perfidy. I lifted the cover with the back of my thumbnail and read the inscription: To dearest Cathoel, love from. I let the cover drop. It wasn’t clear why this book, which must have been somewhere on their shelves for the last seven or eight years, suddenly had appeared next to the couch the day I was to visit.

    I watched my mother encountering my new book. This book is only five days old, we found for it a sumptuous eggshell paper, it has all the decent poems I have written in the last fifteen years, since my first book, it has been a labour of decades and in the final drafts I found early copies of the illustrated layout, on my computer, going back to 2008. The poetry is as round and whole and nutty as I could make it. I had the sense, seeing it go into the press last week, of this work no longer belonging to me, as though the poems are intact worlds of their own in which I am only a familiar visitor. That’s how I know it’s done. The title, the yearning, the courage, the brimming pages: to me it is still the most beautiful book in the world, just as every baby once born is, however briefly, perhaps only for microseconds, momentarily the youngest person on earth.

    My mother looked through the book for thirty seconds. She liked the colour of the cover (bright yellow). She remarked on a couple of photographs, neutrally, incidentally: “Oh there’s that photo of the beach that you took.” She didn’t read one word. The kettle boiled and she set the book down on the couch beside her and got up to make the tea. “Are there coffee shops round where you’re living now?” she wanted to know, “are there any that you like?”

    My father left his enticing, absorbing online universe. He came struggling over to the couch, on his stick. He has a new hearing aid, his first. “I don’t notice the difference,” he was saying, as he reached me, and I said, “Perhaps it’s the other way round. Perhaps you weren’t noticing the difference beforehand, and we all were, because you just didn’t hear what you weren’t hearing.” His eyes gleamed suddenly, a kind of sleeping awakeness. “Yes,” he said, “that is probably true.”

    He moved my book aside so he could sit down. He asked if there were any coffee shops round our new place for me to hang out in, any I liked. My throat filled with a hot, tight, swollen feeling like heated rocks. I was crying, but I wasn’t going to let them know that. My mother came over with the tea, a single mug for me alone, and we all sat down and gazed at the low polished table between the couches.

    We talked about my father’s hearing aid and the new fabric on the chairs outside, their wide verandah. I admired some shelves my brother and father had built together. My mother picked up the book and set it on the low table. She must have felt she hadn’t somehow paid it enough attention because she started asking, Is it selling well? And Now that you’ve got the book out of the way, are you working on the CD? I brought forward by an imaginary hour the appointment I had made in the next suburb. When my mother got up to carry the tray of tea away I pilfered the book written by the ex lover and slid it into my bag. I left behind my parents in their house which is so strongly scented with cleaning products that I’d had to get up and open the outside door casually, which is how we came to be talking about the pretty covers on the lounge chairs overlooking the pool. The silverbeet fronds I had planted in January when I came back from Berlin stood proudly greenish yellow with their scarlet and purple spines, a border to the flowerbeds as I had intended them to be. I carried away the rocks in the throat, determined they would not come all the way home with me. I knew a comforting local coffee shop where I could leave them, had left them before, could leave them. I drove away from my uncle’s house, that is opposite theirs and where my uncle who has never married hoards all the china and silver intricacies once belonging to our grandmother and pets, presumably, his conviction now three years old and formed on a strange circumstance that I had been stealing from my own family ‘heirlooms’ (some old clocks, taken to pieces by our other uncle who never repaired them) and selling them, on eBay, for a profit. He will not back down from this insulting character assessment and I will not accept it, we no longer speak. My parents have him round for dinner but not when I am there. I left all that behind under the trees including the one with the spine of our old treehouse embedded in it like an ingrown tooth and the one that sweeps its skirts along the ground, dropping seedpods like earrings, the new house that stands next to the old house now sold, and took myself up to the coffee strip and into a dingy local bookshop playing, comfortingly, the plaintive tales of local boys the Bee Gees, and browsing along the racks I found several books I wanted to read including one written by a friend of mine whose work I’ve not yet explored, and I noticed the bad feeling ebbing away and this pleased me, I felt proud of myself, and I told myself paying for the books that this was an achievement, an improvement on the other times when pain arising from this household had lasted me all day, all year.

    The pain lasted only an hour or so. Maybe a little nervousness beforehand and some despondency residual afterwards, but most of the negative part of the experience was confined to that one hour: the half hour in their house and then, in ebbing increments, the browsing half-hour afterwards, a dim fish nosing round a quiet tank. Later that afternoon I met up with a poet from Melbourne who is cycling in small sections round Australia as a fundraiser, he bought my book and cooed over it, loving the papers, loving the photographs, stroking his cyclist’s hand down the poem pages. He told me how awesome it was. I told him how awesome it was that he is making this huge trip, his own books sent on to the next town care of a performance poet friend, and I thought about how he will cycle home over the Nullarbor, west to east, planning his route so that every hundred kilometres or so he can fill up with water. You can’t bring enough water for your own journey, it’s too hard to carry. You have to rely on other people, strangers, sometimes, en route to fill you up with their water, because really all water is shared water anyway.

  • someone by seed, how

    I found a little seed in my pocket. If I grow it, I wonder what it will be. It seems like a bark of mahogany, polished, washed in from the sunny outreach of the starry sea. I’ve carried it everywhere. I simply forgot it was there. So it what. Sow it in water, sow in what soil remains to us, sew it in the hems of my garment that I’m not fit yet to kiss. Climb out of the comfort and sloth of my couch where you tubers in muddy channels spend all the day and fling out onto the hemless endless air the seed I throw away.

  • that lamp

    I have a lamp that is shaped like a shell, was in fact a shell, is a home for a strange and retiring sea creature long now gone. It glows almost red when you plug in the bulb, a beloved’s ear with light behind it. Lately as the days are tropical cold and dim and windy we light the lamps tagsüber. Near the beer factory is a tiny art printer who lays on canvas and on fine rag paper people’s photographs and paintings. We left the lamp on at home and went out. He showed me some of his work. He opened a drawer and let me roll some of the beautiful paper in my hands.

    Nearby is a tucked-in kind of cafe which you can barely see from the road, it is screened. Inside is like a secret fish tank. The chalkboard says You like cake. We make cake. Cake CAKE. We ordered cake. “Eighteen fifty,” said the guy. Cake is expensive. I said, “Now that was a very good year.” “Huh,” he said. We sat down and went over the book I am bringing to print this week: page after page of it, is it still beautiful, does it still hold. You’re looking for the tiny cracks and nail holes that let seep gradually the water. At the far end of the place a handsome man lay back in his chair. Stroking lazily his little device. He didn’t lift his eyes off it. His daughter dressed from head to toe in pink ballerina costume lay in a pile on the concrete playing dreamily with blocks they have stacked down there, singing and rousing on herself. She was in her own world, he was in someone else’s. Two men came into the cafe and I heard the guy recycling my pale joke. “19.90,” he said, “now there’s a good year. You’d be finished school, out into the world…” Behind my back I could almost hear them gazing at him blankly. I felt bad about the failure of the wordplay I’d transmitted, as though I had set him up.

    Later the night turned out fresh and enchanted, so strange, those nights that bring home the spirits from the deep sea and the mountainside. I lay in the hammock between two large trees, watching as the wind rustled and tumbled like cities through surf, down to the bony ground again and again, carrying in itself everything whole and real, everything breathing. This month I don’t know if you’ve noticed but again the full moon was full or albert full for days and days. This always feels like some kind of special benediction to me, as though we have been given a treat, like we have pulled off a trick somehow and gotten away with something.

    I should end there but there is something more to say. You know the night? In the night if you lie in a hammock you are in the air, you’re in the water. I gazed up, mostly with my eyes closed, into the depths of the tree, the sparring webwork of the lazing bed, the night itself drawing its fleece across the stars. It felt like one of those nights you could climb up into, curled as I lay curled, and the night would heal itself round you seamlessly and simply carry you away.

    When I came in my partner called me over to his screen. He loves the new. He wanted to play me a piece of music, piano music. We were silent, listening to the climbing sounds. “Isn’t it beautiful?” Yes, I said, it’s beautiful. He said, “It’s the first piece of music not composed by human~” “What?” I stood up. I think I was shouting. “Why did you play me this? Why did you?” “What’s the matter?” “Why do you show me this stuff?” “I thought it would make you feel good! It’s not scary, it’s just beautiful. Listen how lovely that is.” When someone who understands doesn’t understand: the world is a cyborg desert already. I said, “I can’t take it. I can’t live in a world where machines compose music. I can’t live.” An ache spread inside my chest, despair, hopelessness, rage. Within me I felt the impaired moon, the night, the thoughts of serene pursuit drain like soap scum away. Poke the pearls and they are merely bubbles, evaporating, the >plink<. Someone let the plug out of the sky and I felt all the buoyancy of things drag slowly down, my heart is hot and sore and sleep seems more oblivion than restorative hammock in a sea of quiet leaves which sparkle like near stars.

  • can he floss: not so sweet

    I was seeing this guy once who got comfortable enough to start flossing in front of me, thus revealing his ingenious method: he’d extract the string of floss periodically and holding it still taut between his fingers, sniff at it. Possibly the most repulsive act I’ve ever seen in my life & I could never kiss him again, the relationship foundered. Anybody got anything grosser? And do I really want to ask this question?