How It’s Going

Marginal notes from the killing season.

I keep meaning to write a thing but my bones ache with a fatigue that calls to mind the early months of pregnancy. If it was that, this would be a different sort of note. I am driving in the mid-afternoon, alternately pinching my nose and my earlobes to stay awake. When I finally park, I think I’ll just close my eyes for a few minutes, and then it’s dark.

Democracy in the US is being dismantled from inside the White House but naturally everyone in passing periods between bells keeps on asking one another the usual questions. That is, when we’re not having clandestine conversations in which we agree to either pull the fire alarm if ICE shows up or at the very least to put popcorn in the microwave, set it for ten minutes, and walk back to class. Even though we think that the members of that organization would, if they had any sense or were at all in communication with local law enforcement, know better than to wear their jackets around here. We smile weakly while rushing to get in line for the single working bathroom between passing periods and say How’s it going? Like we don’t know. 

Oh, you know, we say back to each other. In a certain tone meant to indicate a wry awareness of a mutual understanding of professional obligation to carry on. With preventable infections poised for a major uptick, now by some measures is no time to start risking a loss of health insurance––except. But anyway, the kids are still here so who are we to go leaving now?

Where news is still being reported with any measure of integrity, it comes at such a rate and speed that you may find yourself shaking your head with a face in the posture of the sort of disgust that appears to be on the verge of a maniacal laughter, in response to a story that in a time not long before this one would have left you weeping.                               

And you thought yourself to be hardened before, having seen so closely so many sides of men you wished your children would never know. 

But here they are with their slick tongues and weak eyes, coming. The age of changing regimes with tanks and masked soldiers charging into conference rooms is decidedly passé. These killers walk in with khakis and polo shirts, bring donuts for the staff and fist-bump with the confidence afforded only to those at a certain level of remove from the lives of other humans, for reasons that some of us may speculate over, in likely error.

They perform experimental surgeries with words meant to anaesthetize unwitting victims. They call their actions simple cost-cutting measures for the sake of efficiency. They assure everyone they are only after criminals and grifters. Silently, in remote areas, off camera, construction continues erecting maximum-security concrete fortresses capable of housing whole cities. 

One wants to avoid hyperbole in a time like this. The truth is raw enough. But I can’t help remembering histories less than a century old, of another regime overseas, who once used similar language and parallel means––adjusted for context, of course––until arriving at the inevitable problem of exceeding the capacity of state-of-the-art holding facilities. The ovens, when they fired, were not some green monster’s evil plan, but the simplest and most efficient way of dealing with the practical problem of too many bodies than the holding centers could––as the saying went, process.

Which raises the issue again, that monstrous reality of human life and its perpetual inefficiency. The officials shook their heads. Their stomachs turned at the thought of what it meant to stay the course. Yes, of course,they agreed. They could fix this. Just wait, they said. It’s going to be something like you never imagined.

Preservation

And remains

You could hear it, the echo of each in that fleet of arks, each meaning to save in the coming storm, but the rain did not come. Only this flood of arks, and the small ones crushed beneath the weight of them. Then there were arks at the speed of sound and now approaching light, the rate at which the saving reaches the cycle of completion, finally and fully invisible. Tell me, angel, do you still breathe under there? I want to hear you.

In the Grasses

In the deep

Do I live? The question a reaction to certain ideas of the empire, on really living, as the saying goes. As promoted by the feathered peacocks, the shining kings, the swaggering killers. To whom the fieldmouse is prey or pest, and the whale is a mythical metaphor, a catalyst for the next heroic quest. But these sisters listen low to the ground, tending the dens where the babies wait, and swim beyond the senses of the sonars. Here are lessons in the art of going missing for entire seasons, keeping the camouflage close, and the beloveds closer, in the shadows of the seizing empire, feeding the budding bodies of the dens and depths beyond detection.

Life is something separate from announcements. And yet, what else are these words penned in the quiet (for now, it is early) room with the sleeping cat and the waking birds outside, in the moments before its time to give it all over to the tending of the mouths that come and go, the littles and the broken, the invisibles. Sometimes they are unsure if they live or will keep living. Sometimes I want to announce for them, into each: Live, live, live! These eyes get weary sometimes of the announcing I.

And yet, we live.

Waltz

With crouching figure.

Skin trembles with the muscle that sheathes the innermost reaches of the lush garden behind a poem that is tended to nurture and feed the disarmed and disappeared, which never asserts except to underscore an endless stretch of unseen elements, each moved only to dissolve the ends of their reach to attach at the points of dissolution, into some more and ever unknown, whole.

The Use of Mirrors

As a shield.

Long studies in endurance make it possible to hold a placid gaze, to make these eyes a mirror, returning only light. Vanity is so often the lead horse, its reliable prance quick to assert the next happy ending: Victory, victory! I watch the riders pass, their contented flag billowing bright. 

Behind these mirrored shields, the smoke of a homeland rises over blackened hills, the devastation nearly total. Except for this singing silence, the trace of oiled fingers around the surviving glass bowl. How did they miss this? Protect it. The mirrors are here so that the pillagers may not see what is left for the taking, highlighted against the scorched earth. Hold and wait until they are out of sight.

On Sanctuary

With June Jordan.

When the visionary told you, Man is not a tree, you took note. The punchline had to do with the whole country up and moving every few years. Out of one town, into another––given the means, which were a significant factor. You considered reasons. Why the impulse to cut and run; to fly, stop, land?

Meanwhile, you could not––would not, stop thinking of the child who couldn’t flee, who didn’t make it. You refused coexistence with the mental calculations that allowed the peace of some to be secured by the occupation of others.

It is a fundamental need, you said, basic as shelter, food. For sanctuary, you said. Because man is not a tree.

***

Adapted from June Jordan’s 1989 essay, “Finding the Way Home.”

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