#4
OBU wants a free
day. It comes with the contract, doesn't it? She wants to sit on her
cushion and gently erase the blood-stains spreading across the internet
this morning. She wants to water her doubt until it blossoms into
something green. She wants to laugh when her dog hunts raindrops on
the lanai.
OBU wants to know
how this happens, when what is private separates itself from the
public sphere (if it is a sphere). Where is a leaf-drenched space
beneath the bushes where she can sit, immune, where birds at late
afternoon trade gossip in mad cacophonous gulps of sound? Why can she
not parse pain from delight?
OBU thinks to hire a
personal trainer, one who can show her how to stretch her hamstrings
while avoiding six television screens that hang between her and
slogans telling her to CHANGE HER LIFE.
Or OBU might hire a
personal musician, a Mexican singer with a blunt steel guitar and
tiny speaker, to serenade as if her instruction manual matched
his. She hears others say “take care of yourself,” and wonders
what that means. Means to an end? Health and humor and the pursuit
of?
The poet laureate
erased the “Declaration,” that part where early Americans
complain about the tyrant across an ocean. What is left when you
erase a complaint is another, more abstract, one. To abstract a
moment is to bring it dripping into the present, like Marcel slipping
on a damp cobblestone.
OBU's dog interrupts
her with tug of war toy; she wonders why it's a war
between them in the living room, when her arm takes one side and the
dog's mouth another. When the growls sound angry but occur in the
context of delight? The dog's dream of violence (the white-flecked
rooster that struts on the same patch of lawn each morning) dimmed by
the knotted toy?
The recipe calls for
a strainer. Water runs through the pasta and then tiny holes in the
metal bowl. Words run through the mind like agents searching for a
cause, or an effect. Starch comes out in the sink.
OBU pesters too
much. She expects a lot from others. Some of it comes before the
legislature and is voted down. Some of it sits like gravy on her
plate, and she doesn't like gravy. She fails to hear her tone in the
mirror, says the right thing in the wrong way, at the wrong pitch. To
say is to be spontaneous, but what she needs is less of that, more of
the considered phrase.
OBU wants everyone
to have a free space and time. It's too exhausting any more (“any
more” is not a phrase her partner likes her to use) to strain the
daily news. It's a real strain. She wants to set up a fellowship for
survivors, a place with good jazz and better poems. She'll have to
fight the budget cuts, but we might be able to do it on the fly.
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