Friday, November 27, 2015

SEX in the MACHINE


SEX in the MACHINE

Funny how the Doberman pinches at the heels of trapdoor lust. Watch with aqua eyes. Swear you won’t forget you’re mine.

Funny when the preacher man wishes, not to do the knees. Pinned to the wall, played like his organ… sex in the drum machine.

Feel pretty, synced up. Something like… being in tune? The cadence is blue. Honey, my sweet, the hive is you. Something like, unbuckling your buckle. Swear you’ll remember.

Pretty good on a wave. Pretty good as a slave. This valuable thing, between my lips, these beastly arms, hold fast when I resist. My American Fighter, doyen. This record is ruddy. I am martyring for you.

It was like, elemental, electrolysis. It like, separated before it collated. Even if I linger a thousand years, it won’t wane.

The hand that feeds the bronco, bucking in the grass, also cracks the whip, and pulls it taut, until it snaps. The furrows, the lines, the swirls, the tides. The zipper is won. The zipper’s undone.


We enter machine, and you bang me as drums.

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

The FELT HEART



The FELT HEART

On this mountain, I fashion arrows from my rowan, and watch as flowers run white, and fruit bleeds red. Here I am, without a stone, at the bottom of the mountain. I lost my bow somewhere along the iridescent stream, while I followed it in tandem, until I arrived at your spring. I might wade in your pool, and lose all humility, like so much flotsam, in the shipwreck of me.
                I would rest in your cove, allow myself to be cradled by your felten walls, but while I dream, I breathe fire in my sleep. What arcane memories of a cooler time might tempt me to risk it? However tempted I may be, I cannot; flame to your heart, it would mean.
                On this path that leads to an immortal realm, be unctuous with your instruction. I can aim for the stag who defies my way, (a tortured buffalo stance), but the marrow in my motions is torpid at best. Instead I will feast until a moribund place relieves me of my living (relieves me of my change).
                The diaphanous, silky cloth of your robes, would do better on the dirt of this trampled road. And I come here from the mountain, and I have faced un-obsequious things, to stand before you now, to offer me on repeat.
                These hands? They are clay, and stationed for the remains: of your felten heart, your ripened heart. Mine, and mine always.

CAS 11/23/15 06.23Pm

Thursday, November 12, 2015

The SECRET HEART



THE SECRET HEART

No blacklisted emotion here. Just slow-motion scenes and fluid, fecund clutches. We made a place, secret, where we could hide, my heart in yours, and yours in mine.
       Anticipatory glances are more than nurtured in this unseen circumstance. What lies beyond that smirk, behind that curve? Fingers trace a course from the corner of your eye to the corner of your mouth. Such wealth to be had in the peaks of your chest, and the valleys of your neck, and belly, and ahh...
       Is there really even a world happening around us?
       Slow-motion swings and felicitous sways. Reeling backward, unafraid. I can be anyone with you. Grasp it sharply, searchingly. Electric charges, energy-vibratos, flowing between, exchanging within. I can hear your secrets. Can you hear mine, too? I can breathe it all, your majesty, the light, the dark, your vicissitudes. 
       Surreptitious workings without any clues, they fasten secrets in lockets on chains surrounding our hearts. Secrets to them, no secrets to us. Embedded together. Infinity.
       Slow-motion turns in waves of zeal, no hesitation: I will feel what you feel.

CAS 11.10.15 06.58

Thursday, November 5, 2015

The Iron Heart



THE IRON HEART

Running. 

I am running. And it is behind me, giving chase, billowing in its magenta shades and gossamer pulchritude.

I am running, in a thudding wood, a dying wood. I am running because to stand is to be caught.

I am not looking back. I can hear only the tinkling of life underneath, and Novembral breath as it charges past. I see only obscure contours hurtling by; fair palates that capture so much more than the little deaths they betray. There is awe in sight, there is wonder in sound, and in the thundering that is my heartbeat, keeping pace & rhythm with the strides I take.

I am traveling, away from it. To look back is to yield the apostasy I have strove for, the fortification I know. An iron heart.

Running, so far in. Refusing a backward glimpse. And what is more fearsome: that what is following is really following, or not there at all...

For who could want this fragmented frame? Who would try their alchemy on an iron heart, and who would melt it down? Who would contend to handle the splinters, of all that I am, and all I will be?

Is it a dream I am running in, to a Tree of Life, without limbs? What sleight of hand could make me believe, that any hands would wish to carry me?

And the flaxen shapes, golden before, cast over with ripples of impending nothingness. I can't let it in.

I am running, I am weeping, I am parts becoming none. I am running, I am weary, I am used, I am none. I am iron and I cannot let it get me. (Please let it get me.)

-CaS 11.04.2015 09.00PM

     

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Wrapping Around




Opened and up and around and within,
Starving for death and for sex and for sin.
Between two minds, one whole and one thin,
Are my crystalline moments, with opaline skin.

Seeking a comfort that sways and then breaks,
Leaving the land in the hands on my waist.
Candles can make all the shadows embrace,
Themselves in a hallowed and moonlit place.

Skyborn & forlorn, coupled together,
Two bound as one, in a harness of leather.
Ipso my facto and nothing does better,
Than keeping the promise, to never say never.

And if I can kill the same man twice,
Will murdering then become my vice?
Between two eyes, one blue and one white,
My shifting devotion is kept in your sight.

Gratuitous brides permitting their rape,
With prickly pear trees carved into stakes:
A crimson sacrifice they may make,
At first to offer, but then to take.

Decorum, dressed up in shotgun shells,
She patiently waits for the ebb & swell,
Of all the ticklish tongues in hell,
To lap up her secrets, and never tell.

The tuna caught from last night's dream,
Is thrust on you with a twitch and a creme.
Look! Can you spy at the tops of the trees:
All the boys kissing, and growing their wings?

The prognosis; safe, sane, sound,
One fellating idiot going to town.
Between two legs, one up and one down,
Spreading apart, and wrapping around.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Drugs & Me: (Pt 4): Powerless...

Click Here for PART ONE
Click Here for PART TWO
Click Here for PART THREE

I was told by a doctor the next day that I had suffered alcohol poisoning, and I was lucky that it had not been fatal. My blood alcohol content had been 0.41; a 0.40 is typically when people slip into comas or, as the doctor had said, death.
                That night I went to a meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous. It wasn’t my first time attending AA, but it was the first time I had entered the rooms with the realization that I might be, probably was, alcoholic. It’s funny, I’m able to remember that meeting now, even after five years and hundreds of subsequent meetings. I was slightly hungover, and the topic was something pertaining to “Life on Life’s Terms.” When it was my turn to share, I spouted off some nonsensical meanderings about my past trials & tribulations, but nothing really pertaining to the topic at hand. I wanted to rattle off all the bad shit that had happened to me. But I believe that’s a common happenstance among most newcomers: a kind of quasi- competition in the Top 10 Charts of Personal Suffering and Misery; who has the worst horror story involving drugs or alcohol; everyone trying to subtly one-up the last man’s sorrow. Well, that was me.
                It was when I got a sponsor and began working the 12 steps that I understood there were appropriate times to share my experience, and other times that were not so appropriate.
                I procured eight months of continuous abstinence from both drugs and alcohol, and it was a glorious eight months. I went to AA Conferences, I was the secretary for my home group, and I had a social life with sober people. Things at home were just as grand, too. I had slowly begun to regain the trust of my family. I actually had money in my pockets and in the bank. Though I was still living at my mom’s, she helped me to save for when I moved out again.
                I was in the middle of Step 4 when my balanced program began to falter. The fourth step is a searching and fearless, personal moral inventory. In layman’s terms, what that looks like is a person creates a list of people, institutions and principles they feel have wronged them, and record how and why they’re pissed off at said person or place, then those beliefs get flipped inside out, and put under a microscope and analyzed with a sponsor, to see where YOU were wrong in each of those situations. It’s not an especially jovial task, and it’s even more tedious to examine these instances and find out all the faults you have. Add to this my problem finishing things I start, and halfway through, I lost my steam. When it came to me sitting down and actually writing the damned thing, suddenly everything else needed taken care of first: the kitchen needed cleaned, the laundry needed done, the dogs needed bathed, etc. and so on.
                While I busied myself not busying myself working on my inventory, I was asked to be the chairperson for my home group meeting the next month. Before I could really think about it, I exclaimed, Yes! I’d chair it!
                I had the entire month to stew in my nerves over chairing that meeting. All my internal fears over my low self-esteem, my sense of inadequacy, came rushing back to me in torrents.
                The day I was to chair my first meeting, I was so pent up with dread I couldn’t stand it, and finally I asked a coworker if he had anything to help me. He went on a lunchbreak and brought me back two extra-strength Vicodin. So that night, right before I was to act as chairperson for not just any AA meeting, but my home group AA meeting, I threw eight months of sobriety down the proverbial tubes, and ate both of the Vicodin. Most people would say that was when my relapse happened, but in all actuality, my relapse started some time before the physical moment I took those pills. My program slipped when I stalled finishing my fourth step, and at the moment I was asked to lead the meeting a month prior, I had 30 days to lay the bricks for relapse.
                I took Vicodin four times that month, each time being moments before I sat at the head table of Southside Club to chair my home group Big Book study. When my month of chairing was over, however, I continued buying painkillers. At the house, I was even pleased to find several bottles of Vicodin in drawers and medicine cabinets.
                For a couple months, I had the opiate use under control. But because at that point I still had a conscience, I eventually came clean about it all. I started back at Step One, with a different sponsor this go round, and went to a private, inpatient treatment facility for a few weeks. I had some success staying clean for a short while, but the call from opioids was a persistent one that I could not keep ignoring.
                Though I tried to avoid those cravings, I succumbed, and for quite some time, I secretly consumed hundreds and hundreds of painkillers a month. There I was, back at square one, hiding my usage behind a metaphorical smokescreen. I even kept a faux sober date to make the act all the more convincing.
                It came tumbling down, the smokescreen evaporating, on a Superbowl Sunday. For breakfast that morning before church, I had downed a handful of Klonopin, after church for lunch I enjoyed a large handful of Vicodin. I told my mom I was going to a meeting, and she asked me if I’d stop at the market to pick up items for the game that night. I replied that I would of course do that for her. Instead of going to a meeting, though, I went to a buddy’s condo, where I smoked lots and lots of marijuana.
                When I arrived back at home, my mom gave me an odd look and asked where the cookie cake and other snacks were. I remember feeling slightly confused at the question; cookie cake? What the hell was she talking about? Then it came rushing back to me: the food for the Superbowl! I was told to pick some up, but all the benzos had made me forget 100-percent about going to the store. I made to spat out some quick excuse to try and assuage the words that I just knew were going to come from my mother, but I was not fast enough. My thoughts were panicky and felt caught in the muck & mire of my Klonopin-sloshed brain. Four words crept out of my mom’s mouth:
                “You’re high, aren’t you?” All I could do was nod in agreement.
                She had told me myriad times that if I messed up again, after the many, many times she had given me second chances, that if I came home again under the influence, I would have to leave. I didn’t even wait for her to say as much. I told her I would leave the next day.

*****

For a short time I lived with my father. He and I have a history that could fill encyclopedia’s A-Z, with special influence on volumes “B” (for betrayal), “G” (for grudge), and back to “A” (for asshole). But we looked past our past. He had his own personal demons, and I mine, and we didn’t allow them to clash. I didn’t stay with him long, and soon moved in with a friend from high school, and her boyfriend.
                Because I had no one to hide my drug usage from (in fact, my roommates, Janis & Larry, were quite the burnouts themselves), my addiction flourished under the watchful eyes of no one but myself. I didn’t have to sneak around or hide anything from anybody, and if my mom asked how I was doing, I would lie and say I was just peachy.
                The truth, however, was far grimmer. A depression more bleak and cancerous than I had ever dealt with before, swept over, and obliterated me. There is no exaggeration when I say I would cry myself to sleep every single night. I made a nightly ritual of getting drunk and putting on headphones to listen to a playlist on my iPod I had titled, “The Sads,” (consisting mostly of Cat Power songs (thanks Monte, ha)). Lyrics about broken hearts, drugs and sadness shot through the earbuds and echoed around my head while I would convulse in bed from weeping so deeply. I would piss in empty booze bottles because I didn’t want to leave my bedroom. I would continue to go out with Janis and Larry every so often, so they wouldn’t think anything was wrong, but I’d go to the bathrooms of the bars we frequented, and just break down. I would think of my family, of my mom mostly, I would think of past relationships. I’d think of everything I lost.
                But then an old coworker from a previous job opened up a whole new world to me, and I was sorely, sorely mistaken if I believed I had lost everything already, because I was about to learn what it truly meant, to lose it all...