Monday, December 1, 2008

Allsberg Cafe

Dear Jar Heads, let's try using this blog post as the place to post poems, or excerpts of prose, that we wish to share and to get feedback about. Will this work? Any suggestions?  Allsberg is a virtual cafe, based on the idea of a gathering place in the model community ("Allsberg") that I am writing about in a book called The Marketing of Virtue.  
  Below is a poem that simply retells a touching true story shared with me a few days ago. Contrast the simplicity/economy of this poem with the layers and loops of the previous two poems, "Being Found by Yourself (letting a poem be a deer)", and "Layers, Liars, and Lairs". Indeed, poetry comes in many shapes and sizes. 

 

...Moon...


By the time grandma covered 

the bedtime story,

the sheets felt warm,

just right for sleeping. 

She ended the story

the same way she always did, 

standing at the doorway, 

saying, "Know how much I love you? 

From here to the moon."


Years later, 

when she had a stroke of genius, 

at a doorway 

ending the story 

(this time lying on cold tile), 

she said the only word

she could get out -

"moon".  

Just right for living. 

Looking back, hearing her last word,

he feels warm again. 




© 2009 Darrell Moneyhon





I am very happy with the following poem. It seems a successful experiment with talking to the mind of the reader as though we were have a therapy session or an openness to being mutually transformed, rather than merely reading a poem or story. Being Found by Yourself (letting a poem be a deer) is my "flagship" of "Transform-etry" - poetry designed to help transform our minds and our being. 

Being Found by Yourself (letting a poem be a deer)


I heard this story. I

identified with

it. It

haunted me, hunted me, 

camouflaged as a story. 

But it was a wholesome hunter,

a kind of holy ghost hunter

whose weapon of choice

is a cross

bow strung with the specter

of the unknown, yet committed to 

this, this 

whatever

it is. It is 

a matter of hunting from a blind

for something beyond.


There is a story, 

if that is all

you let it be. 

It can be more

if you seek something

more, more

or less let it seek you.


This is behind the scenes stuff.

It is not the stuff of poetry. 

It is step-by-step preparation,

like buckling up a boot,

like setting up a blind,

and sitting up there, waiting

until the story finally comes around,

out of the wild. 

 

On the first day of deer season, 

a young man headed 

to a Pennsylvania convenient mart 

early in the morning, at

four something, for something

to eat through the day

while he watched for deer. 


On the way to the store

(one of those all night and all day

gas station stores), driving his vehicle

(I never heard what kind. Was it an Impala? 

More likely a Cherokee 

or an F-150, or an S-10; no matter,

it was the vehicle he chose, 

on the path he chose.), a big buck

appeared out of nowhere

and crashed through the windshield

before the young man 

had a chance

to spot him or aim or count the points.


The two of them died on that road,

leaving everyone

wondering which

was the hunter 

and which the hunted? 


Irony at times seems gruesome, 

tempting a cruel perception 

of poetic justice, like some Edgar Allen Poe 

poem, in which a young man

full of dreams,

who, due 

to a lust for dreams, 

is impaled

by the very racks he longed for.

This is a very dark version of a very strange story.


There is another story

wrapped around the same facts, 

wrapped around the driver,

and run through him, 

having shattered the standard view. 


It is a story of grace, of the 

lithe crossing of life

paths, of sections of life

intersecting, 

of the ghostly thing you look forward to,

finding you so brilliantly

that it is as if it is 

the essence, the holy ghost, of yourself

finding you. Wham!


In this story, hunter and hunted are not at all

at odds, but in a sacred coming together,

out of doing what they were most called to do,

to be, to see

out from the blind. 


In this story, there is no distance

between the young man, his last breath,

and the breathless anticipation of the listener

as he or she hears the story, 

or sees it in the mind, 

out from the blind 

of mere plots plodding along 

without intersecting themes.

 

In this story, you live like Tristen 

lived in Legends of the Fall

committing wholly to your truest path, 

hunted by that holy ghost 

who helps you, as the young man in the story, 

“die a good death”. 




© 2008 Darrell Moneyhon 



                 Here is another poem, hot off the presses, written just today, 12/11/08. It seems to have some of the reader self-referential qualities as Being Found by Yourself... Having the reader refer to his or her own mind or own attention is a kind of Gestalt therapy technique I have started putting in the poem.


Layers, Liars, and Lairs


OJ Simpson surfaced

from his legal (and life's) inundation,

on a spot not quite beyond the shadows

of murderous doubt. 

If, in fact, he did what he was accused of doing,

is who he is that act?

Is he that rage which must have overcome him? 

Or that calculation which must have 

possessed him as he possessed 

the where-with-all to use it?

Cutting off a life brings countless tears,

ripple effects of victimization.

But the onion cut of life, 

exposing a layer of rage under the calculation,

and a layer of fear (of inadequacy, lack of control, 

or hurt) under that,

also brings us to tears. To think, 

a man like that may have a hurt little boy

below several surfaces. Well, 

it's enough to make a grown man cry;

enough to bring retribution to it's knees,

to prayers of solace and healing. 

The guilt of a man is not a single dimension.

The life of a man isn't cut

and dry. It is moist with deep layers,

slippery as the weird and colorful fish

in the oceanic mind. 


Oh, if in fact

he did it, he lied

while tried; the big oath,

that ogre called integrity, 

broken on the stand.

Where do all the lies room and board

in this old world? In the heart 

of a man and woman? 

Or in hearts surfing mere surfaces, 

tossed and lost at see, at the appearances 

of things. Things like that over there

(it is a mere distraction, and nothing to do 

with this poem); it is a lie

simply lying there to take us away

from pungent meanings that might have been

peeled out from the onion. 

It is easier than crying. Sometimes

the deception is so great

that we take it as truth,

and interpret the whole poem in terms of it -

of it's apparent nature, 

whatever it is, or for that matter,

what "is is".  


'Home is where the heart is."

That's what they say. Wait now, 

isn't the heart

where the home is? A place 

that brings out whatever creation

is to be dreamed? A man can get lost 

in a good book, and he is often found

in a good woman. 

But if his beauty (the beauty he seeks)

is only skin deep, he is lost 

in a good woman. 

No feminine touch can nurture 

his heart into its fullest fruition - 

he is trapped, convicted 

toward the lesser thing. 

OJ was convicted by exoneration

from the deep ("so help me God") truth, 

if, in fact, he did what he was 

accused of doing.

The little boy inside 

is home alone.   




         © 2008 Darrell Moneyhon


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