I was supposed to write a "calming" poem -- it was supposed to "calm" the reader.  Well, I can't do that.  I can disturb, horrify, disgust, but "calm"? Nyahh.  So here's a poem about "being calmed."
(Mr. Xanax, Mr. Ativan, Mr. Valium)
              
hold
shaking, spit trailing, white 
she cups a hand 
whispers
she curls up, still
it is a good, it is an excellent
he curls up 
next to her on the rug
twines her fingers, she lies shaking, 
spit trailing, white 
face in a blue bowl, 
he cups a hand around her ear, 
whispers, Mister, Mister  
it is a good drug, an excellent trailing 
dream, a fluffy white rug, it glows 
cupped in his Wednesday,
 
his floating hand, his blue subtle ears
of white soap and curled terrier, 
it is a cupped slug who hums 
softly, a steady, slow fingering vibration
 
you can feel it if you just, whispering,
spit cupped in hands,
if you just hold still
---------
Leave me more lines!  More lines, I beg of you!
 
 
3 comments:
the shadowboxer and his opponent dance
I think that is a perfect response. Like me you are a poet and we poets have the habit of never being able to look at a word without seeing below the surface. It's the English language's fault. If 'calm' only meant or could mean one thing then there would be no problem but every word comes with associations, other meanings.
I was once asked to write a short story in one sentence, a bit of flash fiction, something I'd never done before. Most people submitted sentences of a couple of hundred words. I took a leaf out of Beckett's notebook – and Joyce's – and submitted a sentence 1125 words long; called 'The Sentence' it is about a man serving a prison sentence. I never even had to think about it, it just sat down and immediately began writing.
Russell -- thanks for the excellent line!
JIm -- interesting one sentence. Anyplace I can read that?
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