Wednesday, September 24, 2025

DREAM DOOR

 


In the dream there is a small hidden door in my mother's bedroom, the kind that was once used for ice deliveries in old apartment buildings, or a crawl space leading to a tangle of wires, spiderwebs, and rusty pipes. But when I bend low to open it, the exact same room appears on the other side, the same bedside table and lamp, the same red bedspread, the same bottles lined up like a miniature skyline. In fact, the whole interior of the house is there, in reverse. Though I am very young, I can walk through it by memory, taking a left where normally I would go right. I can hear and smell coffee percolating from the kitchen, a television sounding low and far away. But nothing happens in this dream. It is merely a feeling of calmness I have walked into, the very strangeness of the mundane. No one is shouting here. No one is leaving. There are no sirens wailing outside the window, no red lights reflecting against the glass. It is impossible for me to tell if this is before, or after, or never was. It is a dream that I tell to no one, for there is nothing to tell. But after I wake, it's a dream I immediately want to get back to. But of course I can't return. I can never return.

Saturday, September 20, 2025

THE WATER WOMAN

 


I hold the divining rods loosely, as though they were fragile things, the slender legs of something wounded or at rest, waiting for them to tap out their simple message on the air. Divination implies a pull toward the sacred, toward the promise of water underfoot, which in turn pulls forever through itself, its source a continual mystery. The superstitious call it witchery, as though it were something sinister, though they make no argument or claims to deny it. I tread lightly, as though I were already spirit, sometimes without shoes, until I get a twitch, a signal, an indication of the hush and the hollow below. It's not magic, not in the way you might think, but merely listening with the body, the whole of it, the way our people always have. Water, after all, answers to water. On a good day, when the wind is calm and the trees drink up the light, I can lead you to the right spot. I can tell you where to begin digging, where to build. The real work -- a whole lifetime of it -- is up to you.

Sunday, September 7, 2025

MY MOTHER AT EIGHTY-SIX, RECOVERING FROM AN ISCHEMIC STROKE

 


This isn't the first time she has left this way -- hovering between sleep and awake, speech and silence, breath and no breath. When we were kids, the pills and the Stoli nearly washed her away, bringing her only partway back. The ECT and barbiturates softened her eyes to a blue-tinged fog, a weather we could not grasp. But this time she seems closer to the further shore, more resigned to stand among its trees and shadow. Her body sleeps on one side, like a child nuzzling closely in the first chill of autumn. The words that come now, if they come at all, tumble out in fragments, like the torn scripture of some long lost gospel. They break free of source and context, uncertain but continuing, trailing off like the memories she has spent a lifetime trying to erase. This woman, stubborn as the sun and moon, whose version of Jesus brandished a sword toward the open sky, offers neither confession nor consolation. She travels silently on wheels now, waiting without expression for her lunch and medication, for whatever can be easily recognized, waiting for her own version of leaving to return.

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