Tuesday, April 12, 2011

First Pedicure from a Vietnamese Woman


A poem I wrote last week. As you can tell by this, I find pedicures kinda awkward, ha! 


First Pedicure from a Vietnamese Woman

 A lonely glazed donut hardens
on the cracked sacrificial plate
painted with pink flowers.
The little Buddha leans back and smiles, looks away, as if to say,
“No, really, my diet starts today.”
Crumbling incense sticks are his barricade,
charred remains of whispered supplications,
his hoard of scorched intercession,
dues paid to the watchman of the shop.

I feel his burning stare from his dollhouse shrine,
as I too recline, in my sumptuous vomit-colored cushions.
And you, my beautifier, kneel at my feet.
My assistant of ablutions,
My provider of painted keratin,
what stories of gun point, panting breath, and stifling galleys
do you lock away behind your almond eyes?
What horrors did you touch so that you could be here,
to massage my ugly toes?

Sticky tabloids sit untouched by my side,
as interesting to me as dead fish,
frivolous nonsense that means nothing.
Who cares what Justin Bieber has to say,
when I know your heart starves for the embrace
of the child left behind in your homeland?

Buddha shifts in his seat hungrily.
The hour of prayer is getting closer,
as you wash the feet of the dream
you risked your life to taste.





Thursday, April 7, 2011

Strong to the Finish


 I wrote this poem a few weeks ago for my creative writing class. But I also wrote it...because I needed to.



Strong to the Finish

“Olive….Popeye…Bluto.”
Pale petal lips whisper the names
to the humid darkness.
The flickering flash of those black and white caricatures,
glimmers across glossy diamond-blue eyes,
fixed like sunken pebbles into ghost-pale gaunt flesh.
Slumped in the strong, sad arms of her weary mother,
I am utterly helpless, and I feel a fool,
my head puffed up with fancy medical words
that cannot begin to wrap their starched tongue around
such sacred and tender sorrow,
that oozes a guttering flame of desperate hope,
boldfaced and delicate in the face of
such monstrous, frigid, ruthless judgment:
“less than three percent survival rate.”


And at that moment,
all I wish for is a can of magical green stuff
that a certain sailor carries in his back pocket,
to push through that slinky IV tube,
like an emerald river of strength;
to pulse a puff of spring
into a dying body made of winter.