Tuesday, June 30, 2009

i need a battle

A little flow from a couple of sleep-deprived tower guard shifts...

what can i say, i guess i still gotta pay
some dues for the shoes that took me so far away
from the ones that i love and the love from above
i couldn't see it was free till freedom took off the gloves

then it was the 1-2 and 10 and the doors swung wide open
down the halls they were callin me walls of the fallen were stallin me
but i kept pushin in spite of me in spite of the light of eternity
blindin my flight and burnin me
till i forgot how to listen and flooded my system
with sugar and spices and vices that glisten
till all i was missin
was a reason to keep pleasin myself in this prison

i need a battle
an 8.8 earthquake to shake and rattle
the wheels of this track leading back into the shadows
obscuring my vision by fear and division
of my self from my soul by a single discision
to follow hell down a hole through a shallow inscision
in the tip of my finger that lingered over the line
needing blood to be signed
so shorten my name and set a flame to my time
while i play my part in the game and march down the line

now i go boom, boom, boom till it fills up the room
to maximum capcity and critical mass
aint no elasticity can survive the blast
boy, you better watch your steppin
i rock a belt-fed weapon
my rage is a rhythm
and this cage is a lesson
that i'm learnin to the core
and turnin into my war
as i break down the doors
and shake down the memories
of every time i've turned away from a sign
and followed the low road alone
throwin stones with my eyes

these lies are a liability chocking the virility
out of the little bit of love in me
so these words that i'm writing
is the way that i'm fighting
to shed a little light
into my heart
and hope it
ripens

Saturday, June 6, 2009

D-Day

As our Boeing 757 flew over the beaches of Normandy 50,000 feet below, in route to our pit-stop in Germany, before continuing on to Ali Al Salem, Kuwait, I realized that it was June 6, of all days. D-Day. I tried to draw the symbolism out of it but decided to simply ponder the sacrifice made by so many men before me. It certainly put my experience in Iraq into perspective. It's really not so bad. Five more months of fun in the sun and then it's, "Adieu my torturous lover, sweet as a razor's edge... it's not you, it's me."

Currently, I am sitting in the Kuwait holding tank for transient soldiers, still with enough elbow room to remember the embrace of my last two weeks of unadulterated freedom. The depths of which I shall not attempt to plum. Suffice it to say that mowing my grandmother's lawn at dusk, drinking a glass of wine and kissing the girl of my dreams, meeting my new niece for the first time, hiking with my sisters, having coffee with my mother and simply breathing an extended sigh of relief was enough to leave my heart brimming with love and longing and impossible sorrow.

The second week of R and R becomes harder to enjoy as your return to the real world of mechanized submission grows imminent, the impending doom. It's a wave of emotion you don't fully acknowledge until it is immediately upon you, at which point your defenses are useless. The day I left, Anne was going to hang out with her friend for a fun-filled afternoon of beer consumption and varmint control (a win-win in Montana as cattle tend to break their ankles in the ground squirrel's holes and, after a few beers, the sport of it really starts to take hold of your emotions). "Have fun killing gofers," I said before I walked out the door. "Have fun killing people," she replied with a kind of sadness masked in the joke. We both laughed at the contrast. She's pretty damn funny sometimes.

Now the gavel has landed and still echos through my consciousness like a distant rolling thunder and lightning strikes of heartache that seize you without warning and hold the pit of your stomach captive in your throat. Its back to work but not all she wrote. The new diamond in my mind is re-deployment and returning finally to Germany. As bleak as the Grafenwoehr post seemed before Iraq, it's acquired a new flavor. One of sweet release and simple opportunity.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Grasp

You ever play a card game that revealed the
balance of your existence? Well, my sister, Anne, and I just discovered such a "game"...or Grasp as we now call it. What you will need to get started: One regular deck of 52 cards, one nickle, a willingness to understand and, perhaps, most importantly, one, or two, bottles of wine (the quantity and quality of which is entirely up to the weight and willingness of you wallet).


Grasping for the wind...is this not what the rigid and habitual survivors consider a futile pursuit? Nonsense! Let flow the the uncertain and sumptuous vitality of experience. Let question beget question and life beget life. Bone of my bone, flesh of my flesh, fall prey to our inquisition and desire to discover! Behold, the Beauty and the Revelation....

Key:

Clubs = Family

Spades = Work

Diamonds = Money

Hearts = God/Love

Ace = Self

King = God

Queen = Soul Mate

Jack = The Variable Humor

1-9 = Degree of Measurement/Quantity

No formula here, just a simple and totally open communication within a symbolic and representational framework according to the musings of two siblings under the influence and in search of their souls. Bear with me, or bare with me.

Each player/seeker is dealt three cards. A nickle (as it is neither too rich nor meager) will be flipped or spun to determine who will be the first to show. The first card represents "Transitional Trials," and having called heads, I flip my first card....

Ace of Clubs = Family break down. Joined the Army for my self, resulting in my ultimate seclusion from the lives of my family and general disconnect from the rest of conventional society. My hand is now open to the insights of my quisling sibling. I am fair game to any and every association she might make with the Ace of Clubs. We dive into a dynamic and searching stream of consciousness to dance with the circle of life and dispel notions of a linear reality. Anne flips her first card....

7 of Clubs = Inclusive family break down. In touch with the transitional trials of each immediate family member and the symbiotic effect of each. Our father is dead and now more a part of our lives than ever before. A holy number, 7 is the measure of his influence: Divine. We all know him more intimately in his absence and feel the love and provision he embodied now that it is gone. Regret is destructive and instructional. We miss him and move on.

We step outside for a cigarette and ponder the providence of our immediately recent development, not only as card-readers, but as friends. Anne tells me things I've never known about her and I stop feeling so frustrated about returning to Iraq. There is such great meaning in everything and Anne's heart is a new treasure. We really are growing up together. The next card will represent the potential resolution of the first. We return to the table and I flip it over....

Queen of Spades = Work will be required and my soul mate and I will work together. Our union will consummate a love that heals the transition of one era to the next. A woman I love with my entire existence will require a sacrifice greater than I can give. Grace will prevail and the Holy Spirit will replace my desires. Anne flips....

9 of Spades = 3 being her nemesis number, representing uncertainty and irresolution. Hard work toward acceptance and simply being will be required. The trinity will never be grasped enough to make a representative image of God. Faith is required by the moment. 9 is also phonically "No" in German, whatever that means. Another cigarette... back to the cards and the third is the "tie down," the reinforcement of resolution. I flip my last card....

5 of Spades = More work. There are five immediate family members to whom I owe my love and understanding. To whom I am the seed of their father and husband and the brother by whom they have stood and encouraged for these 27 years. For rushing headlong into the infantry and war I've taken days of their worries on my shoulders and given them cause to fear. They understand, but to ask them to is the weight of my soul in their hearts. Forgive me. God give you peace. Anne shows her final card....

8 of Spades = Acceptance of family as a group of individuals and reality as infinite. "Time" is but a measurement that renders reality as a linear reference-point and a convenient ear-mark for masturbatory memories and masochistic indulgences. The end is as often the beginning as the beginning is the end. Embrace the vast expanse of experience and the dynamic throbbing of existence that is your life. Fight and bleed.

The "game" was over, I thought, then Anne swiped a card off of the top of the deck and flipped it over on the table between us. Up to this point, our hands had been only black and of work and family. The card was the 2 of Hearts. How beautiful, I thought. The two of us imagining and exploring God's infinite creation. The thoughts surging between us on our breath like lightning, like the Holy Spirit.

Inspired by Gene Autry

I'm sick and I'm tired of your face,
Looking just like a loaded gun.
Like you robbed the grave of the setting sun
And called it the day the west was won.

This looks like goodbye, I hear my train a-comin
It feels like pulling teeth
With a back that was broken from bearing the weight
Of wings that never opened to carry you away.

It's high time you were brought in
You're wanted in every state of my mind
So put down your arms and come quietly
It's not so lost we cannot find.