Monsters, Zombies and Addicts: Poems by Gwendolyn Zepeda
Monsters, Zombies and Addicts: Poems by Gwendolyn Zepeda
Monsters, Zombies and Addicts: Poems by Gwendolyn Zepeda
Houston, Texas
Zepeda, Gwendolyn.
[Poems. Selections]
Monsters, zombies and addicts : poems / by Gwendolyn
Zepeda.
p cm
ISBN 978-1-55885-810-7 (softcover : acid-free paper)
I. Title.
PS3626.E46A6 2015
811'.6dc23
2015003061
CIP
The paper used in this publication meets the requirements of the
American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence
of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984.
Copyright 2015 Gwendolyn Zepeda
Printed in the United States of America
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Contents
ADDICTS AND OBSESSIONS
Cocktail Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
The Woman Who Taught Me to Smoke . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
JFK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Calling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Your Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Unspecified Design Anxiety . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Her Trendy Shoes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Anxiety Attack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
The Ringmasters Daughter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
MONSTERS AND WARRIORS
When Hansel and Gretel Grew Up . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Testimony . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Landscaping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Its Friday Night . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
No Title . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Maggots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
TV Bonding Time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Carnie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Portent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Dream Dictionary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Texture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
New Teeth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Berries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Flirt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
After the Hurricane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
Sad Shock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
Fluffy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
Wesley Parks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
Animals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Blue Eyeliner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Party Bears . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Recipe for Fun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Ants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
The Downstairs Colombians Particular Insanity . . . . . 79
The Sad Monkeys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
The Man Whos Sitting Next to Me in this
Photograph . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
Morning Game . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
Aunt Sylvia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
For you.
Cocktail Hours
What if all my nights were Christmas lights on patios with tinkling drinks and fun conversations, sophisticated joshing with
confident women and amusing men and the weathers nice and
the mood is right and it lasts half the night and the next morning, Im not sorry. I just drink coffee and relive the moments from
the bar before. Anticipate the next night out.
What if so many bright nights made my weekdays feel heavier
by comparison. Like a boat with all the ballast on the one side.
An air balloon thats getting dragged down.
Dragged down. I get dragged on. And how do I escape? Im
tempted toward crime, I buy lottery tickets. I fill with resentment.
Until I tip. I let my boat get tipsy. It tilts this extra ballast into
the darkening sea, the rising waves.
JFK
We love JFK. I wonder, though, what else there is to know about
the man or his death? The men behind the death? The men behind
those men? The grass on the knoll that was under their feet. The
Texas live oak that shaded the shots above. Any flower that scented the air. The printed flowers on any of Jackies dresses.
Its all been done, been said. Why chew the fat, the grass, the
leaves, the clues again?
Masticate JFK. Masturbate the memory. Flog it. Fog it. The lesson learned by rote. And after, nothing known.
Calling
Shes attracted to the prettiest ones
the most dramatic, the mugging-est, pouty-ful
Calling all hands to deck like
the sirens on rocks
all sparkle and screeches
She sees them as temptations.
Needs them.
But I feel them like suction
like undercurrents, toilets
sucking and flushing you down
Theyre forces to run from, Im
permanently lashed to the mast
Shes Odysseus and Im a thousand
ears to hear his wailing.
Your Type
She has dark hair and eyes like a predator cat.
Seems to be petite in this picture, but round.
And her last name ends with A.
I have dark hair, round eyes like a rabbit.
Tall legs, not much like her,
my last name ends with A.
The Spaniards rode ships to the island of her people.
Liked what they saw and so took it. Left her slightly
lighter skin, a different kind of nose, a last name that
ends with an A.
The Spaniards found my people near the mountains.
Thought how sexy. Gifted them with baby ponies.
Read them poems. Fed them candy and wine.
Got sex. In exchange, I hope.
I hope they fell in love or had, at least, a
mutually agreeable transaction.
I got the lightest olive skin, this round nose, and my
last name ends with A.
You show me her picture, then leer at me. You
smile or smirk as you tell me predilections.
But I dont know why you think I care.
Your grandfather got here in another mans boat.
Youve nothing I want and youre nothing
like the centaur.
Anxiety Attack
When you explain that this feeling is only adrenaline
caused by glucose or lack thereof in my blood,
I can talk myself down. I can concentrate on fruits
or agave or aspartame substitutes. Think about the
things I control, then ignore all this trembling,
this stomach cramp, teeth grit, eye burn, bile,
this dread of the given situation. I can be
more machine-like. Create a fuel efficiency that
keeps me safe and makes my thoughts not matter.
10
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Testimony
I was scared of a thing that might have happened. In daytime,
Im sure it never did.
At night, I dont trust daylit memories or instincts. In nightmares, like filmstrips, the feared thing occurs.
Ive asked for witnesses, for plaintiff or defense. Strong boys say
I shouldnt ever worry.
But I trust in my fears. Am willing to face things, admit them,
tear open, suck clean, and thus cure.
17
Landscaping
I like mowing the lawn, especially in the mornings.
It was 75 degrees with a nice little breeze to keep my
hair off my neck. The handle of the mower vibrates
fiercely and makes my hands numb, but its not a completely
unpleasant sensation. Little chunks of grass and
ant hills fly up and hit my arms and legs, making them
sting and making it sweeter, later, when I take my
shower. I always start by mowing squares, to be
more efficient. But my shapes change, eventually, for the
flowerbeds and shrubs and things. All the shapes are
pleasing. There goes a triangle of grass! Theres another
rhombus done! As I make decreasing hexagons around a
crepe myrtle, I hear it plead dont hurt me.
I would never hurt you, baby. You know that.
Sometimes I mow in the evenings, instead, staying out
until its too dark to see. Farther and farther away I
go, the noise not-unpleasantly numbing my mind. The
weariness starts to drag at me, but maybe I can
keep on pushing forever.
Eventually, I do hear my name bellowed angrily
across the land. So I stop whispering promises to
flora.
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19
No Title
The bravest thing is
daring to think
That the devils wont follow you anymore.
Those omens were wrong and
the unsaid prophecy untrue.
To think that you might not be
a dog in a yard
dumb drooling and flea bit,
blocked by fences that
no one else can see.
20
Maggots
Maggots stink in trashcans. Bend against/across the floor and terrorize bare feet. Portend bad things: The bad life passed, more
bad to come.
Maggots grow into flies and eventually die as hardened iridescent shells in sun.
When you stop squealing and consider, youll realize their temporariness. A very short segment of being. This didnt last. It
cant. So get up. Fly away.
21
TV Bonding Time
Its good to watch cop shows with your
kids. Every week, youll tick off the plotlines on
lists you keep in your mind. Sort them into:
Bad things youve already told them about
Bad things you need to explain
Bad things avoidable with the right preparation
Theres another list you keep in mind:
Bad things that happened to you.
Your kid hears your breathing. Notes plotlines that
make you stay silent. Perceives more than you
think and absorbs your lessons unsaid.
22
Carnie
He told me to sit on a certain horse. Said it went higher or faster
than the ones fixed alongside. I was young enough to want to
ride the carousel. Young enough to be polite.
It ended in the dark, my steed between the freeway and the bulk
of machinery that hid me from my waiting aunt. He came
around to bring me down.
When I told my aunt what happened, later, she only nodded.
Unsurprised.
He said, let me help you, miss, hot hand near my thigh. And I
was old enough to recognize he wasnt yet skilled at taking
things. Old enough to scare him with my eyes.
23
Portent
I was baking a cake to take to my mother-in-laws house for
Thanksgiving.
Id bought raisins in an off-brand box. Opened the box, dumped
it over the batter.
I saw gnat-like creatures in the air. I looked into the box and it was
full of little worms.
I screamed and threw the box onto the floor. Cried because
I really hate worms and cause
Id wanted this cake to
impress my mother-in-law.
He came into the kitchen and yelled, What the hell?
He looked in the bowl, said, That shit wont kill anybody.
He stuck his hand in the batter, scooped out the worms and
chucked them in the trash.
I finished up the cake and watched my in-laws eat it later
but
I couldnt eat dessert myself, of course. And now
I only buy the raisins people say are full of pesticides.
We got divorced, too.
Mmm, mmm, good.
24
Dream Dictionary
They say the symbols of your dream must be particular to you.
They say only you can know their meanings.
And so I meditate.
The kittens that cry sound like They do, but then
tug at my womb like everything.
The woman that left (like She did) looked mean but when
breathed, smelled like freedom.
The monsters that made me scream in the dream, I
realize now, had your faces.
Im screaming at your faces but I cant run away.
25
Texture
What is the texture of kindness,
preferred by the nice
with no unpleasant undertones, gross connotations?
Kitten fur on live kittens only?
Hydrated petals of uncut blooms?
Bland as the skin on the cheek of the loved one.
I like suede, sanded wood, crushed stones, skins of rabbits.
Something pilfered or ruined for
Me, for me, for me.
26
New Teeth
i.
Today at the dentist, I was in for a treat. My dentist is rather
OCD and wanted to make sure my new fake teeth matched the
others. So he brought in the lab tech, a man named Leon, whod
made my new canine and incisor. They clicked these caps into
place and Leon looked. In office light, then sunlight from the
window. Leon said we needed more violet. Took a tiny palette
and painted right into my mouth. Clicked the caps off and baked
them in the oven while I waited, while I lay on the dental chaise
lounge and looked out the window. Thought about the job of
making teeth. Thought about the man who makes them and
knows, like an artist, that theres no such thing as white. His
palette a rainbow of pastels. His mind a gallery of enamel, no
doubt. A painter of crowns and a sculptor of them, too. I wondered if hed gone to art school but didnt get to ask because
I didnt get to talk. Because I lay there as a canvas. A canvas that
can hear its artists working. I guess you could say I was an
object, but it felt okay. An object in a comfortable chaise
lounge. Ive had a lot of dental work because I have weak teeth.
So I know what it means to submit. But I never take the laughing gas. I submit of my own volition as long as I can always
reach out, grab the wrist. Kick the tools down, the power off.
Throw down the bloody bib and leave.
I dont. I lie there. Force myself to release the tension from jaw
and shoulder, and toe by toe. Allow the artists to do their art.
Then Leon leaves and the drill starts. No more paint and no
27
more ceramics. Its only the metalwork and ice sculpture now.
Noise of chainsaws. Cold vibrations on my teeth, up my nose,
and down to my toe by toe.
ii.
The longer I lie, the more I remember the times before. The
time this dentist pulled that tooth from my head. And it had calcified, fused itself to my jawbone like a fossil. Like sta-lagmite or
lactite. Like when we were kids and the old clouded ice built
castles in our freezers. Which our parents could defrost, with
time and warm air, whereas my dentist could do no such thing
with the tooth fused hard in my head. He could only shoot me
with numbness, lever against my skull and pull. He pulled and
pulled. Sweat made his forearms shine, eventually rolled on his
temples. I felt like a monstermisshapen and shamed. He was
the Beowulf to Grendel my mouth. Eventually, he won. Was
exhausted and I didnt know how to comfort him. So I went
home and fell asleep. Expected to have nightmares.
This time isnt as bad as that, or as bad as the other, with the blue
gunk that rolled against my tonsils, so it seemed. The time with
the screaming drill. The time the need for extra shots was
revealed in bloody sharpness.
This time is barely anything. Or maybe I get used to it.
It goes so long, I run my mind-tongue over old thoughts like
backs of incisors. The episode of Seinfeld where Jerrys dentist
raped him, making fun of old fears. Steve Martin in that little
shop of horrors, inexplicable dentist among monster plants. The
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29
Five OClock
Go home, lady they say.
Shes worked hard all day and now
its time for others to celebrate
drink and brag, to
brush up against each others
stiff bravado and grin the
jizz-seeped grins. To slap
each other on the backs
like hunting dogs and say
Go home now, lady.
Her necks hot as she goes.
Behind her eyes, the scenes
are red and wasps buzz in
her ears, her steps are muggy
and as she goes, she goes in the
wrong direction. And before
shes gone, she leaves
the others a slice of pie.
She wraps it slow and
careful and no one cares.
33
Conform
Sometimes I feel less than girly because I dont care about
celebrities personal lives.
Sometimes I feel guilty and try.
Flip through a magazine, find a picture of Darryl Hannah. I
liked her in Blade Runner. She also played a mermaid once. Shes
tall. I wonder if she sometimes buys mens shoes, like I do. If she
buys mens loafers.
I read somewhere she was smart. Read she was shy. Was she
really shy or did she save her conversation for the other smart
kids? Who reported this about herthe person who, in high
school, chattered endlessly with groups of girls at a table in the
middle of the cafeteria?
In this photo shes not wearing makeup. Not much. Does she
like it that way? Does it hurt to have her hair curled, pulled,
blown straight, teased higher? Or does she maybe like the
makeupblack eye rims, red lipstickthe same way that you
might like a mask?
What does Darryl Hannah do after a long day of filming? Does
she go home and lie on her couch? Does she ever feel guilty for
not thinking thoughts about other womens hair?
34
Acted Upon
A paper doll is balanced on a very thin line
Depends on the windflow which way it might fall.
Nature show is playing on your family TV
Depends on the camera angle, cadence of the narrators voice,
which way your sympathies lie, with the lions or with the
gazelles.
The paper doll is waiting on the razor wire
Ready to jump the direction you blow.
A fat man is sweating on his family couch, there under a piece
of wrought iron on the wall. The irons on the wall cause the fat
mans wife bought it. She wanted one; she saw them in all her
friends houses. The mans fat is due to the buffets on Tuesdays
and nachos on Sundays while rooting for home teams. The
sweat is because he exerts himself yelling. He warms to his subject. He talks about black children choosing to stay in the ghetto. Theyre stubborn. They dont want good lives. Its obvious.
Look at their pants.
A paper doll cant stand upright, you dummy. At most a gust of
air might blow it to its feet for fractions of a second.
Sometimes I feel like I have no choice.
Your breath blows me up to my feet and then out of this room.
I land on a savannah. Grow four legs, am running free.
And when you chase me, I turn around. Look you between the
eyes and laugh at your nature.
35
Girl Cousin
This girl was bad. They told her so.
I eavesdropped and learned all
the ways of it.
They called her loud-mouthed.
She talks too much and
no one likes that. No man.
Hush her mouth.
I peeked but never saw her
alone, despite
the big mouth,
the bad slut,
the men bucked.
36
37
38
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Drag
I look like a boy in drag today. You know how drag queens will
walk around their apartments in their robes, not yet dressed or
wigged for the evening and yet not able to go without makeup,
even in their own homes? Thats how I looked just now when I
saw myself in the restroom mirror here at work, with my short
hair and the lip-colored lipstick the department-store beautician
talked me into buying. All I need is a cigarette and a glass of
clear liquor on the rocks.
Maybe I am a boy in drag. Especially here, where I dont feel like
everybody else. I dont want to be the best secretary, or even the
prettiest one.
I say a boy and not a man because this place is full of men. I
dont share their raging urge to compete, to rake in the deals, to
fuck all the women.
But I do want to impress you. If I knew some sort of dangerous
sport, Id do it in the freight elevator right now. A stunt to make
you gasp, laugh, and clap your hands. But I dont know how. Plus
Im wearing these impedimentsa skirt and high heels.
How about we meet near the freight elevator and I kiss you? Or
do a sport with my eyelashes that makes you kiss me? And we
stifle a gasp, giggle, then sigh. Come out to each other as rebels.
Admit were clever enough to hate everyone here. Declare that
we dont care if we get fired for screwing around in the freight
elevator. Were daredevils. Bitter clowns. Stuntmen and tough
guys. And theyre lucky were not in the mood to kick ass.
40
41
Fat Guy
Big boy with the loud ice-jiggling Big Gulp.
Cords rubbing, feet scuffing.
Face sweats, breath drags.
We hear his heart struggle, hear his joints grind together like
seeds in a grandmas molcajete.
Less-fat boys say motherfucker better not die here.
Not clog clean carpets that stretch between cubes.
Skinny CEO makes faces and checks on the premiums, the
company-pay portions.
Cuts down his own portions. Reminder to run.
42
43
Be a Girl
Dont resist that girly shit.
Coat your things in pink and
make your eyes like glossy stars.
Dont deride your frilly thoughts. Cry
vats over hurt puppies, minor
chords or disappointing men.
Avoid unhappy hags who want
their own damaged dollies, will
rip your hair and hold too tight.
Scratch like your familiar would. Reach inside and show your
boiling
blood. And scream the octaves over.
44
45
46
Janis
i.
My mom called from the institution where she lives. Something
had jarred her and she needed to fret about the usual things, of
course, but also to reassess the tragedies and mistakes of her
past. I was home early and alone for once, so I listened to her
longer than I normally would.
Every time I listen to my mom, shes a little bit different, or a lot
different, depending on the kind of drugs shes on, or her point
on a given drugs waxing/waning usefulness. She goes from disconnected to lucid, from panicky to ambivalent, from grounded
in reality to very far above it. Always different, but never well.
This evenings monologue was nostalgic, yet paranoid as ever.
She said she was glad I never got into trouble like my brothers,
that I was always good and strong. She wished she could afford
to send me $50 a month. She was sad about being so old and fat
and ugly. She told me bad dreams about jealous ex-friends she
believed had done her wrong.
She told me a story about something very bad from a long time
ago. Two hippies got into a car with me and my brothers, alone
in the park. Meanwhile, she did something with another hippie
or two. She didnt want to do it, but shed hoped theyd give her
money so she could buy us things wed cried for at the thrift
shop that day. You dont remember that day, she said.
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48
ii.
My mom called yesterday. She was down because age is catching up with her and she looks like she could be a grandma now.
(I have three kids, making her a grandmother of 10 years.)
She said my dad wouldnt want her to move in again, now that
shes so old and ugly. She sighed that she was unable to get
boyfriends anymore, because of her face.
I asked her what shed do if she were in an accident and lost her
limbs, or had her face burned off in a fire. I asked if, after that,
shed still be a person worth knowing. And, if so, why.
Thank you, Precious, for trying to cheer up your old, ugly
mother, she said forlornly.
iii.
Things I think are crazy:
1. Worrying about your looks
2. Worrying about what some man thinks of you
3. Trading sex for anything
4. Worrying about the devil, Nazis, evil coke dealers, sheiks
in Arabia, etc.
Sometimes I act crazy. I admit it.
49
iv.
I only have one good memory about her.
She used to let me play her guitar. Id strum atonally and improvise songs. The songs were always about horses.
My mom would clap enthusiastically after each one. Thats so
good, Precious! Mommys so proud of you!
50
Neigh
You thought I was a horse and so I mightve.
You pictured saddle, then yourself, astride.
You likened windy tresses,
rounded quarters to those parts of me.
Imagined taming, breaking, riding.
Metaphors that applied.
I might be like a horse but not the
ride that youve been thinking.
I feel wind in my hair, my heavy quarters coming round.
You might cut off my hands somehow and
leave me hooves that thunder down. Pound blood
into mud in a vicious pudding.
Teeth that reach too far. A hearty scream.
53
Yesterday at Target
Its the day after Christmas so shoppers are perusing the fiftypercent-off decorations. A little boy accompanies his mother.
She points to the word PEACE in gold plastic.
In Spanish, she asks her son, What does that say? In English,
he tells her Peace. In Spanish, she asks him, What does that
mean? In English, he says loudly, PEACE. She asks him again.
He smirks and does a slight shrug with his hands, at me or at the
invisible camera that must be taking in the scene.
I wanted to tell the woman, dice Paz, so she would know. But
then shed know Id understood their conversation. Seen her
sons disrespect. Guessed that he calls himself a different name
at schoola distortion of his real name thats a word she cant
pronounce.
Shed wonder if I could see her son struggling away from her
arms. Shed wonder from my accent, maybe, if my father was
somewhere sighing.
54
Dog Walk
Beast on a leash rains
destruction on a
galaxy of ants.
My hand on the
leash makes me
like a sort of
god, maybe.
Unmoved. Uncaring.
Only vaguely directing the
wave of misfortune.
55
Toxic Mold
Theres the girl who lives there.
The mold doesnt bother her.
It wont until fifteen years away
and then shell have allergies.
Reasons to host the Thanksgiving,
herself, or to
skip it altogether.
You know youve succeeded when you no longer tolerate.
When your body rejects what you breathed as a child.
56
A Fall
I felt my foot hit wrong on the stair
my weight pitch too far forward of center.
Corrected course but not enough.
A little too late.
I felt my wrist wrench, gripping
the banister.
Ankle bone ground on the edge.
Hip took the weight of far too much of me.
Carpet burns everywhere.
Carpet burns everything.
I heard my own scream
like a scared, angry goat.
I bleated. I called out the
pain, the rage, the regret
of my miscalculation.
57
A Broom Is a Broom
What they mean by elbow grease is the propensity to use the
tools youre given. Thats why all my brooms, whether plastic or
straw, flattened out or beveled edge, are prone to daydream,
leave the work half undone while imagining the future. Better
worlds to brush with tender strokes and not this rush.
My brooms unfocused on the task and I refuse to buy a new one.
My elbows stay clean but can drop a moist tear if someone criticizes dirt Ive left behind. And I might feel bad when I get elsewhere.
58
59
My Superpower Is Leaving
any situation at top speed. And sometimes
leaving makes the people left behind
call you names. They say Bitch. She thinks shes too
good. But my ears are also heroic and turn the
opposite of supersonic.
Can fold against my head so I dont hear. They
fold down like my heart, which contracts to a
wad of steel.
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Pictures of a dick
they make me sick, then
I take out my own camera lickety split
Not because Im dirty
Not because Im clean
But because Im wearing the right brand of jeans
Hey, guys, how bout a fight?
Hey, old man now, how bout a fight?
Here comes a lady in a mini skirt.
She can wibble, she can wobble, she can do the splits
Got herself a job and I bet youre pissed
One, two, three, four
You slapped on your daughter and you called her a whore
Five, six, seven, eight
You slapped your sons face, said hed better be straight
Boys go to family court to
pay more child support
Girls go to bars in
shoes like movie stars.
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Autumn Poem
I lie and say Fall makes me happy with its new beginnings and
red orange splendor
while terrorized and achy in the mornings, which get darker
every week day
The feelings called relief and whats bringing it are light bulbs,
bright games on my cell phone screen,
warm voices of the DJs on the radio who keep me from driving
astray, driving back home, or
coming to a standstill in the middle of the freeway and cowering in the dashboard lights and
crying for the sun. Whats making this okay is thoughts of
starchy foods and parties.
Kill a deer, set sticks on fire. The same mentality. Beat a drum,
draw
spells on the walls. Chant cheery words loudly but well always
be scared of this dark.
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Berries
That man came and lectured us on arm size. On DNA and evolution. On the nature of his brain, which entitled him to leer at
us and couldnt be considered rude.
We saw that he was colorblind. You pitied and fed him. Gave
him some very choice berriesthe best that we had.
He couldnt tell the difference. He didnt say thanks.
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Flirt
You say I flirt too much. You
call me flirt. Wide eyes,
moving lashes, flashing smiles
were how I got taught to be
polite. My mentors pretty
women and my targets
stubborn men.
See what you want.
Say what you wish.
If I wanted you, my ears
would sound like roaring
trains of lions. My tongue would
taste like metal of a pencils end,
or blood. My feet would ride
a wave to you, then bed.
I cant say how itd look to you;
Ive never seen me flirt.
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Sad Shock
A woman who worked in our building killed herself this morning.
I rode up the elevators and escalator with her yesterday morning. We talked and talked about I dont know what. In the ladies
room she fretted she was having a bad hair day. She always said
that.
Every time I went to get water, I glanced through the glass
doors. Like always, she sat there, serene and alone at her desk,
complemented by the floral arrangement and the wall-length
window. A refreshing change of scene.
Someone said she was crying yesterday afternoon in the ladies
room. I didnt seecant imagine it.
I wished aloudoffered the hundred dollars in my savings for the
chance to go back in a time machine to yesterday, to somehow
know what she was thinking, and to somehow change her mind.
They put a white ribbon on the glass doors. The flowers are
drooping. Everyone has red eyes.
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Fluffy
Last night I dreamed of kittens. At least three, each better than
the last. Starting off cute/tiny/fluffy, making me say Aw! and
then progressively becoming cuter, tinier, and fluffier, until I was
nearly in tears. Then they changed into something else. One
became like a faceted glass moving sculpture of a kitten, reflecting cuteness with every step. Throughout each metamorphosis,
they meowed at me softly and held my gaze with their blue or
green eyes.
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Wesley Parks
Wesley Parks, you called my cell phone at 4:41 AM the other
day.
You called again at 4:42.
Used my voicemail to apologize to Rose, Kevin, and the others.
Sorry youd been out so long and that maybe no one had told
them.
You had a seizure, got knocked into a coma lasting more than a
day.
You sounded sincerely apologetic, and maybe also afraid.
Wesley Parks, I called your cell phone today.
Your mother answered.
I asked for you and heard conversation in the background,
maybe you and your dad.
Your mom said youd been in a coma.
I told her about your misdirected phone calls.
Told her about Rose, Kevin, and the others.
Your message that didnt get through.
Your mom said youd been in a coma.
I told her my concerns about you and Rose and Kevin and the
others.
Your voice apologetic.
Your message un-parlayed.
Your fears that were evident, had now become mine.
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Animals
When I was a child the teachers asked us, if we had to be an animal, what kind of animal would we be? And I would always
think I was a baby coyote. But Id lie and say a kitten or a pony
because.
Later I thought, yes, I might be like a cat. In response to that
question, which I continued to periodically ask, once a week or,
at the very most, once a night, right before I fell to sleep.
Later I felt more like a fish, with big dead eyes.
Later a cat again, but a really tired or old one.
Now I dont know. Havent asked myself in years. Which makes
sensea baby coyote wouldnt.
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Blue Eyeliner
Whenever a relationship ends I have to
search for blue eyeliner. In pencil form, at
Walgreens or Eckerds. Cheap but not slutty.
Not navy, not aqua or teal, but
bright blue, like the sailors saluting or
cocktails in swimming pools.
A color that says I dont need you.
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Party Bears
Before I learned it was a metaphor for the stockmarketa piece
of art that rich couples used to put in the bedrooms of babies
this print of a painting of bears would scare me.
It accosted me in our office. A thousand bears dancing in the
forest. The ones who arent dancing are serving wine or cooking
fish. Some are just standing there, watching the dancers and
touching on each other. A big freaking forest bear rave, with
bears in different colors. Black, white, brown.
Did my boss bring it in, from his collection of less-liked
antiques? Or was it simply there, like a poltergeist in a ranch
house that was built on an Indian burial ground?
The secretary whod been there longest walked over to discover the cause of my distress. Oh, that bugs you? I never even noticed it.
What were they doing, I wanted to know. What is this, some
kind of cult? Why are there so many of them? And why are some
of them white, like polar bears? And why is this one wearing
an apron? Are all the other ones supposed to be naked? The single art history course Id taken at UT was no help here.
The oldest secretary considered my questions.
Theyre there to have sex. Theyre having sexual encounters. Look at those
twotheyre about to get it on.
I was shocked.
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She asked which bear Id be. Said Im that one. She pointed at one
of the dancing bears. And youre that one. She pointed at a white
bear leering down at something unseen in the mob.
I said no, and I pointed to the most innocuous-looking brown
bear I could find in the foreground. Then I drew myself up to a
very straight posture and walked back to my prison of a desk.
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Ants
The other day I was working on a story. Every time I stopped
working and went to the bathroom, thered be a giant ant on the
bathmat, standing there, waiting.
I dont know if the ants were trying to tell me that the story was
fine the way it was, or that I should go ahead and take it in the
direction I was envisioning. Or maybe they were there to be
supportive and inspiring.
But, either way, I had to kill them all. I apologized profusely to
each one before smashing it under the bath mat as hard and
quickly as I could.
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Morning Game
When it was time to turn off the TV, we played TV. We played
Woody Woodpecker, taking turns being its namesake. We played
Price is Right, using cushions from the couch, stacked and offset to
Create an aisle.
Come on down! wed say to each other. Youre the next
contestant on the Price is Right!
Before you said that, you had to say the contestants name. It
occurred to me that I needed one. Not the name Id learned to
write in schoolnot Gwendolyn Zepeda. That wasnt a
contestant.
I announced myself, then. Wendy Reynolds, come on down.
Youre the
next contestant on the Price is Right! Then we sang the music
as I
tripped down the cushion aisle. My brother
cried until I also christened him. Said, Zonky Reynolds, come on
down! because whoever heard of a contestant named
Zonky alone, or Enrique Zepeda for that matter. He
smiled as he ran off the couch, down the cushions, to the
mattress where we slept and ate cereal and
watched TV.
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Aunt Sylvia
On Friday nights, when there was nothing else to do, she used
to tell me, Go get the keys from your daddy. Lets see the Freak
Show.
She meant that we would cruise Westheimer near Montrose,
where all the prostitutes, drag queens and pretty young boys
walked the streets and sometimes climbed into the other cars.
Afterwards, we always went to Baskin Robbins, where she would
watch me eat a banana split with the most eclectic combination
of flavors my thirteen-year-old mind could contrive.
This was after her mother had died. After shed babysat and
cleaned up after her mother, who was busy tearing out of life in
a hilariously awful rampage of dementia and incontinence.
This was before Id become a real teenager and fought my way
away, out of our house.
This was the quiet time for her, when she ventured out with me
to see marvelous things. She carefully monitored my growth
into someone who would go on to see more, later, without her.
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