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writer's block (Free verse) by Zoetrope
Stop hoarding them, he tells me, use them,
and what he means is stop burying them
in my mind, in the back yard beneath a hunterâs moon
or harvest moon or whatever burgeoning moon it is,
because Iâm rich with it,
Iâve plenty, and burying doesnât always have to mean
the red, limp thing that happened so long ago,
itâs all silly superstition anyway, this refusal, this control,
and why are you so hung up on it,
thereâs no need to save, to be so sparing,
so deliberate, so careful
you have "limn" and "luminesce" and "oratory" and "misalign,"
youâve got "restraint" and "parsimonious," too,
and "halt" and "fear" and "notgoodenough" and thereâs always "guilt,"
over what you did and what youâre not doing andâ
but all he means this 45-billed-as-an-hour
is stop thinking so much, stop scratching after words,
after the right way to say things, after the right glib sounds,
the world is not just aural, not just careful,
itâs not control and adept and right, itâs wet and messy,
itâs the noises that sex makes, unpretty slapslapslap,
itâs breach and afterbirth too,
and here, just write something down, let go and just write.
And heâs right, I know this with my thinking mind,
but my unthinking gut feels cramped and twittery
and it wants to go and turn on a TV somewhere
and not do this,
not right now, maybe later when the flow is going,
when the rhythm suggests the lines, why not,
because better to be careful, to be right,
to be riding-and-not-ridden,
control, control/alt/delete, start over or just stop, really,
at a blinking cursor,
at the blank screen.
So I start doodling and thinking about movies
and what movie Iâd be,
and I decide that it would be one of those French films
with spare color where a red balloon means despair
and the underwear are all old fashioned & everyone smokes,
endlessly, smokes Gallois, or those other brown cigarettes
that always make me think of Casablanca,
and they all look unutterably bored and elegant
even though theyâre mostly smallish big-nosed men in their
shirtsleeves.
Tell me what youâre thinking now, he says,
because he can see Iâm not writing anything,
and Iâm feeling panicked, and he always can somehow tell
and always asks that, what are you feeling,
and I donât want to mention the cigarettes,because now
I want one and Iâm planning to go to the bathroom
and sneak one out the window, not a Gallois
or anything exotic, just a plain old Camel Light,
but I told him I quit again, and Iâm afraid
that if I mention the French smokers he might realize
that, lately, Iâve begun to smell like tobacco,
that stale, delicious smell that reminds me of hangovers
and too much coffee and being weak.
I want to be weak.
I want to stop worrying so much about everything,
to stop being the red balloon or at least
be the kind of balloon that goes sailing off gaily,
not worrying about being driven by the wind into a tree
or impaled on a transmitter somewhere or that goes too highâ
I want to go too high and maybe even pop
if altitudeâs the reason,
because whatâs wrong, what could be so wrong
about exploding from sheer height?
And I stand up and look at him, sitting there
with his pinstriped legs crossed one over the other
and his comforting belly and his neat beard
and his little pad and the pen that never scratch
scratch scratches until Iâm leaving
and I tell him, I smoking again, you know,
I lied when I said I quit,
and he just looks at me, with that carefully nonjudgmental look he gets
when I admit
that Iâm throwing up again
or havenât been to work or left bed in almost two weeks
or was thinking maybe I should just go back to The Bastard,
and I stand there with my arms hanging straight down,
counting on that cigarette and feeling
like a mime whoâs forgotten her lines.
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