Metallica

I developed an appreciation for all of their earlier albums, but it seems to me that they hit a sweet spot in ‘89. I was 7 at the time and couldn’t have cared less about this music they called heavy metal. In kindergarten I suppose, a naive kid like most others if they were in a good place. Sometimes I get the notion to travel back in time and hand myself some album or another. “Save it.” For what, exactly? Hell if know. Never mind that I’d be some bearded guy approaching a kindergartner with a Metallica cassette. But if I’d listened to the music at that point in time, even just a song, who knows what might have happened. I might not be here now, writing this. When I think of it that way I dismiss the fantasy and return to where I am. Focus. Listen.

Edvard Munch, Madonna, 1896-1902, litho in five colours

I like my naked women in art depicted in sharp light/dark contrast. It isn’t necessarily sexual (although of course it is), but it evokes certain emotions. The innate darkness of the soul, you might say. I’ve always craved that darkness but wasn’t prepared for it in the past. I yearn to be the contrast. To me, it is beauty. The perfection of imperfection.

exhausted

I return exhausted, frustrated with the state of my body. Though youth has allowed me retain my strength, I have little stamina to speak of. It becomes work to remain physically dominant. Energy no longer rushes forth as it did in the great floods of the past. I look in the mirror and see my once lush hairline thinning in favor of pasty white skull. I take note of the first couple of light hairs in my beard and watch as the surrounding field becomes lighter, tinted red, chestnut, and gold, all leading to the inevitable gray bush. I flex my hand and my coarse skin shines beneath the sunlight, allowing me to see the many fine lines and scars. My body tenses and I feel muscles flare up beneath layers of fat, layers which have been stored for a winter that has never come. The weight of age begins to feel like one. I consider my future, my assets and holdings, what I would leave for the wife I couldn’t fathom and the children who seem to call on me from some distant date of birth. I remember my past and its opportunities taken and missed. Time moves onward.

What is age if not an opportunity to gain an understanding? Never a full understanding, but simply an accumulation of experiences that form the concept of a life. Will the past be fondly remembered or despised? Will it be regret or rejoice? Of course. If life has been good, how can there be grievances? And when faced with continual disappointment is there a reason to venture forth at all? It is all answered with every passing minute, and hour, and onward to days, weeks, months, years, until each step forward becomes less a burden than a blessing. An opportunity to look back on one’s time and remember that it has happened, but not lament that it has passed. If alive, live.

I do not know if that is possible—accepting the progression of time. Not for some, I know. Not for me, once, sometimes still. But I look out across this river near here called the Willamette, where ships, boats, kayaks, and canoes flow along its wide expanse, and watch them move onward, whether they choose a direction or not. I feel the wind whip through my hair and wonder what it would feel like if it wasn’t there. I feel my muscles and see a sun that has watched over every moment in our time. I see a future that is ever-changing and think that nothing lasts forever. I blow warm air into my palms and smile because it’s alright, it’ll last as long as I remember.

Ghosts In Your Home

We arrive late because I was watching a television show about shrimp.

We arrive and inside there are many people everywhere and they don’t do things I like. When it’s time to laugh they are serious and when something is serious they laugh like idiots. I am tired in the way I am tired when I am talking to people who talk about money.

“Ahmed, you’re here! And Meg, goodness, you look fabulous! That dress. That dress!”

My wife is Meg and Pat loves her so they invited us together though they wanted Meg. Many people want Meg and maybe men but I don’t care in the way a husband should. I am a husband to her like circus dogs or boys who wait in parks for men to pay them money for pleasant things. My wife screams. She is happy.

I walk away and through the living room where two women and two men talk at each other. They are on crushed velvet as green as plastic holiday trees. The walls have paintings in gold frames and the walls are melting on purpose. Everyone is moving their heads around so much and their eyes are going to leap from their heads and kiss. I cannot stand it, I move on. My stomach tells me I need to find a place.

In the kitchen I see gold brass everywhere. A track around an island of dead oak and granite seas with many floating ships of absolute beauty. Track lights from one end of the kitchen to the other that serve to create a moody lightmosphere. I go for the first plate, I reach for a toothpick. I run my tongue along the chorus in my mouth and moisten my lips.

Pretty little jumbo shrimp. They sit in a circles, biggest, bigger, and big. I eat them one at a time like women. So beautiful, little jumbo shrimp. So pretty. I eat them and I love them. I move across the table where other little ladies wait for me. Little corn, little bits of cube steak, little weenies. Meg appears from the living room, looking for me. I feel my head spin. I eat more shrimp and all the shrimp are gone when she is next to me.

She asks, “Do you concern yourself with the plights of others?”

I’m too busy eating my little ladies to answer and I shrug. She pats my forearm when she walks away. Her hand is wrinkles and blue.

Pat passes by with a wine bottle and goes into the living room where someone is guffawing like chunky potatoes. I move a corn in and I place it between my teeth. I move my jaw from side to side, roll the corn like a nubbly little log of joy, and strip it away layer by layer until the little corn lady is torn to bits and down my gullet, like chum and I am a shark, come baby. Chunky potatoes again, waddles and a lot of glub.

Someone says, “Jeez, Ahmed. Sit down.”

I don’t know him. I want to eat him and his face but spit him back out, into the toilet, into the shit. Little pictures hang on the walls just above beige tiles that run from the middle of the wall down to the floor like the golden path. I am meant to be here, with my ladies. I feel a groan and I know I should not stop.

Outside, on the deck, music is playing. It makes me want to vomit. Boom boom boom boom boom. They like earthquakes and they live in the wrong place. Go find your booms and leave me in silence here where the action is. I feel the booming in my head and stomach. It rattles me like cocktails in a blender. A constant woosh.

The cube steak is very nice. The marinade that Pat chose is exquisite. She knows how to dress them up and make them squee, little ladies in pretty red and brown dresses. A dash of rosemary somewhere in it, I can tell. It sits in a pool in the middle of my tongue and I allow it to drown before down, down it goes. I’ve stopped using toothpicks. Cube steak in my mouth, down my throat. Wet little chunky bits tra la la.

I sit down after all. He is gone but I see his face laughing at me from the toilet. I breathe heavy and something feels strange for a moment but it becomes better when I see more plates, more of them.

The bar stool lets me lean against the wall with the plate in my hand. Little carrots roll left and right as I try to steady it. Little carrots, what is the matter? You will come in here. And I laugh to myself when I look outside and see that no one is eating. They sit around the wood table stained in green and talk about inane things with glasses scattered across the battlefield between them. They laugh like the lobsters Pat boiled as they bathed to death. I look forward to their big juicy tails. They will be very nice. They make me feel good, like marmalade on pork loin. My stomach is screeching. I can see the refrigerator opening a portal into the universe where I lie in a pool of sauce and drink it like blood. The sky is ambrosia and when I stand naked and look up to the blueberry moon until it all explodes and comes down into my mouth. I place my hand on the granite to steady myself when my legs stop remembering what they do.

My hands, look. They are so colorful. My wife returns from the living room and looks at me and my hands.

“What are you doing? You are embarrassing me. Stop and go wash.”

“Alright, honey.”

I smile enough to make her walk away. I move to the sink. The water turns itself on and out it comes but I want to swallow all the water in the world so I put my face sideways enough to almost break my neck so I can fill my cheeks. The water wets me. I almost fall and the water leaves my face covered in glue. It rolls down to my shirt.

I lean against the cabinet and belch out the spirits of my ladies. When Pat passes by with the roast she stops and screams silence when she should be praying to me like a human god. I reach up and take it. My hands burn and so does my face as I tear it to shreds, such goodness. They try and hold me down, take my roast, but I stand and swing her around and we dance. She steps so lightly. When they disappear into the living room others come in from outside and stand across the island staring at me, their hands on metal stools and granite. I fall and we lie together, oh goodness. I feel my stomach complain and something new wants to come up and outside of me. I don’t want to let it and lie still for such a long time until I fall asleep.

female ghost shrimp

I sometimes look at creatures and pause for a moment to consider the fact of nothing came something, that billions of years ago there was an explosion of stardust and over a relatively short amount of time gravitational collapse and thermonuclear fusion got the solar system going, and then accretion, colliding mass like ships in the night, forming some bonds that lasted and led to more bonds and more build-up until the heavies near the middle and gorgeous gases on the outskirts, until eventually the stars aligned for one little spot in the (known) universe and brought about the spark of life and the elements it needed to survive, thrive, and stretch its evolutionary legs in search of the bigger and the better, splitting one to two to four to billions and branching off when the old ways were not as efficient and there was opportunity for growth beyond the confines of the sea, the land, the air, leading not to the greatest of any one thing but to more life than my glorified brain can fathom and to the inevitable:

“Eventually, helium in the core will exhaust itself at a much faster rate than the hydrogen, and the Sun’s helium burning phase will be but a fraction of the time compared to the hydrogen burning phase. The Sun is not massive enough to commence fusion of heavier elements, and nuclear reactions in the core will dwindle. Its outer layers will fall away into space, leaving a white dwarf, an extraordinarily dense object, half the original mass of the Sun but only the size of the Earth. The ejected outer layers will form what is known as a planetary nebula, returning some of the material that formed the Sun to the interstellar medium.”

And the scattered remains of all of us with it. Fucking beautiful.

Your view

Your view: the setting sun, bare branches, squirrels dashing about, wooden balcony slats, a screen door and its glass counterpart, mint green carpet, the very tip of a laundry fresh pillow.

My view: the loveliest hair, yours, glints of sweat on your shoulder blades, and a swarm of bright colors as all sense of restraint escapes me.