20100724

Dan Dan Beach

sketches of the marianas



(practice notes)

I think of someone when my nose gets the sea. Across the dark blue we can scan a leg of saipan and lao lao and off to the end the little shape of forbidden island. They point out some of the buildings they see. I’m drawn to how the water’s all shallow up front and lapping against our zorries and shoes but in a not too far distance, it just drops, all the shallowness drops and opens to a dark ocean with many mean waves rising and crashing and swallowed down. It’s right there. The ocean.

“This is Dan Dan beach,” Cabrera says, and I’ve never been here before.



We took some turns around the little roads and houses and around Dan Dan and beside the street where the Browns used to live was a dirt road leading into this poorass junkyard. Joel asked if this was private property. Cabrera goes, “Ya, but I’ve been here since I was like…”

It doesn’t look to nice, dirt road, puddles and goats in fences and Joel goes, “OH, did you see that a deer!” I didn’t see it. It must’ve been behind a fence or in that mound of dirt we pass. We passed old blue garbage bins and all sorts of rust. We see a house, and beyond it I see blue. It’s concrete and gray. I wouldn’t like the junkyard scenery living here, I think, and then we stop at some boonies. And I don’t know why. When we get out, I see that there’s a trail. I’m thinking, Hmm, I’ve never been here before.

On we went and it goes down, not to steep. Me and Joel get a smile out of it. It’s new to us. Cabrera the trailblazer gets down ahead. I like the leaves. I ask Joel the trees names. He doesn’t know. The leaves are brown and long and curl inward to give this oval shape. A leaf hugging itself. They are the floor we walk on. Joel tells me to stay clear from any spots that are clear of leaves. He says that’s the spirit spot or something. He mentions taotaomona.

The hike down is made up of limestone rocks against the steeper drops. Ropes lay draped on them. We go down a couple of those steep spots, and one last final one before the jungle’s not overhead and were walking along high grass and there you go: beach.

It’s beautiful, like I said. And there’s trash everywhere. Like colorful assortments and layers washed up against the beach, zorries, rope, bottles, cans, they’re on every inch. It doesn’t bother too much since we’re just visiting. With it gone, the beach would be the place…cos I like how the crabs crawl all over, Joel jokes they’re making him dizzy with motion sickness, he’s crouching at different spots and angles working his camera. I’m so dumb and prettyboy that I’m wearing jeans and my vneck and nike dunks. But like I said, I breathe the sea in. It’s hot out.

Let me tell you more. The beach is pretty small and the sand disappears around some jutting rock. It shrinks out on both sides. One of the rocks looks like Old man by the sea. I don’t see it. But Joel ever observant sees that, and goes, “You can see the nose sort of and mouth…”

I like the beach and get in a little fantasy of coming back here with a troop of youth with plastic bags and working it till it’s just white sand and crabs. What’s special is how the rock cliff goes along atop the beach. Before it bends out and traps the sand, it sits and is sort of smoothed out at the bottom into white bumpy seats where you’d lean on or sit down under a good shadow, and watch our ocean.

I think Dang we need a beach clean up.

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20091213

dinner conversations

a poem



Hear
They’re fighting again, it makes the girl run to her room and the boys
Stare at the tv, ignore it, it’s happened before
The blow-up and at its root is the green
Thing, that dirty flimsy thing
You could tear it into soft pieces but why would you
Why would you when you need gas and
That shirt look’s really nice, man, also I’m kinda
Hungry, also, the kid we’ve sent abroad needs
His lunch and dinner or starve
I am shoveling the rice, biting the Chinese sausage
When I hear
Them
I see them
They’re right with me at the table but
I hear them
And this terrible
Thing
Has sounded off throughout the years
I scoop more rice.
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20091119

the aircon is dead

a poem







I need the gusts of San
Vicente I find on the balcony

You can have me in
my boxers

You lift the yaps

Mami!Mami!Ah!Ah!
look at
Ray!Ray!--Boy.
come over here.

of the laundry creatures to the
the worn screen door of my ear

Flies walk in thru the screen if they
please

A million angry engines growl
past every night

the bitch barks at everyone

our phone shrieks for money

Throwing the trash I tilt back
these slow ghouls in the night
keep the moon to themselves

I wanna spill of the
second floor and rest my
zorries on the parking lot.
The cars will go wow

Look
a black pickup is
hounded off the road
by red-blue flickering

You hand me their dialogue.
"Yes, Sir?"
"You've been speeding
your headlights
you're drunk
you suck at driving."
"Ok, sir."
"Here's your ticket. be safe."

If
my boxers would slip
to my heels.
run your cold
fingers all over me.
sweep me off my feet
o wind
like
a
lover

WHOOSH me past the sad clouds

ease me on the moon

Alone.




San Vicente, Saipan
Oct. 30.
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20091010

typhoon melor

prose/poetry composition



The boards tacked and the steel shutters across the windows in the gray before the storm that we hear is for sure, for sure coming, so our college and schools and the offices close, our markets’ lots full up with cars, our last minute shopping, last drive round the island, the private school principal photographs his school for the insurance people, the tardy parents has their son looking out over the vacant playground, and the wind is stirring things and the reports are stirring people, but I don’t think to worry, and I think it’s a good thing now—Ma’s gonna force Pa to drive us around in the beating whips, the beating laps of rain, rippling blur over the windshield---YES, please.

The fridge matai’d right before the storm, and all its insides turned sour. The ice has melted the meat bad, the vegetables dank, the whole smell as you open its door in the morn and go oh shit, why now? But just this evening, the little Korean man, dark skinned, no speaky English too good “You fridgerator broken?”—Yes. So the five foot man and his tall Filipino friend drag the honking metal construction as I clear the way and part the zorries at the door aside, one-two-three heave and it’s out the door down the balcony and worked into a vacant flat. They drag a working one back in, so all is good, we didn’t go shopping but we’ll see, we’ll last, Ma has been praying for one for a long time, maybe this is the monster worth writing about.
MEH-LOR.MEE-LOR I mouth it—Melor, our supertyphoon, I wait for you tonight. But there’s no sign, some rain fall, and gray above and the anticipation.







In the typhoon
A chinese man and his umbrella
Tug-of-war

On the windshield, the pelts are circles, they get tired, lose shape, slide down, from his left comes the wiper.

Driving through garapan, streets are swamped, waiting for trees to fall down.

Now its been raining for hours.

Beyond my screen door
The typhoon
Inward from the door
I type
I am the audience.
I participate.

The tree bows. And bobs its damp head. Under the harsh shower, it swings.

The parking lot is an ocean. The road’s the rivers.
The sky matches the road and pavement.

Ah.
The tree is a broccoli in Melor’s cold stir-fry.

My brothers dart to Lao Lao Bay. A great day today, shirtless and sprinting, touching puddles before pavement.

I find a swamp in the hall.

Running on an empty tank, the steel shutters over the gas stations are telling us to go home.
One is open on middle road. Four long lines of cars.
The man filling his tank is stewpid slow.

The shower has stopped.
The wind is in the green.

5:45 Boys, its furreal.

The light flickers three times then out.

Out on the balcony, I stand on the stool then I sit back down when I see the landlord look at me odd. I hug my knees, the chill, the rain tickles my skin.

Moments before I laid on the couch, looking out in our blackout, the light outside is bluish gray or grayish blue or just me and melor.



But Ah! It’s returned. A time out. The roles reverse, approaching Half-past Six it’s Dark.
Before dark a pair of red wails dancing through the village. It was the ambulances.

I’m alone in the flat.
But I detach, trying to be as good as not here. The phone rings. Success is when it’s just Melor.

The ladle scoops the edges of the creamy lugaw with scallions. A warm pot.
The ladle steals from Pa’s scallion rice-cream.

But before I can succeed. My family’s back. (Not like I was really gonna go zen-mode. Next time?)
They’re back. This means the AC’s back. The TV’s back. The computer’s back.

Writing is active detachment. If I could participate without participating without pen…I think I would. I should.

What separates me and you is the span of a pen.

The chicken is thawing. The chicken is thawing in the sink. Pa slaps it on the board. The slick cold fatty skin pulled off. Hammer the knife through the bone. The boys have brought friends over.

“They’ve finished all the bread…”—My sister.

Thatack! Thatack! thru the cold chicken.

I hear laughter in our bed room. Two little beds. One bunk bed. Two more guests. Usual additional lodgers for the weekend.
Hannah is yapping hyperactive HOLA-NIHAO-HELLO-BONJOUR
I haven’t tickled her little soft belly yet.
Mama’s become a lancheru now(Farmville)

Phoothoowhoothewthewthwoothwoo whistling wind All doors are closed.




What to text?

I need your attention.







The lights blink. Scares Ma off her farm. PC off.

The boys wanted to meet girls at Winchell’s.--donut filling--
“What are there mother’s thinking?—Ma—“Even your Pa planned to send them there!” Typhoon doesn’t dampen hormones.
She’s slicing the garlic with a scowl, gossiping with Pa about a death of a haole.

Cold and alone and dead and dead a long time in hotel room.
He was a regular at church.


7:00 pm
“You need ginger?”
“I need garlic, onions, peel the radish.”
Ma rubs her eye with a bending wrist. Her blinding onion. Exasperation. Ma and Pa unappreciated master chefs every night.
“Hannah get me some water please?”
The ugly brown scabs fall off circumskin this radish in her hand



What to text?

I need your attention.



“Dennis, cook rice. Dennis cook rice.”

Snaps me out of a fantasy.
Pa’s scowling at the unchopped raddish. Ma retired to her bed to read. Lazy.
Thatud! Slicing them at an angle. Pa’s red. I see the bulb on his shiny red head.
He says, “I’ll cook the rice.”
“Why?”
“I’ll just cook it.”
Ok.
“This rice is the same from lunch, right?” Pa scooping out sticky leftovers into bowl. Washes pot. Water gurgles. Work off rice with sponge and fingers. Then rinse. I know. I don’t have to watch. Lift the trash lid. Wet yuck rice dumped in. He scrubs again. He is our Mr. Clean. Mister meticulous. I would’ve had the pot in the cooker by now. This is Pa tonight. is Pa every time he cooks

Writing is a lonely activity. “Dennis put the candles out.”

I stretch on my sister’s bed with her stuffed friends. “Hannah will you stop jumping?” “Hannah, you’re too close to the TV.”

“Dennis, hush, turn off the light.”

Stupid tv show. Stupid catchy song laptop-noise. Follow the sudden spite it leads back to Me Aware is alone

The butane stove is on, its little blue flame under black deep round stove. I smell. I hear my stomach.

SUDDENLY

“You crying?!” “Why you crying?!” He lights up loud “Why you crying, ah?!’ He booms.
Hannah’s pout runs away and she runs away to her room. I hear her sniffing. Ma storms out. TV off. Ma scolds “Why don’t you listen. We already told you.” I hear Hannah’s clogged nose sniff-whimper/hiccup. “Stop!” She stops. Ma needs her sleep.
I know this happened before. All this happened it already has it already will—the bewildering mundane.

Aware is alone and watching
“Dennis open the door.” The smoke from the fry is too strong.
I find the typhoon still there.

I make ripples in the bowl. Looking up, I see the little bathroom window, a screen of dust with some holes and along the corner where wall meets wall there are spider webs—specks in them like rat droppings, bugs done with bugging, a hammock for the dead, one bug legs kicking—with a finger-hook I could twirl it apart round my pointy, cotton candy.
Webs look like age, and these one’s have come from nowhere, one thread blows broken below the screen, hanging on to wall, a flag. But I know they’ve been here awhile
all I had to do was look up. Aware is Whitman and he is in all


The stir-fry gets going. The loud tsssssssssssss!shimmer of oil when the garlic and onions are put in.

Pa’s procedure and tips
-let the wife be the kitchen helper
-fry chicken first and separate
-fry onions and garlic till brown translucent
-add washed clean radish cutss
-add Chinese chili sauce and black bean sauce, oyster sauce, Chinese wine
-half-spoon of sugar
-put a lid on it
(I sneak a piece of chicken, in my mouth soft tender delish)
-add some water
-add some chicken oil from pot of separated chicken into the stew
-add a little more water

Pa takes a break, flips over the newspaper on the table; he scowls “turn on the aircon very hot” The perspiration on his shiny head

-add chicken
-stir around, mix contents, spoon ladle into bottom, bring the below to the top, top to the below, let every piece of chicken taste the stew
-add more of each sauce and wine to help chicken
-put lid on, steam

Now the radish are soaked in the brown, you can see the stew run in them like veins over their skin. The stew is bubbling

-most important, be Chinese




Next day, 6:00 pm

“Batt, that typhoon was minor.”

It rained on the Chinese moon festivals, but when it all cleared



In tonight
The milky bulb
blemishes and all


During school one day, She said “Fachina!”
“Yknow,like a war cry, but it sounds like, you know…”
Tera-cotta warriors shaking the dust off their shoulders and armor and mustaches, charging and shouting—FACHINAAA!
Happy belated china.

My chinky scowl
My chinky smile


Melor hushed me into the house so I could shut up and watch.

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20080929

conversation with a stranger


got a ride back here

i don't i cant remember what you looked like
you were overweight and had a mustache and i think you had some funky haircut you are a teacher and you have high blood and a bad back and you just came from the gym and i should go sometime and yea i plan to go soon and you were gonna go on medication and you were gonna be dependent on it but you reasoned the implications and consequences you thought about how they might not have the medicine if you decided finally to go somewhere you asked my grade laughed that i was a senior it's good you are right there it's almost over you said it goes by fast i said yea it does you mentioned how your senior year seemed like last year. you laughed.

you laughed after every self-deprecating comment you laughed

about how you had all these big dreams and how one thing led to another and how you tried to apply to these colleges but, you know, you didn't know all the requirements how you took a course in guam how a teacher is what you got and you laugh and
that is what you are but what you are was that friend tonight
we laughed and i said it was good how you saw that you lost nine pounds after a run on the treadmill and you were smiling and laughing about it, how you checked your blood pressure and it was normal now and now you just had to keep it up you had to keep off the rice like you've been the past three weeks and the coffee with sugar, stick with sugarless sweeteners, live off the sweet potato and wheat bread and i said it was good and i was happy for your victory for your lost weight and return to a right blood pressure those small things big things make you feel so good and this victory made me feel so good and i said thanks thanks when i left you in the lot and i wonder where you head what you are and if it lasts but what is important and what i wont forget is that you won today you won you won you won you were smiles and laughter and you were good and i wont forget this time around and how good even vicariously that feels thank you thanks thanks
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