Monday, October 14, 2013

Not Those Timid Souls

Sometimes I wish all I ever had to do is watch Netflix. Perhaps one day.

My name is Bea and I love television and film. I love The Daily Show and Colbert, Sherlock, How I Met Your Mother, The Office, Parks and Recreation, New Girl, and Breaking Bad. My favorite movies are too many to list, but I will post about them when it's relevant and when I watch great new ones. I mention these things because I really think that a person's preference (or dislike) of certain TV shows or movies says so much about them.

I'm not sure what else to say at the moment and there's so much pressure (eek), so here are two poems I've written instead. Which is funny, because I've always sort of hated poetry. It's a love-hate relationship. Here is my first actual poem, one that I like and that actually feels to me the way a poem should feel, and the other is an assignment we had to do for my creative writing class where we describe ourselves in unconventional ways with things and objects, in the style of Edward C. Corral. 

The first poem was inspired by a quote by Theodore Roosevelt, which ends:
"...Who at worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who knew neither victory nor defeat."


Not Those Timid Souls

She is covered in goodbyes.
Daring
Bared
She knows defeat
He looks like pity. He stares,
She is his laughter. She is:
At, with,
because of.
Eyes-squeezed
Clothed in winks,
The tattered remains of second chances.
Her hours drip with him.

That suitcase, yellow leather
Held him inside.
Skin on slippery muscle
Limbs raw from friction
In the supple leather of this shell
The suitcase stores him
Scrawled in red felt tip
Her hand is goodbye for now,
What she will say
He will believe. There is no
Space for this suitcase. Three
Years is so many
Hours that drip.
He wants like wanting. Not choice
Coarse sutures and
Twine

Hope rots
With trench foot years
They
are a crimson almost

Not those timid souls


A Self-Portrait

I'm long river and green.
      I'm filthy prospector gold
and campfire coals. I'm red
     and reading
hands grasped to an eagle and parrot
     in the banlieue. Salt pours, sticking to my
eyelash

     and gluing my teeth. I'm
a fisherman
     on a boulder in
underwater. I am a document
     half-silent
but louder than half
     an eaten typewriter

soft from repeated washings
     with bleach unpasteurized
milk on plaster and 
     splinters
rosy yogurt drips
     on my birkenstocks

creaking in bulges
     and eloquent growls
portraying babble
     comprehensible
I'm small country
     kitchen. Beached crab
and too much small.

1 comment:

  1. You write awesome poems! Write me a poem, please (but then you'd be wrong when you said you will never write another poem)! Anyway, watch Netflix to your heart's content; life is too short!

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