Wednesday, November 01, 2023

31.10.2023

From time to time, I find myself suffused with a deep longing to feel closer to my Judaism. 

Tonight, I dug out an old, pocket-sized sefer tehillim, put it into a blue, velvet pouch, and placed it in the army green satchel that's recently, for reasons of practicality, supplanted my handbag. 

I searched through my dusty, disordered bookshelf for an old friend in A B Yehoshua, couldn't find it, and settled on a beaten up second (or third? ) hand copy of Amos Oz's "My Michael", purchased at Dani Books on Ibn Yisrael on a bored, rainy, winter afternoon in Jerusalem. It now sits beside me on the bed. I may or may not re-read it, but that's not the point; it's a friend. 

I resolved to say the Shema before sleep, and sought out Shoah documentaries on YouTube, to put on after the Shlomo Artzi concert to which I'm currently listening. 

I know the images and stories will only intensify the painful feelings of trauma I'm currently experiencing, along with the rest of klal am yisrael, which, right now, is exactly the point. This, too, is a deep part of my Judaism.

My Judaism, molded on both sides of the sea (to paraphrase Achinoam Nini), is Friday night candles and dinner with my family (when they were alive,) before going out with friends; it's Shlomo Artzi, Amos Oz, Kavveret and Chumos, Kasha varnishkes, Bamba, and mezuzot on every door whose klafei have never once been checked. It's the occasional bracha when I think of it, and my collection of magnei David that always make me feel powerful when I wear them. 

It's the stories my parents and grandparents told me that live in me in softened, pink hues, with rough edges so sharp they still cut deep.

It's so much of the trauma I, and my parents, and their parents, and so on, "midor ledor" have had woven into every cell of our being. The trauma is important, you see. It is the ner tamid that burns forever and keeps us warm in this cold world. 

It's the scab that never heals, that at times, like now, I pick, just to see the blood. 




Sunday, October 29, 2023

מולדת

כאן בביתנו גר אח שלי
זה גם את הבית של אחותי
ואמא, ואבא, גם סבתה שלי
 וגם את הסבא, ולפעמים, 
הוא גם את הבית של הבני דוד שלי
הארץ שלנו
כל כך קטנה
והמרפקים שלנו
הם תמיד חבולים

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

24.10.2023

This world has consumed my resolve 

Like a handful of the 

Crumbs of chips

The only remainders

At the bottom

Of a Pringles can. 


Sunday, October 22, 2023

22.10.2023

Can we go home now? 

There's no good rides, and the food is terrible and

I'm out of tickets anyway. 

I'd looked forward to this for so long, 

But the funhouse mirrors are all cracked, and

The paint is peeling.

The ferris wheel is rusted and I don't trust it, and

Even the teacups are out of order. 

How many times can we play that  game? 

The ping pong ball will

Never fit into the bottle.

I've had my fill of funnel cakes.

Can we leave now? This place is too loud.

I've a headache, and I want to rest. 



Saturday, October 21, 2023

21.10.2023 II

In line at the grocery store

There was a couple in front of me

She pushed the cart while he

He scratched her back

Gently through her coat

And she gave in to fatigue

Or affection

Or both, and her head fell to the side that he was on 

They shared conversation

That no one else could hear

How much, I thought

They looked like we once did. 

21.10.2023

I wear you like a scarf 

In winter, you keep me warm

But in summer

You itch my neck

And I wish that I could take you off.

Saturday, October 14, 2023

14.10.2023

 If these horrors break you open

as they do me

Let yourself be broken

Let yourself be open

Humanity is a river in which we live

Let it in

Let it fill the

Spaces between your organs

Let it fill your organs

Let it take you over until there is

No more you. 

You are us.  

We are you. 

There is no difference. 

No difference at all.

Friday, October 13, 2023

13.10.2023

 Today is Hamas' "Day of Rage"

Today, I have therapy downtown. 

Today, I'm wearing my blingiest Magen David. 

Today, I am afraid.

I'm afraid, but I won't be made 

to hide. 

And even if I could hide, why should I?

Why should my lot be any different from that of my 

Brothers, sisters and siblings who cannot hide? 

Because they are charedi 

Or because they live in Re'im

Or a thousand other ways 

in which we are separated from the world. 

True, maybe it's guilt: 

That I'm here in NY, 

While so many of my loved ones are still in our homeland. 

It probably is, but nevertheless. 

I am Re'im.

I am Nova.

I am Kfar Aza.

I'm Tel Aviv.

I'm a Zionist.

I'm an Israeli. 

I am a Jew.

הנני.

Wednesday, October 11, 2023

11.10.2023

 Our heart is broken.

We'd be soulless if it wasn't

And we are not. 

Our heart is broken

Wide open

This is why you can hear it beat even across the world. 

Let your heart break, 

Especially if it's soft.  

Don't waste your precious energy denying this injury 

But remember always

Softness is malleable

Our broken heart will heal 

Scar tissue will create

New shapes 

New strengths

Tend to this broken heart

And remember it's not just yours

That we are a people of one heart

In however many bodies.

Tuesday, October 10, 2023

10.10.2023

How often I've heard

Antisemites claim

That we Jews went like sheep 

To our deaths in the Shoah

But this morning, there's something I 

Can't help but wonder

How many of us actually did acquiesce to our own murders

 

How many of us saw how dismal the world had become

How many of us—

Through layers of generational trauma, felt

The old familiar hatred 

And hostility that had risen once again

And sensed our hopelessness

In the deafening silence of supposed friends, who were 

Too intellectual to

So much as name the injustice

Without "considering the complexities at hand"


I can't help but wonder 

How many of us went to our deaths

But not like sheep after all

Rather like warriors

Knowing how our deaths 

Would come to stain humanity


Apparently, such stains fade 

In almost no time at all. 



Monday, October 09, 2023

09.10.2023

How can I scroll past your photo? 

You, amongst the 1400 something other worlds that have been immolated

Consumed

As if you were some 

Thin symbol in

Soy ink on rice paper

Thinner than the pixels that

Create this fake ghost of you now 

How can I scroll past your face, when my 

Black hole heart wants to contain you forever?

And maybe therein

There is really a white hole

Maybe 

Rather than collapsing,

Into some terrible singularity, 

My black hole heart can

Draw you in

Protect you

Until it can cough you out again

Safe

Bright

And whole 

On the other side.

Monday, September 11, 2023

11.09.2023

 This picture haunts me. 

There's great beauty in these forms and colours, but the windows are so dark; they look cold and eternal,  as though I'm looking into a portal between the worlds of the living and the dead.  I can't look away, but it terrifies me.




Thursday, August 24, 2023

24.08.2023

I'm a natural sceptic, but right now, I'm a heartbroken sceptic in search of something— ANYTHING to make me feel connected to my Carrie, and so when today, in the middle of my living room, this candy wrapper fell, seemingly from the ceiling, it felt like a sign. Carrie used to buy these for us every year, because she loved white chocolate, and I loved Reese's, especially the holiday editions.  (Better chocolate to peanut butter ratio in my opinion.)

And so, for a moment or two, I'll push aside my scepticism, and enjoy what really may be no more than the serendipity of a messy, cluttered apartment in dire need of cleaning, and a recently repositioned fan. 


Except...


That's not really how it happened, is it?  No, but the truth is far less magical, and we all love a good story, so I won't tell you the truth, about how the thing that actually fluttered to the living room floor was a crumpled, twisted receipt from Duane Reade that had likely been sitting on the sideboard, and that the candy wrapper was introduced when it stuck to my bare foot as I walked over the detritus that's still thick on the floor on my love's side of the bed where I hardly ever go, because I'm afraid to disturb any more remnants of her presence in this apartment, but it's dark and cloudy outside, and I needed to turn on her lamp.  

I won't tell you any of that, because it's sad. And we all like a good story.  Something to cling to in an unstable world. 

And so, we'll stick with the story that the special wrapper, with the ghost on it was conveniently positioned on some high shelf, perfect for my love to send fluttering to my feet, just to let me know she's still here.



Friday, August 18, 2023

18.08.2023

 Fallen leaves

Dessicated in the 

Late Autumn's cold winds

Crumble to nothing

They crumble so easily. 

Friday, August 04, 2023

04.08.2023

I've been tempted to check on my ticket

To hold it in my hands

Take stock of my inventory

But a body in motion tends to stay in motion

Unless acted upon by an equal 

And opposite force

Something I'm severely 

Lacking at the moment


"She's got a ticket to ride

She's got a ticket to riii-hiii-hiiide

She's got a ticket to ride.."


But unfortunately 

She still cares.

Thursday, August 03, 2023

03.08.2023

I envy the wild orchid

And wish I too 

Might bloom for six to ten weeks

then lose 

My head, and quiet- like a stone, lie 

Dormant in my bed

Of cool, soft loam

To bloom again

and begin anew

When the days are agreeable

And the cold skies 

blue.


Monday, July 31, 2023

17.04.2014

An old piece I wrote many years ago. 

.....


G


You were

snail paced walks round the

Botanical Gardens, 

creeping cacti and 

     alien orchids–

unlikely as painted plastic

You were

Intimate coffees 

on Broadway 

& on 9th Street

Trepidation and excitement at the thought you might touch my arm

You were 

a thoughtful gift 

from Trader Joe's:

chocolate covered potato chips I'd once proclaimed should be covered by Obamacare 

But you were also 

A party-size, blue bag of

Cool Ranch Doritos

eaten numbly 

by the handful,

Stuffing down hurt as I

Stuffed them down my throat,  

in my car, parked on Park Avenue South

and

You were 

my regret:

a failed test for my 

fledgling boundaries

and a mistake from which 

I'll do my best not to learn.

Saturday, July 22, 2023

22.07.2023 II

 I'm suicidal

And so I write, 

And so I edit, and 

Edit again

Until my thoughts lose shape

Until my lines lose meaning

Until I'm so sick of my

Moribund thoughts

That bored

I roll over

And go to sleep. 


22.07.2023

Thick, warm

Like Mother, the voice 

Says “It’s time. You're tired. You should rest now. 

Rest.”

Half asleep, 

And with aching hands,

I type

Against the glaring light of my phone's screen 

These notions might lose some of their loft

But left alone

They might lift me from this bed

And carry me off

On compliant legs. 

 


Thursday, July 20, 2023

Memoir (this is a work in progress.)

With the advent of mobile phones and social media, we’ve learned to externalise so many of our memories;  Instagram and Facebook, and the omnipresence of cameras within our phones have granted us an expansion of our very minds; these devices have become, in and off themselves, sense organs, and archives. 

Having grown up in the 80s, there are precious few pictures of my teen years. My parents were far from fond of my aesthetic choices, and I never had enough pocket money to invest in the taking of pictures, or development of film. 

My inner images of myself from that time are all that survive, and they all have wavy edges, prone to the kindness of idealism, or the cruelty of internalised judgements from others.  There is one picture that does exist, one taken with a phone some 15 years ago of a TV screen, whereon was playing a VHS tape:  I’d been filmed one day for the news, because home Karaoke had just been invented: I was in the 163rd St Mall, and a local news station was doing a light hearted segment on people’s reactions to the device which would allow anyone to “feel like a star in their own living room”. I sang “Singin’ in the Rain”, because that’s the song Alex and his droogs sang in “Clockwork Orange”. Punk rock man. 

Anyhow, the picture is of a 17 year old me: I’m smiling, and looking down. There’s a microphone cupped in both my hands, and my curly mohawk has fallen over my eyes.  I look particularly gentle, I think.  Soft. Vulnerable.  Contrary to the image I strove to project, of an angry, toughened, punk rock psychopath who’d shoplift earrings from the Woolworth’s, and stab them through my ear on a whim; I wanted desperately to be seen as someone not to be messed with, because at the time, I was someone everyone messed with.  I was a veritable punching bag for every bully at my school, including teachers and faculty who’d never outgrown such tendencies.

Sometimes I wonder what it might be like if I were able to travel back in time to those days, to observe myself in that context; perhaps even more revealingly, to observe those who took delight in tormenting and bullying me; I wonder what I might see in them. Their bullying was brutish, never sophisticated.  I wonder what I might be able to perceive in their faces; what might their microexpressions reveal?  Was there really such hate? Was there fear? Was there helplessness and angst desperate for an outlet, any outlet? 

Was there guilt?

I reach back with my mind, but those images are even fuzzier than those of my own face. In fact, if pressed, I doubt I could even name a single one of my tormentors: not the jocks who called me “faggot” as they beat and kicked me while I lay in a fetal position on the floor, trying to protect my face, not the vice principal who then brought me into his office, pulled down my pants, bent me over his desk and paddled me for “fighting”. 

I remember the small revolver revealed threateningly to me one day out on the front steps by the metalhead kid who often threw raw eggs at me, but I don’t recall his face or name. Like some perverse version of Proust’s tea soaked madeleines however,  the image of any similar gun on the news brings that moment back to me in the kind of clarity only one fearing for her survival might experience:  his face, blotted out,  but the gun, an image as clear as my mental image of the phone on which I’m now typing this memoir.

.....

On the morning of my eighteenth birthday,  my mom bade me to drop out. She and my dad had been called into the office enough times to witness the way the students behaved, and, more concerning for my mom, the way the faculty and staff spoke to the students. She saw the inherent violence on it all.

.....

I found the picture I’d described in my Instagram,  and it’s somewhat different: rather than looking down, my face is slightly downturned, but my eyes are looking up, and my smile looks almost... menacing? 

This is the fallibility of memory.  Perhaps in my previous description, I was

Describing how I might have seen myself at the time, were I granted the time travel opportunity I described above. 

Then again, maybe the shot I’d captured was a split second after I’d been looking down, smiling sheepishly. It’s possible.  I can envision the two expressions, and they flow together organically.

.....

 

Sometimes, in the midst of that strange, dreamless sleep between dreams, an image of some random object that was a fixture in my parents’ house pops into focus, and my body jerks violently awake, short of breath, heart pounding. 

All gone.  

The enormous “I’ll Drink To Anything” mug that held two regular mugs worth of coffee, the green, oval cigar tin from the middle section of the downstairs medicine cabinet, the enormous, wooden headboard in my parents’ bedroom that made a specific sound I’ve never heard replicated each time it banged against the wall whenever someone sat on the bed...

Gone. 

All this familiar ephemera–

Elements of a world I once knew with my skin: mundane things affixed in time, place, soul...

The world I find myself in now can only be characterised by the absence of familiarity; I reach out in all directions, trying to snatch “home” elements from the ether.

They cost so much, and none of them are the same.

.....

I burrow deeply into nostalgia, like a worm, grasping at objects that lie along the way: that chrome, “snowcap” bottle-cap pin I wore daily in the eighth grade, the two- tone blue Vans I wore until they had holes, and my parents begged my therapist to convince me to throw them away, the khaki safari fedora from Merry-Go-Round that I was so proud of...

And of all things, it’s now an image of the roughly woven, off white, textile curtains that hang in what was my father’s office, (which used to be the family room) in the Miami house that now pervades my thoughts; this specific, and unimportant thing,  that witnessed the daily, evening family ritual in the early 80s, when we’d gather after dinner on the roughly upholstered couch to watch that day’s episode of Guiding Light on the VCR, that- once turned from family recreation space into my father’s office,  hung silently behind my mother’s back on those sleepless nights she’d play Freecell at my father’s computer while softly listening to Schubert’s “Trout” on CD; that witnessed my father’s endless frustrations, cursing over computer, after computer, after computer down the years that he could never manage to wrangle to his will..

Those curtains, like the details of the corners of the produce section at the Winn Dixe across the street, that I used to visualise like a meditation on hot, lonely nights when I couldn’t sleep seven thousand miles away in Kfar Habad...

Artifacts are witnesses.

When all is threateningly unfamiliar, it seems to be things that are specific and trivial, even mundane that offer a feeling of safe familiarity.  Maybe this is the lure of nostalgia; we’ve already survived this past; the only thing the future promises, is that at some point, we won’t.

.....

The house, and all that it contained is gone. I’ve been paid off.

What a weird chapter.  I feel like a character torn from the pages of a book that’s been my entire universe since the day I was written, and now...

Now that every copy has been thrown on the fire; I’m adrift in empty space, bereft of plot, setting, history. A mirror reflecting nothing.

.....

The other day, a friend posted on Facebook, asking about people’s first apartment; mine was in South Gate, Los Angeles. 

It was 1988, and for 120.00/week, I got to sleep in a roach infested one story row motel, next door to Samsam’s Liquor, where the bathroom window wouldn’t close completely, and I had to sleep in socks, sweatpants and a hoodie with the hood pulled tight around my head and a bandana tied over my face to keep the roaches from crawling into my ears, mouth or nose. I lived on Night Train from Samsam’s and quesadillas from the burrito truck and I thought life was amazing, because I’d escaped the hell of suburban Unincorporated Dade County,  Florida.

I’ve lived in several crappy apartments. 

There was the motel in Key West,  where my friend Meredith fell through the rotting, wooden floor one morning on her way back to bed from the bathroom.  It was another motel, and we shared not only a single room, but a single bed as well, although I ended up sleeping on the beach most nights whenever she had a trick. 

There was the “closet” on Dor Dor veDorshav Street in Jerusalem, that was about 2 sq metres, and then there was the place in East Harlem, on the third floor of an old walk up,  where the stairs had a literal depression in the middle from a hundred years of foot traffic; it was over a 24 hr car wash, and I had 6 roommates (2 of us per room). The Brasilian landlady  kept a fermented crab in a bottle on top of the fridge, and I later learned, she’d routinely go through my things while I was at work.

This place, the one that Carrie and I shared for 18 years, is the nicest place I’ve ever lived; it’s the first place that’s really felt like “home”, albeit less so in my love’s absence. 

And things are changing here. Last night, I broke a small ceramic plate.  It slid out of the cabinet and bounced off the stone countertop.  Until it exploded on the floor, I’d maintained a vain hope it might survive.  It was one of two survivors of a set that’s lost members over the years in various ways.  The two had nested comfortably atop the pile of pasta bowls on the lower shelf of the cabinet for years. Now there’s only one.

.....

When,  in 1987 Sinéad O’Connor’s album “The Lion and The Cobra” came out, I was instantly obsessed. She was everything I wanted to be: powerful, beautiful, vulnerable, so unflinchingly herself.

I was an awkward, traumatised, bullied, 18 year old punk in my father's black combat boots, and a grossly oversized, loud, polyester old man’s suit I’d bought at “Red, White and Blue Thrift” on 6th. I was also seen by most people as a boy, although even the gargantuan suit in which I hid fit far better than that designation.

I was sensitive, suicidal, friendless, and the favourite target of every bully in North Miami Beach. 

I was also carless, and so, daily I’d take the 9 Downtown bus to the 163rd St Mall, to break out of my suburban isolation, to see people and be seen.

A favorite way to pass my travel time was to fantasise conversations with Sinéad.  I just knew that if somewhere along the bus route she happened to board, being the outlandish, punk rock beacon I was, she’d see me, with my shaved head and many piercings, and surrounded by the conservative nightmare of 1980s Miami, we’d become instant friends.

And so in my imagination, she’d get on at the stop after mine, by the 7-11. At first, we’d talk shyly to one another: she’d tell me she was in town visiting family.  She’d ask me if I had an extra cigarette, and what there was to do. I’d suggest we walk down to “Open Books and Records”, or go Thrift Store hopping; there really weren’t many options.  She was 3 days short of 2 years my senior, but it didn’t matter; we were of the same tribe, and I loved her fiercely. I wanted her to become my older sister, my protector, and I wanted to protect her. I imagined her standing fearlessly between me and my bullies, and I imagined quiet moments of emotional intimacy. I think many big loves of all kinds might be born this way.

.....

I’m tempted to check on my ticket

To hold it in my hands

Take stock of my inventory.

 

But a body in motion tends to stay in motion

Unless acted upon by an equal

And opposite force

Something I'm severely

Lacking at the moment.

 

“She’s got a ticket to ride

She’s got a ticket to riii-hiii-hiiide

She’s got a ticket to ride..”

But alas

She still cares.

Resistance takes up so much space, and all of my energy.  I’m constantly worried I’ll run out, and of course, the inner dialogue is constant:

“Why are you bothering? What do you think could possibly change?”

“I don’t know, but I’m afraid I’d end up leaving the party right before it gets good. “

“But you’re tired. You’re so tired. And everything hurts. And the bills are mounting, and the city is starting congestion pricing. You won’t be able to afford to even leave your neighbourhood anymore, you’re going to be more isolated than ever, and what will you do when your funds run out?”

“I don’t know. 

I don’t know.”

I finish my coffee, and return to bed.