Misadventures of the Mind











{May 11, 2008}   In The Begining…: The Maternal Side

I actually don’t know a lot of things about where I’m from, like how my parents met or actually managed to fall in love enough to get married (my mom and dad are VERY different people), but here’s what I do know, and I’ll try to keep it at least a little interesting.

My mom was the reason my grandparents got married, she was born about seven months after the honeymoon. My grandpa had been married before in Pennsylvania to a woman I can’t remember ever having met (though my mother says I have), with whom he had three sons: Lenny, Mark and Jay.

They divorced and my grandpa moved to Kendell, which is not so much a town as the name given to the land containing several dozen farms. He met, impregnated and married my grandmother, and with her eventually had four daughters: Brenda Rae (my mom), Jennie Lynn, Sandra Jean and Heidi Sue. Please pity their pathetically southern sounding names.

I know that my grandfather grew up in Pennsylvania, that his parent’s were Pennsylvania Dutch but were the last generation of us to speak German for two reasons: 1) So they could talk in front of the kids without being understood 2) So my grandpa and his siblings would be more “American”.

My grandfather has a twin sister (something I didn’t know until two or three years ago) and is one of ten children.

I don’t know much about my mom’s childhood except that for a long time my Grandpa was very sick and they didn’t have much money to spare, and they almost entirely lived off the garden my grandpa still keeps (this is why my mom won’t touch zuccini or eggplant to this day).

 At some point I’ll go into a little more depth on everyone, but for now this is it.

Happy Mother’s Day all.



{May 3, 2008}   What’s in my name?
Miss Reaper
 Miss Reaper.
She is a little thing.
 A Wisp.

 Pure black.

 

 

 Miss Reaper II

 Miss Reaper,
a strangled little goth thing.
 Tripping over books and souls,

in slap-thunk boots,

 

Miss Reaper III

He leaves Miss Reaper tired and frail,

shaking from the drug still

dancing,

The glimmering pink of broken glass

through her veins.

 The Coffin is on the nightstand,

its weight not on her now.

But with every step he takes,

its chains wrap more around.

 Fine and cold

and clinging,

Bringing back the heaviness

of lives gone by.

 

 

Miss Reaper IIII
She dresses up in death and dreams,

and binds her hair,

so that it seems

she can control,

one little thing.

 Her party dress is purple,

the color of her lies.

And all the people present,

comment on her eyes.

 To her everyone has blue ones,

But hers are a cutting,

shattered hue.

They look as though,

they already know,

what all there is to you.

 A flower growing on the wall,

not whispering with the vine.

Just standing there,

as still as stone,

watching yours and mine.

 

 

Miss Reaper IIIII    

When they first met,
She was fiddling,
fiddling with the chains on her coffin.
The one she carries on her back–

the one that carries all her pasts.

 Miss Reaper.

 He smiled at her,

then said he liked her bag.

She growled,

thought he was only teasing.

 When they first kissed,

She was a man,

face halo darkened,

and breasts bound tight.

 (So hard to breathe.)

 But she grinned and scowled,

deepened her voice.

He laughed and smiled.

Two boys kissing in the dry leaf smell.

The swings still groaning,

and the water hissing low.

 

 



{May 3, 2008}   The question of 5 year olds and philosophy majors: Why?

      I can’t tell you what strange force possessed me to actually start this, but I can tell you what inspired the ball to consider rolling. I was going through some old files on my computer and found some IM conversations from high school (not so long ago, 3 years now) and I started thinking about all the things, all the nurture factors that have built up to make the me I am now.

       The process of building a person is so complicated and so fragile. We wonder at the miracle of life from conception to birth but not at all the growth thereafter. Sure, we have mile stones, learning to talk, learning to drive, but we don’t measure the mile stones in our personality. The first time we stood up for something we believed in, the first time we succumbed to peer pressure. All the things we exalt and abhor in our pasts. I started this to write about those.

      It wont be in any particular order. The ages at which things happened will be guessed at. My memories will be tainted by everything I know now. But I will tell you the truth as I know it to be, the pride and the shame, my triumphs and failures. I’ll build you me.



et cetera