Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Honeymoon


                He felt the breeze move his hair, the whispers of the wind in the trees and her perfume mixing with the sweet scent of blooming flowers.  It was their honeymoon, the start of a long and prosperous life together.  The thought of the bliss and endless joys they were to share made his heart skip and flutter, it was surreal in that just two years he went from pushing papers at a downtown law firm to work for the EPA, helping not harming.  It was all because of her.  She showed him the value of his life, what he can do for others, especially his new wife, whom he owed everything to. 

                He trailed in her wake, blonde curls and bright blue eyes shimmering in the summer’s bright sunbeams.  He had never been able to keep up with her, one of the reasons why they married; she pushed him farther than he’d ever be able to go alone.

                “Come on, slowpoke!” she shot him a wry grin as she turned to look up the hill, her hand coursing along the sprigs of wheatgrass lining the trail. 

                “I think there’s a rock in my shoe, can we stop for a few minutes?”  Though his job benefited the outdoors, it didn’t benefit his body, which was glued to an ergonomic chair six hours a day.  He tried bribing her with a Chewy bar and peanut butter.  She took the bait.  Even with her mouth stuffed with nutty goodness she was beautiful.  He made a joke about her chipmunk cheeks and she let out a muffled snort, not wanting to expel food over her groom.  She choked down the remainder and punched him on the arm, then wrapped it around her waist.

                “Jeez, abusive,” he laughed.  “That really hurt.”  It didn’t hurt but she knew that as well as he did.  He gave her a playful shove and she fell dramatically onto the hillside just off trail.  He knew this game.  Kneeling at her side he grabbed her earlobe and she pounced on top of him, pinning him.  She leaned in for a kiss, touching nose to nose, and sprung up with a teasing laugh. 

“If you keep slowing us down we’ll never make it to the lookout before dusk,” she yelled over her shoulder as she marched uphill.

“What did I get myself into,” He asked himself with a smile as he got to his feet.

The sun began to set over the adjacent mountain as the land leveled out.  What he saw before him was beyond words.  He stood behind her with his chin resting on her gyrating locks.  Their hands intertwined, focused on the natural wonder before them. 

When the black night doused the sun’s flames and all lay quiet, they lay their blanket down and pulled a bottle of wine out of the pack, taking swigs whenever their lips weren’t connected. 

“I couldn’t think of a more perfect moment if I had all the time in the world” He lay back and gazed into the heavens.  A ray of fire streaked across the sky and dissipated into the darkness.  It was a shooting star!  He bolted upright and focused his attention to find any more movement. 

“There!” she gestured toward the sky.  It was if god was painting the sky with flame, stroke by stroke. 

“I can die happy after seeing such beauty” he ran his fingers through her hair, his eyes still following the shooting star.  “The tail disappeared!  Must’ve made it through the atmosphere”

His eyes tracked the glowing orb, arcing up from the horizon and widening in shock, suddenly closing in fear.  His hand tightening around his new bride’s was the last thing he felt before being crushed into a indistinguishable pulp.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

The Cell


Steven Rekstad

ENGL 050

                Thrust facedown into the cell, teeth grinding the grit of the dirt floor, I lay nursing a festering bitterness.  I could almost see the noxious fumes drift past my face, a testament to the centuries of mental and physical torture that have been endured within these walls.  Overwhelmed, I stumbled to my feet and wedged my face in between the coarse rusty bars. 

“I’m innocent! I would never kill my own wife, I was framed!”

Lumbering up, beady eyes barely visible under his dark brow, the guard looked curious.  Suspicious, I backed into my cave.

“Why don’t you come over here and we’ll have a chat?”

Cautiously I crept up.  “Closer now, don’t be shy.”  On high alert, I saw his hand constrict around his baton before violently swinging in a low arc, narrowly missing my face.  He swaggered off, his booming laugh echoing along the torch-lined catacomb. 

I reasoned with myself, “I was just trying to make a case for myself.” 

Weeks passed with no hope for freedom.  I ate my weevil lined bread and chicken broth when my stomach wasn’t in knots from the hopelessness and decimation I felt.  Days and nights blurred into one, with only the scarce meal to divide the time into segments.  Change came suddenly and unexpectedly when I awoke to the figure of another standing over me.  Clutching my wooden spoon as a shiv I backed into the corner in a defensive position.

Squinting through the darkness I made out the distinct lines of my childhood rival.  Ten years of school yard torment tarnished my younger years, yet he envy and hatred I felt for him seemed so trivial now that my life had fallen to shambles.  Still, fate had played a cruel trick on me.  Weeks of unanswered prayers for companionship and this is who answers?

He spoke, “I heard you were taken to justice just last Friday.  I didn’t believe it.  It was too good to be true, I needed to see it for myself.  Lo and behold, you stand before me emaciated and haggard, a murderer”.  Meaningless hatred rose again in my chest, renewed with purpose.  I lunged for his throat, giving him his just desserts after a lifetime of unanswered cruelty.  The guard burst through the cell door to separate us, “Visiting hour’s over!”  Barely audibly, I heard him whisper, “It was me” just as the guard turned a deaf ear.  I lashed out once more, answered by a heavy club to the head.

I awoke shackled to the wall, defeated.  My feet dangled limply.  Accepting my fate, I found a stone on which I could gain some upward force, I saw my chains slacken for a second.  On my second attempt I forced my wrist around my neck.  It tightened and I could feel the air in my lungs struggle to escape, starving my body of life. 

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

The Secret


You receive a phone call from your two best friends. 'Hey, we’ve done something terribly wrong and need your help. We can’t talk about it over the phone. Please meet us at the spot where we made our pact back in high school. You know the place.' Nervously, you grab your coat and car keys.

           

Squelching the doldrums of Spring Break was no easy task.  Left incapacitated by a viral infection from earlier in the month, my options of afternoon entertainment were restricted to watching The Ellen DeGeneres Show with the decontaminated remote control in a Zip-Lock baggie or seeing how far I could run around my neighborhood before my sickly stomach upchucked whatever it contained.  I chose the former, letting the slick plastic container slide and crinkle to the floor, my arms hanging limp.  I managed to convince my guilty conscience that I would only get sicker from being exposed to the elements.  My vision blurred and my thoughts drifted to the solar warmth that radiated off my German Shepard when he came through his doggie-door after a long siesta in the summer sun. 

Summer.  Only seven months ago I was sitting on the porch of my Senior Week house in Ocean City, Maryland waiting for the rusted-out grill to singe all the bacteria off the hamburgers that were soon to accompany my breakfast of three beers in a 7-Eleven Big Gulp.  It was the best four days of my life and the perfect Segway between the giant circle-jerk that was the second semester of high school and the wet t-shirt contest that was Penn State summer session. 

On day four I began to see our group falling apart, half our house’s male population falling prey to the overwhelming amount of liquor and lack of adult supervision.  A majority of our school was down the shore within a mile radius warranting flocks of our compadres gathering each night.  Our friend’s birthday came and my best friend Troy was beyond blackout drunk but still forging his way through the haze.  Too intoxicated to find his own way to the party he enlisted the help of our friend Pete, who I’d warned earlier in the day that Troy’s drinking had become a problem.  After pleas from the house’s girls and my shouting after them, they disappeared from view around the corner.  That was the last time I saw Troy in perfect health, if you could call it that.  Tending to our other friend Rob, who was babbling drunkenly on his bottom bunk we got a garbled call from one of the party house’s occupants, “…ambulance pulled up…shit-housed…Pete ran off…”  I punched a hole in the drywall next to the bed, “How the FUCK could this happen?  I’m going to find Pete and kick the shit out of him!”  I ran out the back door to find the rat sitting in the driver’s seat of our van.  Seeing my eyes bulging out of my head, he quickly fumbled with the car’s automatic lock.  I hit the side of the mom-mobile at top speed, denting the side.  Flecks of spittle coated the window, “You motherfucker, you left him! You’re dead!”

I snapped out of my daze in a giggle to my dog’s wet nose vacuuming the inside of my ear, one of my favorite childhood sensations.  I looked at my phone to find 2 NEW VOICEMAILS flashing across the screen, hitting redial.  Troy’s voice crackled over the speaker, “Hey, we’ve done something terribly wrong and need your help. We can’t talk about it over the phone. Please meet us at the spot where we made our pact back in high school. You know the place.”  

My nerves on edge, I grab my keys and coat and hop in my soccer-mom van, still dented on the side.  I pull up to the disc golf course separating our suburb from the downtown area and wait for a sign of motion.  There’s crunching behind me and I spin to find Troy and Rob.  “We came by to check on the body…the hole’s been dug up…we have to leave town.”

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Shot

My assailen's pit of fury travels from his heart to mine
In a flash of magma and a hurricane of chemical smoke.

Hit with a boiling sledgehammer,
My chest explodes in a raging pain.

Molten lead burns inside me,
Scorching my vital components as it goes.

The bullet erupts from inside my goosedown jacket,
A carnival of feathers and visceral fluids.

Like confetti, they sprinkle to the ground;
A celebration to my life which has come to a close.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Mononucleosis Sucks


Mononucleosis Sucks

To lie in void, which was left long ago

My objects  packed, now reside far away

New friends, about everyday lives they go

I am helpless at home, days dull and grey

Trapped in my body, I flounder and flop

Missing my break, stuck in lonely bed rest

When will the onslaught of infection stop?

On my return I pray I feel my best

Burd-ning my mom, a deadweight in current

Guilt fills my heart and poisons fill my mind

Appreciation for her I have learnt

Reparation for her aid I will find

Sterile office and cold metal tool

I would give my left nut to be in school



                I felt a sonnet would best describe the woes that I am going though.  I thought the feeling of being back home treated like a child after finally escaping the clutches of my small town would be best expressed in the dialogue-mimicking style.  The heartbeat duplicating pattern seemed to fit the theme of sickness, with the possibly accidental errors in accents symbolizing my ailments.  I liked the couplet at the end, I thought the hint of humor would give it a distinct identity.  I like how sometimes you have to change the pronunciation of words to fit the metre and rhythm, like when I used burd-ning instead of burdening to get one less syllable.  I remember in Romeo and Juliet when Shakespeare uses banishรจd instead of banished to add an extra syllable when Romeo is outcast from Verona.  I can’t imagine writing an entire play using iambic pentameter, it was a huge pain and I’m still not sure I used it correctly.  Mad respect, Shakespeare.

                I did not like the style of Villanelle, the tercets with the first and last lines rhyming for multiple stanzas felt awkward like it rhymed like ABAABAA, I didn’t like how it sounded unless you pause in between stanzas.

                The Ghazal ends multiple lines with the same word and one of my pet peeves is repetition of words in writing so that was an obvious style to drop from the running.

                Similarly with the Pantoum you are supposed to repeat lines, which I feel is just unacceptable and would bother me to no end unless I really found a topic I could fit into it, like running on a treadmill where my mind keeps returning to the same thought because I’m so bored.


Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Take No Road

The Road Not Taken
    
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one
traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim
Because it was grassy and wanted wear,
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I marked the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I,
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.





Take No Road

At the foot of a looming cliff face,
I sat still, roasted weiner in hand
I reclined, feeling the sun's embrace
My eyes closed, I drifted off to space
In my mind were visions great and grand;

I floated in a land filled with black,
Bare trees grabbed from the edge of the path
Reaching for my clothes and for my pack
Filled with woe I wanted to turn back
Running, I escaped the forest's wraith;

A new trail appeared out of the fog,
Trimmed in green with tasty fruit to reap
I picked some and sat down on a log
Eating my fill I felt like a hog
Stomach full I fell into deep sleep;

I sprung awake with a sudden thought,
I don't need travel to eat and rest
I have weiners which I have just bought
And a camper van too, I forgot
Life's pleasures without being too stressed

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Leo

Living life, devoid of deception
Magnificent in other men’s perception
In the heart, burns an eternal flame
Impervious to an adulterated name
Every lass eyes the lion with lust
Scouring the night for that ever fateful thrust
Enthusiastic and optimistic
Expressive on the border of artistic
Opposition quivers in thy face
Minions kneel down in humble and modest grace
Stars, though divine, do not decide fate
In a world of billions, none do equate

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Crossroads

Steven Rekstad
ENGL 050-005
Ms. Grollmus
The Nonfiction Essay
February 14, 2012
Crossroads
“FUCK YEAH!” I shout as I leap up from my chair in the Industrial Arts department of Council Rock High School South.  “Happy Valley here I come!”  Flashing across my screen was a virtual acceptance letter to Penn State, the school of my dreams.
It is four-o-clock and school has been out for over an hour, I linger for band practice, one of the banes of my teenage existence.  If my musical talent wasn’t a royal flush dealt to me in the poker game that is life, I would curse it.  In high school my ability to toot my own horn brought me nothing but misery and sorrow.  My mom forced me to join marching band my freshman year and my new inner circle of friends kept me in the music department’s clutches for the next seven semesters.
                After I my feet return to terra firma I turn to face to startled glances of the Technology Club.  I let out a boisterous chuckle, knowing full well they are only in their silly club to pad their college applications and to sugar coat their 2.3 GPAs.  After my booming chortle finishes resonating throughout the building, I turn on my heel and exit purposefully and jovially.
                I searched out my best friend and partner in crime, Tim, who had received his letter days before me.  Zooming up from his blind side I launch myself into the air like a Velociraptor from The Lost World: Jurassic Park in a field of tall grass.  Crushed under the momentum of my charge, he enters a defensive state, curling up like an porcupine in combat with a honey badger.  Recovering, we grab arms to form a circle and jump for joy like little girls who received an Easy-Bake Oven for Christmas, unaware they reinforced gender-based stereotypes of which their predecessors fought so hard to shed.
                Onlookers shot quizzical glances in our direction, shocked to see two large blonde fellows acting like school children on a major holiday.  Those who knew us better didn’t even glance twice; it wasn’t an uncommon occurrence for us to celebrate raucously.  The words “Fuck band, we’re going to get cheesesteaks” crossed Tim’s lips just as it crossed my mind.
Hypnotized, we pulled up to the Holland Shopping Center; our arrival snapped us out of our daze.  It was an all too familiar drive and our minds were occupied with thoughts of tailgating, the Lion Shrine, and the big man himself, Joe Paterno. 
                We walk into Ultimate Pizza to find a boisterous Philly accent shouting, “Ah CR South boys!  Cheesesteak with pepperonis I presume?”  Our two year tenure on the track team, (a tenure we took very lightly) throwing shot-put and javelin allowed us plenty of time to cut warm-ups and fill our bellies with as much oily, bulk-bought meat as possible.  Over the years we had become regulars, dropping a large portion of our summer’s earnings into the greasy hands of the ever-changing owners of the shady joint.  (We later found out it was a front for a cocaine ring, who knew?) 
                Upon our boisterous return to the school auditorium, we were met with a room half full of glares, half of muffled snickers.  The director’s eyes burned with a familiar fury, her jaw slack with surprise.  We had a concert on the morrow and the majority of the band consisted of young inexperienced players.  In other words, they sucked. 
Our director spoke, “You know full well we have our last concert of the season tomorrow and yet you skip another practice?”
“To be fair, we only missed scales and warm-up”, Tim remarked.
“You never see a lion warming up before he takes down a gazelle, do you?” I quipped.
We could see the look of hatred on her face but it only coaxed us to push the limits of her patience.  Go fuck yourself”, we thought, or rather whispered on the brink of her hearing capabilities. 
A week later I enrolled in summer session, and Tim set out on a road trip, hopping from school to school to see if Penn State is right or him.  One visit to the shithole that is known as Ohio State shed him of his indecision.  He enrolled to the Motherland a few weeks later.
Tim had always achieved better grades than I had and the university deemed him worthy of a normal fall admission, meaning the inseparable duo would spend the summer apart.  We showed no concern of the separation.  Our friend Matt expressed interest in visiting during Arts Fest, offering to help Tim make his inaugural unsupervised pilgrimage to State College.  We wouldn’t be separated for long.
The weeks passed and senior year came to a close in a blaze of glory at Ocean City, New Jersey.  Casualties were avoided, if only just.  The events of that week, cut short by disaster, cast to shards many friendships.  Our bond, reborn from the ashes, was built up as strong as ever, though there are soft spots still in the healing process. 
Days from the end of Senior Week, I found myself a newly minted freshman, molding the blank slate that was my side of 505 Hartranft Hall.  Bonded in the novelty of parental freedom, my floor mates and I quickly found common ground in the ease and simplicity that is summer session.  With only two classes as distractions and ten idle hours during the day, friendship came effortlessly and swiftly.  Joey, Will, Nick, Greg, Alan, Frank, Mike and Matt became my new inner circle, united in the common objective of taking every advantage of Penn State’s lackadaisical afternoons and vigorous nightlife. 
Weekday and weekend were filled with the same overindulgence that marred the end of senior year, though stretched thinner and thus safer.  With only our hangovers as punishment and our absent-minded resident advisor as a parent, we thrived as a family, pushing the limits of our own bodies and minds.  No fraternity house or apartment was left unturned by our whirlwind of revelry.  I wrote home to Tim of such nights, hoping to lure him westward to University Park.  Answered by promises of his presence, my mind was settled.
                More weeks passed and I had not seen hide nor hair of my curly haired counterpart.  I wished to show him State College how it should be enjoyed, to give him a tour of the downtown area I had come to know and love.  I wished to get to him before another influence, our devilish friend, had the chance. 
His parents, knowing of the new habits he had acquired over the past year which started with my seventeenth birthday party and “the wine incident”, had come to decide they wouldn’t allow their son out of their reach and guidance.   With this new disappointment my correspondence with Tim faded with the hopes of our reunion.  Sure, I updated him on my doings and he did the same but the conversations never again grew beyond small talk until the few days between Summer Finals and Fall Orientation, where we had the chance to sit around our respective backyard fire pits and hold council. 
It was a short period of reprieve from the “stresses” of school.  I hadn’t seen vacation since the previous summer and even then I had to work in the slums and coal mines known as Sesame Place.  Behind the family-friendly visage of Elmo lies a great darkness characterized by burning sun, limited shade and quagmires of piss-water.  The gap was a welcome reprieve, a period of detoxification before I ventured back to the city of endless brothels and taverns.
With Tim in tow I made my glorious return, leaving behind the cushion of parental support I had only just become accustomed to.   We had longed for the opportunity to join the Rowing team, an opportunity which was granted a few weeks into the semester.  We started training like dogs right off the bat, running a campus circuit every day of the week, lifting like crazy and conditioning on the indoor rowing machines, known as ergometers or ‘ergs’.  We were brothers in our pursuit of collegiate glory, stopping at no end to make our bodies and minds hard and sharp.  Weekends were sacrificed, as were classes.  Starting the day at 4:30am takes a toll on one’s desire to attend 9:05am chemistry lectures.  As soon as our dedication had risen, mine had fallen.  My evenings were occupied by pledge activities and study, hoping to regain my lost grades.  A breaking point came during Homecoming.  A sleepless night of gluing bunches of tissue paper to chicken-wire led to my appearance at practice wearing jeans and a t-shirt, as far from rowing attire as possible.  I practiced in my skivvies much to the giggles of the girl’s team and the jests of the men.  It was a grueling affair, pushing us to our limits.  Devoid of slumber, I took every reprieve we were granted to rest my eyes, alternating between passing out and pulling the oar with all my strength.  It was then that I knew I could not carry on. 
Three choices lay before me: Schoolwork, Rowing and Pi Lam.  I knew I had to drop one for fear of losing all three.  My schoolwork was the most obvious choice to keep, it was my purpose as a Penn State student, and my key to unlock the many doors life would offer me.  Both Rowing and pledging offered reward through hardship.  I took a long look down the crossroads, eyeing my two potentials.  On one hand, I had the opportunity to become a varsity athlete, to represent the school I had always dreamt of attending as a child.  This path offered physical turmoil, hours toiling on the ‘erg’, striving to push the limits of my body.  On the other hand, I had Pi Lambda Phi, a brotherhood I so longed to become a part of.  The philanthropy, friendship and enjoyment I found among the residents of 321 Fraternity Row could not be found anywhere else.  I saw myself blossoming from a reserved boy, stuttering in the face of authority and women, to something more.  I was becoming a man, bonded for life with my pledge brothers.  A chance like that is hard to pass up.  I knew right then, in a boat in the middle of Bald Eagle State Park that I had come to terms with myself.
 Upon docking I pulled my coach aside, “Jason, I can’t do it anymore.  You saw me today, I can’t handle this anymore, I have to quit.”  He put on a guise of understanding but I knew he was upset, of the 20-30 novice rowers that joined, more than half had quit.  I was told the next day at practice he cursed me out, which I figured he would do.  He gave the same treatment to the throngs of deserters before me.
Now that I was back on a normal sleeping schedule, I rejoiced at the thought of starting my morning routine at 8am, three and a half hours past my norm.  I felt like a king hopping out of bed to greet the sun, a pleasure I hadn’t been blessed with for a month.  Tim on the other hand carried on as usual, proving to the both of us he held great dedication and commitment to the person he had since become. 
We ate many dinners together, complaining of our respective trials.  He looked forward to the honor of the races while I looked forward to my promotion to brother.  As our tasks became more difficult, so did finding time to meet and break bread.  I felt that once again our friendship was slipping through our fingers.  My attempts to slow our falling-out were futile, I brought him to my fraternity house, introduced him to my new friends, hoping he would take the same interest in Greek life that I had.  Alas, he was comfortable where he was and we had both found our niches within the hordes of the PSU student body.  Separated by circadian rhythm and the half mile from South Halls to West Halls, we grew apart one more.
I realize now when I stood at that crossroads, I didn’t stand alone.  In the summer I had talked myself into thinking distance was the only gauntlet our friendship faced, when in reality the friend who I regarded as my twin, born of another mother, had taken the other road.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

On Conformity

                Hipsters, the supposed non-conformists they may be, all have something humorously in common.  Every time they step into a thrift store, Hot Topic or Spencer’s Gifts they are allowing the general population to dictate how they dress. 
                With every horn-rimmed glasses frame, pair of Tom’s shoes, cut off jean shorts or colander-esque t-shirt of a band no one’s ever heard of, the stereotypical hipster promotes a prejudice.  The fact that there is a stereotypical hipster should provide plenty of evidence that a group of nonconformists is an oxymoron.  I had a hipster friend in high school that was a huge fan of a band called Minus the Bear.  He wore all their hard to find merchandise, listened to their EPs that no one else knew existed and responded the same way anyone asked about them, “they’re pretty obscure, I doubt you’ve ever heard them”.  One day we were at our mall’s Barnes and Noble sifting through their music section when he saw one of Minus the Bear’s albums prominently displayed. 
“It’s as if I don’t even know Minus the Bear anymore, what a bunch of sell outs!”
I replied, “You’re actually mad you’re favorite band is popular?  You’re not glad they’re doing well for themselves?  Would you prefer they stay at a constant equilibrium at the brink of obscurity and starvation?  They probably worked minimum wage jobs up to this point.”
“I feel like they’ve changed.  They used to be all about the music and now they’re all about selling their clothes to middle schoolers.  They might as well be Hanna Montana.  Look at this album, it’s completely different than their last one!  What happened to vinyl records anyway?”
The first hipster stuck out like a sore thumb, the self-satisfaction he gained from avoiding social norms was probably legitimate and people probably applauded his originality.  He wore slacks instead of britches, a bowler hat instead of a top hat and probably popped his collar.  He probably actually had a curly mustache instead of a look-alike tattoo on his finger. 
                I’m curious to see the new demographic of anti-conformists, We had Goth in the 90s: They all wore saggy black pants, face paint, dark, long hair and had vials of blood around their necks.  The 00s had the Emo revolution: Swoop to one side of their face to cover their eyes, jeans tight enough to reveal the circulatory system of their legs, eye liner, and facial piercings.  They all looked the same and wrote poetry with dark undertones and overtones.  Could the 10s be the decade of the hipster? I certainly hope not.  Maybe this new crowd will realize that being in a flock of black sheep is the same as being in a flock of white sheep, only you look ridiculous.


Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Holocene

                                Not a note perfect, not a harmony melodic, not a lyric profound.  Limited in my life experience, I flounder.  I can pick along to the scrolling notes on the page, follow the crinkled scribblings in my notebook as I lay upon my bed.  I know I have nothing to preach, nothing to offer the world of music.  In my own head I visualize what I write as a nebulous arrangement of planets, following their divine trajectory with no variation or inspiration.  Still I write and I play.  In sparse occasion the planets will align, coaxing me to play further, hoping to achieve the same celestial feeling.  When my skin crawls and my pulse accelerates from my own doing, I know I have created music.  It’s a drug like any other.  Runners extract a high from pain and torment; junkies push euphoria into their veins through a needle.  I draw my high from the eclectic beauty of song.  On off days when my fingers blister and my voice goes hoarse, I find satisfaction scouring the internet for Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes and Dispatch hoping their familiar exoticism offers me my fix.  I feel crushed underneath my own failure, yet grateful to the artists who describe my feelings in ways I can’t.
Bon Iver- Holocene:
…and at once I knew I was not magnificent
strayed above the highway aisle
(jagged vacance, thick with ice)
I could see for miles, miles, miles

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Suspect in Killings of Homeless Men Has Family Link to Homelessnes

                Feet crunching in the wet gravel, Itzcoatl Ocampo shuffled up to the rusted door of his father’s broken down big-rig truck.  His thoughts were racing, carefully planning the upcoming conversation.  He knew he had blood on his hands and an uneasiness flowing through his conscience.  The ungreased spring of the door handle creaked and clicked open with a metallic twang.  His father’s grizzled mug oozed through the crevasse with the enthusiasm of a disgruntled, un-unionized carney.  The cracks and crags of his once handsome visage were reminders of a life hard lived.  He missed his son, a recently minted war veteran, and welcomed him to his temporary shanty.  Times were hard and he’d begun to stretch the definition of shelter to its limits. 
“They found another one”, Itzcoatl said, referring to the recent rash of serial killings.  “He’s targeting the homeless; I hope you’re taking care of yourself.” 
“I’ll be fine, I’m safe in my truck”, the elder Ocampo replied.
“I just don’t want to see you end up like the rest of them.”
Refugio Ocampo reassured his son, who’s glance was shifting and constantly looking over his shoulder.  “Your brother Mixcoatl told me you had come back changed-that all the veterans come back changed.  I hope you are still the same man.”
Itzcoatl responded, “I am the same man.  I am sad, but I am the same man.”
“Izzy, we all mourned the loss of your friend.  Claudio was a good boy and an even better man.”
Hushed and teary-eyed goodbyes were said and just as suddenly as he appeared, Refugio’s son was gone.  A few days later he caught word of the killer’s capture.  Nothing could have prepared him for the title of the article: Suspect in Killings of Homeless Men Has Family Link to Homelessness.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Post 1: Greek Week 2011 shirt

Still riding the high I got from accepting my bid to Pi Lambda Phi fraternity, I walked through the hard-wooded halls of 321 Fraternity Row like I owned the place.  Though I can now navigate the century-old house blindfolded, a mere three months ago it was still full of mysteries.  The walk to my big brother Miles’ room was a familiar one though.  I spent the last couple weeks hanging out, watching football games and pulling pranks with him, hoping he would be my mentor for the coming months of pledging.  We seemed the perfect fit for each other, Industrial engineering majors, tall, athletic and the biggest goofballs anyone can meet.  I sat down on his black futon to congratulations of accepting my bid and his appreciation that I picked him as my big brother.  He gave me an overview of what he expected from me and what I could expect from him. He wished me luck and sent me on my way, but not before tossing a grey-blue ball of cloth into my surprised hands.  I unknotted the tangled mess, unveiling my first letter t-shirt from last year’s Greek Week, an annual competitive event between fraternities and sororities. He reminded me that anytime I wear them I represent not only our fraternity, but the values and standards that our brotherhood has built over the past 116 years.
            Some might look at this t-shirt and turn their nose up in disgust.  It’s old, worn out and smells like a frat house laundry room.  To me, it is representative of all the work I put into myself as a person and into the house that has given so much back to me.  It means finally finding a place where I can not only be myself, but become the best version of myself possible.  Since meeting the 12 other members of my pledge-class, the group of men I learn my history and knowledge of the fraternity with, I have become best friends with all of them.  We know each other’s deepest secrets and greatest aspirations.  I know we will attend each other’s weddings, children’s births, and eventually funerals.  Since initiation, I wear that shirt with pride, representing the group of like-minded individuals I have earned the right to call my brothers.  Every time I put on the shirt, I sense the lingering smell of unknown detergent and dryer sheets and feel the cloth, worn from a year of use by a 6’5” giant.  Though it’s stretched and stained from countless pre-games and tailgates, I would never think of throwing it away, it’s far too emotionally valuable.  I hope next year I will find a little brother who will understand its significance and cherish it as I have.