Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Thomas

LÜGEN-LEBEN


Reichlich Nehmen

Kaum Was Geben

Viel Versprechen

Ohne’s Zu Meinen

Hinterher Brechen

Schuldig Ist Man’s

Schlieβlich Keinem


Nie Zufrieden

Mit Den Lieben

Somit Schreibt Man

Eben Dann

All Ihre Fehler

Auf Zettel Im Kopf

So Im Geheimen


Wirkliche Nähe

Wird Gemieden

Ohne Vertrauen

Kann Man Leider

Nichts Festes Bauen

Und Man Tut‘s

Für Alle Versauen


Ein Solches Leben

Ganz Unbemerkt

Mit Jemand Andrem

Zu Verbringen

Bedeutet Das Man

Einsam Lebt Und

Ohne Jeden Frieden


Zum Schluss

Nach Jahren

Voll Verzweiflung

Was Hat Erreicht

Das Manipulieren

Freundlos Steht Man

Nun Da Am Ende

Allles Verloren

Mit Leeren Händen 



Copyright, Corinne Wesley, May or June 2008

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Chapter 3
Before long, Franz found himself looking at the image of the frail old man he had become. There, in the shiny mirror-like pane, which appeared to have been cleaned this very morning, he saw what living his life had left of him. In this moment, his gaze did not take in any of the urban busy-ness behind the glass. All he saw was Franz in his favorite coat and, due to the windy conditions that day, not wearing a hat. He was watching his thin white hair being blown about, this way, then the other when, along with the next strong gust, a figure appeared in the window beside him. He did not know what to make of this. It had never happened before and it felt like an intrusion of the most disagreeable kind. During all the time he had spent outside the watchmaker’s shop, thinking about the passing of time, no one had ever disturbed him. And, strangely, he had not considered such an imposition a possibility.
“It must be a woman,” he thought, “because the hair is much longer than my own.”
He could tell that she was having a difficult time getting her mane under control and it occurred to him how funny they both might have looked to an observer. He felt paralyzed, unable to move, so he stayed still and pretended that he was alone.
The woman turned to him and said, “Hello, are you thinking of buying a watch? Or, perhaps, an alarm-clock?”
Franz was not sure what to answer, so he said nothing.
She turned and faced him, brushing strands of chestnut hair off her face. Her green intense eyes looked deep into his, making him feel uncomfortable.
“I love this shop.” She smiled at him brightly.
“I like to look and watch time go by. Do you live around here?” She asked.
He looked away awkwardly, wishing he could regain control of his limbs and walk away.
She frowned as embarrassment spread over her face.
“Oh, pardon me! I didn’t mean to intrude. It’s just… I never met anyone before who looked at this window in the same way I do. You seem… familiar. And, it’s something people object to. About me, you know. Because, I talk to strangers, to anyone I meet. You can tell me if you’re bothered by it. I’ll go away. Sorry!”
Franz thought that she was different from other women he knew. He could see that her face was wrinkled, not that of a young woman.  Yet, her figure… and the way she moved…That combination of age and timeless youthfulness. He realized that she was beautiful.
“Don’t go!” He said.
“Forgive me for being startled. I’m not used to someone like you talking to me. Especially here, in front of this window. I pass this place every morning. I’ve never seen you before.” He stopped talking and looked at her helplessly.
Her face lit up.
“Well, I come here too, almost every day. Usually it’s in the afternoon, on my way back from town. Our city home is close by.”
Franz smiled, “I live a couple of blocks down the road. Where do you live?”
“In our – no - in my townhouse. Around the corner, in that little side street there. My husband and me, we fixed it up together, after we got married, so that we would have a real home to be in, whenever we came to our favorite city. We spent so much time here. And, hotels.... well, you know. He died…”
Sadness surrounded her. She looked away.
“I’m sorry for your loss. Has it been long? I am a widower too, you know. My wife passed away three years ago.” He was surprised that he had just said that. Normally he did not talk about it, ever.
She sighed, and offered her hand to him.
“It’s been nine months now. My name is Lisa. Glad to meet you.”
He took her hand and squeezed it gently; feeling her strong grip, then let it go.
“I am Franz. Nice to meet you too. Listen, would you like to go for a cup of coffee up the road?”
Franz watched her face as he spoke the words. He hadn’t done anything like this in years and he felt nervous. Maybe he shouldn’t have asked her. They were strangers, after all. And, he already had his coffee and was on his way home, where, according to his solitary routine, his writing was waiting for him. He always worked on his memoirs after having his espresso for at least two hours. What was he doing, changing things around? It made him feel insecure.  Still, he found himself hoping she would say yes.
Lisa was watching the clocks in the window. Silence covered her like a shroud. Franz stood next to her, overcome by anxiety. He could see her outline reflected in the glass but not her face. The wind had picked up and swift dark clouds were moving in over the city from the sea, covering the sun, spreading grayness, threatening rain. Finally she turned and faced him.
“What do you do?” She asked him, with a serious look on her face that allowed her age to take over and hide the beauty Franz had admired earlier. It amazed him, how she had changed in such a short time, and he wondered how troubled her soul might be.
“I am retired, used to be a professor, long ago. Now I just write…”
“Books?” She interrupted him.
“Not any more. I’ve written many books, but now I prefer to just write short stories.”
“About what?” She wanted to know.
“Well, right now about my life. I guess you could call them vignettes, simply, my memoirs.     
I am very old, you know. There is a lot to tell, too much, actually, so I’m sorting through it all and just write down the things that seem important.”
She nodded her face tense. Her hands were clenching and unclenching around her thumbs, but she did not seem aware of it. Her mouth tightened. He sensed her pain. But, he knew that she was isolated by it, beyond his reach.
“I write too.” She said, her voice sounding edgy.
“Really? What do you write?”
“Short stories, poetry, research papers, essays. In three languages. I have something, just one page, in my purse. Would you like to read it?”
Franz sensed that it was important to say “Yes.” He understood how lost she was. It reminded him of the time his wife died. But he also knew that her suffering was far greater than anything he had gone through. So, he said quickly, “Of course, I’d love to read it. Is it in English?”
A smile flashed across her face and for an instant Franz saw that other one again. It was incredible how fast Lisa could change. Or, maybe change was the wrong word, he thought. She seemed to be made of layers, which were all part of her and, depending on her emotional state, switched from the surface to somewhere underneath. He found himself fascinated by the multitude of expressions, flowing across her face, and realized that she was not playing a game, or acting, only reflecting every moment openly, like a child.
Lisa opened her purse and took out a folded piece of paper. She unfolded it slowly, glanced at it briefly, flattened it carefully and gave it to Franz.
“Take it!” She said. “I know now how to find you, here, every morning. Right? I’ll see you in a couple of weeks, when I get back from New Mexico and you can tell me what you think. Now I must go. I’m sorry but I can’t have coffee with you today. Maybe we can do it another day, after I return?”
She smiled one last time and, before Franz could reply to her vague question, she had already turned and was walking away quickly. A strong gust pushed her towards the corner and then she was gone.
Franz stood there, no longer aware of the window filled with passing time. He folded the page and put it in the inside pocket of his faithful old coat. It rustled against his chest as he walked home and he thought about how he had to keep it safe, from the wind and the rain that was beginning to drip down.
In the reception hall, he waited for the elevator to open its door with that melodic ring, entered it and rode up to his floor, looking at countless reflections of himself in the mirrored walls. He thought that he looked quite ancient, yet he felt the presence of the Franz who still lived inside of him, a little tired and sometimes weary of the body that was his vessel, but otherwise unaffected by the years. He walked down the corridor, unlocked his door, hung up his coat, took out her page and sat down at his table. He began to read.

Reflections on a theme
What’s the theme, you might ask? Well, it’s one of the inescapable ones. That’s for sure.
My husband died nine months and thirteen days ago. Am I over it? You be the judge.
The thing is, everyone in his family, including he when he was alive, have this idea that people come back as birds and hang around those they left behind, after they die. Sometimes there might be a cloud in the shape of a giant bird in the sky. His family members, who had descended like vultures for a visit, in order to “honor” his death, got all excited about that one. They ran out and stood there, pointing at the sky. I knew better and stayed in the kitchen, at the table, with my glass of scotch, smoking and thinking about what had happened, the first morning I woke up without my husband.
You see, that morning I was sitting in the bathroom, thinking about where my dear departed could be, when a big old fat fly came buzzing right past me, a few inches away from my nose. It landed close by, on the window next to me, and stayed there. I stared at it and it hit me like a flash.
“This could be my husband,” I thought. “After all, there are other creatures with wings that fly, and this is one of them.”
I laughed out loud and said, “Hi, baby. How are you? You must be as blown away as I am right now. You probably had hoped to come back as one of your beloved ravens. Well, things don’t always turn out the way we expect them to.”
The fly did a one-eighty and began cleaning its wings with great care. It obviously wasn’t able to say anything to me. But, the two of us remained there, in the bathroom, for quite some time, having more of that same one-sided conversation.
Since then, a lot of time has passed and, on occasion, I have one particular fly in my house that seems to search me out and behaves differently from the others. I suppose flies don’t live that long and so, perhaps, my husband is caught up in some insane Hindu-type resurrection cycle, being reborn as fly after fly. I can’t say for sure.
One thing I know, though, is that I have one living in my house right now, which follows me everywhere. And, at night, it sits on the ceiling in my kitchen, always in the same spot, so I sit on the counter, with my glass of scotch, still smoking, like I did on that first day, and I talk to it. Part of me knows that this is crazy, but another part of me really hopes that it’s him, that he can hear me and that he understands just how much I miss him.
What’s the moral of this tale? You make do with what you got?

© Corinne Wesley 2015
Federico

me toca
tu alma trágica
y perdida ya
desde mucho
tu mundo panteísta
sigue como siempre
los caminos
los arboles
aves y lagartos
las peñas blancas
tus palabras
nos siguen
como las hojas sopladas
que vuelvan y vayan
en el ritmo ventoso
de las temporadas
con brisas polvorosas
y con esta luz
que viene
no se de donde

( poema saludando Federico Garcia Lorca )
© Corinne Wesley
LOWLY TECH? No.

Can I "draw" your house? Yes.
Do I WANNA "draw" your house... NO!
I'm not an architect, because I
Don't wanna draw houses,
Apartment buildings, offices,
Plazas, malls...

I can't stand
Shopping centers,
All that other
Garbage you
Want me to draw...

I'm a CAD-TECH,
Because I love to Invent!
I Create and Destroy,
Diagram, Display,
Then rotate,
Enjoy...

I'm a CAD-TECH,
I don't "DO IT" for you...
If you could do it
For yourself, I wonder
Would you?

I enjoy the
Beauty of Symmetry,
And Lines of Design.
I drift into a World
Of Divide and
Points on a Plane,
With Vectors passing by,
Just to say "Hi!"

Purple, Red
Green,
and Blue...

YOU don't know what
Layer they're on,
But DAMN SURE I DO!

Take your sketches,
Throw them in the trash!
If someone ever builds
That hovel, I'll just sit back and laugh!

I'm a CAD-TECH,
That's not what I do.
I know what real art is,
I wish you did, too!

I don't "DO IT" for money,
Not for Fortune, or Fame,
I do it because I can,
And don't care what you say.

I do it for love, and all
The wrong reasons,
I'll do it for you,
Just because you...
Ask.
© James Connor 2013
Chapter 2

LISA

Lisa’s gaze, similar to the soft ephemeral touch of blind fingers, wandered slowly across the familiar outlines, surfaces, silhouettes, brightness and shadows filling the space that was her home. She spent a large part of her days and nights, as well as those strange undefined hours that lie in between, sitting motionless at the big table in her kitchen, smoking cigarettes (much to her closest friends’ consternation), sipping scotch and looking at the outside world through a tall but  narrow window. While she sat there, the seasons, chased by high desert winds, swiftly passed her look-out, already taking leave again by the time she had begun to notice their arrival. Having always lived her bound-less life to the fullest, she remembered being surprised at how easy her acceptance of this new home had been. Equal in natural beauty to the Mediterranean island, where she had lived for eleven years, New Mexico lacked the polished sophistication one could find everywhere in Europe, even in rugged and undeveloped places. This attribute was what she had come to love most about her new world.
Frank’s death had killed her appetite for life’s undiscovered secrets from one day to the next, she mused bitterly. All of a sudden, she had no desire left to perform the necessary maintenance, her physical being expected from her. Food and drink, other than scotch and coffee, showers, combs, toothbrushes, clean clothes, the stuff that makes a human being civilized, as well as nourishes, energizes and maintains its health, none of that was important anymore.
She had not only lost her lover, her best friend and greatest fan, but also her love of life and all its delights. And, if that were not enough, her “condition”, as she called the mental illness she was burdened with, due to an ongoing chain of traumatic events going back to her earliest childhood, was worse than ever before, despite the pills and all other manners of treatment available to her. She felt more isolated each day. During the first couple of months after becoming a widow, friends and neighbors had surely noticed her increasingly strange behavior and her extremely self- destructive ways, but accepted them as symptoms of profound grief. Lately, however, it was becoming obvious that they were less and less accepting of her conduct, when she did not return to the way a “normal person”, grieving or not, ought to behave.
One by one they stopped coming to visit her and, those who occasionally still did, were quickly alienated from the sheer shock of seeing how she was deteriorating. It made them leave as soon as they possibly could, claiming important engagements elsewhere, promising to come back.  Most of them didn’t, and those who did, started to be irritated with her for ignoring all their attempts to advise her how to move on, and get back to what they called “reality’. Her reaction to being patronized and marginalized for her unwillingness to play along, was to drive everyone away by becoming even more outrageous and anti-social, openly demonstrating that she did not give a damn about the rules and regulations “normal” people accepted for themselves and expected others, if they wanted to be part of their group, to adopt and then behave accordingly.
The price Lisa paid for her obstinacy was high. She no longer belonged to the world around her and lived a solitary, exiled existence with her dogs, who loved her the way she was,   unconditionally and fiercely loyal.
After observing and considering her situation for several months, she ended up doubting very much, whether it was possible to transform her inner turmoil into coherent words and phrases, in order to be heard and, truly understood, by others. She kept asking herself, how much time she had spent, appearing quiet and unassuming to the eyes of any chance observer, while really lost in a whirling, nauseated state. Being this way usually reminded her of some kind of frantic activity but she could not remember what it was and kept trying to figure it out.
At first, she found herself comparing it to what happened when, due to loss of signal, her satellite TV picture disassembled into small colored squares, to the point where they just fell apart, tumbling and then stopped making sense altogether, leaving behind either black and silent nothingness, or that maddening “white noise,” when all broadcasting has ceased and been replaced by “black” and “white” having an argument on the screen.
However, after some deliberation it had finally come to her. The frenzied movement in question, resembled the “to and fro” on her computer screen, when it performed the “defrag option” from its toolbox, rearranging a huge amount of files and, thus, re-establishing order. Well, obviously even a computer could not achieve the re-creation of perfect order in a used hard drive, stuffed to the gills with bits, pixels and unprofessional, personal binary overkill. Therefore, her computer’s system tools tried their best to conquer chaos with structure, in numerical and alphabetical order, of course, which was the one thing chaos detested most of all.
There, without realizing it she’d managed to write a number of witty little paragraphs under the pretense of describing the indescribable.
How utterly despicable! Fooling herself into a wishful belief that the issue which tormented her so could be disarmed, or “neutralized”, by applying some clever, and amusing, rhetorical eloquence.
Shame on her! Shame and disgrace and ... and ... well, more of the same!!!
Was it surprising that the climax, or final destination, of so much shame was a violent state of self-loathing? Which tossed her into a dark, frustrated mood, usually accompanied by an ancient, scorching, impotent anger? From there it was only a short distance to utter, ice cold panic, leaving her overwhelmed by the scary conclusion, and not for the first time either, that perhaps she was finally beginning to lose her mind.
The realization that this time it was brutally serious and no longer “cool” to be thought of as eccentric, notorious and, especially at parties, a little crazy, made her feel terribly afraid.
Her life up to this point had never been threatened by her “condition”. Denial, recreational drug-use and living in exotic places full of “eccentric” and “crazy” people had made it possible for her to exist as if she were “normal” after all.
Now, away from all this life of fantasy, the “pixeled”, “defragged”, “binary”, hysterical, self-destructive and manically depressed state she found herself in, also called “Bi-Polar” (the disorderly version) for short, was gaining on her.
Ok, it was not only gaining. It was rapidly catching up with her.
Well, actually, truth be told, it had already caught up with her and established a comfortable residence inside of her.
On top of that, when she decided to enquire as to “Bi-Po-lady’s” plans regarding her departure, she had been laughed at, ridiculed, and rudely informed that “Bi-Po” was not going to leave anytime soon.
Meaning what??
Maybe?
Or probably!?
Nope!
Meaning surely, never ever!
With a deep sigh she looked at those last, five, short lines.
Later , she cried hot tears, began talking to herself and finally started running, up and down, back and forth, like a maniac (hehehe... f.u!! it’s only funny when you’re not the maniac!), until she managed, in a “out of focus” sort of manner, to find her bottles of valium and xanax. She had half a pill each, washed them down with a decent, chilled, local chardonnay she had picked up at a winery near her friend Bosnap’s dental clinic; on the day he had needed a driver to take him home after the extraction of several teeth.
She lit both, a doobie and a cigarette, at the same time, put her feet up on the kitchen table and stared out the window, not really seeing anything. It occurred to her that, once again, she had not slept, nor eaten and suddenly became aware of her body protesting the severe neglect it was being subjected to by its tenant, who did not care if she lived or died.
Asking herself silently if she had come to the end of the road, Lisa looked at one of the framed photographs on the wall next to the dining room window, showing a view of the Golden Gate Bridge, almost completely shrouded by fog, with only parts of the structure visible, making it look like a bridge in the clouds high above. It occurred to her that it might be a good idea to go to San Francisco and stay a few days in the little apartment Frank had bought for them. Maybe being in the city they both had enjoyed so much together would inspire her somehow into finding her way out of the deep state of depression that was overshadowing her life. She picked up the phone from the table and began making preparations for her departure.
“Who knows,” she thought while dialing the number of her house- and dog- sitter.
“In a city the size of San Francisco there might be one person I could explain myself to and be understood....”
© Corinne Wesley

Friday, September 18, 2015

The Sigh




the sigh
lazily i gaze
as white cloud-castles
rise steeply in the distance
somewhere else someone
sighs melancholically
as deeply as i do
under the same bright sun
and the same blue sky...

Copyright Corinne Wesley
September 23. 2015

(one week before Earl's death...)