Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Gypsy Dreams

Things like that were never meant
for gypsies like us
mama said.
I had always been fascinated by architecture,
beauty of arches, columns,
decorative elements in homes, in particular.
I used to
draw houses when I was a kid.
make elaborate columns in crayon and colored pencils.
color in gardens of bougainvilleas, oleanders,
climbing ivy and rainbow colored roses.
I lived in my masterpieces.
They were more tangible to me than any real house on a real street.

Acoma, Ocotillo, Turney,
Baden, Jefferson, Roosevelt,
Taylor...Names of tucked away streets
where I played with long forgotten friends,
haunted homes where the ghosts of my past still live.

On Taylor Street,
I found my dream house while flipping through
an architecture magazine
I bought for a dime
at the Tolleson library.
The wrought iron fence with
its delicately forged roses
and vines that
formed an archway above its open gate
which invited me to walk the terra cotta path
that lead to the massive wooden front door—ten feet tall.
On either side of the door were two potted trees,
each home to a string of white lights
which would begin to sparkle come nightfall.

The door opens—
the warmth of the hearth,
embers singing, burning
living vibrantly and quickly dying
in the fireplace.
Spicy sweetness of cinnamon
and brown sugar hangs in the air…
a slight scent of basil and rosemary
simmering in a marinara sauce
adds a savory balance.
Candles flicker in their places across the room,
two in the corner opposite a heaven-reaching potted palm.
Terra Cotta tile floors give way to
travertine, marble counters, hardwood flooring.

Masterpieces—a Crayon stick-figure family
and two finger-painted dogs
lived vividly behind glass panes
in gilded frames
proudly displayed
on the walls.

French doors open
outward to reveal an outdoor fountain,
cozy dark wicker furniture,
A vast green garden.
Rows of climbing roses,
ivy, grapevines, clematis
sweet peas and lilies
and vines of juicy, ruby red tomatoes
—just waiting to be plucked.
A wooden sandbox full of toys,
sits among the blades of fluffy green grass;
a tire swing sways in the breeze.
A hand built
stage stands in one corner of the yard,
curtains drawn, just waiting for
budding thespians to preform
and an audience to sit--enthralled.

A family lives here—rich in love.
A family lives here and makes it home.
A home. MY home.

I tear out the glossy pages,
fold them up and hide them
in my favorite book,
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.

For the next three years,
anytime I need to
hide
to run away from
my reality,
I take the well worn pages
from the hiding place
and unfold them, escaping—
I return to my dream home.

I see my children running in the yard,
pushing each other higher and higher on the old tire swing,
reciting Shakespeare and singing for me
on the little stage
I built with my own two hands.
I watch myself tend the garden,
even swollen with pregnancy,
I nurture bell peppers, chilies,
and tomatoes—
always tomatoes.
My faceless husband helps me to my feet.
Dusting the earth from my overalls,
I waddle off with my husband
through the French doors,
I carry a basket overflowing with the fruits of my labors
Squash--yellow and green,
juicy ruby red tomatoes
and fresh basil,
perfect for the night's marinara.

One day, mom and dad
tell us that we have to move again.
I understood why, but I grew angry anyway.
I didn't want to leave.
This house on Taylor Street was the closest thing
to a real home I had ever known.
I cried and cried.
I flung open A Tree Grows In Brooklyn
and sought escape
once again.

I unfolded the pages.

Only cold, shiny pictures stared back;
reminding me I was still
only a Gypsy.
Silly girl,
Gypsies don't have homes.

I tore up the glossy fantasy
and threw the pages
in the alleyway dumpster.

I pulled the rusty gate closed
behind me and
walked past the underwear hanging
on the line
and quietly slipped back
into the house.

Gypsies Like Us

Things like that were never meant for Gypsies like us
said mom.
As soon as I was aware of my poverty, I longed for finer things.
I read voraciously from the time I was one—
anything my little hands could get a hold of
menus,
old instructions on the operation of a Sony VCR,
and my favorites
discarded books
and
magazines
from the library.
Bon Appétit! Cucina Italiana!
I drooled over glossy gourmet meals,
I imagined dining on homemade gnocchi
in a savory tomato cream sauce
While I sit, sipping a frothy cappuccino
in a lively Roman piazza
in an outdoor cafe, people watching
There! An artist and easel…
Painting the Pantheon
Under Roman skies
Warmth of the caffeinated cup of heaven
in my hands
Taste the pancetta
in a bite of sauce--divine.

Brother bangs
on the bathroom door
Get out now!
Because he had to go
Number two.
"Oh shut up, Javie! I'm on my period."
That would shut him up.
I bought myself five more minutes
in paradise.
The dingy shack
on Taylor Street opened to the cobblestone Via Argentina--
Rome. Italia.
I walked along
Winding through side streets,
A church comes into view
Santa Maria Sopra Minerva
Turn the corner-- Piazza della Rotonda
And the Pantheon. I was there.
If only for a single moment.
“Get out!”
I flush the moment away.
Damn it.
I left the bathroom as Javie
slammed the door behind me
I opened the rusty screen door
Walked barefoot onto the scorching concrete
Past the washing machine
Over to our droopy clothesline
and grabbed a clothespin off the line
with a squeak.
I squeezed the clothespin between my fingers
and took in the setting sun in desert sky.
A color wheel
The teals and oranges
Artists brushstrokes
mixing the violet and scarlet
reflecting off of tufts of clouds
still hanging above me.
Silence.
I envision the Roman piazza
Across the sea
The exquisite meal waiting there for me.
Squeak.
The artists in front of The Pantheon
Squeak.
Paint on a canvas
Squeak.
Sipping wine in a glass
Squeak.
I’m not there.
Silence.
Squeak.
I began to sob as I remember
Mom said
We were Gypsies.
Reality sank in
I looked at the shabbiness that surrounded me.
"Things like that were never meant for Gypsies like us."

But didn't Gypsies live in Rome, too?

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Stargazing, Stumps and Bullets

Arizona sunset
Hues of azure, violet and orange
Slowly gave way to blackness
And out popped the stars.
The sultry desert wind
Kissed my hair
As I sat on my stump seat in our front yard.
There was the Big Dipper and Orion’s Belt.
Stargazing…Interrupted.
My sister and brother decide to watch a movie.
They beg me to make popcorn and watch, too.
Mom grabs her purse and walks to the corner store.
Dad is sleeping in the bedroom
And the baby is toddling around the living room.
Cruella DeVille plans to skin puppies
And outside the living room window
The yelling begins.
It drowns out Cruella.
My sister cries.
Men are screaming
Then there are gunshots
The rest is a blur
Of ricochets and shattering glass.
I grab my brother’s leg
Reach for my sister’s arm
and drag them onto the carpet.
I pin the baby down
I scream-
I feel a sharp pain and wetness on my belly
I landed on my glass of water.
I hear the neighbor boy running past the living room window
Toward the side of the house
They are trying to kill him.
He wants a place to hide.
Brother holds the baby down
While I crawl down the hallway
I throw my body against the back door
And scream for my father.
It takes all I have to hold the door shut
As the neighbor boy screams and Goddamns me for
Not opening the door. He bangs
On the door and white paint chips
Fall like snowflakes onto my black hair
Dad sees me holding the door
and throws his weight against it, too.
The neighbor boy gives up
and runs through our backyard
He tears through the laundry on the line
Dad’s white shirts are lying in the dirt
He hops the fence, tearing my honeysuckle vines
We hear the gang chase after him.
Gradual Silence.
I have held my breath for an infinite minute
and am stock still until
The baby shrieks and I shake and begin to cry
Dad holds me for a moment
Then we crawl to the living room.

Outside there is silence
Soon broken by sirens
The phone rings—mom
Still at the corner store
Wanting to know we’re ok…
She heard it all and started to run toward home
but was held back by the Chinese lady and her husband
Who owned the store.
We walk outside—
There seem to be stars on the blacktop
Shell casings sparkle in the night
Softly illuminated by street lamps
Police lanterns shine
Soon we see a campground on the street
On the sidewalk
In our front yard
Little orange tents number each casing.
Dad’s car tires are flattened and there are two bullet holes in the door
Our window is broken and a bullet went through a wall.
Dad thanks God that no one died.
My stump seat is full of holes.
The next week we pack up our things
And leave Taylor Street.
I never stargaze again.

Tamales

Dad has on his bandana
Mom has on her gloves
I’m standing in between wanting to
Get into the thick of it
Tia Irene takes up the rear
The raggle-taggle assembly line would no doubt impress
Henry Ford himself.
Dad smears masa onto the corn husks
And hands them off to mom
Who fills them carefully
With cheese and green chile or beef in red chile
Then folds them deftly
Mama’s Mexican origami--
Tia Irene swaddles each
In virgin white wax paper
Right out of the dark blue box
I stack each one and soon I have a fortress of tamales
Stacked and waiting to be steamed
Waiting to be savored
I drool a little after lifting the lid
Of the steamer.
Mama smacks my hand and reminds me
That these tamales are
Waiting to be sold.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Life.

I live my life in such a way that I try to share love...I try to love anyone I meet. I feel compassion and love daily. I try to be as understanding as possible. There are times when I can love and be loved. I love so deeply and purely--I cannot even begin to explain just how deeply...

The mere sight of someone suffering can send me reeling. The thought of someone being alone or in pain makes my soul ache. I see a homeless person and I weep. I see pictures of children in third world countries and wish I could just give every one of them a home, love, food, an education...everything they need. I read stories of heroism and sacrifice and again, I weep. When I worked for the Church, not a day went by where I didn't weep. I would weep for the women who came in hoping to get help paying a bill, help with food or diapers...or the elderly man coming in because he needed help to pay for his wife's heart medication...I'd see the light of hope in their eyes and I was desperate for a way to avoid snuffing out that light. There were days I succeeded, and days I failed. I couldn't be trusted to have my own cash on hand because I would have none at the end of a day--I likely gave it to a young mother to buy some formula for her newborn baby or to a man who needed a bit of gas just to make it to work the next day. I once used money I had set aside for my wedding to buy a tombstone...obviously it wasn't my own. I knew a wonderful gentleman who had died. His wife could not afford a headstone for him...she got the bill and just couldn't pay it. She had come in about a year or so after he died...and looked really down...I finally got the story out of her. She was too ashamed to tell anyone else. I wrote a check to the cemetery company right after she told me. I couldn't bear the thought of someone being buried without being remembered...what if it had been my David buried without a headstone...the very thought of it made me weep for hours. Father Andre once had to take me aside to lovingly scold me over lunch, because I loved so deeply and cared so much that it was affecting me emotionally and mentally. He said I had the "gift of tears." With that gift there is a responsibility to keep yourself in check, because you can get too carried away.

The thing is, I absolutely love humanity. I love humanity so much, in spite of itself. I try to look beyond the worst bits of humanity. I want to see the good, but sometimes, sometimes I can only see the bad.

I can carry love in my heart for just about every living creature, even the lowliest of criminals, but for a select few, I cannot feel anything in my heart except revulsion and anger. There are things I can accept and many things I can and will forgive and forget...but betrayal and manipulation are two I can never forgive. The worst part of this is feeling so conflicted. I don't want to hate anyone. I just cannot bring myself to do otherwise when it comes to certain people. It hurts, but something inside will not allow me to forgive or forget certain wrongs. These grudges, I’m afraid, I WILL carry forever and a day. I will not forgive anyone who maliciously uses others to get what they want. I will never forgive betrayal of trust or betrayal of love. I will never forgive manipulation and malice. I revile pettiness and shallowness. I loathe falseness. I hate that which is not borne of truth or love. This may not justify my feelings. This may make me, in the eyes of some, the smaller person. I don’t care. I will not be moved.

Perhaps this is the downside of loving too deeply. The opposite abyss is just as deep and infinitely darker. In my struggle is reflected humanity--at its best and its worst.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

We are America.

American faces
millions of hues
shades of democracy
shades of hope

our dreams
and wishes
our collective voice
yearns to be heard
must be heard
and taken to heart.

We are America

too often we
have forgotten
ourselves
in dismissing our
brothers and sisters
as weak
or lazy

looking out for
number one
and in so doing
have undermined
all we
once held dear
all the while
seeming to
unravel

fighting
bickering
amongst ourselves
allowing
self imposed
divisions
to divide
us

Ghosts of
patriots
long dead
ancestors
honored
and revered
and ancestors
long forgotten
wail
cry out
for unity
justice
peace
liberty
mercy
dignity for those
at whom
we turn up our noses

we have forgotten
we are America

too easily forgotten
the single welfare mother
who could be my mother
or your mother
had circumstances
so wished
it to be so

she is your mother
your sister
your cousin
your wife
you?

serving self
has made us
fat
lazy
greedy
fearful
hateful
angry
self righteous
and
pretentious
hope fighters.

we have forgotten
where our salvation lies
where our freedoms lie
where our loyalties lie

we have forgotten
there is much work
to be done
hope can do much
but only so much

unity
and hard work
sweat
pride in
accomplishment
must pick up the
pieces
and be
hope's springboard.

Today
America sings
she speaks freely
again
for the gag
has been loosened.

the transformation begins
at the break of dawn
it begins here
in my heart
and in yours
it begins here
and grows
and flourishes
in us.

all of us.
we are
America.

Friday, May 1, 2009

My Fat Ass. Revisited.

I've had a rough go of it lately. I've ballooned up in weight. I'm feeling pretty low. I keep trying to remember that I'm healthier than I was a few years back, though my weight may not reflect that fact. Dealing with fertility issues and emotional crap isn't easy and yeah, all of it makes me want to reach for a bag of Munchees or a giant slice of cheesecake. I'm not perfect. I'm just me. I'm trying to remember that.

Ran across this poem this morning. I wrote it sometime last year...I think last June. Made me smile. So I'm posting it again.

My Fat Ass


I get stared at in stores

Little kids whisper and giggle when I pass

I can't fit into the clothes made for the whores

That laugh at my fat ass.


I walk into Borders or maybe, B&N

Diet books look at me mockingly and harrass-

Jeering and cursing, they mock the sin

That is my fat ass…


There are times I wish I was thinner

I run, I bike, I chug Slim Fast…

All in the pursuit of an ass that's a winner.

As hard as I work, sure enough, here remains my fat ass.


Skinny Minnies and Buff Muffies agree,

Somehow, I offend others with my incredible mass…

That the world would be better without me

Long before they get to know my fat ass.


You shallow jackasses have a lot of nerve.

I just have to shake my head and say--Alas,

I've had far more patience with you than you assholes deserve.

Frankly my dears, y'all can kiss my fat ass!

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

They Don't Always Bear Fruit.


A canopy of ivory blossoms
Cascade over my head
The fragrances of spring fill the air
I walk along the petal strewn path
Alone with my thoughts
Breathe in
Step
My worries overwhelm me
Step
Breathe out
Step
A woman passes by
Jogging along
Pushing a sports utility stroller.
Inside--a cherry cheeked infant
Sleeps Soundly
Lovingly tucked beneath a blanket.
Step
Step
Stare
I want to believe
It is impossible to be angry at God
Breathe in
While walking in the beauty
Step Step
He Has created
Breathe out
But jealousy bubbles up within me--
My bitterness like bile in my throat.
Tears fall
my pace quickens
Stepstepstepstep
I just want to get home
Step step
I just want to fall into bed
Breathebreathebreathe
I just want to cry out
Stop!
I look up at the canopy of white
And glimpse the patches of blue in the negative space
I cry.
Step
Slowly I turn and watch the woman jog down the road
Stroller ahead of her
Until I no longer see mother and child.
A blossom falls from heaven
Onto my head
I pull it out of my hair
And touch the silken petals
The anthers deposit pollen onto my finger
I drop the bloom onto the ground
Step
Step step
Breathe in
Breathe out
Stop
I look down and see
the flattened blossoms
paving the sidewalk
and feel empty
even more barren
than I did before.
Breathe in
Breathe out
I just want to go home.
I just want to fall into bed
I just want
Too much.
I want too much
I want more than my body
Can give.
Breathe in.
I just want to go home.
Away from the ivory blooms
Away from the mommies and strollers
Away from spring
Away from renewal
Away from reminders of
What could have been.
Step.
I think on it all on the way home.
Step.
Breathe in
People constantly tell me we have our
Step.
Crosses to bear
Breathe out
Enough.
I don’t want to hear it anymore.
Step.
Breathe in.
Home.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Wishing & Hoping...



I’ve hoped for the day
I’ve wished for the day
I would find the day
I could understand it all.

The closer I get
The faster it runs from me.

Together maybe we can stalk it.
Together maybe we can catch it.
Together maybe we can hold it.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Better.

I am no better than any other man;
I am a better person because of other people.

Each friendship
Each kindness
Each loving gesture
Each act of altruism
Each moment of compassion

teaches
my heart
directs
my vision
enriches
my soul
opens
my mind
deepens
my understanding
betters
my life

I am no better than any other man;
I am a better person because of other people.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

At The Death of an Actor.

An actor lives only once in this world of ours
But characters live and die forever more.
How many times will Hamlet die
Throughout eternity?

With the passing of an actor
Entire worlds go with him,
He takes Hamlet,
Romeo,
And Caesar, too.

When she breathes her last,
Ophelia ceases to be.
Ismene, Medea, Blanche DuBois and
Sally Bowles die, too.

Entire Civilizations have fallen
With the loss of each cast—
Only to be revived once more
By another actor
Another cast,
At another time.

Another world is created—
Not quite the same as the last, but
It is familiar, still.
Once again Othello lives
To kill his Desdemona.
Juliet takes her life once more
When she sees her Romeo dead—
Life becomes a Cabaret again,
And The Iceman (Continues to) Cometh.
We patiently Wait for Godot,
While we hear A Little Night Music.

We laugh again,
We cry again,
We remember tragedy
We remember joy.

Until at last
Our hearts break once more.

Another actor dies--
Taking with him creation--
Taking with her creation.

The worlds he made
The worlds she made.
The lives she created
The lives he created
Will
Now
Sleep
Eternally
In peace.

Monday, March 16, 2009

I Know A Place (Where The Wild Things Are)

The final song from Where The Wild Things Are. Written in 2001.


I Know A Place…
Lyrics by: Melissa C. G. Alvarez

I know a place
Through the night, across the rolling sea,
Over distant lands,
Beyond the forests of green,

I know a place
Real far away,
A place I have seen
A place I long to be

Where there are rules,
Where there is a bed,
Where the food smells good,
Where the wild thing's aren't.

There is a place
real far away,
a place I know,
a place I have seen
A place I long to be

Smell the good smells of food...
from far away,
where the wild things aren't,
where I want to be...

There is a place
real far away,
a place I know,
a place I have seen
A place I long to be
where some one loves me best of all...

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

My World Untamed

This is originally from the musical adaptation of Where The Wild Things Are that I helped write in 2001-2002.


Where the Wild Things Are

My World Untamed
Lyrics by Melissa Alvarez


I’m stuck here in my room
With nothin’ to do an’ nowhere to go
now…if only an idea would bloom…
That’s it! Let my thoughts grow!

(To self)
Let this be my world untamed…

In a far-off place I can go
Where I can dance showered in moonbeams
To a place that only I know
Away from here, away from her…beyond my dreams

Yes! Let thoughts run wild. No limits, no fences, no walls!
Let the vines creep and hang; Let the trees root and tower
Let wild grass take over; let it all be filled with stuff that crawls!
Let all kneel and cower…
All of this in my world untamed.

Here in my room, no my world…
Let an ocean swell, let the birds fly high
Freedom and beauty unfurled
All of it possible if only you’ll try…
In my world untamed.

Now I know…
That’s where I’ll be.
That’s where I’ll go…
I’ll be free.
I’m my world untamed.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Mirror Mirror. 2.5.09

Sliver gleaming
The eyes
Looking back at me
The face
So like mine
A shell
Of what once was
She mimics my movement
The strokes
One
Two three
Four
Five
Of brushing
The graying hair
She puts the brush down
And peers deeper
Beyond
The cracks
And canyons
Understanding
My surprise
My sorrow
Of realization
We acknowledge
Eachother
In silent
Nods
She is all that remains
Reminding me
Of what I once was
And what I am
Now.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Cancer. 1.01.2009.

Your eerie stillness
The peaceful urgency
your eyes speak--
Distracts us from the
Mortification the
Sheer terror
Chills to the bone
Hurricane anger
Terrified winds
Raging beneath the calm
Smile you show.

Immediately
there are
Prayers recited
Silent pleading to Heaven
To God
The Father above
To grant us a miracle
To spare you pain
To spare you this challenge
To spare us the pain
To spare us this challenge
Selfish? Perhaps.
But maybe we just don’t know
Any other way
To deal with the news;
To face this monster—
Who threatens to break up
Yet another happy home;
And threatens to crack
Our foundation, yet again.

I talked to her yesterday afternoon.
I can hear the panic in her voice
As she tells me she’s calm.
As she assures me time and again
that she’s fine.
Deep down I know she isn’t
Though I don’t dare say so.
Deep down I know she’s coming undone.
So I change the subject before she cries again
And we talk about my little sister,
who isn’t as little as she used to be.
Yes, she’s in high school now.
I know time has flown.
It slipped right past us, before I even realized it was there.
The conversation inevitably returns to the dreaded subject
And I hear her voice crack a little.
The thought of anything taking you from her
Sends her reeling
I offer my ear for her to vent
Or cry or scream
I offer a meal or two and maybe a shopping break
To ease her mind…
she thanks me
And changes the subject again.

Wasn’t it just a week ago,
Christmas Day
Where we gathered and gifted
And laughed and ate
Until we were full
Until we swore we would burst
If we took another bite
of Aunt Ellen's Divine Peppermint Angel food cake…
When the cares of the world were nowhere to be found?
Or so we thought.
How could we have known the trouble was in the room with us?

It never fails to surprise me
This gift of life.
One moment nothing is amiss
Then
Before you can catch your breath between laughs
Something as ordinary as a trip to the doctor
Turns into your life into your very own personal hell.
It is in how you react to the situation, I suppose…
And in what lesson(s) you learn…

I’ve learned this so far:
Having Friends and Family is a blessing and a curse.
A blessing because we laugh together.
A blessed curse because in order to laugh together we have to risk suffering together, too.
Things go wrong.
Things go right.
Prayers and hope are powerful.
Miracles happen when you least expect them,
Tho’ the same can be said for tragedies.
Peacefulness and calm can be found in the strangest places,
Like doctor’s offices and bathrooms.
Anger can be found in strange places, too…
Like Church and the supermarket.

God is everywhere you allow Him to be.
Things we think are being taken from us are only being refined
And tempered…and being made better than they were before.

Faith is easily broken or led astray—all it takes is one unkind word or work.
Even if what you want most in the world isn’t given to you
It does not mean you weren’t given what you needed most.

No matter what, life will keep moving onward.
With me, without me…With you, without you.
We just have to trust that everything will turn out OK.


Now.
Here we are
Propping each other up
As best we can.
There you are digesting the news
We see you.
Silent. Nodding.
You smile.
It makes us feel better.

Now
We’re
Ready for the battle.

Without question.
Now

We’re ready.