teachers talking about teaching on the F train @6:47am.

It’s 6:47 in the morning on the F train. 
At first I write something down in a note on my phone, 
that I thought was earnest in the moment, but
on a second read-through 
made me laugh in its self parody. 
Because teachers writing about teaching is like 
walking a tightrope between two lion pits — 
if you cross the chasm to either extreme of the spectrum you’re probably fucked, 
and if you stay on the line long enough, you’re probably fucked too. 
You’re best never hopping on the tightrope in the first place, 
especially if it’s 6:47 in the morning and you’re on the F train. 

The way I see it,
teachers talking about teaching often fall into one of two buckets:

1.
When teachers forget how to be students
they think themselves Socrates
and ask hypotheticals that can’t be answered like:

‘How does one feed fifty minds 
when fifty throats hold back fifty rocks 
lodged in fifty windpipes 
that squeak in fifty tones
a dissonant song that cries 
for fifty generations of abuse,
a song that carried fifty pairs of feet
across the river Jordan 
and vibrated along the length of 
fifty lips that kissed the saccharine
taste of honeyed statutes
that couldn’t wash away 
the salt from their skin,
the salt of the desert that held them
prisoner,
a taste that never goes away
no matter how much molasses 
collects on the tongue
like thick, broken promises?’

Or:

‘How does one feed a brain that’s already 
full on disillusion
and has already learned to taste honey as vinegar and salt as truth?’

Because it’s easier to blame a system than
take your fraction of that blame on the chin.

2.
But sometimes teachers remember how to be students
and they say pretty, perfect things like:

The truth is you don’t. 
You listen. 
You listen to their words,
Words that carry joy,
Words that carry sorrow,
Words that carry strength,
Words that carry anger,
Words that carry wisdom,
Words that carry laughter. 
And you listen in a way that says
I hear you,
I may never fully understand you,
I may never know your experience,
But I hear you,
And if you keep trying, I’ll keep trying too.

But those are perfect, pretty words
like the kind you put in a cover letter
or in a poem,
no closer to reality than the
hypotheticals of Mr./Mrs. Socrates

The truth is,
most days I’m not sure which kind of teacher I am. 
Maybe neither; 
maybe a bit of both. 

The best I can do is
Show up to work on time,
leave an open ear to my students,
keep my desk neat and symmetrical,
avoid speaking in Hallmark card aphorisms,  
settle into my place on the tightrope
between the two lion pits
and hope my best is enough. 

Because its 6:47am on the F train
and this isn’t the time or place 
for teachers to talk about teaching. 

sun flowers.

They turned their funny faces to the sun
On 4th and MacDougal
And sucked it down with a reusable straw that they bought from Whole Foods,
Because the earth is dying, like the children on their screens every day
And they drank the sun till there was salt on their lips
And they sighed,
“this is all we can take
         we can grow no more
                  we can sweat no more
                            we’ve had our fill and
                                     we want to go home”
And they ubered back to their 700 square feet

of central air and sage soy candles
And cranked the AC and put ice in their cups,
And they turned on the news
And gave their thoughts and prayers to the children

and they refreshed their feed

and checked the temperature for tomorrow

sandbox

 
Hands and feet, and knees and elbows.
 The alienated intimacy of the A Train at rush hour.
 When skin meets skin,

does it pull something away?
did I take a part of you with me?
do you carry me on your shoulder?

Are you here with me,
 a fragment of yourself —
 the self that existed as a body
 in that one sliver of space and time?
 Because it was there in that imperceptible moment
 that our granular cells thrashed
 against each other
 like sand heaved up by an undercurrent swell
 and passed from wave to wave.

Hand to hand,
 body to body,
 sea to sea,
 our cells, our sands, our moments
 all leave scuffs on each other’s sleeves.
 My sand is red, yours blue, his green, hers purple,
 except they’re not red
 or blue, or green, or purple —
 they’re each a shade that’s
 distinctly one’s own,
 a theoretical hue that lies
 in the infinitude between RGB codes,
 not a single one just like it.

We commute from point A to point B in a sandbox.
 The colored sands — her sands, your sands —
 all brushing and crashing against one another,
 exchanging and collecting,
 limbs
 that collide and collide again
 until you finally hit your stop,
 and you flood out into the streets with
 the wet heat of July in New York on your neck,
 and you walk and dilate
 at the thought of taking your shoes off,
 and all of the moments you
 picked up along the way tickle your feet
 like that time you fucked up
 by wearing your sneakers to the beach
 and regretted it for a week.
 Except you’re not at the beach,
 you’re in alphabet city,
 and when you take off your shoes
 and turn them over,
 they pour out a rainbow

Titanosaurus

I wonder if the earth shook when the titanosaurus fell
And it’s bones and scales settled
Twisted arabesque, last breath death-
Pose; crooked neck
I saw a bird’s nest fall once, ten years old
And from my chest, felt it all
the reverb, you should’ve heard it
It barely made a sound
But it shook the earth


The Chariot

Sirens.
Shoulders hunched, Parisians line the streets.
Mothers kissing daughters, chest-swells of relief
Thankful it was not their daughter, thankful it was not their —
Sun to their backs, neither East nor West.
Three shots ring out.

Sail on, sail on.

Three shots ring out.
From earth to earth again,
The hands move swift and fold the flag
The hands move swift and find their mark
Polished wood against skin, the soil speaks,
“Be still, child, you’re coming home.”
They tell you in the baby books, you know,
That it’s dangerous to leave an infant sleeping on its back,
But there is nothing left to harm this child.
She sleeps, back against the wood, chest towards the sky
In the carriage of stillness and quiet,
She sleeps in the chest of the other Mother now.

Bodies shuffling, the crowd draws pause
Silenced by the thunder, hushed by the
Sirens.

Three shots ring out and startles the herd.
Blood-panicked eyes, rapturous cries –
“Liberté, equalité, fraternité.”
Three words but one body,
She’s heard across the sea.
Carrying more weight than lead, she rises.
Atlas-shoulders pulled back, wings outstretched
She catches the glint of Sol, as she flies transatlantic,
“Carry me, brother,” she says to the sun.
The great flame dips behind Big Sur, and she, the trinity,
Carries her message across the continent,
“Liberté, equalité, fraternité!”

As all children are taught,
What falls in the west, ascends in the east
But today, the darkness clings to the chariot,
Unseen tendrils tear at the yokes,
Wide-eyed horses strain and groan against the weight
And for a moment the world holds its breath,
Unsure if the sun will raise its orange crest above the horizon,
Disbelieving that the city can ever emerge from its sublunar veil,
That laughs can still be laughed,
That the earth has not been dislodged from its course
Cast away from its orbit,
And left to freeze and burn in the great vacuum.

Blood runs thicker than water,
But is vapor in the shadow of ink.
The chariot emerges.
With the dawn at the heels of Helios,
The perennial hammer-blows of the pen strike against paper.
Breathing new life into infant lungs with each breathless stroke,
They lift the children from the kingdom of this earth.

Sail on, sail on.

Stained Shirt

Wrapped around the steel wire of your
Frame, the stain of Chardonnay, four
Four bottles that bent the room, and
Turned us out and the purple plume, hand
Over hand, four in hand, crooked knot
That pulls my seams in line but not
In sync, they’re jumbled scattered skittered
And the ice drip that bloomed from our
Limbs, limbing, limping, like cherries bittered
In the jars of liquor my dad kept on the satin wood
Assembled with His hands and stood
To hold the fruits above the head
In the memory of rooms I once said
Were my own, my home, a stone of a place
I keep in my jacket pocket
And feel the weight, iron locket
Tugging the cloth from my chest
To separate, peel back the past, what’s left
Behind is the Now, but I’m not in this
Moment, am I, thoughts vaporing, kettle hiss
And you say you’re sorry for the stain
You left on the shirt, like there’s a shame
In it, but there’s none, lover, friend
Because the redness brings me back
To those cherries, in their jars,
And for a moment I can
Occupy the ghost of those rooms again

St. Marks and 1st, 2:42 a.m.

 

Raise plow
It’s a sign I see
Every time I’m drunk and passing
Through St. Marks
And I try to picture the snow mounting,
The ice expanding into the vacant cracks and
Smothering the already narrow throat
Of a street choking on its history

I’m one of the atoms spread thin over this street
Where Giants have howled to rebel moons
And forty years ago you could smell the revolution
In the sweat and thick clouds
Of smokes and songs
Coalescing into a snow of itself
That lined the streets in heavy piles

Raise your plow
You, machine

And leave it be
To the shapeless murmurings
And scattered thoughts of who I was
Just a year ago
When I was whole
And though I wasn’t always happy
I was happy
Because when I try to fathom where I’d be forty years ago
It strikes me,
A pillar of furnace flamed steel,
That my small murmurs are all the street of my throat of my skull has room for
So carry on, machine
Raise the plow

Andromeda

It doesn’t scare me to read that the world is ending
It will not be my children
Or my children’s children’s children
That will see the collapse

2.5 million light years away,
Andromeda, you are the closest galaxy to my own
I’m the Milky Way,
And though we can’t feel it,
But I swear I can,
There is a pull between us and
In 4 billion years
We will collide

We have collided before
In the beginning
When all of matter was thrust together in
Beautiful chaos
And our elements slow danced 
Before the great fission,
The concussive Bang,
And we scattered

Now we are not one body
But two

I’m not afraid of the imminent collision,
Though they say it will be the end of ends
Of our world
Because it comforts me
To know that across these soundless
Black distances
We reach out with unseen fingers
And though they don’t interlock,
My fingertips hover beside your own
And I smile to think that
Though we move
As independent bodies in space,
There are unseen contours
In the fabric of space itself
That tug on our bodies
And pull them together

I don’t fear the collision,
The merging of galaxies
Because I can feel the heat of your distant stars
And they give me warmth
In this cold darkness
And I wait eagerly
And patiently
For the day that our hovering fingers
Collide again

Gas Leak, 2015

Beloved son
When the thunder struck did
The sound wave reach your ear
Restless particles
Oscillating against the
Body of matter and gravity
Or was it all silence
Siren screeches

They whisper the walls down
And the smoke licks out from the rubble
And I saw it
First on my phone
Before rushing out of my apartment in the ABC’s
Sprinted to 7th and 2nd
To see the the circus
I double-knotted the laces of my
[Optical white Chuck Taylor’s, 49.99 -2% student discount, eligible for FREE Two-Day shipping]

And in that whiteness I first saw sun
But in the smoked chimney 7th street
The mirage was unsustainable and the
White became abyss to me

And the helicopter blades severed the air
Into sinusoidal hands that tugged at my shirt
And stuttering sound emissions
That shook the flames
Flames that stretched like cat spines
Reaching upward towards the sky
Tadasana, mountain pose of smoke
Fingers of rippling heated air curling up in prayer and pushing
The last structures down into the Earth and
A plume of grey ash bloomed out in every direction
And suddenly you could see into the windows of the adjacent apartment building
Like peeling back the bark from the stalk and
Revealing the cellular structures within the walls
And the whiteness captured them, the starers standing in their windows
Their view of brick and mortar replaced by the trickle of siren lights and shimmering reflections through the smoke
And they stood there, naked and in awe
Looking out at a sudden emptiness
A new angle of space within the familiar cross street
And the city looking back at them
In mutual surprise and understanding
And I felt a sudden shame at looking in at the intimacy of the moment
And turned away and noticed that my
White shoes had turned grey