Monday, September 15, 2014

Portland's Finest - Poem (Slam)



Portland’s Finest

Cuttin’ phone poles
Cuz I hate the noise they make
Environmental terrorist
Cuz I am not a fake

Cop cuffed me, cussed me, hit me and smiled,
“Lissen here, boy, you gonna be here a while
I wanna know your name,
Where you’re from
Your game
Tell me who you run with
What the fuck you are
Or its gonna be a long night
In the back of this police car.”

“I see, cop, you wanna know who I am?
I’m the impact between the four horns of two rams

I’m the dream that makes you awaken, panting
Lost in an ocean, alone and drowning

I’m the way that your wife looked with lust at that man
That could rip you in half with own bare hands

I’m the daughter you had that you couldn’t protect
From the boys with the drugs that you have to inject

I’m the gang that you fear that shot up your friend
Unlimited weapons and funds with no end
That slink around corners and fall through the cracks
That make you feel like you’re under attack

But that’s just the beginning my badgering friend
I’m the war that you started that has no end

I’m the kid that you hate just because he’s black
That might be a suspect so rat-a-tat-tat

By the fear in your eyes I know that your size
Is shrinking behind the false pride that you hide

So do what you want cuz it’s all coming back to you
The abuse that you levy, to me, is nothing new

I belong to an army of people that look like you
That mix with your crowd and drink with your crew

Make you nervous? It should, bitch, cuz we’re all around
Infiltrating your culture, waiting for the bell to sound

And when the bell sounds and it’s time to take action
I’ll be looking for you with a pissed-off faction.”

He looked around.
No one could see.
He un-cuffed me
And set me free.

--Eric Marley
September 2014

Inner Child: Occupation and Response - Essay

Inner Child: Occupation and Response



"Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?" -- Mary Oliver
Part 1: The Occupation
Well, Mary, the first thing I am going to do is grow up! I am going to smother this pathetic inner child that is always asking annoying questions. I mean, they never stop!  And they’re so stupid. For example, last night he looked up at the sky and asked, pointing at the stars, if those are the eyes of his friends that haven’t been born yet. Can you believe it? What an idiot. And once he asked if the clouds were people, just a different kind of people. I laughed. Everyone knows what clouds are; they are vaporized water that coagulates. And stars are just big rocks.  It’s not rocket science, kid! Oh, and he’s so distracted! He’ll be walking towards a bug on the ground and then stop and look at a flower for ten minutes, and then go pick and eat a ripe cherry tomato and then be sorry he missed the bug! Ugh, I don’t think this child has much of a future without my adult Self stepping in to intervene. So that’s what I’m going to do.
Once this child that is so obsessed with play and learning nonsensical things has been taught that those are not the ways of happy adults, and to aid in this endeavor, I will send him to school where he will sit in a class to learn the lessons of life. He will be instructed by teachers that may know a lot, but we will keep them to one subject for maximum efficiency. The kid will sit to his normal limits of attention, whatever the adults say is normal anyway, and then test him to make sure he has memorized the facts that were presented. Integrating the facts with practical life experience will happen, or not, but experience is not as important as the facts themselves, as anyone knows, because you can get experience down the road. If this inner child rebels, acts out or especially daydreams, we will make certain he is brought back into line with others that are on a track of success. To the extent that he conforms with the standards that are set up for successful people, he will be happy. He will belong. He will have many friends.
Now, we all know there is trouble in the world. When that happens, we go to war. What I hope for my inner child with his one wild and precious life, Mary, is that he will learn how to be patriotic, that he will pledge allegiance – not to Life, or to Creator, or to the happiness and well-being and awakening of mankind to our heavenly Connection, but to a flag and to the concepts that the leaders of his great nation say are important. To defend what is his – or what the leaders tell him should be his – for these it is worth risking his wild and precious life. In these evil times, we know that what is rightfully ours will be threatened by those that disbelieve us. And to defend his rights and those of his offspring so they can have anything they want, this is a critically important endeavor. He will defend the right to the lifestyle of a civilized nation. We worked hard for those rights. We sacrificed for them. I mean, we didn’t, but someone did. So it is our responsibility to not only defend these rights, but to find ways to sustain the lifestyles we deserve. Build a fence to protect your stuff, growing inner child – so you can be happy, and your offspring can be happy, too. It is not your responsibility to worry about the residents of other nations. Your nation is what matters. This should be apparent.  (But it probably isn’t to him yet, haha).
Once he is out of the service, with his one wild and precious life, I hope my inner child will go work for someone, for that is the way of safety. Sure his creativity may feel stifled at times, but that is why he gets two weeks off per year, to go find his bliss again, so he can return energized for another fifty weeks. If he stays long enough and does well, he can get more days off – whatever the company says he can take. He can sail oceans and surf and fish, as long as he comes back. If the company doesn’t sell or change management or go through any hard times because of dishonesty, greed, mismanagement, or the larger economy faltering, he can one day get money for not working and look back on his life from a place of physical disrepair with the satisfaction that comes to someone that has given his life to what matters.
During his years of working, this inner child will need to find God. For that, he will need religion. I hope he will find one that gives him direction about how to know God, that has pre-formed rites and rituals that keep him in line, so he doesn’t do anything to offend the Great Deity upon whom he is dependent for favor. With luck, he will never feel the need to ask questions that would estrange him from his great God. With even greater luck, he will have experiences that make him feel closer to Him, and hopefully those experiences will teach him not only that he is right, but that others are wrong and that their sacred experiences  are from the Enemy of All Righteousness. There is no doubt that this successful son will be at war with this Enemy the whole of his life. May he vanquish him and stand atop his dead body with the flaming sword of justice in his hand, pointing it towards the sky which is the home of the Lord. I hope this for him.
There is much work to be done for this wild child of nature to have a successful life. Let the training begin forthwith. 
“Come on, kid, get in here.”
Part Two: The Resistance
My name is Alexander. I don’t know how I know how to say what I am about to say. I don’t even know how I know what I am going to talk about, but I do.
I heard that man talking a second ago. I don’t like what he says. I am only five years old, and I already know that what he says is not right.
I know a lot more than he thinks, but he doesn’t think what I know is very important. Like sometimes I lay in my bed and listen to the rain on the window and it sounds like when my cat walks down the hall and it makes me feel warm inside. And sometimes the moon breaks through the clouds when it’s still raining and each drop holds its own rainbow, like its own little world. I watch them shimmer in the moonlight that comes from so far away and it’s like it makes them alive, just for me. I feel special, I feel close to the One who made the raindrops when I see that because I know that in some way, everything is just like that. I look up at the moon and it makes me smile, even when it’s not raining. And when I see it poking through the clouds, I think of my mother. She’s soft, like the moon. The sun can be hard. Once I got a sunburn and it hurt for days and then my skin even peeled off! The moon never does that. The sun makes everything so … so much. But the moon, especially a full moon, gives me just enough. These quiet times with her make me want to be nice to my sisters, too. I don’t think that guy knows that the moon and I are friends.  I feel the same about the earth, too, except a little different because it has a different personality to me. He would say those things are not important. That’s not right. And what that guy said about my question about the stars wasn’t right, either. In fact, I know he’s wrong. Those really are the eyes of my friends that haven’t been born yet. I know that when spacemen look at them close they are rocks, but from a distance they are my friends, looking down on me. I know that because they tell me stories of other times, times I don’t remember when I am alone, when we were all together. The stories all sound familiar, even though I don’t remember them without the help of my friends. I don’t know how it works like that – that they can be one thing up close and another thing far away and how I can hear them inside me, but that’s how it really works. They come to me all the time. I could say more about it, but when he was making fun of me and how I love everything – the bugs and flowers and tomatoes – that I can’t get enough of those living things, it hurt my feelings. It’s not my fault. I just… love everything. (shrugs). What’s wrong with that?
He talked about school, too, that guy. I’m not going. I’m not. He can do whatever he wants, but I am not going. (Long pause, frowning). But if he makes me go, you better watch out because I am not going to follow their rules. I AM going to daydream, all the time, unless they say something that lines up with what I already know inside me. I won’t listen to anything else, from anyone that tries to teach me. I know more than people think. All new stuff has to agree with what the stars and moon say, and what the dirt and the bugs and sky says, or I am going to ignore it. It’s like there’s this straight pole inside me that is made of truth. Any new idea that comes to my mind has to be straight like it is or I am throwing it out. If a part or the new idea is bent and a part is straight, I can maybe keep the straight part and throw away the rest. If too much is bent, or if the teacher is mean, I will throw it all out. Teachers should be nice because anything that lines up with the pole inside me agrees with the moon, and I told you the moon is like my mother, and the earth, and all that is Real. If Teachers are mean, it’s because they hold too much inside them that is not real and that will make me doubt everything they say. Good luck, school, teaching me anything that disagrees with the stars. I will not listen.
After talking about school, the man talked about war. I don’t understand war. It looks exciting to me, but it also looks like it hurts everything good. I guess there are reasons that someone might have to fight. Like, if someone was going to hurt one of my sisters, I would fight, even if I was scared. I am the oldest, and the biggest and strongest. If my parents weren’t around, who would help them? First I would try to talk it out – I would try real hard because I would probably be scared– but if that didn’t work, put ‘em up! (Puts ‘em up, smiling a gap toothed grin). But the thing that made no sense to me was the part about allegiance to the flag. It seems like that is not a good idea. The flag isn’t the one telling people what to do; it’s the people that have the power behind it. Anyone knows that. And if those people say to do things that don’t line up with my inner pole, what then? What if they only want what’s good for them, and not the people? I’ve heard the pledge of allegiance. I even said it. But I am not going to say it any more until they change it to say:
“I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, as long as the leaders agree with my inner pole, one of many nations that are all under God, that promise to try not to divide themselves from each other, with liberty and justice for all.” I like that last part the best. I don’t think they’re going to change the pledge of allegiance for me, though, so I am not going to say it anymore. I’m sorry I ever did.        
That guy also talked about working for someone. That just seems like school for grownups that forgot everything; forgot how to be happy, forgot how to play, forgot how to hear things like stars talking, forgot about their inner pole… (Appears to think hard). I guess there has to be work in the world. But it seems like people should just do what they want to do for work and spit up the hard jobs or the bad jobs between themselves. Otherwise, who would haul the garbage? Who would (smiles and chuckles to himself) clean my room? Some things have to be done, but there’s no way I am going to spend my … what did she say? … “wild and precious life” sitting in a school for grownups. No way. My inner pole wants to throw up when I think about that. It wants to wither. I think that’s what the workers’ bosses want to happen. It makes the adults easier to boss around.
And can I just say that church sucks? Why would God create a whole world and then only visit the places that man built? God doesn’t like man-made stuff. He wants man to like God-made stuff. Of all the things that guy said, the part about religion was the worst. The worst! I want to make my own religion, and have one member in it: me. I want to do whatever God tells me to do, and I want to hear her in my own mind, with my own words. I don’t know if God is a man or a woman or a child or an animal… I kind of think God is the perfect mixture of all those things. Whatever he is, all I want to do is be in front of him and I want him to be in front of me. I want to see the tracks of God everywhere. I never want to forget what my heart tells me, what the moon and stars and owls and dolphins and all the people who love each other say: that I am somehow a part of God. I don’t know how, but something inside me tells me that. And when I whisper to myself when I am going to sleep, “I am a part of you, God. Thank you for telling me that,” my inner pole sings.
I think this adult that wants to possess me is going to have a harder time than he thinks. I know that in some other times that I don’t really remember he had an easier time with me. But not this time. This time I am walking my own way. I am looking at the sky. I am standing on the earth. I am holding to the trees.
This time, I am me.

--Eric Marley
September 11, 2014