2016-12-23

My Mother Died

My Mother Died
By James Oliver Smith Jr

My mother died ... yesterday ...
at least ... that's what one aunt says ...

she was married to one of my mother's brothers ... a brother
who was already dead ...
she was telephoned
by one of my other aunts
who was
also married to one of my mothers brothers ...
another brother
who was also dead ...

or

perhaps it was earlier ...
There seems to be some confusion
within my family ...
about my mother's death ...
not about my mother being dead ...
but ... rather ... about ... who ...
will tell me
my mother is dead ...

I ... myself ... was curious
about this ... too ..
as I watched the
raw ... December ... sun
stroke my 65 year old hands ....

Wrinkles
sprung up from my hands
as I laid plastic tracks
on the children's bar
in the coffee shop
... forming ...
a child's universe
from plastic engineering ...

trains and horses
traverse the tracks
beneath an oscillating fan
warding off Minnesota's winter
...
which craves to
cling to pane glass
as light rail trains

... real trains ... outside ...


remind me
there's something churning ... outside ...
my mother's death ...

I know
there's supposed to be a protocol
... mother dies ...
... children notify siblings
... siblings notify the world ...
... condolences ...
propagate
like pigeons in Elliot Park
or Landmark Square ...

Then ... I suppose ...  I should reflect
on the good times ...
on the ... shared ... supposed ... intimate memories? ...
on the ... supposed ... affections once held? ...

Between the sub-zero temperatures
outside
... the arthritic fingers ...
... the merciless ... low hanging sun ...
my hands open the box of
reflections
and grope ... with those ...
tired hands ... inside ...
My knuckles knock ... painfully
against bare walls ...
an empty bottom ...
and a top ... never ...
properly installed ...
nothing deposited ... empty ...

What is the protocol
for emptiness? ...
.... What is the response ...
to "condolences"
lobbed in the direction
of emptiness? ...

Another light rail train
glints by in the Solstice sun ...
on University Avenue ...
It's the shortest day ...
the longest night ...
and for me ... the largest ...
box of emptiness ..

My daughter
asks my brother
to tell me
my mother is dead ... sometime ...
recently ...

and ... she says ...

whispering ... from within that box
of emptiness ...

"Tell him" ... she said ....
"his mother is dead"

... then she said ...
"You'll tell me, (right?)
when he's ill?" ... "when he's ill?"

My brother sighs ... relieved ...
"The cat is out of the bag" ... he says ...

I snap more plastic tracks together ....
and I arrange trains and horses ...

and put the lid ... firmly ...
back onto the empty box of reflections ...

"You will tell me (right?),"
... says my daughter ... to my brother ...
"when he's ill?"

My mother is dead ...
I think ...
as I contemplate my aunt's message
... "Your mother is dead" ...

The protocol was short circuited ...


The box of reflections is empty ...

A neighbor says...
"Your grandson was baby Jesus last year"
in the church nativity ...
another empty ... unshared
reflection ...

Happy Solstice ...


It's the longest night ...
It's the shortest day ...
It's the most empty box
of reflections ...

The condolences? ...

I click another plastic track together ...
and watch another light rail train
pass by
outside ....
beneath the December sun ...

My old wrinkled hands
can touch the tracks ...
They can feel the memories ...

They push aside the empty box
of my mother's empty memories ...

And my daughter? ... and her baby Jesus? ...

She won't have to worry ... anymore ...
who is going to tell me
my mother's dead ...

josjr (2016 1222)

... The Bard of Franklin Avenue ...

2015-03-26

Memory Card



Memory Card
By James Oliver Smith Jr

Mark Jacobson was rather proud of himself. He was pleased with his life as he reflected on it. Although he did not plan to live for 93 years, he surprised himself by actually enjoying his time on planet Earth. All of it.

“It’s a good day,” he would typically say to the attending nurse each morning. The nurse would usually smile and busily mumble some canned affirmation while checking monitors clicking, beeping and whirring around Mark, attesting to his status on the medical charts draped over the foot of his bed.

“Yes, it is a good day,” the nurse might say absent mindedly. The nurses never disagreed with him. He knew it wasn’t their job to assess his evaluation of the day. Their job was to keep him alive.

Mark thought about the irony of that purpose: to keep him alive. He knew that was the task they were focused on, even though they all knew this was the last phase. He also knew they were quite reticent to become too connected to him personally. This was, after all, one of those rooms where people left as bodies to be processed, handed over to relatives or made available to the medical school for study by new generations of physicians. That’s why he never asked what their names are and never committed their names to memory when they offered it.

Mark was ready for all those machines to register that final status, the time of death. The nurses were ready clean up after him. The hospital was ready to reassign the room. The process of keeping him alive was simply a stream of data insinuating itself into databases, spreadsheets and quarterly finance reports. All of those years of designing software and generating reports for various hungry managerial eyes had given Mark the ability to look at the process of life as a data set to be manipulated and analyzed.

He had treated his own life in the same way: a data stream. A warm, comforting rush worked its way across his body when he imagined the order he had instilled into that data stream. It was one of the few physical sensations he could still experience. He didn’t care, at this point, if his body could actually still feel the sensation physically. He fully understood the possibility that he was simply stimulating his tactile cognition with the thought. He felt the order of his life’s data stream, whether it was physical or cognitive.

The nurses were only concerned about data emanating from the monitors. That was their connection to reality.

Mark turned his head to the side and stared in the direction of the night stand. He took note of the phone headset resting in its cradle and the controller for the television set that stared down at him from the corner of the room, next to the window. He could also see a box of tissues with a tuft of white fiber rising from the opening in the top of the box. Moving his hand to the edge of the bed his fingers moved the objects on the table to the side a bit. Then he moved them again.

“Where is it?” he hissed to himself, “Where is my memory card?” Mark was now agitated. That sense of order he had just felt in his life’s data stream was now disrupted and he was not happy. He had spent most of his final years scanning documents, books and images. He spent countless hours organizing and documenting the digital files on on tablets and desktop computers. He even made sure that everything was backed up in multiple locations, both on the web and local back disk drives.

He had digitized everything he could. He was frustrated with stories of relatives spending weeks, months, even years, cleaning up, organizing and disseminating the belongings of relatives who had died.

He was determined to make the job of those tasked with cleaning up after him easy. All of his jobs, marriages, business relationships, children and were documented and organized digitally. There was nothing left to clean up. It was all digital, redundantly backed up and fully documented. Every network location, service password and file system structure was detailed in a memory card that he planned to give to one of his children if they showed up. That memory card was sitting on that night stand, ready to be handed over.

... was on the table! That is the problem. ... was on the table. Mark could not see it! The key to his life’s data stream could not be seen! His fingers searched the bed sheets for the emergency switch. Once found, he pressed it, setting off the alarm.

In short order, Mark’s room was filled with nameless nurses checking monitors carefully. Seeing nothing threatening, they turned towards him in unison. One of them asked, “What is wrong?”

“My memory card! Where is my memory card!”

One of the nurses moved to the night stand and moved a couple of items. The nurse’s hand lifted a small blue box containing Mark’s memory card.

“It’s right here,” said the nurse impatiently, “It just got moved over to the other side of the night stand. It’s alright.”

The nurse placed the blue box at the edge of the night stand, arranging the phone, controller and box of tissue so Mark could see the memory card container.

“Now you should be able to see it,” said the nurse, “Is there anything else you need?”

“Yes, I was wondering if my son or daughter had called,” answered Mark, hopefully.

“No one has called”, said the nurse, adjusting his sheets, “now get some rest.”

“Damn kids,” Mark whispered to himself.

As the final nurse was about to leave the room, Mark’s machines came alive with a concert of alarms in different keys, a cacophony of technological awareness. The nurse rushed to Mark’s bed, grabbed his wrist, then pressed the emergency alarm switch. The other nurses and a physician entered. The physician began issuing orders, starting the process of trying to revive Mark’s body.

Ultimately, the physician terminated the revival process, jotted down the time of death on the chart, then he left the room to answer another call.

Nurses set about to prepare Mark’s body for transfer to the university for research. Those were the instructions in Mark’s files on the event of death.

A man walks into the room and asks if this is Mark Jacobson’s room.

“Yes,” said one of the nurses, “may I help you?”

“Well, I got a message from my dad, telling me to come here. My dad said my grandfather had something he wanted to give to my dad. Mark Jacobson is my grandfather.”

“Oh, I’m sorry,” said the nurse sympathetically, “your grandfather just died. That is him lying there. Would you like to be alone?”

“Oh, no. Go on with your business,” said the man, “is there anything I need to do?”

The nurse looked at Mark’s chart, then returned her gaze to the man, “Actually, your grandfather has taken care of everything. He is donating his body for research at the university.”

“OK,” the man said puzzled, “but my dad said my grandfather wanted to give him something.”

The nurse thought for a second, then said, “Well, he kept talking about the memory card in this blue container.” The nurse lifted the container. “He kept it on his night stand. He was pretty obsessed with it. Could this be what he wanted to give your father?”

“I really don’t know,” said the man, “I never have seen my grandfather. My dad never had much to do with him when he left home after my grandmother divorced him. Quite frankly, I didn’t even know he was alive until my dad called me and asked me to come here and see what my granddad was calling about.”

“Well,” said the nurse, “here’s the memory card.” She hands the blue container to the man, who held in his palm, inspecting it closely.

The man extended his hand to the small trash basket underneath the night stand and released the blue container into the black plastic liner of the trash can.

“It seems like this trip was a waste,” said the man plainly, devoid of feeling. He turned, left the room and stepped out of sight.

The nurse looked at Mark’s body ... then the trash can ... then the chart ... then she joined the other nurses shutting down machines and preparing the body. The room needed to be ready for another patient shortly.

Josjr (2013)

2014-04-03

Skylar and The Divine Light Fairy

Skylar and The Divine Light Fairy
A One Act play
by James Oliver Smith, Jr.



Cast:
Skylar: a seven year old girl
Nancy: John’s sister, Skylar’s aunt
Fairy: The Divine Light Fairy
Betty: Skylar’s mother
John: Skylar’s father
Fibonacci Man: Man on bus
Abyan: Muslim Woman on bus
Pat: Person on bus
Priest: Man on Green Line light rail car
Bible Man: Man on Green Line light rail car
Eddie: Dakota American Indian man at Minnehaha Falls

*******************************

Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota

Narrator: Skylar and her aunt Nancy are on the 21 bus headed west down Lake Street for the Blue Line light rail station. They are seated on the first forward facing seat on the right hand side of the bus. Skylar looks forward to the first seat opposite the driver where an older woman is sitting quietly, smiling broadly. The woman is wearing a bright pink dress that is stained, thread bare and wrinkled. She is holding a straight tree branch that is about two feet long. Her thin fingers clutch the branch tightly. On her head, tucked into her gray, disheveled hair, is a rhinestone tiara sparkling with the sun light shining through the bus’ windows.  The woman turns her head towards Skylar. Her eyes sparkle.  She winks and Skylar laughs.  With her right hand the woman beckons for Skylar to come to her.
Skylar: Aunt Nancy, that woman wants me to go over to her.

Nancy: No. You can’t do that. She’s a stranger.

Skylar: But she looks really nice Aunt Nancy.

Nancy: OK, but I’m going with you and I’ll sit next to you.

[Skylar and Nancy move up to sit next to the woman with the tiara.]

Skylar: [Boldly. Curious.] Hi.

Fairy: Hi, little girl. What is your name?

Skylar: Skylar. What’s your name?

Fairy: Oh, I don’t have a name anymore. I’m just the Divine Light Fairy.

Skylar: Fairy? What’s that?

Fairy: A Fairy is someone with magical powers. And my power is that I can give others the power to see the Divine Light. Savers is a portal into the Divine Light and they gave me this tiara as a sign that I have this power.

Nancy: You probably got it out of the trash.

Fairy: It’s mine. They set it out for me. It is a sign of my power. My wand here was given to me by an oak by the river. I use this wand to pass my power on to others.

Skylar: What does “magical” mean?

Fairy: Magic is something that happens and you can’t explain why it happens.

Skylar: You mean, like the sun and moon? I don’t know why they happen.

Fairy: Scientists know about the sun and moon. The earth turns and the sun and moon rise. But what we don’t know, is why we feel happy when the sun and moon rise … or sad … or mad … or hurt … when we see the sun rise … What is it, in the universe, that makes us feel safe … or afraid … or anxious?

Skylar: You mean, like the darkness, when mommy turns out the light? Why am I afraid?

Fairy: Yes … like the darkness. Why do you think you are afraid of the dark?

Skylar: … because I don’t know what’s there. It makes me scared that there could be something there … and I can’t see it.

Fairy: What if I could help you see through the darkness and see the Divine Light? Would you be afraid then?

Skylar: What is the Divine Light?

Fairy: It is a feeling, within yourself … that you will be safe … that things will be alright … that somewhere in the darkness is a power that will give you strength … confidence … courage.

Skylar: I would like that. How can I get that power?

Fairy: Well … I can give it to you.

Skylar: How?

[The Fairy lifts the stick she is holding and taps the tip on Skylar's forehead.]

Fairy: Just like that. You now have the power to see the Divine Light. It’s that simple.

Skylar: But what does the divine light look like?

Fairy: Oh … You’ll know when you see it … and when you do you will be very happy … but it will only make YOU happy, because no one else will see it in the same way you do.

Nancy: Skylar. Here’s the station. We need to get off now. Come on.

[Skylar and Nancy get off the bus and head towards the escalator at the Lake Street light rail station]

Skylar: Aunt Nancy … can you see the Divine Light?

Nancy: Don’t be silly. That old woman is crazy. You aren’t going to see any Divine Light.

Skylar: But she said I would, and I believe her. But I don’t know what the Divine Light looks like. She said it would make me happy.

Nancy: You shouldn’t fill your head with such notions. There is no such thing as a Divine Light that’ll make you happy. You can just forget that right now.

*******************************

[Seven year old Skylar's bedroom, the following morning]
Narrator: A beam of light makes its way through a break in the curtains in Skylar’s bedroom, illuminating her face.

Skylar: [Wakes up, rubs her eyes, blinks, Sits up and looks in the direction of the light coming in from the window] Oh! Such beautiful light! … It’s absolutely divine! … Yes … absolutely divine. … [exuberantly, standing up in bed and bouncing] Divine! Divine! Divine!

[Skylar stops bouncing, sniffs the air and smiles]

Skylar: Pancakes! … Sausage! … Breakfast! … Daddy’s making breakfast! … [starts jumping on the bed again] Divine! Divine! Divine!
[Skylar jumps off the bed and runs out of the bedroom and down the hallway towards the kitchen]

Skylar: Daddy! Daddy! Daddy! … Breakfast! Breakfast! Breakfast! … Divine! Divine! Divine!

John: [turns towards his daughter and smiles] I thought these aromas would wake you up. You seem extraordinarily happy this morning. What happened?

Skylar: The light woke me up daddy. The morning light. It’s divine, daddy, divine! … Divine! Divine! Divine!

John: Divine? Where in the world did you hear that word?

Skylar: On the bus, daddy. Yesterday. Me and Nancy …

Betty: [walking into the kitchen, tying the strap on her bath robe] Nancy and I … not me and Nancy … Nancy and I.

Skylar: … [speaking rapidly ... more rapidly than her mouth could form the words, her speech stumbling on the words, taking quick, frantic breaths, in a continuous stream of words] Auntie Nancy and I were on the 21 bus yesterday and there was this old woman on the front seat, right by the driver and she had on an old pink dress, a raggedy brown jacket, and a beautiful tiara on her head. It glittered! Just like the sun this morning. She said she was the Divine Light Fairy and she said that Savers was a portal to the land of the Divine and that they gave her the tiara as a sign of her power to see the divine Light and she had a stick that she said was from an Oak tree by the river and that the stick has powers in her hand to give others the ability to see the Divine Light and she tapped my forehead with it and said that I would be able to see the Divine Light now and that’s what I saw this morning … the Divine Light … like she said … see? [stopping, totally out of breath, eagerly awaiting the response from her parents]

John: Divine Light? You saw the Divine Light?

Skylar: Yes! This morning. Just now. Divine! Divine! Divine!

Betty: [taking a seat at the table] Divine Light. Now that’s interesting. Let’s sit down at the table, eat some of daddy’s pancakes and then you can tell us all about this Divine Light.

Skylar: [takes a seat as John puts a plate with pancakes and sausage in front of her]. She picks up the knife, cuts a chunk from the stick of butter and spreads it on the pancakes] Nancy says she’s crazy … She says that woman rides the bus all the time and says the same thing all the time and wears the tiara all the time, but this morning I saw the Divine Light … [Skylar pours syrup on her pancakes, grabs her fork and cuts out a piece dripping with melted butter and syrup] … so that means she’s not crazy … right?

John: [serving Betty a plate with pancakes stacked on it] So, what were you and Aunt Nancy doing on the 21 bus?

Skylar: We were going to the Lake Street Station to take the Blue Line to the Mall of America. Aunt Nancy promised me some ice cream and some rides at Nickelodeon Universe.

Betty: Aunt Nancy says this woman is on the 21 a lot?

Skylar: Yes. Aunt Nancy says she’s seen her on the 5, the 2 and lots of other buses. She says she’s crazy, but I don’t think so. I think she’s nice.

John: [sitting down at the table with his own stack of pancakes] Do you know what the word “divine” means?

Skylar: No, but it must be something special, like the sunshine that woke me up today. I looked it up on my Kindle Fire last night on the web and all the meanings said something about god and something about deity, but I don’t know what that is.

Betty: Well, “deity” is just another word for “god”.

Skylar: Why don’t they just say “god” then?

John: Some people don’t like the word “god” because it is associated with religions and empires and wars in ways that they are not comfortable with.

Skylar: Like you? You never talk about “god” or “deity”.

Betty: We didn’t want you to grow up with a narrow view of the universe. We feel the universe is larger and more inclusive than many narrow ideas about gods or deities.

Skylar: … but what has all this got to do with the word “divine”?

John: Well, since you are asking these questions it must mean it is time for your own journey to discover what the word “divine” means to you.

Skylar: You mean I can do this on my own? … find out what “divine” means?

Betty: Yes. We feel that’s the best way to find out what the word “divine” means. Aunt Nancy told me that she is free today and was wondering if you and she could go on an adventure today … your choice.

Skylar: My choice? Then I want to search for the “divine”. Maybe I can talk to the Divine Light Fairy again! … Divine! Divine! Divine!

Betty: Nancy told me about this Fairy you met. She’s not too keen on encouraging you to pursue this, but she did say she was willing to go with you today, to search for the Divine Light.

*******************************

[Skylar and Aunt Nancy walking towards Lake Street to catch a bus]

Nancy: You mother tells me that you want to spend the day looking for the meaning of the word “divine”. Is that true?

Skylar: Well, I think I already have it, but I’m not sure. I want to be sure.

Nancy: What do you think it is?

Skylar: I think it’s sunshine, like the Divine Light Fairy said. She tapped me with her oak stick and said I had the ability to see the light and this morning I saw the sunshine … light … That is divine.

Nancy: If you know what it means then you don’t need to search for the meaning of it.

Skylar: But I only THINK I know what it means. Mommy and Daddy said I need to find out for myself and I want to find out if it is sunshine.

Nancy: Alright, where do you want to look first? We are coming up to the bus stop and we have choices to make. We have the 7 bus and the 21 bus at this corner and the Blue Line light rail just a couple of blocks down Lake Street. See the station down there?

Skylar: Yes. What should we do?
Nancy: One thing I like to do when I can’t make up my mind and am willing to use any of the available options is to look for a sign that helps me make the decision. For instance. We have the Blue Line, the 7 bus and the 21 bus. Look around us and see if there is anything that is the color Blue, the number 21 or the number 7.

Skylar: [spins slowly in place when they get to the corner, looking for something blue, 7 or 21] Look, at the curb! There’s a 7Up can. Let’s go on the 7.

Nancy: Alright. Which direction?
Skylar: Hmmm, whichever one comes first. We’ll take that.

[Skylar and Nancy cross Lake Street, looking up 26th Avenue to the North and Minnehaha Avenue to the south]

Skylar: Look a 7 bus is coming!

Nancy: OK, we are going north then.

[When the 7 bus stops, they board and sit on the first forward facing seat. In front of them, on the side facing seat is an old man with gray hair wearing a long, flowing, white robe with vertical rows of sewn patterns of tree branches and leaves. His right hand is holding onto a thick cane carved from a tree branch]

Skylar: What’s your name?

Fibonacci Man: I’m Fibonacci Man.

Skylar: That’s a funny name.

Fibonacci Man: Why? It’s logic, and logic is divine.

Skylar: Divine? You know the meaning of “divine”?

Fibonacci Man: Of course, little woman. I know not only the meaning of “divine”, I also know the formula for “divine”?

Skylar: Formula? The “divine” has a formula?

Fibonacci Man: Yes, of course. Everything has a formula and the foundation of all formulas is the Fibonacci sequence. It is the formula of the “divine”. [then the Fibonacci man lifts his wooden cane and raps it on the floor, first once, then once again, then twice, then three times, five times, then finally eight times. Then he smiles] THAT is the sound of logic, the sound of the Fibonacci Sequence and the sound of the “divine”. I am the Fibonacci Man.

Skylar: I thought the meaning of “divine” was sunshine.

Fibonacci Man: Oh, yes … yes! Sunshine. All light is defined by the Fibonacci Sequence … so therefore … little woman … sunshine is the meaning of “divine”. I am the Fibonacci Man.

[across from Fibonacci Man is a Somali woman wearing a hijab. She is reading the Koran. Skylar walks over to her.]

Skylar: Hi.

Abyan: Hi little girl.

Skylar: What is your name?

Abyan: Abyan.

Skylar: Why do you wear that thing on your head?

Abyan: It is a sign of modesty.

Skylar: Do you know what the Divine is?

Abyan: Yes. The Divine is Allah.

Skylar: Is Allah god?

Abyan: Yes.

Skylar: What does god look like?

Abyan: Allah doesn’t look like anything, but can also look like everything. Allah is everywhere.

Skylar: Is Allah in light?

Abyan: Of course.

Skylar: Thought so.

[On the front seat on the other side of the bus from where Nancy sits, is a person wearing a sun dress. The person has a full beard and short hair, but has a hair band across the top of the temples and head. Skylar walks over to this person.]

Skylar: Hi.

Pat: Hi.

Skylar: What is your name?

Pat: Pat.

Skylar: Are you a man or woman?

Pat: Is that important?

Skylar: I guess not. I’m on a mission today with my aunt Nancy.

Pat: You are? What mission is that?

Skylar: I’m looking for the Divine. I think I know what it is, but I’m not sure. Do you know what the Divine is?

Pat: Well, I think the Divine is different for everyone. We are all unique and we shouldn’t be judged by how we look, what we think or how we see the Divine. But, since you asked, I must say that I love wearing my sun dresses on the bus on sunny days. I feel so warm, so safe, that I feel like I can go anywhere and be accepted as I am.

Skylar: Sunlight! I like sunlight too. I have the power to see the Divine Light. The Divine Light Fairy told me so.

Pat: I know the Divine Light Fairy too. I see her almost everyday. She gave me this hair band I’m wearing.

Skylar: But your hair is so short you don’t need a hair band.

Pat: It’s not for my hair. The Divine Light Fairy said it was a gift from the Savers Portal to the Divine Light. She said it would help me be who I am. Did she tap with you with her wand and give you the power to see the Divine Light?

Skylar: Yes! She did.

Pat: You are very lucky. Use that power wisely.

Nancy: Skylar. We are at the West Bank Green Line station. We need to get off.

Skylar: OK auntie. Bye Pat. Bye Abyan. Bye Fibonacci Man. We’re going on the train now.

[Skylar and Nancy took the Cedar Avenue elevator down to the light rail platform and boarded the next westbound train. They sat next to a priest wearing a big cross hanging from his neck. It swayed gently on his chest. He tucks his robes beneath his legs when Skylar and Nancy sit down.]

Skylar: [to the priest] Hi.

Priest: Hello, young woman. How are you today?

Skylar: I’m happy. I saw the Divine Light today.

Priest: You did? Where?

Skylar: In my bed this morning. The light of the sun hit my face and I woke up. Immediately I knew it was the Divine Light, but I’m still not sure. What do you think?

Priest: Well, God is everywhere and he speaks to everyone in different ways. It would not surprise me at all if he chose to speak to you through a beam of light in your bedroom.

Skylar: Oh, goodie! Divine! Divine! Divine! … but … wait … You said “he speaks”. Is God a man?

Priest: No. God is not a man. He’s just God.

Skylar: … but how come you keep saying “he” is God is not a man?

Nancy: Skylar, we are at the Downtown East light rail station. We need to catch the Blue Line here.

Skylar: Bye mister priest.

Priest: Bye young woman. Enjoy your day. May you be blessed with your Divine Light from the sun.

[Skylar and Nancy leave the Green Line car and walk to the other side of the station to catch a southbound Green Line light rail train and step into the first train to arrive. A man wearing a suit is reading a Bible on the large seat by the door. Skylar and Nancy sit next to him.]

Skylar: What are you reading?

Bible Man: The Bible.

Skylar: What’s that.

Bible Man: It’s the word of God.

Skylar: God? That means the Divine. I saw it in the dictionary.

Bible Man: Yes. God is Divine. Are you saved?

Skylar: I don’t know, but I have the power to see the Divine Light.

Bible Man: How can you do that if you aren’t saved?

Skylar: I don’t know. I was just told that by the Divine Light Fairy. She tapped me with her wand and gave me the power to see the Divine Light.

Bible Man: No. No. You can’t see the Divine Light until you are saved. Here’s a tract that will tell how to get saved. Then you will be able to see the Divine Light through Jesus.

Skylar: Is Jesus in the Divine Light?

Bible Man: Of course he is. He is everywhere.

Skylar: Good. Jesus is in the Divine Light. I thought so.

Nancy: Skylar. We have to get off now. We’re at the Minnehaha Falls station.

[Skylar and Nancy leave the train and walk to the Minnehaha Falls, descending the steps to the bottom, where they could get a good look at the cascading waters. At the base of the falls a man is seated on a rock. He is silent, listening intently to the sound of the falling water. Skylar approaches the man]

Skylar: Hi. My name is Skylar. What’s yours?

Eddie: Eddie. How are you today?

Skylar: I’m happy. I’m also on a mission.

Eddie: A mission? So am I. What is your mission?

Skylar: I’m looking for the Divine Light.

Eddie: You have come to a good place to find the Divine Light. I look for it too here. This is a sacred place for my people and for all nations.

Skylar: Who are your people?

Eddie: The Dakota. We were the first to settle this land and we have shared it with many others. For me, it is the place I come to see the Divine Light.

Skylar: Is sunlight the Divine Light?

Eddie: Sunlight is Divine. Yes, indeed, young woman. Sunlight is Divine, and it is here, in the falls … in the water itself … in the earth … and in every tree that grows up within the earth … I feel happy here … and safe.

[Skylar smiles and looks up towards the falls which is sparkling in the afternoon sun. Then she notices a woman leaning over the rail at the top of the falls. It is the Divine Light Fairy with her bright pink dress, her dazzling rhinestone tiara and her oaken wand. She's smiling.]

Skylar: I feel happy too … and absolutely … divine!

The End

2013-02-27

Tabula Rasa Divination


Tabula Rasa Divination

Oh, those wiley friends of mine.
They tried to tell me
there were pages on the wall,
But their shifting shapes
with flashing hands and fluid feet,
all struggled to show it all.

"But there is divineness in the words," they'd offer in harmony,
"on the pages," I could not see.
"There should be pronouns", they would plea.

Some said "he."
some said "no"!
I could not agree.
I didn't know,
for there's nothing there to show.

"It's a Tabula Rasa", I then surmised.
"For the words have all been compromised."
So I stepped away
from the propaganda haze
and thought of all the ways
a rain drop sparkles on a vine
and said,
"Now that's an image of the divine!"

James Oliver Smith, Jr. (2013 0225)

2013-01-24

Paying The Rent


Paying The Rent
---------------
(from Boston Rediscovered)

I'm paying the rent
for a bit of time
on Stuart and Tremont

I once ate roast beef
here
with horseradish
and sharp cheddar,
waiting behind
rope lines
and driven appetites
prodded by theatrics,
strip shows
and cheap cinematic screens
obscured by cigarettes
and gay boys miffed
by my desire
to actually see a film ...

It's a diorama
of my personal history,
somehow
infused
with airwaves
once announcing
body counts
and psychedelic sentiments
more brilliant than
supernova incandescence...

The Age of Aquarious
seems to have come
and gone
without the slightest whimper
of regret
or innocence--

It's all gone now,
that sharp thread
of raw curiosity
and unbridled
animosity...

The smokey screen
of the Stuart theater
now serves
Big Macs, Egg McMuffins and
Filet-O-Fish sandwiches
to the faces
of Chinatown...

and I now sit
with an Italian combo
and a cinnamon roll
to the sounds of
business chatter,
employee evaluations
and investment strategies...

Hair is no longer banned
in Boston

... it's been styled
for power

josjr (2012 0124)

2012-10-04

The Evils Of Jazz

As seat-of-the-pants
as my plans for Boston were,
I was every bit as serious about
attending Berklee School of Music
as any seventeen year-old
could be ...

I'd seen the catalog --
I'd studied the images of
professors,
musicians
and
even the streets pictured
in the catalog,
over
and
over --

brownstone buildings,
Back Bay beauty
and Fenway fantasies
beguiled my jazz maze
incandescent bebop
vision phase ...

it was 1969,
the age of aquarius,
the home of academic protests,
bongo bistro sit-in music fests
in gardens, commons and city squares

to the tune of psychedelic-strafed
extemporaneous insanity
held hostage
in winding orange-blazed skin-head
Hari Krishna singers
dancing on the corner of
Boylston and Tremont
begging
forlornly to business suits
and afro-wielding
mini-skirt, frolic, hormone
vibrant, bell-bottom
leg romps
in the shadow of unrest
movies, hair-brained stage flames
and curious yellow
flourished
orations in the plums of
peeled-banana-LSD extravaganzas

bleeding on Herald-Traveler-Record-Globe
admissions
to culture
civil detonation

I observed it all
from three thousand miles
of innocence
interred

for it was jazz
I wanted
blazing from a bellowing bore
of brass, shellac and triggers
ripping
dirty tones
in a fusion melody

but my mother
tried to quell it all
with an attempted exorcism
of naive will
in Richland,
a preacher assigned to the mission
of declaring
the godless evil of music
contorted
and misconstrued from
straight and narrow flows
of righteous rivers running rampant
in the backwaters
nuclear servitude

but, there,
in the preacher's den
I syncopated
gloriously to the rhythm
biblical thumpitude

and ripped a delighted
glissando
as I left the church
in a cloud
of elated curiosity

inspired by Huntington Avenue,
the road
I craved
to
extract from picture
and tack to the bottoms of my
shoes

josjr (2012 1004)
Stowaway in Boston

2012-10-03

Redstone Sunrise

Throughout the night
there was only the vast
emptiness of an
unknown sea
underneath,
giant waves
washing away a landscape
that had names,
colors,
people,
voices,
faces,

but they all seemed to be sucked
into tiny points of light,
crawling painfully,
slowly ––
like bugs or dust
or lost traffic signals
that had become
detached from poles,
wandering aimlessly.

The lush green of Seattle
for which I often lusted,
lamenting that the caravan
seem to be stuck
in some desert rut,
bogged down in desolate dunes,
where trees were exotic,
mountain scarce
and people all seemed
to be from somewhere else ––

but,
the reality is
I was never around long enough
to really know
where anyone was from
because they were all framed,
always
within the chrome borders
of the rearview mirror.

It was reminiscent of the
summer of '66,
where I spent many hours
on Coronado Beach
watching crabs
click sideways,
blowing bubbles
as I built cities
at the water's edge
and watched them dissolve
with each new wave.

This new, dark, sea
beneath my feet
dissolved it all,
a cosmic tidal wave
that left only slide positions
on my bass trombone twitching
my fingers,
my neck,
my lips ––
whispering arpeggios,
glissandos
and pedal tones
over and over
until the sunrise
revealed the beauty
of redstone urbanocity ––
the Hub,
Bean Town,

Boston.

josjr (2012 1003)
stowaway in Boston

2012-10-02

Rattlesnake Eyes


That flight out of Seattle --
that flight in 1969 --
that leap from
a 17 year long caravan
was a catapult
from the dark crevice
I had been traversing
from birth.

As person born on a caravan
I didn't know
I was on a caravan.
I just jumped on the
wagon because
that's what I think I
supposed to do,

carried along
by the currents
of a stream
flowing down
whatever dry riverbed appeared
on the landscape,
and I held on --
not because I wanted to,
but because I didn't know
I didn't have to.

That's what I was thinking
when I stared out those
sterile Windows
of that United Airlines flight
rising above Mount Rainier --
blinkless,
cold,
uncompromising,
like the eyes of
rattlesnakes
I once hunted
along the igneous cliffs
outside of Connell,
every bit as frightened
of them
as they were
of me,

as I was of falling off
that caravan.

josjr (2012 1002)
Stowaway In Boston

2012-10-01

Poem: Red Eye

Red Eye

Nomads have no home ...
only places seen,
the ground they're standing on
and some place
on the other side of
midnight.

I was once a stowaway
on a caravan I called family,
born on a dairy farm
outside of Houston,
thrown into the trunk
of an old Studebaker
headed west,
but not before picking up
the scent of fresh shrimp
in Corpus Christi
and the taste of countless
Concorde grape filled
communion cups
in a string of mildew soaked
Texas Southern Baptist churches.

Just like any ol' sailor
weary of too much time between
here and there,
I have many stories to tell
on an idle day,
about those first seventeen years,
but the short story is a
frantic tale
of five states and thirty moves
that ended when I jumped out of
the caravan called family
on the banks of the Columbia River
with a dual-trigger bass trombone
in my hand.

The plan was simple:
take the ninety bucks from
graduation
and buy a one-way ticket to Boston
to become a jazz musician.

It was a red eye out of Seattle --
My first flight,
lifting above the lights
and mountains
and nomads
without faces
and homes
and purpose,

on the other side of midnight.

Stowaway In Boston
josjr (2012 1001)

2012-03-05

I Am Going Blind ...


Preliminary note:
This is quite definitely an exploratory piece that is targeted for the beginning of a nonfiction book on my vision loss over the past twenty five years (Into The Haze). It is my initial effort to set the tone, establish the context and present the voice of the book to follow. Feedback on any and every aspect will be appreciated.                                            

Into The Haze
Part 01
Seeing and Perceiving
Chapter 01
I Am Going Blind

I am going blind. There is no other way to say it. However, I have tried to express this reality in ways that seemed adequate, but they are all euphemisms, expressions that soften the blow of the reality, but the reality remains: I am going blind.
If I say "I have pigment dispersion glaucoma" or "I am vision impaired" I would not be telling a lie. Both statements are true. Both statements are facts. They are static declarations that imply a stabile condition. They say that there is something within me that is different than the norm. They say that I have a problem, but they don't give any indication of what that means. Glaucoma simply means that something has raised the pressure within my eyes. Like blood pressure there is no pain and no indication that anything will happen as a result. For untreated high blood pressure, the end result is death. For untreated pigment dispersion glaucoma, the end result is blindness. But for high blood pressure there is a treatment and life goes on. No one needs to know anything has ever happened because there is no visible or behavioral residual effect. With pigment dispersion glaucoma, though, there are no treatments that stop it, only delay tactics. The end result is, inevitably, blindness. The only variable is the timing.
An overly simplified metaphor would be one in which a person lives in a large room where 1000 light bulbs are installed an lit in the ceiling. Each day, one light bulb is turned off. Over the course of 1000 days, the ambient light in the room would be reduced at an almost imperceptible level with each lost bulb. Our marvelous human adaptability would simply operate at some "normal" level with each new day, not being conscious of the diminished luminosity. Eventually, we will start to get the impression that the room seems darker, but it will be easily brushed off as a figment of our imagination. It will not be until we are unable to perform important tasks like reading, cooking, writing and other activities that we will become serious about finding a solution. If there is no solution we do what we can until the last bulb is turned out. Then we start depend entirely on our other senses and do what we can.
In my case, I can throw other complexities into the room, like fun house mirrors that distort all images. I could add a steam or smoke machine that clouds the air, removing the clarity of the air. For extra measure, I could put on glasses that are calibrated for an incorrect strength, removing visual accuity. Then, to make everything more interesting, people would sneak in every night and move all of the fun house mirrors, change the strength of the glasses to a stronger, more incorrect level and increase the density of the steam or smoke. That is how my life has progressed over the passed twenty five years since my first diagnosis of glaucoma.
In a world of humans with eyes, there are generally two states: the vast majority who can see and those who can't. Everything in-between is poorly understood, and in the case of pigment dispersion glaucoma, it is always changing for the worse. There is no point that you reach where you can say, "That is it. That is how I see with pigment dispersion glaucoma." Each day turns off another pixel in the screen of my life. Each day turns off another light bulb. Each day introduces a new set of optical illusions and a new level of cognitive confusion. But people, the culture at large, potential employers and health insurance organizations want to have a number that will tell them definitively what my vision is. Is it 20/30, 20/70, 20/200? They don't want to hear "It depends...".
No one wants to hear about visual field range, low contrast resolution, distortion, low light blindness, glare effects, low acuity and the loss of stereoscopic vision. To move into a discussion of visual cognition is even less appealing, but these are the elements of vision that we all experience from the moment our eyes opened outside of the womb. They define the way we perceive the world, the way we relate to the world and all creatures within it. They also provide the foundation for how we communicate with each other, which is predominantly visual. Fortunately for most, this is a seamless and "invisible" process. We don't know it happens. It just seems to work "out of the box".
When we walk into a room, or any space for that matter, there is a symphony of reflected light that is gathered up and passed back into the brain for analysis. The "gathering up" is accomplished by the eyes. This is vision. The "analysis" is done by the brain. This is cognition. The result of visual cognition is an "image", which is one aspect of perception. This "image" is made up of millions of components that represent everything from color to dimension, distance, direction, orientation, shadows, movement, luminosity, patterns and many other elements in a scene that surrounds us. This "image" is the fodder for memories, associations, recognition, emotion, knowledge and other factors that have an impact on how we feel, how we act and how we think. All of this occurs before we have any awareness of where we are and what is happening.
We like to think that this happens instantaneously. In reality, we depend upon it happening almost instantaneously because, in some sense, nothing happens until we "perceive" it and perception is the result of this gathering and analysis that is accomplished by the eye and brain working together. If it didn't happen we would never know we are in danger. We would never recognize other people. We would never be able to navigate through the world or learn anything. A similar cognitive process happens with our other senses of touch, smell, taste and hearing, but with much less data to work on and much less complexity.
If we had to think about the vision machine in order to use it, it would never be useful to us. Imagine if we had to consciously turn our eyes on and explicitly choose what data to gather, what to send back to the brain and which data are to be analyzed and in what way. It would take seconds, if not minutes to even know that we were in the room and even longer to figure out what else was in the room, including friends, relatives or lions and tigers.
With total blindness, there is no visual information arriving in the brain. Even if the eyes are perfectly, physically functional, if the information from the gathered light does not make it to the brain nothing is "seen". This is when the brain has to use the other senses of touch, hearing, tasting and smelling, but all of these senses together do not bring even a sliver of the information that vision provides. There is a reason for all of those expressions that indicate ignorance ("I just can't see it"), denial ("I turned a blind eye towards it"), risk ("I just jumped in, totally blind to the consequences", "a blind date"), deceit ("a duck blind", "blind sided") and other types of behavior.
But, at least with total blindness, the brain knows that there is no visual information and doesn't try to "see". With vision, even if it is deeply compromised, the brain will defer to vision first and foremost and it will try to figure out what the eyes are "seeing" before anything else is done with the other senses and it will believe what it "sees" even if it is incorrect, because the brain will fill in the blanks left by the eyes with what it (the brain) believes should be there, even if it wasn't really there. At the same time, it will not believe that something is there if it can't "see" it.
This is particularly true if a person had "normal" vision from birth and then experienced a degradation of the vision later in life. In my case, I had thirty five years of uninterrupted binocular vision with a full visual field range, full color, good high contrast resolution, no distortion and many of the other elements of what would be called "normal" vision. My brain developed with that "normal" vision profile, which allowed me to live a reasonably "normal" life. For most people, this is a "normal" experience, since "normal" vision has been fully established by the time they are three years old. After that, it is all a matter of gathering and learning.
So what does the brain do when the data coming in from the eyes is no longer valid? If everyone around you starts to lie to you all of the time, what happens to your perception of the world. What do you do when you have no confidence in anything said to you? With pigment dispersion glaucoma, the optical nerves die randomly over time as a result of the sustained, elevated ocular pressure. As the optical nerves die, the information the brain is depending on to "see", "perceive", "analyze" and "survive" is becoming less dependable. In other words, the eyes are lying with increasing voracity, continuously.
If I can't, with confidence, understand what I am "seeing", how can I communicate to others what I am "seeing"? This has become the ultimate challenge. I have two eyes, although my left eye only exhibits a sliver of peripheral vision and my right eye has a vision that is affected by a variety of factors that limit its ability to gather enough accurate, reflected light to send back into the brain for effective analysis. But to others, my eyes look normal. My "blind" left eye tracks with my right as it has for the past sixty years. I am mobile. I have no difficulty moving as I have throughout my life, although I am slower at sixty than I was at twenty. I can physically do everything a "normal" person can do. So it looks odd to others when they "see" me use a walking stick with reflective tape to help me "see" and help me avoid falling if I run into something I don't "see".
The visual cognition part of my brain does not know that my eyes are lying to it. It really believes everything that is coming back from the eyes is complete and accurate. There is no way for the brain to know otherwise. It will do everything necessary to ensure that the image created internally is "complete" for the sake of "memory" and analysis. So, if my walking stick stops in mid-air when the tip hits the edge of a retaining wall that the eyes and brain didn't "see", my brain wants to believe that the stick is stuck in the air. It doesn't believe what it can't "see", so the retaining wall does not exist. If my leg hits the "unseen" retaining wall, bruising my shin, my sense of touch will send a somewhat urgent message to the brain saying that there is a hard object in the path and that the shin is injured. The brain, wanting to believe the eyes, will take a second look with the eyes, which may very well still not "see" the wall. Now the brain has to mediate between the eyes and the leg and respond with a counter action. Often I will close my eyes just to force my brain to use my sense of touch and bypass the superior clout of visual cognition. This disconnect between my visual cognition and the rest of my senses, and the ensuing effort to resolve the conflict can take time result in catastrophe if there is the possibility of falling into a pit or stepping in front of a car.
It is not as though I woke up one day and realized that I could not see. That would be blindness: no light; no purpose for windows, street signs or television; no context for most of what we normally "perceive" as beauty. That would allow me to say that I am blind. That would allow me to say something the world understands: that I am handicapped and need assistance crossing the street, reading a book or shopping for groceries.
I've seen the small bumps arranged in patterns on elevators, office doors and public telephone keypads, but there is a sea of three dimensional reality that gives no clue to its existence until it is tasted, touched, heard or smelled. Vision is the glue that ties it all together within our brains. Without it, the world is a labyrinth filled with obstacles and no map. It cannot be studied, only experienced. Every wall must be felt. Every flower pot must be tripped over or bumped into. Every low-hanging tree branch must be grappled with as it tugs at clothes, tangles with hair and gouges the skin. City streets are savage rivers teeming with metallic piranhas eager to devour the visually clueless racing for the curb. I feel myself slipping into the murky currents of this haze that swirls around me. I am unnerved when I see my fingertips disappear while cutting carrots or onions. I shudder when I step into a room and ask the group of people standing nearby if they have seen my wife, then one of the people in that group steps towards me and says, "I'm here." I marvel when I am talking to someone and their head suddenly fuses into the brick wall in the background, leaving a body with no head.
The lines of text that form on the screen as I type them are both out of focus in the midst of a glaring backlit screen and unfolding in distorted waves. If I place a strait ruler along the line, it too will rise and fall in sync with the letters. There is no "true"-ness in the contours of my life. Everything stretches, weaves, disappears and rises up from the obscurity like a goldfish floating to the surface of a pond obscured by moss and algae.
I am no longer in the land of the sighted. I am not yet in the land of the blind. I am in the land of smoke and mirrors. I am going blind.