Friday, June 20, 2014

Demarcating with Boundaries & Fantasizing Cobalt Blue Doors




My suitemate in seminary, 
the tender and silliest dyke you ever met,
blue eyes like morning glories
set above mostly pale 
but quick-to-flash lightning red cheeks,
name of Anna Kathryn, 
used to pause in my tiny bedroom doorway  
upon returning home from class
eager to process the latest theological learning,
with someone a little less daunting 
than the professor she was crushing on hard

She'd stand there for hours
quoting scholars, weaving ideas,
requesting my partnership in discerning aloud 
whether or not these ideas about God 
or deconstructions of God
or silencing of the name for the sake of the Name 
God
did or did not mesh with my fleshy, worldly experience. 
I'd take in and push back or provoke or laugh or cry
given variable contexts such as 
weather, menstrual cycle, relationship status, 
the latest topics in therapy, and/or vague, lingering homesickness
that doorways, in and of themselves, would
consciously and unconsciously (I believe) 
trigger by the mere visual of her standing there. 

After this practice of occupying doorways 
continued despite changing apartment buildings and bedrooms,
we thought more of it than mindless, convenient habit. 
Might form lead to content?, we'd muse aloud. 
Then we'd half-jokingly launch pleasurable fantasies 
of writing a book one day entitled "Doorway Theology"
which became more and more frequent--
the utterance of fantasy, that is--
when she went on to the East Coast to get her PhD in theology
and I ended up in the economically thrashed rustbelt to pastor. 
That fantasy kept the doorways central to the relationship
when thousands of miles separated our bodies. 
Imagination sorta incarnates proximity.  

In the last week, I've been having new fantasies of doors. 
Not doorways. Doors. 
They are magenta doors, surrounded by grey,
 Orange Julius doors, surrounded by light brown,
 bright cobalt blue doors surrounded by flesh colored adobe walls. 
Every time they are front doors of houses, 
looked upon by an outsider,
a stranger passing by, across the street. 
They haunt me about some future possible
when we get bold enough to splash color 
on physical architecture that represents 
what's spacially framed as a boundary of coming and going, 
a boundary of what constitutes myspace & yourspace in this place.  

Are doorways altars? 
Is the position of a door a particular rendering, 
a voice? 

How you can stand there,
 at the threshold of an open door,
the geography of it all literally belonging to an/other
but in standing there, inevitably, by physicality alone,
albeit temporarily and with great precarity,
the space becomes more yours then theirs,
which transitions them from owner to host
and you from passerby neighbor to occupier 
which can confuse, sometimes subtly and quietly 
other times wild and unsettlingly 
the categories of self and other
there and here. 

(Kind of like skin--a boundary so porous 
folks have actually come up with theories 
about its impenetrability 
just to calm the terror of realizing 
corporeal autonomy is a farce)   

But how when a door is closed the doorway itself is inaccessible,
which leads one to know exactly where lines of self and other 
and geographies of inside and outside are drawn 
which can lead to a gorgeous, exquisite self-actualization 
birthed from the death of codependence 
or to a loss that feels like choking while drowning
in water so cold you don't know whether 
lack of oxygen or hypothermia will kill you first. 

There is power in the power to demarcate. 
To keep open wide. To close and lock. 
To crack it open, ever so slightly, 
intentionally leaving a sliver of light 
shining in the hallway like love infused Morse-code 
to a tired and weary traveler 
just home from a hard day. 

Yesterday my husband had a vasectomy. A door closed. 
I cried quietly on the drive to the appointment. 
I cried in the shower this morning 
after feeling like getting out of bed 
required too too much.  

Then I slumped myself in Tom Ott's doorway, 
body heavy heart sick
from memory after memory 
of an old, bald, straight-to-business 
white man in a white coat 
standing over and operating on
my beloved mocha-skinned husband,
memories of testicles splayed, 
needles and scissors grabbed,
the smell of burnt flesh, sights of blood, gauze, ice packs 
memories that terrorized me enough 
to admit  my hopes for ever having children 
with this man, again, 
died on that table, in that office.

How many possible futures die with the performance of a vasectomy? 
Countless. Itself a theological question and answer. 
Where are the protesters outside of these clinics? 
Itself a theological question and answer.  

In the doorway, I intuitively trusted Tom to know something, 
an expectation rooted in radical trust 
and longevity between us,
that he would see 
--in that doorway--
that I needed him to see 
what I couldn't conjure, gesture, speak. 

"Come in, come sit..." he said. 
With that invitation, he bid me enter a funeral procession, 
one I didn't even know I needed,
where sorrow and care 
could have their rightful places 
in our mutual spaces

for the sake of truth 

these altaring demarcations
these doorways where we dwell
these boundaries around exchange we draw
for coming and going
here and there
me and you
these places we place ourselves 
what we bid enter
and what we prayerfully release
matter. 

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Nesting

Burnt orange breast
portrudes like the pride it signifies
amidst a mostly dull grey body built for flight
surrounded by bursting spring nettle green--
a mother bird builds a nest
for her 4 open-mouthed baby birds 
who sing and chirp and demand 
and ruffle each other's feathers
in a tree 
that sits 
right outside 
my kitchen window. 

A week ago, the same day we first caught a glimpse of the nest, word came round that Battle Creek is set to receive state funding for first time home-owners as a way of programmatically responding to Michigan blight. For years as a young girl and then as a budding student of Marx, I watched carefully how the accumulation of personal property resulted in the cage mentality of far too many humans, particularly "trapped" womyn who became mired in their own lifelessness with every passing day of their overly domesticated, gender-rolled lives. For years now as a resident of the state that has the highest unemployment rate per capita of any in the union because the lies of capitalism (which are built on the assumption that ownership of material stimulates a productive economy) staged their most awful theater right here--I'm reluctant to buy a house.  

Momma bird darts in and out of the tree,
exploring the terrain
securing food
returning it to the hungry beaks 
nuzzling the loose branches of the nest
making sure the balance of it all remains.
They are safe. They are fed. Nourished and alive. 
Grounded in rituals up so high. 

Whose work is the work of home-making? Does it indeed include ownership? A stable place? Or is it about collecting what's available in our environments in order to meet the current demands? While acknowledging no one gets to stay anywhere forever? We are all here only for a season, only for a time. What if what's close at hand is all we need in this season? Yet it strikes me significant that there are specific seasons, do or die ones, that require a stability. A staying place.  Where rituals of awakening and resting, preparing and feeding, playing and cuddling, spatting and remaining--themselves--make the home, home. Is it the building? Or is it the rituals? Both/and, I suppose.  

Earlier this morning
my own daughter and I stood beneath the branches
where the baby birds live 
quietly, timidly trying to catch a peak.  
"It's sacred in there, Rory" I said. She got on her tip-toes
and chirped her 2 1/2 year old affirmation 
that always takes on a soprano high note at the end: "yeAH."
Momma bird came swooping in, 
but upon recognizing our presence, flew away
while keeping her eyes entirely locked on the nest.
Think Sankofa and Maternal Protection--with wings. 
 She landed on a telephone wire above us,
watching until we decided to move along. 
I felt for her. Wanted to get out of her way. 
To say "Hey--we have no right 
to keep you from your babies,
to occupy this land so close to your home. 
Sorry for the intrustion." 
Instead, I took Rory's hand, 
and lead her to a pile of sticks she'd collaged on the grass--
far enough away that momma bird could return 
close enough that Rory might make the connection 
between her collage of sticks on the ground 
and the mom's labor up above so high. 
Distanced perfectly so that she might see the value of it all, 
how the creativity for it and of it is already in some of us,
before we even know we need it, 
natural, beautiful--
and totally undercompensated.  

The dimensions of our material lives are justice issues. They are. But never before have I been able to witness, both in the world and in myself, the value of womyn's work (which shouldn't just be our work), of the maternal materiality of this Earth and why that work deserves a stable place, a resting space, a home, because the work itself is sacred, eternal and the catalyst for each new generation to recognize its inherent right to the rituals of sustenance, intimacy and beauty that this life naturally affords. 

Maybe I'll buy a house, after all. 
And maybe, just maybe 
I'll paint one of the walls burnt orange 
to honor her.