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    My Mother's Body

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      Did I truly think you could put me back inside?

      Did I think I would fall into you as into a molten

      furnace and be recast, that I would become you?

      What did you fear in me, the child who wore

      your hair, the woman who let that black hair

      grow long as a banner of darkness, when you

      a proper flapper wore yours cropped?

      You pushed and you pulled on my rubbery

      flesh, you kneaded me like a ball of dough.

      Rise, rise, and then you pounded me flat.

      Secretly the bones formed in the bread.

      I became willful, private as a cat.

      You never knew what alleys I had wandered.

      You called me bad and I posed like a gutter

      queen in a dress sewn of knives.

      All I feared was being stuck in a box

      with a lid. A good woman appeared to me

      indistinguishable from a dead one

      except that she worked all the time.

      Your payday never came. Your dreams ran

      with bright colors like Mexican cottons

      that bled onto the drab sheets of the day

      and would not bleach with scrubbing.

      My dear, what you said was one thing

      but what you sang was another, sweetly

      subversive and dark as blackberries,

      and I became the daughter of your dream.

      This body is your body, ashes now

      and roses, but alive in my eyes, my breasts,

      my throat, my thighs. You run in me

      a tang of salt in the creek waters of my blood,

      you sing in my mind like wine. What you

      did not dare in your life you dare in mine.

      THE CHUPPAH

      Dedicated to Rabbi Debra Hachen,

      who made a beautiful wedding with us,

      for which many of the poems in this section were written.

      Two poems by Ira Wood are included.

      Witnessing a wedding

      Slowly and slower you have learned

      to let yourselves grow while weaving

      through each other in strong cloth.

      It is not strangeness in the mate

      you must fear, and not the fear

      that loosens us so we lean back

      chilly with a sudden draft on flesh

      recently joined and taste again

      the other sharp as tin in the mouth,

      but familiarity we must mistrust,

      the word based on the family

      that fogs the sight and plugs the nose.

      Fills the ears with the wax of possession.

      Toughens the daily dead skin

      callused against penetration.

      Never think you know finally, or say

      My husband likes, My wife is,

      without balancing in the coil of the inner ear

      that no one is surely anything till dead.

      Love without respect is cold as a boa

      constrictor, its caresses as choking.

      Celebrate your differences in bed.

      Like species, couples die out or evolve.

      Ah strange new beasties with strawberry hides,

      velvet green antlers, undulant necks,

      tentacles, wings and the senses of bees,

      your own changing mosaic of face

      and the face of the stranger you live with

      and try to love, who enters your body

      like water, like pain, like food.

      Touch tones

      We learn each other in braille,

      what the tongue and teeth taste,

      what the fingers trace, translate

      into arias of knowledge and delight

      of silk and stubble, of bark

      and velvet and wet roses,

      warbling colors that splash through

      bronze, violet, dragonfly jade,

      the red of raspberries, lacquer, odor

      of resin, the voice that later

      comes unbidden as a Mozart horn

      concerto circling in the ears.

      You are translated from label,

      politic mask, accomplished patter,

      to the hands round hefting,

      to a weight, a thrust, a scent

      sharp as walking in early

      morning a path through a meadow

      where a fox has been last night

      and something in the genes saying

      FOX to that rich ruddy smell.

      The texture of lambswool, of broadcloth

      can speak a name in runes. Absent,

      your presence carols in the blood.

      The place where everything changed

      Great love is an abrupt switching

      in a life bearing along at express speeds

      expecting to reach the designated stations

      at the minute listed in the timetable.

      Great love can cause derailment,

      coaches upended, people screaming,

      luggage strewn over the mountainside,

      blood and paper on the grass.

      It’s months before the repairs are done,

      everyone discharged from the hospital,

      all the lawsuits settled, damage

      paid for, the scandal subsided.

      Then we get on with the journey

      in some new direction, hiking overland

      with camels, mules, via helicopter

      by barge through canals.

      The maps are all redrawn and what

      was north is east of south

      and there be dragons in those mountains

      and the sun shines warmer and hairier

      and the moon has a cat’s face.

      There is more sunshine. More rain.

      The seasons are marked and intense.

      We seldom catch colds.

      There is always you at my back

      ready to fight when I must fight;

      there is always you at my side

      the words flashing light and shadow.

      What was grey ripples scarlet and golden;

      what was bland reeks of ginger and brandy;

      what was empty roars like a packed stadium;

      what slept gallops for miles.

      Even our bones are reformed in the close

      night when we hold each other’s dreams.

      Memories uncoil backward and are remade.

      Now the first egg itself is freshly twinned.

      We build daily houses brick by brick.

      We put each other up at night like tents.

      This story tells itself as it grows.

      Each morning we give birth to one another.

      What Makes It Good?

      What makes it good

      Is that we came to this

      Having each tasted freely

      Of the sweet plum flesh of others.

      So your head will not turn?

      It may turn.

      But my feet won’t follow.

      What makes it good

      Is that we came to this slowly

      Not blind or in white fever

      Tearing off our clothes running

      But walking arm around shoulder

      Friends.

      So you will not fight?

      We will fight

      Fists balled, throats

      Full to choking

      But we have learned

      How to stop

      Before the blade hits the throat.

      What makes it good

      Is that we give each other

      Freedom, for the laughter

      Of others.

      So you’ve never had to give up friends?

      I have given up

      My gang of boys.

      They wanted me to trade

      Her for them

      But why trade

      When you have what you want?

      What makes it good

      Is that neither dawdles thinking

      My lover kept me back.

      So you are not ambitiou
    s?

      I am ambitious.

      And what will you do about her?

      Take her with me.

      And if you go nowhere?

      It is no fault of hers.

      What makes it good

      Is that we

      Both

      Want it bad,

      To be good.

      Ira Wood

      Why marry at all?

      Why mar what has grown up between the cracks

      and flourished, like a weed

      that discovers itself to bear rugged

      spikes of magenta blossom in August,

      ironweed sturdy and bold,

      a perennial that endures winters to persist?

      Why register with the State?

      Why enlist in the legions of the respectable?

      Why risk the whole apparatus of roles

      and rules, of laws and liabilities?

      Why license our bed at the foot

      like our Datsun truck: will the mileage improve?

      Why encumber our love with patriarchal

      word stones, with the old armor

      of husband and the corset stays

      and the chains of wife? Marriage

      meant buying a breeding womb

      and sole claim to enforced sexual service.

      Marriage has built boxes in which women

      have burst their hearts sooner

      than those walls; boxes of private

      slow murder and the fading of the bloom

      in the blood; boxes in which secret

      bruises appear like toadstools in the morning.

      But we cannot invent a language

      of new grunts. We start where we find

      ourselves, at this time and place

      which is always the crossing of roads

      that began beyond the earth’s curve

      but whose destination we can now alter.

      This is a public saying to all our friends

      that we want to stay together. We want

      to share our lives. We mean to pledge

      ourselves through times of broken stone

      and seasons of rose and ripe plum;

      we have found out, we know, we want to continue.

      We Come Together

      We come together

      Pure and ample

      Top-heavy woman

      Stocky man

      Midwestern half-breed

      Long Island Jew.

      Jew with eyes of jade

      Jew with eyes of almonds

      Jews with tempers

      Like the blue serpent tongue

      Of the lightning that cracks

      The sky over our land.

      We come together strong

      Strong as our passion to lie

      Skin pressed to skin, quivering.

      Strong as our hunger

      To tell, to taste, to know.

      I am lucky to have you

      I know it.

      But with each windfall

      Comes the tax

      With each rainfall

      The weeds

      To kneel and pull.

      We give and take

      With no line between.

      We grow our food.

      We heal our wounds.

      You remind me

      Good writing takes time,

      I bolster you

      When the world attacks.

      We came together

      Each an other,

      Sister brother

      Mother son

      Father daughter

      Man and woman.

      We lick each other’s skins like lost kittens.

      Fight like starving strays.

      We talk deep into the night

      Make each other coffee

      Keep each other straight.

      We are scrub oak

      Strong and low

      Peony

      Full bodied, brilliant

      Feast for the butterfly

      Feast for the ant.

      Our love is like the land.

      We work to keep it fertile.

      Ira Wood

      Every leaf is a mouth

      The way the grain of you runs

      wavy and strong as maple.

      Black grapes warm in the hand,

      the bloom on them like mist,

      breathe their scent in gusts:

      dusk of a summer evening.

      In sleep you shimmer heat

      banked like a Russian stove.

      How wide you open to me,

      a volcano gaping its belly

      of fire all the way to the molten

      core; a tree whose every leaf

      is a mouth drinking sunshine

      whose roots are all mouths.

      Our life is a daily fugue

      polyphonic, with odd harmonies

      that make the bones vibrate

      secretly, sweetly in the flesh

      the way a divining rod shivers

      over veins of water, or power.

      The Wine

      Red is the body’s own deep song,

      the color of lips, of our busy

      organs, heart and stomach and lungs,

      the color of our roused genitals,

      the color of tongues and the flag of our blood.

      Red is the loudest color

      and the most secret

      lurking inside the clothes’ cocoon,

      banked in the dark of the nightly bed

      like coals shimmering in a stove.

      It is the hot color, the active

      that dances into your eye leaping,

      that goads and pricks you

      with its thorn of fire,

      that shouts and urges and commands.

      But red coils in the wineglass

      head into tail like a dozing cat

      whose eyes have shut but who purrs still

      the pleasure of your hand, whose

      warmth gently loosens the wine’s aroma

      so it rises like a perfumed ghost

      inside the chambers of your nose.

      In the mouth wine opens

      its hundred petals like a damask rose

      and then subsides, swallowed to afterglow.

      In the wine press of the bed

      of all the salty flows of our bodies,

      the heat of our love ferments

      our roundness into the midnight red

      flowering of the wine

      that can make drunken and make warm

      that can comfort and quicken the sluggish

      that can ease the weary body into sleep

      that can frame the dark bread and cheese

      into feast, that can celebrate

      and sing through the wine of the body,

      its own bright blood that rushes

      to every cranny and cove of the flesh

      and dark of the bone, the joy in love

      that is the wine of life.

      The Chuppah

      The chuppah stands on four poles.

      The home has its four corners.

      The chuppah stands on four poles.

      The marriage stands on four legs.

      Four points loose the winds

      that blow on the walls of the house,

      the south wind that brings the warm rain,

      the east wind that brings the cold rain,

      the north wind that brings the cold sun

      and the snow, the long west wind

      bringing the weather off the far plains.

      Here we live open to the seasons.

      Here the winds caress and cuff us

      contrary and fierce as bears.

      Here the winds are caught and snarling

      in the pines, a cat in a net clawing

      breaking twigs to fight loose.

      Here the winds brush your face

      soft in the morning as feathers

      that float down from a dove’s breast.

      Here the moon sails up out of the ocean

      dripping like a just washed apple.

      Here the sun wakes us like a baby.

     
    Therefore the chuppah has no sides.

      It is not a box.

      It is not a coffin.

      It is not a dead end.

      Therefore the chuppah has no walls

      We have made a home together

      open to the weather of our time.

      We are mills that turn in the winds of struggle

      converting fierce energy into bread.

      The canopy is the cloth of our table

      where we share fruit and vegetables

      of our labor, where our care for the earth

      comes back and we take its body in ours.

      The canopy is the cover of our bed

      where our bodies open their portals wide,

      where we eat and drink the blood

      of our love, where the skin shines red

      as a swallowed sunrise and we burn

      in one furnace of joy molten as steel

      and the dream is flesh and flower.

      O my love O my love we dance

      under the chuppah standing over us

      like an animal on its four legs,

      like a table on which we set our love

      as a feast, like a tent

      under which we work

      not safe but no longer solitary

      in the searing heat of our time.

      How we make nice

      Before we clean, we scream

      accusatory, rowdy as gulls.

      We screech, we bark, we flap.

      Abruptly we subside and start.

      Always it is two weeks past

      the last endurable point.

      It is destiny we grovel to,

      that if we do not clean

      we will smother in our own dirt.

      We mutter and swot and heave.

      We scrub and spray and haul out.

      The vacuum cleaner chokes on a tissue

      ball, its bag exploding; some cat

      vomited behind the heaviest couch.

      Dusted cobwebs fall on the scrubbed counter.

      O house, neat as a stamp collection,

      everything in its place ordained

      glimmering with propriety at last.

      Invite all our friends to dinner,

      summon the neighbors who call

      this the jungle. Let in the cats

     

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