“I bet if we dusted her heart for fingerprints, we'd only find yours.”

—Rudy Francisco

“Every year you have more to lose, but you can choose to bury your past in the garden beside the tulips. Water it until it’s so alive it lets go and you belong to yourself again.” ”

—Andrea Gibson, “Royal Heart”

A Third of Me

Human beings sleep on average eight hours of 24, or one in three. The average human then spends 33.3 percent of his or her life asleep. If there was a baby born in the moment you first closed your eyes, that grew only while they stayed shut, and you lived to be sixty-years-old, that baby would grow as old as me. This is why I trust my dreams.

Our eyes are closed often enough to become unreliable, and I for one, don’t intend to go through my life 1/3 blind. I have learned to see with my mind. Our eyes don’t bring us closer, they don’t teach us culture, they don’t bring us peace. Our eyes don’t give us hope; think of the last time you made a wish… were your eyes closed?

We remember faces but forget names, remember our day planners but forget the days. We read to say we’ve read, and not to say we’ve known. We fill our houses with colors to make them look like home. When we are wrong, we are told to open our eyes… but they are wide open cupboards, with nothing inside.

I had a dream once that I could speak as loud as violence is silent, could breathe as loud as change is bright - I had a dream that my words might make a difference, somewhere… to someone… and here I am. It wasn’t my eyes that gave me the courage to speak as tall as this room, or that lead me to love and to lose the way I have, or taught me to give, or taught me to ask - it wasn’t my eyes that stopped me and told me to change my life. The more I thought I was seeing, the more blind I became and the harder I look now, the more clearly I see that I am right… when I open my eyes, I start losing my sight.

March 9th, 2013

Play

The Wall

I can only connect
with older men and
beaten women
because one soul
can recognize
another battered one

and I realize that’s
why I will always be
Ponyboy and Charlie
but I am not infinte
I will not stay gold
(I’ve always been silver)
because the rest of
the gang knows to
stay away from souls
in ragged clothing

no amount of lipstick
can disguise the
bruises on a mind
no amount of makeup
can take the shadow
out of these eyes
no amount of bleach
can erase the chemicals
stuck in every follicle

there’s not enough
hot water to wash
the stains off a soul

Meet Yourself in The Mirror

Tell me what you love.
If I look you in your eyes and ask you to tell me what you love, the answers will likely roll off of your tongue. You love pizza and crafting and roller coasters and poetry. You love to read, you love to write, you love music, birds, tattoos, obscure documentaries, and the color of the sun filtered through the smoke of a wildfire. You love your boyfriend. Your mom. Your brother. Your sister. Your daughter. Your best friend. Your dog. Your grandmother. Your cousin. Your son. Your aunt. Your wife. You love pastries and foreign languages and folk music the way it feels to itch a bug bite. You love early mornings and late nights and study breaks and hugs and sentimental cards on your birthday. How long do you think you could go on and on before you said, “I love myself.”
Most people go a lifetime.
I used to think I was invincible, like most young people do. I knew everything, knew exactly who I was, could have conquered the world. My grandmother, with a smile sewn of wisdom, told me if I really wanted the truth, I should stand in front of a mirror. She told me:
“Meet yourself in the mirror, make a date of it. Look closely, and even if it’s strange, keep on looking until your eyes became skies with constellations of light, and the rest of the world fades away. Examine every inch of your face, and feel however you feel about it. Be thorough. See even the things you don’t like to see. When you know your face like you’d know a friend’s, meet your eyes again. If it’s awkward or forced, do the best that you can, and with all the sincerity you can muster, say, ‘I love you.’”

I thought it was stupid, and I told her that right there, but for some reason I still crept into the bathroom that night to rendezvous with my eyes. I was surprisingly awkward, awkwardly shy, and stood with my gaze turned down, like I was seeing myself for the first time. With a flutter in my stomach I met my own stare, and though everything in me protested, I let out a half breath that carried an almost inaudible whisper of the words… I love you… and then I cried uncontrollably because I knew it wasn’t true.
I stood in that bathroom every night for a year, and I lied to my eyes until I could rewrite the truth. When I looked in the mirror and knew for the first time that I loved myself, I also knew I would never need anything else to survive.
My grandmother knows me, and instead of telling, she showed me that love is a tree, and if we don’t grow the roots, we’ll spend our lives collecting dry leaves; they are charming when pressed in books and kept in picture frames but they don’t grow up to feed our families the way seeds do.
She told me:

“You cannot say, ‘I love you,’
without the implied foundation
of, ‘but I love myself, first.’

If you don’t love yourself,
every time you have ever said,
‘I love you,’

it was a lie.”

And she was right.

May 12th, 2013

“You blink with more passion than some people make love with. ”

Lauren Zuniga
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