Upward
With the help of Zen, my old friend Jack dissolved his disagreements with the world, purified his quarrels, shushed his ego, stopped biting back when bitten, and gradually had no opinions other than wise ones. And so our friendship lost its bones and meatiness, because it is clear to me that I am not going to humanly improve but will be forever benighted by shadow and abrasion. I will keep eating my experience with a certain indigestion and shitting out opinions to the end. Goodbye, my friend, goodbye, I say quietly to myself like a character in some science-fiction novel as I watch the smooth spaceships of Zen slip the heavy harness of the earth and rise into the weightlessness of space, leaving a few hundred million of us behind, weeping and holding on to our stormy weather and our extended allegiance to stones.
Little Champion
When I get hopeless about human life, which quite frankly is far too difficult for me, I like to remember that in the desert there is a little butterfly that lives by drinking urine. And when I have to take the bus to work on Saturday, or spend an hour opening the mail, deciding what to keep and what to throw away, one piece at a time, I think of the butterfly following its animal around through the morning and the night, fluttering, weaving sideways through the cactus and the rocks. And when I have to meet all Tuesday afternoon with the committee to discuss new bylaws, or listen to the dinner guest explain his recipe for German beer, or hear the scholar tell, again, about her campaign to destroy, once and for all, the cult of heteronormativity, I think of that tough little champion with orange and black markings on its wings, resting in the shade beneath a ledge of rock while its animal sleeps nearby; and I see how the droplets hang and gleam among the thorns and drab green leaves of desert plants and how the butterfly alights and drinks from them deeply, with a stillness of utter concentration.
Ship
At dawn I get up from my bed and draw the blinds; the light through the bedroom window is too strong. I don’t want the sun entering my house so early, when the dreams inside my head are still wet paint and part of me is still on board that ship I visit every night, that floats offshore — that ship whose crew and passengers are girls — cabin after cabin, deck after deck, an ocean liner full of women, like a box of chocolates. Tonight again I’ll be there, trying to pry one of them away from all the rest, into a pantry or a stateroom; desiring fiercely to unwrap her with a kiss, whispering to keep from being caught. And it is perfect, I suppose. I am permitted to visit but not stay; that boat is not allowed to come to shore, and wreck my life. Night after night it sails through my interior, a monument to immaturity, with its cargo of strange women being smuggled through the grown-up world. When I’m not there, I can imagine them: playing cards in their pajamas, smoking cigarettes and drinking wine, dancing with each other to old jazz records on the phonograph — laughing and making fun of me and all the other men who visit them at night, who think that women live out there, over the horizon.