A Modest Exquisite Corpse for Ted Berrigan

First Thoughts, Best Thoughts

 

**

 

Bird song in early snow and I’m on a journey.

I was a middling boy who loved Jules Verne.

I’m piloting a snow submarine with birds for a crew.

 

**

 

By some unestablished rule some event may have hurled its first “yes” at other events causing discrete happiness for unsuspecting people.

 

**

 

I am old. I like it. I feel snappy in my post-diluvian world. 

 

**

 

Met once at a Finnish monastery a monk who was 100 years old. We were in the sauna. His sweat smelled like strawberries.

 

**

 

I’m loosely arranged on a salad of calendar pages. 

 

**

 

Goddess of underlings, roll your sexy wheelchair!

 

**

 

Hilarity beyond the constellations, but “no religion too” —thank you Mr. John Lennon…

 

**

 

The isotherm of galloping winter brain. Let’s sneak around and knock on the neighbors’ windows!

 

  

Watch: White House Observance of the 50th Anniversary of the Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act

Watch: White House Observance of the 50th Anniversary of the Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act

Dear Friends,

On Friday, November 15, the White House will host an observance of the 50th Anniversary of the Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act, signed into law by President Kennedy in 1963. This event marks an opportunity for the intellectual and developmental disability community to review the accomplishments of the past, examine current challenges, and look ahead to the future of disability policy. The event will include speakers from the Administration and representatives from a number of disability organizations.

The event will be streamed live. The event will begin at 1:00 PM ET on Friday, November 15 and can be accessed at the following link: www.whitehouse.gov/live.

Best,

Claudia L. Gordon 
White House Office of Public Engagement
Disability@who.eop.gov

Get Updates

Visit us at the White House Office of Public Engagement website athttp://www.whitehouse.gov/engage/office. Be sure to join the online conversation by following Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett at @VJ44, Office of Public Engagement Director Paulette Aniskoff at @PAniskoff44, and Director of Specialty Media Shin Inouye at @Inouye44.

Note: If you received this email as a forward and would like to be added to the White House Disability Group email distribution list, please visit our website athttp://www.whitehouse.gov/disability-issues-contact and fill out the “contact us” form in the disabilities section, or email us at disability@who.eop.gov and provide your full name, city, state, and organization.

 

Disability Mirror

 

 

Nanao Sakaki, the great Japanese Zen poet said “break the mirror”—for its reflections are  not us. Out here, where the soul has no footsteps I stand dis-mirrored. I may relapse during the day, seeing myself as others will, but not just now. Blind guy before the bathroom vanity…

 

I can’t see much and certainly mirrors evade me, but I know this slick glass is the place of both articulation and despair. I also know its immodest tone for reflections are speech and mostly barbarous. Petit mal, little stains, blotching, one eye wandering like grackle, all eternity’s offense is there. And worse with disability. Worse because you’ll be tricked into the peculiar discipline of looking good for the able bodied—what they call in disability studies “the super crip”—half poster child, half fucking Batman. What’s in your reflection? Overcoming. Inspiration porn. Slum dog vanity. Time for a Zen mirror break. 

 

How small it is, the mirror. Thanks be to God, it gets smaller the more I “look”. 

 


Break the Mirror

In the morning
After taking cold shower
—what a mistake—
I look at the mirror.

There, a funny guy,
Grey hair, white beard, wrinkled skin,
—what a pity—
Poor, dirty, old man,
He is not me, absolutely not.

Land and life
Fishing in the ocean
Sleeping in the desert with stars
Building a shelter in the mountains
Farming the ancient way
Singing with coyotes
Singing against nuclear war–
I’ll never be tired of life.
Now I’m seventeen years old,
Very charming young man.

I sit quietly in lotus position,
Meditating, meditating for nothing.
Suddenly a voice comes to me:
“To stay young,
To save the world,
Break the mirror.”

 
—Nanao Sakaki
 
 
 

 

 

Dear Al Franken, Stop Emailing Me, Please

Every day it seems, I get another chummy “zap” from Senator Al Franken. I like Al. I think he’s as close to being an ethical creature in the Senate as one may find in these scurvy times. But he’s not my Senator. He doesn’t appear on national television. He has Franken-circuits—his own cyber festival of happy hoplites. And I’m glad for him. Glad he has national followers. Why shouldn’t he have loyalists? even Pee Wee Herman has loyalists. I’m all for Franken. But I’ve grown to hate his unsolicited and relentless emails. I dislike them because they’re buddy-buddy, over-familiar, and just a wee bit spitty—like the dentist who nearly phlegms you when your mouth is filled with cotton and he’s leaning close and talking about fishing. I don’t know how I got on Al’s air command radar. I must have signed a petition or something. That’s how it is. You try to save the boundary waters and then you’re in Al’s coffee klatch. Dear Al: I’m the Santa Claus of loneliness. I like it that way. I wish you well. You’ve got plenty of work ahead of you. I understand. But we’re not friends. I won’t be coming down your chimney. 

 

Dog Introductions, or How to Live Outside in the World, Guide Dog Style, Acknowledging Luck, etc.

  

In college on a whim I read Boolean Algebra for a semester. After meeting Bill and Reba, my first guide dog’s puppy raisers, I began working on a personal equation—man “plus” “minus” blindness, multiplied by dog “over” associated love (bracket) puppy raisers, dog trainers, multiple volunteers) equals optimism plus the unknown world before him. 

 

Or maybe my new “dog and man take on the world” sensation of connectedness was akin to the expressive sweep and intuition of the two violins in Bach’s “Double Concerto” —stereotactic intelligence was surely overcoming me. It was more than just the trust in a guide dog—it was a wider trust—wider by far. 

 

There’s an enigmatic grammar to growing: poets try to outline it, dancers bend space so we may feel it. Dog growth and the unique temptation to explore had been choreographed for me not by a single artist but many. 

 

Then I began daydreaming about dogs in history. Corky and I, Reba and Bill—we were just links in a long chain, for dogs had always lead human beings into light. There’s the story of Abraham Lincoln who as a boy fell into a deep cave. This was when he was around 14. In those days Kentucky was still a wilderness and rescue was not very likely. Lincoln had fallen a long way and though he hadn’t broken any bones he was weak from the blow. He tried to scale the walls but slick rocks made climbing out impossible. This is not a guide dog story—and then again, it is—Lincoln suffered from life long bi-polar depression, a condition inherited from his father. Young Abe and old Abe thought about suicide many times and in many respects it was his love of dogs that brought him solace. At 14 he’d bonded with a stray who he quickly named “Honey” and as he lay at the bottom of the cave Honey ran in widening circles barking furiously. She was like the television dog “Lassie”. She caught the attention of a traveling farmer who came to Lincoln’s rescue. Faith in a dog is faith in the unknown world before us. Accordingly during his years as a circuit riding attorney Lincoln was always accompanied by dogs. 

 

       

 **

 

I try to express my thanks most days—not with the easy gratitude of school rhymes but by means of a harder thing. As a person with a disability I’ve spent years cultivating articulate despair. The harder thing is not gratitude, not precisely, but understanding indebtedness to others and acknowledging that sometimes you’re lucky. Dogs are luck. Ah, but people are luck, a more difficult stance. Hardly anyone wants to say it. People are luck. 

 

Luck in America is its own capacious subject, fit for a variorum edition, fit for top floor of a major research library. One night, early in my relationship with Corky, alone in my lonesome apartment, I found myself watching rather inexplicably “Larry King Live” because while channel surfing I discovered he was interviewing Paul Newman. I was always fond of Newman. I was fond of him long before his charitable work (which became legendary)—I liked him outside his movies, liked him for being a real human being. In the puke-carnival of celebrity Paul Newman had always seemed to me both thoughtful and decent. Newman was talking about luck. And so I put down the remote.      

He explained that in the years just after World War II when he was getting his start in the theater and working in New York, there were lots of actors who were far more talented than he was. But on one unforeseeable night he was called on to take the leading role in a Tennessee Williams play when the primary actor was ill. In turn, that was the night the New York Times reviewer was there. Maybe I’ve got the story just a little “off”—it might have been a reviewer from “Variety” and the play might have been by Chekov. I could probably look up the transcript but I don’t want to. What matters now, and mattered to me then, was Paul Newman’s exceptional clarity and humility—his career was shaped by and impelled by chance, a thing he understood perfectly well. And damned if that wasn’t why he was working so ardently to develop charities. 

 

“Hell,” I thought, “in America if you talk about Luck you’re some kind of Communist.” All that “pull yourself up by your own bootstraps; independent cowboy; titanium spine BS”—the creed of neo-liberalism. And there was a great actor, smiling gently, telling the truth—that something one can’t influence must happen for your door to open. 

 

In the year before I went to get a guide dog I was both unemployed and deeply depressed. Formerly a college professor (albeit an adjunct one, hired year to year) I was living on food stamps, disability Social Security and section 8 housing relief. What was luck? And what, if any role, did talent play in a life? Of course I got up every day, brushed my teeth, went to the gym, visited a therapist, wrote poetry, and endeavored to keep glum dispositions out of my hair. Don’t get me wrong—good luck or bad you have to keep working. Its that or die. 

 

But hearing Newman with my guide dog on my lap I realized that something ineffable, something unknowable, even wildly improbable had been occurring during my year of solitary struggle. Bill and Reba Burkett and their children, Bill Jr. and Anne—they were raising a puppy for me—though they did not know me—though they lived four states away. Luck is bigger than any one of us. 

 

 

**

 

I’ve been thinking about luck ever since. Today on the first day of snow in Syracuse, New York, I’m “lucking out” because of my new friendship with James Wolcott who last week visited my class on public intellectuals and the digital commons—then yesterday he wrote about the experience on his blog at Vanity Fair. 

 

Luck. Wolcott also understands it. His probative and sharply nuanced memoir “Lucking Out” is top shelf reading, especially if you’re interested in the early days of contrarian journalism in New York during the early 1970’s. I cut my teeth reading literary journalism in just that period, though as I said to Jim—he was in the city, living the life of a writer, I was tippy-toeing around the known streets of my small town, unsure how to live in the world as a blind person. I lived vicariously through his work. Felt I was “there” at CBGB. And many other places. 

 

Luck. Its body half undressed, beckoning, half of the imagination, met by chance in the real world. Who can say what it is? One senses talking about luck is like dissecting a joke. 

 

Luck. I want to set it against the shrill, spiritual disorder of our time. Reckon it. 

 

Something’s happening here…what it is isn’t terribly clear…

 

  

The Common Life

Last night I dreamt I about one of my undergraduate professors. She was essentially a character in a Louis Auchincloss novel—down on her luck, selling off her family heirlooms. Somehow her furnishings wound up in a mansion owned by Sotheby’s. And then I was there, discussing how she could buy back her Empire sofa and a fireplace treatment on credit.

 

Auden said “in human dreams earth ascends to Heaven” but the good poet wasn’t always right, and sometimes dreams head straight for the Devil. Failing to procure the proper funds, my professor vanished, as people do in dreams and life. Then the entire thing became about vengeance and someone (Freud would say it was me) stalked Sotheby’s killing the Ivy League bastards one by one. 

 

We are often selected to mourn for our age. That’s how it is. Do they dream of political economy on other planets? 

 

Song in the Dentist's Chair

End of summer. Birds sing shorter notes. Dying requires only the smallest arias, eh Puccini?

NB: of Puccini and birds all I know for sure is the maestro loved duck hunting—the joke is, he ate every duck in Italy.

For a poignant theme, remember all songs are time sensitive. Meantime:

let us praise our maker, sing a little air—these fake teeth will outlast me—like love we don’t know where. 

Tähän päättyy kesä (This concludes the summer)

—contemporary Finnish folktale

 

The northern wind is (unaccountably) making my grandfather silly—though he’s in his grave—though he was (unaccountably) Lutheran—though he redacted joy during his sojourn on earth. 

He gets in touch. “Pine turps and baby coffins,” he says, via Morse, with a branch and a window. Then, for a long time, he’s silent, drinking in the marl-ish ichor of eternity. Then, tap tap tap: 

“Winter wind. Stop. Bells ringing in underworld. Stop. 

The dead laugh, throw spoons in snow.”