“the sex that gestates Life”

Excerpt from Chapter 2 of LONELYHEARTS 2016, my upcoming campy, surrealish, coming-of-age dramedy novel about a bipolar pansexual at end of the world.

(In this scene: Miss Lonelyhearts reminisces about a bible-study teacher he knew in high school, whom he jokingly referred to as “Father.” ( “I thanked him and called him ‘Father’ as a joke, knowing he wasn’t a priest; the word tingled on my tongue, lips, and teeth. Like a powerful spell. A secret magic that everyone was born with and I was just discovering.” )


He asked how I felt about god and the bible so far. I told him I thought it was silly that people referred to god as ‘He, with a capital H.’ I said, if god did exist and for-some-reason had a sex, ‘I would imagine it’s the sex that gestates Life.’ He laughed at my candidness and I was warmed inside. He told me that he agreed; that he didn’t think god was sexed. And he told me, in regards to my childbirth-as-punishment concern, that he believed the sacrifice of Christ had washed away most of that Old-Testament thinking, along with the rules like not shaving and not eating shellfish.

It was all so rational. He asked me if I was ready to accept Christ into my heart; I said I wasn’t sure.

He began playing the organ as if possessed. Everything moved around me with music and connectedness. I closed my eyes and felt the soul behind the song. It was troubled, but searching and eager, and I felt something for it that I imagined was love. I was one with it. I opened my eyes and realized that Father was overtaken with the fluidity of happiness like I’d never seen in him.

He was active but calm.

He stopped playing and, without looking at me, said that he wrote it for me; that I was his muse.

‘Shouldn’t your muse be god?’

‘It can be . . .’ he smiled at me. ‘You’ve got a fire in your eyes. You know that?’

‘I think it’s just light,’ I blushed.

He started telling me that he loved my voice, and he thought I should sing in the choir. I started to say I didn’t think my voice was good enough, then he grabbed my face and pressed his lips into mine. They opened instinctively for him, and I let him inside me. He tasted like a smell I recognized; like cigarette smoke. It felt like caffeine and a sunshiny walk, and I wanted more. I needed more. Our tongues flirted with real oneness, and I was lost in how warm, pulsing and purposeful our movements were.

He leaned into me further, and I felt an expectation in the pressure of his body on mine. A snake slithered up his throat and down my own, but I didn’t want it there; I pushed my body back against his, and the snake slithered back into his belly. I could sense its coiled comfort there. I could also feel the sudden, newfound absence in myself, but the absence felt more natural than the urgency to fill it.

I separated us to breathe. I looked at him and thought about how natural it would feel to love him, with a love I’d never known. He asked if it was okay that he kissed me, and if it felt good for me. I told him it was lovely, but that I didn’t have any experience for comparison.

Upon hearing that he was my first kiss, his eyes retracted in shadow. I called to him lovingly as he slipped into the abyss, but some demoniac doubt had contorted his face beyond reason. He acted like he didn’t hear my concern, and he yelled at me to leave. He continued screaming until I rose from the bench and inched away from him. Then he began pounding on the organ with a disjointed urgency. The rumbling made me turn and run; the Earth was riddled with apocalyptic fits.

The forceful, directionless thunder followed me, even as I descended the steps outside. I was certain the church would collapse. But then I glanced at its facade one more time, and I realized that the church had been built to withstand and amplify that very noise.


Read more excerpts (and soon, the first five chapters) here.

real cover

Be gentle; this is only a tentative cover.

Love always,

your Mister

Everything

Everything

There’s a little piece
of all of us
that is everything
and unbreakable
because it must be
everything and unbreakable.
Because of this piece
we’re all magical
psychiatrists, gods
and warrior-priests;
and because of
the rest of ourselves
we are none of these things.
It’s in this sufficient
insignificance
we make religions
from what feels comfortable
in our hands
and how we learned to speak.


As you struggle to honor the best in yourself, going into the final month of yet another year: please know that I’m always there, stumbling right alongside you.

Love always,

Miss L.

“Angels,” for Mara and Lauren

“Angels,” for Mara and Lauren

Three minutes of that song,
more than I can bear;
earbuds like earrings, ripping out;
now it lingers
and echoes from my bed:

“Writer in the Dark,”
a single song,
sung by Lorde,
but somehow the size of
every song I’ve ever heard.

I am in hell but
sometimes I find it fascinating
and think of my friends;
then I pray for them,
meaning: I reach out to

them, wherever they may be,
and make sure they know
I hope they are safe.

My own body is filled
with holes, you see,
(some from birth, and
some, I’ve placed there myself,)
so I know and worry about how

quickly, suddenly those holes can fill
with anything;
how deeply they can drag you
down, slow you to the point of stopping
you, maybe stopping you forever.

And so I say
a prayer again
for the friends whose holes
I know most deeply, truly;
I light a candle, then

wrap myself in warm telepathy.
I feel their spirits beckoning,
pulling me upward to play!
Our smiles shine, reflect and
unite to reflect

the entirety of Creation’s light:
from the faintly glimmering amortality
of old, dying, and dead stars,
to the eternal and futuristic
Light of Hope;

and so we pray again,
naturally, for ourselves and
each other and everything else,
for all life, from every time,
the old to young and back-again:

this thought is for you;
wherever you are,
we just want to make
certain you know, deeply and
truly, we hope you are safe.


I wrote this while thinking about music and prayer, right after listening to “Writer in the Dark” by Lorde for the first time. (“I am my mother’s child: I’ll love you ’til my breathing stops, I’ll love you ’til you call the cops on me; and in our darkest hours, I stumble on a secret power…”)

lorde.jpg

Lorde, give me strength.

Love always,

your Mister

The Hope Does Not Spill

I received a particularly disappointing rejection last week; BUT: it’s the first rejection I’ve ever received that was addressed to “Miss Lonelyhearts,” so I’ve decided that it was cool and that I’ll take it as a win. I’ve also found a bit of solace in this poem I wrote about a month ago, which touches on depression and writer’s block.


The Hope Does Not Spill

Calm, warm blue
beckons me like a husband
from beneath
the sweating white ice.
It commands me
to bring it release,
promising
it will do the same
for me, eventually;
and, although it never has,
I can’t stop myself from
imagining, again, what it would
be like to believe this thing
I don’t remember asking
to be filled with,
which abuses me tenderly,
passionately sometimes
with healing bruises, telling me
that I am nothing without it,
that it is godlike and far
older than I can imagine,
and that I am unknowably lucky
to be its vessel,
to divide myself and slowly die
so it can continue replicating
itself, maybe forever,
replenished by countless other vessels,
some impossibly younger and sexier
than I am–
cells within cells within cells
that don’t technically exist yet–
because I am too stupid
or too something or everything
to contain it, understand it
completely.

It screams at me
for the first time
as I trace its path,
a river down my arm;
it’s so loud
but so impossibly faraway
inside me,
so I cannot hear it
but I know what it wants,
what it always wants:
to be freed, for me
to stab the cold, wet
touchability that separates us,
breaking it just enough so
I can chug its burgundy
on the other side
of the ice, released,
and finally drown in it.
My finger reaches
the end of that river
and strokes what it finds there:
an opaque patch of ice;

my body collapses
like the ice in my mind
as I blink away dryness
and try to cry out
all the trapped, dead, frozen things,
but the hope does not spill from me.


rejection

Historical document: my first rejection as “Miss Lonelyhearts”!

Love always,

your Mister

Understand Why People Love Me?

Understand Why People Love Me?

I know you feel guilty,
I know you know why,
but why did you do it?

Were you angry or scared?
or worried that nobody loves you?
I’m the one you hurt and I forgive you,
and I’d like to help you not feel guilty anymore.
That’s why I’m asking these questions, like:
What about me upset you?
Was it something I said or did?
Did I remind you of someone you don’t like?
or someone you were told to be afraid of?
someone you think is beneath you?
I would like to understand my part,
the role in which you’ve cast me,
so I can help YOU understand it,

understand that sometimes I don’t know what I believe,
and sometimes I’m so angry I feel like I can’t be a good person,
and sometimes I get lonely,
so lonely I think about dying
because the things that make me proud of myself might not make others proud of me.
I have an idea of what love is
but I wonder sometimes if I’ve ever really felt it, for myself or anyone else;

sometimes I worry I don’t deserve it.
Do you ever feel that way?


Love always,

your Mister

Heaven Reminds You of Me,”

Heaven Reminds You of Me,”

That lovely summer changed me
maybe more than it changed you.
Sometimes when I look up at night,
I no longer see the moon.
In its place, your smiling face
is looking ever upward, too.

I once tasted heaven
in the moonlight on your face,
and prompt silly thoughts arrived,
like, “I hope Heaven reminds you of me,”
even if we’re not together.
We talked about our future,
staring back into the past,
just old light on a dark night.

You filled and surrounded me,

now in the observatory’s shadow–
just a building among trees,
only where we first met–
a product of man’s history,
men who dreamed of building
taller and seeing farther, but
all we really cared about
was trying to get closer.

You helped me finally understand
how something called a God
could really just be love
and a face you see above,
always smiling and expecting you
to be a kinder man.


Love always,

your Mister

You Say You Love Me,

You Say You Love Me,

“Love the sinner, hate the sin”
still proudly preaches hate within,
so please don’t say you love me
if you think my love is sin.

For when you say you love me,
and I make to say it back,
my peaceful heart will meet with hate
from understanding that you lack.

You shouldn’t say you love me
when fear and hatred lie below,
for what you’re feeling isn’t love,
just a word you think you know.

I hate none of what you do,
and even less of who you are,
therefore it masks insanity
to hate me from afar.


You are not capable of both hatred and spiritual Love.

Love always,

your Mister

My Mom Has Gifted Me:

My Mom Has Gifted Me:

My mom has gifted me:
this lovely life to live,
a heart that sees,
a brain that breathes
the blood she was
so kind to give.

Without Her saving blood,
I couldn’t speak,
I couldn’t love.
Before Her braving flesh,
my soul was little
more than nothingness:

a star no life could see,
but still she felt my plea,
“in your image, labor me,
delivered in your purity.”

Then from darkness I was torn,
to Her sacrificial kindness born.
Now I walk with Her upright,
share Her love and speak Her light.
* * *
So, thank your mother every day,
for freeing you from silence.
She gave you everything
you need to love,
and to forget that
does her violence.


I hope you don’t consider my capitalization blasphemous; it’s part of the scriptural imagery I employed in this poem to demonstrate the fact that childbirth–not just once, but for the creation of ALL human beings–has always been and will always be a miracle, not a punishment.

Love always,

your Mister

Miss Lonelyhearts Wears the Party Dress

Miss Lonelyhearts Wears the Party Dress

3:30 in the morning
in the middle of the night:
my phone rings on silent
and it’s you,
calling to cry
about another man that doesn’t want you.
I answer because I want you

to smile.
Even if I can’t see it,
I’ll hear it in your breath,
or at least that’s what I tell myself,
like how I tell myself
we don’t just want each other
because we can’t have each other.

I guess that’s what faith is,
why faith is so hard to keep,
especially when the faith is
only in yourself,
and in your ability to make
a miracle with someone else,
even though it’s never happened before.


This poem uses seemingly incompatible opposites (morning/night, ringing/silent) to show that several different types of love can exist between the same people at the same time. For example, unrequited romantic love doesn’t cancel out spiritual or friendly love. Also, the type of love you receive from others can sometimes dictate the type of love you show to others, but the love you receive from others must never dictate the love you show yourself.

Love always,

your Mister

P.S. – The title of this poem comes from Chapter 14 (“Miss Lonelyhearts and the Party Dress”) of Nathanael West’s Miss Lonelyhearts, the novella upon which this entire project is based.

Miss Lonelyhearts Always Returns

Miss Lonelyhearts Always Returns

Sometimes my soul grows tired,
tired as the twilit sky,
tired of this body it calls home:
this body that needs washed,
fed each day and put to sleep,
this body that will die a baby,
having never outgrown its constant need.
This body must always come or leave,
and it walks the same hallways,
climbs to descend the same stairs
and get to the same places;
they say a third of life is spent asleep,
but what fraction expresses the time
spent walking to and from the same bed?
Everything done again feels wasteful.

I avoid mirrors on these tired days,
because it’s hard to look myself in the eyes
and say I love me, even the least important part:
this hairy, wrinkled, blushing thing
that hosts a soul you think you’ve seen,
baked in clay and covered with pieces
and marks we must learn to love or die unloved;
they say the body is a temple or garden, and I know
those are meant to look different in different light,
cast uneven shadows and move clumsily through time,
then disappear altogether, making room for new things.
So maybe I, like they, will teach people
how to be immortal in transience, by existing after I exist,
in stories and paintings, or in unspoken memories of how
I gave the world goodness by letting it happen in and around me.

Another tired night, bombarded by Death
of people, youth, and opportunity. I close the door,
turn off the lights and face the lifeless, lightless mirror;
I stare into the blackness and pray, searching the invisibility,
alone, to find a trace of goodness in the universe inside.
I allow myself to forget that I’m meat and bone
enslaved to needs, reliance, and vanity. In the abyss
I hear an echo; it’s me, quoting Dostoevsky to a friend:

“I think the devil doesn’t exist, but man has created him . . . in his own image and likeness.” “Beauty is mysterious as well as terrible.
God and the devil are fighting there, and the battlefield is the heart of man.” “To love someone is to see him as God intended him.”

Having seen my soul in the voice with no sound, I turn on the lights,
illuminating my body and the truth that I’m free
to love again, without feeling wasteful.


This poem was inspired by one of Artur Deus Dionísio’s Instagram photos, in which he stands before a mirror; he wrote this caption for it: “‘Mirror, is it true, you don’t even have a true color?’ None at all, you know, I’m not the one you seek when you see me: I’m your mirage, but you’re my slave #cage #mirror.” As someone who’s struggled with body image issues for most of my life, this caption struck a chord with me. I challenged myself to play a lovely little serenade to myself in that chord, and this poem is the result. I hope it resonates with someone out there, so we can keep this beautiful music going.

I became acquainted with Artur after I downloaded an amazing app called DailyArt, which provides me with a daily dose of inspiration. Every day, the app displays a new work of art, along with a descriptive discussion of the artist and theme. His discussions are always my favorite, so I cyber-stalked him and the rest is history. I highly recommend this app to anyone with even the slightest creative sensibilities; actually, I just recommend this app to EVERYONE. I promise it will inspire you by reminding you that Life is Art and that nobody is ever alone.

Love always,

your Mister

P.S. – The title of this poem comes from Chapter 10 (“Miss Lonelyhearts Returns”) of Nathanael West’s Miss Lonelyhearts, the novella upon which this entire project is based.

Previous Older Entries

my last drink

November 21, 2021
1492 days ago.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 95 other subscribers