Scrape your ears until the music stings.
David Allen Sullivan
Toughness is
all the muscle proof we need to weaken a storm.
Ignatius Valentine Aloysius
Stupid! says the boy
thrashing the hedge with a stick.
Stupid! Thwack. Stupid! Thwack.
He can’t see what he’s hitting
for the tears, but my father senses
something out there shaking.
*
For our bodies’ work, we need good feeding,
need god masks and clothes for decency. Sea
of skeleton beneath, echoing sounds like
songbirds long on zest and short on sleep.
*
Alone in a woodshed.
Ax head buried
in the stump
that won’t part.
A man sits
on a mound of wood chips,
his face pools in his hands.
*
The body knows so much more than
function alone, more than reaction. It’s the
intricate mangroves of our civilised minds—
belts of fine wood chips and candor,
mass of thought-sand shimmering among
the seashells—setting down their roots
well below the conscious line.
*
On the bus. Soundless.
In an old herringbone coat.
Two rivers carve
his stoney face.
*
We’d walked for six million years, bowed from the
loneliest distance of darkness and become defenders,
builders, steep hunters who couldn’t give up fear,
who drank a good cup and even learned how to weep
silently at night, fleshing herrings’ bones.
*
My father sinks to the ground
over where he buried the dog.
He strikes his wet cheeks, curses.
Finds himself laughing, then licks
salt crusts like dark chocolate bits.
*
Our faces show we’re curious,
always wary, as when we stayed
put in the trees for so long,
before feet touched browned
earth, eyes cocked this way and that,
trick the leopard’s wild claws, make
a hot run for the shallow pond
to sink into a gulp.
*
One ex-love said: Men weep
through their cocks.
*
How did we come to see beauty,
and did it pitch its first chance
in our groins or in our heads?
Who was called to be the love-guest,
niched in the pillowing leaves
among high-terraced branches and heat?
And before Australopithecus, making no plans,
just radiating purpose from need, survival.
*
The unwatched man cries. The man who’s not sure he’s a man cries. The woman who wants to be a man cries out. The cries of the gulls over the fisherman are answered by his knife as he shreds the net so it’ll never be mended and yells as he weeps. The man on the boat cries. The one in the water cries. I don’t know what you want of me—cries the man who was my grandfather into the lap of the woman who was my grandmother—honestly, I don’t know. (I was just about to knock, face flushed, tears answering his.) The student cries alone in the carol, while janitors empty bins. Failure hangs over him like a sword. The man headed into battle cries. And the one returning. Under night’s blanket I survey my life. Like a rear view mirror’s multi-car clash I somehow managed to squeak by. All my faults are there. All the screw ups that could’ve killed me. I kneel in the backyard and cry out at the moon, sliced in half like a magician’s trick. Cry over our lost child. Cry because I’m grateful for all I’ve come through.
*
Strides unbroken, we needed clans guarding our weak
enclosures, shielding lover and self, soft newborns.
Spread our tangle of vines and diligent calls. Fed on
nuts, greens, fruit, and chased down other trees for more,
until others like us claimed territories, spread their nets.
Early behaviors flooding ancestral bodies.
*
The man on the park bench
is haloed by an empty space,
as if no passerby dared
interrupt the sobbing.
When one does
they lean hard on each other,
both shaking. Paired bowling balls
being air dried.
*
Grief, pain, and palm-clenching, wounds that
made us pound the first poultices, fevers asking
for desperate balms. We gave our bodies up for
the right herbal clues, learned to stay away from poor
choices, fatal poisons. Held each other in death,
found fire from our own hands, longed for good heat.
*
In the calculus of longing
the crying man
counts as < one.
*
Men wept, gave weakness back to riled-up animals
in flight, pulled the covers off on hunters’ guile.
How’s it out there? the great tumuli ask, holding
tide-washed heaps of male dominance & power—
time-worn, crushed, fragmented. Found knees bent.
*
You wouldn’t know my father
was crying, save for the earthquake
quivering every inch of him.
And the wet falling on his dress shoes,
as if prepped for spit-polishing.
*
What would I have given to see my father weep,
lay aside his mask and gambled reef, ancient pride
whipped back, baring his scars like the femora of
Orrorin tugenensis bares. What god-wind swept
away his long futile cry which I did not hear? Men
have not wept enough, won’t be seen dead in tears.
*
I covet movies, just so I can have a reason
to let go without undue questioning.
*
Weep when delicateness least expects it. Trembling
bodies shed tight wavelengths of isolation, angst.
That’s when tears prevail over grit. World people, the
hunted turned hunter cried. Now we let go.
*
Balloons well up
under animé eyes.
They quiver, before
gushing out,
raining down,
flooding the whole town.
*
In the calculus of longing,
primates rings with
a tenderer feeling, and
I imagine a time when
we first made art, love—
with lattices of need,
seaweeds of desire,
curiosity, and failure, too.
Partners tearing up—
*
The cricket loss dissolves
the fist of men
into tears.
*
How did we turn from survival’s
hunts in open fields to swift games
that warmed us in caves,
that made us laugh when we won,
get bent when we didn’t?
Which hominids found tears more healing, made safe ripples & burials in peat bogs?
*
One man holds onto
the overhead loop on the subway
while he backhands his eyes
with the other arm’s sleeve.
Everyone’s so goddamn studious
all of a sudden, eyes blued by
phones, fingers blackened by news.
*
I wish for stories of Denisovans’ loneliness, see
lives 2.5 million years in a great span of time,
visualise our early human ancestors in the Upper
Paleolithic, facing hunger and regret while
walking in search of food—the weather,
sharp-stone-brutal, and grief glinting as pearls.
*
Men weep everywhere.
They can hardly see to steer.
*
My good ancestors move untethered,
nodules of the past with sights ahead. I gather balms for wounds, for fevers which water gives us. I sense danger
lurking nearby and will be the first
to bolt; better that I go than weary
women and children, gladiolas sniffed up by wolves who hear the weeping,
who understand our fear.
*
Each of us. All day.
Behind our glasses.
Behind locked bathroom door stalls.
Alone in our cars.
All us men,
or semblances of them,
weeping.
We don’t know how
we’ll ever stop.
Don’t know if we even want to.
*
Our bodies carry us across painted time,
needing care when weakened, harmed.
I’m living in pieces, Ardipithecus
ramidus leaping from clay. She taught us
how to live, weep for life. 4.4 million years
is a long time to learn something.
*
If we listen with our whole bodies,
inside suffering there’s music,
solace of storm song’s balm.
A man, with another man
in his arms.