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Archive for July, 2009

Space Walk

July 31, 2009 13 comments

At night, Reina played among the stars.

She rose from her pillow, gliding up and up, one arm outstretched, as the Earth spun into a small ball below. Inevitably, she bumped into a speeding comet, pulled herself up and perched on it, as on a black velvet throne, surveying the planets rolling away like glass marbles into the field of space. When she tired of the views passing before her, she skipped onto other heavenly objects — asteroids, moons big and small, unidentified bits of space junk of unknown origin — until she sighted the phenomena she most loved: giant, spinning galaxies, great milky spills of stars across the horizon-less void.

Her days unfurled in stark contrast to her nights. She awoke in her bed to rise and dress in stained shirts and shorts, took the bus to where she crawled on her knees across someone else’s kitchen floor, sodden cloth in hand, crunchy cereal and cracker crumbs prickling her fleshy limbs. Under her absentminded gaze, load after load of soiled clothes turned spotless.

Then she ran home for her nightly adventures. For slow leaps through universes rushing like amusement park rides, one into another. In some of those universes she was a child again. Her father blew dandelion fluff with great gusts of his stubbly cheeks, as Reina leapt to catch it. In others, she was someone she had not yet been: a woman with an explorer’s audacious smile, diving through blazing wormholes, stardust billowing around her like sheets on a line.

So many Reinas, so many ways to travel.

One night, as Reina rested on Saturn’s innermost ring, where she had been watching gases rush like colored streamers across the planet’s face, she felt a moving presence. She peered behind her. No one. Yet, still, a ripple trailed across her outer limits, mass in motion, like a cool wave. Benign? Uncertain, but she thought…  probably, yes. A brief pause, and the other moved deliberately, slowly, away, a fish swishing through deep water.

The next day, Reina stood at the curbside market, flexing her aching shoulders and considering lunch, when she perceived someone watching her. A big, blowzy lady had swept awry a tower of limes as she passed, intent on peaches. Behind her, the shopkeeper regarded Reina with a shy smile, as he scooped up green orbs and placed them neatly back in pyramids. Reina loved limes, their cool tartness like saucy tongues. She reached for one. Her hand brushed the shopkeeper’s hand. A familiar tug.

“You like space travel?” she blurted. A statement to him, a question to herself. Could she really recognize that same cool fingering she had felt during her space walk?

“You know Saturn?” she asked in wonder.

“I love Saturn,” he replied. “Those colored streams, that prickly ring thing, like a shower of ice sparks. Love it.” His long, thin fingers picked up an orange. The other hand plunged into cold crystals underneath a case of salmon. He drew forth a thin, sparkling band of ice, then sent it all in orbit around the two of them, the zeroth law of thermodynamics circling right before her eyes.

Thus, Reina met her Max. Without hesitation, she stepped into his world, learned to haggle for prices with truck farmers, who pulled from their vans boxes of fruits and vegetables, burning colorful and explosive, like supernovas, like blue and red dwarfs, like comets spraying green tendrils into the city’s desultory air.

Reina loved stacking produce, feeling the charged textures, the energy potential of each one. Some of their customers saw it, this bright rush of chlorophyll, of pungent atoms, at once sustenance and decay. They smiled dreamily while handing over their cash, perhaps thinking of gleaming particles flowing through their bloodstreams. Others thrust money at the shopkeepers, heads and eyes down, ignoring warm smiles, grasping their purchases as if squelching life within their grip.

At night, Max amused her by slicing dinner ingredients as they floated across the kitchen, his knife strewing peels of zucchini, chunks of carrots, zests of lemon through steamy currents, over bubbling pots. Together, they slept beneath swirls of cosmic dust and wandered through distant star fields. Each morning, as they opened the store’s front gates, brilliant eggplants and celery rushed to meet them, like bit players in a big top show.

“So many universes,” Reina murmured one day, when Venus clung to the horizon.

“Yes, light years and light years to explore,” replied Max. After glancing around to ensure they were alone, he balanced a watermelon on his fingertip, tossed kumquats into a wide pattern around it. Reina swelled with possibility. With a twirl of her wrist, she sent strawberries swirling from their green plastic cages to dash among the orange balls, surprising Max, astounding herself!

A customer arrived with a sudden clash of bells above the door, creating a momentary bobble in their midst. Reina thought, “Freeze time,” and saw the fruits come to a sudden halt, undetected by the man with the briefcase, who quickly chose an apple and a banana from the baskets by the register. As she lifted her hand to return his change, she saw the star stuff trailing from her own fingertips. At that moment, she acknowledged a quiver deep inside herself, saw the logical extension of her relationship with Max.

“There’s been an energy exchange,” she whispered, rubbing her swelling belly.

“A conversion, something new,” he suggested.

“What next?” they asked as one. And enjoyed not knowing the answer.

People who stepped through their door saw they had entered a unified state. At night, Reina and Max linked arms, rose, back to back, swimmers in the nightscape, feeling the fit of blade to blade, their own zygotic matter immersed in light. The earth, with its cacophony of crashing cars, its mounds of dirty laundry, souls trudging dejectedly from work to home and back, became a shining, glittering puzzle in their sky. New universes called.

by Glenda Bailey-Mershon

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Categories: Economy

Call for Submissions: Words of Power

July 29, 2009 16 comments

In magic, to have said is to have done.
Eliphas Levi

Again this fall we’re taking the helm ourselves, not for want of volunteer guest editors, but because we had such a blast with last fall’s Journaling the Apocalypse issue that we resolved to do it every year if possible. The submissions period is from August 1 to August 31, and publication will begin around September 15.

This time we’re looking for words of power: curses, spells, charms, prayers, incantations, mantras, sacred scriptures, explicit performative utterances, oaths, or legal instruments. Submissions may consist entirely of such super-charged language, or may riff upon or explore such language. Submissions of visual art may of course take a more figurative approach to the topic; images of amulets and other power-objects, for example, would be welcome. But otherwise we urge contributors not to interpret the theme too broadly. Please don’t just send us a piece of writing that you think is powerful according to some subjective evaluation. We’re looking quite specifically for language freighted with mana and/or executive force, or writing about that kind of language. If you’re not sure whether something qualifies, feel free to query.

Please limit written material to no more than five items per submission, with individual pieces not exceeding 3,000 words. Please refer to the general guidelines before submitting, and note especially the recommendation to query us if we don’t acknowledge receipt within two days — occasional server hiccups and email glitches are a fact of life on the internet.

We look forward to reading your words of power with an unusual admixture of excitement and trepidation. This issue could be a real test of our editorial juju!

—Dave and Beth

Categories: Words of Power

Truck Song, You and I

July 29, 2009 2 comments

The radio is hobbled in this mottled blue truck with its touches of cancerous rust,

the antenna a broken stub,

but the truck sings a 200,000 mile tune. Between muffler sputters and engine knocks,

who needs Elvis or Cheryl Crow?

The tire’s rhythmic thrumming, the periodic squeak, keep us humming into the night.

Lying in the bed at the hilltop,

we wonder who waits for the stars to burn out? The fuel gauge shows empty,

it always does,

and the odometer is unreliable. On the way home you start to worry

about how much farther we can go.

by Gregory Stapp

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Categories: Economy

Post-Coital

July 28, 2009 4 comments

Light sweet crude

 

d
e
k
a
e
p

f
e
l
l

“to settle at $44.51 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.”
It was Paris. But in Texas.

by Eileen R. Tabios

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Categories: Economy

The Economy of Porn

July 27, 2009 1 comment

She voices no words
for her long absence,
her wasted frame

the time it takes
to make her face,
to fix her hair

and reach the set
where she strips
to the waist,

pours molasses
over her breast
as the camera films

the inevitable spill
to the ribs
before fading to black.

by Maureen Jivani

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Categories: Economy

Visual Economy

July 26, 2009 3 comments

Visual Economy, by Anne Morrison Smyth

by Anne Morrison Smyth

Categories: Economy

Math Tutor

July 25, 2009 Leave a comment

Today I tire of abstract lectures,
trigonometry’s equations,
the theory of topology.

Put away your textbook.
Assess the addition of our absolute
values. Multiply the factors.

Kiss me. Until we test,
it’s all hypothesis. Gather data.
Calculate initial results.

Kiss me again, exponentially.
Above its x/y axis,
let me graph your parabola’s arc.

If the plot points fail,
we can go back to zero.
Meet me in the lab of love.

by Pia Taavila

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Categories: Economy

Then Again: In Meditation on Ruskin’s Stones of Venice

July 24, 2009 Leave a comment

Then again, you are made of triangles
Your eyes, lips, cheeks all joined in harmony
Your stance, a point of geometry
Isoscelism is your creed and scale

My body’s made of circles all a tangle
Circular logic travels well on me
Both body and thought housing holes to scry
Both curving softly into folds, no angle

Inside a triangle the circle stays put
While the triangle’s encompassed dutiful
Within the circle’s circumference; He spoke

of the hibiscus sitting in a circle
in a triangular relief, with soot
Building on the door’s lintel in New York

by Joanne Hudson

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Categories: Economy

Evening

July 23, 2009 1 comment

Street lamps flicker on and I’m the last to head home.
Dusk settles over the bare parking lot.

The cold pierces the skin like a syringe to a girl’s arm,
a man in Burma holds her as the liquid sinks into her flesh.

I shift the stack of papers I’m holding and there is no point
in working late. The girl prays, her eyes wide and white.

The tip of my key, jamming into the car lock, fits in.
The man ties ropes around the girl’s wrist to the bed post.

Enough to keep her heart pulsing to find a vein;
she will be awake for a few more hours.

Begging for sleep, she will see a pike of lust
stretch the soul out of her body. I see the sky.

The first drops of rain slide down the windshield.
The girl begins to hum like the start of the engine.

by Angela Koh

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Categories: Economy

Pliant de Voyage; Objects of Desire

July 22, 2009 Leave a comment

After the notebooks of Marcel Duchamp

“The penalty consists
in ‘cutting the pane’,
in feeling regret
just as soon as the
article’s possession
is consummated.”

Many readymades
suggest a body,
parts of the body,
bodily functions,
erotic promise,
stand-ins for body,
consumers seduced
into a purchase.

Sexuality is
like window shopping.
So… endow objects
with human desires:
the leering grin of
the bathroom faucet,
faces everywhere,
the world eroticized.

Design devices
for things personal,
such as teeth, eyes, breath.
Violate aversion.
Live life on credit,
prophecy fulfilled,
certain of future worth,
and free to create.

Frustrate reading.
Upset expectations.

by Alex Cigale

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Categories: Economy
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