This Is Me

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My name is Michael Newman, I am studying creative writing at the University of San Francisco. I am just trying to get my thoughts and writings out there into the world and very open to critique so, let me know!

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Hello, Darlin'

Ok, first off, I'm sorry for how long it took me for this next post. In my non-fiction class we are writing essays which is entirely different than poetry (which is what I prefer). Hence the long break in a post. Finally I have one! This is an essay written for our closest family friend, M.D, who passed away far too young. It's dedicated to her, her husband John, and my parents. For those of you unfamiliar, "a little bit of rhythm and a lot of soul" comes from The Loco-Motion, one of M.D's favorite songs. I hope you all like this and for the Newman family and friends out there who read this, I hope you can still see M.D by your side. I love you.



Hello, Darlin’
For John and M.D. For Mom and Dad
“A Little Bit Of Rhythm, And A Lot Of Soul”

I still remember the clumsily stoned and grouted walls of the church, the high reaching single-pointed ceilings and the watery stained glass windows letting unfamiliar light reach the pews. I remember the sunstone daisies and sapphire hydrangeas, and the veiled scenes of His last days that they blocked. The forty rows of eighty-eight degree pews made of solid wood that kept my posture proper in the presence of you, still upsets my back. I thought He of all people would be a fan of lumbar support, but maybe they hurt so much to keep me fastened onto the real; the here and now. I’m glad, because it was a hard concept for me. Seven rows back from the marble-wooded lectern listening to stories of your past, told by people who’d be around in my future, I was struggling to understand the present. I sat and watched as you lay in a box, far too small for your spirit, and I could only wonder if this would be the last time I saw you.
            It wasn’t.
            We didn’t talk of you for a while because the reality was far too raw. Life changed for us; conversations once overwhelmed by story telling were far more cautious in order to avoid bringing up any “M.D. stories”. Our Saturday night family barbecue’s were a little more on edge, too, because as the compact disc changer chose, blindly, the songs we would listen to, we’d always fear it would come on. A few months down the road it did, and we all looked towards the back of the yard and listened. We loved watching you “chug-a, chug-a” around the blood-red brick border at the deepest end of the pool, leading the line artfully along the crooked ground. It never mattered, shit show or sober, you never missed a step. I can’t begin to tell you how excited we got every time that song came on; our eyes frantically flooded the air until we found you, usually alone, and usually seven steps ahead of us. Once you got those hips and knees going in turn with your strategically bent arms you were a one-car train that couldn’t be stopped, so we joined you. Somehow I knew that as we all stared deep into the darkness, as the catchy melody poured over the crest of our house and through the limbs of the un-cut trees, we all were watching you again.
            I’d like to think I saw you that night, but I didn’t, because I wasn’t sure if you saw me too.
A long time passed until I thought I saw you again. All the way until the following October I could have sworn you had gone for good. But October had always been a special month, especially for my Mom. Each time the doorbell rang that month I got desperately nervous and mildly upset at myself; it was times like those that I regretted not ironing my shirts or changing out of my soda-stained khaki pants (because the browns didn’t match). And each time the melody of the fight song filled the downstairs and part of the upstairs hallway, my Mom would take a deep breath, sigh and slowly walk towards the door. It was hard to watch, but I knew what she was thinking. You’d always show up, like clock work, on any given day except Halloween, yet still dressed in an excruciatingly confusing costume, causing us to question, is this M.D.? Naive, I know, because who else would “trick” at twelve thirty-three on a random Tuesday afternoon, fifteen days before Halloween? Still, there was no greater treat than you in your “Miss Piggy” costume complete with wiry blonde hair taped to your smooth scalp. I’m sure as my Mom stood patiently, listening to the man in khaki pants (stainless) and blue button-up short sleeve shirt on our front porch, she was trying to picture you. I think I saw you from over her shoulder, but I wasn’t too sure. I was still uncertain if you saw me too.
You must have sparked some memories in my Mom, and later that night when I heard her crying to my Dad, he must have been sparked too, because that weekend they taught me to play 99. I was honored. Remembering that “older and up” club you used to run downstairs after nine, when I was upstairs in bed supposedly attempting to go to bed. Funny, because by nine fifteen I’d slink down the green carpet stairs (this was back when the stairs were solid, so I couldn’t peek down and watch you.) and turn the corner of the white wooden banister, all of you would be looking right at me, surely wondering why it took me so long that night to come down. You’d always let me watch so I’d stand between you and my Dad, with John and my Mom in good sight.
It amazed me how small you four made that brown table feel, while I stretched to see the top of it. You and my Mom sat across from one another, and John and my Dad did too. I’m not sure which of you were more cocky; you and Mom with your cute but oh-so-devilish grins, when you either had the cards or didn’t (I think you were the better bluffers). Or John and Dad when they licked and pasted the Ace of Spades to their foreheads, just so you knew they had the card. I found it funny. And no matter how much you thought you’d win, none of you ever seemed to lose.
I learned, that weekend, to play 99, and though it was only the three of us, I tried desperately to picture you across from me. I thought you might be giving me some wink or hint so I knew you had the right hand. And though the three of us got lost in the empty space the chair created, I didn’t feel you looking back.
It stings me to say it, but I think I gave up for a while. I figured there had to come a time when I’d need to move on and let go, and stop trying to have you around. I even took your song off my iPod, just so I didn’t run the risk of remembering you.
A lot happened in the time I took off from my search for you. A lot happened to all of us. I was young when you passed, and so were my parents, but we all aged a lot since then. I can only speak for myself, even though I’m sure it applies to us all, but I was having trouble with feeling alone. It’s not because my family wasn’t there for me or because I didn’t have the close friends I needed, you’d know better than any how blessed I was. I guess it was the light-hearted, free-flowing soul you kept through the tough times and the good times that I was missing. I guess I didn’t have long enough to learn from you.
Towards the end, though you were subjected to a world of dry hallways, drawn shades and cold blankets, you’re smile felt as pure as ever. It was reassuring. You always were certain to convince us you’d never leave our sides
Luckily, you didn’t.
A few months down the road I couldn’t explain why the lights in the parking lot of the Golden Gate Bridge were blinking on and off as I stared out into the unknown during one of my many nights of self-reflection. Or even the lights up and down Clement and Balboa, that seemed to switch from off to on, or vice-versa, each time I’d drive towards them. I couldn’t explain why as the more troubled I got, the more often the electricity seemed to be troubled in the places I was. It took a while for me to understand.
Two weeks ago I was driving on the 101 South, towards San Francisco. The traffic was almost as thick as the rain that blurred my windshield (It reminded me of stained-glass windows), and halfway home my back was aching, so I sat, upright, in my seat staring straight ahead. I guess the circumstances reminded me of the church I last saw you in because I started humming under my breath. You must have been listening, because as I ascended the last hill of the highway the entire strip of street lights were blinking on and off with “a little bit of rhythm, and a lot of soul”.
I was glad I saw you again. I was glad you saw me too.

I love you, M.D, and we miss you John.

Friday, March 2, 2012

Posts to come!

Sorry everyone! Been a little under the weather and trying to stay up on school work but starting tonight and through this weekend I will be posting writings, photos and thoughts. Thank you all for the views and  check back in tonight or tomorrow!

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Breath's Burden


Breath’s Burden


Where Sweetgum falls and feet fail to trudge between thistle and weed,
Yellow roses with scent of Red’s,
Blue Bells and Coltsfoot, here the spotted thorn lay bloomed where lined hands welcome.
Out beyond the cry of skyline, the reach of golden chord -static and pristine-
the junction of worlds, blessed, onramps and Oreo Cows,
blades and bade for caramel dirt and what was worth.
Weighted among stretch of sky,
Candytufts and Snapdragons.
Passed the trickle of stream, drawn shade of lid,
ninety-degree Daisies and Snowdrops alike, soft and stuffy Water Lilies.
Beyond reach of lung and budding tongue, blue -or maybe not- iris,
pinpoint pupil but maybe I’m missing the point,
draped in fancy frills and marble shards,
draped in pollen and blemish


Monday, February 27, 2012

La Mer


So, this is just a quick poem I wrote on MUNI (the bus line in SF for all you non-sf'ers) while heading to my apartment from class. I have been trying to write a lot more lately and so far it is going well. I really appreciate all the views the blog has gotten and I'd love to keep the views coming, so I will try not to disappoint. Would love for you to message me on Facebook or text or anything really, just so I know who is reading and maybe how you are liking the blog. Anyways, here is the poem, La Mer. Thanks again everyone!


  La Mer

I know she is near, the Grand Pacific,
but all I see is Cha’s Tv’s and UPS, sadly,
I’m far too large to ship and they would laugh at my destination.

I know she is near, the Grand Pacific,
but the route times aren’t available, don’t worry,
the transit station is to be replaced with a new, state of the art,wave design. It will look like a Pacific wave.

I know she is near, the Grand Pacific,
but this breeze cannot be hers, it comes across as far too chilly,
and it comes across as far, too.

I know she is near, the Grand Pacific,
but I have lost my orientation, and I fear I’m looking south,
or maybe just not hard enough.

I know she is near, the Grand Pacific,
and she will be my home, when I find her, and,
I know she is near the Grand Pacific.


Sunday, February 26, 2012

It Must Be Said



It Must Be Said
For, D.A. Powell

Beneath the water-spotted, ten-dollar glass,
in a box surely ripe with lead, smirching eutrophic promise,
surely during the worst windstorm of the past, I’d say, three minutes.
Surely, it must be said.

But who’s to say all the woodsmen and painters of coffins past,
dirt sickening their soles, stomped atop stumps and stray screams-scant,
careful among blossoming dandies as if short-tempered lions or
lioness.
Surely short of patience and short, more or less.

At least mine breathes, a mere eight or nine feet above me, through
carefully slanted slats, separating my silence from the air.
At least I am alive, or so I feel, more or less, deserving.

Beneath the water-stained, eleven-dollar glass,
in a box surely ripe with titanium dioxide,
the landscape doesn’t seem so useless.
Yes, again, my feet beg for travel,
outside of this once, encasing, box.
My feet a guide from boyhood, you’re feet a guide to life.
Surely,
It must be said.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Cedar


At last, like cemented veins, our streets have resurfaced.
A brilliant divide between oak and hope.
Rough against the flat of my foot but like before
my toes are soft to the step.
I walk the oak fence, piece-by-piece,
tracing the line by hand.
Ignoring drops where wood becomes absent,
ignoring rough snags on my calices,
ignoring disobedient nails for better or worse.
Following from wrist to elbow, a sudden left,
and home is a sun-caused freckle amidst a patch of trees.
Wind whirls like breaths of yesterday,
silent again, but I feel the sadness.
I walk the driveways of familiarity, balancing on cracks,
none of which are cause for concern.
I make sure to sit at each doorstep, an eager eye turned toward the hill,
a lonely arm turned toward the door,
and the scenes are just the same.
At last, like cemented veins
our streets have resurfaced,
A brilliant divide between oak and hope.
I'll take a right.

No Return Policy


One could call it window-shopping,
But my eager-scatter, reflection-to-reflection
Intricate with determination remains receipt-less
As no sight is striking and I’ve left my wallet at home.

By The Hands Of Man, By The Hands Of God


    Just wanted to write a quick poem about the beauty I found out in napa. Wrote it at 2:30am in like 5 seconds so... if you don't like it, its totally fine! ha. No, I hope you appreciate it.

By The Hands Of Man, By The Hands Of God

All that I could do was marvel at the beauty,
of the iron and brass intersected and interchanged,
reaching up towards the heavens and connecting the lands.
A hand made wonder and I’m just in awe.
Until I found myself out beyond the Oreo Cows,
where the green bled to green, and the trees stood tall,
standing up against the heavens and stubborn to their fall.
A hand made wonder and I’m just in awe.

Alive


Alive

It could not have turned out better had we followed the directions,
Your calf found the pocket of my knee,
Your thigh, with just the right clench,
Kept my hips in check.
Your hand, dressed in sheet.
If love were an art
We’re the piece not to be found.
But love is about the passion,
About the rogue ankle reaching towards the ceiling,
The fingers blooming and retracting,
The chin to forehead, nose to neck battle for dominance.
Love is about the chaos,
The toes parted by Achilles, the heels dug into shins.
It’s about the pain, the strain and stretch.
It’s about the emotion, the breathing and sighs.
It’s about the truth of feeling.
Love is about the eye-to-eye stare,
The green-to-green attraction,
Love is about feeling alive.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Napa Wrap Up


Back to reality after the weekend in Napa but I must say it was amazing and couldn’t have come at a better time. Ate delicious home cooked breakfasts, and a dinner paired with amazing wine. Went wine tasting, relaxed and kicked ass at Pictionary, drank more wine, and slept. It was perfect.
Silver Oak was by far my favorite winery, not only because it ended up being the most bang for my buck, but also because the wine was incredible. By far the best wine I have had, and it only was released two weeks ago! Also went to Stag’s Leap, Chimney Rock, Darioush Winery and back to Silver Oak for a second go. All the locations were very different in both appearance and taste, which gave the overall experience of wine tasting multiple mini experiences.
The house we stayed in was amazing; beautiful, comfortable and quiet. It was enjoyable waking up to soft rays of sunlight peeking in through slatted blinds, but not having to wake up and get out of bed. I could have stayed in bed the entire time. Anyways, the entire trip was perfect. Saw wineries, downtown Napa, surrounding areas and multiple wine districts.
Now it is back to reality and back to school and all its glory. I am trying to focus more on writing lately (poems and such) so stay tuned for more updates!


also, you can see photos from the trip here:
Napa Photos

Monday, February 20, 2012

Napa For The Mind

     Wow, I never realized how much of a different life is within 60 miles of my San Francisco apartment and this finding could not have come at a better time. The semester is now going at light speed, the reading and writing is picking up and before I know it, it's going to be summer and I'll forget it all. Stress has been building and added to my missing of home and family, I needed a break.
     We got to Napa around 6pm on Friday. We would have arrived sooner but we needed to stop for some "Northern California" mexican food (because they put rice in their burritos. us "so-calians" find it humorous) and some ribs and goodies. Sweet Tea Arizona? I think yes. A shirt that has a banana-moon smoking a cigar just because we can? Throw that one in too.
     Once we got back on the road it was smooth sailing until we arrived at the house which sits on Malk Vineyard, which has the logo of a pit bull. The drive up was astounding. Fading back and forth between tree covered darkness and revitalizing bursts of sun that made their way between the branches. Although it became semi-difficult to drive through this rave of exposure, my body welcomed the challenge. Winding in and around fields, vineyards, cows and hills, I found myself feeling far enough from the city to let my walls down. The lone country road that gave my eyes a test and put my heart back in motion.
     Pulling up to the house I felt like a pro, like it was no big deal. A steady 17mph down the narrow  road comprised of dirt, gravel and soil, nearing the house but unable to decipher its location due to the abundance of foliage covering its face, I wasn't phased; pretending I have done something like this many times, but who was I fooling? I'm excited!
     We finally get through the wooden, swing-open gate and up the gravel driveway, to the green and brown finished wooden garage door. To the right there are walls of unevenly stacked stones, intriguingly close to straightly-lined but unsettling close to not, surrounded by yellows, pinks and greens of earth dwellers. To the left is another stone wall leading my eyes around the front of the house, which is technically the back, just feels more front like to me (with the view and all). I follow the stones around the house and onto the deck. The wood creeks beneath my feet and I say hello in return. The front of the house is all done in a nice, dark wood, and the deck to match. Walking over to a spot that slowly became my spot on the deck, I was amazed at the sepia colors bursting through the trees. The shadows and the golden ring that formed around the leaves struck by light were astonishing. Looking out over field and fields of anticipated grapes helped me visualize my distance from the city. If I can only see as far as 7 fields. I can only imagine there are at least 10,000 between myself and reality. It was comforting.
      I knew I was on vacation when I could look down at my feet, caressing each rickety contour of the deck, and not wonder where they should be. It was my time to relax, and my feet fell to 2 1/2 feet off the ground, posted up on a wooden stool. Three legs and a top, the simplest comfort, the simplest mind.


More thoughts from my trip to come!
P.S. Sorry if there are typos, It is early and I'm hungover. Just a casual type. But feel free to make fun of me!

Thursday, February 16, 2012

The poem that made up this lovely bulldog-
Delightful. Just another afternoon to relax.
I hope they don’t think I’m lazy,
They look at me like they think I am,
But they look at me when I’m not lazy too.
Does my breath smell?
Oh no, maybe it’s my gas.
I hope they don’t think I’m smelly.
I’m just so comfy though, maybe I don’t mind what they think.
I don’t mind.
I’m just so cozy laying here on my face.
My skin is so warm squished up against my eyes.
This is the life.
Zzzz.
Ah, oh no. I fell asleep. They are looking at me again.
Maybe I breathe too loud, oh no did I snore?
I need to breathe softer.
No, no. This is who I am. I know they love me for it.
They think I’m cute when I grunt.
And they giggle at my gassy ways.
I know they love me. How could they not?
Look how snuggly I am over here, they must be talking about me.
They must be talking about how cute I am.
I’m just a cute little bulldog pup over here minding my own business.
How could they not love me.
Oh man. I think I’m. I’m
Zzzz.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Stunning Is



Well, it seems to be that time. My first post on my new blog. There will be plenty more to come but for now, one will do. Need to get this started at some point right? This is a poem called, Stunning Is.


Stunning Is

Stunning is the blackness set ablaze,
the 5am shadow cast from far beneath
by first stretch of sun.
Stunning is the traceless strokes in a pallid sky,
the 4:45 certain glare, the understanding of dark,
a followed foe.
Stunning is the feel-felt, lids upon lashes,
and 4:30 easy-pleasing reason she’s within them,
and she remains.
Stunning is the shut-eyed view of brilliant comfort,
the loaded lonely but content nonetheless
seated at the doorstep of her soul.

The Day Deteriorates To The West



Another poem for those who would like to read. Just wrote it now and have not spent too much time on it but hey, its something right?


The Day Deteriorates To The West

The day deteriorates to the west,
God drags his brush through his palette and carefully strokes bursts of Citrine in-
between the Onyx sky.
Rivers run rapid, bursting with billowing clouds--an eruption of Diamond--the
water is lost.
The ocean, once a blanket weaved of Tourmaline and Agate, now dry--stricken with
Sunstone and Moonstone.
Fields prove barren­--Jasper soil prevails.
Trees fade to Amber.
Lifeless colors lament.
11am and I am still looking east,
to the Peridot and Iolite of her eyes.

You, I’ll Still Adore


One of the four poems from my class last semester. Had the privilege to learn under the wing of D.A. Powell and ended up walking away with much more than I had anticipated. Grew as a writer, as a person of feeling and emotion, and as a bystander of life. (He has a new collection out, Useless Landscape, Or A Guide For Boys. Take a look!) This poem is titled, You I'll Still Adore, but I will also post my three other finals titled-- 1.Red 2. Befog and 3. Nothing But The Best (A celebration of Frank Sinatra using only his song titles) Anyways, here is the first one!


You, I’ll Still Adore

My greatest fear dwells beyond my control,
so I am stuck watching the silver lined nimbi withhold
without a sensible cause.
The land grows thirsty but the population is quenched
with the product of their greed.
I’ll continue to pray.

Nightfall is more frightful than the days I spend alone. By midnight,
I cannot sleep and I start my journey east.
Posted at the furthest reach of pier 39, on the edge of my toes,
I wait.
By 5am my knuckles are white with surrender,
but the first burst of light is the re-birth of hope they need.

I know she is getting tired. There will come a day that I wont want
the touch of carpet on the soles of my feet,
but her feet might wear out before mine. We watch her walk.

Now, as cumuli and strati disperse overhead,
and the tickle of green works its way up my back.
My hand sits, fingers bloomed, waiting for your palm.
And as we watch the sun slip off to sleep, I’ll make sure
to remind you. 

Nothing But The Best

This is the fourth poem from my final portfolio last semester. It uses only song titles from Frank Sinatra!


Nothing But The Best
            A tribute to Frank Sinatra

New York?
Witchcraft. L.A. is my lady,
My kind of town.
Autumn leaves, Summer winds
All or nothing at all, for once in my life,
The best is yet to come.
I’m gonna make it all the way,
Mr. Success.

It was a very good year,            
Loves been good to me,
More than you know.
All I need is the girl, body and soul.
Call me irresponsible, call me
Faithful.
She says, she’s the right girl for me.
Guess I’ll hang my tears out to dry.

I never knew, how little we know.
I could have dance all night, goin’ out of my head.
How insensitive.
You brought a new kind of love to me.
The good times, the birth of the blues
Somewhere along the way, something’s got to give.
I see it now.
I’ll never be the same.
I’ve been there.
Life’s a trippy thing,
Like a sad song.
No one ever tells you, that’s life.

Sure thing, these foolish things, this town,
The day after forever.
You forget all the words.
Yesterday’s, forget to remember.
It’s a lovely day tomorrow, take a chance.
Oh! Look at me now.

Red


Red

A solid foot cannot trump the wandering eye from constant search for a crisper green, and the fence in the foreground promises a fresh start.
But the horizon is farther than it appears, and there, the grass grows untamed and wild.
The home of Mojave Rattlesnakes and foothold traps, the grass is thick, dark and restricting.
The unknown is enticing but the path home becomes lost.
The path out goes, un-found.
Your feet, able to escape sight, struggle and clamor through knots of blades,
Nipping savagely at you ankles.
The eyes you once trusted sit below the green, smothered by color and lack of landmark.
The grass may be greener, but you bleed the same red.
Unsafe grows the uncertainty beyond the horizon.
The slightly browned, unchaste grass of your past’s appeal has never been so great.

Befog


Befog

At six I saw my hero, by seven, my wilted past.
But the sweatshirt you left behind was the hope I learned to count on.
A sign of my future growth.
I wanted to be as big as you, until I learned how small that was.
I was like a seed from a bush,
that dropped not too far from home.
But I crossbred with ambition. I am a tree
and you were uprooted.

The sweatshirt you left behind, once comforting,
now holds my wrists and waist like a straight jacket.
The hood I mistook for your cape,
now nothing but a mask and I don’t know you.

At eleven you were my guidance, by sixteen, you stunted my growth.
You were the child, but I matured. Now,
at twenty-one I surrender, as the bushes sprout branches out of season,
as the sun’s heat befogs the snow, and rolling fists of crisscrossed blades of green
beg for color.