An interesting short video starring physicist Michio Kaku …
Author Archives: Kyle Kimberlin
All’s a Scattering
Earlier today, I posted a vignette called Wild Radish. This evening, I made a few more edits. I also added an epigraph, which was in my notes for the piece but had not been placed in the text yet.
I think it’s a little better.
Happy Mothers’ Day
to all the Moms who read Metaphor. In honor of Moms today, I suggest these two poems.
To My Mother, by Wendell Berry
When I think today about the things I’ve written about mothers and motherhood, there aren’t really enough. But it is a topic in my work from time to time. And this little piece crept to mind. It’s not celebratory, by any means, but I think the writing is pretty good. See if you agree.
Wild Radish
She was noticing the dust, which covered her shoes. There was so much dust, and large rocks by the trail and the chaparral was orange in the late afternoon. Dust was kicked up by a breeze off the ocean, so that it stood to spin in little storms, which bore it up and over the houses perched like crusts of heaven on the side of the arid hill.
The ocean was dark blue and choppy, topped by little caps of white. There were sailboats, pretty to look at, and the gray outline of the islands. But the sea seemed annoyed by their coming, by what they intended to do. So she watched his shoulders and the back of his head, as he moved ahead of her down the trail. His shirt was red and black flannel, and she saw the cloth was beading and thinning where it was tightest over his bony scapulae.
Wild radish grew thick along the trail, bullied by the onshore breeze, its blossoms lavender and veined like pallid little hands. She thought they looked sad and frail; orphans, underfed, unloved. But she was in that kind of mood. Seeing sadness everywhere and swept along by grim events. She wanted to go home, make tea in her kitchen, sit and read.
They came to the edge of the bluffs, a cut through the brush and heavy plants, where the trail dropped steeply down. He turned and began to walk crab-wise, testing each step carefully, so as not to fall. Shifting the box he carried to one forearm, pinned against his torso like a football, he reached for her hand.
“Careful here now, watch your step.”
Step by step and slowly I descend, looking for what I believe. Something more than this hand to hold on to, brighter than this slanted winter light. I dreamed about you last night, that you came for me in a white car, smiling, looking far into the distance, as though the house were built of canyons, quarries of slabbed and shattered rock. But we could go, into the town where the people were gathered, where the sound was pooled into music, where the children in their houses were asleep. You disappeared as I woke up.
The tide was out, and the beach was empty, curved for half a mile like a crescent moon against the bluffs, and at the far end were the bones of the abandoned fishing pier. Great rusting ribs of iron stood in a line that led a hundred feet beyond the waves, and gulls perched on the tops of every one.
I dreamed this place before I came; I knew before you left that I would dream to bring you here. And how could the sea not accept this, welcome it? This is what she does.
In the soft sand, where it got harder to walk, he dropped her hand. They kicked off their shoes and he had the box in both hands again as they went on, through the piled kelp and drifted wood. She noticed how the sound of the waves boomed ahead of them and echoed from behind, from the cliffs, and rolled from ear to ear as waves broke down the beach. So they were caught inside the thunder, crash, and roll of it, and in the shushing ebb of every wave. Then there were pockets of quiet for the gulls to call, to cry.
I remember when I took you to play on the longer, happy public beach. You had a yellow plastic shovel and a pail, and said you’d make a castle big enough for God to come and live with us. I helped. You got distracted by a group of boys and played with them. I rested by the half-built castle, until God arrived.
He stopped on the damp and hard-packed sand, just above the margin of the waves. She stood beside him, her hand just lightly in the middle of his back, above his belt. The sun was just setting, turning the clouds the color of a saffron quilt.
“We have to wait.”
“I know,” she said.
“For the wind to turn.”
“Yes.”
The sea rose and fell in front of her, so it seemed to be at level with her eyes. The boats and the islands rising, falling with her in a floating world. She could not tell herself from them, or separate her feet from sand, her eyes and arms and mind from everything borne up and down and back and forth, foaming and sloshing and living and dead.
The wind turned. The sun had fallen finally away.
“This was his favorite place,” he said, opening the box.
“He loved it here.”
“He loved you too and me, and this is not really him, you know.”
“I know,” she said. She was weeping now.
“We didn’t have him long enough, not nearly long enough, but it was all so hard for him. And now at least he has some …”
“Peace.”
“Yes.”
Wild Radish by J. Kyle Kimberlin is licensed under
a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercia
l-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License.
Museum
Today Metaphor recommends In The Museum Of Your Last Day by Patrick Phillips, a poem read by Garrison Keillor in today’s Writers’ Almanac.
Bin Laden is a Joke
A guy walks into a bar, tells the bartender “Gimme a Bin Laden.”
“I don’t know that one,” says the barkeep, “What’s in it?”
“Two shots and a splash of water.”
Toward Water And Home
They say the history of a tree is learned
by counting its rings, though to see the story
you must cut it down. I say leave the ax
at home. The tree remembers more than that.
No need to turn your hand to violence.
Walk up and touch the rough body
listen to the rhythm of the upward-flowing
xylem drum. The wind will shift and change
the pitch of leaves. Now it has a voice.
The tree will tell you stories of animals
which men do not deserve to hear.
The black bear passes sometimes late,
sighs heavily beside the tree, moves on
downhill through blackberry and oak
toward water. The old doe sleeps
beside the trunk and wakes with the sun
on her face. She rises, moving on.
And the tree tells the story of today,
how you have been in pain without remedy
or very much hope. But you came.
You rose and stood up to the bright
and thoughtless light of spring
and you came to hear. Now you are moving
on, with everything, as everything is looking
for a place to be. And the old tree leans
happily into April again. It leans a little more
each year, toward home.
Third Draft May 1, 2011
Toward Water and Home by J. Kyle Kimberlin is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial
-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License.
Feel free to share — to copy, distribute and transmit the work.
Story Replaced
I recently uploaded and shared a very short story – a vignette, of 2.5 pages – called Shining Leaves. Later, I found a small typo. Just one little word – a was where an is ought be – but still. We’re perfectionists.
I uploaded a new copy, with a couple of other minor cosmetic improvements, and here’s link:
Puppy Love
Here’s a fun and heartwarming video of a puppy and a horse.
Nonverbal Verbs
Guess what I’m doing tonight. Don’t wanna guess? Aw, yer no fun. ![]()
I’m writing a new poem. I think I’ll call it Toward Water and Home, which reminds me of Like Water for Chocolate. That was a good book.
I haven’t been writing as much poetry as I used to, my creative time having been claimed by short fiction and the novel. The latter hangs on like the metaphorical equivalent of a bad dictator. Maybe a snarly, misanthropic wizard who lives in a ruined tower on a hill.
Progress is like slogging through a bog, is my point.
I believe I like the new poem. I’ll let it jell-o for a couple of days, then post it here.
Here’s something I have been pondering for a long time:
How large a role can the unconscious mind play in creative writing which is not overtly symbolic?
We all recognize that nonverbal communication, such as painting or sculpture, are used to express the nonverbal world. But how close can verbal communication come to being part of our verbally inexpressible reality?
Stated differently, can words be used to express that which is inexpressible with words? I think so; it’s sort of what I do. Maybe you do too.
I propose that the unconscious mind is always on the job, and we are well served by allowing it equal time at the desk.
Alive For Now
Today Metaphor recommends the poem, Staff Sgt Metz by Dorianne Laux.
Prescient, Wasn’t He?
Avoid the necessity of those overgrown military establishments, which, under any form of government, are inauspicious to liberty, and which are to be regarded as particularly hostile to republican liberty.
– George Washington
Distractions
I know I’ve been remiss about posting. Ten days since I offered up anything at all. I have no excuse, except that I’ve been distracted. Life can be that way, if you don’t keep the hours tamed with a whip and a chair.
I think sometimes we need to play, and that’s one of the things that’s been claiming my attention. We’ve had a little visitor come for a couple of weeks, to remind us how to play. Here’s a video.
If I have any readers left, God bless. Here’s a vignette – a very short piece of fictional prose – as a token of my appreciation.
http://kylekimberlin.com/story/shining_leaves.pdf
Maybe tomorrow, we can discuss it.