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6/10/2020

Mental Tapes: Be Easy

Wrote this sucker a while back...thought it may be a good one for today. Enjoy, C.A.

Mental Tapes:  Be Easy

Don't we all have mornings where we look in the mirror and think this:  I look like absolute shit. Well, I suppose I don't know if you do, but I do, for sure. Had that thought this morning. And yesterday. I suppose we all have some sort of old mental tape that plays over and over in the mind. Maybe the tapes are different, but they creep up on us, aye? Aye, matey. I have no idea why I suddenly turned into a pirate, ha.

Mental tapes. Maybe some girl wakes up terrified of work because when she was little her father told her she would never succeed and every day, she battles this demon. Some kid at the U.S. border wonders if he'll ever see his parents again because his entire life the outside world has stripped him of relatives, one by one, with no fucking warning. Some older woman collects canned goods because when she was little, there was no food in the house. Some man ferociously cleans his car at the self service wash, even though he already did it once that day, because when he was little, his father lost it all gambling, and the message is clear to him:  the work is never enough. And deep inside me, there are still the remnants of myself as a little girl, depressed and full of self-hatred.

The tapes play on; they creep up on us in the strangest moments. Some people are never aware of these tapes. Others are. Awareness can be a beast...over time, I've worked to fight against these negative mental tapes, and there's been great progress, but I suppose we all carry the deepest ones with us for years...maybe some of us hold on to them our entire lives.

These days, I mainly battle self esteem issues and fear. What makes me most afraid? It changes, but lately, judgment of my life and body, and the fear of being stuck. Trapped.

But there's something miraculous within all of this -- these pains can bring us together. And with all of these highs and lows, with all of these battles within us, remember to be easy on others and be easy on yourself today.

C.A. MacConnell

6/07/2020

Milk Carton

Proof of life:
Tangled hair, twisted throw.
The animal and I,
We wake.

Strange captor calls from the
Family.

Now, stretching. True, I'm no brow-beauty.
Some other missing girl will
Bring the ransom
Home.
She'll be a longer living wall fly.
Some say she'll stick.

Ground coffee, look here, I make the black
Law. I admit, it's a little

Strong.

Call the shepherds. They know
Blood.
Find the sign,
The lost shoe,
The search team, the one
Phone call,
The right or wrong
Words. Relatives know how to make a
Deal. Someone finds a bad sock,

A trace.

Hero, empty or full, don't forget the suit
case.

C.A. MacConnell

6/05/2020

Fiction: Leopard Park


 fiction, written between April 9-13, 2001.

Leopard Park

by C.A. MacConnell


On the most crooked limb, I hang by my knees, halfway up the most crooked tree in Leopard Park (named after some Big Man. Not the animal). I take long half-runs to arrive, drifting to rest in this place of twists and turns. Each afternoon after teaching, I move to hang upside down, my knees wrapped around the sap-lined bark, my brown braid swinging as a tail would. There, I hold my breath, and the web of leaves masks my shape. My blood-rushed face. When I come up for air, right side up on my fleshy seat, I watch them.

I watch them, trying to remember what it was like to be pre-teen and lost in between Play-doh and college, brand named toys and liquor, recess and gas stations, potty training and prom. Pre-teen and trying so hard to be known that it aches. I watch them and remember the ache. I watch them and their age of Boy and Girl, the age when those words alone could rise up from their voices, becoming alive. I watch them, and I forget that downtown, the riots are happening.

Today, they play so close that it makes me hide deeper. So deep, I become the tree. The tree becomes me. My braid is just a branch. That’s the drift.

Most days, they swing, and then they stretch out in the grass, sunning their skins as lions would. When one side is cooked, they flip. Sometimes, they face each other, whisper, and stare up at the sky -- legs spread slightly, bodies sinking into the hillside. Sometimes, I see their toes touch.



Three weeks ago, when they first met, it went like this:  there was only the sound of stuttered talk, only the jerks of stuttered walk. They stopped near the swing set, staring at their feet, legs planted down as stiff as wood.

Hearing her sing some Lauryn Hill, from two swings away, James looked over at her and shouted, “You think you know? You don’t know what it is to be black.”

Red-faced, with a deep voice, she laughed and yelled back, "I dig the song, so deal with it." Then she just kept on singing. She came from the gut. Her smile was wide enough to push the cheeks out.

And then they sang together, and their voices grew as loud as the sounds coming from the swings beneath them. The creaks, the aches. Then their words slipped into silence and more swinging. Then a contest to see who could go the highest, and who had the most balls when the swing was at its peak. Who would let go.

Voices rose again when Katie won the swinging contest. She went the highest, and she let go there, landing in a heap.

“Still, you don’t know what it is to be black,” James said again, shaking his head. “But shit, I admit it, you can fly on that swing. You can fly.” James raised his arms, making wings.

Katie beamed, and that was all it took.



Right here, right now, while the riot fires spread downtown, Katie and James sit on the stone pillars of the Leopard Park overlook. Only a row of stairs separates them. Katie swings her feet, rapping her own version of a Nelly song. She knows more words than James. Rubbing it in, she raps on. Her words come out clean and soft. Then they change, becoming harder, edgy, and urgent. Then mean.

James nods his head to her beat, black locks bouncing. He scans his eyes over her thick thighs, her tight jeans that lace up the sides, her two-inch white platform shoes, and her head full of blond, baby-thin braids. Nearby, on the ground, her blue and green plaid uniform skirt sits crumpled in a ball. Earlier, she changed behind a tree, peeling off her oxford shirt, the skirt, the navy knee socks, the stark white tennis shoes. Now she is fully transformed into her ghetto clothes, she says.

James rolls his eyes and begins to sing along. No, he hums. He doesn’t know enough words yet.

Katie waves her arms and sings. She sweats. She swings her hips all the way through to the last line, eyes shut. She’s got rhythm.

Smooth and slow, Katie glances at his bare feet. Cracked skin lines shoot across the soles.

He swings his feet to the same beat as hers.

They share a look and smile. They smile at the hills, the massive trees, the squat ones, and the city below, their city, the city where windows are breaking, where the reporters count up shootings. Street marches thick with thieves, congregations joining hands, and the shouting and the blood. And through the screaming, the shootings, and the looting, through the news, the radio, and the toothless woman at the bus stop, we all know we must be home by ten. Citywide curfew.

There is no fire up here. There is no heap of stolen goods on this hillside. There is no gang, no crowd, no suited men with sticks, no beanbag guns, no tear gas. Up here, Katie and James can kick back in the trees, their bodies cradled by ancient limbs. Those tree lines run deep. Sometimes deeper.

Slowly, the sun sinks. The few dog-walkers, the few sunbathers, one by one, begin to vanish. The birds change to bats. Katie and James, blond against black now, sit back to back in the grass. There, they remain until the grass darkens and seems to blend to one flat blade.

Though it’s way past my time, with tests to grade, a cat to feed, and the riot news to watch, I’m staying right here to see Katie and James roll their shoulders against each other, back to back in a double massage. Like this, they move, her braids twisting to join his locks, a mix of stiff blades of hair crunching together, bare feet digging tunnels in the grass.

Katie pulls her knees in to her chest, becoming smaller. “Look, James,” she says, “I’m just a shadow.” She holds up her hands and spreads her fingers for him to see.

He doesn’t turn to look. He whispers, “Yeah, you are.” He leans against her.

Minus the moonlight, I might believe her.

Then he holds up his hands, reaches back, and hooks his fingers in hers. They arch, back bend style, hands clasping, heads tipping back crown to crown.

“We made our own moon,” Katie says, leaning back more, pressing her head against his, holding his hands tight. Her neck seems to grow longer, wider, becoming a white slide.

James is the first to let go. “I’ll show you a moon,” he says, rising, pulling down his pants, and showing her all of it -- his backside, light brown and smooth. Then he laughs and sprints off into the trees to use the pisser.

She covers her full face with her hands, giggling. From her place on the grass, she stretches and strains to see the curve of his lower back, the shape of his dark backside, the strong, runner’s thighs. The thighs fade to thin calves. They’re tight as a cat’s, thin and sleek. Fast.

“Hey, don’t look!” he yells from the trees.

“Why not?!” Katie yells back. Giggle, giggle.

“I said don’t look!” James yells again.

But she does anyway.

He zips up his pants, catches her looking, and charges at her bullet-fast. “You better run,” he says.

So she runs, faster than I think she can in her platform shoes.

With his hand, he catches her by one braid, giving her head a soft jerk.

She doesn’t have a chance. She stops and turns to face him. Her chest bounces twice, and then settles.

I can tell by her wide eyes that she has hopes.

His locks creep all over his forehead, moving and sliding like bundles of thin men. Close up, he talks to her, his tone jumping from soft to thick-skinned within words.

Together, they walk as slow as Sunday street-crossers. When they reach the swings, I can make out her grin and her grip on the chains; I can tell that for Katie, there is nothing better than ghetto clothes and an afternoon nap next to the one who can feel the ache of the same sunburn.

By now, his hand is buried in her blond braids. I wait for him to swing forward, lean down and kiss her forehead first, then lower. But he doesn’t. Instead, he gasps and shows his teeth. He leaps from his swing, pointing at the sky, then lower, pointing at me, that woman in the most crooked tree. That watcher. He comes closer, baring his teeth. It is only then that I know they are real and can see the gaps. Still, he is pointing, his finger so close, I think it might poke me. Poke my eye right out. Poke a hole through me, one that wouldn’t kill, but one that would grow wider until I became no more than air, breath, smoke, and steam. Not even dust.

“There’s someone there,” he whispers back at her, “Some bitch watching us, Katie.”

“Shit,” she says, shake-turning to look. She joins him in front of my tree. “Creepy bitch stalking us.” Her plaits frame her face, making it seem even rounder. Her lips seem redder. Bloodshot red.

No one moves until I shoot down from my nest, scraping my hands on the limbs, breathless and sticky with sap, and begin to run, faster than I think I can. But still they are gaining.

“James, I can’t see you!” Katie cries in a childlike panic.

Still, he is gaining. Thin and sleek. Fast.

“I’m here,” he calls back to her. “She’s heading for the parking lot.” His voice is calm and smooth. He’s got rhythm.

He’s still gaining when I see the lights. Surely it’s eleven or twelve for sure. Way past the curfew. Who would’ve thought they would have time to check here.

As the cop pulls up, James waits beside me in the lot. He stands a full head taller than me, but I don’t look at him to see this. I sense him there -- the way I would sense someone behind me, someone hiding, someone seeking, a stray, or a spirit.

Katie breathes hard, crouching behind James’ lean frame. “My mom will kick my big white ass if she finds out I’m here,” she mutters. “She thinks I’m at Dad’s.”

The cop swaggers up to us, one hand empty, and one hand on his belt. Then the East hand resting on his stick. The West hand on his gun.

James’ eyes are lined with more age than I thought. And from the waist up, he seems thinner. Gaunt even, his cheeks hollow with the weighted breath of getting caught; he seems older than a thousand thirteen-year-olds, aching to run. I too consider bolting.

James shifts from foot to foot, waiting. He looks left, then right, grabs Katie behind him, holding her still. It’s much too late to run.

“You want to tell me what you’re doing here past curfew,” the cop says. He smells like a barn, like leather.

I grab my scuffed elbows with my hands. Fold my arms.

Holding hands, Katie and James stand with droopy cheeks, their lips trapped open in a slight gasp. Each of them has thick pieces of hair covering one eye.

Crushed and trapped, we all heave.

“I was just taking them home,” I say to the cop. It isn’t to save them, but more to save me, the forty-year-old teacher who hangs from a tree to watch kids. No, it isn’t for them. It’s for The Great Watcher. Me, watching them, wearing my jogging pants and t-shirt, hair falling out of my braid. In fact, there isn’t much of a braid left at all. Just pieces. Fragments. Gotta get home to the riot news and the cat.

Katie is clinging to her uniform skirt, still balled up, useless in one hand.

James towers over us all. Tight-lipped, tight-muscled, he folds his arms tight at his chest. He isn’t going anywhere.

“Yes, I was just taking them home,” I say in my best teacher voice.

“No, she wasn’t,” James says with a tight half-smile. “Let’s be real here.”

Katie moves out from behind him and elbows his hip.

When James peers down at her, eyes wide and wet, black as a hole, she wraps her arms around his waist, locking her hands there.

The cop tips his hat, scratches his middle, and reaches for his cuffs.

I’m waiting for him to take me, the Great Watcher. Take me in. But he gets an urgent call on his radio from some high-pitched dispatcher trying to tone it down, trying not to sound frantic. It tears him and his leather smell away.

“Just get them home,” he says to me from his car, rushing down the driveway.

Downtown, the riots call him away. We all know that in that moment, the riots save us.

The cop pulls past the swings, the crooked tree, turns on his lights again, and speeds down the drive in a blur of red, black, and blue. Then black. And we know it is safe.

James pulls on Katie’s shirt, saying, “Come on, baby.” Suddenly, she’s his baby.

Together, they walk shoulder-to-shoulder, matching strides. No holding of hands. No kissing. Just the faint sound of Katie singing and James backing her up. Then he turns around, facing me, The Great Watcher. He tenses and shakes, crouching down. Just as I think he will leap and take me in, he stops there, holds up a palm, and gives me a stiff, forced wave. No smile. Just his frozen palm hanging in the air, still for one moment, then two. On the third, James turns his back and hooks that hand in a loop on Katie’s jeans. Both of them take a deep breath and exhale at once, spent. Their ache comes from the gut.

As I head home, I reach my hands up to touch each finger to its match, making my own circle of skin. In my strange shape, I see three more cruisers prowling. Still, I creep forward, holding together my own moon, humming one of Katie’s tunes. This bitch’s got some rhythm. Baby, it’s much too late to run.