Is it just me or does this sound like it should be performed only when there's a full moon, only in a graveyard, and only by a backing band consisting of brain-hungry zombies?
The stories cascade down, shaken loose from part of my brain.
The girl with the scratches from her cat who wore bandaids all over her face.
The impossibly beautiful girl whose smile lit up the back room of the restaurant at the party.
The girl with hair so long it could wrap around her body three or four times.
The summer I was working in the library and noticed that there were four women who worked there who seemed normally sized in most ways except for their insanely large posteriors.
The pre-internet spread of misinformation.
The post-internet spread of misinformation.
The misunderstandings.
The misappropriations of affection.
The way the rain prods the part of my mind that leads to dreaming.
The memory of certainty that is so much stronger than the certainty of memory.
And it coalesces. With a sudden realization.
That maybe the complexity of the girl you loved so long ago was all in your mind.
Maybe she wasn't that hard to figure out. You were just looking at the wrong thing.
And maybe, just maybe, she was mumbling gibberish, not singing in French.
In case you've never heard this speech, it's worthwhile. And if you haven't heard it recently, it's worth another listen.
A few quick thoughts for today, which marks both the (public) celebration of a Presidential Inaugural and the (official) celebration of the life and work of Martin Luther King, Jr.:
May we all rise to the challenges we face.
May we all remember who we are as individuals whose choices matter. And as members of the community of human beings.
May we have the courage to speak from the heart and rise to the occasions as they arise.
And may we all realize that we are all flawed, but that our past (however good or bad) need not keep us from greatness.
I was reading Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. And the girl on the bus noticed. And she commented on it.
Said the Green Knight was a feminist parable. That the metaphorical beheading of womankind and the subsequent return in a year and a day was clearly a reference to menstruation.
Went on to describe the way each of the battles in the poem represented a different dysfunctional romantic relationship.
She spoke in great detail and with sharp command of the text. Each of her major theses was supported by multiple references to specific stanzas. And argument, like each stanza, was laid out so it ended with a bob and wheel. The "bob" was a short line, followed by the "wheel," a longer line infused with internal rhymes.
I don't even remember why I had the book. It must have been assigned reading for some course I was taking. I can't imagine I would have picked up the book on my own.
But I don't remember any of that.
I remember her necklace -- an oblong piece of jade on a silver chain.
I remember her scarf -- purple, with green stripes.
And I remember her description of the appropriate punishments for each of the metaphorical sins committed by the men represented in the dysfunctional romances she felt were represented in the poem.
And I remember how she smiled after she finished her analysis.
And how she gave me her phone number.
After her discussion of beheadings and combat, and sword-fueled menstrual cycles.
I folded the paper with her number in it. And I put it in the paperback. And I read the rest of the poem.
And lost the book.
Exactly one year and a day later, I was back on the same bus.
I remembered the conversation and looked around for the girl.