Creature in the Forest (Part 3)

A shot rang out in the forest. The hunter tripped and fell onto my path, the one that the animals dare not tread. His head snapped up, eyes met mine, and he screamed. The horrible sound. I had to snuff it out.

Like a flame, I grabbed his neck, squeezed, and snapped his brittle bones. Head lolling to the side, I had forgotten that there are men out there in the world that they parade around the streets talking into mechanical devices demanding things from one another. They are filled with poison, I can tell by the way he smells like gasoline, like the chemicals they create that made me sick to my stomach and made me trek out here to live and hunt alone. I can’t stand these things.


Creature in the Forest (Part 2)

When I grow strong, I linger in the morning light and bathe freely in the deep waters of the lake. Sometimes there is a cougar with padded paws who creeps up to the water and laps it up. She will glance at me now and then surely wondering what I must be doing, a thing like me. The cougar sniffs the air and wanders back into the tree line. I’m not prey or a threat, I just am, like a ripple, a slick stone covered in moss, like discarded bird bones mixing in the sand.


Creature in the Forest

Below the mist, I lay on wet soil among the rubble and ruin of past selves. Crisp outlines of shadows
dance with the fall leaves and cascade into the still lake beside me. A scuttle of creatures, the movement of stones, as they scurry to the water’s edge to drink or clean bloody claws.

I am waiting for the moon to rise, to peak out between the mountain scape so I can join the owls and other night animals in their hunt for fresh flesh. Once, I lived in a city, now I’m just another thing gnawing on bones. What am I?


April in San Francisco

In front of the Chinatown public library, I look across the street at a garage and the Transamerica Pyramid poking out from behind.

Depending on your positioning, the slant of the hill, the gaps between passing cars at intersections, and the weather, it’s possible to gain new perspectives on iconic buildings and the Bay Bridge. These are the views I’ve been searching for for the past few months.

A cable car on Powell Street grinds by heading southward. A slight burning odor hits me when it passes; a mixture between metal and oil I still can’t figure out.

Since the start of the new year, I’ve read more, written here and there, and thought about a few poems I’ve yet to scribble down. It’s all been swimming in my head as I balance starting a new job, spring cleaning, and upcoming birthdays. And it’s already April. How did that happen? Lately, it’s felt like time slips by faster, and I’m left trying to catch up.

I walk south on Powell Street. Nag Champa floats in the air by the Buddhist and Taoist Association building, and I take deep breaths to get as much of it as possible.

The sky is blue with a few clouds, but they’re moving fast, so it might change to gray skies and a slight rainy mist. Riding out all the atmospheric rivers and turbulent winds in the city these past few weeks, I’ve been calmly waiting for Spring. I want a sunny hot day to go to the beach and read.

There are plenty of current events to talk about, but I’m somewhere between exhaustion and nausea every time I try to write about any of it lately.

I keep running out of time to process the most recent mass shooting before another one happens. As hateful rhetoric spreads and takes hold in multiple states, as reproductive rights are stripped away, and as fascism continues to grow – I worry about the future.

How can I write about it all? How can I process what’s happened in the U.S. in the past few years? I’m struggling to grasp how other writers have done it.

So I take moments to look at the city, I take moments to sit and eat lunch in a park, I take moments to read a book at cafes I haven’t been to before, I take moments of peace because I’m not sure how many of them I’ll have in the future.

I make it to California Street and hear the rhythmic grating of another cable car, this one coming up the hill and heading north. Small groups of tourists, families, and couples crowd near the stops on the street corners, waiting to jump on.

Crossing the street, I glance at the Bay Bridge down below, framed by the layered buildings downtown. It’s unbelievably beautiful.

Over my shoulder, the Transamerica Pyramid is hidden by a strip of grayish clouds; the ever-present giant I imagine to be a hybrid symbol (modern and ancient) of longevity for the city. I hope through it all; it’ll continue to stand.

Otherworldliness About Existing: A Reflection

It’s Sunday and it’s raining, and I wonder what’ll happen next.

I’m spending my days absorbing the murders that continue to shake the U.S. (Tyre Nichols and the unending wave of mass shootings). Somewhere between it all, I’m inching along as each day starts and ends, and I can’t help but think we’ve all slipped into the next chapter of dystopia living.

Am I the only one who feels a strange kind of otherworldliness about existing right now? It’s one bludgeoning after another, and it won’t stop. Can’t medicate ourselves enough with shows, fast food binges, and the usual consumable depressants.

What’s been said has been said, and the fight continues on. There’s no going back to “normal.”

I’m feeling less like a human in this country and more like a living object stripped of agency as women’s reproductive rights are dismantled in multiple states.

Now I wonder if, much like generations who survived the Great Depression, World War I, and World War II, how will the events of the last seven years scar and continue to affect us and those who come after us?

I’m trying to stay positive, stay aligned with personal and professional goals. Read, write, and keep going. Some days it’s easier, but today I swear I feel the churning waves of something greater, darker, approaching on the horizon, inching closer as each day passes. I expect the unexpected. War? Famine? What’s next?

Ukraine fighting on, and the pain of continual murders in the U.S., either through police force or gun violence. I’m having difficulty putting it into words and documenting it all. It’s more than overwhelming.

How do you cope with the loss of the last three years? How many continue to suffer from losing friends and family due to COVID-19?

I haven’t posted in a while because my mind’s been swamped as I navigate making something of my life while juggling the gravity of everything happening.

How have you managed yourself? Are you able to compartmentalize what’s happening and then push on? I need something more than meditation and self-help books. I need hope.

Thoughts? Share them below in a comment, and let’s have a positive chat.


Currently Reading:

Still Mad: American Women Writers and the Feminist Imagination by Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar

Churchill: A Life by Martin Gilbert

Listening to: Deep Dive: 80s Pop