I
could've been a well-muscled dancer, but I had a stand-off
with my dreams in
the picnic area.
If there was a bastard, it was grandpa I swear
to God, the only
man I knew that made me feel like my chest was two tectonic
plates
crammed up against each other.
I dreamed of a monument made from prefabricated
aluminum,
cheap carpet, and the smell of Lysol and burnt toast.
Dad
loved birdbaths. I broke them with stray lawn darts. He
taught me to draw nudes.
I was never quite what he wanted.
In the iron tub we hid from tornadoes
and the blocked out sun.
It was like living in a vending machine. I watched
Ed Sullivan
as dad yelled at my sister because of her bad dreams.
Grandpa
was never a powerful man. He was never a stoic man.
He was never full of bravado.
Couldn't make snow. Couldn't
write Don Quixote. But he made this place like
some people
make newfangled gadgets. He didn't know better. He just did it.
If
you collected butterflies, would you put them in here?
I think this home
could answer from within if I kicked
it hard enough.
No bike racks.
No sweethearts.
Everything looks better when weeds resume their traffic.
Every
trailer is a perfect paragraph. Full of pots. Grace.
Hilarity. National treasures.
Weaklings. Lines from the
Bible. Fiftyish men that defied calculators. Yellow-worn
chairs.
What
kind of man flattens the Missouri ground into a
concrete pancake, throws down
a few trailers, and dies
without even taking an aspirin?
I once had
a book pressed into my memory, with the features
of this place. My worst-case
fear is that I will remember it.
Grandpa, like a test pilot from some leftover
war, was strange
people.
Stolen utensils. Chicken pox. Blithering kids
zigzagging
between lots. Such irritations shaped the recipes of our lives.
Before
muscle cars and striped T-shirts,
before the SLA and bombed banks,
before
the Rolling Stones stole country music,
before Nixon licked the ears of dead
Cambodians,
there was this place.
Let's play voyeur. You sit in the
front room
with the flies' uncertain buzz, the plastic
covers on the furniture,
and the scratchy
Elvis Presley singles. I'll eat french fries and wipe
my
hand on your BMW.
I used to think the only thing I was good at
was getting
the mail.
I like the row of bony trees,
the white sapling trunks
like
elongated Styrofoam
or a row of huge soft teeth
next to the utility meter.
Something
whispers in there.
I'm waiting to hear the half-joking chorus
of the
Monkees' song, the absence of synthesizer
technology. I'm waiting for the blue
angel
of a rock'n'roll dream.
If I was religious,
I would walk into this trailer
park and rebuild
Babylon under the sky the color of vacuum bags.
Trailer
park rain. Neil Diamond. Eskimo kisses.
In tornado alley,
nothing softly
slips
it's all wrenched nails
from cheap 2X4's
upturned cars
propane
tanks spinning in rivers
and washtubs
holding me to this park.
If
we could look back at this
place and measure manhood,
or party loyalties,
the
whole new world
ripening from consciousness,
then why
can't we find where
we
fell down?
I thought there could be an interchange
between the light
blue trim of the trailers
and some hint of my own weakness
in the labor
market … of my craving for an
egalitarian society and why I prefer motorcycle
diaries
over soft, inoculated prose.