Tuesday, January 22, 2019

The Reformation

“How disquieting it is to feel, 
how troubling to think, how vain to want!”  
                            ~Fernando Pessoa

I must let myself happen.
But I construct anyway
everything I can.
Days do not add up 
to anything lengthwise.
My only measure is vertical.

I can’t make happiness
by wanting it. I must
instead
surrender to 
what I can’t make happen.
Live with myself without it,
or you, or the certainty of others.

This moment is a crucible,
I have two choices:
Accept or invent.
How to make love with
absentia? How to make
peace with the fleeting
impermanence of 
everything I was.

My heart is muscular,
my mind, not so much.
Everything I do is to
escape a tyranny:
mine or another’s.
I am an immigrant
in my own country;
a country of constructs.

I make my deconstruction
taut, and without sentiment.
In order to take in
the most that I can,
I am a drum…
hollow, without strings,
aligned with the heartbeat
of my God.


Peter Valentyne

January 22, 2019

Thursday, January 17, 2019

I Like to Pretend I’m Dying

“We are here to find 
that dimension within ourselves
that is deeper than thought.”
                     ~Eckhart Tolle

The only thing I know
how to do is play.
I can probably out-play you. 
I’m exhausting. 
I don’t like saying good-bye.

I am always playing.
Its all I know how to do.
I’ll stay in the sandbox
long after you have to go.

I don’t mind playing alone.
It’s my saving grace.
If you come over
be prepared for
vivid recreations with army men,
maybe even finger painting.

I like to pretend I’m dying.
It started with reading “Love Story”
way too early. 
I like being sad.
I like to feel things
heightened by losing them
one by one.
I will make a perfect
old man.

I like faking accidents.
Just the thought of
falling down the stairs
for an entrance
makes me laugh.
I do that at parties.

When I was ten
my neighborhood turned on me.
I fell in love with everyone
with my whole body.
I couldn’t contain it.
Parents objected to my having
crushes on their children.
They knew I was different.
I didn’t feel real.
They watched me scream
out their windows.
I loved to cry
and play dead by the road.

To this day
I like to pretend I’m dying.
But I really want to be saved.
One of my favorite scenarios is
to almost die in a storm,
to fall down on the ground
in a raging rain
that nearly drowns out
my dying last words: “Help me,”.
I like it in snow too.

I love it when the elements
threaten my destruction.
There is nothing better than
a gale force wind.
I can work a wind
like nobody's business.

One summer I learned
how to cast spells
with a dead tree branch.
I could change myself
into things.
That’s how I survived.

To this day I am
always the first 
to spot the moon.
It gets me nowhere
but it can be endearing.

When I was young
I had a wound
that matched with what I wore.

When I got older
I had a scar
that wore me
beneath my clothes.

Older still
I lost a limb
and
learned
how to pray.


Peter Valentyne
January 17th, 2019


Friday, January 11, 2019

Shafts

“During the day we drive shafts into our fresh trains
of thought, and these shafts make contact
with dream thoughts. This is how night and day
fertilize each other.”
                                                     ~Sigmund Freud


The moment we close our eyes,
they pull up our anchors
and make their way in,
marauding, freeloading, 
they themselves are blind, 
in need of no light
to enact their dramas.

Each story begins with
losing our bearings,
anesthetized by 
sheer comfort
on a soft slab,
and though paralyzed
we move about freely
as if we are not a prisoner.

Our eyes adjust to the light
because it is our own.
In other words,
we light the world with ourselves
even when our bodies
lie rooted in darkness.

There is no sense of time,
only moments that feel accurate,
relevant, ever expressionistic.
Here, time is a canvas
with no north or south.
All that matters
is that we be made to
feel things.

And so at night 
they are mere verbs,
fluid, feeling, moving.
We can only react.
Everything around us
is here to break us down;
whether sadness, joy, danger,
hopelessness, anger, fear,
or most importantly,
fear’s opposite: love.
This is how our stories
take their shape.

They wear our clothes,
unless we do not.
More than once
they will find themselves
swaddled in ill-fitting gowns
and expected to accept
whatever happens…
We, on the other hand,
 are always at the center,
as we are,
for all intents and purposes,
happening to ourselves.

What comes comes unbidden.
In all likelihood
we are at our own mercies,
though this slight understanding
is arrived at
only in hindsight.
In this way there are two of us:
one that is and one 
that can only remember;
one in night and one at day.
One lives vividly amid
landscapes propped up
on poles by Dali.
The others ~  all in masks. 


Peter Valentyne
January 11th, 2019

Friday, January 4, 2019

Second Skin
(for Ellen, in memory of Jim Marentic)

If what is essential
is invisible to the eye,
then the Beloved is 
everywhere you look;
his obscurity,
the very
proof of him.

A lifetime
spent looking forward
to seeing that face
now has you
glancing backwards
for the slightest
glimmer.

Don’t underestimate
your being
versed in transformation,
daily witnessing
his language
devolve into it’s own
foreign tongue.
Never-the-less
you learned to speak
his music,
inadvertently
becoming fluent
in drawing down
angels 
from
aloof heights.

He, as they,
are always attempting
 to tell us
something significant
even as
their words break apart
like strings of dark pearls
scattering
billiard ball and atom-like…
If only my fingertips
could feel you forever
snug in my pocket.

Now you are saving
your lover’s place
in this new dream,
connected by a more finer
thread than any
spider could compose.

Here, his
music is a map
to him.
You follow his notes
like a trail
of confetti,
angelic footprints
tread through flour.
Dusting for prints, 
you long for a snowman,
the weight of which
stands always on your heart;
an elephant 
un-willing to leave this room
without you.

You alone
were my fate,
my disaster, my opus,
my crux, my cross, my joy,
my journey, my sustenance,
my second skin.

Peter Valentyne


Tuesday, January 1, 2019

The
Poet of Amputees

Only a poet like Rumi
could write a line
so clean and true
and without pretense as
“You must change your life”;
and with that one sentence
make you answerable 
to all your own prayers. 

With each day looming, 
and every window inviting 
in the implications of light,
sleep can clear our slates,
dreams can rouse our souls,
the first day’s empty canvas
calls out from it’s blank page
 like a twin diary. 
We are one.

Your life is not made of furniture. 
Your well-being not dependent 
on what you know,
as knowledge can also deaden.
There’s truth we can’t see 
yet still can feel,
our minds blind
with constellated thoughts 
holding us in their place
like strings to a puppet. 
Can you feel them?
I do.
Who can return to us
what’s been lost,
if not ourselves?

 What if we were
to put aside assumptions 
made of fear,
and dare to live 
without their meaning
because all that once has life 
never stops wanting
to tell its story.
Vow again
to face the implications 
of your undying love’s audacity, 
your self-regenerating imagination, 
because you know the other is there
guiding you 
just as every story betrays it’s teller
by callously making way 
for another tale. 
We are better for being broken,
stronger for not having,
more receptive for our
belief in what’s invisible. 

The poet of amputees 
need only hold up a mirror 
for you to be whole again.

Peter Valentyne

January 1st, 2019

Sunday, December 16, 2018

Christmas

Like a time machine
fashioned from a forgotten Frigidaire,
stored in the basement
covered by a dust laden sheet,
its lost ignition key 
recoverable only through 
some unfathomable emotion,
I pray I can still feel
Christmas.

With a heart as marred 
as an ancient cherub,
chipped, yet
still able to cry out;
like the shard of quartz
I once carried in my pocket
to amplify my joy, 
could something so
wholly magnificent 
still, now
be my heart’s
mantis in amber?


Peter Valentyne
December 2018


Sunday, November 25, 2018

The Beautiful Feelings

"The cinema is the expression 
  of the beautiful feelings." 
           ~Jean Luc Godard

The beautiful feelings
always begin by taking
their leave,
as some things 
only become visible
by disappearing.

Like a scent of sadness
making the heart known,
in silence
both full and empty,
drained and restored,
an hourglass
recycling its own
memories of 
sand and salt.

The beautiful feelings
are like leaves that brighten
before dying,
then wither and surrender
to the wind.

Childhoods are played
in these leaves.
The smell of going away
still prickling in our noses
as cold air
often proceeds a goodbye.

In this way
everything is turned over
and sometimes
over turned.
The boy lets go
of the man
who burnished by
too much joy
sometimes
gives way to
a poet
who pauses, then
returns to raking
his warmest memories
of Summer.

Peter Valentyne
November 2018