I must seem so strange

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

2 free verse

Untitled

velvet luxury your taste
a beautiful disaster
twisted metal and broken glass
inviting enticing
adrenaline then endorphins
pumping pulsing
hold on
hands roaming fingers aching
jaw tense and hips winding
luscious pressure
a forgiving massacre
reaching probing
aching with hunger
devoid of anything but
your skin



Willing
Dishevelled devious rapture
Delirious dogma
Sensuous
Lethargic
words tumble like
ice
in
rum
and I am lost within this
within you
fear dripping off my tongue
you never waver
stoic
solid
somehow less like falling
more like jumping
head
first

Trial

Trial
sultry contemptible night, you own me
straggling down twisted streets and long dark halls
searching, searching for something to stop this
burn, this ache that’s settled in my stomach
the oppressive smolder, glaring scowling
circular lucrative logic just out
of reach, out of touch under the cold brick
the soiled pavement the indecisive earth
it’s there waiting with a cheshire grin and
withdrawn claws calculating the perfect
moment to drop kick me in the gut with
the truth, the oppressive iron-clad truth
that I am better off in the depths of
hell than under the gauge of this needle

A Slow Burn

A Slow Burn

posthumous words
a poets fate
words like freedom
escaped onto the page
fleshed out
yet never a crescendo
never relief
furious scribe
your destiny is to wait

Slippery

Slippery

working my hands
down
the sides
of your chest
thinking of crushing depth
of coarse brute strength
of vulgar words
of details
breath like wheat - sweet fresh air
here I am
earthy tones
tan
honey
your sound is guttural
animal
wrapped in you like humus like greens
here I am
taste tangy like lemon
taste salty and bitter
here I am
deeper

"Poor Lady she were better love a dream"

"Poor Lady she were better love a dream"

Weighted pauses, baited breath every ounce
Of my being entreating, waiting for
Our lips to meet for your hand to brush
Mine for some relief from the heat under
Your gaze- tantalizing, tempestuous
So fine so elegant so deliciously
Deceptive and true all at the same time
The curve of your hip the length of your thigh
Grazing the arch of your back with the tips
Of my fingers, the rhythm pulsing in
The space between us as we lay face
To face, wordless, motionless as I think
What would convince you, challenge you to hold
Me in your soft hands? I’ve seen fate tonight

She was a sunset and I was a car crash

voluntarily voraciously slayed
by your violet eyes by your vicious legs
your vulgar tongue your rowdy hips your Strong
sturdy frame, solid made for safety for
durability for longevity
your sharp wit Biting, lasting leaves me with
insatiable hunger for something more
for some knowledge of the undiscovered
for love, for nourishment for touch, justice
hardly a second counted feels less than
an hour while waiting for the phone to ring
waiting for the mail waiting just to wait
“You know better” they say waving their palm
I nod, tapping my ashes in the tray

(My first attempt at a blank verse sonnet)

The Exchange

The roads are really slippery. I have to keep turning the wipers on higher because it is muddy. It is getting foggier the higher this old ambulance climbs. The driveway is really long and steep and it gets stuck twice. I get it out the first time, but the second time there is no getting it out. There are State Police there and neighbor’s silhouettes litter all of the front porches on the road. They tell us it is just a few hundred feet to where he is. Each of us grabs as much equipment as we can carry. I have the jump bag, which holds the cervical collar, BP cuff, SPO2 monitor, sanitary gauze and oral glucose…basically anything I may need within the first 5 minutes of a call. I also carry the defibulator. I have this really strange feeling in my gut on the way there. They say in any medical field that you grow a sixth sense about these things. We all develop superstitions.
I glance at my watch. It is 11:58P.M. It is New Years Eve. As I walk up the icy path, it becomes clear that if he is in bad shape, we aren’t going to be able to get him back to the ambulance very quickly. All of our stabilizing work would have to be done on-scene; establish an airway, stop all major external bleeding, and restart the heart if it isn’t beating. We are all nervous. The State Police walk with us lighting the path before us with flashlights. The air is surprisingly warm for that time of year, but still cold to the exposed skin. There isn’t much snow on the dim path, just ice and rocks. It takes us about seven minutes to get to him. The call was dispatched as “snowmobile accident with one unconscious male.” None of us know what to expect
His friends are all around him, about five of them. They all turn and come toward us like a wall. One tall blonde man wearing snow pants and a sweater grabs my arm and starts dragging me to his friend. “Please help him! Please do something! My buddy, he isn’t breathing!”
As I get closer I can see that he is face down in a puddle. Someone had tilted his head to the side. There is another man standing next to him. His overalls are muddy and he has blood on his hands from the man on the ground. He has a big scruffy beard and I have a clear view of his giant muddy boots as I kneel next to the man on the ground. The scruffy man says, “His face was in the puddle and he was gurgling so I turned his head. After that he stopped gurgling.” It hits me like a ton of bricks…this helpful neighbor, with all his good intentions, probably snapped the man’s neck when he turned his head. I get close to the victim’s head, listen for breathing and check for a pulse.
Nothing.
I look up at Kathy and Bill and say, “we’ve got to get him on his back.” They take his grey snow pants and flannel shirt and I stabilize his head. In one swift motion we flip him over. It is very dark, but I can still clearly see his face. I am on my knees next to him, staring at his young smooth face. He has a distinct, memorable profile. Strong cheek bones, long eyelashes, proportionate features, although obviously swollen. There is blood coming out of his nose, mouth and ears. He is my age. I am overcome with the fear of letting him die. He is too young.
I attempt to do a jaw thrust to open his airway, but I can feel the bones slip away from under my hands and know that his jaw is crushed. Bill has his back to me, talking to the people around us, looking for the sequence of events, how long he’d been down, how fast he was driving and if anyone has any of his personal information. “Bill I need suction!” I shout. Almost in slow motion, he turns, looking down on me on the ground, “we don’t have it with us.” Right then I have to restrain my sense of panic. This is a disaster. We can not secure an airway without suction. I can’t see into his mouth because it is too dark. I pull the pocket mask out of my wallet and apply it over his mouth, the smooth vinyl slippery in my wet hands. I know if there was any debris or blood in his airway that attempting artificial respiration would do more harm than good. I also realize that there was good chance that his blood is going to get into my mouth, but I know if we don’t get some air into his lungs, he would suffer brain damage, if he hasn’t already. We still don’t know how long he’s been down.
I muster up all of my courage and attempt to hold his jaw open with one hand and plug his nose with the other. The first breath doesn’t even come close to his lungs. As I suspected, his mouth is full of blood and vomit, and it does get into my mouth. The smell is horrific. No words can describe the smell; something like regurgitated Doritos, Corona, and salsa. It is the most wretched smell I have ever experienced. It takes over my nose, it is in my mouth, on my clothes and the wave of nausea hits me like a bus. I pause to re-center myself. Kathy and I look at each other and know we are in a tough position. His friends are all around us, screaming and crying and begging us to do something. We want to start CPR, but you can’t do that without an airway. Kathy begins chest compressions. I try to scoop some of the liquid out of his mouth. Bill carries over the AED and attaches the pads to the victim’s chest. The screen is flat line. “Continue compressions until I get medical control on the phone” Bill says. (Medical Control is a direct line to a physician at the hospital.)
The doctor tells him to stop CPR. Kathy and I are doing compressions and attempting mouth-to-mouth for about ten minutes while he is on the phone. This is already too long for a person to go without the heart pumping blood to the brain. Panic settles deep into my throat like a golf ball. I know that we cannot save him. I know that his neck is broken and we have no chance. I know that his friends are standing all around us crying and begging us to do something and there is nothing else we can do.
I know that his blood is in my mouth and I can not get the taste out and as I wait for further instructions, I am still gagging periodically from the iron bitterness. It’s not just the metallic taste of blood; this is something much more acidic, perhaps bile. It is fetid.
My boss says that the coroner is on his way and that we can pick up our equipment, but we cannot leave until he gets there. My pants are soaked with his blood and vomit, my sweatshirt splattered. I am covered in his lack of life. It creeps into me slowly and I feel increasing anxiety. As I carry my equipment back down the dim icy path, the sound of his girlfriend’s moans and cries turn my stomach. It’s never the scene that haunts you; it’s the smells and sounds. I know already that this taste will never leave my mouth.
Back at the ambulance, Kathy comes up to me with a wet towel and washes my face. She is worried about me and she is visibly shaken as well. She is new. This is the first time we have ridden together. She is older than I am but I am her senior tonight. She is supposed to follow my lead; only, I can’t lead because I am unsure how to be strong. This event, this sequence of events has altered my vision and knocked out my sense of balance. As we reload the rig, the coroner pulls up and we point him in the right direction. His car wont make it either. A bystander uses his tractor to pull the coroners vehicle up the steep slippery path. Bill comes quickly down the hill and says its time to go. We have another call waiting in town and there is no crew to take it. None of us have time to recover from what has just happened. None of us have time to regroup. It is time to go to a new scene with new people and pretend that their problems are just as serious (they never are). It is time to put myself last for another, like I have done countless times before, only this time I don’t feel the same drive that I usually do. I want to go home. I want to wash that poor man’s blood and DNA off of me. I want to separate myself from what I was just witness to. I want to change my clothes into something untainted, something less tragic. I want to change my thoughts and go back to my boring middleclass existence and watch Survivor, but I can’t.
So we go on that call and it is like so many others that seem insignificant. It is like so many others that make us all question why we do this for a living, but we do it and we think we are done for the night. We are not.
At the Emergency Room, they tell us there is a premature baby who needs to be taken to Albany Med. We are still the only crew on duty, and the day crew won’t be on for another two hours, so we agree.
It is a long drive home and I have a lot of time to process the events of the evening. The baby arrives in Albany unscathed. He is treated and released from Albany Med with no complications and some part of me feels vindicated. I have been part of the end of a life and the beginning of another in a single twelve hour shift.

In some ways I feel like medicine is sacrilegious. Maybe people are not supposed to interfere with God’s will or plan. Or maybe this is part of the plan too. So often I feel our only job is to stand witness, to bear the burden of the closing of another’s life, to validate it, to make it real. Maybe their family isn’t there, or maybe they had no family at all. Maybe their family is there, like tonight, but at least we are there to carry a little piece of the weight. You tell yourself it’s for the family, if no one else. We are gatekeepers, looking over the abyss and holding the key to their fates. Each of us takes a turn holding their lives in our hands.
Of course, I don’t know if I even believe in God, so it’s difficult to assess whether I am on some predetermined path or not. I guess it doesn’t matter either way. Perhaps I am there to make the family feel just a little less helpless, or maybe, as I like to think, I am here to witness the passing of a soul from one realm to another. It doesn’t matter. The fact is that I do see it; I am present in that moment. My crew and I, it affects us regardless of whether we belong there or not.
For me, there is a handful like this one. There are those calls that are irreversible, tragic, flawed and raw. Every one of them illustrates how little control we possess. They are the calls that went terribly wrong-- where incapable, hasty hands did not perform their duty. There is indescribable guilt buried close to the surface with each one of them. It is irrelevant whether I did my best, the memory revives as failure.
Overall, the thing that I have taken away from each of them is that sense of mysticism. There is undeniably something greater than humanity, something both controlled and chaotic all at once. One cannot deny the difference between a body with a soul intact and a body devoid of one. It’s impossible to witness that distinction and not have it change you. It is a spiritual experience. Every time.

Thursday, April 06, 2006

The Flood

The Flood

The silent, stoic patriarch of my family lies in a maroon, sterile looking bed in front of me. To my left is his scared, heartbroken wife of 53 years. It is her tears that employ my own. Periodically she grabs my hand in hers that is so frail and knarled and asks me some gut wrenching, heart dropping question like, “How long do you think he will hold on? Or “What will I do with his new chair? I can’t sit in it.” Each time I fight back the wave of sadness and act strong. I came here with the intention of being a support for my family. With every twitch and moan from my grandfather, the semi circle of chairs freezes in silence and stares at the unresponsive core of our unit.
With every bleep or whistle from the heart monitor, we collectively and dutifully proceed to stare at the screen like it is an enthralling TV drama.
My family has hugged and kissed me more in the past three days than my collective life. My mother is facing me from the opposite side of the bed. She alternates between the heart monitor screens, the sporadic movements of my grandfather’s unaffected side and the window behind me. She tries to fill the silence with stories of the younger cousins’ youth. She talks of when we all dressed up for Halloween and got our face makeup all over her 1983 Honda EXP. She reminds me of how my grandfather got me addicted to butter pecan ice cream. (He took me to the corner store every day after school for a single scoop.) She tells of the time my grandpa dug a well and I spent two solid weeks out there playing with the frogs and tadpoles until the day I fell in and got my boot stuck in the bottom. (It is still in there.) She recounts her own youth and memories of her father. My aunt and uncle are present and chuckle as she tells my cousins how she always won at chess, so no one would play with her and my aunt chimes in that my mother would then “beat her up” because she wouldn’t play with her. My cousin mentions that he recently found pictures of him and I bathing in the kitchen sink.
The doctor comes in with the results from the CT scan. He holds them up in front of the light above my grandfather’s head and points to the dark area where the stroke has occurred. It is almost half of his brain. “This is dead tissue. Obviously the clot-buster drugs didn’t work. The chances are very slim of any significant recovery. I doubt he will make it through the weekend.” With that he turns on his patent leather heel and leaves the room. We are shocked and horrified at the doctor’s callous tone and each of us mutters under our breath.
My grandmother says that she wants to start seeing a new doctor, because she doesn’t like the one that she is seeing (the one that was just here). “I don’t like him; he doesn’t listen.” “He’s a douche bag Gram, you should see someone you like,” I say.
My mother retorts “I love my daughter” with a smiling tone.
I stare at the imitation tile-linoleum floor and the drop ceiling tiles. We are surrounded by tiles. I stare at anything but the room that is filling with tears all around me. I go out of my way not to make eye contact because I do not want to cry. No, I prefer to wait for other much less appropriate places like in front of strangers in the hospital lobby.
Time creeps by and my stubborn grandpa continues his struggle. His fever is back up to 102.4 degrees and his lungs are audibly full of fluid. My grandma has rubbed the skin off of my hand by the time the priest comes in the room. As if on command everyone reinstates their personal quest to flood us all onto the street. I imagine us all clinging onto mattresses and garbage cans trying desperately to stay afloat as the deluge rushes us down the stairs and out the fire door, all those tiles littering the salty river bottom. Flood warning signs line the shores and concerned citizens’ stand biting their nails and watch with baited breath at the unfortunate gasping, flailing victims in the water.
This daydream continues all through the priest’s prayer as we huddle, hands linked around my fading grandfather. One of my younger cousins is sobbing so loud that the priest gets distracted a time or two.
It’s now 12:30 AM and all but my mother and I have given up their post at his bedside. I sit in a creaky wooden chair holding his hand and stroking his feverish face. His hands, I notice, are remarkably soft for someone who worked so hard for so many years. His nails are trimmed and clean, as they always were, and his hair is combed evenly to one side. With every word I say, his eyes move under his eye lids. He knows that I am here, and I tell myself that he knows it’s me. I kiss his scruffy chin and tell him everything that I think he needs to hear. I pet his hair as I lean over to whisper in his ear. I tell him that his whole family is there and loves him and I tell him that there is no need to be scared. I tell him that we will take good care of grandma and that he shouldn’t suffer if that is the only thing he is worried about. I tell him that he was my favorite (and he was) and I tell him that I will see him in the morning. I do not know for sure that he will still be with us, but I will see him either way and I don’t feel guilty.
I am on the road about fifty five minutes. I wanted to take a drive to clear my head before I try to sleep. My car begins to sputter. It bucks and the headlights dim and I do my best to pull it off the road. As I roll into a parking lot, it stalls. It is 2 AM. I am all alone in this small town; all of the residents are tucked away safely in their beds. I don’t have a cell phone. I pop the hood and use my mini flashlight to look underneath. I don’t know what I am looking for. I can barely see anything. The engine is steaming, so I take a guess that it’s overheated, but then I see that there is a tube that has burst. As it dawns on me that I am trapped here with this giant hunk of tired, heavy metal, tears being to pour down my face. Again I am reminded of the flash flood warning signs that I had seen earlier in the day.
I visualize a map of the area where I am. There is nothing for miles. I am sobbing hysterically at this point. I sit down in the driver seat, with my head on the steering wheel. I remember all the details about my grandpa that I have held back all day and I cry for each of them. My grandfather had always been my surrogate father. He showed me all about gardening and plants. He taught me how to read the forest and track animals. He taught me how to identify animal droppings for better hunting. I never did go hunting with him, but I sure would have if I had been older or taller. I remember when he named a flower that we planted together after me. He taught me how to be calm. He taught me the importance of being peaceful and one with nature. I wanted to be just like him. I had always followed him like a puppy. I wanted to be with him now; it wasn’t enough time. I cry for over an hour before I am too exhausted to cry anymore. I decide to sleep in my lifeless, old, worn-in car. It had served me well. I wrap my corduroy jacket over my shoulders and fall into a deep, exhausted sleep.

The sun is beat down on me like a hard wind, and I wake squinting. It is still damp and chilly. I stand, shaking the cold out of my bones. A half hour passes before someone comes by. In Vermont, people stop for women. The man is in his early 50’s with a graying beard and shaggy hair. He is tall and slender and wears a red Budweiser hat. He doesn’t say a word other than to ask where I was headed and I am thankful because I was still at a loss for words.
Back at the hospital, it is like I have gone back in time to the day before. Everyone is seated in the same places and the heart monitor is still bleeping. My mother informs me that Grandpa is being moved to a “comfort care unit”. They are sure he will not last the day. Throughout the afternoon faces exchange for new faces as people filter in and out to pay their respects to my family and to say their goodbyes to “Coop,” as he was called by his friends.
The tone is markedly different today. Each of us can sense the change in the way the nurses speak to us. He is dying and they cannot save him. Our vigil continues late into the night, each of us taking turns wiping his furrowed brow. He is in pain, but he cannot tell us. One by one, the family trickles out to their cars and warily drives home to wait. My mother begins packing up my sullen grandmother’s belongings to take her home for the night. I had been waiting all day for some time alone with him. I want to say goodbye, on my own terms, in my own time. I hold my poor brave grandfather’s hand and hum a soft song with my head lying on the guardrail by his side. Again, I get close to his ear and assure him that no matter what, we will take care of his wife- we will take our duties seriously. I assure him that we all love him and respect him and that he can go whenever he is ready. It is hard to watch him suffer. I know he is holding on out of guilt. He thinks he’s abandoning her, after all of these years of devotional love and care. I remind him of all of the goodness that he has brought to the world. I remind him of how much love he has shared with us all. About 45 minutes has passed since my mother and grandmother left for home. The nurse has assured them both that she will call if anything changes. I stand to hug him one last time. I cannot hold back the sobs that escape onto his chest. I kiss his cheek and tell him one last time that I love him, before I turn and head out the door. I feel a pressure unlike any before on my chest. I can’t hold back my tears as I pass the nurses station. They peer up curiously from their nurses logs.
Once again the image of me grasping for something sturdy, as I crash down the stairs in a wall of salt water comes to mind. I can’t shake that image. But this time I imagine that I don’t bother to continue the fight. In my mind, I let go of the chair that I am holding onto and sink into the depths of the murky river. I inspect the tiles littering the muddy floor, inspecting their uniformity and texture and suck in a big gulp of water instead of the ever necessary air.

I take a shuttle to the bus station. My mother had reminded me before she left that she would be back to spend the night with him. I must go home for work in the morning. It is cold next to the window on the Greyhound. The bus driver is feeling chatty. I respond in one word sentences in hopes that he will get the idea that I want to be left alone. He asks me about the ring on my left hand and whether or not I like children. He rambles on about baseball. I fall asleep. I dream of that river, that is now so deep I cannot tell which way is up or down. I do not feel claustrophobic, no instead I feel free. I poke at the fish that swim by and giggle at the seaweed that wraps around my leg. I explore and navigate the deep saline gulf with ease. I feel no pressure, not in my lungs or in my heart. I move around gracefully, letting time pass with no regard. I am fully at peace. I am liberated.
I wake with a start as the bus comes to a halt at the station near my home. The driver nods his head, apparently disappointed with my company. I huddle on the corner, waiting for the CDTA that will take me to the comfort of my bed. At least we will be reunited. I am exhausted and still somewhat weepy.
Opening the front door, I see that there is a message on the machine. I know immediately what it will say. I glance at it several times as I undress and climb into bed. I feel obligated to listen to it; like it would be disrespectful not to, but I choose to wait. I already know what it says; that he is gone. I rationalize that no one will know the difference, as I fall into a deep sleep with reflections of the river bottom behind my eyes.








~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Henry F. Cooper Jr., 79
HOOSICK FALLS - Mr. Henry F. Cooper Jr., 79, a resident of South Stateline Road in Hoosick Falls, died Saturday, February 4, 2006, at the Southwestern Vermont Medical Center following a brief illness.
He was born in Bennington, VT, on July 12, 1926, he was the son of the late Henry F. and Helen L. (Clark) Cooper.
He received his education in Bennington.
A World War II veteran, Henry served in the U.S. Army.
He married the former Eleanor M. Robertson May 9, 1953, in North Bennington.
In earlier years Henry was employed at the Bradford Mill, Sprague Electric, Cushman Manufacturing and the Hale Company in Arlington, VT. He later worked at Globe Union, which later became Johnson Control, from which he retired in 1988.
He enjoyed playing horseshoes and over the years he received many trophies. He and his wife Eleanor were very active in the Bennington Horseshoe Club. They also traveled throughout Vermont and New Hampshire to different tournaments. Mr. Cooper was elected into the Vermont Horseshoe Hall of Fame. He also enjoyed hunting and fishing.
Survivors include his wife Eleanor Cooper of Hoosick Falls; a son, Frank T. Cooper and his wife Diane of Hoosick Falls; two daughters, Nancy C. Woffenden of North Hoosick and Ellen M. Redden of Hoosick Falls; eight grandsons and three granddaughters; two great-grandchildren; a sister-in-law, Donna Goodell of North Adams, MA; and several nieces, nephews and cousins. He was predeceased by a brother, William T. Cooper, and a sister Martha Hall.
The funeral will be held from the Mahar and Son Funeral Home on Thursday, February 9, 2006, at 1 p.m. The burial will be in the family lot in Park Lawn Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Mahar and Son Funeral Home Wednesday from 4 to 7 p.m., when the family will be in attendance.
If friends desire, contributions in memory of Henry F. Cooper Jr. may be made to the Hoosick Falls Rescue Squad through the office of the Mahar and Son Funeral Home 628 Main St. Bennington, VT 05201.



Henry F. Cooper Jr. Rites

February 10, 2006
HOOSICK FALLS, N.Y. — The funeral service for Henry F. Cooper Jr., 79, who died Feb. 4, 2006, was held Thursday, Feb. 9, 2006, at the Mahar and Son Funeral Home.

Pastor Michael Benoit officiated.

Mr. Cooper's daughters, Nancy Woffenden and Ellen Redden, were vocalists.

Bearers were Candice Redden, Donald Donisthorpe, John, Jeremy and James Woffenden.

Burial took place in Park Lawn Cemetery. Military taps were played by Maurice Rancourt and the American flag was presented to Mrs. Cooper by Joseph Krawczyk of American Legion Post 13.

A reception followed at the VFW Post 1332 in Bennington.

Saturday, March 18, 2006

New Orleans Part 1

3/5/06
This afternoon we got off the plane in New Orleans. As it was landing we commented on the roofs replaced by tarps and the barren coastline. The temperature was a moderate 63 degrees with a sweet smelling breeze as we exited the revolving doors at the airport. We then patiently waited, huddled under a tree outside the car rental place "Dollar Rental." Getting our keys we scrambled into the vans and started our adventure.
At first it didnt look like anything had happened at all.The land and houses near the airport were mostly intact and there were countless businesses open...but as we moved southeast there was a descernable change.
Saint Bernards Parish is about 15 minutes outside the city. A parish is a county, like "Albany County." This was where we would be working. There had been 3 types of flooding here. Rain, levy and river/lake water. There are no images or words that could convey what we saw appropriately. IT looked like a war zone. We drove for a half hour,all the way to the end of St Bernard, or the town Chalmette and were stunned to see house after house after house, after business after business completely destroyed. Nothing survived. All of the trees are dead. All of the houses either untouched since the hurricane six months ago, or gutted to begin rebuilding.
There are no open businesses, no electricity, gas or water lines. Nothing enhabitable within 30 miles. Each building is marked with grafitti labeling them checked for survivors.Easch still holding appliances, furniture, magazines and shampoo bottles.Homes where families had been, baby's first steps taken, fighting and fucking and love and family and connections all destroyed,or left in a pile. Private businesses that would never again see a customer. There are sporadic cars on the street and intermittent groups on front lawns using shovels and rakes, searching for everything, anything that had been lost. There are personal affects strewn on street corners, childrens shoes in gutters,boats on highway medians, cars full of mud and piled on top of one another in front yards. There are no children anywhere. Tired mothers and fathers, aunts and cousins continue the mass exodus of muddy, moldy sheetrock and dirty mattresses. They are trying to piece together a life for their children to come back to. There are 5 schools open out of 40. There are no animals either other than the well fed birds who scavenge the piles of refuse and debris on each front lawn.The mayor says there is no where to put the garbage and debris. I can see why. There are literally tons on every street corner.
We pass an empty lot with a car turned on its front end, leaning against a light post and a gutted house with a children's ball in the driveway. There are ghosts here where lives used to be. One thousand people found dead, one thousand still missing. The only store open is a makeshift Home Depot that has tents outside for the timber. The people needed them to even begin thinking of rebuildng.There are no gas stations,no restaurants. If we need something we will have to drive into the city.It is a deserted 1950's Western Movie. The savages came in an burned everything down leaving the people to move on or try again.
One house in the 9th ward is pushed right out into the street.Their bedroom window is eyelevel to the passing cars. They got it the worst. It is a bit closer to the city, still in St Bernard. The houses there didn't even stay on their foundations. It's no wonder they talked about just bulldozing eveything .There is literally nothing to salvage. Not even the wood. The houses were beaten and flooded for 2 weeks with no relief. In Chalmette at least, most houses stayed in tact, it was just the inside that was destroyed. Not in the 9th ward. There is nothing. People can't even drive on the streets there, there is still too much in the road. Trees, cars, wood, boats...
An hour into our circular drive, we found our tent village. It is run by FEMA. There are armed guards ar every gate and pictures are not allowed to be taken under any circumstances within the camp. We must wear a badge at all times and we will sleep in tents and shower in communal showers. I cant help but think each citizen on Chalmette would kill to live where we are staying. They are sleeping in shelters, or in their cars. They sleep in deserted schools.We all feel selfish for being worried about our living conditions. At the orientation they showed us a video taken the day after the flood. Each scene is a reiteration of what we had just seen only this time there were people. And water.There is 20 feet of water in some spots.Water up to the red lights, water up to the roof of the Taco Bell, resients living on roofs with buckets to pee in and blankets for the night. Old men and women in boats crying, the elderly in a nursing home sleeping on cots in the hallway of a school, a child on a mat sleeping on a bridge, we had seen first hand the gutted frame of the Walmart and here it is on the screen underwater.There were no sounds in the room, just the soundtrack of the video. The song was "Dreams."

New Orleans Part 2

3/6/06
This morning we rode a greyhound to our work site. The first group got off the bus at their stop . It was a one story(as most are) and in the front yard was a tall medium build blonde on her cell phone. As the kids(most are 17-21) piled off the bus, the woman stared in disbelief. They old her they were there to clean out(gut) her house. She dropped her cell phone. She started to cry. She was not crying because of the tragedy that was losing her home and all of her possessions, she cried because we were there. She cried because we cared and because the emotional stess of throwing out her ruined belongings was no longer hers to carry alone. I was so moved that I could not restrain myself from crying. I sat staring at her and cried. I could not stop it from coming out of me.I shook and sobbed silently in my seat. Heath patted my shoulder.
And then we got to our stop. I understood on a whole new level now why it was so important, what we are doing.I couldn't help but think how I would feel if this were my home, if I had to stand outside my front door and witness what we were seeing. Noone had stepped foot into our house since Hurricane Katrina six and a half months ago. Even the pictures I took( it was hard to find pictures taht where appropriate plus I felt guilty) did not accurately depict the atrocity of this event, the horror that 20 feet of water could cause.I wanted to get to work.
We could barely get the front door open. When we did, mud spilled out in congealed chunks. Furniture was upside down. A wedding dress hung from a door frame. There was not an inch of clear floor. The room was a pile...literally a pile of mud and stuff.It looked like a mountain that we could never conquer. We thought to ourselves, "this will take us all week."
So we began, grabbing the shoes and clothes, bottles of cleaning solution, mud mud and more mud, dishes, appliances, tv's and stereos, cabinets, beds, all covered in mud. All covered in mold, covered in mud, stuck in the mud. It looked nothing like a home.For that matter the town doesnt look anything like a town.It doesnt seem like people should be here, or that they have been here for ages. It seems that this just happened yesterday, yet it seems that people havent been here for years. It's a ghost town with random looters in the streets. A house here or there will have a sullen man or woman with a shovel, a rake, slowly but steadily removing the rubble, the caked mud, the backed up sewege, the destroyed photographs.
I still haven't seen any children.
All day we dug out the kitchen and the livingroom, stopping only for lunch or to catch some air that didn't wreak of mold or rotten food. In the kitchen the pots in the cupboards were filled with six month old mud water spilled onto my pants and shoes and cracked glass jars of pickles rolled out from under the fridge. We had duct taped the fridge to save ourselves the stench of the rotting meat in the freezer, but the stagnant meat water drained out when we turned the frige upright anyhow.
We found all sorts of animals in the house. Crawfish, minnows in the bath tub, frogs and cockroaches.Giant black spiders waited behind every column of insulation. It was very difficult to breathe with the N95 mask on, but they are the only one's approved for working in black mold which apparently is very dangerous. My back began to ache around noon. The repetitious shovelling of the mud proved too much for my poor back. But I kept working. I felt a reverence, a respect for the people who had lost everything. Even the frequent panic attacks from the claustrophobic masks did not deter me from working because I felt I owed it to them. I didnt have much time to get involved, to make a difference.

Fron 8am to 3pm we dug and hauled and hammered and grunted. We were exhausted, but by 3 o'clock we all looked around the filthy but strangely more liveable space we had created. We finished the large livingroom and kitchen and we were half done with the bathroom. We had torn down the moldy sheetrock(whuch crumbled in our hands like cake) and shoveled out the majority of the stagnant, modly six inch sludge that covered everything. For tomorrow: the bedrooms....

New Orleans Part 3

3/8/06
Last night I got very sick. I had a very high fever. I could not sleep and my already aching muscles could get no relief from the chills and aching that came with the fever. I felt like death. Some time in the night my fever broke. When I woke up this morning I felt a lot better. I decided to go to work. I mean, I only have a short time to make a difference here. I want to use every second and make it count. So I got dressed and packed my back with clean clothes to take a shower this afternoon. The walk out to the bus was painful and then Heath asked me to take the cooler. He works harder than all of us put together, so I never say no.
This afternoon one of the firemen came to check us out. I sat and talked with him while I ate lunch. HE said that his house was gone too, but that everything was great because his family was fine. He told me how it was to be here during and after the flood. He said he spend 2 days finding the floating bodies and tying them to lamp posts. He said he spent several days getting people off their roofs. The house next to where we are working has a hole in the roof from the residents who chopped their way out. They had been in their attic until the water got too high. He pointed and said, “There were hundreds like that.” Then he showed me a picture of his boss’s house the day of the flood. You can barely see the roof in the picture. He had tears in his eyes when he talked about breaking into the gas station to get the Slim Jims and Coke to feed to the people he had brought to the gym of the school. There was no where for them to go. He said they didn’t see outside help from Sunday until Wednesday. Then he said, “You know who the first people we saw where? No, it wasn’t the National Guard and no it wasn’t FEMA, it was the Canadian Mounties. They came all the way down and when they got in they told us they had tried to get in the day before, but the Guard wouldn’t let ‘em through, so they went down the river and convinced a barge owner to take them across. They were the first one’s we saw. The Guard was keeping people out!” I shook my head in disbelief. What a concept. If New York had a natural disaster, I have no doubt I would be telling the same story. Leave it to Canada to take better care of our people than we give.
- - -
I was having a very hard time breathing today. It was very humid; my throat is thick with mucus and then the mask on top of it all. It was tough to work. I kept going. It was very important to me not to waste any time. We finished 2609 Shannon St., and then moved on to help another group. They had a very big house. They had a terrible system. Not nearly as organized as we had been. It was frustrating for us. So we took over. We finished the front room in about a ½ hour and then moved on to the rest of the house. If I had to guess, I would say we did about 40% of the house that day, without their help for the most part. They took a lot of breaks, they sat and smoked, they broke windows for no reason. We all got a little annoyed, but we just kept on truckin’. We said a prayer for the house like we did the last one, giving it all of our good energy and blessings and then our group of 10 women showed those boys how work is really done. Surprisingly, by the end of the day, they were telling us how inspirational it was to work with us, that we were really motivated and that they wanted to work harder because we had shown them how it was done. We were all surprised to hear that. Turned out they were from Georgia. Most were from a college and were getting class credit for being there. That in itself was the difference between our two groups. All of us from St Rose were there because we wanted to be, because we were deeply affected and because we wanted to get involved and make a difference. To them, it didn’t matter whether they worked hard or not. They got credit either way…

New Orleans Part 4

3/10/06
Our second house is in a better area…and by better I mean less damaged. 2619 Legend Ave. There is only three inches of mud instead of the traditional six that we are used to. This house has not been touched since Katrina either. It is a lot bigger. I had a terrible fever last night which broke around 2am. I cried because I was so uncomfortable on the cot. I can’t recall the last time I was sick like that. Even the feeling of having to pee was excruciating. Good stuff. I felt great when I woke up, all the way to the bus and driving to the site, I felt fine. I feel good now too, but I know it is probably not the best idea for me to work. It would be better for me to rest, but I feel a responsibility to work while I am here. I have so little time to make a difference. Plus, it feels so good at the end of the work day, so accomplished, so content, I don’t want to miss that even for a day. Shyla is staying home today. She’s had this bug for a day longer than I have. We are supposed to go to the city tonight to celebrate. She wants to feel good for that, so Heath told her to stay and rest.
It is extremely hot today. I went outside and the humidity hit me like a wall. The sun is intense too. We all will be tired today. Its so hard to breathe with it humid like that.
Off to work I go.
- - -

What a day! We finished the house. It only took us 2 days. It’s such a riot when the fire men pull up to check on us they always comment on the fact that we are an all female crew. Truth be told, we worked harder than any male crew I saw down here. We work so well together. Each of us has a place and our movements are almost choreographed. It’s really beautiful. We never argue or get in the way, we just work, each of us sensing the importance and the gravity of this work. Each of us have spoken to the locals, and heard the horror of it all. We have bear witness to the hugeness of this catastrophe and we all take great pride in being here and being a part of this process.
It still is strange to me to talk to someone who says, “Oh everything is great. I couldn’t be happier” and then find out later that they had lost everything just like everyone else. They are so strong, so brave. We all share a reverence for them.
- - -

We just had our nightly meeting. This was our last .We leave in the morning. Sister Sean facilitated, as always, and asked each of us to share one thing they would take with them and one thing they would leave behind. I said I would leave behind all of my prayers of strength for the people of St Bernard’s Parish and all of my anxiety that I had before the trip. And with me I would take the awe of human spirit and the bonds I had made with the people on my work team. We all felt a sense of wonder and mystery over the sheer power of Human Will here in Chalmette. It is sad, but sometimes it takes the biggest catastrophe to bring out the best in people. None of us want to leave. No ten page paper or speech will ever bring us the satisfaction or sense of peace that this place did. Each day was a gift, tired and hungry and sun burned, each day we got up smiling and ready to take on the world, because the palpable energy was invigorating! We wanted to be in it every day forever. All of us. I am sad to go back to school. Even being sick, I would rather stay and continue this fight. I have never done anything so rewarding, so necessary, so beautifully and essentially good. I don’t think college will feel the same now. How could it? College is all about selfishness and self-centeredness. It’s about what you want, what you need. And really, there is nothing better in the world than giving to others and the gift that we gave them, taking the burden of digging out their belongings, throwing out their memories, was the best gift we could have given. Each of us did it whole heartedly; we left a whole lot more than prayers in Chalmette. We left blood, sweat, tears, skin, and most importantly, a piece of our souls. Day after day we worked with all the might that we had…for them, for their families. We wanted to badly to be a part of their lives and their new beginnings. I think we succeeded in that. Meeting the woman whose daughter owned the house we cleaned on Monday and Tuesday energized us to work even harder the next day. She was so kind, so selfless. There was no way we couldn’t have been moved.

I found a sort of religion in St Bernard. I keep talking about God, but it’s not your typical God. Not the bible, Jesus and Mary sort of God. It is a God that is life. Religion is a celebration of life. I found a beauty that I had never seen before. I looked around every day and found things to be thankful for. I found out what the human spirit is made of and I found out what is truly important. I think I knew that part all along. I mean, I consider myself petty minimalist to begin with. I don’t care about material things and I don’t give a shit about money. I have always been poor and yet somehow I have never gone without. Now, some might say that’s the power of positive thinking, but I say it’s Karma. If you do good things, good things gravitate to you. Period. I’ve always found happiness in giving back, but something is different here. It’s a whole new level of giving. It is very personal. I found myself so respectful of every piece of furniture that I threw out, each picture that I wiped the mud off of. I felt as if I were an advocate for the owners of those houses.
I found God buried under the mold; a will to survive that I didn’t truly believe in before now. The residents of Chalmette come out each day and help their neighbors unbury their house. They look you in the face when they speak to you. They have more concern for everyone around them than themselves. They inspired me to be a better person, a more compassionate, loving person.
This is what Courtney and I have been talking about all along, but now I see it more clearly than I even knew I could before.
God is the human spirit and it is life. It is the flower that grew in an empty, dusty lot. It is the crawfish that survived six months in a moldy house. It is the fireman who broke into the Quickie Mart and stole Slim Jims and Coke to feed the homeless of his town. It is the signs that say “We’re coming back” and “We will rebuild.” It is the 1300 college students who have up their spring break to give a little slice of reprieve to the citizens of Chalmette.

- - -


I am outside. It is 5:30 in the morning. I still have a fever. I am shivering and it is 80 degrees. We went to the city last night and celebrated our victory. We had finished two houses on our own. Ten women and one man finished two entire houses from start to finish. We are beside ourselves. We ate at a local favorite called Café Maspero.
The food was cheap and delicious. I was feeling nauseous, so I didn’t eat a lot, but it was great. A group of Sister’s from New Orleans came to show us around. They paid for dinner. They were such a treat. They told us about their experiences during and after the hurricane. They brought us maps of the area and took us to all the local favorite spots. What a beautiful city. I want to live here. Everything was lit up and there were flowers and palm trees everywhere. We saw St Louis Cathedral, which looks like a Disney castle. Out front on the street people take rides in horse drawn carriages all night and then there is the trolley, with its wooden seats and little bell. There are street performers everywhere and they are all so talented. This one man played wine glasses filled with water. Tim asked him to play Mozart and he did! He was very funny. He told stories while he played. We walked down a series of streets behind the cathedral and all the shops had beautiful art in the windows and the sidewalks were cobblestone. There is music everywhere. Heath and Amy danced in the street as the rest of us clapped along. We were all so full of joy. It was amazing. I fell in love. Later we took a walk to the Mississippi River to watch the ferries go by. The sun was setting on the water and there was a wedding going on in the building behind us. Everyone was laughing and smiling and the music floated out onto the water and the rhythm matched the waves on the shore. I have never felt so alive and so at peace all at once. None of us were prepared to leave. We wanted it to last forever.

Right now I am staring at a flower that I found growing on the camp site. There is not a living thing for miles. All the trees and shrubs have drowned here. Chalmette was submerged in twenty feet of water for two weeks. There is barely any grass, but these flowers are growing next to the fence. They are light purple and I can’t help but stare at it. Each petal is perfectly symmetrical, the same number of petals to pollen makers. It really is art. How can anyone deny the math behind nature? For me it is completely undeniable that something, someone did this on purpose. To me that is God. It’s not a person, as I said, it’s things like this. It is a perfect sixty-five degrees right now. The sun is coming up for the last time on me in New Orleans. I have to get back on a plane today and go back to college, back to my dorm and my residents and classes and work. I would rather stay here. I’d rather perform this physical labor every day. It’s so much more important. I will feel silly in my classroom, typing on a computer. I haven’t watched TV, used a computer or flushed a toilet in over a week. What a concept.
I no longer identify myself with any sort of entitlement to my possessions. I feel like I belong in this tent, on that cot, eating in that mess hall, under this sky. How did all that change in a week? I don’t even feel like the same person. I feel like some higher version of myself, like I mutated from a larva to a butterfly. Will I be able to go back to the way things were? Because it is going to feel strange…I guess I have to. Maybe I can come back. I feel more home here than anywhere I have ever been in my life. Maybe I was meant to find this place…

Hi.

I have a journal somewhere else.


My journal

That is the link. YAY
I think I may use this for actual writing...like words instead of pictures, like I do in that one.
xoxo