Friday, October 12, 2007

First section of the memoirs.

No memoir ever really starts in the beginning. And for good reason. Babies are goddamn boring. No one wants to read 4 chapters about baby food, dirty diapers, and teething. Well, I guess some people probably do, but I’m not one of them and I certainly don’t want to be writing for those sorts of people. So baby books be damned.

Rarely will you pick up a good memoir that even begins in the pre-k to 6th grade period of childhood either. I really think this is because most people’s lives at these ages are pretty much the same. Books have to have pop and fizzle to sell. I have to deliver some great reason for you to turn the page, describing my kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Hartfield, would be mildly interesting, at best, let alone a reason to turn the page to find out when I mastered my vowels and was shocked to learn that Y went both ways!

However, around middle school the real me began to emerge, and that is true of most people. We all come from the same ball of dough. All just sets of mashed together balls of genes and until we develop personality and characteristics that make us different, we are like cookies without frosting: bland, boring, and with nothing to make us interesting. Who wants a sugar cookie when a cupcake is waiting?

It’s an epiphany, that first moment of self-realization. A bolt of lightening. A shot of ego. That eternal spark that makes us us. Hopefully that isn’t the first, last, and only epiphany for most of us, and the sparks continue to fly into our mind, a grinder working a raw piece of metal, making it smooth and refined. The sparks fly everywhere and sometimes start fires in the people who surround us. As we grow older, the sparks fly less and less, the fire is banked, and, eventually, we die.

My first spark was standing in front of a blackboard in a small private school house in Chandler, IN. I had been asked to do some basic math on the chalkboard and after finishing the prescribed work, scrawled my name across the board. The day was near done, the work completed, it was hardly an act of defiance, as I was breaking no rules. I stood there, looking at my name, written with the penmanship of a typical 5th grader: sloppy, without the distinctions that would come later in life, the straight lines slightly off-center, each letter formed with tongue-jutted effort.

“Write your whole name.”

The words sort of hung out there, a flare over a battlefield. And I realized, standing in front of 5 or 6 of my classmates and friends, that I had no clue how to spell my first name.

My name is a combination of two warring parties. In one corner, my parents, who wished to show their devotion to the Bible by choosing a name from the same. In the other, my grandmother, who wanted a grandson named after herself. And, before you ask or attempt to guess, Billie Bob Bigelow. I’m not sure how that is a woman’s name, but, in Texas, I guess anything is possible. So, much like Macarthur and some nameless Japanese official, without the aircraft carrier setting, the two parties agreed to name me with both sides in mind. William Daniel Vaughn.

With such a charitable donation of the first name to my grandmother’s wishes, one would assume that their generosity had no bounds. That would be incorrect. From the day of my birth I have been called Dan. The joke’s on you Grams!

And, standing in front of a chalkboard, sweating beneath the spotlight gazes of my peers, I wrote across the board, W-I-L-L-Y-U-M.

Phonetically spectacular, I know. Absolutely perfect.

Alas, this twisted world of letters.

It was at that moment, standing up in front of a class and misspelling my name on the chalkboard for everyone to see, that I realized that life was going to be a series of tests, most of which I would fail.

-wdv

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Rome

The new Hadrian

Sits upon the throne.

He buildeth walls,

An abundeth of walls.

A wall to wall up the wall

And the wall

Before that.


He buildeth walls.

Tall walls.

Keep them away,

Those Picts,

Those Scots,

Those Wet Backs.

They belongeth not

To our Rome.

The benefits and privileges

The hopes and dreams,

They are for us only,

Us, Romans.


A city of 7 hills,

7 generations removed

From the first generation

That swept past

The foundations of our wall.

They, the true blood of Rome,

They, Romulus and Remus,

They, the founders,

They, the fathers,

They, them without walls.


We must stop the waves

Of the tired needy and oppressed.

We must stop this ocean

With our dam.

We must Dutch-boy-stand,

Fingers in the holes.


I, the new Hadrian,

I buildeth walls.

I buildeth big walls.


-wdv

Sept. 23, 2007

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

An Exstension of the Machine

You sat there, head resting in your hands, all day. You didn’t even move when you heard the door swing open, instead you slid your hand over the counter and tossed some menus toward the nearest waiter. You thought about where your life was going, or rather where it wasn’t going while you sat at this station without any hope.

You probably didn’t know it, but other employees debated whether or not you were going to kill yourself that night. If you had just given up and didn’t want to face another day behind the register, filling out receipts for people who hadn’t even cared to read the name stitched in the front of your shirt. If it had said “fat” or “bitch” or maybe, “fuck you”. Then maybe it would have caught their eye, but instead you were nothing more than an extension of the adding machine: taking money, returning change, watching people wander in and out.

What no one knew was that you actually had tried to kill yourself a couple of times. The first was with that poison spider your brother, Davey, had found. He left it, at the end of the day, in a bucket, lid secured. Said he was going to put it in an aquarium or something, feed it crickets and lizards, watching them die with its venom dripping from puncture holes. That night, you had brought it out, put it on your arm and begged it to kill you. Just end this bullshit you were so tired of. It bit you all right, and then you crushed it. Reaction learned from years of Valley misquotes. It died and you were left with a severely infected arm. Your parents worked frantically to fill you full of antibiotics and other remedies, the whole time you just wished you were dead.

Then there was the incident with the pills. They must not have been as strong as you had thought, and instead of slipping away into a drug induced over-dose, you just laid there all night. Feeling snakes and spiders (maybe the ghost of one) climb up and down your body, your skin on fire, it was hell. Sadly, it wasn’t really hell, though, that was waiting for you the next morning, when you woke up and had to play it off like you were just trying to get high. But that day, while you sat at your post, next to the front door, oh, how you wished you were dead.

So another week passed by, and then another. You sit there at that register, staring at the wall, waiting for the clock to hit 2 so you can get up and turn the sign over to closed. You try to ignore the catty comments from the waiters and diners and, for the most part, you do. They become the soundtrack to your workday: a low murmur to blend in with everything else. You sit there. You wait. And you wish that you were dead.

A short story that will appear in my upcoming chap book, Weight of Days.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Weight of Days

The new book is complete. 16 poems, 3 short stories. One of the short stories... tomorrow.

Friday, September 14, 2007

One Minute's Thought

One minute to say the thing

That comes to mind when I think of you.

I remember that night on the couch,

No, not that night,

The other one,

When we just sat and read.

You, a book by a holocaust survivor,

Me, honestly, I don’t remember.

But we flirted over our books at each other,

Like two kids in the library,

Hoping one of us

Would get enough courage to say something,

Anything, really.

But we didn’t need words,

What we had was too sublime

To put into the flawed dialects

Of our time and place.



-wdv

September 14, 2007

Monday, August 20, 2007

The Day is Coming

My apron will be tossed
willy-nilly,
strings dancing,
across the counter.

My ticket book
will join it,
mid-flight,
holding hands
preparing for a rough landing.

My shirt tail
will fly from my belt's grasp,
my stomach
may make an appearance.

The door will be pushed
and opened.

And I,
I,
will fly free.

-wdv
August 20, 2007

Thursday, August 16, 2007

A Writing Playlist

Pen to Paper

1. Radiohead - "Karma Police"
2. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - "Emily Jean Stock"
3. Pedro the Lion - "Bad Things to Such Good People"
4. The Arcade Fire - "Intervention"
5. Cat Power - "Cross Bones Style"
6. Beck - "O Maria"
7. Tom Waits - "Soldier's Things"
8. Starflyer 59 - "Can you Play Drums?"
9. Smog - "Say Valley Maker"
10. Magnetic Fields - "I Don't Believe in the Sun"
11. The Mountain Goats - "See America Right"
12. Creedance Clearwater Revival - "Long as I can see the Light"
13. Modest Mouse - "Bukowski"