The Perch l Volume 2

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a n a rts & li tera r y journal volume 2 | spring 2015

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volume 2; spring 2015

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Editor-in-Chief Michael Rowe, Ph.D. Managing Editor Ashley Clayton, M.A. Prose Editors Claire Bien, M.Ed. David Fitzpatrick, MFA Jeanne Steiner, D.O. Poetry Editors Christa Morris, B.S. Chyrell Bellamy, Ph.D. Visual Art Editor Rebecca Miller, Ph.D. Editor Larry Davidson, Ph.D. Design & Layout Marilyn Murray Cover Photo by Portia Watson

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about the magazine

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We conceptualize a “perch” as both a higher vantage point from which to survey an area and gain a new perspective as well as a place upon which to rest. Our magazine’s goal is to offer a forum for listening to many different voices. We also chose the title The Perch because we are a publication of the Yale Program for Recovery and Community Health (PRCH) at the Yale School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry. Our section for visual and multimedia art is called The Parachute Factory, a gesture towards the history of the building where YalePRCH is housed, which was used to manufacture parachutes during World War II and which currently serves as a gallery space. We hope our magazine provides a comfortable space for risk-taking in the arts and self-expression, much like a parachute allows for soft landings, even amidst the harshest territory. _______________________________________________

If you are interested in submitting work for an upcoming issue, please visit our webpage at http://www.yale.edu/prch/ThePerch.html

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table of

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POETRY & PROSE 6  9  14  17  22  24  28  29  34  36  38  46  48

AFTER THE TAKE DOWN

Beth Filson

DROWNING

Chelsi Robichaud

DEAR JESUS

Noemi Martinez

ARTIFICIAL WINGS

Susan Lin

FILE, X-

Jadyn DeWald

YOU HAVE NO IDEA

Gloria Jorgensen

ANGRY YOUNG MEN

Noemi Martinez

THE SLIP OF PAPER

Constance McKee

ALLUSIONS TO GRANDEUR

David Zaza

DARING

David Zaza

BREAKTHROUGH

KD Williams

SECRETS #1-10

Emily Lazar

ILLNESS AND NARRATIVE DISTRACTION—OR VICE VERSA?

Arthur Frank

60  62

PHILLY

Emily Lazar

COMMENT ON ILLNESS AND NARRATIVE DISTRACTION

Larry Davidson

67  68

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INTERROGATIVE

Emily Lazar

FIZZY LIFTING

Sonya Huber

SOARING

Pat Vidal


77  80  84  86

RISING OUT OF SLEEP

Charles Thielman

CHARNEL GROUND PEOPLE

Lisa Levy

GIVING IT TO THE RIVER

Charles Thielman

LIGHT BETWEEN STARS

Beth Filson

V I S UA L A RT W O R K 7  8  16  20  26  37  47  52  61  65  66

ATOM BY ATOM (OCEAN EDGE)

J. Daniel Graham

WHAT NAME DO I CALL YOU?

Beth Filson

FREE THE SLAVE

Issa Ibrahim

GROW YOUR ROOTS

Portia Watson

TREE POLES

Nathaniel St. Amour

TAKE MY PEOPLE DANCING

J. Daniel Graham

THE INNER LIGHT OF THE DYING IS LIGHT

Beth Filson

TURMOIL

Issa Ibrahim

A CHAIR IN TABLES CLOTHING

J. Daniel Graham

ELECTRIC WILD

Nathaniel St. Amour

KNOW WHY YOU ARE ALIVE

Beth Filson

76 CLING

Portia Watson

78  85  88

SPEAK YOUR PEACE

Portia Watson

DRAGON

CJ Nye

THE WORLD IN HER HANDS

Portia Watson

NOTE ON PRIVACY: The Perch has a policy of requesting that authors of nonfiction pieces omit or disguise identifiers or seek permission from third parties.

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about this issue

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Over the past year, we’ve wrestled with what it means to be a literary magazine published by a mental health research group. In this issue, every piece is about or connects to mental health in some way—often explicitly. While we believe in the necessity of raising up these often marginalized narratives, we recognize that by bringing such voices together, we inevitably emphasize their differentness. Yet themes of suffering, community and recovery are not unique to stories about mental illness; they are universal experiences that all art draws from. Just as those with mental health challenges are more than their illness— are whole, complex human beings—the pieces in this collection are much more than their subject matter—they are works of art. In this second issue, we have a special article and commentary that speaks to how narrative gives life and complexity to the patientphysician relationship. Arthur Frank is a sociologist known for his scholarship on narrative medicine—including his own story of cancer survivorship. In his essay he examines “distraction” in modern life— its threats to relationships and shared meaning and its multiplicities of meaning and viewpoint. Frank then moves on to the distractions of modern medicine and their implications for the patient-physician encounter and humanistic medicine. Larry Davidson, a psychologist known for his research in recovery from, in, and outside mental illness, follows with a comment on Frank’s article and on the link between narrative medicine and medical practice. We hope that these two pieces add yet another new perspective to The Perch. _______________________________________________

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AFTER THE TAKE DOWN by

The ones I am afraid of have metal teeth, leather skin, exist behind fences, wrap their leather arms around me, then bite.

Beth Filson

Hush, hush… If only to lay me down in the skin of my mother.

How to say this? There was an open gate, a way out, and some of us took it. Migrating butterflies streamed between two fence posts. We followed. The insane make reason, I’m telling you. We understand where the fence posts go and do not place them. We have no thought for way. No need. Walking a field is walking a field. The ones back there – they are so unfamiliar with self they must wear name badges on blouses, coats, smocks to remember. Did you know you can spit a name? You can make a name sound bitter, and humiliated—make it go taught, then slack. You can spit a name out on the floor and wipe your mouth on a name and the person’s whose name you drool can’t do a thing – as if to touch the center of a soul like a nerve, as if to grind your teeth on that nerve.

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ATOM BY ATOM (OCEAN EDGE) by

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Beth Filson


DROWNING by

Chelsi Robichaud

What if I let it overflow?

Trin wondered, her fingers creating tiny whirlpools in the water. She

imagined sailors shipwrecking because of the miniature models of chaos she produced.

The water kept pouring, the surface disturbed by the gushing from the tap.

Her knees were immersed now. Soon her chest would be, too. Then up her neck. Then there would be no oxygen left to suck in.

“Think about what you’re doing!” a panicked voice cried.

Trin ignored the voice.

If she let the water overflow, she would need to hold her breath.

First inhale. Second. Calm yourself. Steady. Calm your mind.

“Trin!” the voice rose several octaves. “Trin, Trin!”

Breathe, breathe.

The water touched the line of her jaw.

Remember how it feels to breathe.

She plunged her head under the surface. Her lungs felt the pressure.

Don’t shout, she thought. You’ll lose the air. But she knew this. She had done

this dozens of times before.

The water would be spilling onto the floor now, filling the room. She didn’t

open her eyes to check. She needed to be focused. She could only open her eyes when

_*_

she felt the water disappear – when it was just her, and her empty mind.

I needed clarity, and the only way I knew how to find it was by drowning.

I discovered this when I was eight years old. My family and I were visiting

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the oceanside. I found it exciting to swim until the beach was seen only by squinting. My mother yelled for me to return. Rebellious, I ignored her. The waves lifted me up to the sky like a tiny mermaid.

But the ocean betrayed me. It wrapped around my skinny leg, and held me

tight in its grip. I was pulled under. Where there had been a feeling of victory, now there was only a stark fear. I screamed and water filled my lungs. Darkness enveloped me, and the water twisted me so I no longer knew which direction to swim.

Then, in this absolute horror, I felt soothed. The trivialities of my eight-

year-old life seemed to come into focus. Why did I struggle so hard to be the best? In this realm where no breath existed, you lost. You always lost. Why fight it? It was pointless.

Eventually I emerged from the water, sputtering and kicking like a bird

set free of its cage. My mother stood crying on the shore, not believing her eyes. She thought I had died. My father held a flutter board in his hands, as if he were about to spring into the ocean and rescue me. My sudden appearance seemed to shock him, too, and relief on both of their faces was clear.

Breath returned. I returned.

My new discovery fascinated me. It wasn’t enough to emerge myself in still

water, like the lake near our home. It needed to be tempestuous. It needed to be alive and vibrant. It needed to replace that part of me that wasn’t.

_*_

My new enemy became my most intimate friend.

Other kids would float in their pools with their backs to the sky, their bottoms serving as a kind of buoy.

“What are you doing?” I would ask, confused and intrigued. My friend’s

head would pop up from the water, and she would grin.

“I’m pretending to drown!”

The other children laughed. I did not.

The silence continued. On and on and on and on....silence.

Breathe.

My family and I moved away from the ocean. New life. New beginnings.

New friends.

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But I couldn’t begin anew. I wasn’t even really there. I had left my shadow,

the impression of me, back home.

My father doted on me, for a while. When I turned fourteen, things changed.

He ignored me. It was like I had lost my voice. Eventually I did. I wondered how I had failed him, what I had done to deserve it. Now I know we were much more similar than I knew. He had his drowning, too, but he drowned in life whereas I drowned in its absence.

My father had a sailboat. I remember going out on deck in the mornings. It

would be cold. The fog, tinged almost blue, transported us to another ethereal world. Childishly, I wondered if this was where he went when his eyes went vacant. When he “disappeared.”

Every little test, quiz, academic success—I hoped it would redeem me from

whichever inherent failure had become apparent to him. But it never did. I didn’t give up until it became my prime directive, the thing that fueled my every effort: be the best.

But what happened once I achieved that? My thoughts never went that far.

In truth, I didn’t think it was possible. Which is why I wasn’t at all prepared for it when it became a reality.

In my twenties, isolation was comforting. It wasn’t exactly the same as the

ocean, but it was close enough. I read voraciously. I read until pages splintered my fingers, until my mind was splintered.

The Odyssey became a favorite of mine. Poseidon hated Odysseus, but the

Greek hero kept on trying to get home. Penelope inspired nothing in me. I wished she would rise up from her throne and go find him. But she didn’t. She just kept spinning. Spinning, spinning – like the world. Always going round in circles. Endlessly, in circles.

Then I met Cole. He was wonderful. He filled the spaces with noise, with

words – words I lacked. He was intelligent, too. We were writing our theses for our Master’s in Physics, dealing with mirroring topics. His mind worked so quickly, and so in depth. I envied him. I also wished I could press my lips to his closed eyelids.

But things were strictly work. White coats, boring reports. Piles of paper. I

sometimes wished those paper cuts were from him, and not the pages he gave me. I

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desperately wished for a part of him with me. Instead I could only whisper a tiny thank you.

We became friends. Eventually lived together. “For convenience’s sake,” he

told me, his eyes lighting up as he smiled. His hand pressed to my shoulder, and I nodded. I wanted it to remain there for hours.

I didn’t know how to speak to him. There’d be nights where I’d know how

to express myself, and the words would be lying in the depths of my throat, sinking, sinking...sunk. Unable to rise up. I spoke a different language than him. One he could never decipher.

It wasn’t often that I let myself feel. Feeling doesn’t lead anywhere positive,

anyway. Feelings come like a whirlwind then leave you empty. Mine did. Or were they his? I couldn’t tell anymore. Breathe...

Breathing became difficult. I felt the world begin to slip through my fingers.

Where were my books? My things? Where were the ideas, the words, which filled me?

Cole and I were glued to our screens, living to finish our research. So close.

We were so close. I didn’t really expect to be the one to find it. But I did. I finished the calculations. In front of me were years worth of sweat and effort.

I minimized the window, slowly closing my laptop. I looked over at Cole,

who sighed, rubbing his tired eyes.

I closed mine.

Breathe.

It was over. It was finished. I breathed mindfully, but none of my mediation

practice seemed to matter.

I looked at the Great Wave of Kanagawa our friend had painted on our

bathroom wall, above the tub. It engulfed the room. Soon it would detach from the realm of illustrations and absorb me. Disappear...

Could I cry underwater? If I could sob, I would have felt it leave my lips by

now. I could only lose. I needed to freeze this moment – freeze this self. It needed to exist as a monument for my life’s work. If I lived on now, it would become a memory. An image. How could I live with that? How could I wake up, breathe...inhale, exhale,

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participate in this movement and unmovement if I had tasted Paradise? Disappear.

I smiled with my mouth closed. It was real, and I had attained it. All those

years, lying in my bed, wondering if I’d ever be able to touch it – this dream of mine. Holding my breath until life and death met and I could envision it. The person I would become. The person I’ve become. The person I will be.

There were days where I would linger in my room, looking at my things

and feeling they did not really belong to me. The piano. The laptop humming in the darkness, imitating bioluminescent life. Entwining my fingers in my sheets. I didn’t recognize any of it as mine. It just existed. It belonged to here, but not to me. DISAPPEAR. I didn’t need the ocean now. The tempest was inside of me.

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DEAR JESUS by why can’t the government give me some money for the clunker in the driveway it’ll die soon & i need to get to work & get the kids to school don’t ask me to buy some $14k ride that’s just crazy let me buy another one to last a few more years so i can keep going to work & paying rent, (going crazy & telling lies) & shit like that & let’s see about getting some good care for my dad who only sees shadows, & blue lights & i wonder (why he is blind & i don’t take his calls) who’s taking him to get groceries because i can t (i remember the hidden food can’t remember if it’s real or not) & can u see about getting my hermano into a good rehab after this last stint he’ll be dropped out at a bus station, & i can’t invite him here & he’ll sleep at shelters & then

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he’ll (don’t say he’s gotta be saved we are all lost & fucked & if he can’t ask i’m asking for him) find old friends & then he’ll see it’s all useless & so i don’t blame him because we all look for release see, but i can t have him here (we all want guns) & he dreamed the address of his kids in that little cell, made lukewarm cafe in the shower but i wonder if dreams get spiked with memories or the other way around who can tell the difference anymore, he dreamed them, their address, their house & sent them letters & i found them too it looks like they have that that that companion that follows us & any day now, any day right right right things will change & why’d you give us hope i’m asking

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FREE THE SLAVE by

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Issa Ibrahim


ARTIFICIAL WINGS by

Susan Lin

The girl came to him, never the other way around. There were no chance encounters in public arenas. He had no clue where she was living or staying, and whenever he asked she was nothing but evasive. This was a girl who had clearly perfected the art of changing the subject a long time ago. Once, after she had exited his room in her usual abrupt manner, he tried to follow. She led him all over the small town, which—he quickly learned—was not so small after all. She took detours through alleyways and then entered a twenty-four hour café where she ordered two servings of baklava and savored each bite as if it were her last, while he was forced to wait surreptitiously in the co-ed restroom until she brushed the crumbs from her hands and left. He couldn’t find his way back to the hostel without asking someone for directions in his clumsy Turkish. There was a lot of pointing, wild arms gesticulating this way and that. He wished he’d had the forethought to leave stones marking his path like a boy in a fairy tale. A few days later, she showed her face again: a fishbowl grin waiting at his doorstep, demanding kisses and shelter and another private glimpse inside his belly button. The latter seemed to be a game to her—a running gag that continued even after the entertainment value had grown stale—except that she approached the matter with such somber determination that he began to doubt his initial perception. In the interest of fairness and equality, he asked to look inside hers as well. Her claims were outrageous but he was beginning to believe they were true. She knew things she should not have known. “Show me yours,” he said one day. “Show me right now, or this stops today.” His voice may have faltered. He wasn’t convinced that he was in any position to issue ultimatums.

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“Of course.” She shrugged. “All you ever need to do is ask.” If anything, she seemed insulted that he hadn’t done so earlier. She stripped for him again, and this time it was agonizingly slow. Her top dangled on the hook of her index finger for an everlasting second before she let it to drop to the floor. Once again, his eyes were drawn to the scars along her midriff. It was impossible not to notice them, to wonder about their history. She looked up and caught him staring. “Well?” She reminded him of a petulant child, one hand resting on her hip. “You will have to get closer, you know.” He knelt, positioning himself in front of her toes. He pressed his forehead to her stomach and his lips to her abdomen. The action was as clinical as it was intimate, rivaling the experience of looking into a periscope for the first time and expecting to see something different than what appeared directly in front of you: an enemy ship approaching an underwater submarine from above, a stranger hiding in wait around the corner. Until you knew the scientific explanation, the parts that made up the apparatus, it all seemed like magic. So much so that you didn’t want to know the secret behind its operation. But Colby didn’t have any stories to tell afterwards. Inside her navel, he never witnessed anything other than bottomless darkness—a shade of black pigment so pure it was hardly fathomable back then, even if he would see it later in the midnight sky. Somehow he felt cheated: she was a pair of binoculars on the observation deck of a famous building and he had inserted the correct coins. But, the city offered no attractions, no alluring sights. “I am not surprised,” she said when he complained, and actually waved her hand dismissively as she said the words. She was reticent in general, but when the conversation turned to her family, she became even more tightlipped. “My mother has been gone a long time. Nothing can bring her back now.” A few moments of silence followed. Then, she added: “Like your dinosaurs!” That last bit made her smile. It was a complicated smile that hid behind it so many unsaid words. Nevertheless, she seemed very satisfied with herself for making the comparison. “Dinosaur,” she kept saying that day, over and over, as if she had never uttered it in her life. “Dine… Oh! Sore. Dye nose, oar!” She experimented with a variety of pronunciations, stretching and compressing each syllable this way and that as if she were folding the word, like

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origami paper, into a series of distinct and separate configurations. In her mouth, the subtle mutations were endless. To top it off, she pantomimed each mangled phrase in her own private game of Charades. Looking on, Colby wished he had never mentioned the prehistoric creatures to her. What was the point of shoveling away the dirt that kept these ancient graves hidden? What new discoveries had they uncovered? During dinner a week later, he realized that she had not finished. “Die! No, soar!” she exclaimed without warning. She pretended to stab herself in the stomach with a pronged fork, slumping forward in her seat before spreading both arms out and gliding around the island counter in the kitchen, on the verge of flying away, limbs outstretched like artificial wings. He was so startled by the outburst that he literally jumped in his chair. A butter knife clattered to the floor. His glass of water overturned. Surely she had run out of options by now, he thought. But that last creation proved to be her favorite, and it soon became her battle cry. She used it in the place of silence, as the expression of unreadable emotion, as conversation filler when she didn’t want to respond to his questions or react to an observation or statement. She didn’t speak of her mother again and ultimately he decided it was better not to ask.

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GROW YOUR ROOTS by

Portia Watson


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File, Xby

Jadyn DeWald

This afternoon, in the mail, I received a torn-up letter From myself, dated Sept. 1971, instructing me to get Out of town, trust no one, not even my wife. I started Shoving clothes into a bag, then ducked out the back Through the lettuce patch, and hid in Mrs. Prichard’s Petunias. I could have been in Nam again. A chopper Circled overhead. In the dappled shade, my light suit Took on a camo look. I dipped my index fingers into The black soil. I started to paint my face. It’s strange, Viewing your house from your neighbor’s flowerbed, Your wife in your bedroom brushing her golden hair, But I had my instructions. The Cougar in Bill’s drive Was, clearly, my getaway vehicle, but there he stood On his lawn, running his hose, sporting black glasses. Just as I crept out from behind the flowers, he turned,

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And I, like someone being rewound, slunk backward, My heart hammering. Then some kids started to sing In the window overhead—Mrs. Prichard’s grandsons, Twins, doubled over a cake. Would you even believe That it was my birthday, too, that I sat there weeping, Fighting back sobs? In the meantime, a police cruiser Cruising by. Bill dropped the hose, tied his robe, and Started toward me. I bolted straight for the flowering Apple tree, then sat down against its trunk, clenching My bag. Bill, police cruiser, chopper—things looked Grim. My thoughts drifted like a bunch of paper-thin Clouds. Then an apple fell into my lap. Then another And another. A rainstorm of apples, green, thumping Into the grass. I held one. I bit off its stem. I hurled it Like I was eighteen again, high over my left shoulder.

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YOU HAVE NO IDEA by

Gloria Jorgensen

You sit there, behind your Chinese Chippendale knock-off, silent, like you know my pain, but you have no idea, not unless it happens to you. God, I wish I could smoke. How do they expect anybody to live through anything . . . you have to see the bloody mattress and have the smell wake you at night, screaming.

We were a pair, us two. Nobody else downhome knew about her. I was the

only one to have that privilege. From the second we met we both knew we had some Karmic destiny together. The irony alone would have made her laugh. She wasn’t but eighteen, half my age, just a baby. She was so bright and full of life, now cut short as her bleached blonde hair on one side. All because I helped her get an apartment in the city and left her alone too long, long as her tar black hair on the other side. I’m the one who’s supposed to have good sense. I’m the one who should be dead. Still.

Are you some damn Freudian, sitting there all quiet like that? Don’t expect

me to say the first words. You’re the one who makes the big bucks. You start. I’ve been shrunk before. I’m certifiable with all I’ve been dragged through and you don’t have the street cred to prop me up for what I see in my future.

She was alone when that junkie busted in looking for something worth

stealing. Him a monstrous, huge fellow, and her a little bit of a thing not as big as a minute. You know what I was doing that was so all-fired important? I’d gone to get my clothes, my fucking clothes from where I had them stashed. We weren’t even done moving in.

You ever plan to ask me why I’m here? Not wondering what I’m thinking

about? Why on God’s green earth are you making me sit here and run through all this

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in my head? Don’t you think I’ve dwelt right here enough by myself? Aren’t you and all your fancy degrees on that wall behind you going to try to convince me it was just fine to leave her alone and I’m not a horrible person? What kind of phony are you?

If you had the courage to ask I’d tell you he killed her with one of our own

kitchen knives, took it out of the drawer and stabbed her in the chest, right through the heart. I believe he intended to rape her because he had her down on the bed. She fought like a tiger, though, screamed so loud everybody in the building heard her. Blood smeared across the walls in arcs from where she swung her arms. He already had her hundred-dollar boom box stashed in his closet down the hall. Dumb shit. That right there hung him. Plus he was seen going down the fire escape outside our window.

When we went to court, his mama was sitting there, a schoolteacher, wearing

her church clothes and hat. His mama, in her hat. That was her baby.

You sit there with your safe life, dressed in a suit and tie and laundered shirt

that came back from the cleaners with a neat paper band around it, stacked tidy in a box. You don’t fool me. A man as tall as you is used to getting away with a lot because people have to look up at you; they confuse you with a person who’s worth being looked up to. Your voice, deep, the boom from your barrel chest, works for you, too. You get respect you don’t deserve. Not from me. I see who you are inside: a little man. Do not pretend with me.

You tell me what to do with this sadness, this shame. Have you ever gone

down to the morgue beneath the underpass where the freeways all have ramps into the city from the earthquake? It’s a small, dank building, dark inside. She was there for me to identify, small, waxy, laid out on a metal gurney, a towel stuffed into the gaping wound in her chest. They wouldn’t let me brush her hair. You sit, impervious, watching while I fly apart, earning your shekels, as cold as her body under that white sheet. Bloodless. Motionless. Unfeeling.

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TREE POLES by

Nathaniel St. Amour

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ANGRY YOUNG MEN by if heaven could be tiny & there be no hell so first we hustle riselike him thinking our bodies rot in deep black earth after the walk our souls wandering on earth or thrown into the fiery pit of belly & bullet covered in green blue mold already forming over thoughts of redemption intangible paths doubt not named begging the question we are formed into boxes of old paper, bullets penetrating this onionskin.

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THE SLIP OF PAPER by

Constance McKee

From the deck of the house, Nora watches her children play beside the lake. The girl, cornsilk hair across her face, stretches her arms to capture a pale butterfly. She’s grown taller. The boy, stick in hand, squats on the lake’s edge, investigating something—a turtle perhaps? She notices a scab on his knee—how did he get that? The nanny, skin honey-gold in the late-afternoon light, hovers like a responsible mother. More responsible than their real mother, she thinks, a knot tying in her stomach. In her pocket, a slip of paper with a place, a time. She fingers it, uncertain. She hasn’t had a drink in two days. The world has changed. Behind her, on the other side of the sliding glass door, her husband, just home from work, prepares their drinks. She turns to look at him, but sees instead her reflection in the glass. Blonde, slender. At least one person, her mother, would say “emaciated.” Aren’t daughters always too thin in their mothers’ eyes? It’s true that she doesn’t have an appetite. She raises her arms to examine them in the glass—no fat, but not much muscle either. She’ll resume her strength training some day. The door slides open. He’s smiling, perfect white teeth against tan skin, glass extended in her direction. Should she take it? Heart pounding, she hesitates; he pushes it toward her. She acquiesces, her fingers brushing his, sending a tingle toward her heart. The glass is cool against her hand, condensation already sliding down the side. With eyes closed, head back, neck stretching, she soothes the heat of her cheeks with the body of the glass. She examines the golden-brown liquid, mixed as she likes it—four ice cubes, a splash of spring water and the well-aged Scotch they bought in the U.K. She inhales the scent—smooth, bold, yet slightly musty. Tiny ripples form on the surface as her hand trembles. She salivates, skin prickles, in anticipation. Can she say no?

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With drink in hand, he closes the door, pats her arm as he passes her, and settles himself into the chaise lounge facing the lake. When she continues to stand in the same position, her back now to him, he asks, “You okay?” What can she say? Yes, she has so much—wealth, husband, children, home. But no, she’s not okay. She says so. He looks at her, as she watches his reflection in the glass. “What?” The ice cubes rattle with the tremors of her hand. “I said I’m not okay.” His dark brows are touching each other, forming a single slash above his black eyes. He’s silent for a moment. “What is it?” When she doesn’t immediately answer, he pats the lounge next to him. “Come here so I can see you.” She doesn’t move. The children’s laughter drifts toward her. How can it make her feel so sad? He puts his drink on the small table between the lounges and comes to her. He squeezes her shoulders with his hands, rests his head on top of hers. “What’s wrong, Nora?” His arms leave her shoulders and encircle her waist. His body presses against her back; she leans into him. One tear drops into her still-full glass, but she holds back the others; she’s not a crier. She shakes her head. How can she tell him? How can she not? He waits. “You know I’ve been seeing a psychiatrist,” she begins. “That’s right,” he says. After a pause, he continues, “How’s it going?” “She said she’s concerned about me.” “Oh, yeah?” He’s still holding her, now rocking her slightly, side to side. “We’ve all been worried about you, baby. That’s why you’re going to see her.” Nora watches his face in the glass. She doesn’t want to hurt him. Or vice versa. “She thinks I’m drinking too much.” He unwraps his arms, steps back. “Really?” he says to her reflection. “Social drinking—what harm can that do?” He retrieves his Scotch from the table and sits on the edge of the chaise. She turns and looks at him. “Dr. Blake says I should stop drinking entirely. Go to AA.” She fondles the slip of paper in her pocket. “She gave me a list of meetings.”

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THE SLIP OF PAPER

“AA? That’s for alcoholics.” He shakes his head. “That’s ridiculous. You’re not an alcoholic.” “I don’t know. Maybe I am.” Her hands now trembling hard, she puts her glass on the table and walks to the deck railing. The children are sitting in the grass with the nanny, looking for something—four-leaf clovers? “I haven’t had a drink in two days.” “Didn’t we drink out here yesterday? And the day before?” She hesitates. “I poured mine out when you weren’t looking.” He’s silent. She glances over her shoulder toward him. He’s staring at her, eyes blacker than usual. She faces him. “You know, being in therapy has been hard for me.” “I know.” “With all the stuff I’ve been dealing with.” “Yes.” She exhales. “I was having a couple drinks before seeing Dr. Blake, then a couple more afterwards.” He studies her face, gazes into his glass, swirls the brown liquid, nods. “So what? It’s no different from that antidepressant she’s been giving you.” “You and I drink before and after dinner. And more on the weekends.” “We don’t drink more than any of our friends.” The air feels still and hot between them, broken only by the children’s squeals and the occasional buzz of a cicada. “I’ve been avoiding looking at things I don’t want to see.” He chuckled and shook his head. “What in the world are you talking about, baby?” She clasped her hands together to quell the shakes. “The kids. I’ve been a neglectful mother.” She took a deep breath. “You and me.” He empties his glass, clinks it onto the tabletop, then stands. “That’s absurd, Nora. I’ve heard that if you think you’re an alcoholic, you’re probably not. We’ll get you a new doctor.” “I don’t want...” He walks to the railing and waves his arms toward the kids and the nanny.

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The children squeal, “Daddy’s home,” and start racing toward the house. “Look at me, David.” His eyes dart sideways toward her for a moment, but he continues smiling and waving at the children. “I’d like your help with this,” she says. “I’m not sure I can do it without your support.” “We’ll talk about it later, Nor.” Footsteps pound up the stairs, and the children tumble onto the deck like puppies, soft and round and wriggling. David rushes toward them, squats and encircles them with his arms. The nanny hovers close, glowing. David rises and kisses her on the cheek, for a second too long, and their eyes meet. A fist clenches in the pit of Nora’s stomach. She crouches to receive the children’s hugs. David whispers to the young woman, and her laughter floats across the deck like the notes of a wind chime. “Let’s get pizza,” David calls out, in an excited voice. The children cheer and jump. “And beer for the grown-ups,” he added. “Can’t have pizza without beer.” He looks at the nanny, for another moment too long. “You’re coming too, of course. We’ll get a couple pitchers.” She nods and laughs. He turns toward Nora, as if an afterthought. She knows better. “Nora? Are you coming?” A test. Leave him alone with the nanny? Go with them to confront their glances, the beer? The children are skipping toward the garage. Nora can win back their love. But David? He faces her, hands in pockets, dark form silhouetted against the dying sunset. She turns away. As a full moon begins its rise beyond the lake, she feels for the slip of paper—her talisman and guide for her coming journey.

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THE SLIP OF PAPER

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ALLUSIONS TO GRANDEUR by See the gentle curving where the road narrows there?

David Zaza

Where the row of stone ends the cliffside falls away. See the gentle arching there? Our world, too, disappears. Take a moment to look at the sloping ground near the trees. Where the evergreens stand the sky begins its fade to black. The horizon slips. The sun shines through the sea—barely there—then it goes. There it goes. I wanted to begin that way. The night grows once it starts. I wanted to begin, with plainness. The flat tones. Then this: night. It is a memory of some nameless lost night worth having.

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The phone call tells you where you are and when, then goes. And a lifetime sometime ends. A pulsing blur remains with you the world over. Give yourself that blurred night and after passing through, you clear it. You hear it, now sharp and ringing. A memory has changed you. Walking on that road now, the curving cliffs restrain you. Feel the cliffside rocks, their skin. The day is moving and blank. The rest of the world gone, alone you tremble as you sit. Listen. Hear the cars beneath the cliff— Your friend is not there with them. Hear the ocean’s distant breath— The silent hollow tubes of his life now rested. He’s running faster forgetting he cannot run. See the daylight coming in. The dusty rooms sit blurred. See yourself among things. The worst despair plagues them. Hear again the phone call. Your dusty sunlight becomes plain expression. Departures from our blank and heavy world persist. Friends in earth and oceans lie down in unmarked graves. See distance rise between the living and the dead between the cliffside and the sea between discomfort and repose between two people who begin between the endless curves of roads and in the darknesses of the night.

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DARING by

David Zaza

Am I willing to believe what I saw, or even to tell you? The dead on the street, smiling ghost of the friend who was not my friend,

the man who introduced me to young death, to strangers’ grief, to the lousy importance of chance in a lifetime, the smiling pitted living face of the man, smiling, walking by me, in the other direction. Identity given away in the quickest glance, certain, but brief enough to bring doubt, doubt enough to allow skepticism. Certain identity given away. My walk had been his, the young, alive, despairing and celebrating walk up the avenues—far—beyond youth even, just living and walking up the avenues, and then he went to death and I, wallower in the soil, digger of any kind, I stood up and took his place. Impossible! The ghost on the street, the hollowed smile, and there were his eyes on his face on the body of his ghost walking. He turned toward me, met my eye, and smiled his smile. And I am not the first one. Examples of the supernatural rise like heat through the masses. Some scientists, cynics have been converted. We the believers, the heretics of secular culture, telling ghost stories of murder and plague. The atheist, the poet, I am willing to become something else. A spiritualist, touched. Myself plagued with questions— or guilt or self-doubt. Who sees what I see? Who meets the living eye of the dead on the street and holds it, returns the smile? What am I betraying, a further search for meaning? Some kind of unhappiness? He looked at me taking that same walk we once had made together—what seemed to him in illness a long walk—and smiled to me. Do the dead come back to smile on us? To mock us with a smile? Do they smile in anticipation, or in glory? And I lingered just beyond where he passed me. Could I look back—admit to it here? I walked farther, looking somewhere else. I looked back and he was gone.

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TAKE MY PEOPLE DANCING by

J. Daniel Graham 37


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BREAKTHROUGH by

KD Williams

“You are not alone,” Ed says.

Somewhere, in another city, in a badly decorated office, there’s girl just like

you. A counselor named Ed may or may not be there. The walls are definitely spinning. Her thoughts are definitely racing. She’s just like you, except she has brown eyes and a crescent scar above her lip. She’s just like you, except she isn’t.

“What I mean is, you don’t have to be alone in this,” he says, snapping me

from a daydream.

“Duh,” I say as I point. “You’re right there!” Ed doesn’t laugh like I hope he will.

“You’ve got to use the resources available to you.” Ed tries to meet my eyes,

then turns to his desk. He’s shaking as he pores over forms. He tells me how many mental disorders present around my age, how there are highly effective medications. I might be in a “mixed state” or something, Ed says. Mania is waning and the dark night of depression waits. Ed doesn’t say that, but I’m a poet sometimes.

I study Ed as he studies me. He’s wearing a green-checked button-up that

his wife probably told him to iron, but he didn’t, thinking no one would notice. The shirt’s awkwardly tucked into his khakis, which are so close to his skin color that it creates the illusion that he’s not wearing pants and there’s something very wrong with his legs. Actually, his hair is pretty much the same color too. He’s fucking creepylooking. I might’ve made him up.

“Am I dreaming?”

Ed stops scrawling on the green form on his desk and twists to face me. Are you serious? his expression asks me. His diploma from a college I’ve never heard of whimpers in the corner.

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“No,” Ed says in a measured tone. He drops his pen. “Do you have a hard

time knowing what’s real?”

I keep my gaze wandering and disconnected because I don’t want to see

the change on his face when it happens. The bookshelves are lined with baseball memorabilia. I want to tell him it’s his uninspiring life that makes me think he’s one of my dream people. A few months ago I would’ve rambled on about the deterioration of my sleep schedule, my ups and downs and how they’ve led me to question the fabric of reality, but I’ve been trying to put fewer words into the air lately, so I nod instead.

“Is this a new occurrence?” He takes a big gulp of imaginary coffee.

“Not if you count the imaginary lion friend I had in kindergarten.” I laugh.

He doesn’t. The noise canceling machine whirs in the doorway.

“So, Jessica, this is what’s going to happen...” I zone out. The only person

who still calls me Jessica is my father, and he’s somewhere in Indiana today. At least I think. It’s hard to keep track of his truck route, and he hates talking on the phone. I wonder if and when someone will call him. How he’ll take it. He’ll be calmer than my mother. They’ll both hesitate to say anyone got it right, claiming I’ve always had trouble sleeping, handling stress, fitting in. She’s always been so dramatic.

“Do you know how to get there?” Ed asks. I’m afraid to ask where I’m going.

“Oh, I can walk.” I wiggle my legs in my new purple jeans. My wardrobe

indicates a sense of urgency lately. The purple paired with my bright red coat really sets the tone.

_*_

It’s the Jesus freaks in the quad again. This isn’t how I thought I’d go, if

I ever thought I’d be on my way to commit myself anyway. I’m not even sure what they’ll do when I get to the Psych ER. Until last Wednesday, I didn’t know a separate ER existed for mental emergencies. I like the idea, though. Imagine having a StubbedToe ER. There wouldn’t be any corners. Just round rooms and pillows and the soothing coo of nurses. Specialization is key to recovery. Anything’s possible with the right treatment plan.

I’m crying over the brassy center of the quad, the symbol branded on the

ass of this university. I plan on blaming the sting of the January air if one of the Jesus freaks feels benevolent enough to come over and ask what’s wrong.

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I text my roommate to meet me here. She’s at the gym. I’ll bet you ten bucks

she’s wearing the short blue shorts, even in this weather. I rub my hands together and sit down to collect what little feeling I have left.

My eyes tell the Jesus freak to go to hell as he stares at me from under his

white tent. A man strums a guitar behind him. The Lord’s lost a sheep, but my soul he has to keep. He croons.

A Jesus freak walks over. Hi. I am a Jesus freak, but you can call me Mike, I

think he says.

“Hey, Mike.”

“What’s wrong? We’re offering free encouragement in the Jesus Tent.”

Jesus freaks and their Crazy Capitalization.

“I could use some of that. All my paid encouragement ran out.”

Mike smiles awkwardly and escorts me to the Tent.

My roommate’s wearing the blue shorts when she approaches the Tent.

Several Jesus freaks are praying over my head, and the man with the guitar howls. The Lord has many addresses, but his place is in my heart.

“Are you okay?” she asks.

“Nice ass!” I shout over the music.

Suddenly, we’re in my roommate’s car and less religious music is playing.

_*_

You want to go to the seaside. I’m not trying to say that everybody wants to go.

“I feel like I’m your dog, and you’re taking me to be put down.”

Leslie doesn’t smile like I hope she will. Her nose is huge. That’s not her

nose. I knows her nose.

_*_

“So, where are you hiding the gun?”

The lady behind the counter isn’t speaking English. I sort of understand

Spanish, but I haven’t been to class in a few weeks and I hate to be reminded of my failures. I’m human like that.

“Is she speaking English?”

“No.”

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“Tell her to stop.”


BREAKTHROUGH

“Stop speaking English?”

Please fill out this intake form, her eyes tell me. I speak eyes.

The intake form is yellow like my mother’s coffee-stained teeth. The first

_*_

part’s easy — age, social security number and insurance information. Marital status: single and ready to mingle. Then it gets tough — Reason for coming in:____________

I pause. “Why am I here?” I ask the nose that’s Leslie.

She sneezes us into the next room. Oscar’s taking my blood, and I stare at

the needle as it enters my skin like the proboscis of a mosquito.

“Spell your name for me.”

“No. It’s on the form.”

“It’s a formality.” He switches vials.

“That’s what they modeled it off after all.” I tell him.

“Modeled what?”

“The needle. It’s like the mosquito’s proboscis. It’s a nose.”

“Could you stop watching me? No one ever watches me.”

“Jesus is always watching, Oscar.”

I don’t know how long we have to wait. When I got here I had all the time in

_*_

the world. Enough time to count the triangles on the gray carpet and make up names for the ladies behind the counter to my left. Now my head lolls forward and my eyes are full of sand.

“You should really tell your patients what’s going on,” I tell Carmen.

“Que?”

_*_

“There are six-hundred-and-forty triangles in this room.”

I want to read to Leslie and her nose. There are several copies of AARP

magazine, but I choose Animals that Live in Trees.

“This book changed my life,” I announce to the room and hold up the book

for all to see. A small, grey lady kicks off her slippers across from me. The little boy next to me cranes his neck.

There are lots of animals that live in trees. Some of them are only in trees

sometimes. Some of them make homes in trees.

People come and go. It’s fun to guess whether they’re the crazy ones or if

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they’re here to see someone crazy. A girl is wheeled in on a bed, using her brown hair like a canopy for her face.

The three-toed sloth gathers moss.

Their hair grey and short, her parents tail her. She’s definitely the crazy one.

It can take Mr. Sloth months to get enough moss.

I wonder if they were crazy once. Maybe their hair was making them insane.

“Cut off her hair!” I shout. “Save her!”

To my right, the little boy flashes an incomplete grin at me. Leslie deflates her nose and it lets out a Shhh.

“Okay, jeez.” I point my left thumb at Leslie and raise my eyebrows at the

little boy. “Tough crowd.”

He giggles. His mother pats him on the head. She’s wearing a dark green

sweater I really dislike, the color my mother always said would bring the lightness out of my brown eyes. It might not look like it, but I bet she made the little boy crazy somehow. I wish I was lucky enough to have someone to blame. My parents aren’t crazy. My dad’s a little alcoholic. My mom’s a little unaware. But they’re fine, really. This has to be my fault. I press my fingers to my temples as if I can extract whatever foreign body is causing me this mental vacillation.

The ceiling fan stirs the used air in the waiting room.

“I should’ve taken the medicine. I’m sorry,” I tell Leslie.

She’s blowing her nose, but nods like she knows how I feel.

“I just wanted to take my chances being myself.”

“But you’re always yourself.”

“Except when I’m not.”

These are the moments I hate the most. The ones when I realize the ceiling

fan isn’t the only thing spinning.

_*_

The woman near the television hasn’t taken off her sunglasses, but I don’t

think she’s blind. They gave her soup on a plastic tray with a plastic spoon. I want soup.

“If I gouge my eyes out, will I get soup?”

“No. Don’t do that.”

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Not everyone’s eating soup in the waiting room. Some get to go to the


BREAKTHROUGH

vending machine outside. Three women are eating Doritos and Honey Buns in the left corner.

“I’m so hungry,” I say in their direction. My heart hurts and my brain feels

fuzzy, but I don’t share everything with everyone.

“Can I go to the vending machine?”

“No. You have the bracelet on that says you can’t leave,” my little boy friend

says to me.

He holds up his bracelet — a leather strap with a sensor the same as mine,

but with much more slack on the ends — and I don’t feel alone, which makes me feel worse, but I still manage to smile at him.

“Fine then. Let’s stay! Want to read with me?”

His five teeth say yes, but his mother wraps her arm around him from the

chair to his right. I wonder if I’ll get to leave and see my mother again. She’ll probably have to come see me in here. I’ll live in this chair. The bracelet’s getting tighter and tighter. I’ll never leave.

_*_

Dr. Yang gives me some pills and clicks his pen.

“Spell your name for me.”

I’m sleepy so Leslie drives me home. I sleep a long time. So long that when I wake up, her shorts have grown into pants. “How do you feel?”

“This has been a long time coming,” I answer.

“We all break down sometimes. You’re going to be fine.”

“This isn’t a breakdown,” I say, making my voice deep. “It’s a breakthrough.”

We go to a party like we used to. Or maybe it’s when we used to. First, I put

_*_

my coat on backwards, but I make it a fashion statement, so it’s okay. Everyone loves a fashion statement. All my friends are at the party. They’re snorting coke and laughing. I go to the bathroom with a bottle of Jack.

“Hello, Jack.”

“Hello.”

“Wouldn’t it be funny if I didn’t wake up tomorrow?”

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_*_

“Wouldn’t it be nothing?”

I come back to life for dinner with my family. We eat at a burger joint I’ve

never been to. It’s like it sprouted up in the middle of the night. My little boy friend from the Psych ER is there, this time in a red shirt.

“Are you my brother?” I ask his little toothy face.

“I love you,” he spits.

“Spell your name for me.”

“Y-O-U-R-N-A-M-E.”

_*_

“Do you know where you are?”

“The hospital.”

“Which hospital?”

“The moon hospital.”

“Stop being playful. Which hospital?”

“The one we’re in.”

“Okay. What day is it?”

“Today.”

“What day of the week? What year? What month?”

“Did you know that in Portuguese each day is called a fair? It’s the day of the

first fair. Tomorrow will be the second.”

“What time is it?”

I pause.

“Now?”

_*_

The outpatient form gives advice. It’s pink like the scar tissue on my father’s hand.

Stop smoking. Stop drinking. Stop doing drugs. Floss. Eat an apple. Floss

again. Check here to release your information to your psychiatrist. asks me.

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“Can your roommate with the big nose come pick you up?” the secretary


BREAKTHROUGH

“I live alone,” I say to the door.

I take a taxi. The cab driver asks where I want to be dropped off.

“I’ve never picked someone up from the ER before.”

“Take me to the ice cream shop.”

I order a triple-fudge brownie sundae. The man behind the counter asks if I

want a receipt.

“No,” I say. “I want no evidence of this ice cream’s existence.”

He laughs and laughs and laughs.

I feel like myself when I look in the mirror this morning. Everything’s going

_*_

to be okay. Everything’s going to be okay. Everything’s going to be okay.

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SECRETS #1-10 by

Emily Lazar

He has ten secrets, but can never remember the correct order in which to disclose them. They have colors and numbers. Different shapes and weights of difficulty. One is humor-buoyant. It goes free first. Unless his confidant shares something shattering and he has to follow it up in kind. Two are toe-tagged. There is nothing to lift them. No singing, no moving fingers. He knocked the breath out of them in the telling once before. So you could say that for now, he has eight secrets. The dead aren’t even the worst of them. The worst can arrive at any time. He gives it up like vomit and broken glass. The rest breathe air, fireflies filling his stomach. There’s not laughter in them, but stretched vocal cords, and teeth, and all his gladness. They’re pinned down, labeled neatly. Never smashed or stroked. You might also count the half-a-secret that stuck on the wall of his larynx. It never exits but on occasion small pieces mix with his Do-you-think-of-Gods and I’ll-bewith-you-in-a-moments, undetected. You don’t make a secret, conceive it or hatch it or plant it in the dust. But it slips out like sneezing, the smell of 12 AM sweat, and snores stuck scaling the octaves. The source is the body. The trouble that speeds it is the mind. It’s not for one person to plow fissures for secrets and another to harvest them whole. But two people sit in two bedrooms, saying let it be so. Force the fireflies from their stomachs, and all their gladness. To be shared and smashed and stroked.

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The Inner Light of the Dying is Light by

Beth Filson

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ILLNESS AND NARRATIVE DISTRACTION— OR VICE VERSA? by

Arthur Frank

Distraction, most often a pejorative attribution, is not always such a bad thing. An anecdote about William James nicely introduces how distraction figures in mutual understanding, known more formally as the problem of knowing other minds or the problem of intersubjectivity.

Jacques Barzun begins his book about James describing a scene in

Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1890. James and two students are walking along when a large, imposing figure approaches them. Barzun writes: “His long white beard blowing, cane swinging, he seems in a world of his own, talking to himself, or else to some invisible listener. He will mow them down, if they do not get off the narrow sidewalk. ‘Whoever he is,’ says [one student], sure of his not overhearing, ‘he’s the epitome of the absent-minded professor.’ ‘What you really mean,’ says James, ‘is that he is present-minded somewhere else.’” (Barzun 1983, 6)

Breakdowns of mutual understanding sometimes result from ill will, but

more often they involve people who are, in James’s phrase, present-minded somewhere else, even if they are looking at each other, talking to each other, and seem to have every reason to be concerned about each other. At our historically present moment, electronic devices create a perception that we live in an age of unprecedented distraction; or in James’s terms, changing conditions in the frequency and intensity with which people are present-minded somewhere else. Following James, we live not so much in an age of distraction as in an age of multiple and transitory absorptions-an age of multiple attractions. Perhaps never before in history have so many people spent so much of their time so fully absorbed for such short periods of time, and never have so many attractions been to screens, not other people.

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Eventually I hope to say something about the more specific empirical


problem that I’ve been working on for a couple of decades, which is why so many healthcare professionals and so many patients find their relationships with each other unsatisfactory. Specifically, why do healthcare workers and patients so consistently feel misunderstood and under-appreciated by each other? I believe that many programs to improve clinical communications have only limited success because they haven’t explored this fundamental incongruity: why do clinicians and patients often appear to each other to be distracted?

To get to that issue, we need to think about consciousness in order to

appreciate the depth of this problem of clinical misunderstanding. I want to begin by considering this shape-shifting word, distraction, then talk about distraction and the capacity for different forms of narration, and when I finally get to the clinic, I hope we will be prepared to know it differently.

As a sociologist, I understand distraction primarily as an attribution that

people make about their own or others’ mental states, and I proceed by collecting a variety of such attributions. By a mental state I mean something phenomenological: a relation of consciousness to the world. This relation involves the scope of what consciousness is attending to, what is foreground and what is background in that attention, and what the phenomenologist Alfred Schutz (1970) called the system of relevances that sorts reality into foregrounds of attention and backgrounds of comparative inattention. The foreground of consciousness--the sense of what is most relevant--is what Schutz called the paramount reality (1971, 226), and the sociological issue is that most of the time, persons agree on what the primary reality is in any time and place. Even when people actually do not agree on what the primary reality is, they believe that others agree, or if that belief cannot be sustained, they believe that those others ought to recognize the same primary reality that they act upon.

Schutz had read William James and was developing James’s ideas, so let me

again quote James. “My experience,” he wrote, “is what I agree to attend to.” James then uses a fairly graphic example. “What dogs will attend to in the sculpture gallery will be ‘Who peed on this pedestal?’” (Richardson 2006, 186). Please note here the typical Jamesian usage that humans agree on what attend to. Behind this verb agree lies the triad of effort, will, and habit. Unlike dogs, humans have a capacity to will their attention, and then turn that will into habit, which renders will preconscious. On James’s account of human psychology, we are always forming habits and acting out of habit. The moral question is whether we act on habits we have willed.

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What, then, is distraction as a relation of consciousness to reality? Here the

mental state itself comes conflated with attributions and evaluative judgments. Earlier I referred to the word distraction as being a shape shifter. What I meant is that it is sometimes used as a positive attribution and other times as a negative one; sometimes being distracted is a good thing, other times a bad thing.

I am proud to say that my home province of Alberta has a Distracted

Driver law that levies fairly high finds for cell-phone use while driving. Behind that usage lies the principle that driving should be a driver’s exclusive focus of attention. Distractions are whatever relegates driving to the background of consciousness and puts something else in the foreground. I think it is important to note that this foreground/background priority is controversial, as is evident from the massive rate of violations of the Distracted Driver laws. Clearly for some people, the cell phone is the proper foreground of attention. In James’s terms, they are present-minded in relation to their phones, and the road and other vehicles are a distraction from this primary focus of attention. Unfortunately, most understandings of distraction as either a bad thing or a good thing do not consciously reflect on the value priority that underpins that attribution. The assumption that others share underlying values is, regrettably, a persistent source of misunderstanding.

In usages that may be increasing, distraction is understood as a good thing.

Attributions of distraction appear frequently in Sherry Turkle’s book Alone Together (2011), which has a good claim to be the preeminent ethnography of contemporary electronic distractions. I think the core issue of Turkle’s book is controversy over what kind of distraction is a good or bad thing for which people in what circumstance--and there are multiple forms of distraction and multiple circumstances.

The first half of Turkle’s book is about the new generation of personal

robots that are designed to respond to gestures, especially caring gestures. A Japanese company makes a robotic baby seal named Pero. Pero is marketed mostly to nursing homes as a pacification device for residents, who will sit peacefully for hours stroking Pero and appreciating its responsiveness to them. After studying how Pero was adopted in Massachusetts nursing homes, Turkle concludes: “Most often, nurses, attendants, and administrators had been happy for the distraction it provided” (2011, 104). The moral logic behind distraction being understood as a good thing, as it is here, is that for some people, at some point in their lives, being present-minded as far

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ILLNESS AND NARRATIVE DISTRACTION— OR VICE VERSA?

as possible from their primary reality is a good thing, because that present reality is not very pleasant. Whatever distracts the person from an oppressive reality is a good thing. That seems difficult to dispute, as long as one accepts the presupposition that the distracted persons have no choice except to out-source responsibility for determining their paramount reality.

The most positive spin I can imagine being put on distraction comes from

recent literary criticism. Here, distraction does not involve any out-sourcing, but rather it’s a generative source of creativity. My source is the literary critic Stephen Greenblatt (2013), writing recently about the film production of Much Ado About Nothing. Greenblatt describes Shakespeare “allow[ing] himself to be distracted” as he adapted source materials as plots for his plays. Thus, writes Greenblatt: “in The Merchant of Venice, he permitted the Jewish moneylender to take over the play; in both Henry IV plays he transformed the conventional figure of the parasite into the titanic Falstaff; and in Romeo and Juliet he gave the tragic hero’s witty, cynical foil Mercutio so much brilliant airtime that Shakespeare himself reputedly said that he had to kill Mercutio in the third act to ‘prevent being killed by him.’”

Greenblatt then gets to the usage that concerns us. “Never was Shakespeare’s

distraction--his trust in following his imagination wherever it took him--happier than in Much Ado.” In the source material, Beatrice and Benedick are peripheral characters, but Shakespeare allows them to become the focus of interest--their happiness becomes the audience’s paramount reality, in Schutz’s sense. My interest is Greenblatt’s celebration of distraction as the mental state of trusting one’s imagination to lead wherever it does, and his implication that distracted imagination is fundamental to creativity. Here we have a third and distinct usage of distraction: neither a state of attending to the wrong reality instead of what one is responsible to attend to, nor a state of being happily away from an unpleasant primary reality that is best left to others to manage. Instead, distraction is the willful suspension of what has previously seemed primary reality, in order to allow a new foreground/background relation to emerge.

Finally, a fourth possibility, which returns to distraction as a bad thing, but

in a different way than Distracted Driver laws. Here the issue of the overwhelming frequency of small demands. Again I return to Turkle for an example. She describes Diane, a thirty-six-year-old museum curator. Diane “receives about five hundred

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emails, several hundred texts, and around forty phone calls a day” (2011, 166). Turkle’s summation of Diane’s situation is worth quoting in full, because I think it best expresses what many people understand as the contemporary problem of distraction: The self shaped in a world of rapid response measures success by calls made, emails answered, texts replied to, contacts reached. This self is calibrated on the basis of what technology proposes, by what it makes easy. But in the technology-induced pressure for volume and velocity, we confront a paradox. We insist that our world is increasingly complex, yet we have created a communications culture that has decreased the time available for us to sit and think uninterrupted. As we communicate in ways that ask for almost instantaneous responses, we don’t allow sufficient space to consider complicated problems. (2011, 166) Diane is not present-minded elsewhere. She is better described as fragmentminded. That form of distraction is the opposite of the creative distraction that Greenblatt proposes, and so distraction-as-fragmentation is the contemporary problem of narrative.

The idea of living in an “age of distraction” brings to mind Walter Benjamin’s

two famous essays written in 1936: “The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility” and “The Storyteller”. Both essays make claims about distraction, and it’s an open question whether these claims are as contradictory as they at first appear to be. The “Technological Reproducibility” essay makes a case for distraction rather than absorption as the preferred mode of aesthetic reception. Distraction fractions the aura that gives canonical art its received authority and opens perception to new art forms, principally cinema, that Benjamin celebrates. “Even the distracted person can form habits,” Benjamin (2002) writes. “The sort of distraction that is provided by art represents a covert measure of of the extent to which it has become possible to perform new tasks of apperception.” He concludes this section of his essay proclaiming, “Reception in distraction ... finds in film its true training ground” (2002, 120). Thus goes Benjamin’s praise of distraction.

“The Storyteller”, on the other hand, begins with a complaint that human

have lost their capacity for storytelling. “One meets with fewer and fewer people who know how to tell a tale properly,” Benjamin writes. “More and more often, there

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is embarrassment all around when the wish to hear a story is expressed. It is as if a capability that seemed inalienable to us, the securest among our possessions, has been taken from us: the ability to share experiences” (2002, 143). Benjamin equates the loss of storytelling with the loss of experience. “Experience has fallen in value,” he writes; “And it looks as if it may fall into bottomlessness.” He attributes this fall in the value of experience to World War I and the post-war conditions of inflation, what he calls “bodily experience by mechanical warfare,” and “moral experience by those in power” (2002, 144). As his argument progresses, Benjamin is most concerned with the loss of oral communication: “Experience which is passed from mouth to mouth is the source from which all storytellers have drawn” (2002, 144).

So in one of Benjamin’s essays we find praise of mechanized art, specifically

film as training in distraction as reception. And in the other, published in the same year, we have a lament for the loss of experience due to conditions of mechanized war and the loss of orality. If these claims are not flat out contradictory, they certainly seem to reflect different sensibilities. We might simply dismiss the disjunction between arguments as a reflection of Benjamin’s own distraction during times that were increasingly ominous for him, but that seems too easy.

Benjamin’s two claims seem less opposed--and may even approach

complementarity--when we attend to what he most values about film in the “Technological Reproducibility” essay. In what I find to be the clearest and most forceful argument in an essay that Benjamin’s contemporaries--specifically Brecht and Adorno--found anything but clear, Benjamin writes about the terms on which the film audience identifies with the film actor. He describes the actor in terms that remind us of Turkle’s description of Diane; like her, the film actor performs in fragments. The actor gives his or her performance before what Benjamin calls a “group of specialists”-film technicians, producers, and a director-- “who are in a position to intervene in his performance at any time.” “Shots are filmed in a number of takes,” Benjamin writes. Benjamin then reaches the core of his argument about the film audience’s identification with the actor and, in that identification, the political value of film: To perform in the glare of arc lamps while simultaneously meeting the demands of the microphone is a test performance of the highest order. To accomplish it is to preserve one’s humanity in the face of the apparatus. Interest in this performance is widespread. For the majority of city dwellers,

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throughout the workday in offices and factories, have to relinquish their humanity in the face of an apparatus. In the evenings these same masses fill the cinemas, to witness the film actor taking revenge on their behalf not only by asserting his humanity ... against the apparatus, but by placing that apparatus in the service of his triumph. (2002, 111)

We clearly have to do a lot of updating to bring Benjamin into the century

of iDevices. People no longer leave the apparatus of the office behind at the end of the day and go to a cinema. Often, people watch the cinema on the same device on which they have spent the day working, or a similar device. People in some cubicles undoubtedly feel they are relinquishing their humanity in the face of an apparatus, but then they switch screens to Facebook or Second Life or maybe pornography, which are both a means of escape and resistance. Transforming the work device into a social and entertainment device becomes a means of asserting one’s humanity in the face of an apparatus.

In both “Technological Reproducibility” and “The Storyteller”, the

fundamental problem is the loss of experience--alienation from the conditions in which people are forced to live. In “Technological Reproducibility”, the apparatus that instigates this loss becomes a means of reasserting humanity. In “The Storyteller” no such claims are advanced. Benjamin looks back to a storyteller, Nikolai Leskov (18311895), whom he describes as “at home in distant places as well as distant times” (2002, 145). Leskov is a paradigm of the storyteller who asserts his or her humanity in a fundamentally different way than the film actor; not in fragments, but in grasping long stretches of experience. “For he is granted the ability to reach back through a whole lifetime .... His gift is the ability to relate his life; his distinction, to be able to relate his entire life” (2002, 162; emphasis in original). A common problem of asserting one’s humanity finds radically different solutions in the two essays, one apparently looking forward and the other looking back. The film actor finds humanity in reassembled fragments; the storyteller works with wholes, as Benjamin emphasizes, “his entire life.”

Let me now switch, abruptly, to conditions of contemporary medical practice

as a venue in which we can observe the multiple shapes of distraction and the problem of asserting one’s humanity in the face of an apparatus that threatens the capacity for experience. What is this apparatus, and how to healthcare workers and patients both confront it, but confront different aspects of it? Or, what is the characteristic distraction for both clinicians and patients, how does this affect their respective capacities for

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narrative, and how might narrative be an antidote to distraction?

So many stories might be told of both clinician and patient distraction that

I will quote only two summary statements as stand-ins for all those stories. On the patient side, I’ll go back to William James but this time quote something written to him. When James’s heart showed serious signs of giving out, his brother Henry. Responding to the news of William’s ill health, Henry, who knew what it was like to be ill, wrote: “Oh your poor distracted doctor-ridden carcase” (quoted in Richardson 2007, 401). That line could be unpacked at considerable length, but let me only emphasize the most obvious point Henry James is making. Doctors distract. From what? we ask.

To suggest what medicine distracts patients from, I’ll quote a contemporary

witness. In Christopher Hitchens’s (2012) posthumously published writings on his terminal cancer, he talks about the prayers offered on his behalf by various Christian groups with whom he had debated his ideas about religion; that is, his opponents as he argued his militant atheism. Some groups interpreted Hitchens’s illness as God’s retribution, but others were more generous. When Hitchens asked one pastor what exactly he was praying for, the response was that he prayed for three things: “that I would fight off the disease, that I would make myself right for eternity, and that the process would bring the two of us back into contact,” and he added that the third prayer has already been answered (2012, 16).

We could each make our own lists of what to pray for when critically ill,

but those three seem a pretty good start. The distraction caused by the demands of the medical system, in which the patient becomes a cog, gives such exclusive primacy to the first point of prayer--fighting off the disease--that it distracts from the second and third points. I’d call these the existential task of illness--what Hitchens’s friend describes as making oneself right for eternity--and the social task, making contact with those who matter and developing those contacts. Going back to Schutz’s concept of a paramount reality, medicine--as the apparatus that the patient confronts (and then specific machines within that organizational apparatus)--is an especially jealous paramount reality. Patients have other work to do, and becoming doctor-ridden can be a distraction from that work.

The doctor--and here I use that term as a proxy for all healthcare workers-

-is no less distracted, but distracted differently. Again I’ll use one brief quotation to signify a mountain of concerns. Recently in the online newsletter Pulse (2013),

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subtitled “Voice from the heart of medicine,” Regina Harrell, an Alabama physician, writes with elegant and poignant precision about the lack of fit between one of her patients as she knows him--Dr. Harrell actually makes home visits to her very elderly patients--and the check-boxes on the electronic health record that she is required to use to document each visit. The check boxes require her to repeatedly emphasize some aspects of her patient to a level she finds disrespectful. Significant nuances are lost when she has to make binary decisions about a condition that the patient has in part. And there is much about her patient for which there is no check box. The sum of the boxes are both a misrepresentation of her patient, and the requirement to fill in all the boxes is a significant distraction to Dr. Harrell. The most specific effect of the apparatus she confronts is that “I spent more time checking boxes than talking to patients and their families.” More systematic time-and-motion research on hospital residents supports the generalizability of this sad conclusion. Harrell’s report offers the most stark example of Benjamin’s prophecy that experience loses its value in confrontations with mechanization.

Here we circle back to the issue with which I began my discussion of the

complexities of usages of distraction. From the perspective of medical administrators and healthcare accountants, what counts are fully completed electronic records; that is the paramount reality to which they are present-minded. They would certainly not say that seeing patients is a distraction--most would sincerely regret that implication--but for them what literally counts is having the check-boxes filled in. From the perspective of institutional medicine, whether and how a critically ill person puts him or herself right with eternity, and how social ties are maintained or even enhanced are, again, not what anyone would explicitly call a distraction, but the system treats these as distractions.

Narrative, by which I mean storytelling in Benjamin’s sense of deepened

experience, drawing upon reflections of a whole life, expressed at some point orally to listeners who are present, is disrupted by the distractions of institutional medicine. Anatole Broyard said it most explicitly: “doctors discourage our stories” (1992, 52). But a physician like Regina Harrell would add, healthcare systems discourage doctors from being the co-constructors of the stories that Broyard wants his doctor to participate in. For storytellers, medical institutional systems are a distraction. For institutional systems, people’s experiential stories are a distraction. And that is where I believe we are, right now.

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I conclude with the image I began with, the large fellow careening down the

sidewalk, so preoccupied with wherever he is present-minded that he forces others out of his way. The contest over what counts as a distraction--which distractions are good and which are bad--is not played out on a level field. Medical systems are big enough to force both patients and individual physicians out of the way, to effectively label any person’s concerns as secondary to institutional paramount realities. I give the last word to William James: “The bigger the unit you deal with, the hollower, the more brutal, the more mendacious is the life displayed” (Richardson 2007, 384). And that makes it imperative to keep being storytellers, but we require the will to sustain a habit of doing so.

REFERENCES Barzun, J. (1983). A Stroll With William James. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Benjamin, W. (2002). Selected Writing, Volume 3, 19351938. Cambridge MS: Harvard University Press. Broyard, A. (1992). Intoxicated by My Illness. New York: Clarkson Potter. Greenblatt, S. (2013). On the Edge of Slander. New York Review of Books, September 26, 50-51. Harrell, R. (2013). Checking Boxes. Pulse: Voices from the heart of medicine. Retrieved October 18, 2013. Hitchens, C. (2012). Mortality. New York: Twelve. Richardson, RD. (2007). William James: In the Maelstrom of American Modernism. Boston: Mariner Books. Schutz, A. (1970). Reflections on the Problem of Relevance. New Haven CT: Yale University Press. Schutz, A. (1971). Collected Papers I. The Problem of Social Reality. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. Turkle, S. (2011). Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other. New York: Basic Books.

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PHILLY by This city doesn’t move her mouth except in screaming. No one tends to her neon-light irises and the rash of empty churches across her cheekbones. I remember at night she used to roll over, darken my vision, leaning in for a kiss. First light was the lull when she pulled away. There was barely a pockmark or protrusion on her before pistols and syringes took her skin. I searched for solace in U-Hauls and Greyhounds and left her like that, lying on her back.

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COMMENT ON ILLNESS AND NARRATIVE DISTRACTION by

Larry Davidson

Frank encourages us to “keep being storytellers” in the face of an institutional medical system that is distracted by a combination of mechanization, check boxes, and the provision of billable services. He argues that narrative is an antidote to these distractions, and that we need to summon our collective will to (re)turn to the habit of using stories as a way of reclaiming the healing arts as a fully human endeavor. The founding of this very journal was based on a similar desire to infuse medicine in general, and the mental health field in particular, with the arts as one avenue of expression of this shared humanity. But there is more to Frank’s call than the simple act of sharing stories—as poignant and illuminating as they might be. Frank also challenges us to infuse the concrete, everyday practice of medicine with our patients’ concerns. Borrowing his terms, we are challenged to integrate the patient’s “paramount reality” with what has been the paramount reality of contemporary medicine. Or, to be more concrete and specific, and to borrow from Hitchens’ friend, we are challenged to bring the values of maintaining or enhancing social connections and making oneself right with eternity, as well as other basic human concerns, into the routine, everyday conversations physicians have with their patients. How are we to do this, and what kind of difference will it make if we do? For the sake of this brief commentary, I am going to assume that the field of narrative medicine has not been entirely successful in bridging this gap. I also am going to assume that we cannot require physicians-in-training to experience their own serious medical condition, to see the health care system through a patient’s eyes—as happened to the surgeon portrayed by William Hurt in the 1991 movie “The Doctor”—in order to humanize their practice. Narrative medicine has remained too distant from routine practice, while relying on each physicians’ life experiences may be focusing too close, erroneously blaming systemic failures on well-intended and caring

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professionals. Dr. Harrell, the Alabama physician whose piece Frank highlighted, is surely not the only physician to complain about the “lack of fit” between their patients and the requirements of their electronic medical records. Might we target somewhere in between?

As a place to start, we know from research that a matter of only a few

more minutes spent in contact between physicians and patients may make a disproportionately significant difference in the quality and effectiveness of care. For example, physicians who spend less than 7 minutes with their patients are less likely to provide information and life style advice, less likely to focus on preventive activities, less likely to enable their patients to engage in self-care, less likely to recognize and address longer-term and psychosocial issues, and, as a result, are more likely to require more follow-up visits than those who spend more than 10 minutes with their patients (Wilson & Childs, 2002). In terms of quality and effectiveness, endoscopists who had an average withdrawal time of 12 minutes detected nearly four times as many adenomas than those who had an average withdrawal time of 6 minutes (Barclay, Vicari, Doughty, et al., 2006). And in terms of cost, physicians who saw patients for less than 15 minutes were much more likely to have at least one malpractice claim made against them, while those who spent at least 18 minutes with patients were more likely not to have any (Levinson, Roter, Mullooly, et al., 1997).

As the dates of these citations suggest, we have known for quite a while

that rushed, i.e., distracted, medicine makes for sloppy medicine, which makes for bad outcomes. But these data, apparently, have not provided persuasive enough evidence to change practice, even in this era of “evidence-based medicine.” What these data do suggest, though, is that it may take just a few additional minutes to practice in a more humane way—to elicit and consider the patient’s own paramount reality—and that the benefits of doing so will more than pay for itself in the long run should politicians and policy makers find it possible to adopt a longer-term view. Capitalism and concerns over cost, then, cannot be the only culprit accounting for the current mechanized state of American medicine. The freer market created by the Affordable Care Act may begin to work its magic in making medicine more cost effective by focusing on quality and outcomes (as its architects had proposed), but this is unlikely to be the complete story.

At least one other factor that needs to be considered was suggested by

a friend of mine who is a French psychiatrist, who defended me at a meeting held in Paris at which I was talking about recovery from depression (something I know about both personally and professionally). I was criticized for not appreciating the

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gravity of the illness when my friend stood up and remarked: “The problem here is that we doctors were trained on cadavers. We only learned about death and disease. What do we know about life?” The perspectival nature of consciousness that James and Frank are pointing out, the fact that my experience and what I attend to is different from yours, is due to the fact that we are embodied subjects. Our bodies are not the “objects” that Descartes and centuries of Western philosophers who have followed him have taken them to be. If we want to move beyond an objectifying approach to medicine, we also need to move beyond an objectifying approach to the human body.

Stories are important because they tell us who we are as unique individuals.

But we are unique individuals because we are embodied, and thereby individuated, forms of consciousness. We will continue to have a mechanized, and distracted, system of institutional medicine as long as doctors view the human body as separate from the person who “owns” it. We do not “own” our bodies, and our bodies cannot always be fixed in the way a mechanic fixes a car. Sometimes they can be, like when I dislocated my shoulder. But most of the time, when things get serious, whose body it is that we are assessing or treating will be an important influence on the course and outcome of care. To make room for the patient’s paramount reality in the relationship, physicians will need a map and surveying tools they can use to navigate this all-too-close, yet at the same time incredibly unfamiliar, terrain.

CITATIONS Barclay RL, Vicari JJ, Doughty AS, Johanson JF, Greenlaw RL. (2006). Colonoscopic withdrawal times and adenoma detection during screening colonoscopy. New England Journal of Medicine, 355(24), 2533-2541. Levinson W, Roter DL, Mullooly JP, Dull VT, Frankel RM. (1997). Physician patient communication: The relationship with malpractice claims among primary care physicians and surgeons. Journal of the American Medical Association, 277, 553-559. Wilson A, Childs S. (2002). The relationship between consultation length, process, and outcomes in general practice: a systematic review. British Journal of General Practice, 52, 1012-1020.

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ELECTRIC WILD by

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INTERROGATIVE by

Emily Lazar

Who is this man who doesn’t promise a blessed thing aloud, but inks himself a vow upon his skin? He’s a September man, a waiting man, a three-phone-calls-and-a-bottle-against-the-wall man. Used to slips tens under the hem of her dress when she sat at a hotel desk in Astoria. And what’s the bravest thing he’s never done? To pick up bad habits like flypaper, the half-opened door of her skirt within an inch of his eye. Later: search for solace in U-Hauls and Greyhounds and leave her like that, lying on her back. To whom did he confess age sixty-seven petrified him forty years before? He won’t remember a sad spinster spun out on sloe gin. She kept the rivers of Eastern Europe captive in her varicose veins. And is this his first time, his final? The man shrugs unfinished shoulders. He is still a genius when he sleeps.

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FIZZY LIFTING by

Sonya Huber

“My dear boy, I promise you they’ll be quite all right. When they leave here, they’ll be completely restored to their normal, terrible old selves. But maybe they’ll be a little bit wiser for the wear. Anyway, don’t worry about them.” - Willy Wonka in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

Before I met and loved an addict, I thought I knew what it meant. I had been

educated about alcoholism and substance abuse. I thought I knew the scope of the challenge. I had done time—years’ worth—in rooms in circles of chairs with brokenhearted people, in groups for families and friends of alcoholics and addicts. Addiction and alcohol threaded through my life like a river cuts landscape. I believed I was going in with no illusions. Like the children traipsing into Willie Wonka’s factory, I would remain master of my desires.

I graduated from college an anxiety-riddled mess and moved from the

Midwest to Boston simply because Boston was not the Midwest, breathlessly eager to live any life beyond my own. Boston offered me my first post-college apartment, my first post-college breakup, and my first car stolen and returned to me broken. The city also gave me my first glimpse of my Golden Ticket, though at the time it looked like a fight club too real for Chuck Palahniuk.

I worked at a photo-processing place for a few months, temped for a few

more, then got a job with benefits as a counselor in a youth home. All I knew was that I wanted to help teenagers in pain. Immersion in a house of therapy and therapists

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led to impromptu psychoanalysis in the staff room and at the bar. How great to have friends so devoted to Therapy Nation! Our pooled therapy collective made up for our wages, which hovered around $16,500 and didn’t include mental health benefits.

I opened my mouth to tell a story over coffee to one of these coworker-

friends, and instantly it seemed I found myself holding a pamphlet with the support group’s meeting times. I went to a therapist to get help for another issue and was routed to this same support group. All roads, for me, led to the basement. I was apparently a commercial for something I didn’t know I was selling. Because I was a panicked, often-crying, cash-poor, desperate-feeling waif and this group was free, I thought I’d go eventually. Around the same time—I can’t remember now what came first—a supervisor asked me to take some of the teens with drug problems to a support group downtown. Driving a van full of devil-may-care teenagers from the group home to any destination often included one of them opening the door and bolting from a vehicle at a stop light, or crawling on the floor to hold down the gas pedal, or pounding each other to a pulp in the back seat. I shepherded them to a high-ceilinged room in Boston’s bunker-like city hall made of concrete, and they fidgeted shyly under the easy glances of wizened Harley guys and assorted future versions of themselves. The four or five teens slouched in plastic chairs, rolling eyes and studying their shoes, waiting uncomfortably for the drug addicts’ meeting to begin. My feet remained in contact with the cement floor, ready to spring up and follow a kid who might claim a need to use the bathroom and then detour to the subway. I was ready, as always, to be pulled into the hallway to talk down a weepy, angry, or flashbacked teen. I labored under the false impression that this was just another night at work. The room got silent, and the strange creed was read from wrinkled pages pressed in the smudged, plastic sheet protectors of worn binders. They recited a jumble of numbers, each followed with a statement of action, a catalogue of little stories: “we” did this, “we” realized. The intonation of the word “We” drew me in with its heart-opening pronoun. Then the first names unfurled around the rough rim of the table, each claiming

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a “and-I’m-an …” as a surname followed by their identification of alcoholic and addict. What would come next? Would there be bitterness and rage? Would bystanders be blamed? I tensed in my seat and winced. Instead there was an expansive quiet. Instead of a cacophony of voices there was a rule: one person spoke at a time and got to finish sentences. The very air transfigured. I had never known a hush so reverent, urgent, and practical. That highceilinged concrete room seemed supported by a routine outside of itself that took no effort to launch and required no vestments, a kind of anarchist Catholicism. It gives me goose bumps now, eighteen years later, to remember that exact room, that exact night. A thin man with a shaved head began to speak. One of his arms was cradled in a sling, and he spoke so casually I thought he was going to make an announcement about the coffee. Instead he briefly told the group that his arm didn’t work anymore. He had overdosed and laid unconscious on his stomach, arm under the weight of his body, for three days, he said, and in the process he’d cut off circulation to the limb, which would now be mostly unusable. Then he laughed. He laughed as casually as if he’d spilled coffee on his shirt. His eyes lit up and he shook his head and he laughed, and the room laughed with him and shook its collective head. That night I drove home a van full of teenagers slightly quieted and thoughtful, and as I piloted our vessel onto the highway I felt the secret shock of internal inflation. A second self expanded like an air bladder or another organ. I felt as if I belonged there among the ravaged and slinged and jack-booted—but why? Something in me answered with the same kind of amazed laughter. I saw this luminous organ inflate and felt slightly uneasy, having no name for what had occurred in response to the recognition of pain. Identification: but with what? I didn’t like drugs, barely drank, and had no compulsion to use. But somehow these people felt like siblings, like family. In Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Charlie and Grandpa watch as families are consumed and deformed by unchecked desires: Augustus with his chocolate, Veruca with her greed, Mike Teevee with his electronic eyes. The parents urge and enable them to become what they consume while the psychedelic Oompa Loompas’ running

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commentary offers the stinging opportunity for accountability. What I love about this movie is that no one is innocent, and everyone is tempted by the lure of seemingly magical detours. Left behind by the group, Charlie and Grandpa sip the Fizzy Lifting Drink. At first they have fun, playing at being birds and airplanes as they air-swim, flip, and twirl. Then they realize they can’t stop their ascent. Above them an exhaust fan roars, its propeller blades chopping the air. Charlie and Grandpa panic, howl, and flail as the buzz of the metal approaches. By accident they discover that laughter pops the bubbles in their guts. We laugh in the meetings because when we do, bubbles of loneliness float up to the roofs of our mouths in a golden lightness. No one but these people understand what my laugh really means. This secret laughter is bought with pain and reckoning. If I call it trauma laughter, it sounds frozen and sad, reactive, but it’s not bitter—it is science. It’s the gasp and joy of mutual discovery, the shorthand of a thousand steps in error, the sharing of failed field research, a collective education project of radical proportions. Paulo Friere, a Brazilian philosopher of education, pioneered the approach of critical pedagogy as a means for social change. He advocated for peasants and other oppressed communities to self-organize into groups, identify their own agendas, and ask questions of themselves to analyze their conditions and better their situations.1 While I was reading Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Friere in political collectives, I had not yet made the connection between his words and the radical grassroots field research happening in the church basements where another part of myself went to save all of me. Those groups, so often seen as regressively religious or “self-help,” echo Friere’s work: self-governing, profit-averse, saving people for free. I’ve signed on to left-wing collectives in several states, but I’ve seen nothing more radical than that basement commitment to life-or-death praxis. The laughter opens the lungs and relights the world. It comes when people have all been through the same secret thing and then they name it to each other. It becomes funny so quickly. “Gallows humor,” they call it, but it doesn’t feel as close to hanging as it does to delight in a near-miss, a slightly chilled joy at momentary survival. I’ll tell you why this is funny. Like a joke’s punch-line, the pattern we have 1

Paulo Friere, Pedagogy of the Oppressed.

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missed is revealed. And our intelligence and delight rest on pattern-recognition. When we see a pattern—what we all do the same, what happened to all of us—we laugh with infant joy, especially when it’s a shared pattern, something we created together, even if it is diseased and partly sad. It’s a delight to share the pattern among people who have felt and created one similar, our own version of a village’s blanket-weave or basket-pattern. The laughter also comes from lightness; since you have made the same strange object of your life, odds are you won’t think my pattern ugly or wrong. I found a meeting for friends and family of addicts, and with embarrassment, regret, and a sense of shouldering life’s burden, I realized that I had found my people. I have to say—out of love—that we are less Harley and more nerdy, less hilarious and more quiet and pained, than a roomful of addicts. If you love your nation you have to see its faults and its outlines; we are, by nature and experience, a tense, worrying, throat-clutching lot. The strangers who sat and spoke about their days in those rooms described my internal terrain to a degree that was spooky. It was like visiting the same psychic every week and hearing tiny details that were each right on the money. So I kept going back. I noticed there was laughter there. As things started to thaw and poke their sharp ice-floe pieces at my insides, I started to just sit there and cry and think and want to throw up and hide but also to breathe in a way that up until now had taken either a minimum of an hour-long walk or some Klonopin. I came back for the oxygen. Later, I curled viciously in a plastic chair, technically homeless, worldly possessions shoved in a large backpack heaved up the subway stairs and dropped next to my chair. Laughter from rows over made me want to tear someone’s skin off in broad, wet sheets, yet I couldn’t bolt. This was the only place where no one cared if you cried in a corner and blew your nose on your sleeve. They’d pass me Kleenex and I’d snatch it with hatred and they’d smile. Someone would tell a sad story, everyone would laugh, and I would think, that is the saddest fucking story I ever heard, and these people are loony. Twenty minutes more and I am out of here.

I found a place to live and kept coming back. I usually found a chair at the

edge of the circle and tucked my feet up on the chair so that my shins made a wall

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to protect me. They let me sit in the back and cry. They let me accumulate a pile of crumpled tissues, sweep them up in a rangy ragged hand as the prayer was said, and they let me run away. Damn them, I thought, and their totally uncool club. I never expected it to become my home. Having a home or a family like that doesn’t solve anything. Roald Dahl’s version of childhood doesn’t involve easy happy endings. In Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, he respected children enough to acknowledge that we come from partial darkness. The beasts we fight are always complex and compelling. In the same way, membership in this basement club where we gathered to fight and understand our own demons never promised an easy way to extinguish those demons. That would be a child’s fantasy— and not even a very interesting story. There’s an easy story told in shiny board books about what it means to “get better” or to “survive,” to “triumph over adversity” or to “recover.” It’s a commercial of self-help in which an actor with overly bleached teeth makes outrageous promises to sell a product promising the end to pain. Roald Dahl would cringe at such a narrative, would think it too insulting and damaging even for children. He would never frame and copper-plate a story of past adversity, would never sell it as a memento to ward off danger. He would never pretend to children that the pain is part of a previous age. Anyone who is injured will tell you that the scars from an injury inhabit the body for the rest of one’s life, pinching in the cold, itching in the summer, serving always as a reminder. J.R.R. Tolkien and J.K. Rowling’s books, too, kindle such a flame in the hearts of children and adults because the heroes show their damage, their lifelong scars, their fears and the permanent change the journey writes on their bodies and minds. This is a J.K. Rowling story of recovery and of fighting darkness; the darkness is the birth of my essence, my meager powers, and my weaknesses. When I first read Harry Potter I shuddered constantly as many readers do at her scar metaphor and its keen insight into generational trauma. The dangers are real and serious. The cures are not easy. Therefore the failures along the way are not failures; they are necessary and to be expected. A friend asked me if the basement meetings I attended for years had failed. Did those meetings and their wisdom not work because I wasn’t immediately cured? The story I believe is that I came out each week as flawed as I went in. This

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story, like Harry Potter, like the Lord of the Rings, is a generational saga about fighting dragons, about flaws, about darkness and failure. It is a story about learning to see in the dark, about being transfigured by love, about learning new languages and being willing to walk a long walk outside the place of easy comfort. In the movie, Charlie Bucket and Grandpa are denied their prize by Mr. Wonka when they go to complain about being eliminated from the contest. They knock on Wonka’s door, and an irritated and outraged Wonka rounds on them, “You stole Fizzy Lifting Drinks. You bumped into the ceiling, which now has to be washed and sterilized. So you get nothing! You lose! Good day sir!” he screams, outraged at the violation of his trust. Charlie is redeemed when, unprompted by anything more than a prick of his conscience, he pulls an everlasting gobstopper out of his pocket and sets it on Wonka’s desk as he is about to depart. With this tiny admission of his own wrongs, he is shocked to learn that he wins the kingdom of candy. That’s the price we also have to pay, pulling out of our pockets the self-righteous and infantile rage we might suckle ourselves on until we die. We open our pockets and have to laugh at our roles and ourselves in the Technicolor madness. We are anonymous. We are children who visited Wonka’s factory and find ourselves reflected in our desires. What we share is that we each know the lost moments in a week collect like crumbs and pennies beneath the couch cushions of madness, grief, and despair. Yet we laugh constantly. Out of the basement I am often embarrassed at the sheer weight of my naked laugh. But in the basement it sprawls where it will. It catches some off guard and they look over and giggle. Yeah, we counted pills. Holy shit, we drove to find you at the bars and hauled you home. We planned you dead, we wished you dead, believed you dead. We left and came back and threw things and tucked away grievances like Everlasting Gobstoppers. We did such crazy stuff—sometimes we still do—all in the madness that comes from being collateral damage to a whirlwind in which we thought we could fly.

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SOARING by If I could

Pat Vidal

free myself from this knot of arms, legs and head tucked into the curving despair of me,

I would be a gull, soaring and lofting on winds high over the sea,

wheeling in a flashing arc in that eternity between the sun and my shadow scudding on the sea.

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CLING by

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Portia Watson


RISING OUT OF SLEEP by I decide to keep my appointment with what light remains, still hearing the voice before waking.

Charles Thielman

Boot-prints in blue snow to a barn, thick blanket waiting on stall rail. Hands and breath on coarse mane, we canter into what dawn skies offer. Our trails of breath fog dissolving while branch shadows form and begin to pull back from a white field. Owls flying into dream, my throat close to her muscled neck.

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SPEAK YOUR PEACE by

Portia Watson


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CHARNEL GROUND PEOPLE by Under the Weather

Lisa Levy

An early Spring New England day of my thirty-third year, and I’m under the weather again. Against all winter odds, there are buds on the dogwood trees in the divinity school quad--but the forecast is sunshine with a chance of locusts, for which I am glad. On days like this, the cloudless sky makes everything worse. On a bench in the shade, surrounded by sun-giddy graduate students sitting in circles on the grass and a ring of barefoot, khaki-clad men throwing a Frisbee on the lawn, I do what I always do when I’m under the weather, and conjure the kindest place I can imagine. Today, it is a blue room, surrounded by the ebb-and-flow sounds of a winter ocean. A hyacinth macaw named Pearl for company. A hanging basket of night-blooming Morning Glories in the window. There are no headaches in the blue room, and only sometimes tears, which I collect in paper cups and distill. I drink the water, because it’s important to stay hydrated, and from the salt, I sculpt human figures in pain. Moonlight breathes them awake, and they climb from the blue room through the open window and run glittering into the sea. They glow for a moment beneath the nightdark waves like subaquatic stars before they dissolve. When animals die, the ocean washes their bodies away before I have a chance to see. I leave a key under the mat for the Rabbi, and keep a spare set of plastic utensils, in case he should stop by. In case he, too, is under the weather and in need of a blue room. Come in out of the locusts, I’ll say, You’ll catch your death.

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Charnel Ground Blues July of my thirty-third year. I was pilgriming from Grand Central Station to the Rubin Museum of Himalyan Art in Chelsea, twenty-seven blocks away, on foot because of a longstanding aversion to the subway (an incomprehensible liminal labyrinth, millions of people who know exactly where they’re going). There were wing-shaped patches of rubbed-raw skin on my feet--I’d had to stop at a pharmacy for band-aids--and I suddenly felt like a girl very far from home. I arrived at the museum hot, anxious, and limping. In contrast, the other Friday night patrons smelled expensive. They exuded a mysterious, reptilian coolness that whispered of apartments with central air, doormen, private cars, pedicures. I felt exposed, as if the throbbing places on my feet were a portal, accessible to these diamond-beaked strangers, into the flayed recesses of my heart. Wandering amid tapestries depicting the six realms of the Tibetan Buddhist wheel of existence, a collection of implements used in sacrificial “wrath offerings,” and a sculpture of Krishnacharya riding a zombie, I found a small case containing ritual instruments used for meditation. The one that snagged my attention appeared to be a flute or pipe, painted orange with black stripes like a tiger’s coat, adorned with tassels. I sought out the appropriate placard. In benign font, it read: “Shinbone trumpet. Nineteenth century. Human bone, human hair.” It continued, The shinbone trumpet is associated with siddhas and yogis who dwell in charnel grounds. The charnel grounds are where corpses are cremated or chopped up and left to be devoured by wild animals. The interlude between death and the disposal of the body is an especially perilous time, and if ritual protocol is not strictly followed, corpses can become possessed by malevolent spirits. Thus charnel grounds are considered haunted, lonely places inhabited by the dead, ghouls, and demons. Meditating at night in total isolation is a challenge undergone by those seeking transcendence. I stood in front of the case, trying to absorb the music of the silent instrument into my body—but I couldn’t have felt farther from a South Asian charnel ground. The Rubin, the reincarnation of a Barney’s department store, was coated with a residue of luxury. The sleek, cool-skinned patrons took only casual glances into the case before moving along to more eye-catching rugs and sculptures. High heels beat

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a clipped rhythm against marble floors. Docents shrouded in ennui made practiced jokes while explicating Tibetan Buddhist cosmology. The two lords of the charnel grounds stationed at the entrance--robed figures with enormous skulls for heads and carnivorous, come-hither grins--seemed more like grotesque mannequins displaying the latest fashion than looming reminders of mortality. I lingered, trying to hear the song of the bone trumpet, until the uniformed guards began to urge people gently toward the exit. This is a story about charnel grounds. For the fifteen years since I was diagnosed with major depressive disorder, I have been periodically sent back to that place of death and held there, unable to speak, unable to leave. There is no transcendence in this story. There are malevolent spirits, and hungry ghosts, and vultures big as kindergartners eyeing me while they pick through the bones of others who have succumbed. I’m under the weather, I say to excuse my months-long absence from my life, the generic colloquialism papering over an intimately personalized nightmare. I would like to be able to tell a story that concludes with revelation and redemption, with a self-opening to God that gives meaning and beauty to this ugly thing inside me. But after almost a decade and a half, life has taken on a provisional quality, and six, or eight, or eighteen months of more or less “good” days doesn’t meant I won’t find myself once more among the corpses and carrion birds. It comes quickly, a dark tunnel swallowing a moving train, or it comes slowly, the steady drip of a leaky faucet that yellows the porcelain, a geologic process of erosion that one day gives way to a crater of sorrow. That is my story. There are also the stories of others. For a year and a half, I held a Sunday afternoon church service on the acute inpatient unit of a psychiatric ward. The Fourth Floor at the Connecticut Mental Health Center housed ten men and ten women, all of whom were experiencing acute episodes of a severe mental illness, many of whom had a dual diagnosis of addiction. Most of them had been homeless at some point during the twelve months prior to their admission. Our Fourth Floor House Church took place in the Groups Room, the same room where Sandy, the infinitely goodnatured recreational therapist, helped the residents brainstorm healthy coping skills while they did art projects that involved some combination of construction paper and finger paint, children’s safety scissors and macaroni. Each Sunday, we laid out a colorful plastic tablecloth--bright green for Palm Sunday, lavender for Easter, a buttery yellow, scattered with autumn leaves, to celebrate

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the advent of Fall. The plate that held the sweet-smelling loaf of Stop & Shop-brand challah was always the centerpiece, surrounded by paper cups of white grape juice (white because one of our regulars believed she was allergic to the color purple) and battery-powered flameless votive candles, which I was constantly giving away to patients who were afraid of the dark. During the service we prayed, read Gospel passages, sung Amazing Grace and We Shall Overcome, and shared communion. Occasionally, afterwards, there was a line for hugs. We had our regulars: Bill, who combed his hair, tucked his button-down shirt into his sweatpants, and told me each time I saw him about the night the Big Dipper came into his living room. There was Penny, who was a nurse before paranoid schizophrenia struck in the late ’70s. She once made me a sign in Art Group that said, Chaplains are born to love and to be loved. Bettina was the unit’s resident comedian. The other residents giggled when she answered the community phone, “Macy’s Department Store! There’s nobody here but us chickens!” Whenever I offered a spontaneous prayer, she asked, “Did you make that one up by yourself?” and then muttered, “Now she’s a smart cookie.” After my encounter at the Rubin, I came across a fragment in a book on Buddhist ritual practices: “The bones of suicides are the best for making bone trumpets because their spirits stay in their bones, and this gives the trumpet power. The sound of this trumpet makes the ghosts and evil spirits fly away.” Since then, I’ve begun to imagine a charnel ground people, troubled spirits of the dead and of the living, with immense power locked inside them. I imagine that there might just be another world touching this one, a world where powerful siddhas sit in perennial full lotus and wail on tiger-striped bone trumpets like lunatic bluesmen, the breath from their fear-dry mouths releasing the spirits trapped within to push back the dark. I imagine them sitting alone, unable to see one another but within earshot, playing a call and response, trumpet calling to trumpet, spirit to spirit, bone to bone. Depending on the day, we might be the siddha, or the trumpet. The one playing, or the one being played. There is no Easter at the end of this story, at least not so far. No empty tomb. No resurrection. Only a Gethsemane God who has been there, alone and afraid and weeping, to sit with me among the bones, who stays with me and prays for me when I cannot form the words. There is a siddha who plays a fierce, unholy trumpet, and disciples who dream unquiet dreams while their friend kneels by himself in the dark.

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GIVING IT TO THE RIVER by

Charles F. Thielman

Cliff turned collars of sunset gold, twilight climbing the roots of shadows,

I wade into shallows, arms out for balance, body sweated through a day of unloading boxcars to load truck-caves parked on summer sun baked blacktop. Current skimming layers of an inhaled pace, river a cool slice into this valley’s swath of leaden heat. Arms and legs off-duty, I float downriver with a thought of swimming back. Letting go of the strain of working in diesel swelter as bare rock darkens to accept what the night sky will lower through dense steam, I listen as traffic hiss slides off a highway curve and down slope below the sung approach to branch and nest. The river lugs dusk-released curves of blue through buoy bell clangs, inside the ocean. The faith I carry in pockets of marrow balanced now on a flat stone, body stretched out below shimmer, black fur dropping wet stars.

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DRAGON by

CJ Nye

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LIGHT BETWEEN STARS by

1. After the rain, she sniffs the air. It smells light. Condylura cristata: Star-nosed mole. Here we are linking our universe to this small, dirt bound thing. She loves the milk-white flesh of grubs. It is for her that the earth trembles and grass uproots itself and tulips fall in her wake. Daffodils, having survived a late frost, let go while all good dogs go crazy dancing in the yard. 2. The small, boxed azaleas outside Easthampton Savings Bank are nothing like the wild branches growing everywhere in my actual country. Nothing here is like that abundance where croaker are, and flounder grow fat on river bottoms

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where neighbors broke off blossoms of dogwood to bring to us with covered dishes that April. Music of bullfrogs in the back ponds. Breath of porpoise off the floating dock. 3. At night, now, light of titmouse, nuthatch, stoat, vole. Breath of sleeping dog. Breath of sleeping mole.

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Portia Watson


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Contributors

LARRY DAVIDSON is a Professor of Psychology in the Department of Psychiatry at Yale, where he directs the Program for Recovery and Community Health. His training, research, and policy interests focus on the interface of recovery in psychiatric and substance use disorders with membership in society. Much of this work has been oriented toward articulating a disability and civil rights perspective on psychiatric disorders. He enjoys spending time with his wife, their children, their friends, and their dogs, cooking, eating, celebrating, reading, and watching movies. ------------------------------------------JADYN DEWALD serves as Senior Poetry Editor for Silk Road Review, and his own work has appeared or is forthcoming in Beloit Poetry Journal, Bellevue Literary Review, Columbia Poetry Review, The National Poetry Review, West Branch, Witness, and many others. He currently lives with his wife and daughter in Athens, Georgia. ------------------------------------------J. DANIEL GRAHAM was raised in a military family and moved every two years for most of his life. Introduced to creative outlets at an early age, he has never forgotten the lessons of craft from his mother (a basket maker and calligrapher) and the lessons of engineering and risk from his father. His training in the arts—specifically printmaking—comes with a BFA at the University of Florida and an MFA from the University of Georgia. Daniel has also trained as a traditional furniture maker under woodworker Dennis Sitka in Washington DC. Currently, he is an Associate Professor of Art at Georgetown College in Kentucky where he teaches a variety of courses including Sculpture and Printmaking. He lives with his wife Holly, his daughter Olive, his son Thatcher, and their dogs Clover and Cricket. ------------------------------------------SONYA HUBER’s first book of creative nonfiction, Opa Nobody, was published by University of Nebraska Press in 2008, and her second book of creative nonfiction, Cover Me: A Health Insurance Memoir, was published by UNP in 2010. Sonya’s creative nonfiction has appeared in Creative Nonfiction, Fourth Genre, Crab Orchard Review, Sonora Review, Hotel Amerika, Literary Mama, Sports Literate, Kaleidoscope, and other journals. She currently teaches creative writing at Fairfield University and in Fairfield’s Low Residency MFA program.

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BETH FILSON is a graduate of the Iowa Writer’s Workshop. Her most recent poetry is forthcoming in Spoon River Poetry Review. She is also the co-author of a number of articles and manuals in the field of trauma-informed peer support. Aside from writing and consultation as a peer specialist in the field of trauma, Beth is a self-taught artist. She is from Georgia but considers Western Mass her home. ------------------------------------------ARTHUR FRANK is a professor at Betanien University College, Bergen, Norway and professor emeritus of sociology at the University of Calgary, where he has taught since 1975. Trained as a medical sociologist (Ph.D., Yale, 1975), he is the author of a memoir of critical illness, At the Will of the Body (1991; new edition 2002); a study of first-person illness narratives, The Wounded Storyteller (1995; expanded edition, 2013); a book on care as dialogue, The Renewal of Generosity: Illness, Medicine and How to Live (2004); and most recently, a book on how stories affect our lives, Letting Stories Breathe: A Socio-narratology (2010). ------------------------------------------ISSA IBRAHIM Born in 1965 in Jamaica, Queens, to a musician father and artist mother, Issa’s gifts for rendering were nurtured in a creative familial environment and inspired by Saturday morning cartoons, 1960s album art, comic books and science fiction. Only after aimless wandering, losing his mind, soul searching, and becoming twenty-year artist-in-residence at Creedmoor Psychiatric Center’s Living Museum did Issa sharpen his focus and embrace his love for the arts. Issa has become an awardwinning documentary filmmaker, been featured in an HBO documentary, an NPR audio story and in numerous international exhibitions. He creates art of all kinds, composing and performing original songs, writing like his life depends on it, and working on his relationship with God. ------------------------------------------GLORIA JORGENSEN is in her 60’s, lives in Coastal Northern California near a very small town (450 people) on 23 acres she’s been homesteading for about 25 years. She lives alone among bobcats, deer, and red-tailed hawks. Gloria can see the redwoodcovered mountains and hear the Pacific from her land near the Pomo reservation. ------------------------------------------EMILY LAZAR studied creative writing and psychology in college and always saw a strong connection between the two. She is now pursuing a degree in clinical psychology, and language and storytelling remain an integral part of the work she does. ------------------------------------------SUSAN L. LIN recently completed her MFA in Writing at California College of the Arts, where she spent her days photographing toy dinosaurs and eating free pie. Her novella Goodbye to the Ocean was a semifinalist in the 2012 Gold Line Press chapbook competition. Her short prose recently appeared or is forthcoming in Hayden’s Ferry Review, Ghost Town, Midway Journal, and MadHat Annual.

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the | volume 2; spring 2015 LISA A. LEVY is a writer and editor living and working in Houston, Texas, where she was born and raised. Lisa has a BA in English from Amherst College and received an MFA from Syracuse University’s Creative Writing Program. She was the fiction editor of the program’s national literary journal, Salt Hill, and taught both academic and creative writing to undergraduate and graduate students. Most recently, she graduated with a Master of Divinity from Yale, where she studied religion and literature and gained experience working as a chaplain with people struggling with severe mental illness. Her work has appeared in The Newtowner, Opium and online at killingthebuddha.com. She is currently working on her first collection of short stories. ------------------------------------------NOEMI MARTINEZ is a poet/writer and grad student living in South Texas. ------------------------------------------CONSTANCE MCKEE is a forensic psychiatrist and has recently received an MFA in creative writing from the Stonecoast program at the University of Southern Maine. ------------------------------------------CJ NYE holds a MA in Arts Administration from Columbia University and a BFA from the School of Visual Arts. You can follow her process in the studio on Facebook and Twitter at /CJNyeArt. For more information about CJ’s work, please visit her website at http://cjnye.com. ------------------------------------------CHELSI ROBICHAUD is a second year humanities major studying at Carleton University. Currently she is a staff writer for The Arbitrage magazine. ------------------------------------------NATHANIEL ST. AMOUR is a DC-based artist who recently graduated from the University of Tampa. He is currently working on a series that explores the dichotomy between humanity and nature. This theme is seen in how the paint in his works is applied copiously via a syringe and allowed to coalesce and run together, becoming an uncontrollable force of nature. He then draws on top of the dried paint with colored pencil or pen, attempting to alter that which was created by the natural flow of the medium, which becomes a metaphor for man’s need to shape the world towards his purposes. ------------------------------------------CHARLES THIELMAN grew up in Charleston, S.C., moved to Chicago, studied at redbricked universities and on city streets, and has enjoyed working as a social worker, truck driver, city bus driver and enthused bookstore clerk. Married on a Kauai beach, a loving Grandfather for five free spirits, his work as Poet and shareholder in an independent Bookstore’s collective continues! His other poems have been accepted by literary journals, such as The Pedestal, Gargoyle, Poetry365, The Criterion [India], Poetry Salzburg [Austria], Gangway, Windfall [Oregon], Muse [India], Battered Suitcase, Poetry Kanto [Japan], Open Road, Poetry Kit and Pastiche [England], Belle Reve, Tiger’s Eye and Rusty Nail.

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PAT VIDAL is a retired nurse who loves New Haven and all that it offers in the arts and music. She has written poetry for over 25 years and has been lucky enough to take poetry workshops with gifted teachers. She is also a musician, playing the clarinet in a ragtime ensemble and in a classical quartet. She has a husband, three grown sons, and one grandchild, all of whom support her efforts and take time to critique her poems. ------------------------------------------PORTIA WATSON is a MA candidate at the University of Kentucky’s Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce, where she is studying development and global health. She recently returned from spending two years in Thailand, where she pursued a Fulbright teaching grant as well as a fellowship with the NGO Burmese Refugee Project, now known as Kwah Dao. Portia is interested in photography and the power it has to unite the viewer and subject. She sees photography as a conscious act of attending to the world, and herself as a witness to the transitory beauty in every passing moment. ------------------------------------------KD WILLIAMS is a recent graduate from the University of Michigan with a bachelor’s degree in English and Spanish and a Creative Writing sub-concentration. She received a 2010 Hopwood Undergraduate Short Fiction award and more recently received the 2013 Stony Brook Short Fiction Prize. KD has edited and contributed to the Michigan Daily’s weekly magazine, The Statement. ------------------------------------------DAVID ZAZA’s writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Ardor, The Quarterly, Squalorly, Dialogue, Coracle, and elsewhere. He has produced two puppet plays in collaboration with visual artist Mark Fox. He lives in New York, where he owns a small graphic design studio that produces arts publications.

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