Sunday, December 9, 2012

Christmas in Crete - 12/01/12

Christmas in Crete:
Red Blood and Fresh Meat

by David Sherry


     It’s December 1st, and as I step out into the light, I realize that the coat I have chosen to wear is completely inappropriate for the weather. Taking into consideration that it is the first day of December, it is strangely warm; like a hot tub that’s located outside at a ski resort. The only way that anyone could possibly tell that Christmas is around the corner would be the bright lights and festive decorations hanging off of many houses and/or establishments. Immediately I begin to sweat profusely under my heavy duck down, coyote-fur-hooded mammoth. To say I am ill-prepared for this wintery desert climate is a statement that probably could use a bit of refining, if you know what I mean. Holy Hell! Is Christmas really only 25 days away? The only reason I left the house this early is because I need to get a fuse in my car replaced. And I guess it was supposed to happen that way.

     As I pass the Masonic Temple, I head for the Crete Service Center. My attention is suddenly snared by a hustle and bustle usually absent in downtown Crete. The first thing that catches my attention are the ice sculptures. Kind of a shame since it’s a warm Fall day in December. The people walk about like gypsies, groups of nomads traveling from one sight to the next; never sticking to any one attraction for too long. From one angle you could say that the scene looked like an Attention Deficit Christmas Cluster. They look happy enough, I guess. There’s an over-compression of high schoolers, a disconcerting amount of adults, and the scattered bouncing children pointing at the ice sculptures and scrambling to meet Santa in the gazebo.
    I pull around to the the other entrance to the service station since the one I usually drive into is blocked by a booth selling Crete-Monee Warriors merchandise. Banners and flags fly hailing the team as state champions. Now let me ask you this: why should we care? I’m not saying necessarily that we should not care, but why should we, if at all? All that aside, I pop into the office just in time because they are about to close up for the day. Rob quickly changes my fuse. He stands up from the side of my car.
    “All done. It should be working fine now,” he says. I start to pull out my wallet to pay him for the work but he stops me. “Don’t worry about it,” he says to me. “It’s just a fuse.”
    I’m kind of taken aback for a second. I had the money ready and everything. How often do you run into a mechanic nice enough to fix your car for free? I thank him graciously and then take off to park the car over at my house. The walk back into town is eerily quiet. But this only holds true until I reach Main Street.
    There’s quite a few people traipsing through the streets, but it could hardly be called a crowd. They all have faces and stories of their own, all different yet eerily similar. It’s only 1:30 PM, and maybe more would make their way into the streets later tonight, but unfortunately I won’t be there to see it. Tonight’s a work night for me. I notice the booths set up next to the gazebo where Santa Claus resides. There’s also a smoldering fire pit in the middle of the street with a circle of empty benches set up around it. There isn’t much going on near the gazebo, so I decide to catwalk up and down the streets to survey the life-forms as well as the ice sculptures.
    First I come upon ice chiseled into the form of a knight. This installment is sponsored by the Crete Chapter of the Order of St. John. Scampering around the back of the sculpture is a little four-eyed boy wearing a startling amount of blue. His hoodie reminds me of a cold pool that was subjected to a little too much dye and chlorine. The kid’s hood is pulled up over his red Santa cap, with a puffy white ball peeking out from under the blue cloth. He pokes at the ice curiously. Who knows, maybe he had dreamed of being a knight in shining armor at one point in his young life.



As I walk a little farther down the sidewalk amidst the Crete folk, another sculpture catches my eye. It takes the form of a small helicopter sitting atop what looks like a giant magnet and a heap of snow. This one is sponsored by Crete Steel. I guess that I failed to wake up early enough to see the sculptures being created. Oh well, at least I get to see them before they melt completely. As I stand and stare at the dripping helicopter, a heavy-set middle-aged man comes and stands next to me, studying the same ice that I am.
    He looks at me and shakes his head. “Kind of a shame, isn’t it? Such a warm day that these sculptures won’t live for very long. It’s just ‘art of the moment,’ if you will.” I look him over without saying anything. The man gives me a nod and a salute, turns and goes on his way. After this I decide to investigate for more information. The booth near the fire pit looks like a good place to make enquiries.
    So I shuffle over to the booth that’s covered in advertisements. A man and a woman sit within. The woman is probably late 20s or early 30s with long brown hair and a slim face. The man is bigger, overweight with thinning hair. He has a somewhat jolly air about him. They both acknowledge my presence.
    “Can we help you?” The woman asks.
    I pop my head in through the window of the booth. “Yeah, I was wondering what you can tell me about what’s going on today.”
    The man gives out a big hearty belly laugh. “Oh, child,” he says with a smile. “It’s Christmas in Crete! Where all peoples come to be jolly and festive! These are the days when the streets run with red blood and fresh meat!”
    I subtly raise an eyebrow. “I’ve been checking out the ice sculptures and noticed all the other booths set up.”
    “Yes, sir,” he continues. “They came out to sculpt about, oh, maybe ten o’clock this morning. You missed that.” He winks at me with a toothy grin. “Santa Claus is across the way and there will be music playing in that setup later on tonight.” He points to an empty stage across the way. He hands me a piece of thick blue cardboard with snowflakes and text printed on it. “Here you can peruse over this. It tells you everything that’s happening this weekend.”
    I take the schedule from him and briefly skim it over. There is going to be bands playing later tonight, but I’d have to be headed to work by then. Everything else was definitely merriment, but didn’t seem very fun. The kind of “Christmas Dull” you get once you hit a certain age. Sometimes Hanukkah can be more interesting than the ever-merchandised Christmas season. I hand the schedule back to the jolly man and thank him.


     It’s about that time to fill the stomach, so I pass by the rest of the sculptures and people, some silent, some boisterous. I make my way to The Edge, a little cafe on Main Street. They have their own ice sculpture outside of a rhino sitting on a small stool; he’s holding a coffee cup which is being filled with the drips falling from his nose. So I enter The Edge to get a sandwich and some soup. The tiny cafe is somewhat cramped today since there are way more people out on the streets of Crete than there normally is. It’s encouraging to see that The Edge is getting some good business since it’s a smaller establishment, but what they serve is actually very tasty. After I sit down with my food, I notice a young man, maybe about twenty-one, performing card tricks for people around the restaurant. I eye him for a while, as any writer would do, until he comes over to my table. He’s a bit short, probably about 5’8”, thin build with short cut brown hair. Looks a little like a college kid type to me.
    “You want to see a card trick?” He asks me.
    “Sure,” I say, putting my spoon down into the soup.
    He fans the cards out in front of me. “Pick a card,” he says. I pick one and look at it, it’s an eight of spades. He cuts the deck in half and tells me to put my card in the middle without showing it to him. I do this then he places the top half back on the deck, covering my card. He taps the top of the deck then snaps his fingers and picks up the top card. It’s a three of hearts. “This obviously isn’t your card, right?” I shake my head then he cuts the deck a couple times. “Well,” he says. “You’ve tainted that card you touched just enough for the rest of the deck to want to reject it.” He waves his right hand over the deck then snaps his fingers. A card shoots out from the middle of the deck and he catches it in his right hand. Flipping it over, I can see that it’s the eight of spades. “Is this your card?”
    I hold my fist up to my mouth in disbelief and burst out laughing. “That’s pretty impressive.” He thanks me and we end up having a conversation about filmmaking, writing, school, etc. Before I leave he gives me his card. His name is John Heide, a sleight of hand/card artist. And a talented one at that.
    Back outside there is a little bit more going on, but I decide that I’ve seen about enough of Christmas in Crete. There are crossing guards stationed at the crosswalk near the fire pit and the gazebo, which seem to me to be a little unnecessary because there is barely any traffic on that street as it is.
    “How are you doing today?” One of them asks me as we wait to cross.
    “Pretty good,” I say. “How about you? Enjoying helping people across the street?”
    “Safety first!” He says with a smile. “It’s important to make sure that everyone gets across the street safely.”
    “Yeah,” I say. “But if a planet or a meteor were to collide with the earth right now, it wouldn’t really matter if you got everyone across the road safely. They’d all be dead anyway.”
    He is silent for a second then responds. “That’s true. No one knows when that time is coming.” He walks out into the street with his stop sign above his head. The cars stop and I cross toward the booths and the fire pit.

    
     I nod to the crossing guards and bid them a good day. That’s when I notice that there are people sitting around the fire pit now listening to a strange looking Santa. I walk over and stand behind one of the benches to hear what he’s talking about. He’s wearing a green tunic with a long red robe over it. Around his head is a wreath made of evergreen branches. He’s explaining the origins of Saint Nicholas. Most of what comes out of his mouth seems like a load of hogwash and glamorized myth so I decide to depart.
    As I walk home, satisfied that I have seen all I needed to see, a hawk swoops down over head and lands in a tree a few feet in front of me. Not a huge bird, but a majestic one nonetheless. It surveys the landscape with its razor-sharp eyesight. I think of Horus as his striped tail feathers ruffle in the breeze. To me, this singe occurance has been by far more inspiring than anything I have seen today in the streets of downtown Crete.


Wednesday, November 28, 2012

"Begotten" by David Sherry

“Like a flame burning away the darkness,
Life is flesh on bone convulsing above the ground.”

    Innocence is lost when it is destroyed by the rough bark of dead trees. I can see what is not yet left in this forest of nothingness. Coming into focus of harsh blacks and whites is a cabin that does not decide anything even in flowing robes of clouds. God sits and he is nothing here. He is discontent as drip drip he feels it fall to the ground in pools of black. Why is he gushing what he has created to spawn life? His hands are wet and he gropes the cracked walls, smearing what is left of heaven. No longer white, all that is now is streaks of black. Worms of forgotten prayers wallow in discarded sand. He is deaf and all He knows is being ripped from his open emptiness. The foot is dead and the second flood slips down and covers the flesh that is on the bone. Wet, damp, and soiled, he knows nothing. But from the ashes and the drippingness of mortality rises a beating heart. A Mother Earth that is blinded by her father’s image. Wet black on flowing white releases her to the sun. She strokes the Father’s dead manhood, becoming the woman: fertile and pure. White spray tendrils waterfall and cover her with steam. In the life of dead anything makes what virgins keep. She has become the mover as she spreads the seed over her being, impregnating her once disregarded womb.
    A field of desolate expanse with sliding coffin, wooden and hollow. Stand up, I say, and it becomes me as Mother Earth strokes her distended belly. She is big with him, the Son. Arteries, veins, sky of endless clouds and He is born. Son of Earth is purged from the womb as a full grown son. Ropes of infidelity in the land of Nod, he is taken by nomads and dashed against the stones. He gives them gifts of flesh from his mouth and they eat of his abundance.
    But raped once more by nomads of old, Mother Earth cannot fight as her body is entered and impaled repeatedly by the wordless mouths of utterance. We known not from whence they came as their violence speaks of days of old. Pulling apart the bodies of the weak. Limb torn from socket and pounded to the earth with withered sticks. Mother and son are destroyed. Destructed into the ground of Creation. But forthwith flowers spring forth into life on the ground of the dead.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Hellion (version 1)

I run off God’s own ethanol
A stench with gall
So who’s got the ball
And who’s court is this
Which elite can I dis
Dismiss it with a fist
Oh, I insist
That you finally enlist
In the army
That’ll help us coexist
But I missed the sign-up sheet
Cause she couldn’t be discreet
And I lost my hand within the sheets
So I was unable to write
Even to utter my name at night
The pencil picked a fight
Between the lines hidden from sight
Is it strength to show our might
But that doesn’t make it right
I’m riding that beam of light
It doesn’t touch the sun
It’s just a rainbow for fun
Words that’ll never be outdone

Word
Who’s the leader of this herd?
Is a phoenix a spirit or a bird?
A question so absurd
I wouldn’t expect it to be fulfilled more
I write above blood and gore
So much more than a seeping sore
Bleeding on the floor
With cuts, I’m loosing breath
Inching toward my death
Shadows bring the Thoth
Foaming mouth full of froth
Like the head of a beer
LSD to see clear
Listen, can you hear
A suicide of peers
You lack empathetic tears
At the River’s Edge
We built a callous hedge
To hear a killer bragging
So I’m lagging behind
Any feeling for the body that we find
This flesh is just rind
To slice our own kind
Inside, defined pulp
Like a blood orange
    step back and gulp
Behold your Wizard of Gore
You’re begging for more
Simon Says to sever the core
Dead bodies melted down to Iron Ore
Drop Dead Sexy
Lifeless like Ellie
Hellion
What Is It? we sellin’ ’em

Friday, November 23, 2012

Elemental Junkie

Ingest me like a chemical compound
I’m here to shatter ground and astound
But if my head could ever quit its pounding,
I could do with a little grounding
Cause my place is in space
Fuck an atomic rock
I love God’s creation,
    but we put it on lock
So I take a hammer to this clock
Crystal shards
To get cosmic lawyers disbarred
Which card you got?
Does it thicken this plot
Or stir the concoction in the pot
What’s the molecular makeup
    of my dripping snot
Buck shot forming out of astral ash
Take your monatomic gold
    and trade it in for cash
I’m bleeding hurricanes from a gash
And I wouldn’t bother to
    lick your blood from the grass
Puff puff pass
And pass out
Don’t look down
Cause then you’ll hear a deafening sound
That’ll drown out His voice
This has always been a choice
So I choose to hoist
A moist tongue above a host
Speaking with the Holy Ghost
She’s the one I feel the most
I’m burning like a roast
And standing at the coast
A breeze felt with ease
We’re in a schizophrenic schism
    far from peace
Like the polytheistic gods of Greece
I’m at least under the belly of the Beast
I see its Marks
It ain’t a myth or a farce
It’s all so dark
Like a nightmare opium den
Or a crack whore garden
Pardon our dust
And systematic rust
Passed down through years of lust
I feel the manic gusts
As this frigid panic thrusts
Our epidemic must
Find a soluble end
Through visions we contend
Our soiled souls we mend
Hope the healing ain’t pretend