Monday, October 28, 2013

Untitled by K. Rose


I find inspiration among distant faces

Each one solidifies a part of history that no one can explain

Viewed with disdain are the various shades of lip stains permanently etched

Each story different and with recognition each lie can become exposed

Dig deep and you shall find the diamond in the coal mine

True beauty with the glimpse of the sun rising in the horizon

Forgotten cultures intermingled within one

Creating an undeniable pact with unreliable facts

Untraceable celebrations and unthinkable recreations

History runs like an unrelenting waterfall with stories that are untold

Aspirations of acceptance and true love for mankind still exists in the souls of dreamers

Being instead of seeking what is heartfelt and true

The mirror reflects what was always seen

Beauty is not only true for ourselves but for everyone else

Beauty and true can be found among distant faces

Skin tones ranging from dawn to midnight

Each one singing a different tone each tune creating a melody

The reality of creation cannot be denied or misidentified

Windows of the soul exposed validating what we all share

What we all love, things we fear, varying textures of the same grade of hair

Diversity should be celebrated and appreciated

There is inspiration among distant faces

Each one solidifying a part of history that no one can explain

~Kendra S. Rose, student

Untitled by K. Dedrick


You

are the reflection

of a full moon

on an ocean wave.

 

A solitary grain

of sand on a shore

having withstood the test

of time.

 

The lonely soliloquy

of a loon

on a vast and empty lake

littered with leaves

in October’s wake.

 

A mountain top

piercing the sky

 

A pregnant

dewdrop

perched on the edge

of a petal

 

on the edge

of a meadow

 

on the edge

of imagination

 

on the edge

of a dream

 

You

are a sunrise;

a sunset

melting in

opaque gray

shrouded by the sultry sky

 

You

are

in every moment

in every breath

of my life
 
~Karin Dedrick, Coordinator of Student Services

Untitled by T. Fernandes

I have researched, read, experienced and incorporated many different philosophies and practices into my repertoire. Some may say I'm "a jack of all trades, master of none", while others may view me as a lifelong learner. Personally, I really don’t care for labels, nor like to specifically call myself anything, as I’m an eclectic mix of so many beautiful teachings and experiences. So, call me student, teacher, empath, intuitive, or entrepreneur, to some mother, wife, sister, or friend, it doesn't much matter, for I am one in these, and all these in one.
~Theresa M. Fernandes, student


Untitled by Anonymous

Sitting in Bryant Park, green chairs creaking,
Taste of France Balloon is à la ReMax.
Chatting about nothing for once,
Just listening and breathing.

Walking so many blocks,
Missing that being a daily norm.
Weaving our way through tourists,
Just two girls on the way to the subway.

It gets better with time, they say,
Your heart will come out of your throat.
It used to happen immediately in Grand Central,
Just Times Square now and just with red shirts selling tickets.

Took the subway back downtown,
Walked from Times Square again because I could.
All the way to the lower East Side,
Just reclaiming my streets with each stride.

~submitted by a student who prefers to remain anonymous

Untitled by A. Tascio

In Mt. Vernon the clouds don't take you anywhere.

All is cement, barbed wire & asphalt melting in the sun.

Shards of buildings jut out and hit me as the train takes me home.


~Anne Tascio, student

Not In by Ezekiel Strawberry


Around midnight, or was it two or three, I followed a trail of blood. I was led to strange apartment buildings and thick, frigid fences; these were surrounded by sporadic dying patches of yellowing grass lying unwet against pre-potted oak trees, grown. The oaks, they were actually behemoths, yes they were, they hung sterile and bone and picky-fingered in that no-wind you get on any hot, bereft midnight. And, when they weren’t hanging, they’d loom; it was a sort of ominous, watchful looming, the kind that towers and eyeballs and spies and detects and shadows and is silhouetted, a nasty tangle of sharp and web against that perfect howling cream cheese disc at your zenith.

The soil beneath was moist. Rich, thick; but, like an unfit mother, it’d lost its ability to nourish its sprouted, withering babies.

Bits of moon played, reflected on the trail of blood. Moonlight, that’s a reflection of the sun. The sun, a reflection of god. My eyes: if you saw them, that glimmer of moon sliver shimmering—that’s the reflection you’d find there. Spots, revenants, remainders of something once with breath—but, alive?

The blood is my alive, now. I’m living on this blood; I’m fucking greedy about it. My eyes follow its slithering under a fence, and, hungry, I stop walking.

What passed through here, bleeding this way?

Have you ever followed something, just because your instinct told you to? The question, the ‘why,’ the reason, it was vague; but! –you did know it was something unanswered. And, as in a dream, you followed the question, you searched for the comfort in knowing the answer.

“?”

That’s the question. Its rational contents are vacuum; if you could Deify that there little mark of punctuation, if you could glorify the Riddler—you could play Batman…and be left with the gift of a journey—something to eat following a grueling, successful hunt. Only, you wouldn’t necessarily know where to go! –but—go you would, if your interest was piqued by an unexpected trail of blood, say, that trickled bizarre through a dark and curious city with awful swirling faces, all lumped and crooked and greasy.

There’s barb wire up top, and a hole in the fence to my right. I pop through.

*****

I’d told the blonde I was only going for some air, which was a lie, anyway, because air is not a cigarette, but the lie was bigger than that. I didn’t want to hear another word out her pretty little glossy slut-lips. She had this way of spewing garbage, chucking armies flying spikes and arrows and sharp barbed poisons, fish bones and squishy turds: She talked and I cringed.

*****

I’m between brick buildings, considering the possibility of getting jumped. Dark alleys are good for getting jumped in.

There’s no moonlight, here, and it’s hard to see the trail. It fills the cracks between rectangular cobbles and seeps deep into shadows, where it drips, where it gets lost, where it’s the fabric of my thought, where it’s my ability to remember.

That cave, that library, that place where I reserve thoughts like to-do’s and birthdays and coupon expiration dates—its catacombs are ragged, cavernous and black; they roll and sink into dusty, sunless oblivion. I’ll shine a light at the mouth. That light’ll sink down into forever, dissolving into an infinite and thick yawn. I’m a black hole, you could say. Think Alice’s hole, only no Wonderland, no fantasy to wake from—only a sort of slow drifting into dreamless nothing-sleep.

*****

She’d been edging into me, rubbing into me like a cat. Her softness was ripe, inviting, fruit that will be flawlessly ripe in, say, three days. I can still feel it, now, far away, gone—her fleshy warmth, she kept it concealed under soft clothing, but only from the eye. Her calf, my calf. Her elbow, my leg. Her breast, my side. Her whisky, my gin. My kind of girl.

And the lights! The lights were shiny and everywhere! Neon Bud Lite, Neon Bud, Neon darts, neon fucking dots and dreams and winking on my glossy shot glass, whirring and buzzing and dancing in the jukebox and on the smartphones, in holes in time and on the bitch’s glasses, that’s all I remember from her, she wore glasses and they screamed I AM THE ROOM and I did not like The Room, did not care for the busy busty bartender of The Room or its upbeat swinging restroom doors, those doors which also reflected this chaos moth party in their swinging, or the haze by which we all grew progressively drunk and horny; and as that haze crept through the bar, I have to tell you, you could feel a palpable urgency. There was a need to whet appetites for moisture—but the moisture was leaving the bar two shaved legs at a time—and the hour would come, it would, when the bar would just dry up, crack, and die.

******

The blood, the stream, ends. It trickles, now, a thin stream that ends at the grate by the curb.

A pungent sewage reek, that’s there, and there’s dripping liquid. The drops echo. The drops cut the silence. There’s clarity, there, and cold. It defogs, un-fluffs. A vague siren trumpets somewhere. Far, probably. Sounds like a football field away, or two hundred yards, or: Miles? Galaxies? Universes? The dark is funny that way: it’s layered, and uncertain, at best; also, it’s layered, and uncertain, at worst. I wriggle down.

*******

*****

Her voice, that voice, that garbage truck voice! She’d pointed it in my face, force-feeding her understanding of skiing, television, and gun control, a rotten tirade of glass chunks. If this was foreplay, I didn’t want to see the finish line, and I definitely didn’t want to fry her a goddamn egg in the morning.

I was inside the bar, but I wasn’t. Not really, no. That’s why I’m not actually a person. Not really, no, not a person, hardly one at all, because I’m not here. I hear what you say only I don’t understand who you are…and—you don’t understand me, do you. No, no one does, not really, no. I don’t. There's an orphan dog that follows me around and blocks me from people, and it stinks of liquid and awful brown; it's got fleas and disease and pestilences that other people just aren't interested in. Loneliness; stench; death.

********

Underground, and through the grate, the moonlight plays on green shit water, and green shit water plays on my work boots, invading them. Slosh, slop, and instinct tells me to walk. I won’t see the blood, it’s lost in this river. I only know the blood.

I spark my lighter twice before the flame catches. I’m going in.

******

She hadn’t asked me one goddamn question about myself. What was her name? I really did like her. Christ, what was the name of that stupid bitch? Susan? What had it been? Sally? No one has names like Susan or Sally anymore. Susan, maybe.

All I remember are those spinning chaos orbs, the stupid ubiquitous retard pieces of crap.

********

I'm wading. The lighter flickers. I'm flanked by ancient cobble walls with a soft glowing orange. They're bushy with wet tufts of mold-slime. The odor's getting bigger. The lighter's hot and I let it go out.

*******

Samantha? Sammy? Sue? No, not Susan. No Susan. She swung her hips over to me and looked so cute and sexy it was painful. Two or six drinks later I wanted to sew her fucking lips together. It was cowardly to leave but I left without a word, mostly though because she was a hideous little goblin and I don’t always see that sort of thing if a girl’s shirt is cut low enough, but I did at the bar, I did tonight, I witnessed her ugly and left, so her ugly must have been big.

********

Sounds like rushing water up ahead. I flick the lighter but it’s all melted and fucked up. I walk on, all caution and slow, pushing deeper into the abyssal hallway.

*********

And the only reason I don’t want to see the ugly is because I want to see the beauty; and the only reason I want to see the beauty is because I am desperate to love it; and the only reason I am desperate to love it is so that I will be loved in return; and the only reason I need to be loved in return is to prove I’m a human; and the only reason I want to prove my humanity is so I know I exist; and I need to know I exist—I need that, because I’m disappearing.

End of the line. End of the tunnel. The loud of rushing water is everything. White noise with an echo, which means I’m in a large room. I think there’s other tubes. I think they’re all dumping sewage into a central chamber, further down. I think I’m gonna jump.

I’m midair and within the descending stream and it cradles me, and the dark cradles me, and I wish I never left her there. Maybe I ruined her night, she even probably liked me. How can you say that!—she didn’t know me at all. Maybe she wanted to. She thought I was cruel, of course. Do you think she went home and masturbated? You're sick! I don’t care, can I watch, though? Don’t ask me that, but it’s sad if she did, I could of given her the real thing. You really are sick, you know that?

Me?

No…there is no me.

The fall ends, splash, and my head’s underwater and it’s cold and ungodly. It’s a slap of slime. I’m awake! This place stinks of decayed goat scrotum! Oh my dear God I’m awake! Cold! I feel cold! I hate this smell! I’m in my body! I’m drowning! I forget how to swim!

My head bobs back down under the surface. Then, instinct: I’m back, I’m breathing air, I’m treading water, I steady my breath, I take a moment to create calm.

I see two doors in front of me. They’ve got a faint glow, like someone squashed a jellyfish and pasted its luminescent guts on two doors, only there wasn’t enough jellyfish to go around, so the glow is few and far between and tough to make out.

Everything else is pitch black. I swim toward the doors.

I know where they go.

Left is nothing, it leads to nothing, it's rest, it's where I'm already going, I'm more than halfway there, it'll be comfortable and nothing...right, if I take right, right will shit me back into the world, the real world, and that's when I realize I've left the world, this tunnel is not a worldly sewer at all.

All I know is I can sleep when I'm dead.

~Eliahu Case, student

My Iniquity by M. Rutledge

I love you, these three words

Slowly slid from my lips

Floating through the air

Wafting gently to the ground

I knew that my love

Deeper than the pain

Draped across my chest

Would never be seen

The reflection of her own

Mirrored the syncopated

Stutter of my own heartbeat

Knowing that my soul

Needing her soul like

A bird needing wings.

I needed her.

I wanted to believe.

To make me a believer.

To believe that my days

Would begin with her

My nights ending beside her.

I wanted to belong

To someone who would never belong to me.

But I persist. In my iniquity,

I persist.

Knowing that what I wanted

was not mine to be had.
 
~Musatye Rutledge, student

Monday, October 21, 2013

My Scars Speak of My Strength by G. Dormeus


The day my life changed was August 11, 2009. While driving my younger brother to his first year of college, my family and I were involved in a horrible car accident.  My mother tried to make a turn off of the exit. She could not execute the turn and lost control of the car.  We hit a tree head on at 60 miles an hour. My younger brother and I were in the back seat and my mother and sister were in the front. My mother suffered a broken femur, arm, and ribs, my sister suffered from a broken ankle, my brother suffered major internal injuries to his organs, my neck broke (in four different places), my right hand and right foot broke, and my intestines were crushed. Four surgeries later my body was left with a lot of scars that were hard for me to look at times, the one on my stomach is a foot long, the ones on my right hand are six inches each, the one on the back of my neck is the only one that I can see, and the one in the front of my neck has gotten a little darker some of my scars on my chest from the seatbelt ripping my skin off have healed up really nice. I had a hard time in the beginning dealing with all these scars on my body, until one day I thought to myself all of my scars are part of a story a story that I am able to tell because I survived! The quote I have is my own quote that I have written on the back of my phone which helps me every day!




“My scars speak of my strength.  They tell my amazing story of being a survivor"!

~Guerlande Dormeus, student

Michelle's Poem by M. Bauer-Roth


Roses are red

Violets are blue

With Empire State

I can start anew.

 

The professors are great

Support staff too

Don’t know where I’d be

Without all of you.

 

Soon I’ll be able

To graduate

Until that day

I have to wait.

 

I’ll wear my tuxedo

For this special event

Time went so fast

Don’t know where it went.

 

They’ll say my name

Concentration too

For then it will be time

To start anew.


~Michelle Bauer Roth, student

It Is Okay by G. Perez-Vazquez


It is okay to be me, to be late,

To sleep until ten and not do anything

To stay at home and enjoy myself

To curse at ‘them” when things go wrong

 

It is okay to make mistakes

To keep myself strong

To say my truth with an open heart

To be deficient and still dance

It is okay to see him as my soul mate

To fight back my past

And learn how to welcome that in my new path

To forgive them and to bless them instead

Because they are the school that completed my task

 

Yes…………………

It is okay to stay in one piece

To let everybody see my strength with an open soul

And within my voice show the “All” that we carry on

To live alive and to be grateful instead of hurt

To know that God cures the shame hidden in my soul

 

It is okay to make myself happy

Enjoy the surroundings of a bright day

To be the mother in me, to share with her as should be

To laugh with my grandchildren, to be upset with my sons

And still feel how I love them more

 

Yes it is okay to cry sometimes, kill the “pretending” that wants to shine

That I had hidden all my life

To digest my emotions and throughout those feelings

Find the courage that had grown with the commotions

Starting with a cry and ending with a smile,

 It is okay to be the mirror of the sea that is at bright as the sky

Yes it is okay to have the “All” living in me

Because through him I have enough

For you and  me

~Gina Perez-Vazquez, student 

Maybe Today by G. Perez-Vasquez

I will start this day counting my blessing

Thanking the omnipotent for the small and the immense

I will look at the sun set and see the beauty behind the fence

The splendor in the wake of my life

Maybe today I will watch his eyes, observe the clouds

And try to understand the magnitude of the sky

 

Maybe I will observe the rain, smell each stars essence or touch your smile

And however I can definitely I will fight the pass.

Walk over my scars.

I will ride the train that takes me throughout the firmament

 

Maybe today I will remember you and your absent 50th birthday

And thanks the universe for the great opportunity of having you in my path

Be happy with your smile, cry your tears or share our fears

Enjoy the essence the bath my skin

 

Maybe today I will end my day recounting my blessings

That like flowers field grow with love an

Give you my flesh my sight and my stressing 

~Gina Perez-Vasquez, student

Beauty by V. Ruffino


 
Oh, beauty,

Thunder be,

Bolts thru air

On big blue seas

 

Lightning doth strike

Explosive and free

Without any thought

Of what it should be!

 ~Velina Ruffino, student

Memorializing by V. Ruffino


Pen in hand,

Thoughts all askew,

Writing my soul down

On paper a new.

 

Pleasure does find me,

Here in your presence.

As I know that without you

I’d lose my life’s essence.

~Velina Ruffino, student

Because My Beloved by V. Ruffino


When you liked anything

I smiled from deep within

As a tide reaches the shore

And sighs from its inherent relief

 

Oh, how sweet,

Sweet and subtle

How your joys

Bring me such fulfillment

 

When you are joyful

My world explodes in color

One spontaneous abortion of emptiness

Replaced with a colossal burst of glory!

~Velina Ruffino, student

The Circus by L. Guyette Hamell

Two dwarfs in green wigs and white suspenders work the crowd on a mild March night here in the land of smoky dreams. Karen and I sit at the table sipping our too-sweet drinks.  Stuffed grape leaves languish on a shared plate between us. We watch as the young crowd passes by, moving in tangled groups, bodies traversing this busy tourist street. They are loud: voices raised to youth and drink. And I can see their very essence by the way they react to these two short men on the street. Both dwarfs have painted their faces red; one of them smokes. They are as garish as Christmas, as novel as trinkets in a souvenir shop. They slap five, laugh at the cruel jokes, mug with the drunken, flushed faces of undergraduates who bend down and smile into the camera next to the 3-foot clowns. And I feel the curl of anger at the back of my throat, pressing against my tongue. Years from now, some of these kids will swallow the bitter pill of memory. Some will remember this night, will remember their inhumanity, and shrink from it, will taste its acidity on a sleepless night. And so the curl of anger is not for them—but for the two painted clowns who toddle around this busy street hiding behind their shortness, their green wigs, their fear. Tell me who you really are, I want to say to them. I know you are not this

Yet who am I to demand that? As I hide behind my Olay Regenerist eye cream, behind the gloss of Chianti lipstick, an underwire bra… On the street beyond our table are the girls who own this night, in their half-clothes, their haughty skin, their unawakened eyes. Their bodies are the polished engines of a car show, sleek aerodynamic limbs moving on a festive night. The boys watch, circling, aching to drive one of these revved-up machines. Karen and I pick at the dehydrated grape leaves, watch quietly from the corner where women like us belong. And I lift a napkin to my lips to wipe away the pretense, staining the heavy cloth. I do not want to be a Jean Rhys character, with her half empty Pernod, her blood-red lipstick bleeding into the crevices around her lips. Pretending, like the wigged midgets, that life is not cruel.

Later Karen and I lift our sandaled feet into the Treasure Trove, sand from the nearby beach crunching beneath our heels. There is a two-piece band—guitar and drums—and the singer has rings around his eyes the way a tree reveals its age. He wears a baseball cap backwards on his head, long shorts, Roman-style sandals. This tells me not to expect too much, and they do not disappoint. At the bar are men and women who have arrived at the same place as Karen and me. She and I look at each other and smile, no longer misfits on a tourist street. I put my purse on the bar, and the man beside me offers a stool which he shakes a bit and settles on my naked toe, his movements clumsy, his speech graceless, blundering. I hope you’re not driving, Karen says by way of a greeting, and the man laughs and tries to shake his head, and has to hold on to the smooth, curved edge of the bar. He works on ships, he manages to say through a thick tongue.

On closer inspection, everyone here tonight is butter-fingered and lumbering—in their baldness, their rounded bellies, their euphoria when the discordant band strikes up a familiar song. The grizzled man on the other side of Karen whoops at every song, pumps two knarled fists in the air, and looks at us with bleary eyes to dance. She cocks one eyebrow at me, and we both laugh.

At the end of the bar are two lithe blonds, their long hair shaken out over pinched shoulders and angled backs. Like Broadway footlights, the sequins on their too-tight jeans illuminate rounded globes as they shimmy to the raucous music. And when they turn around, breasts choked into a cramped theatre, their faces look like mine, like Karen’s. They dance together, two older women on display tonight, and the unsteady men thrum heavily around them. One of the blondes takes a quiet sip from her water bottle, and Karen says, She has had her time with alcohol. And we imagine her earlier life, wonder about our own—two tousled women on bar stools with sand between our toes.

Then it’s time to go, and just as I am shouldering my heavy purse, I notice, tucked into a corner of the bar, two carved wooden images. A Sambo head with ink black skin and a row of teeth like piano keys; beside him, the head of an ape, with two flared nostrils—upon which someone has tossed a fisherman’s hat… I motion to the bartender, nod to the two wooden images. A piercing sun and the bite of Jim Beam have rippled his skin; his long hair pulled back into a pony-tail. What’s this? I say, and he shrugs his shoulders, impatient—and looks behind me to another rickety man, who waves his money, who wants the memory of youth scooped into a glass and chilled over ice. And I am thrust into this circus, into this unknowable place, on a mild night in March, as the guitar player croaks into the mic, the chords from his Fender guitar feeding back through his pawn shop amp—and the sequined blondes quiver around the dance floor…

~Linda Guyette Hamell, MFA, Director of Academic Support