Sunday, May 11, 2014

DANCING WITHE THE GYPSIES


DANCING WITH THE GYPSIES

     By Travis M. Whitehead

     My mother grew up during the Great Depression (there wasn’t anything “great” about it) on

the Texas side of the Red River, with Oklahoma on the other side. Her father was a man of many

talents. He was a carpenter, a mechanic, and a popular singer in local barber shop quartets. He

made his living by fishing the Red River. He was also known for the fish nets he made and sold

at a decent profit. He even saved the family money by constructing a two-bedroom wooden

house on property owned by his brother-in-law. It was a sturdy home, but not a very good one.

The structure had no insulation, and they froze in winter and baked during the summer.

     He could have provided well for his family during these hard times, but he drank away all the

money. He made his own corn brew in the woods behind the house (this was during

Prohibition) and often sent my mother out to make deliveries. She and her sisters had to endure

the humiliation of standing by while the FBI raided the house on several occasions.

     My mother’s father was a mean drunk who made a habit out of calling my mother stupid

every time she tried to accomplish a task. She remembered very vividly his taunting as she

learned to ride a bicycle.

     “I don’t know why you’re even botherin’,” he told her. “You’re too stupid. You’ll never learn

how to ride that thing.”

     “You just watch,” she said spitefully. “I’m going to show you.”

     She turned away as he laughed sadistically; within a week she was riding on her own, no

thanks to dear old dad.

     In spite of my grandfather’s relentless belittling of my mother, she found ways to enjoy her

childhood with great zest. She hunted bullfrogs along the riverbank with a .22. She smoked

grapevine and stuck wads of chocolate powder in her mouth and pretended it was tobacco. She

spent late nights on the front porch ad-libbing her own one-act plays, singing, dancing until

everyone told her to quiet down and go to bed. 

     However, she didn’t always do as she was told. In those days, the Gypsies still lived their

legendary nomadic lifestyle. Dressed in their bright colorful clothing and heavy jewelry, they

would sometimes set up camp in the area.

     The adults, seeking to “protect” their children, told them that Gypsies liked to kidnap white

children and eat them. My mother, being the precocious and inquisitive nine-year-old that she

was, decided she had to find out if it was true. So, one night she waited until everyone was

asleep, then snuck out the window and ventured into the night to go see the Gypsies.

     She came to the clearing in the woods where they were camped. They were in great form,

playing music, singing, dancing, and making merry. After a few minutes, a little girl my mother’s

age walked over and offered her an apple. My mother gladly accepted, and the two stood there

a few minutes eating their apples.

     A few minutes later, the little girl’s mother walked over and asked my mom, “Would you like

to dance with us?” And my mother said, “Yes, I would.”

     And so she danced with the Gypsies. And after that, every time the Gypsies were camped

nearby, my mother would wait until everyone was asleep, then sneak out through a window to

go dance with the Gypsies.

THE DAY I BECAME A CLOWN



SHORT STORY - THE DAY I BECAME A CLOWN
     By Travis M. Whitehead
     I was only five or six years old when I saw my first circus. I loved seeing the lions and the tigers and the elephants and the trapeze artists, and when a guy in a gorilla ran around wearing a woman’s bra I couldn’t stop laughing, nor could my mother.
     However, those clowns prancing around in front of the audience scared the hell out of me.  Clowns are supposed to be happy and playful, but oh no, not to me. They totally creeped me out, and when one of them began making his way up the bleachers in my direction I wanted to run and hide.       
     The clown had this grotesque red grin surrounded by this pasty white paint like it had spent the whole afternoon rummaging through an Avon bag. Those monstrous shoes looked as though his feet had swollen up like the balloons it was now twisting into bizarre shapes to hand out to the kids.
     And that hair! Oh my God, the hair. How in God’s name did he get hair like that? Had he stuck his finger in a light socket? What had happened to this guy?He was running around like he was crazy, twisting those poor balloons into unnatural shapes. Balloons were supposed to be round like kickballs or long like hot dogs, not bent out of shape like a pretzel.
     A sense of dread swept over me as he came closer, and closer, and closer…I started breathing heavily and sweat soaked my shirt. Finally, he was towering over me with this ghastly grin, his eyes glittering as he turned the balloon into some strange animal.
     “Keep that thing away from me,” I said as he leaned down to hand it to me. Without even thinking about it, I popped him right in his big red bulbous nose. He went down, my mother shrieked, and all the kids started laughing.
     Now I was the clown, and I didn’t even have to wear any makeup.

THE STARRY NIGHT



THE STARRY NIGHT

     By Travis M. Whitehead



They speak to me from their stormy portals
     housed in their cave black shrouded
          Drops of twilight from the eyes of God
            Scattered across the shadow sea
              By a cosmic wind
    
Through these fields of light flowering
     I’m mounted on a winged stead
        Riding that cosmic wind
          Listening to the music
              Radiating from their shimmering smiles
              
Drops of shimmering ecstasy
      Musical notes from the symphony of God
          Whirling through the universe
                Morphing into melodies forgotten
                      Revived for the anguished soul

Anguished souls riveted
     By the dissonance resolved
        Into a poignant harmony beckoning
           To phosphorescent hummingbirds
                  Rising from the earth-bound sea
Winged twilight
    Soaring across the universe
         To dance to the ever-changing melody
             Played by the hands of God.

THE LANGUAGE OF THE WIND


THE LANGUAGE OF THE WIND
      By Travis M. Whitehead


     She rises from the depths  of the sky,
           The wind spiraling down
                   A desperate spirit racing across the world
                           Bearing her naked soul
    
     Whistling through narrow canyons
          Roaring across raging seas,                
                 Winding through alleyways and caverns dark
                          Pouring her heart out, aching to be heard.

    By human portals filled with emptiness
         Pilgrims seeking purpose
              Voyagers yearning for direction
                    Eyes set on stars estranged

         Into hibernating wanderers she empties herself
             With forgotten memories of eternity’s youth
                  Transfusing the hot blood of the universe
                       Into chained dreams desperate for liberation.

     From the confines of wakefulness,
          She liberates humanity’s slumber
                        Igniting her senses.                            
                              With waves of illumination
                                    
     Release, set free by the wind’s whisper
          And the imagination sails across the sky
                Guided by the language of the wind
                       A teacher, a student, a mentor
                               
     Imagination, the gift of eternal youth
         With time’s shadow lingering nearby
                The wind bears visions of discarded gateways
                      To pyres of resurrected dreams

     Where the cadences and melodies
           And the rhythms of life
               Beckon the wandering student  
                      Now healed by the aromatic tonic of the wind.

MORELIA'S SYMPHONY OF LIGHT AND SHADOW



MORELIA’S SYMPHONY OF LIGHT AND SHADOW
     By Travis M. Whitehead

     The sun eases slowly toward the west as I stand in front of El Revoltijo, a restaurant across Avenida Madero from the Cathedral of Morelia. Warm golden sunlight slips slowly across the west side of the cathedral, turning the pink stone into revolving shades of orange and yellow. A pigeon flies through bands of sun and shadow into an archway of the cupola where a bell rings. A chilly wind sweeps down Avenida Madero. Bands of shadow slip slowly across the arches, catching a trace of the bronze bell before it’s overtaken by more kisses of the glimmer of night. Westward light illuminates towers cloaked in shadow and song; a corner of a tower, the hem of a saint’s stone cloak catches the sun as it crawls away.
     I stumble into the evening as the sun cascades into the belly of the night. I’m running,
chasing flashes of light before they recede beyond my reach. It’s like trying to catch the

wind, a useless enterprise, but once in awhile I can hear its whisper, and that’s all I need

to keep going. 

     Up El Nigromante, shafts of dissipating light race across the eaves. Pediments and

flowered ornaments are replaced by warm floodlight; it spreads over the rough walls,

sending ribbons of shadow that clash with the evading sun; window balconies of

midnight metal sweep away in gentle arcs frozen by the hands of old artisans.

     On the west side of the street, the stone of the Palacio Clavijero recedes into a cool darkness, evoking a mesmerizing purple. The dream of night is taking effect, injecting its narcotic trance into my consciousness. I look up and see pale blue, lavender and chartreuse flying across the sky, releasing themselves from the light of day.
      There’s not much time left. I race up to Allende Street, where Melchor Ocampo once lived. There’s a rich quiet blue creeping in from the jagged tear of bright light burning above deep purple clouds in the west, pouring up Allende Street. This street runs east to west, and the blazing play of gold on stone walls gives way to lanterns casting shades of darkness, etching themselves into my memory, conjuring a forgotten dream, a lost piece of identity.
     I’m running through the streets along Allende, through the fading doorways of my dreams, chasing shafts of light dancing across time, I’m running  along La Corregidora where the Templo de San Agustin rises high enough to still catch a glimpse of the rapidly disappearing day. The sun creeps across scarred stone, blemished columns with etched flowers, exhausted stained glass and brutal towers saddened by time’s eternal gaze. It creeps across the fountain and blemished cantera whose beauty marks sealed their fate long ago.
     I can only believe that the architects of this city were creating a stage for the plays of light and shadow following the stars, tuned like a fine Stradivarius, the clouds improvising their own rendition, time molding its symphony as wind and rain shape the stones; the passage of time releases its character, gives birth to its own personality, etching its texture.
     It’s this play of light and shadow at the break of dawn and nightfall that reveals the shadows of the soul, a forgotten heartbeat, a dance that lies dormant beneath waking and dreaming, yet in those wandering shadows between night and day, there’s a glimpse of the sleeping poets in us all. In this city, the stone walls have created a rare doorway where eternity offers a reflection of itself; the play of light and shadow lives throughout the night, and the poet dances, the poet sings, the soul harmonizes with the forgotten harmonies forever possessed, but seldom realized.
    

CONCERT IN MORELIA



CONCERT IN MORELIA     Written in 2008

     By Travis M. Whitehead

     Four men appear on stage to play three violins and a cello. The music begins with a slow

murmur indented with pensive sighs emanating from a violin. The sadness grows, wistfully

evoking a disturbed memory crawling to the surface through the consciousness, shuddering,

quivering, then falling into a slow moving stream.

     Suddenly it awakens, frustration rekindled, the dissonances pushing against each other into a

tragic harmony, sorrowful and conflicting emotions fusing, then separating, hovering in the

background through the stream of consciousness, pondering, falling into nothingness, dissipating

to the outlying boundaries of the musical landscape, the notes coalescing into a tragic whole.

     They rise with a renewed vitality, dashing about, rushing in a frenzied determination for

satisfaction, shrill notes jumping, seesawing like the psychotic anger of a distressed soul, now

resolute in its quest for justice, a woman humiliated into fury. She dashes from one precipice to

another within sight of the glory of madness, as though insanity is seducing a tortured soul into

the realm of universal justification. Now each musician takes turns plucking strings as the

insanity crystallizes into focused and calculating barbarity.

     In the second piece, notes slide around ill-defined, the cellist bouncing his bow across the

strings. The musical artisans venture toward the precipice of discovery, musical possibilities

dangling from a cliff, a spider dancing from a single thread over a candle. Chords are ripping

together, clashing, compromising, exhausting their own dreams, resurrecting anguished notes,

dragging them across their conscious lives, stretching the limits of their musical language. They

squeak, pour, slide, struggle for actualization, racing toward a harmony that lingers beyond

reach, sad and dissonant notes struggling to find agreement. And then finding none, they resign

themselves to their dissonance, then rush suddenly, irrevocably into nothingness.

     More dissonance arises in the third piece, with violins and cellos becoming percussion

instruments, bows bouncing off strings like the hum of bumble bees, thump, thump, thump,

thump wrenching from the very abyss of the instrument's consciousness to borrow from some

other musical alphabet, a tortured soul. High-pitched notes cut into the air, then all four charge

onto the stage, shrill notes and a bass line like the galloping of two terrified horses thundering

through a dark wood. \

     It slows, as if the riders, lost now in an exhausted ecstasy, stop to discover their fate. Two

lovers seek each other out - this is their meeting place. They've dismounted and they sneak

through the woods, looking around trees and over rocks. They spy one another but, alas, soldiers

have come seeking their beloved princess and the pauper who has captured her heart, the music

rising in a crescendo of distress. He takes her hand and hides with her in a ravine until slowly, as

the music fades, they are alone, the soldiers vanishing into the darkness.

     The musicians have stretched themselves beyond the limits of their own auditory dialect,

slicing prior knowledge, cutting through the layers of mundane musical dogma, rearranging their

musical alphabet, peeling away layers of obsolete revelations. The music has rushed toward

listeners with hearts flung wide open, filling the vacuous depths of their souls with an agonized

wonder, morphing their clouded perceptions into a speechless clarity.

GALAPAGOS NIGHT



Galapagos Night
     By Travis M. Whitehead


On a star-filled Galapagos Night,
     When the universe bore her soul,
             I sailed across the sea
                       Riding the ocean’s currents.


But I was drawn by her breath,
     Sweet jasmine from the stars,
           And her flirtations of ecstasy
           Teased me away - 


And the sails became my wings,
        The ocean’s breath my sorrow,
                As the voice of eternity’s youth
                Beckoned me away


The breath of the ocean,
     forever burning in my mouth,
           now awakened me
                 From the stupor of wakefulness.


I was an albatross,
     soaring between night and day,
              following in the footsteps of time’s shadow,
                        intoxicated by the hot blood of the universe,
                               heaving, pulsating, groaning.