Today
is my forty-fifth birthday, 8:15am. What a difference a year makes (I’ve said
this before). I’ve been full-time with our Rose since the beginning of
November, and have been in contact with my birth-mother since May (we’re only a
half-dozen emails in, so far, and are moving very slowly, which is completely
fine). It’s exhilarating and rather strange to think that this is only my first
birthday post-contact, even if it is only through a rather sporadic email. My first
birthday without even a twinge of grief, or a vague feeling of loss or absence
(while never entirely comprehending what it is that might be missing). I have
yet to discover where I might have been during those first ten months,
somewhere deep in foster care. I remain optimistic for the possibility of baby
photos (I have no baby photos).
So
much of my twenties and into my thirties, composing a ‘birthday’ poem around
this shapeless, formless void. One I knew only the shape and the size for the
hole that remained.
And
my days: Rose tears around the house at lightning speed (managing to fall,
often), and never stops moving, even for sleep. We read books, go on outings
and occasionally bake (apple pies, apple strudels and scones so far). We receive
visitors, often. We await the possibilities of spring/summer and parks and
running running running. We sit Saturday mornings at Billings Bridge, with
muffins, in-between errands (and running).
Of
course, last night was the annual birthday party at the Carleton Tavern (I must
be around fifteen annual birthdays there, by now), which this post can’t yet
comment upon, but I expect it was brilliant (I mean, honestly). I produced a small chapbook for such (obviously), which you can discover further information about here. A “record” birthday, and a year I’m also seven
years past where I was before, and working a longer poem-in-progress, “Sex at
Forty-five” [see my recent write-up on such over at Jacket2]. This, I suppose, is how the birthday poem exists during
this year’s annual birthday-tally [see last year, the year before, the year before, etcetera], composing something broader, longer and possibly more
specific. An excerpt reads:
Skin. Skin. We measure, syntax. Mountains. Into
the current, slickly,
where they drift, dismantle. Perpendicular. Up
against. Decoding. Twelve poems,
thirteen, fourteen. So much fog, in. Sonneteer.
We are made of multiple dimensions:
skin and bone and sand. Where everything made
perfect.
Please answer, in the space provided.
Into a block of marble: silence.
The consequences. You know.
More delicate, then. Figurines of glass, of
stone. Of something dangerous.
Fills the occasional, space. Alternative.
Silence: not dead, only resting.
Sometimes, slow. The meandering race. Such
speed.
Writing
continues, but with an entirely different set of expectations. Since December 1st,
I’ve been pushing hard for my ‘commentaries’ over at Jacket2, posting 2-3 pieces a week throughout January, February and March, which allows for very little else (although I’ve managed to be
interviewed, compose an essay or two or three or four or five or six or seven or eight, and multiple other bits of madness). I’ve
the poetry manuscript I’m slowly opening, “Sex at Forty-five,” and the possible
tail-ends of another, “World’s End,” begun just as we landed at our current
digs on Alta Vista Drive [which I discuss here and here and here and here, with excerpts from such here and here and here and here and here and here]. Once the Jacket2 ‘commentaries’ are complete, at the end of March, I hope to
dig deep again into the manuscript of short fiction, the poorly-titled “On
Beauty” [which I discussed here, with stories from such here and here and here
and here], with a possible manuscript out the door by the end of the year. Maybe?
And
possibly a return to rework (taking up Christine on her kind offer of editorial
assistance) my post-mother memoir, “The Last Good Year” [links to a variety of excerpts live here]. I’ve a series of scattered notes on/around birth mother,
but I really haven’t had time for months to even begin thinking about
collecting the random scratchings into anything beyond rough notes (I know I must
get on this, soon).
And
chapbooks: forthcoming from knives and forks and spoons press, Honeymoon. (sketches, with
another, Mouth of the Rat, newly out
from Porkbelly Press.
I
was able, also, to deliver ON TIME the completed manuscript with introduction
for the Phil Hall selected poems with Wilfrid Laurier University Press. And our
spring poetry titles through Chaudiere Books—a second collection by N.W.
(formerly Nicholas) Lea and The Collected
Poems of William Hawkins, ed. Cameron Anstee (with an interview recently posted with the editor on working on the collection)—have nearly gone to press,
with launches still in the planning stages. Fall titles include a first poetry
book by Chris Turnbull, a second poetry collection by Jennifer Londry, and a
third poetry collection by Andy Weaver (we will be confirming parts of 2016
sometime over the next couple of months). I’ve curated a dusie kollektiv, with chapbooks by forty-some poets from across North America soaring through the post, soon to appear online as well, and have curated a “Canadian feature” of Evening Will Come, featuring statements
by a dozen Canadian poets, scheduled to post on May 1. What else?
I
am full-time with Rose, and somehow seeing more people now than I did before,
with irregular visits by Monty Reid, Brecken Hancock (with Winter), Ron
Seatter, Michael Lithgow (with Wren) and various others. Nikki Sheppy even came
to visit for a week. Susan Johnson (with Matthew) and Wes Smiderle (with
Griffin) have been coming by during occasional mornings, as we take turns
getting work done, but Susan has already returned to work (Wes doesn’t return
to work until August). Rose is getting quite a lot of socialization, and we’ve
even still our quiet days, where we exist with books, the occasional Sesame Street,
and walks around the neighbourhood, as well as our weekly outing for comic
books and muffins in Centretown.
Really,
I’m looking forward to the warmer weather, when Rose and I can really wander
the neighbourhood, and our array of parks; there are at least four parks within
a couple of blocks in any direction. Oh, to be able to simply let her out on
the grass to run…
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