Quote
"

Sucede que me canso de ser hombre.
Sucede que entro en las sastrerías y en los cines
marchito, impenetrable, como un cisne de fieltro
Navegando en un agua de origen y ceniza.

El olor de las peluquerías me hace llorar a gritos.
Sólo quiero un descanso de piedras o de lana,
sólo quiero no ver establecimientos ni jardines,
ni mercaderías, ni anteojos, ni ascensores.

Sucede que me canso de mis pies y mis uñas
y mi pelo y mi sombra.
Sucede que me canso de ser hombre.

Sin embargo sería delicioso
asustar a un notario con un lirio cortado
o dar muerte a una monja con un golpe de oreja.
Sería bello
ir por las calles con un cuchillo verde
y dando gritos hasta morir de frío

"

Neruda, Walking Around

A good friend of mine is having a tough time finding authenticity and meaning in her new job. She tells me she feels like this poem. The first three stanzas (above) resonate particularly with me. They seem to capture well the feeling of suffocating staleness that I have visited often this year.

“Meh”, we say, but the utterance fails at conveying the weariness of living in our own skins, muted as we are by an oppressive humidity of quotidian process and minutiae. We are starving to unsettle things:

Still it would be marvelous
to terrify a law clerk with a cut lily,
or kill a nun with a blow on the ear.
It would be great
to go through the streets with a green knife
letting out yells until I died of the cold.

Text

Being Twenty-Something

Being twenty-something is exhausting. I’m tired of ‘figuring out who I am’ and I wish someone would insist that I come home at a reasonable hour. Hell, I wish I knew what home meant in this city of my youth, a city that is becoming more foreign to me as I fall head-first, like a top-heavy toddler, from one weekend to the next.

I wish someone would help me fill my huge, bare, white walls with silly doodles, or my hallways with brown paper kites (Rives style) signed with odes to domesticity. What whimsy. It is deeply unsettling to be perpetually in-between; between boy and man even after all these years of pretending; between ecstatic, awkward youth and self-possession.

I will settle though, for more consistent facial hair so that my youngness is not so apparent in places of decent music and conversation worth having. Those pop club ballads are killing me, and the stickiness on the bottom of my shoes is disgusting. I need other grounding.