
Moineau, age 3
The dream had me by the tongue
starting just after memory
and by the balls when I
turned 4 and I turned it
off for good, whatever use it was
I don't know and
should really care less
but it haunts me to this
day: the anima-animus
It started oddly enough
just after the light was turned off
and I turned it back on in that
bedroom landscape of scorn
where Captain Kangeroo was vampire
and Casper was not a friendly
ghost at all, not to little girls
and both of them performed
operations and tore out hearts
through rib cages
So, light on, I swung my
little legs from the sheets and
blankets toward the floor
slipped out of bed and
headed for the bathroom
I only had to wash my hands
but being very small, I
needed a stool, a little red
three-planked step with the
trademark still on it, in order
to reach the handle and faucet
and I did this several times
a day without incident
but in my night-time world
I was scared and skinny cold
and in a whole lot of trouble
I'd step up, staring at my hands
and reach for the soap, then
slowly looking up, knowing
she'd be there in that
silver-throated mirror
I'd force myself to
look at my reflection, knowing
full well I would not be there, but
she would be instead
the black-faced girl, my
animus-ghost, with matted
hair and giant mouth, and we
both would scream, big
and round, a chorus of
echoes that woke me up loudly:
and scared out of my wits
for many breathless minutes
I'd remember that i dreamed
this every night, just when the
light was turned off, and it went
on for month after month
until I outgrew it
Yet, every time I stand at the
sink in bathrooms, I always
expect to be shocked
always know the hard knock
of animus on the heart
and just hope I'll wake up
wake up to my adult life
as one
WOW! Powerful, scary and real. Jerks me back to childhood!
RépondreSupprimerI dreamed of wolves at the door and for years, I thought they were real.
I had mirror dreams, too, but I remember being older . . .
I wrote a story or two about it, will have to find them.
Terrifying...
RépondreSupprimerLaura, I really like this. Like all great memory poems, the images are palpable, and who can't relate to a childhood dream that mystified. You've crafted a powerful ending which brings the poem out of dream and into experience. Excellent.
RépondreSupprimerVisions of Kali at such a young age ... no wonder you had to explore the world of Hindu mythology. Great poem that makes the heart beat like a four-year old. You inspire me to write about the green monkeys that so terrified me as a child.
RépondreSupprimerune vie passee...peut=etre...
RépondreSupprimerje suia d'accord avec Ed - his comment