Poem A Week: Bodega Head by Beth Winegarner

Photo by Flickr user J. Curley. Creative Commons.

Photo by Flickr user J. Curley. Creative Commons.

Here, in this cradle of earth, surrounded by low boulders,
was our wedding bed.
I think this is where I married you.

I do not think it can be undone.

Instead the land wove deep threads through us on needles
so tiny we thought the pricking was pleasure.
It was in this place that I loved your warmth,
sheltering me from the winds' knives,
and you loved the flavor of my mouth, 
which reminded you of riding the ocean.
You wanted to be drunk on me and I let you be,
never understanding that the words of a drunkard
do not truck in the unintoxicated world.

I would have let you take me then,
there in the sunshine and soil,
or that night in your cold bed.
As much as I wanted it I am lucky you didn't take me.

I am even luckier that you left me.

Your absence, and this thin, ridiculous longing,
are far better companions than you could have ever been.

Poem A Week: You Do Not Complete Me by Beth Winegarner

Photo by Filip Mishevski on Unsplash

Photo by Filip Mishevski on Unsplash

You do not complete me
any more than the tree completes the soil,
each slowly devouring the other;

any more than the sun completes the moon,
which is still the moon whether or not it is lit;

any more than the spoon completes the bowl,
filling and emptying it again;

any more than the traveler completes the road,
which goes onward, explored or unexplored, to its end.

Poem A Week: Ashore by Beth Winegarner

Photo by Silas Baisch on Unsplash

Photo by Silas Baisch on Unsplash

Each morning I haul myself
out from the depths of sleep,
pillow a life raft, blankets a tangle
of fisherman's net trapping my legs.

Voices on the radio tow me in,
sometimes so sharply I don't remember going under,
other times so weakly I gasp and cough chestfuls
of dreams from my leaden lungs.

Dreams stream from my hair,
catch between fingers and toes,
weigh me with fragmented memory.

The taste of ash in my mouth,
limbs bruised where you grasped them too hard,
fresh ache of a loved one dead, alive, dead again.

Some dreamers skiff across the night sea's surface
in fast-moving vessels, wake easily each day.
Me, it's a wonder I don't drown.

Poem A Week: Petaluma, 2009 by Beth Winegarner

Birds boomerang above the tin spires
of the empty granary.
Its stacks are ringed with rust.
Its threadbare sheds stand hollow, doors open,
framing the weedy lot beyond.

No one has hauled grain from here in decades.
Ruined barns shy from the roadside,
split sides knitted together with spiderwebs,
spines broken and piled with mouldering straw and leaves.
Livestock would turn from them for fear of collapse.

Freight trucks gather in the darkness just off 101,
wheels nestling into gravel,
headlights winking out two by two.
Sleep, coffee, Grand Slam breakfast and harder things:
all these stave off white-line fever.

Past these graveyards and pit stops
flows the wide river,
carrying gravel barges, passenger ferries, rumors
of capsized pleasure boats.
The town's dead sit quietly, unburied,
as the earth slowly welcomes them back.

Poem A Week: This Land by Beth Winegarner

Read-breasted robins gather on the softball field
in the heavy fog, searching for bugs.
As I approach they take to the sky in one
smooth, silent trajectory. It is clear,
even when humans are not using this land,
these birds think of it as ours.
I do not want it to be mine.
I want the green expanse, a kind of
banquet of insects, to be theirs; I want them
to tell me when I am intruding; I want them
to chase me off for showing up at
family dinner like some traveling salesman
ringing their doorbell. I think of Sonoma, of the
wild green woods, the shrubs and grasses
so massive in the summer, humming with
birds and crawling things. There, nature
is so pervasive and huge that you know,
without doubt, one day it will take over,
swallow everything, and claim its due.

Poem A Week: When I Die by Beth Winegarner

"Dobro" by Mshai is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 

"Dobro" by Mshai is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 

When I die
Bury me in a dobro
Under that pierced steel moon
And its underwater shimmer song

Put my flesh to fire
Bellowed from the heat
Of a 10,000 watt amp
Ringing anywhere everywhere

Lay my bones
In a cello casket
I'll rattle around like dancing
Under the keening of the strings

Press my carbon to diamonds
And put me in a needle
Tuck me into that warm black space
Between the grooves

I could never make music
But when I go
I want you to know
I'm singing

Coming Out: Fibromyalgia by Beth Winegarner

“When we feel vulnerable sharing something with someone, I think it’s because we are actually judging or shaming ourselves ... And then we’re afraid the other person will as well. We’re afraid they will confirm our worst fears about ourselves. That’s why it’s scary. We fear their rejection because we’re really fearing our own rejection of ourselves.” —Kara Loewenthiel

“The reward for conformity is that everyone likes you but yourself.” —Rita Mae Brown

I have fibromyalgia.

I was formally diagnosed a couple of years ago, but I’ve been living with it in some form since my early 20s. For years I thought it might be something else: rheumatoid arthritis, maybe, or a connective-tissue disorder. The diagnosis surprised me, but over time it has come to make sense. 

The definition of fibromyalgia, as it stands now (the medical world doesn’t really understand it very well yet), is that it’s a neurological condition in which things that shouldn’t hurt do, and things that should only hurt a little hurt a lot. When I injure myself, my body heals but the pain lingers — my nervous system “learns” the pain, then struggles to unlearn it. Fibromyalgia often comes with fatigue, general aches, brain fog, trouble sleeping and other symptoms. For everyone who has it, it’s a bit different. 

This is what it’s like for me: I’m in a little bit of pain every day, somewhere in my body. Often, it’s more than a little pain. Today, it’s focused in a spot next to my right shoulder blade. But I’m achy elsewhere, too — in my shoulders, my arms, my legs, my feet. Sometimes, I also feel like I’m coming down with the flu: my throat and eyes are scratchy, everything aches and I feel like I could sleep for days. I have one or two days like that each month. Even on a good day, my body gets stiff quickly, and standing up when I’ve been sitting a while means walking gingerly until my muscles joints loosen again. 

Fibromyalgia flares often come on when I overdo it, physically or emotionally. If I spend an hour gardening or take a long walk, or even if just have a night of bad sleep, I’ll have flu-like symptoms the next day. It’s similar if I get really upset or stressed out by something. Sometimes it’s worth it — worth it to be fully alive and active in my body or in my emotions, even though I’ll likely feel lousy the next day. But generally I try to do things in moderation. 

To look at me, you wouldn’t guess anything was amiss. This is what it means to be invisibly disabled.

It might sound like I’d be miserable all the time, but I’m not. There are bad days, and there are days when I grieve or feel like I’ll never feel good again, but they are pretty rare. This is my baseline and I’m pretty used to it, just like you’re used to yours. 

The most common treatments for fibromyalgia are anticonvulsants like gabapentin and pregabalin, thought to keep the nervous system from overreacting and causing symptoms (they’re also used to prevent epileptic seizures, and to treat shingles pain). I haven’t tried them, largely because I am so sensitive to medications, and these ones are notorious for being difficult to get used to (and more difficult to come off of if they don’t work). 

Instead, I take low doses of ibuprofen, which helps keep my baseline pain levels down. On bad days I have a whole menu of things to try: stretching, foam rolling or rolling against a pinky ball, THC or CBD tinctures, cannabis salves, heating pad, a bath with epsom salts, massage, chiropractic care, a nap. I’ve tried plenty of other things that don’t help, and I’m not looking for any advice. The best preventatives are good sleep, lots of hydration, and not too much (or too little) exercise or stress. But there’s only so much control I have — which is to say, not much. I’ve spent a lot of time coming to terms with the idea that some days I’ll feel like crap, but they will pass. 

The causes of fibromyalgia are still not well understood, but some research points to chronic stress, especially the kind of stress we may carry if we’ve experienced adversity and trauma before we become adults. It’s nice to see this research making its way into mainstream publications after doctors not taking fibromyalgia seriously for decades.

I’ve kept this to myself for a long time, not wanting to be treated as different or less capable — or conversely as some sort of inspiration, achieving so much in the face of adversity. Ultimately I can’t control what others think, and the older I get, the less energy I have for hiding. 

Favorite Things of 2019 by Beth Winegarner

Photo by freestocks.org on Unsplash.

As 2019 draws to a close, I wanted to look back and recommend a few of my favorite things from the year: books, music, television (this was a great year for television!), movies, podcasts, and so on. I hope you check some of these out, and if they’re already among your favorites of the year, let me know! At the end I share a handful of the books, TV and other things I’m looking forward to in 2020.

Books:
Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good, Adrienne Maree Brown
The Book of Flora, Meg Elison
Those Who Wander: America’s Lost Street Kids, Vivian Ho
The Atlas of Reds and Blues, Devi Laskar
Burnout: The Secret to Unlocking the Stress Cycle, Emily and Amelia Nagoski
The Witches Are Coming, Lindy West

(You can hear me talking about Burnout on the GrottoPod podcast on Tuesday, Dec. 31. To keep up to date on that podcast, which I co-produce, sign up for our newsletter.)

Music:
Alcest, Spiritual Instinct
Lizzo, “Boys” (song)
Rope Sect, “Handsome Youth” (song)
Russian Circles, Blood Year
Chelsea Wolfe, Birth of Violence

Movies:
Hustlers
Last Black Man in San Francisco
Little Women
Marriage Story
The Farewell

Television:
Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance
Fleabag
Game of Thrones
(Season 8)
Gentleman Jack
Good Omens
His Dark Materials 
Killing Eve
Pose
Shrill
The Magicians
(Season 4)

Podcasts:
By-The-Bywater
How to Survive the End of the World
The Boiler Room
The Storm
This Podcast Will Kill You

YouTubers:
Bernadette Banner
Cathy Hay
Kitten Lady
James Welsh

Some Things I’m Looking Forward to in 2020:
Anne with an E, Season 3
Big Girl, Meg Elison
Breath, James Nestor
You Were Born For This, Chani Nicholas
She Votes: How U.S. Women Won Suffrage, Bridget Quinn
Parked, Danielle Svetcov
The Magicians Season 5

Poem a Week: Game by Beth Winegarner

Content warning: references to intimate partner abuse.

I: Nature

The fox crouches beneath cotoneaster fronds, 
red snout a strange berry.
A mouse scrabbles in the kudzu, 
tiny twitchings of her nose, whiskers, paws. 
The fox waits, can already taste 
the burst of meat and blood across his tongue.

She's so near he can smell the wet earth of her fur. 
In one motion he lunges, traps her in his jaw. 
Her terror makes his heart thrill.
She goes still in the cage of his canines. 
For long moments, months it seems,
(foxes cannot track time as well as they track prey) 
he holds her.

Is she alive? Curiosity swarms like flies in the fox’s ears
and his jaw falls open like a trapdoor, 
dropping the spit-slicked morsel into the duff. 
With no breath wasted the mouse dives back into the kudzu, 
deep beneath its sheltering barbed wire. 
Her babies will wonder why she brings home 
the scent of the hunter.

What do we say about foxes?
They cannot be trusted to protect hens and chicks.
The difference between the fox in the wood
and the fox in humans’ minds is this: 
the true animal does not grieve when its prey escapes, 
does not spend months wondering why she left.



II: In Fairytales

What makes a man terrorize the mother of his child, 
who saw Kali in the basins of blood 
the midwives carried from her bedroom,
who nearly died ushering in their lily-child?
What makes him tear the telephone wire from the wall,
arbiting connection to kin and rescue, as though
her screams would not carry from house to house?

We hire police to muzzle such men and cage them,
lawyers to seal the locks with guilt.

It is no wonder that some men dream themselves into
foxes or wolves, blade-toothed wild hounds, as though
doing so excuses them from the twin responsibilities of
conscience and respect. To live by hunger, lust,
the violence of bones snapped between strong jaws,
scent, the hunt: simple, isn’t it?

And all the throbbing, hot-veined creatures who
tremble in your presence are yours for the taking.


III: The Leash

Last night I dreamed we made a private joke between us.
While laughing, you wrapped a cord around my throat
so gentle and slow, I didn’t notice at first 
how tight it became until I could no longer 
slip my fingers underneath and pull it loose. 
We pretended that this, too, was funny.

Men have told me what to think, what to wear,
what to eat, what to buy, whom to love, what to say.
What not to say.
I have made their leashes my own.


IV: Wake Up

Sirens slice the night. 
Red and blue spins across your face.
Your hand still clutches the torn telephone line, 
copper wires the frayed end
of a marriage come undone,
ragged, separating, naked.

They enter in blue, sticks raised.
Behave as an animal and they will treat you like one.

V: Leaving

Just as the fox does not grieve and blame himself when the mouse escapes,
the mouse does not celebrate or feel proud. But we are not animals,
and I was secretly glad when I heard you left him.
More than secretly: I wanted to set bonfires on each mountaintop
to light your way to liberty. I longed to name each beacon
that would welcome you: Overleving, Sopravvivenza,
Vrijheid, Liberté, Freiheit. Freedom. Freedom. Freedom.

Poem A Week: False Garlic by Beth Winegarner

False garlic, Nothoscordum bivalve. Photo by Eric in SF.

False garlic, Nothoscordum bivalve. Photo by Eric in SF.

Kick your spurs
deep into winter's hide.
Gulp rainwater, splay your blades,
stabbing green into the black earth.
Claw through soft soil for the sun,
sky the color of a dishrag.

Nod white petals in summer,
shade blonde pistils
from the blistering light.
Flounce your beauty,
flirting through anodyne petticoats
that mask your ballistic blueprint.

Swell your bulbs deep,
masked in papery brown,
studded with seeds: cluster bombs
cocked to burst if they dig you up.
They'll have to savage the soil for years
before they can forget you.