Invisibility
Is Not a Choice: Daily Meditations on Finding A My Voice
Week 21, Day
1: Nothing More to Say
Hello, __day
- the __ day of the month of ___.
You look the
same. Do I?
Sirens roar in
the near and far distance. Again.
Tones range
from high soprano to low alto. Unlike days of decades
past, when
children danced safely in the streets and porch gatherings
were times of
festive camaraderie. Dusty shoebox photos – blurred
in black and
white ink - proof my memory is not the source of the daily
betrayals that
parade before – on, through, over – us. Now, eyes darken
and elders of
all ages shoo offspring inside. Hurry, now. Balls away.
Nets tucked
behind fence. Careful now. Locks twist
right. Nighttime
Games of tag
with no winners await. Curtains draw. Lights off.
Bedtime comes
early for the children
these days. Bedtime
comes early – and increasingly earlier – for all.
Asphalt streets
and concrete sidewalks spew unpredictable fury
after dark. Temperatures
rise. Ninety-nine, One hundred,
One hundred
and one. Rest calls. Daytime frolics grow shorter. Lifespans, too.
Measured in
decades. Did he reach his third?
Times differ –
daily’s shutter, go digital – and fear persists. Was she let go, too?
I need coffee.
No cream. No sugar.
Percolate and
brew – steam reveals a rising sense of unease
that fails to
temper or cool. Too hot to touch. Stand back. Step away.
Yellow tape,
solemn faces.
What now?
Heads turn
right, then left,
then right
again. Eyes lock.
Stories vary,
yet truths remain the same.
Another shot.
Mark made. Life lost.
Him? Her?
Both?
Why? What?
How? NO.
Not again.
Again.
No. Yes.
How?
“There’s
nothing more to say”, we say. On repeat, as we fade into dust
and our
stories evaporate into the gray air we call our temporary home
on our path to
nowhere. And everywhere. Tents line 8th. 9th. 10th,
too.
But there is.
There’s much to say and say we must.
We must ensure
the stories persist.
…Pursuits of
Ms. M. and Mr. D.
... Hobbies of
young Miss F.
…Dreams of
Teen T.
…Toys of Tot
P.
…More.
That we
persist. Through speech. Loud, high-pitched yells. Low, deep-bellowed
moans. Quick,
eager whispers. Punctured text. Succinct replies. Mass emails. Hand written
letters.
Marches. Petitions. Sign here. On the dotted line. Pieces we call poems.
Call it what
you wish, but for whatever you wish – then write.
We must.
Well-constructed
arguments built on scholarly evidence and mountains
of sound
quantitative and qualitative data.
Formal and
informal logic. Formal and informal speech.
Simple if-then
statements mask complexities
revealed in
hindsight only.
…If stay at
home orders are to work, everyone needs a home.
…If stay at
home orders are to work, all homes must be safe.
…If we live in
a democracy, all voices deserve a vote.
…If drug
dependencies require treatment, all souls require care.
…If
temperatures rise above 100 degrees, milk and minds sour.
Shall I
continue? It’s getting dark…
When
contra-positives falter, we must continue to find ways
to ensure our
voices and the stories
of those who
cannot speak for themselves
are shared.
First
Amendment protections frayed
and fractured.
Neighbors speak in whispers only.
First
Amendment protections stifled
and stomped. Visitation
rights on uncertain – and search
dependent – terms.
Privacy
scorched and pruned. Behind the
Curtain.
Turn. Bend. Cough.
Like the bare
wilted and
ever so sad _____ tree with no recognizable name
or identity in
my own backyard.
We speak
not of the terms of our visits.
Only that
they occurred. Twelve noon.
We had a
fine time. Lovely, yes. Of course, we did.
No one
utters his name. Fear it’s contagious, maybe.
In everyone’s
own backyard. ____, there, everywhere.
Ashes and embers
flicker, as
[nameless] boots on the ground tromp, trudge, and slog
through the
crushing news
bites, media
clips, ____ streams, and 24/7 assaults that flood
our planes,
trains, automobiles,
phones, and
minds. No wonder I have a headache.
Week 21, Day
2: Tell Me Why
When asked why
I write, I think how can we not?
The times when
“there’s nothing more to say”
are the times
when there’s nothing more important than saying – anything, everything –
we can. If we
can’t speak to one another, then we write. Loudly. Of the headlines,
the daily
news, and the stories [ the _____, the _____, and the _____ ] of our everyday,
ordinary,
uniquely extraordinary, increasingly silenced lives.
Week 21, Day 3: Time Waits for No One
Clock alarm buzzes.
Body coughs. Bones growl. Wake up.
Hello,
World. Let’s go.
Right toes curl. Left
stretch.
Flannel quilt drops. Knuckles
crack.
Sirens roar. Ready? Go.
Fingers find Red Bic.
Spiral notebook on
nightstand.
Capture nighttime thoughts.
Vague wonderings turn
real as phantom “Thinks”
transform
to physical “Things”
with a familiar name and a
familiar voice.
No.
All that which is documented
persist beyond nighttime dreams – the good and bad – and daytime
wonderings – the good and
bad, the right and wrong, the acknowledged and the ignored.
Write. Now.
Week 21, Day 4: Marking Every. Single. One.
Ball point ink runs dry. Please forgive the tiny pencil scrawl.
Cannot – will not – miss a day. Not a single one…
Hidden behind the numbers and volumes of data that “speak”
objectively of thousands of traumas –
physical and sexual assaults, rapes, and batteries - are the
faces. Fingers tap, then click. Weary eyes
await, as tired souls seek refuge and transportation. Entering a
vehicle with a smile and leaving
with a forever scar. Behind statistics that emphasize
percentages, odds ever in our favor, and phrases
of “only” one for so many thousands, is the question: When will one – every one – matter?
Students of eighteen years, tourists of twenty, workers of thirty, travelers of forty,
explorers of fifty,
friends of sixty, families of seventy, experts of eighty, and elders of ninety years of age.
Parades of lives upended – each and every one – as car
processions occur on the daily -
out of a basic need to arrive at one’s destination safely.
Ending a late-night shift. Avoiding drivers
with penchants for drinking. Splurging on a direct ride home.
Choosing license plates over subway
unknowns. Seven months pregnant with tired feet and an aching
back. Office staff spending wages
to save time. End
of paying the ultimate price. Each one – Losing everything.
Unknowingly entering
contracts about to be broken. Transactions meant to take one safely from point A to point B - where
loved ones, rest, and sweet dreams await, lead instead to
a destination – for one and for all –
of a lifetime of tossing, turning, and haunted nights.
Darn. My pencil point broke. Hang tight.
I have one more.
Week 21, Day 5: Daily Edits
The alarm
clock rings at 6 AM, though the world
runs
non-stop despite our need for rest. First thumbs,
then hands push
Sleep twice, then shower, dress, drive. Again.
Coffee brews
at 7 AM as incoming emails and outgoing
replies
light up the airwaves – 24/7 without fail -
and enter
the stratosphere of our daily
To Do’s with a relentlessness that never fails
to impress.
Careful and cursory reads alike
generate
further clicks and clacks
on keyboards
that next morph into 8 AM meetings
and talk of
policy, appropriate responses, and reviews
for tone. “Where’s
my draft?” On it. STAT. Check
grammar, get
sign off. Be careful of copies. Blind CC only,
please. Copy
him. Not her. Not her? Yes, Sir. Yes, M’am.
On it. STAT. Careful now. Clock minute hands tick, emails
beep, phones
ping, all the while I long for a mandatory – thank you
Federal laws
and regulations – 15-minute break – my time to write.
Clock out.
March to break room. Unzip
clear
plastic backpack. Color tints not allowed.
Must see
all. All must be seen. Always.
Open
journal.
Wait – STOP.
No more robot. You’re not
on company
time. Relax. Write.
Smile to
co-worker. Glance right. Then left.
Okay to
chat? Breathe. Be. Write.
What’s
writing? Freedom.
Freedom to cover,
process, share
a story
however,
whenever, wherever
I choose.
Freedom to
speak and to be
whomever,
whatever, whenever
I wish.
Freedom to
take rides down rabbit
holes and
emerge only for air, not
a new
pressing lead or need.
Freedom not
to dwell on what others –
might think,
but only to encourage
thought.
Freedom to
toss the manual, the samples,
the
relentless checks
and line
edits that strip
life, and
its glorious peculiarities,
like
chocolate whipped cream frosting
on eggs (Not
for you? No problem. Works
for me), from the story
and myself.
Sorry. Not
sorry. No one has to read
What we
write, after all.
Response
requested options
left at the
sterile office.
No “Poem
Read” requests
Required.
Not YET.
Freedom to
write
to find a
story,
rather than
tell the story
I’m asked to
write.
Most of all,
Freedom
to Just BE.
YOU. ME.
WE.
Until the
alarm bells rings. Break over.
Time to go
back to work.
Week 21,
Day 6: Pick-Up Sticks and Media Clips
Games of
pick-up sticks.
Pick one.
Touch none. Ready or not.
Lives
crumble daily.
Prime time
news tells all
stories no
one wants to hear.
Ten second
clips of fear.
… Quick.
Count down from ten. Backwards, yes.
Nothing ever
looks right side up again.
Do you hear
the sirens? The baby’s cries? The squelch
of the car
breaks? The snap of the yellow tape. The roar
of the
thunder? Two seconds remaining? No worries,
there’s
more. Always more. The rush of the
winds. The collapse
of the
building. The slam of the door. The screams?
And the
monotone voice of the concerned anchor persists…
Blink. Fast.
Sound bytes play.
Media runs
on steroids.
Remotes
click and clack.
Pick up ball
point pen.
Find last yellow
Number 2 pencil.
Write to remember.
Week 21,
Day 7: The Question
My logical
side knew the Question would present itself. One day.
But
hopefully not today. Not tomorrow, either. Of course, those
questions we
are most reluctant to address are those most
likely to
knock. Doorbells while we shower. Ticket collectors. Traffic
fines.
Probation officers. Boyfriends. Do you love me? Him? Overdue
library
books. I’m still looking for the copy, I promise I will return
it by
week’s end. Whether by chance. Like
wrong numbers, reply
all emails (Did
I really just do that?), and a single empty seat
on an otherwise
standing room only bus. I sit, knowing I might need
to talk when
all I want to do is write. Most questions are intentional
and life’s a
bargaining process, after all. Though I’d much prefer
anything
else. Well, not anything. But not the Question,
either. “I
read something, in a journal, it had your name on it… is it you?”
Me? I do not
know. How could I? I do not know who writes the words
I see emerge
on the page. The screen. The air between you and I. Are the words
Mine? Yours?
Ours? The piece – you’ve read it. Processed it. Even interpreted it.
So, now,
might it not be some of you? Perhaps. And who I am? That I say, depends
on whose
asking, and when you ask. But wait. It’s my stop. I must go.
Thank you for sharing your
seat.
Week 22, Day 1: Seeing
Double.
Calendar page flips
as left-hand grips new red Bic.
Blank lined pages wait.
* * * * *
Jen Schneider is an
educator, attorney, and writer. She lives, writes, and works in small spaces
throughout Philadelphia. Recent work appears in The Popular Culture Studies
Journal, Toho Journal, The New Verse News, Zingara Poetry Review, Streetlight
Magazine, Chaleur Magazine, LSE Review of Books, and other literary and
scholarly journals.
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