Paradise
The second of three rented
apartments was overhung by
banana leaves, which we
didn’t cut back the whole
year our daughter was two,
but when she was three and
there was a hard freeze, she
picked up all the leaves and
hauled them away. Hans, the
German neighbor, came to
San Jose in the 1950s,
worked as an ambulance
driver, said the rival
ambulance companies would
race to the scenes of
accidents, and if his company
arrived second, they’d park
so close behind the first that
they couldn’t get their gurney
out, that’s how you steal a
patient, he said. Time in
which everything seems
already to have arrived. It’s a
flaw of memory, the sense it
gives of always standing atop
a hill, looking out. But in
dreams there is only one
sense working, which is
different than all the senses
active at once, so dreams
were nothing at all like
waking life. Out for a walk in
the dry creek bed. A
complicated melody, the
spreading around of leaves,
the powerful body striding
along. I do believe in the
depth of a living tree.
Paradise
The book I want to read is
always “over there.” When
choosing between lilac and
jasmine, either flower a sign
of breeze in the treetops,
though unrelated. To what
does my body owe its posture
the way grass owes morning
dew. She doesn’t know that
this morning her mother will
take her to Lake Wyola, and
let her wade out to her neck
in the cold, cold water to
reach the line of buoys that
shapes the swimming zone.
Waiting for a parent to
address and stamp an
envelope filled with coins.
But walking down Mulberry
Street with my family, I felt
the shape of the crowd
around us as my own shape.
What made it poetry. Light
evening chill.
Paradise
The golf balls were always
brought back to shore from
where they’d landed in the
lake, though not necessarily
that summer. What gets
within a leaf and wets it from
the inside. Surface murmur I
try to hold all the edges of at
once. The space around an
idea is imaginative space. As
a negative multiplied by a
negative becomes positive,
the doubled distance feels like
proximity. His train whistle
imitation was convincing,
and we remembered it
thereafter, because when he
made it at a crossing as a
joke, the driver swerved the
wheel and peed his pants.
That direction, from this
direction. A road is a form
for wonder.
Paradise
She held two caterpillars
gently between finger and
thumb, but tracked in lots of
dirt. The kitchen door
wobbled like a favorite
drunken uncle. Painstaking
annihilation of the spirit.
They grow by inclusion,
specifically, they grow by
difference. The force that
through the sub-street draws
the skyscrapers which, as they
rise, fill with first-world
tourists watching television
from the edges of still-made
beds. It was a sacred space,
but nobody acted that way.
This was evident when the
film simply recast human-AI
love as human-human love
with no apologies. That’s the
nature of experience. He
picked up the nearest phone
to say it.
Paradise
Bored faces stretch at the
edges. The self is discontent
and seeks diversion, or was
that completion, or was that
existence, in the other. My
friend had an exaggerated
sense of his own importance
at thirteen that was evident
still when I saw him, high
and on his way to a concert,
ten years later on the city bus
route my grandfather had
once driven. Stillness in the
air above acres and acres of
asphalt. Streets, of course,
don’t change, but are acted
upon. Absence is without
question absence, as fruit at
the end of its limb is distinctly
fruit. Wind streams shear off
the cloud head. Still, the red
pruning shears are not
nothing.
Paradise
The magician builds trust by
disbelief, acting the idiot
so that later, belief will come
easily when he manages basic
tasks, let alone magic. A
practiced composure, lined
like a formal shirt. But the
problem of perception is
perspective, permanent
condition of the brain in
language. On the path, ferns
grow rough and ragged,
disruptive to my stride. I
asked for a map and was
given a very old map.
But when he pointed into
the woods, I understood at
once that he meant to flee.
The way was buttery, it could
have been rain. I remember
mainly trees.
biography
ANDY STALLINGS lives in Deerfield, MA, where he teaches English and poetry at Deerfield Academy. He taught for several years at Tulane University prior to that and has published a book of poems, To the Heart of the World, with Rescue Press (2014). He has three small children and coaches cross country.