Sunday, March 21, 2021

Women's History Month: Sunday, March 21, 2021: Lisa Marguerite Mora's "Balance of Discipline and Utter Abandonment"

 

                                                        photo by Nina Port


Balance of Discipline and Utter Abandonment


I take a book and notebook to the cafe, Intelligentsia several times

a week.  An industrial collage of wood beams; and steel; and light

through clear and opaque glass. High ceilings, gray floors, squares

of cement. Skeletal steel shelves bracketed to the walls. The rest of

the light from compact high functioning clear bulbs. Glass and steel,

accents of wood. Skylights. There is an expectation of copper, but

one searches to no avail. Blues, jazz, and electronica over the

sound system.


Baristas vary from un-maked-up jovial young women to stern men

in their late thirties. A determined ascetic, rather German, definitely

masculine vibe but the non-harsh light softens and fills space between

fine and various straight lines of wiring, pipes, and scaffolding. High

tech lightbulbs suspended on fine steel wires from the wood beamed

ceiling, slant of skylights, large aluminum funnels and pipes affirm

mysterious functions of their own, one thinks of trapeze artists, an

abundance of pattern like birds in formation above the espresso

drinkers who look as determined as the baristas over their Apple

laptops, lined up one after the other on the stainless steel counters.


Outside a beckon of green suggests you are not actually in a building,

though it is quietly and unobtrusively air-conditioned. Or is it? The

atmosphere is focused, not busy; the vibe human and intelligent. An

old structure, brick exterior, built in the late 19th century or at the

turn of the 20th century it was probably once a ware house for milk or

meat. Now people younger than myself stare into their computers,

all MacAir, from the look of them, one after the other, reminiscent

of an assembly line. Perhaps for screenplays. This is a different crowd

from what used to be Abbot's Habit down the street, which has sadly

lost its lease after thirty some years. Or if it's the same people, they

look different here.


Through the speakers some sort of driving dramatic drum beats

and synthesized strings. In the background grind of coffee beans.

Bells now punctuate the music, gives the sense a moment of

epiphany is imminent. Metallic pound of the espresso portafilter.

A dog barks. They allow dogs here? How enlightened. Russian s

poken next to me, the young woman who shares the little table a

nswers me in perfectly accented American. Wish I knew another

language. French. For some unnameable reason it makes me feel

as though I am home. I have never been. I will get there yet. Paris.


It will thrum in my breast bone the slow movement of ancient stone.

Everything is energy, particles move at varying rates. Even me—my

energy sometimes buoyant, sometimes pools in shadows. Now the

music hums and whines, a saxophone, a harmonica. A Parisian feel

again. There was a chance to go when we were in the U.K., but too

tired to cross the Channel that winter. (Now Creedence Clearwater

blasts.) Had to make due with Windsor Castle. Prince Albert's

opulent memorial; Victoria's love for him vastly, intricately, widely,

deeply evident—her heart a jewel on display for generations to come.

Who can measure love?

The less you talk about it and the more you move away from the subject,

those who know you, don't. The deeper that cave within you, encrusted

with a scintillating no one can capture. Protected treasure. Words hack.

Indeed there are those who have brought the pick axes deigning to

clarify and pigeon hole and articulate what your own heart cannot. If

all the jewels of the kingdom were at your disposal, they would not

be worthy of the quality that vibrates under your sternum, the pulse

no music can capture. So you remain silent with epiphany.


Most of the time I feel wordless. Occasionally or frequently something

takes hold of me and I'll write a poem. It's not me as I experience

myself, but some other part that rouses and seeks to share something,

some observation or feeling. Half the time I wonder who this person is.

When I set out to write an essay or a novel, there is a "plan" but even t

hen I will have to let go into what decides to reveal itself. It requires a

balance of discipline and utter abandonment. It is difficult to talk about,

harder yet, to "teach."


Fifteen years ago I visited a tiny seaside village in Cornwall which was

famous for buffeting incredible winds you could lean into and you

would not topple over. People liked to do this, while standing on the c

liffs that overlooked the sea. The winds dared you. And if you were the

daring type you answered the call. We walked along the pathway high

on the cliffs and next to the gray and gold spliced ocean. The light was

incredible. Painters flocked here to capture what they saw.


Sometimes I think I could give up this housing and shoveling of words

into print, this sense of wordlessness only to be taken over by this other

person who "speaks" and says things I only at times half understand.

Sometimes I think before I die I will lean into the wind some other

way and fight for my dual citizenship and find my way back to that

village, invest in watercolors and teach myself to capture on canvas

another way to render images and feelings and observations -- to stop

seeking to make sense of it all with these hieroglyphics I've devoted

my life to. Color and shape would be a respite, the gold spliced Atlantic

and standing on a steep cliff in a steeper wind would wipe out the

roving restless wordless state, the strange angst of gestation.


I tell myself this story. But in the end, you see, even such an experience

as that would seek to become a story. Would demand to become words

no matter how wordless I felt. And I would be used again, cramping my

fingers around a pen or over a keyboard, while the elements danced

more madly than they dance here in languid Los Angeles, its still blue

air, its pronounced sunshine, the Pacific calm and barely lapping. And

in that charming English village perched on the edge of daily capricious

forces, my paints would dry up untouched because these hieroglyphics

demand everything. And they promise it to me over and over again just

as waves and wind hurl and announce themselves unendingly against

the eroding gem of a rock that is England, they promise to me just as much.


© 2021 Lisa Marguerite Mora



BIO: Lisa Marguerite Mora has won prizes for poetry and fiction. She conducts workshops and offers literary services https://www.lisamargueritemora.com. Publications include Chiron Review, Rattle, Literary Mama, Public Poetry Series, California Quarterly, Cultural Weekly, Rebelle Society, Serving House Journal, among others, a Blue Mountain Arts Poetry Prize, First Place winner Micro Fiction for Dandelion Press as well as an Honorable Mention. Though she still seeks a home for her novel, it has caught the attention of top agents. Her prose and poetry have been nominated for Best of the Net as well as a Pushcart Prize.

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