All journeys have secret destinations, of which the traveler is unaware. Welcome to this traveler's tidbits of elsewhere...

Wednesday, June 22, 2016

A Timely Friend (Detroit, MI)

On his corner he wears see-through clothes, thousand-mile shoes and a sun-stained hat.What’s got ya so down dere, missusLife ain’t all dat bad. He scoffs at my ineffective smile. You wanna share my last smoke? My heavy mood exhales the stale tobacco. A foul scent, heavy with feces and whiskey overwhelms my system. I stand anxious for the cab to come.

On his block he mumbles that he lives a life of gratitude, and I a life of indignation. I’s thankful fer e’ry minute cuz out here its da truth dat any minute could be yer last. I fumble to pull a donation from my wallet. I’s don’t want nutin from you, missus. But it looks like you’s could do wit a lesson from me. His sunken black cheeks and rotten gums chatter their story. I look at my watch.

On his street he walks a half-forgotten path, on an avenue where only wild things grow and once mansions battle their inevitable descent to the earth.You think you’s seen things, missus? I’s got more miles in these toes then you’s got strands in yer hair. I lean against the wall.  I knows what yer after. You’s after peace. Well, you’s lookin in da wrong place, missus. I’s can tell you dat fer a fact!  His cracked ashy skin peeks through torn jeans. I can see that his underwear are soiled.

In his neighborhood he lives things other people choose to forget. Dat house over dere was burned down by a battered woman, wit ‘er chil’n and husban in it. A crooked arthritic finger points to an overgrown lot of emptiness. And o’er dere’s where da young mothers get paid for dere sweetness on da regular. You wudn’t neva do dat, wud ya, missus? His hot butter teeth click to form a half-sleazy smile. I sit on the curb.

In his city he knows the truth of difference, the reality of faith and the anguish of exploitation. Dis city is just like a woman. It wants ta be loved Right. His calloused fist beats his exposed chest. Love er right and she’ll blow ya til ya moan. Love er wrong and she’ll beat ya ta yer knees. His hurled rock misses a pregnant dog. I’s can tell you’s a good woman. You’s brought a good man ta ‘is knees, ain’t ya missus? I shrug with a twinkle in my smile.  I just noticed he’s missing two fingers.

In his place his soul knows of a greatness beyond and the shallows of now. An alcoholic prophet with a nicotine fetish, slurring his prophecies at anyone with an ear to listen.  How ‘bout a smile, missus? Ain’t yer next breath worth a smile? His Holy eyes guide his royal stride on a street unseen by the masses. I smile. Ohh wee! He hits his scarred thigh. Look at dat light! I’s never forget dat light. I close the door of the cab. You’s gonna find yer peace, missus. Jus keep on smilin’. A godly promise in his wink. Hey cabby, you gotta smoke? He huffs something about Armageddon starting on Mt. Elliott and Gratiot as he strikes a match. I nestle into the smelly back seat and drive away. Smiling. 

Monday, January 31, 2011

The Legend of Belle Isle


Belle Isle, the largest island park in the United States comprised of 985 acres, and the tenth largest municipal park in the United States, lies just a few miles from my home. The island was the first Detroit landmark to captivate my spirit. And now, after almost four months of calling this city home she has become my sanctuary.

When I find myself facing life's questions, and questioning my place in the world, I walk the Belle and feel at peace. Upon entering her hearth my spirit calms, my energies become grounded, and my heart opens. Her forest whispers the city's secrets; I just have to listen. Her shores render the region's woes; I just have to learn how to serve them. Her views offer a magically detached perspective of this city; I just have to learn how to look and embrace it with love.

It seems the Belle will play an important role in the growth of my Detroit roots. So in homage to her reflectively heroic guise, here is her story:

Long ago Ottawa Chief Sleeping Bear had a daughter so beautiful that he hid her along the shore in a boat covered with a heavy cloth. The chief wanted no one to gaze upon her as he was afraid that she would be stolen from him. One day when bringing her some food, the wind gods caught a glimpse of the maiden and, captivated by her beauty, blew hard enough to ripple the cover off the boat and force the craft into the river’s strong current.

As the boat floated past the lodge of the keeper of the water gates, he also was stunned by her beauty and retrieved the boat. He brought the young maiden into his tent. This enraged the winds who fell upon him, and buffeted him wildly about until he finally died from the beating. The winds, sorry for uncovering her beauty, returned the maiden back to her father, Chief Sleeping Bear.

The winds begged the chief not to hide her from them again, but to let them enjoy her beauty forever. To protect his daughter, the chief placed the princess on an island in the Detroit River and sought the aid of the Great Spirits to protect his beloved daughter by surrounding the island with rattlesnakes to keep mortals away.

The snakes succumbed to her charms and came to worship her. The Great Spirit made her immortal so that her spirit might live on Belle Isle forever. There she could run free with the winds around her. The spirits transforming her into a white doe and let her live out eternity on the island.

The water-gate keeper, who was killed by the angry winds was buried on Isle au Peche (Peach Island across the Detroit River on the Canadian side closer to the entrance to Lake St. Clair), where his spirit remained for many generations. Native American braves often sought out this spirit for counsel before going to war. His voice was heard through the wind in the trees and could be understood only by those who had prepared themselves through fasting and meditation. Even Chief Pontiac, before planning his war against the English, spent a week on Peche Island, fasting in order to clear his mind, and to seek the wisdom of the water gate keepers spirit.