Showing posts with label Kevin Spenst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kevin Spenst. Show all posts

Sunday, December 1, 2024

Kevin Spenst : Whatever Heals You

part three in a series of three personal essays mixing travelogue and review
see part one here : see part two here

 

 

 

Day 3: Discovery Park

     From Vancouver, at Prospect Point, anyone can see Mount Baker, a glacier-coated mountain my family could see from a small living room side window in Surrey; here in Seattle, Cheryl and I are admiring it from Alki Beach. In Canada, it stands for the south. In Seattle, it stands for the north. It’s the fifth biggest mountain in the Cascades where it plays countless roles for other directions, people and creatures. It’s one of the many distant mountains that surrounds Seattle.

     Later in the afternoon, Cheryl and I explore Discovery Park, a large space equivalent to Vancouver’s Stanley Park. Colonialism’s history (aka military history or white settler history) is on display in both parks: in Vancouver the military presence is still active in Coal Harbour, a holdout from the time when the military wanted Stanley Park in the 1800s as a base to protect Canada from American invaders. Discovery Park has a decommissioned military reserve of large older buildings standing far apart from each other over large swaths of mown grass. It’s got a creepy vibe and feels a little like the Stepford Wives. The American military established Fort Lawton in Seattle in 1900. This most tranquil of places holds at its centre obvious markers of colonialism. It feels like a good place to reflect upon the poetry of Jess H̓áust̓i, not that the writer engages in military history, but their collection Crushed Wild Mint intimately conveys a spirituality rooted in the viscera of the body to the mountains that hold living ancestors in a grounded resistance to those who would delineate the world in borders, binaries and the 24-hour clock.

     From their website: “Jess is a Haíɫzaqv parent, poet, and land-based educator living in their homelands in the community of Bella Bella, BC. Crushed Wild Mint honours those homelands in ritualistic poems.

     “Praying is dreaming out loud / with my ancestors,” the speaker tells us in the opening poem, “The Future.” The past and future are brought together in the ceremonial timelessness of a prayer, but the poem also reminds us of how laughter can partake in this sacredness. The poem defines prayer as that which gives “anatomy / to futurity,” the preserve of the past into the future. This idea of anatomy is brought to visceral light in a few poems later, where the speaker suggests “If I were to gut you like a deer, / the smell of good earth and the clarity of green things, the musk and the humus, that scent would rise up / like a prayer.” These lines hold no hint of morbidity, and within the context of gentleness and reverence that runs throughout the collection, they are offered as a vision. Not only are other creatures acknowledged as a part of the speaker’s world, but their existence parallels our own. The poem begins with deer chewing and ends with the speaker’s loved one chewing. More specifically, the speaker’s loved one is mourning some loss and this imagined ceremony of gutting is something offered to help “lift out from the birdsong sorrow / you hold in your mouth.” Familial love guides us through the ceremony of “Ruminant/Remnant.”

     The overlapping lives of other beings we share the planet with is a central part of the poem/prayers in H̓áust̓is book (and certainly some cultures centre that sharing in ways that others can only imagine.) What I adore about Crushed Wild Mint is the echoes of wisdom literature from other corners of the world. I grew up on the Old Testament so its hard not to hear the Song of Solomon in the poem You Are Inseparable, but instead of romantic, its familial and/or self-love:

There are flocks of songbirds

sleeping in your hair,

deer’s wisdom compacted in your heels,

salmon in the creeks of your veins.

 

Your body and the land

have collaborated for your safety and joy

The imagery of the land blends into the body and vice versa. This acknowledgement of the inseparable relationship between a West Coast people and the land is something I can admire from a distance, while trying not to be a white settler tourist (though I’m clearly all three.)

     The fifth and last section of Crushed Wild Mint takes us into the mountains. As if enacting the long journey of climbing a mountain, many of these poems are longer than others in the collection. In the last section of one of these long poems, we read

These are living

Geographies.

 

This is especially true

when the crown of the mountain

was a gift from the weary body

of that mountain’s brother.

 

 “iv. You have arrived”

Here the process of mountain formation is personified at a familial level. H̓áust̓is ancestors saw these mountains generations ago and the thousands of years are compressed within poetry.

     This last section ends with “Prayer (II)” which begins “Creator, / go before us in all things, / especially small things.” Under the majesty of the names of mountains in the previous poems, we return to the smallest of things around us and this poem ends with a prayer “for the blessedness / of perpetual memory.” Climbing a mountain might hold a story of memorable moments but when that mountain is understood as a sacred being, it is also preserving memory on a different scale in space and time. Someone whose family has lived in a place since time immemorial can define and connect with that perpetual memory. 

     Vancouver and Seattle preserve the memory of their “great fires” (both in the 1880s) old civic leaders (both Seattle and Vancouver had American mayors charged with bigamy) and the centuries of colonialism in street names and statues. There are exceptions and I believe they have been growing. In 1970, activists took over Fort Lawton as part of the growing American Indian Movement. The Indigenous activities armed with “cooking utensils” came to occupy the land. They were met with armed resistance and skirmishes took place over three months until an agreement was reached:

In July 1971 negotiations started [...] In November an agreement was reached with the United Indians for a 99-year lease to build an Indian cultural center in the Park. The groundbreaking ceremony took place on September 27, 1975, and the impressive Daybreak Star Cultural Center opened on May 13, 1977.

                                                             https://www.historylink.org/File/8772

     In 2022, participants in the Downtown Eastside Women’s Memorial March toppled Gassy Jack. The statue had been erected in 1970 as a bid to boost tourism in Gastown, but the fact that he’d married an indigenous woman and then, when she died, her 12-year-old niece rang too close to the violence towards murdered and missing indigenous women. Statues are coming down and new totems (at Hastings and Carol) are coming up.

    Cheryl and I do a loop at Discovery Park and pass tourists, locals and far off mountains in the distance. We try to take in as much as we can while acknowledging there’s only so much we can take in.

Days 4,5&6:

Bumbershoot and we dance ourselves loose. We shake the way little dogs shake after encountering a frighteningly big dog. As humans, we have this thing called music to help us shake off our stress. Over six weeks this past summer, I was in emergency four times and I was laid up for weeks on end. At times, it was excruciating. There was no clear diagnosis. I’m finally almost one hundred percent and I dance off the fears of the summer. After dancing to the Montreal psyche-rock band TEKE::TEKE, the first person I hand a line of poetry to hugs me with the biggest smile I’ve ever seen. I give out a few other lines of poetry and everyone at the festival gets it. On our drive home, we stop for dinner in Bellingham. When we tell our server we’ve been to Bumbershoot, she gets chatty. “When I was young, I went to Bumbershoot,” she tells us but she seems young so it’s hard for us to imagine her younger. I give her my last line of poetry, which is by Patrick Grace. She is thrilled.

Envoi:

     Isn’t it lovely to return to words you haven’t heard in decades. On our last afternoon, in reading about Seattle history, I come across this:

'Man did not weave the web of life, he is merely a strand in it. Whatever he does to the web, he does to himself.'

 

--Chief Si’ahl, Namesake of the City of Seattle

When I was a teenager, after I stopped going to church, I religiously watched the Power of Myth on PBS. At the end of the series, Joseph Campbell quotes the words of Chief Si’ahl. I wrote the words out and shared them during our school’s graduation ceremony held in the gymnasium at SFU on top of Burnaby Mountain. During the ceremony, one of my classmates, who’d failed at least once and bullied me in my first year at junior high, leaned in to me and whispered, “I gotta piss.” As I stood up to go to the podium to give my valedictorian address, he drunkenly pleaded, “Keep it short.”

    The sacred and profane are neighbours, living, at times, on reasonably friendly terms. So too poetry resides next to prose. Cities live next to each other with slightly different orientations but with the same giants in the distance. Giants some can know with an intimacy that others are oblivious to, but which demands respect if we care about justice, about living with the right words around us.

 

 

 

 

Kevin Spenst (he/him) is the author of sixteen chapbooks and three full-length books of poetry plus his newest collection A Bouquet Brought Back from Space (Anvil Press, 2024). He is one of the organizers of the Dead Poets Reading Series, has a chapbook review column for subTerrain magazine, occasionally co-hosts Wax Poetic on Vancouver Co-op Radio, and is the 2025 Poetry Mentor at The Writer’s Studio at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver on unceded xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Swx̱wú7mesh (Squamish) and səl̓ilw̓ətaʔɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) territory where he cohabitates with the one and only Cheryl Rossi.

Friday, November 1, 2024

Kevin Spenst : Whatever Heals You

part two in a series of three personal essays mixing travelogue and review
see part one here

 

 

Day 2: Fremont || Cluster Flux


     We’re in Fremont, which is a neighbourhood just over a canal from the main landmass of Seattle. From a map, with bodies of water west and east, this part of Seattle looks like a bone with a fracture. Cheryl is off to get a bra and I’m off to wander. I walk down one of the main streets and turn down a back alley. At the end is a sign for Vintage Mall. I step into a labyrinth of faint old odours floating over bric-a-brac galore: second hand clothes, a corner of mirrors of all shapes and sizes, old movie posters and signed headshots, cassette tapes and records, vintage plates and cups, a rack of postcards and on and on. Everything that you can imagine from your childhood or your parent’s childhood is on display in duplicates.

     In my pockets I have lines from DS Stymeist’s second book of poetry, Cluster Flux, but I wish I had his book with me. It opens with an epigraph from Walt Whitman, that most famous of big-voiced American poets whose vision was optimistic and encyclopaedic. Stymeist’s poetry travels similar routes of openness and would be at home here in the midst of everything. Not that there’s any pop-culture nostalgia, but it’s expansive. What I love most about Cluster Flux is that the poems and sections are framed by a long poem about trains and riding the rails, a mode of travel that doesn’t necessarily care about borders. Train tracks criss-cross the continent and this borderless movement frames Cluster Flux.

     Sounds “jolt and jive” us in “Mass Transfer: Passage 1.” This opening poem of long lines that take us through an inventory of train travel is grounded in alliterative pairings. “The plank and ping of it bangs into soles,/ travels the leg, runs up spine,/shakes chest and chassis.” The mechanical is made most manifest in the body, but there’s no explicit mention of who these people are. It’s only in the last stanza where human characters appear: “on a culvert abutment, two people sleep together. / Discrete layers: cardboard padding, bedding.” These travellers (‘knights of the road’ in the old hobo slang) are sleeping in the rough and in going back to the start of the poem, we might imagine the unidentified speaker allying themselves with the anonymous ‘masses,’ people on the move from one part of the continent to the other. We’re all anonymous to most of the almost eight billion other people on this planet, not to mention the billions of other beings. The pairing of sounds that runs through Stymeist’s long poem might be a stand in for the comfort we take in companionship.

     Poetry doesn’t always comfort, sometimes it challenges, confronts, or perplexes. It delivers as many purposes as the items in any big antique shop. Cluster Flux, however, ultimately offers a strong mix of language (and therefore an open-eyed awareness of the nooks and crannies of the world) along with personal comfort. In “Oblation,” a poem following the poem “Sea-Jelly,” which itself is written as a direct address to a future child, we witness a reimagining of the future child who is no more. But first, in “Sea-Jelly” in Whitmanesque language, we see the “pleasure of elemental increase.” This creature will someday stretch their limbs “across the firm earth’s countless trails.” Two poems entitled “Oblation” follow, with the first one beginning: “In the midst of our loss.” This first oblation (a term meaning a prayer to god) ends in a vision akin to Bottocelli’s Venus “riding out / the tide on the edge of a pink shell.” The second oblation re-envisions this hoped for child as something aquatic: “a sea-throng of blue jellies blooming.” The prayer preserves this loss as a beautiful entity that once was in the speaker and his partner’s lives. “Salt” and “Chimera” are short single-stanza poems that seem to come out of grief. Pain is acknowledged but the effort to preserve the beauty of a hopeful period in a couple’s life is safeguarded in two small prayers.

     Poetry can also comfort through its layering of experiences. Stymeist incorporates his experience living with Crohn's disease most directly in the last section of the book Midsummer Disjunction. The first poem in this section opens with the radio: ‘“Expect set-backs,” lilts the medical pundit.’ The backdrop is the pandemic and the snippet of radio is something that speaks in a different way to Stymeist, whose body “sweats out fever, // overreacts subverts…” The poems in this section are interwoven with imagery from nature. For example, “A cicada-killer wasp clasps a paralyzed cigale / in its mandibles, drags it through the leaf-litter.” The speaker then shares a conversation with another poet over “socially-distant drinks.” This poet explains the pain of his gout and at the end of the poem, the speaker explains his own pain, but this is within the context of others’ pain. It’s a scream within a scream within a scream. We experience pain but it’s the condition of our shared existence.

    The line explaining the fate of a paralyzed cigale (French for cicada) makes the Whitman epigraph of the collection all the more resonant: “stiflings and passages open… the paralyzed become supple.” The dream of recovery for all sorts of creatures runs throughout Cluster Flux.

     I consider giving some lines from the opening of Stymeist’s book to one of the employees at Fremont Vintage Mall. I’m buying a small magnetic frame as a gift and after the sale, I explain that I’m from Canada and I’m sharing poetry on my trip to Seattle. I give him the opening stanza from the poem “Abrasion,” which I’ve written out by hand:

Bison venerate the rare boulders sunk

deep into prairie sea. Generations spin

around stone, crushing blood-sucking

creatures beyond the curve of horn.

 

 

 DS Stymeist from Cluster Flux

 

He’s wearing a military cap and a plaid shirt. He’s intrigued by the poem. He appreciates the gesture and holds the slip of paper up like a bill of sizable denomination. His perfect posture stands in contrast to his loose angular smile.

    We talk a little about how the line acknowledges the culture of animals, but I wish I had the whole book with me. I didn’t anticipate the exchange would go this well. If I had the book, we could read it together and see the last line: “How can I be more like them, rub against / roughness, learn to shed my skin?” In the end: a poem of longing for the strength to deal with difficult change.

    Cluster Flux offers multiple visions and paths to healing, none of them straight-forward and most of them with an eye to the many moving connections that are made in and around the earth. How there is so much more than us.

    I leave the Fremont Vintage Mall to go see how Cheryl’s doing in her search.

 

 

 

 

Kevin Spenst (he/him) is the author of sixteen chapbooks and three full-length books of poetry plus his newest collection A Bouquet Brought Back from Space (Anvil Press, 2024). He is one of the organizers of the Dead Poets Reading Series, has a chapbook review column for subTerrain magazine, occasionally co-hosts Wax Poetic on Vancouver Co-op Radio, and is the 2025 Poetry Mentor at The Writer’s Studio at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver on unceded xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Swx̱wú7mesh (Squamish) and səl̓ilw̓ətaʔɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) territory where he cohabitates with the one and only Cheryl Rossi.

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