Fresh Scribbles

New Voice, New World

What Teachers Make April 9, 2009

(I’ve put a link to the original poem and the email version I discuss in the analysis. Please read them before)

In Taylor Mali’s popular poem, “What Teachers Make, or Objection Overruled, or If things don’t work out, you can always go back to law school,” he stands up for teachers in a lively, no-nonsense sort of way. It’s humorous, original, meaningful. No wonder a copy was made. Too bad it’s ridiculous. The version injected into cyberspace, boringly labeled “What Teachers Make,” completely manhandles the original, mauling the casual humor and wry wit Mali was so good at. The copy—really, a mess of a revision—is sentimental and dull, lacking the vivacious spirit that made the original so powerful. The anonymous author tried to dumb it down for the masses, but, in the decimating act, they took the very soul away. Now we’re forced to examine the two, desperately trying to wipe the nonsensical copy from everyone’s memory and instead give the original its due worth in praise.

Taylor Mali’s long-titled piece stays true to itself, beginning to end, keeping us entertained as well as informed. His banter reigns, his sarcasm drips. Even the title serves as a wise-crack to all who doubt a teacher’s power. The first-person point of view makes it real and believable. We’re sitting at the dinner table getting the rant of the century from a rattled teacher. “You want to know what I make?” he asks, preparing us for his “honesty and ass-kicking.” Then he dives right in, heartlessly. Mali refrains from quotations, allowing his words to jumble together without the interruption of quote-end-quote. Instead, the words and phrases twist together, leaving the reader to untangle who exactly he’s talking to. His detail isn’t in imagery but in honesty. When he describes what she “makes,” we understand. Because we’ve been there. We’ve had the teacher who knows just why we want to get a drink of water—“You’re not thirsty, you’re bored.”—or who can make us feel like horrible human beings—“How dare you waste my time with anything less than your very best.” We get it. We see it. Mali brings life to generic memories and we take them, making them personal. The detail is only intricate because we can remember what teachers have made of us. It’s not at all sentimental, only honest. More dry than emotional; sarcastic more than sappy. The humor of the piece is not in jokes but in his “let you have it” policy. “You want to know what I make?” he asks again, without sounding like a broken record. It emphasizes just how much he does make. It rubs it in “his” face that he is on a roll and knows exactly what he is worth. Mali doesn’t back down, but rather gears up. His poetry isn’t about rhyme schemes or pretty stories. The breaks and rhythm only help move the piece forward, riddled with meaning and purpose. Not a stop, drop or pause is in place that wasn’t planned. It flows because of the sudden breaks and jumpy rhythm. It is, after all, “definitely/beautiful.” In the end, we understand why Mali was so involved. The “what about you?” at the end is for us. More a challenge than an accusation. We understand exactly what it is he teaches and pick up the lesson for ourselves: “If you got [brains] then you follow [your heart] and if someone ever tries to judge you by what you make, you give them [the finger].” Simple as that.

The cliché-ridden copy falls flat in comparison. It’s in a whole other league. And not in a good way. Where Mali’s had heart, this version is inane; where Mali’s relied on character, this nonsense desperately clings to sentimentality. This is “family friendly” to the extreme, cutting the curse words and Mali’s no-nonsense approach to teaching, therefore destroying the character we had in the original. The revision shoves ideals, hopes, and dreams down our throats, begging us to choke on our tears and cheer for this selfless teacher named Bonnie. Who is Bonnie? Good question. She comes off timid and unsure. “You want to know what I make?” she stutters, saying it again and again as if she’s trying to figure it out herself, pausing and blushing, racking her brain for something important to say to the ever-imposing “CEO” that just happens to be “discussing life” with the dinner guests. It’s only after droning on and on about random, unconnected nonsense that Bonnie remembers something she must have read in When In Doubt, Say You’re Making a Difference: The Golden Feel-Good Answer For Anyone. “I MAKE A DIFFERENCE.” She cries out, finally finished. It seems even the anonymous author knew how silly it sounded, so they capitalized the entire phrase. More impressive that way. No, Bonnie is just one, hypocritical mess. She’s introduced as having a “reputation for honesty and frankness” but seems frightened to live up to it. Never does one phrase seem powerful or heartfelt. It’s forced and unimportant; nothing more than a list. When the author took the first-person away, relying instead upon third-person point of view, we lost the reality of the character. Bonnie is just a teacher at dinner protesting her own importance all while struggling with her own self-esteem. In the end she begins to whine, obviously threatened and frightened by her own measly existence: “When people try to judge me…I can hold my head up high and pay no attention because they are ignorant.” You tell ‘em, Bonnie! The entire piece is as much a mess as the struggling main character. Half the poem is prose and the whole thing is devoid of any rhythm or structure. It’s almost as if halfway through the author decided it needed to look more like a poem and so threw in some random breaks and pauses, still littering every line with meaningless filler and frilly feelings. The whole poem is a mouthful with little detail or imagery to make up for it. And Mali, it seems, wasn’t patriotic enough to be a teacher, because this version injects their sentimental bit about cultural diversity and the Pledge of Allegiance “because we live in the United States of America.” Thanks for the reminder. The author managed to keep a few of the “I make” statements from the original. But it does little-to-no good because it has lost its context and power of the character. Now it’s just words. Mali’s original poem is desecrated in this rendition, diluted to nothing more than a vague, shattered shadow. It lost it’s magic when it lost Mali. There’s no character; no driver. It’s just a simple, skeletal, empty, worthless mess.

The two poems are so very different, it does Mali’s poem injustice to hold them together. Where one is an honest confession, the other is a droning storybook. While one has heart because of character, the other beats the heart into it. Mali’s is real poetry, but most of the world doesn’t care, happy instead with the sappy rendition your best friend’s hairdresser’s mailman’s dog sent you in a forward. Click. One massacred, almost-plagiaristic poem coming right up. In the words of Mali, there’s a huge “goddamn difference” between the two, and if I get the revised version in an email, I may have to do some serious “ass-kicking” because it’s such an eyesore to the poetic community.

 

Broken Promises June 28, 2008

My foot started cramping as the minutes passed. It was tucked under my legs as I lounged on the couch, wishing everything away. He sat next to me; the piles of papers and books falling from his lap. It was near midnight. And that was when I sighed. We’d been there—same position—for over five hours. And I learned, like, nothing. At all.

“I hate English. Can we please call it quits? Please, I’m begging you.” I asked tiredly.

He laughed softly, stretching his back across the arm rest. “Lauren! You mean, you don’t find this fun?”

I rolled my eyes, “Oh yeah. No, Josh, sorry. Guess I don’t have the brain capacity of you cuz all this was in one ear and out the other.”

“Yeah, well, I guess if we don’t know it now, we’ll never know it. Might as well sleep.”

“Hallelujah.” I whispered, letting a relieved smile slide onto my face. But I didn’t move; I was too tired. I just closed my eyes and leaned my head back.

“So…should I go?”

He looked over at me awkwardly and I laughed.

“Sorry, I’m just tired.”

He nodded, biting his lip. “Ya, the drooling on the couch sorta gave that away.”

I hit him, laughing.

“Funny. At least I don’t keep looking at the kitchen as if I’m gonna die if I don’t get food this second.”

He chuckled. “That noticeable?”

I nodded, standing slowly and falling into a stretch. “Do you want something to eat?”

He stood, “Not to impose…but yes.”

I smiled, nudging him. “It’s fine. My mom would die if you left here hungry. She totally loves you.”

“Ah, yes. The only one in this house who does.”

“Well, can you really blame my dad? I mean, your family moves in, he goes over to say hi and you sick your bulldog on him.”

I could hardly say it without laughing. Josh just blushed.

“I seriously thought he was gonna kill me! He’s huge and he was practically charging at me. It was…instinctual.”

I just laughed, opening some cabinets and looking for any sort of munchies.

“But is he the only one? Who hates me, I mean?”

I glanced over at him, my forehead crinkling. “Well, there’s Balderdash. But he hates everyone.”

“Oh yes, the dog.” He said with a twinkle. His eyes always twinkled—even when he was mad.

“But is that it?” He continued, keeping his eyes on me, “Do you hate me like your dad…or do you love me—like your mom?”

I blushed, turning quickly away.

“Not in a weird way or anything.” he added quickly. “Just curious.”

I chuckled nervously. “Always curious, huh?”

He didn’t laugh. In fact, he didn’t do anything but look at me; his eyes twinkling. I didn’t know why.

We stood for a moment; him just staring, and me, blushing.

“So, what’s on the menu?” he asked finally, slipping onto one of the barstools.

I stuttered, confused and…flustered. “Well, we have peanut butter and…peanut butter.”

He laughed, “Okay then. I’m good with that. As long as it’s chunky.”

I gasped, “Of course! Only real peanut butter.”

“Isn’t that a bit of an oxymoron?”

I scowled, “No more English, kay? And you’re the one who asked for it.”

“I know, I know. I was just…quoting something. I’m surprised you don’t remember. …Sara’s pool party.”

I stared at him for a moment, then burst out laughing. “Duh! That little five year old after the food fight. He told your mom that he had oxymoron goo all over him. How could I forget? It was you who got the peanut butter out, huh? And you pretty much threw it all over him when he said he didn’t like it cuz you can’t have chunky butter.” I laughed, digging my spoon into the peanut butter. Sara was his little sister; we had been baby-sitting.

“Yeah,” he said, smiling, “You swore you’d never forget.”

I rolled my eyes, “Well that was nearly three years ago. We were like, what, fifteen. Hey—that was the same day your swimsuit flew off as you jumped from the diving board!”

He groaned, blushing under my laugh. “That, however, you swore you’d never mention.”

“Right.” I laughed. “Well, what good are promises if you can’t break them.”

“Ooo! deep!” he laughed, licking his spoon clean. “Sure your parents appreciate that theory.”

I nodded. And it went strangely quiet. Both of us were focused on swallowing.

“So,” josh said after a moment, “What are more promises we can or have broken?”

I thought for a moment. “How ‘bout how you promised me you’d pay me back for those concert tickets.”

“Oh!” he groaned, “Low blow, Lauren! Geez! well, what about you? You promised me you’d never kiss Jake. And—boom—first date, he got you.”

I gasped, “Man, josh. You are ruthless. Besides, I told you, he’s the one who kissed me. I nearly killed myself after. Pity date gone horribly wrong, remember.”

He just laughed, his eyes twinkling like mad. “Yes, well, I still think it’s funny.”

“Besides, why did it matter so much to you? You pretty much made me write in my own blood that I wouldn’t kiss him.”

He didn’t respond, just quickly thrust his spoon in his mouth. I watched him for a moment, surprised by his silence. He was never quiet; and never without a comeback.

“Well what about ones we still have to break?” he asked, avoiding my eyes. He put the spoon down, pushing the jar of peanut butter away.

I looked at him, surprised at how he totally avoiding what I’d said. but he just waited for me to respond.

“Well, we promised we would pass this test.”

He laughed, “Good one. Totally positive, too.”

I rolled my eyes. “What about you? You’ve got a promise you’re dying to break?”

He looked down, and then straight at me. It took me back; surprised me. And I found I couldn’t breathe. That’s when I realized just how close we were. Our knees were touching under the counter; his hand just by mine on the counter. I could almost smell the peanut butter on his breath.

“How ‘bout when I promised I’d never kiss a girl I didn’t absolutely love?”

I stared at him, suddenly nervous. Especially since he leaned closer.

“Well, who you got in mind, cowboy?” I asked, trying desperately to laugh. But he ignored me.

“Or, how we’d just be friends?”

Suddenly his face was hardly an inch away from mine; his eyes were sparkling again. I still couldn’t breathe. My eyes even closed. And his voice turned to a whisper. A spine tingling, total breathtaking whisper.

“How do those sound?”

I swallowed, my eyes still closed. “Good.” I whispered, losing all control as he sunk closer.

I could feel him—it was the only sense that was working. I could feel his hand slip gently around my neck, pulling me closer. I felt his thumb slowly graze my cheek, his other hand reaching my other one. I could feel his breath dance across my face. I felt my heart stop; I felt myself shiver. And then he kissed me. And I felt that.

It was as if the whole world started to twinkle and I finally felt at home. Everything seemed to be right; everything was as it should be. It was as if, in that tiny moment, years of being friends finally made sense. It was all for that single kiss. That one, beautiful tirade of broken promises. And all I could do was smile. But it was enough, because he still kissed me.

 

A Prayer April 23, 2008

Filed under: Poetry, Religion, Shelby Boyer — inkslinger91 @ 1:25
Tags: , , ,

I feel alone;
dear God,
please help me.

All the pain
and strife,
and
fear.

I need your arms,
dear God,
to pull me through this.

The hot tears,
cold slaps
and broken
hearts.

Is there no end,
dear God,
to the misery?

I feel lost,
alone,
uncared
for.

Why are we here,
dear God,
in imperfection?

There’s so much
wounds
and so much
despair.

I want to smile,
dear God,
and to laugh.

I want to feel,
to hear
and
see.

I feel alone,
dear God,
please just show me

the sort of hope
and need
to
endure.

Please,
dear God,
I need you.

Hear my plea,
and help me
find a
way.