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nika-cavat
nika-cavat
American Nika Cavat is a Roman-born poet and writer. Raised in an artist's studio, she was educated in New York and grew up both in Europe and California. She worked in documentary and feature film before becoming a teacher. Her critical essays, poetry, short fiction, and interviews have been published in numerous print and on-line publications. Nika lives in Venice Beach, CA with her daughter, Aurora, their dog, cat, and hedgehog, Cheerio.
My child said today, “You’d be rich if it wasn’t for me” and she then smiled that goofy smile adding, “Why did you have me then? I’m so expensive. ” And when she later shimmied like a long lean cat on a thin fence, I replied, “This is why I had you.” And when she then made up her own word, bestfuzzer, to describe a friend, I said, “This is why I had you.” And as she curled into my belly on the bed nuzzled my neck, and blew holes in my hair, I whispered, “This is why I had you.” She has forced me to reinvent myself to plumb the deep waters of my reserve my sanity, my will to live even and bring up one more shining fish one more favor, one more drive across town one more strange meal at 2 am And in cleaning away the thick of leaves, dirt, and grass from my grandparents’ headstones I become them, their bones my bones Their struggle my struggle How much we could have saved in not having children would nevertheless have impoverished us in other ways. We are driven by dumb unseen forces as ancient as soil to create our children – accident, intent, it doesn’t matter so I pay homage to my grandparents - tired, frightened immigrants barely out of childhood, with the stench of their parents on fire singing their nostrils Why did they persist? What drove my grandmother to marry a man she’d never even met? to bear his children, to suffer his beatings? This is why I had you Because I was lonely *Because I was ***** Because through you I sewed myself back together Because you are my destiny And when my child asks why I had her I breathe milk and honey into her mouth jostle the stars until they ****** like wind chimes pulling the continents back together again. And when she asks me, I can only offer up the scoop of my palms and the ticking of blood in my wrists as reasons.
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Jul 15, 2012
Jul 15, 2012 at 5:05 PM UTC
This Is Why I Had You
My child said today, “You’d be rich if it wasn’t for me” and she then smiled that goofy smile adding, “Why did you have me then? I’m so expensive. ” And when she later shimmied like a long lean cat on a thin fence, I replied, “This is why I had you.” And when she then made up her own word, bestfuzzer, to describe a friend, I said, “This is why I had you.” And as she curled into my belly on the bed nuzzled my neck, and blew holes in my hair, I whispered, “This is why I had you.” She has forced me to reinvent myself to plumb the deep waters of my reserve my sanity, my will to live even and bring up one more shining fish one more favor, one more drive across town one more strange meal at 2 am And in cleaning away the thick of leaves, dirt, and grass from my grandparents’ headstones I become them, their bones my bones Their struggle my struggle How much we could have saved in not having children would nevertheless have impoverished us in other ways. We are driven by dumb unseen forces as ancient as soil to create our children – accident, intent, it doesn’t matter so I pay homage to my grandparents - tired, frightened immigrants barely out of childhood, with the stench of their parents on fire singing their nostrils Why did they persist? What drove my grandmother to marry a man she’d never even met? to bear his children, to suffer his beatings? This is why I had you Because I was lonely *Because I was ***** Because through you I sewed myself back together Because you are my destiny And when my child asks why I had her I breathe milk and honey into her mouth jostle the stars until they ****** like wind chimes pulling the continents back together again. And when she asks me, I can only offer up the scoop of my palms and the ticking of blood in my wrists as reasons.
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44
Addiction No, not what you think, not needles, not bottles, not too much food or too little, not sleeping 18 hours or running until feet bleed, not *********** not voyeurism, not pole-dancing or jello shots or driving 150 mph down dark streets, not working to exhaustion, not bizarre rituals, not staring into bright lights or ******* on sweet treats until a migraine sets in, not pulling out fingernails or walking with pebbles in shoes, thinking any of this brings God to the door.                                                                               No, none of these excesses But, life? Yes. Addicted to breathing, yes. Addicted to sweetness of morning-light, yes. Addicted to aroma of salt water, when the sun swings low and pelicans skim the curling waves in search of dinner, oh yes. And playing hide-n-go-seek with my three year old neighbor, yes. Addicted to not giving up on that African violet in the windowsill, despite its crispy appearance, to watching my child shimmy, yes and yes. To her well-being, her off-key singing, a resounding yes! To letting family be. To the solitude of a hot shower. Addicted to your righteousness, your swagger, the way dimming sunlight cups your body, I’ll admit it, yes.  And anticipation of oysters still in their rough shells. And never, ever worrying about whether these are excesses or not because it’s in the elusiveness of the word (addiction, for example, or desire or want or tenacity), in the lone gesture, the moment before that door opens and the house empties of terror and fills with human breath that the balance is reset.
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Jul 15, 2012
Jul 15, 2012 at 4:58 PM UTC
Addiction
Addiction No, not what you think, not needles, not bottles, not too much food or too little, not sleeping 18 hours or running until feet bleed, not *********** not voyeurism, not pole-dancing or jello shots or driving 150 mph down dark streets, not working to exhaustion, not bizarre rituals, not staring into bright lights or ******* on sweet treats until a migraine sets in, not pulling out fingernails or walking with pebbles in shoes, thinking any of this brings God to the door.                                                                               No, none of these excesses But, life? Yes. Addicted to breathing, yes. Addicted to sweetness of morning-light, yes. Addicted to aroma of salt water, when the sun swings low and pelicans skim the curling waves in search of dinner, oh yes. And playing hide-n-go-seek with my three year old neighbor, yes. Addicted to not giving up on that African violet in the windowsill, despite its crispy appearance, to watching my child shimmy, yes and yes. To her well-being, her off-key singing, a resounding yes! To letting family be. To the solitude of a hot shower. Addicted to your righteousness, your swagger, the way dimming sunlight cups your body, I’ll admit it, yes.  And anticipation of oysters still in their rough shells. And never, ever worrying about whether these are excesses or not because it’s in the elusiveness of the word (addiction, for example, or desire or want or tenacity), in the lone gesture, the moment before that door opens and the house empties of terror and fills with human breath that the balance is reset.
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4
Orcas in Puget Sound Along the road, abandoned wild apple trees bend with their heavy loads, dusty skirts of blackberry bushes purpling fingers, piercing flesh mouths ringed with berry juice, vampires all. Along San Juan Island salmon leap clear out of the briny water, just yards ahead of their predators, Orcas, dorsal fins curving shiny black, sluicing and slicing the surface like sharpened knives They have bred with one another for 10,000 years trolled these waters through famine, earthquakes, world wars through shifting continents, glacial avalanches, through the extinction of whole civilizations. Standing on a cliff, my daughter and I watch the Orcas churning the water - studies in grace the largest gem on the necklace of a great food chain and when we sleep we too chase the great King Salmon of our deepest dreams, the fathers we lost, the currents that bear along children Translucent jellyfish, palm sized, breath below sideways exhale, convulsive inhale umbrellas opening and closing a thousand years or more sliding through forests of brown kelp where mollusks cling We have clung like this to one another, with my body thrown over hers for protection and her exhaling away from me If Mama Orca keeps her young close, so will I If there are salmon to chase and harbor seals to command, so we will Arcing in the late August sky slapping and parting the surface, over and over the whales, lords of the Sound, swim in our brains as we sleep sparkle against blackening waters You are of my body from my body cleaving there for 10,000 years Whatever quarrels there are on land vaporize In the presence of these creatures, arcing against all that is temporal, vicious, small, studies in power and grace The tide pulls out, skimming across rocks and oysters in their muddy beds But this need to care for you remains as big as an Orca your appetite for adventure as voracious and I watch you, my child, disappearing with summer into high school, into womanhood, into the salty, light-dappled ocean
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Jul 15, 2012
Jul 15, 2012 at 4:15 PM UTC
Orcas in Puget Sound
Orcas in Puget Sound Along the road, abandoned wild apple trees bend with their heavy loads, dusty skirts of blackberry bushes purpling fingers, piercing flesh mouths ringed with berry juice, vampires all. Along San Juan Island salmon leap clear out of the briny water, just yards ahead of their predators, Orcas, dorsal fins curving shiny black, sluicing and slicing the surface like sharpened knives They have bred with one another for 10,000 years trolled these waters through famine, earthquakes, world wars through shifting continents, glacial avalanches, through the extinction of whole civilizations. Standing on a cliff, my daughter and I watch the Orcas churning the water - studies in grace the largest gem on the necklace of a great food chain and when we sleep we too chase the great King Salmon of our deepest dreams, the fathers we lost, the currents that bear along children Translucent jellyfish, palm sized, breath below sideways exhale, convulsive inhale umbrellas opening and closing a thousand years or more sliding through forests of brown kelp where mollusks cling We have clung like this to one another, with my body thrown over hers for protection and her exhaling away from me If Mama Orca keeps her young close, so will I If there are salmon to chase and harbor seals to command, so we will Arcing in the late August sky slapping and parting the surface, over and over the whales, lords of the Sound, swim in our brains as we sleep sparkle against blackening waters You are of my body from my body cleaving there for 10,000 years Whatever quarrels there are on land vaporize In the presence of these creatures, arcing against all that is temporal, vicious, small, studies in power and grace The tide pulls out, skimming across rocks and oysters in their muddy beds But this need to care for you remains as big as an Orca your appetite for adventure as voracious and I watch you, my child, disappearing with summer into high school, into womanhood, into the salty, light-dappled ocean
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42
God is in the shadows deep in the pocket of that rose an impossible color, beyond crimson, the epitome of crimson, so crimson tears spring forth This is where God, silent, drunk, on vacation, slumbers God is nowhere to be found not in dead fathers not in demented mothers not in fading ex-lovers not where spiders lurk not in the boom & beat of adolescent children It is the sorrow lodged somewhere between breast bone and lung, sorrow the size and shape of an island, a mountain, the texture of wet sand the weight of wet sand It is this that snatches away my breath upon inhaling A life-long sorrow, sealed to skin as surely as metallic paint to a pan - It hangs on with a cage fighter’s tenacity locked in fierce embrace sorrow coppery tasting sorrow flaked in my hair and Draped over the sofa, cat-like. It just hangs around - changing to heat, radiating at a dangerous level nuclear, capricious, then, as time passes just a presence one becomes accustomed to, like an aging dog or webs above the bed Its cousin, malevolence, its twin, melancholia family to my family, blood to my blood – dropping down from the shower head as I bathe sorrow becoming holy, beyond flesh It holds hands with the musician I’ve known all my life and dines regularly with that other writer We speak of transformation, you and I of becoming other than ourselves, as though we can unzip our flesh and find a whole new identity underneath, throbbing, pink, blood-pumped and with this, go forth into the same old world that remembers transgression and forgives nothing
0
Jul 15, 2012
Jul 15, 2012 at 4:04 PM UTC
Warrior
God is in the shadows deep in the pocket of that rose an impossible color, beyond crimson, the epitome of crimson, so crimson tears spring forth This is where God, silent, drunk, on vacation, slumbers God is nowhere to be found not in dead fathers not in demented mothers not in fading ex-lovers not where spiders lurk not in the boom & beat of adolescent children It is the sorrow lodged somewhere between breast bone and lung, sorrow the size and shape of an island, a mountain, the texture of wet sand the weight of wet sand It is this that snatches away my breath upon inhaling A life-long sorrow, sealed to skin as surely as metallic paint to a pan - It hangs on with a cage fighter’s tenacity locked in fierce embrace sorrow coppery tasting sorrow flaked in my hair and Draped over the sofa, cat-like. It just hangs around - changing to heat, radiating at a dangerous level nuclear, capricious, then, as time passes just a presence one becomes accustomed to, like an aging dog or webs above the bed Its cousin, malevolence, its twin, melancholia family to my family, blood to my blood – dropping down from the shower head as I bathe sorrow becoming holy, beyond flesh It holds hands with the musician I’ve known all my life and dines regularly with that other writer We speak of transformation, you and I of becoming other than ourselves, as though we can unzip our flesh and find a whole new identity underneath, throbbing, pink, blood-pumped and with this, go forth into the same old world that remembers transgression and forgives nothing
Continue reading...
42