Moved!
Please follow this link to my new blog site. It's easier to leave comments, read older entries, etc. I would love to stay in touch with you, so save the url and check it weekly, friends =)
http://freskocity.wordpress.com
Salamat,
Niki
By Niki Esko
Please follow this link to my new blog site. It's easier to leave comments, read older entries, etc. I would love to stay in touch with you, so save the url and check it weekly, friends =)
http://freskocity.wordpress.com
Salamat,
Niki
By Niki Esko
By Niki Esko
They didn’t want to hold you.
They felt too attached. Too dirty with poverty.
A fishnet was my first crib.
Its ends attached to the corners
Of our one room shack. Torn fibers hung
Low and dusted the grainy floor
Lightly scraping
Against the wooden planks—shk, shk, shk—
My first lullaby.
Born beside the roar of a waterfall
That poured into the ocean
During the rainy season,
When the fish could not be caught,
My lungs filled with the despair of a barren sea,
Then collapsed like old boats beneath the falling water.
Until this day, my tears taste like the tropical salts
Of our front yard.
Two small graves rested behind some banana trees
Between our plot and the neighbor’s.
My brother and sister’s bodies nurtured the green-black fruit
And the trees’ broad leaves sheltered my parents
As my new parents walked away with me
In their clean arms to a sparkling new shore
Thousands of miles
And a thousand cries
Away
From the heat
And suffocation
Of begging fists.
By Niki Esko
Kamusta Folks,
I have been on a short hiatus due to a crazy Fall 08 school semester and 2nd Trimester (si, I am with child! An energetic, kicking, and punching child!). Fortunately, I am on a relatively long break from school. This has allowed me to spend a good amount of time with pamilya and other loved ones, my writing, and books. Although I do not have an interview post ready for yall tonight, I do have some quotes and excerpts from a few of my new favorite/treasured books (&, as with all my posts, please read in such a way that your throat and lips vibrate. Ahem, i.e., aloud):
from Woman At Point Zero by Nawal El Saadawi,
"It seemed to me as though I reached out in the dark and took her hand, or that she reached out in the dark and took my hand. The sudden contact made my body shiver with a pain so deep that it was almost like pleasure, or a pleasure so deep that it bordered on pain. It was a remote pleasure, buried in such far away depths that it seemed to have arisen a very long time ago, longer than the length of memory, older than the remembered years of life's journey. Something no sooner remembered than forgotten, as if it has happened just once before, only to be lost for all time, or as though it had never happened at all."-- p. 33
"Revolutionary men with principles were not really different from the rest. They used their cleverness to get, in return for principles, what other men buy with their money. Revolution for them is like sex for us. Something to be abused. Something to be sold."-- p. 88
"Circus acrobats walked
in mid air, a miracle of balance and grace.
flying and catching without a trace
of fear
with only what seemed a thread
they hung onto life
as they swung
over the teeth of tigers.
I would be frightened to fly,
in fact, couldn't try
with my words in a sky
of shhhhhh
don't tell
don't cry."
-- first poem written in grammar school, p. 16
"You bring out the BE in me,
the boundless in me:
blissful healing of trade winds
billowing waterfalls of hair
belts of kukui leaves
beloved hula of our arms
blessings of my grandmother's journey
the blood of her hands in this black coffee soil,
brave generations breaking chains of greed."
-- from 'You Bring Out the "B" in Me,' pp. 86-89
"Introduccion
Sueno
My lover and I are in a prison camp together.
We are in love in wartime.
A young soldier working as a guard has befriended us.
We ask him honestly-- the truth-- are we going to die?
He answers, yes, it's almost certain. I contemplate escaping. Ask him to help us. He blanches. That is impossible, he says. I regret asking him, fearing recriminations.
I see the forest through the fence on my right. I think, the place between the trees-- I could burrow through there-- toward freedom? Two of us would surely be spotted. One of us has a slim chance. I think of leaving my lover, imprisoned. But immediately I understand that we me must, at all costs, remain with each other. Even unto death. That it is our being together that makes the pain, even our dying, human.
Loving in the war years."-- p. i
"In this country, lesbianism is a poverty-- as is being brown, as is being a woman, as is being just plain poor. The danger lies in ranking the oppressions. The danger lies in failing to acknowledge the specificity of the oppression. The danger lies in attempting to deal with oppression purely from a theoretical base. Without an emotional, heartfelt grappling with the source of our own oppression, without naming the enemy within ourselves and outside of us, no authentic, non-hierarchical connection among oppressed groups can take place."-- pp. 52-53