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Wicked Enchantment

Page 2

by Wanda Coleman


  “My Blues Love Affair,” page 20

  In the 70s divorced and on my own, I danced at the discoes, dug on Black Sabbath, David Bowie, and Alice Cooper; I interviewed Bob Marley (Catch a Fire) on three occasions and made the St. Patrick’s Day Riots at Elks Hall when New Wave stormed Los Angeles . . . yet I began wearing the grooves off my Bobby “Blue” Bland. Taj Mahal, and Otis Redding LPs . . . I was a devotee of Herbie Hancock (Hornets), thrice catching him crosstown at Dough Weston’s Troubadour . . . While listening, I am able to visualize fingering, particularly piano and guitar, instruments I’ve studied.

  “Angela’s Big Night,” pages 46–47

  Los Angeles Free Press, LA’s controversial 60’s underground newspaper, gave me my first official freelance reporting assignment: covering a legal defense fundraiser for the then-incarcerated Black Power Movement heroine Angela Davis . . . As a result of my report, I would be secretly boycotted from journalism for the next ten years.

  “Primal Orb Density,” page 55

  Here I am. I prize myself greatly I want the world to enjoy me and my art but something’s undeniably wrong, I’ve come to regard myself as a living, breathing statistic governed not by my individual will, but by forces outside myself.

  “Primal Orb Density,” page 65

  My delicious dilemma is language. How I structure it. How the fiction of history structures me. And as I’ve become more and more shattered, my tongue has become tangled . . . I am glassed in by language as well as by the barriers of my dark skin and financial embarrassment.

  “Looking for it: An interview,” page 77

  My parents were petit bourgeoisie. My mother was a domestic—she came to California from Oklahoma when World War II started and jobs opened up for Blacks here. She worked in movie stars’ homes, and in fact worked a year for Ronald Reagan when he was married to Jane Wyman—she quit when he wouldn’t give her a raise! [Laughs.]

  “Looking for It: An Interview,” page 91

  My anger knows no bounds—it’s unlimited. I’m a big lady, I can stand up in front of almost any man and cuss him out and have no fear—you know what I’m sayin’? Because I will go to blows.

  “Looking for It: An Interview,” page 93

  I’m not about shock; if any shock is present it’s the shock of recognition . . . or the shock of understanding . . . But I’m not deliberately out to just shock people. I’m not about being sensationalistic . . . I want freedom when I write, I want the freedom to use any kind of language—whatever I feel is appropriate to get the point across.

  “Coulda Shoulda Woulda: A Song Flung Up to Heaven by Maya Angelou,” page 137

  I vented my bias against celebrity autobiographies at the outset of a favorable review of Angelou’s All God’s Children Need Traveling Shoes (book review, August 13, 1986), in which I stated that I usually find them “self-aggrandizements and/or flushed-out elaborations of scanty press packets.” Relieved, I summarized Shoes as “a thoroughly enjoyable segment from the life of a celebrity!” No can do with Song.

  “Black on Black: Fear & Reviewing in Los Angeles,” page 141

  The night of the NBA [National Book Award] ceremony, it felt strange to hear my name (I was poetry finalist) called out from the podium by Steve Martin . . . I had devoted my best writing life to the financial wasteland of poetry, working pink-collar jobs to feed my children . . .

  “Dancer on a Blade: Deep Talk, Revisions & Reconsiderations,” page 171

  There are moments when I’m inclined to believe that trying to define poetry is as fruitless as trying to define love. It simply can’t be gotten right.

  “Dancer on a Blade: Deep Talk, Revision & Reconsiderations,” page 180

  My memory of the specifics is vague, but in 1972 I attended Diane Wakoski’s poetry workshop at California Technical Institute in Pasadena. I had met John Martin, the publisher of Black Sparrow Press, in March of that year, and he had strongly recommended I study with his “superstar” poet, author of Motorcycle Betrayal Poems . . . Diane Wakoski took me steps further toward enlightenment, as I kicked and ranted unable to fully articulate my point of view, stubborn in my stance but absorbing as much information as she could supply . . . Not least of the benefits of participating in Wakowski’s workshop was my friendship with poet Sylvia Rosen.

  “Dancer on a Blade: Deep Talk, Revision & Reconsiderations,” page 205

  Buying books was a great luxury in those days. What I couldn’t borrow and return or obtain from the public library, I read straight off bookstore shelves.

  “Dancer on a Blade: Deep Talk, Revision & Reconsiderations,” page 206

  I dared and mailed my painfully retyped manuscript to Black Sparrow Press. In March 1972, the manuscript was returned. Responding to my eagerness to learn, publisher John Martin steered me first to Wakoski and months later, to Clayton Eshleman. In the meantime I had become a Bukowski fan, trying to imitate his style, going to his readings, and hanging out at the infamous Bukowski parties . . . But it didn’t take too long to realize that my approach to language was, at root, radically different from Bukowski’s . . . Bukowski was tone deaf. And I loved the musical lyricism of writers like Neruda, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Brother Antoninus (a/k/a William Everson, who would eventually displace Bukowski as my favorite). I was also enthralled with the plays and poetry of Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones).

  “Wearing My Maturity,” page 239

  The characteristics many attribute to the supernatural have always been a natural/given part of how I am in the world. My intelligence. I have grown more comfortable with this as I’ve aged.

  “The Riot Inside Me,” page 256

  In 1991, following the death of my father, I took a major risk and quit my “slave” as medical secretary, encouraged by my third husband of ten years. The pull of my gift could no longer be denied. I had to write—regardless. I was in my mid-forties. Other than temporary layoffs, it was the first time since 1972 that I had been without a regular paycheck. Ahead lay disaster—spun from the ever-complex machinations of race . . . On April 29 1992, as I left a late morning meeting at the Department of Cultural Affairs, the verdict by the Simi Valley jury in the Rodney King beating case was announced . . . By the time I arrived home the city was again in flames . . .

  “The Riot Inside Me,” page 258

  What does a poet do when poetry is the most under-appreciated art in the nation—even considered subversive . . . Being who I am, I can’t not make note of the ironies—of the arrogance governing our nation’s rhetoric . . . I decided I had to get out of the house and drive out to the cemetery. I had not visited my father’s grave in over a year. I did as usual: took grass clippers, a rag, and bottled water, got down on my knees and tidied up, asking as I always do, the unanswerable.

  Wicked Enchantment

  Wanda in Worryland

  i get scared sometimes

  and have to go look in to the closet to see if his clothes

  are still there

  i have been known to imagine a situation

  and then get involved in it, upset, angry and

  cry hot tears

  i have gone after people

  with guns

  once i tried to hang myself and got terribly ashamed

  afterwards because i was really faking it

  i have gone after people

  with rocks

  i have cursed out old white lady cart pushers in

  supermarkets who block the aisles in slow motion

  i have gone after people

  with my fists

  i have walked out on pavlovian trainers who mistook me

  for a dog

  i go to sleep and have dreams about falling

  and can’t stand the suspense so i sweat it out

  and land on my feet

  i have gone after people

  with poems

  i get scared sometimes

  and have to go look into the mirror to see if i’m

  still here

  D
oing Battle with the Wolf

  1.

  i drip blood

  on my way to and from work

  i drip blood

  down the aisles while shopping at the supermarket

  i drip blood

  standing in line at the bank

  filling my tank at the gas station

  visiting my man in prison

  buying money orders at the post office

  driving the kids to school

  walking to bed at night

  i drip blood

  an occasional transfusion arrives in the mail

  or i find plasma in the streets

  an occasional vampire flashes my way

  but they don’t take much

  my enemy is the wolf

  who eats even the mind

  the wolf will come for me sooner or later

  i know this

  the wolf makes no sexual distinctions

  i am the right color

  he has a fetish for black meat and

  frequently hunts with his mate along side him

  he follows my trail of blood

  i drip blood for hours

  go to the bathroom and apply bandages

  i’ve bled enough

  it’s my monthly bleeding of poison

  getting it out of my system

  watching it as it flows from the

  open sore of my body into the toilet stool

  making a red ring

  so pretty

  flushing it away—red swirls

  a precious painful price i pay

  my man cannot protect me

  the wolf has devoured most of my friends

  i watched them die horribly

  saw the

  raw hunks of meat skin bone

  swallowed

  watched as full, the wolf crept away

  to sleep

  2.

  the wolf has a beautiful coat

  it is white and shimmers in moonlight/a coat of diamonds

  his jaws are power

  teeth sharp as guns glisten against his red tongue

  down around his feet the fur is dirty with the caked blood of my friends

  i smile

  i never thought it would come to this

  scratching

  scratching at my door

  scratching to get in

  howls howls howls

  my children are afraid

  i send them to hide in the bedroom

  scratch scratch scratch

  the door strains

  howl howl howl

  cries of my children “mama! mama! who is it?”

  i am ready

  —armed with my spear inherited from my father as he

  from his mother (who was psychic) as she from her father

  (who was a runaway slave) as he from his mother (who

  married the tribal witch doctor)—me—african warrior

  imprisoned inside my female form

  determined

  i open the door

  a snarl

  he lunges

  the spear

  against his head

  he falls back

  to prepare for second siege

  i wait

  the door will not close

  i do not see the wolf

  my children scream

  i wait

  look down

  am wounded

  drip blood

  cannot move

  or apply bandages

  must wait

  wolf howls and the roar of police sirens

  They Came Knocking on My Door at 7 a.m.

  they had a warrant out for my arrest

  “what’s your name? where’s your identification”

  i was half naked so they didn’t come inside,

  figuring they’d caught me mid-fuck

  they were right

  coitus interruptus LAPD is a drag

  i showed ’em alias #3

  they said “oh, well where is she?”

  i said, “man, she was staying here, but she

  hooked up with some niggah and split”

  “ok. ok.”

  they left

  i went back into the bedroom

  you were naked and still hungry, curious

  “what was that all about”

  “nothing”

  i laughed, took off the rag i was wearing

  eased into the sheets next to you

  we started fucking again

  but things had changed

  Sessions

  doctor asked me if i had any sexual fantasies. i told him i had none

  my fantasies could not be spoken. they would not be well received

  and he might try to kill me

  reality: him cruising by in his cadillac

  me at the bus stop on my way home to hubby and the kid

  he smiles and doubles back, ready as spring

  i slide in next to the singer. at the motel

  he plays hollywood to my watts

  the doctor asked me who i loved most, my father or my mother. and i

  said i loved them both the same, but differently. father understood

  one side of my personality and mother, the other

  reality: him slipping the ring off my pinky

  unnoticed, then pretending to help me look for it

  he smiles and tells me he’s ready

  i slide in under him, unaware that this is

  just another movie scene

  doctor asked me what i thought about the face that curved along

  the paper. was it male or female. i saw a woman there and said so.

  he told me it could be either. i didn’t understand the significance

  of that particular test

  reality: me showing up on his job

  the blistering anger/anguish of summer. i want

  him to take me and the child away from my man

  i want him to stake a claim. not ready at all

  he avoids my eyes, cries about his wife and

  her suicidal tendencies

  the doctor asks me what i am. i say, a non sequitur. he is suddenly

  afraid as i spew out my hatred. across the rug stamping angrily at

  my absence from the nation’s tomes. he shifts his glasses uncomfortably

  hands me a tissue for my tears, tells me he does not want me as a

  patient. walks out. it’s cold on the leather

  reality: me running into him a couple of

  years later, after his nervous breakdown and my

  divorce. lust like yesterday cops a feel of

  my ass, and it’s to the motel for one of the good

  old days. he’s trying to make it back to the top

  and it’s my turn to do a fade

  the apartment a fist closing round me. i go back to the streets, call on

  a few friends and assure them i’m okay and no longer courting death.

  didn’t

  really need a doctor after all, now that i’ve finally found a decent job

  The Woman and Her Thang

  she kept it in a black green felt-lined box

  liked to bring it out to show people, especially the men

  she was sexually involved with

  it was a creature she loved

  sometimes when she was alone, she’d take it from its box

  caress it gently, lay it on the bed, watch

  it glide easily over the blanket

  frequently she would feed it a mouse or small rabbit and watch

  for days, until the lump in its torso dissolved

  it was more than a pet

  of course, she never saw herself in it

  she felt she had so many more dimensions

  she was warm and it was cold

  people loved her but they were afraid of it

  the only thing they shared was a blackness of skin

  and a certain rhythmic motion

  one day she was showing
it to this man

  a very special man

  a man she wanted to fall in love with who

  seemed to be able to love her, a man different from

  the other black men she had known

  and so she opened the black green felt box

  reached in and took it out

  gently she carried it over to the bed

  where he lay naked and waiting

  she showed it to him proudly

  he was appalled, shocked, frightened

  he jumped. he scared it.

  it took a long time for that lump to go away

  many times since she has considered getting rid of it

  but after having invested so much time in the thang

  she couldn’t bear to throw it away

  a friend suggested she sell it

  she’s into that process now.

  Beaches. Why I Don’t Care for Them

  associations: years of being ashamed/my sometimes

  fat, ordinary body. years later shame passed

  left a sad aftertaste. mama threatening to beat me if i got

  my hair wet. curses as she brushes the sand out, “it’s gonna

  break it off—it’s gonna ruin your scalp.”

 

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