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rock-mountain-machu-picchu.jpg

Two Poems by Alan Chazaro

July 23, 2019

Neon Boy Escapes the Internet to Explore Machu Picchu

 

Today I learned how to jungle walk while chucking clouds

from cliff sides & ruins aren't really ruined

if they don't tilt into the earth because I've wandered

miles to carry them & I've chased falling

stars across the dark as if they won't crash my head &

when I woke up I smelled coca leaves & dirt

in my lungs & the mist has swallowed every path

behind me & in front there is wild

bamboo growing & I’ve seen how grass

can be used to build bridges with nothing

more than fingers & knees because if you twist anything

tight enough it might hold you up & if you look deeper

into water you might see cosmos

pooling constellations & a city forming

from the sweet mud around you & this morning

I tasted altitude on my tongue & this is not a metaphor

because I felt the highest forest take root in me & I rock-

stepped across a ruthless road for days & I didn't

understand how these mountains were a myth until I lost

my torso at the summit & held breathing

close to my ribs like I never wanted to leave my flesh &

have you ever wanted to cling to the fabrics at the bottom

of your comfort & not let go & never forget

about the river & never forget about the distance & trust

your elevation like snow whispering from above.

 

 Late Night as Neon Boy

 

While everyone slept, I’d watch the skulls

of idols scrape a muted sky. I’m talking

                           

NBA Jam—Latrell Sprewell and Chris Webber

as digital duo. I’m speaking post-Christmas

 

boyhood tongue, video game cartridge

secrets. Sophomore year: I started

 

pinning muscle car posters next to Tyra Banks

in her polka dot bikini. Relaxation suddenly

 

became a synonym for self-touching. How

the first time a friend of a friend came over she laid

 

wordlessly across my bed. How the language

of knowing escaped me and emptied

 

my insides. How I wasn’t sure

where to go but I went. Back when I would draw

 

in the margins of random notes. Back when I failed

and was failed. Because I’ve never been fast

 

at learning. Because I was only good at sitting back

to watch players like Shawn Kemp climb impossible

 

pyramids of air to touch rims. Because

in those years, everything was and wasn’t

 

some game. Because I scored and I didn’t.

Because I’m still learning how to play, how to miss.


Alan Chazaro is a high school teacher at the Oakland School for the Arts. His first poetry collection, This Is Not a Frank Ocean Cover Album, was winner of the 2018 Black River Chapbook Competition and his second, Piñata Theory, was awarded the 2018 Hudson Prize. They are both forthcoming with Black Lawrence Press. Available at https://www.blacklawrence.com/this-is-not-a-frank-ocean-cover-album

Photo on Foter.com

In Poetry Tags Neon Boy, Alan Chazaro, poetry, Machu Picchu
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