Monday, October 12, 2015

FEATURED WRITER OF THE WEEK: MARK FOGARTY


Rebecca Lobo's Eyes

I looked into Rebecca Lobo’s eyes once.
If I stretch an inch we are just the same height.

So when I glanced up outside the Affinia Hotel
As she stood between two teammates
I got a decent look at her.

She has steely eyes, variable,
Impatient I was standing
Between her and Madison Square Garden.

I look at her with a poet’s gaze,
Bred from thousands of years
Of the liberties of bards.

Rebecca Lobo has champion eyes,
Fierce as the finishing move to the basket.
Mine don’t miss much either, especially close up.

I watch the tall women move in the Elite Eight,
Brackets of women with an affinity for the rim.
Rebecca is done playing for the Liberty.
She says her children now stretch her towards infinity.

She towers over the coaches, asking the questions,
Her pursed lips just visible in the picture.
The producers tell her to smile for the camera.


Tell a hawk to smile. She tries, but she can’t.

_____________________________________________

The Tall Women’s Dance


The tall women twist and twine and turn
The bonds that hold the world in place.

They are getting ready to lift and fly.

There are laws of the universe
That no longer will apply.

The crowd catches on. It’s an invitation
To rise and land in another space
Unthought of in the world’s rotation.

The mascot dances with a little girl.
He dances to Rocky, with oversized gloves.
He bangs a drum. He dances to a tune
That everybody loves.

The tall women are deep oceans
That never have been frozen.
They are watched by women and girls
Who already know the lesson.
They clap their hands, rejoicing.

My pen races over the ticket
So fast I can barely read it.

The basketballs are particles
Bouncing for each horizon:
Neutron, proton, electron.

Dancers zoom in by the dozens,
An acrobat team of weightless teens.
Old women, too, and tiny girls
And everything in between.

The ribbons in the arena flash,
Tail lights of a starship.
Gravity loses all its traction.

What holds us together
Is only human attraction.

Every one who can
Dances to the Jump Cam.

The tall women flit around like birds.
There are no wires, no walls, no remarks.
They are beyond words, past time.
There is only liberty, and sparks,

And two small girls with basketballs
Singing “We Are Family.”

This isn’t a game they’re playing.
It’s the ownership of being.

_____________________________________________


 Brittney Griner is Beautiful

Oh, I disliked Brittney Griner.
Bully girl, jockoid, dead stare.
No poetry. Coasting on her inheritance
Of six feet eight and sharp elbows.

I changed my mind though
When they drafted her first.

She wore a giant white suit, like George Harrison
Or a dude owning his wedding day.
The tears poured down her cheeks
And she didn’t bother
To blot them back. How wrong
I was! Brittney Griner is beautiful.

There’s a frictionless world for everyone,
And Brittney Griner was finally seeing hers.

She grew up a giant, a freak,
Kids calling her gay before she even knew.
She hooped for a school
That hated the way she was
But would look the other way
As long as the buckets fell.

Brittney grew tall enough, at last
To see her way over the bullshit.  

I like how Brittney Griner unfolds
Like a calendar of the mountains,
How no couch she sits on fits her,
But she convinces them they do.
That's poetry.

I like her untangled braids
And her angled cat head.
Her skin is beautiful. The ink is vivid and tender.
She lopes like a jaguar coming home for the day.

I would walk her down the aisle
On her wedding day, beautiful girl.

When I see over the shit, some day,
I will go first in the lottery.

______________________________________


Mark Fogarty is managing editor of The Rutherford Red Wheelbarrow and emcees the Red Wheelbarrow Poets’ monthly reading series at GainVille Café, Rutherford, NJ. His poetry has been published in Hawaii Review, Viet Nam Generation, Journal of NJ Poets, Brownstone Poets Anthology, Exit 13, Unrorean, Eclectic Literary Forum, Cokefishing in Alpha Beat Soup, TEA Newsletter, Footwork, Artemis, Bohemia, City Lit Rag, Instigatorzine, Spirits, Inspire the Planet, Passaic Review, Pink Moon, Side Effects, Lyndhurst Literary Magazine and The Rutherford Red Wheelbarrow. Work is forthcoming in Exit 13, Paterson Literary Review and Red Paint Hill. He is the author of three collections of poetry: Myshkin’s Blues, Peninsula, and Phantom Engineer.

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