The second series of Poets on Couches continues with John Murillo and Nicole Sealey reading Anne Waldman’s poem “How to Write.” In these videograms, poets read and discuss the poems getting them through these strange times—broadcasting straight from their couches to yours. These readings bring intimacy into our spaces of isolation, both through the affinity of poetry and through the warmth of being able to speak to each other across the distances.
“How to Write”
by Anne Waldman
Issue no. 45, Winter 1968
Perhaps I’m kidding myself about
the life I leadSometimes I feel I’m dying
like a lot of things I see around meThen I turn on the TV and understand
that everything must still be movingMusic, for example, and I rush outside
around the corner to a concertIt’s so easy
Everything accessible from where I
happen to live at the momentThings like rock concerts not too many trees on 2nd Avenue
Once, on the Sixth Avenue bus
I got a sudden sensation
I had been alive beforeThat I was a man at some other time
TravelingYou would think this strange if you were a woman
If I were a man right now I’d be getting out of the draft
but I think I’d want to be a poet tooWhich simply means alive, awake and digging everything
Even that which makes me sick and want to die
I don’t really, you know
I just don’t want to be conscious sometimes
because when you’re conscious in the ordinary way
you have to think about yourself a lotDull thoughts like what am I doing ?
Uptown in a large crowd I want to sit down and cry
because everything is simple and complicated
all at onceEveryone has this feeling
Even people downtown
It is very basic to the way we are
which is why I can say “we”A lot of drugs can change you if you want
because you too are made of what drugs are made ofIn fact you are just a bundle of drugs
when you come right down to itI don’t want to go into it
but you’ll see what I mean when you catch onThat’s not meant to sound snotty
I’m open to whatever comes alongThis is the feeling I get before I take a plane
Then everything’s the same afterward anyway
All into one space and here I am again
alive still, same worries on my mindThe thing is don’t worry!
You are doing what you have to what you canYou hear from your friends
They let you know what’s happening in California, Iowa
Vermont and other places about the globeThey take you out of your little room
just like the newspapers or the news
or the man you live withand put you in a much larger room
one in which you are in constant motion around the clock
John Murillo is the author, most recently, of Kontemporary Amerikan Poetry, winner of the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award.
Nicole Sealey is the author of Ordinary Beast and received the Rome Prize. Her poem “Pages 5–8” appeared in the Fall 2020 issue.
from The Paris Review https://ift.tt/3fOBi3S
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