Workshop Description: We will contemplate the nature(s) of narrative. What is narrative? How it works in various genres. How you can work it. Hint: narrative is not always linear. However, it is the thread that holds everything together. Come with a story you want to tell. The story of your life; the story of a brief encounter; the story of your mother’s life; the story of a flavor. You will practice telling your story in different genres, including but not limited to fiction, poetry, journalism, scholarly writing, creative non-fiction/lyric essay, narrative medicine, finger-painting (just—sort of—kidding).
For example, in fiction, look for a narrative arc, look for character development, look for resolution of a problem or conflict or contradiction. In journalism, answer the questions, Who, What, Where, When, How, and, for long-form journalism, WTF? or Why? In academic writing, prove it (persuade me). In creative non-fiction or lyric essay, use all your senses—and ours—to tell the story. In poetry, tell what the words call upon you to tell, in the form they call to you. Play along.
Waking
1
I get into bed at night with my mortality. We snuggle up together. Soon, I close my mind’s eye. But my mortality worms her way back into my attention. Like a comfortable old lover, she prods and cuddles when all I want now is to rest, to doze off in my own pleasure. She wants to be congratulated. She wants to hear from my dry lips that she woke me completely. And she wants to hear from my lips that I love her. I do. I just don’t want to say it right now. Can’t she wait until morning? Just before dawn I’ll be willing again to stroke her thigh and startle her awake, take her by surprise as she takes me, every evening. Earlier every night.
2
My mortality’s twin sister demands three pages every day. Single-spaced. I can deliver that but wish sometimes she would leave me alone. Why does she insist on wearing rouge? The way my mother did when she was in her 40s. I use my hand-held calculator to confirm the years. Yes, the early ’60s, when my sisters and I stopped straightening our hair, let those springing curls fly loose, and stopped using bras to hold our breasts in place. We circled our eyes with kohl and went looking for sex. Even if we didn’t know what we were looking for, we were asking for it. My generation—sigh—we were not sluts; we were looking for something that had been deliberately hidden from us.
We were explorers, and we found it. There it was, waiting for us. We fell in love every time this skin rubbed against another’s skin. Shameless. At last! We were sure that we were the first generation to discover sex outside the hearth. Or at least the first generation since patriarchy discovered paternity. Even as we worshipped those pockets of Fabian free-lovers that grew among the Victorians, we were sure that we were new.
3
I get out of bed before dawn now that I live alone. I brew the dark dust into a libation that frees me to appreciate the day when it comes. My desk welcomes me every morning. We sit down together. The chair wraps its arms around my thickening waist and welcomes me back to work.
What am I doing wrong that a blank page has no fear of my writing across its back? I tattoo small orange blossoms onto it, and the fragrance of the Valley rises until my eyes fill. Those same years, in April, my mother—rouged or not—would drive us through the orchards past the outskirts of the town in the afternoon, until what was bleak at home rose into this aria of artificial snowfall—the fruit trees bursting with new life, promising fruition. Her cold prairie girlhood winter fluttered on the branches until she was sure that it was not snowing, but blossoming. Then we would turn around and drive home the same way we came, in time to cook for all those people—family, they called themselves.
Was it during those very drives that I promised I would never harness myself to that kind of buckboard? I would never lead a family to the trough I had prepared for them, where they would ignore my presence unless I stopped shaking the grain bucket. If I stepped away from the stove for a moment, they would get restless, mill about. They would miss me if I missed a meal. That is, if I missed serving them a meal.
I serve myself. My daughters watch me. I welcome them to the table. The day begins.
THERE HAS ALWAYS BEEN DRUMMING IN OAKLAND*
There has always been drumming in Oakland.
There has always been church-song.
Since the early days when you could stand on the shore,
back to the bay, before there was a bay, feel the surf
pulling and thrumming at your heart, before dawn.
When the bay was a delta, falling sharply
into the sea, before they connected
St. Francis to Marin with gold.
Before the mission, before the presidio.
Since people stood before dawn
among the poplars—that long stretch of alameda—
watching the eastern hillside, to sing the sun up over the oaks,
there has been drumming in Oakland. There has been
church-song.
The people believed back then,
as we do now, that the bright orbs—sun and moon—
were listening,
because
why wouldn’t they?
Listen to their relations.
There has been barbeque in Oakland,
since mussels and wild onion, rabbit and tender deer bits,
lay on the fire, ready
to be dropped into the acorn stew held
in dry-grass receptacles, ready to be
stirred into this rock-boiling water
to add flavor, simmering.
Mmmmmmm.
There has been song in Oakland.
And Oakland has been multilingual and multicultural
for tens of thousands of years, since people first began
to gather here to trade, a crossroads where the creeks
ran down to the bay, where steelhead and coho
climbed up to spawn while
grizzly watched
for their chance, hungry and irritable,
mumbling to each other.
There have always been
Complaints about the neighbors. We live next door.
Marry in. Bird and bear, turtle and wasp.
The locals let us know
what’s what if we can hear them:
There has always been song.
We have always moved to it,
each of us, as we—the two-leggeds, no fins, no leaves—
have moved here: ex-soldiers, land grabbers,
opportunist ranchers and our yanqui lawyers, a new police force,
murderous.
Alongside refugees from land-grabs,
from impoverishment and massacre elsewhere.
Workers crossing oceans or borders
to flee viciousness elsewhere
do the dirtiest work.
While some come as tailors, to cover us
in denim—that warp-faced fabric
sewn in goldfields—some arrive later, to build
steel warships, wanting
an honest day’s work
for a day’s pay. And safety
for their families. Respect.
Fishers and sailors move here
to the canneries, processors, foundries,
factories. Adding mussels and wild onions
to cioppino, to mae un-tang. Gardeners arrive—
Lao, Mien, Hmong, Kanjobal, Mam, Ibo,
Ahmara, Punjabi, Sicilian —
cooks and politicians,
Mexican and Palestino panaderos, bring their own
recipes, their own steps. Their own ways.
The children become
office workers, teachers, librarians, historians. Police.
Physicists and medicine seekers.
Artists and other sex workers.
We gather now against the drought, the fire, the storm,
assess the damage, organize
a promise: a living wage, a house,
some vision. There has been drumming.
There has been song. We find
A place that’s home. Where there has always been
song. Song has been here. Song has welcomed us.
Song draws a line
we can dance across, if we can hear
the drum.
If we can weave
this basket into something
that will hold.