it is wise to live with open palms
for how else may we embrace hands
old and new hard and soft
how else may we comfort friends
near and far lost and found
how else may we release pain
receive hope and love
it is wise to live with open palms
for how else may we embrace hands
old and new hard and soft
how else may we comfort friends
near and far lost and found
how else may we release pain
receive hope and love
A young man began playing piano as I viewed the woodcut “American” by Shaqe Kalaj, we two the only people in the Art Lounge at the University of Michigan Union. We were far from lonely, though, surrounded by voices of poems and visual art at the exhibit “rEVOLUTION: making art for change”. This annual exhibit by the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center (SAPAC) both celebrates and reflects upon “survivorship”, a term used by rEVOLUTION artist Mary Ellen Croci in describing her work.
The young man played an emotional piece “Comptine d’un autre ete: L’apres midi”/ “The Piano: Life is a song” by Yann Tiersen that I recognized by way of the film Amelie, a romantic comedy with a protagonist whose unique view of the world strikes neighbors and coworkers as strange. Amelie navigates isolation with rich imagination, yet still longs for love and healing touch. I found this association poignant as I explored expressions of fellow survivors and allies, pain and promise entwining our stories, lives, and imaginations.
Large canvases conveyed hope amidst tragedy with thick brilliant colors in “Pranayama – Deep Breathing” and “Dandayama Janushirasana – Standing head to knee”, works from a series by Emily Kripitz. Wide brushstrokes of red, blending and bleeding, from Ellie Howe’s “Rape” brought to mind women’s wombs and menses as well as the tearing of sexual violation.
A favorite piece I viewed was the montage “What is your secret?”, inspired by the project PostSecret and arranged by SAPAC’s Networking, Publicity, and Activism Program. Messages hung on a wire background in dialogue with and contrast to one another, such as “I like spring because I like my bare legs” and “Sexual assault affects all”.
Lines of poetry also sparked the exhibit: “sometimes the only thing I can bear to touch/ is words” from “What is love” by Willow Fagan. “A trained advocate/ Couldn’t say a word./ She is my best friend,/ Asking, begging, pleading for anything,/ And I said nothing” from “She said, she said, she said” by Alaina Moreno-Koehler.
*
The young man stopped playing piano before I finished the visit, and in the absence of music a hallow echo rang in my ears. Reflecting on that silence now brings to mind the shame that survivors experience at the fault of others: perpetrators, accomplices who know of assault but take no action, and media professionals who cover assaults yet ignore awareness efforts.
Until late April, I watched my town’s mainstream newspaper The Lansing State Journal cover incidents of sexual violence without addressing current prevention efforts. (The first story I found during the month followed Take Back the Night held April 20.) This irony is rather common in the media, but more painful when it happens during Sexual Assault Awareness Month and after personally contacting LSJ journalists about SAAM-related events (multiple times since March) without one reply. In contrast the City Pulse, The Lookout, and The State News reported on S.A.A.M. for the public; applause to those publishers, editors, and reporters! (See the post “Grateful this April” for links to stories.)
Sexual assault is pervasive; consider recent events in mid-Michigan schools and streets, a decade of abuse by USA male coaches with female swimmers, the likely role of Pope Benedict in protecting pedophiles. The widespread and everyday reality of sexual assault merits media coverage not only about acts of violence but also awareness-raising and prevention efforts. The public deserves to know about services available to survivors, how to respond to violating behaviors, and what survivors have to say.
*
What survivors have to say matters! Closing with this thought, I am sharing a recent poem, which surfaced while thinking about a perspective I’ve encountered more than once: “Some survivors aren’t ready to tell their story.” In placing this comment I can’t recall a survivor ever saying it to me, which is telling. One survivor may deliver their story in a more caustic manner than another, but I propose it is not the survivor at issue but the listener who may be pushed beyond their comfort zone. If a survivor wants to speak they are ready on their own terms, not necessarily those of listeners. I find it important to distinguish whose readiness is in doubt.
ready
some say
some survivors are not ready to speak
really
who dare tells a survivor willing to speak
that she is not ready
the matter is not her words
soft or harsh
sanitized or inflamed
raw or stewed
the matter is who listens
willingly
welcoming
patiently
because
when a survivor speaks
she is ready
to tell her story
the question is
who is ready to hear her
with open ears supple minds clear eyes
and souls warmed by compassion
April has been an amazing and rewarding month. During info tables for Sexual Assault Awareness Month, I enjoyed meeting patrons at Chrome Cat as well as students and staff at Lansing Community College. Many thanks to these establishments! Also thanks to the journalists who reported on S.A.A.M. related events like mine “Hope at the Center: Poetry Show”: Bonnie Bucqueroux (video, Lansing Online News), Jessica Carreras (“The healing power of words”, City Pulse, 4/13/10), Megan Murphy (“Take it back”, City Pulse, 4/14/10), and Leann Schaefer (“Poetry show offers sexual, domestic violence awareness”, The Lookout, 4/12/10 ).
Even more thanks to survivors and allies who made yet another annual national gathering Take Back the Night happen in the Lansing area! Gratitude for help with postering for “Hope at the Center: Poetry Show”: LaShonda Windham and TBTN organizers; Shari Murgittroyd and volunteers at the MSU Sexual Assault Program; and my event partner the Michigan Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence, especially Senior Program Manager Tammy Lemmer.
And, yes, there are more thanks to give for “Hope at the Center: Poetry Show”! Director Tim Lane at (SCENE) Metrospace for supporting local artists and (SCENE) volunteers Bethanne and Aaron for supporting the event. Friends April and Raquel for helping at the door! Also thanks to Raquel for the wonderful pictures. Love to writer friends Ashley, Deena, Silvana, and Valerie for make the night special. Gratitude to MCADSV staff for attending after an already very busy day: Tammy Lemmer, Senior Program Manager, and Mary Keefe, Executive Director.
Many thanks to volunteers at and donations for the show: Emily from S.A.C.I. for info tabling, certified interpreter Shayla Riggs and LCC student Sara for signing at the event, Mark Darling for poster design. Of course, thanks to everyone who came! Some of you I don’t know but for those I do: Becky, Kathleen, Leah, Stephanie. A very special thanks to loved ones for moral support and putting up with me during show preparations: my mother Peggy, my dearest Deena, and my partner Tom, who made the multimedia sizzle.
Thanks to Bonnie Bucqueroux from Lansing Online News for video recording the poem “we are trees” from my new collection Hope at the Center! She visited my info table for Sexual Assault Awareness Month at Lansing Community College on Monday, April 12.
Also many thanks to Leann Schaefer from LCC’s student paper The Lookout for the story “Poetry show offers sexual, domestic violence awareness” (April 12). Leann met me at the Michigan Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence offices in Okemos a few weeks ago to interview Senior Program Manager Tammy Lemmer. Tammy gave us a tour of the facilities, which includes a resource center available to Michigan residents.
Yesterday morning, I watched the sun peek through clouds and tender green on trees, reminding me how spring is a season of renewal. With this spirit, I anticipate sharing my words at “Hope at the Center: Poetry Show” this Thursday, April 15!
My latest collection of poems “Hope at the Center”, to be released in tandem with the show, explores themes of migration and separation through social and personal histories. While wrestling generational wounds the collection seeks healing, a movement from death/darkness/despair to life/light/hope. The show’s image symbolizes this shift with a gerbera daisy emerging from a black background. Many thanks to Mark Darling for donating services for the poster design!
The journey toward hope and healing is basic to humanity on a collective and individual level. This journey parallels my experience as a survivor of sexual and domestic violence: the process of shaping a life-affirming path through tragedy’s pain, shame, and silence. So in anticipation of the show, I invited nonprofits serving survivors of violence to join and get word out about Sexual Assault Awareness Month during April.
My event partner is the Michigan Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence, which will receive half of the show proceeds. I like to describe MCADSV as the spine of local nonprofits offering direct services to survivors. The Coalition works at prevention of sexual and domestic violence at the state level as well as trains local providers. Also coming to the show are representatives from Take Back the Night and the MSU Sexual Assault Program.
Advocates will be at (SCENE) Metrospace when the doors open at 7:00pm, providing a great opportunity to learn about sexual assault prevention, services, and awareness raising efforts in Mid-Michigan. The show starts at 8:00pm with a multimedia performance of my newly released poems. This performance is interpreted for the deaf and hard of hearing thanks to donated services by Shayla Riggs.
If you are unable to be at the show but still wish to contribute, your donation is most welcome! Please use this PayPal button to make your gift – and know that no amount is too small.
Thanks to donated services and a discount on printing promotional materials from Capital Imaging, expenses for the show round down to $100. After recuperating event expenses, one quarter of the door sales goes to the venue. The remaining amount will be equally divided between MCADSV and I. So online donations are very helpful. The ground tally will be published on my web site as well as blog after the event!
The HerStories Project kicked off on March 6 with a festive group. Storytellers Jean Bolley (Lansing Storytellers) and Lynette Brown (Michigan Women’s Historical Center) in character as Elizabeth Cady Stanton began the afternoon followed by the workshop “Journaling through change” by Holly Makimaa (Oasis Wellness). See photos on Flickr.
On March 11, the statewide weekly newspaper Between the Lines published an article about HerStories: “Telling TheirStories” by Jessica Carreras. Thanks to BTL for spreading the word about the program!
Events continue March 13 with storytellers Charles Thornton and Ena Baker (Lansing Storytellers) and two writing workshops. The workshop leaders Dawn Comer and Mary Catherine Harper travel from Defiance College in Ohio to give sessions on fiction and poetry.
“Hope at the Center: Poetry Show” takes place on April 15, 2010, at 8pm at SCENE Metrospace of East Lansing. I am performing poetry from a collection of the same name to be released in tandem with the event. My partner is the Michigan Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence, which will receive half of the proceeds. More info soon to come!
Press is picking up about The HerStories Project including an interview with Bonnie Bucqueroux from Lansing Online and a plug by Bill Castanier published in LON and the Mittenlit Blog. LON also invited me to write from the perspective of organizer, and my thoughts are published as “Creating Spaces”.
Stay tuned for more coverage of the program!
I look out the second-story window of my home and smile at the snow atop bushes, across lawns, streaking rooftops. I am grateful for this Michigan winter, the season I missed most while in Belgium. Normally Belgian winters are mild, much like the coastal-side of the Pacific Northwest, where the grass stays green during the shortest days of the year, where snow infrequently falls and rarely sticks around. So the irony is not lost on me to hear from my partner that Belgium is running out of salt due to this year’s abundant snowfall. His mother recalls that it’s the first time in many, many years since the snow covered her country’s ground for longer than a month.
This morning I’m reflecting upon my Valentine’s weekend, when I joined writers for a winter workshop with Laura Apol at the Leaven Center in Lyons, Michigan. Continue reading
I’ve named a new endeavor of mine The HerStories Project, which kicks off in March to celebrate stories about women during Women’s History Month. If you live in or are near the greater Lansing area of Michigan, be sure to join the free program!
On Saturday afternoons in March at the Everybody Reads bookstore (2019 E. Michigan Ave.), the program offers storytelling, writing workshops and author readings. The final event on March 27 is the Benefit Show and Open Mike, a fundraiser for the Women’s Center of Greater Lansing. The public is welcome to join events without registration except for participation in workshops and the open mike.
Check out the press release for the full program, and email herstories.project @ gmail.com to volunteer, ask questions, or register.