"How Do You Like America?" by Keiko Matsui Gibson





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   ~~~                                 

   ~~~    HOW DO YOU LIKE AMERICA?     

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   ~~~        AND OTHER POEMS          

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   ~~~              BY                 

   ~~~                                 

   ~~~      KEIKO MATSUI GIBSON        

   ~~~                                 

   ~~~                                 

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   MY BEAUTIFUL HIROSHIMA TEACHER



   Crimson sunset in Lake Michigan.

   I think of a beautiful woman

   in Hiroshima when the bomb was dropped.

   Was she fortunate not to be killed

   with the 200,000 others?

   Was she unfortunate to stay alive?



   Bright light

   crushed her breath

   windows burst

   she went out

   she woke far off

   stuck all over

   with broken glass

   she couldn't scream

   in blood and pain

   no word would do

   or will ever do

   she felt the end of the world.



   Fujiko is more beautiful because of her scars

   Fujiko is more beautiful because many men and women have loved her

   Fujiko is more beautiful because she has lived alone

   Fujiko is more beautiful because she has taught 

           many students

   Fujiko is more beautiful because she has always 

           loved Hiroshima

   Fujiko is more beautiful because she plans to live 

           in a tiny farmhouse there

   Fujiko is more beautiful because she does not fear 

           the inevitable cancer

   Fujiko is more beautiful because of her peace.

   

   The wormy scar on her neck

   tells the folly of history.





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   REXROTH REXROTH'S EPIPHANY: JUNE 6, 1982



   You disappeared too modestly

   like an autumn leaf falling invisibly.



   Your powerful torso and pink face

   composed a Matisse painting.

   Your ramen tasted as if Marichiko had boiled it.

   The womb Mandala--red and red and red--

   symbol of the organic universe

   was your natural place.

   You were a fiery Buddha, a raging Fudō-myō

   loving tangled Japanese hair.

   I felt small beside you,

   your beaming power quieted me,

   you soulfully called me _Keiko-san._

   Your eloquence was a sword

   piercing masks of snobbery

   cracking the ice of authority along the winter lakeshore.

   

   When your moon was waning

   you changed from Giant to Dwarf.

   Constant pain,

   wires taped to your stomach,

   choking up phlegm--

   everything about you saddened me overwhelmingly.

   But your eyes were more eloquent than ever.

   You did not let me blink.

   I held your thin hands and gazed at you.

   I saw Carol-san kissing your lips so sacredly

   that time and space were frozen.

   I forgot how to breathe and move my feet.

   You became a star on June 6

   in Orion, your constellation.

   

   Hope you take a long bath

   in eternally consoling moonlight. 

   

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   RAKAN'S STILL WATERS



           Rakan (Japanese for Sanskrit _Arhat_), the original 	

           Indian followers of Shakyamuni Buddha, have often 	

           been portrayed by Chinese and Japanese artists. 



   Candidates for Buddhahood

   striving for no approval

   live in easy retirement.

   Bodhidharma and Lao Tzu

   sometimes visit them

   speaking soft nothings

   over cupped hands of water

   and overdone smoky mushrooms.

   Confucius and Mencius never join

   this ridiculous meeting

   because they are too busy

   teaching morality and crafty wisdom.

   Rakan don't have anything to teach.

   Animals rather than people

   plants rather than animals

   rocks rather than plants

   are better friends for Rakan.

   Waves are lapping the beach.

   Trees are rustling in breezes.

   Birds are resting on fences.

   People are sick in bed.

   Raccoons wash fish.

   Rakan are everywhere.

   When you recognize them

   they are no longer strangers.

   

   

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   FOR YOU



   Climbing the frozen hill

   told I was pregnant

   I watched my breath melt icicles

   the cells of my body were dancing toward the sky

   blood throbbed blue in my hardening breasts

   

   I could not help but talk to you

   knowing you were growing 

   ears, eyes, and mouth

   

   imagining the day you would talk to me

   and see the sky with me

   you were surely living in me

   your only home was my womb

   

   now you are homeless

   I feel you everywhere

   I will always be your mother you did not get to see.

   

                                      (Summer, 1985

                                       Crystal Lake, Michigan)					

   

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   AN EXISTENCE SO NEAR SO FAR



   You started growing in my womb

   a miracle of the universe.

   You made me throw up for six weeks.

   But I could not be sure you were you

   till you first knocked on my tummy

   at 6:22 in the evening

   just after tofu and rice

   on the 10th of May

   1986.

   You were gentle but sure

   telling your existence

   to your mother.

   I screamed for your father!

   He rushed in

   caressed my tummy.

   I felt like dying for joy.

   My love for you soared.

   

   Now you bump me inside

   turning somersaults

   rippling my skin.

   Is it dark in there?

   How does my voice sound to you?

   Are you suffering when you hiccup?

   You are so near

   I can almost hold you in my arms

   and yet you are too far away

   for me to see.

   I wish you would crawl out of my navel

   and say "Hello!"

   I want you to suck my nipples in peace.

   I want to kiss you until my saliva all dries out.



   In this overwhelming joy I forget that 

             you are mortal.

   Don't come out too soon!

   I wish you could stay in me forever

   so I could believe in Eternity.

   Am I living with the secret of the universe?



   Pregnancy is not simply preparation for birth.

   Pregnancy is the birth of myself.

   As long as we are born we grow

   we suffer from sickness,

   we age, and pass away.

   During this long but too short journey

   we glimpse eternal life

   flickering light

   which makes life endurable.

   The pain of creation

   the joy of creation.



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   NAME AND BABY



   Name and baby are born.

   Name lives longer than baby.



   Climbing up a small hill

   always I find a graveyard

   surrounded by thick green woods.

   Flowers modestly but proudly

   console the dead.

   Approaching the tomb

   my joints ache.

   Fear gushes from my forehead.

   After all, I may need a religion.

   In the grass, inscriptions of the dead

   seem more real than the dead.



   Henry Miller, Muriel Rukeyser, Alfred Hitchcock

   Peter Sellers, Prime Minister Ohira 

   and my father-in-law George Gibson

   left our world last year.

   Where did they go?

   Where are they?



   Late Sunday morning

   black Chinese shoes scatter

   on the Persian carpet.

   Looking at an amber teapot

   I remember an old woman in a white dress

   who gave it to me--

   the widow of the man

   who groaned lion-like in the war

   and died from ennui of citizenship

   in a so-called comfortable basement.

   Her theatrical talk and her skeleton

   of dreams which failed to be pink

   cast sad, appealing shadows.

   She definitely existed before me

   and she knew me.

   What is her name?

   I did not even ask.

   Is she still alive?



   Drinking tea from her teapot

   my stomach assumes life and death--

   nurturing milk with morbid tea.

   My hands wobble, pulling in

   the image of a baby that can be

   Cloud or Flower, Bird or Lion--

   names for a blank sheet of paper

   as dazzling as the marble 

   of the tomb.

   

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   BELATED LETTER



   My old friend raped at 17

   how can we toast your life?



   Your ski instructor

   taught you suspicion of men.

   Your comrades were

   pain and hatred

   till you met B...

   proletarian wit

   compassionate lover.

   Connective tissues

   spread through your body and world.



   But after his infidelity

   you detested men

   turned lesbian

   separatist

   clipped short your 

   burning red hair and

   ridiculed my marriage.

   How could I  

   so new from Japan

   understand?

   Was it my fault

   perplexed, overwhelmed

   recoiling?

   I needed you

   a heart-friend to share

   horizons of solitude.

   But you said

   "Having children's a sin

   in this patriarchal age."

   Your green almond eyes sparkled.



   To awaken as women

   you wanted us to show

   our vaginas.

   Undressing you watched me

   timid, reluctant

   till I said, "I'm not ready

   to be exposed."

   To what?

   Exposed to the feminine world?



   When you said, "I'm wet!"

   what could I feel?

   Is my suffering just mine?

   Is the sky vast?



   I kept searching for myself

   any self at all

   beyond language

   beyond meaning

   beyond senses

   beyond symbols.



   1986, Chernobyl  assailing

   the earth

   I gave birth to a son

   feeling death in life.

   Seasons change with the wind.

   We are aging like everything else.

   I have not yet heard from you. 



   Bright orange maple leaves

   flirt with cold air

   as if restlessly desperate

   for a damp lover.



   Do you hear the rustling

   of pearl shells

   their murmurings

   of grief?



   Misty daybreak

   brings a message

   from the moon:

   stop distinguishing

   accept devotedly.



   Men and women

   fall in love

   make love

   leave love

   and will love mysteriously

   so long as rivers

   wash away 

   residues

   of humanity.





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   I AM IN AMERICA AND AM NOT



   I can't seem to sleep forever

   disgusted with this black jacket

   loved so much for years--

   Damn it!--laughing at me

   on the white sheet

   like the cast-off skin of Satan.

   Throw it away--hero of hell--

   frigidity piercing my skin.

   I am a comb without teeth.

   When I was a boy in Japan

   expecting to be a salaryman

   I imagined nothing like this.

   

   Seducing me

   is Japan far-off

   in steam from a bowl of nabe--

   the country of mothers

   whose hands are yellow 

   from eating too many oranges

   and fathers who sip sake 

   with decreasing tolerance

   worrying about nagging.

   

   Time is really strange.

   People like Proust and Woolf

   (who are like Proust and Woolf?)

   were great after all

   spraying Bergsonian streams

   of consciousness.

   I hear out of season

   temple gongs of New Year's Eve

   and I don't.

   Where am I?



   Shrill Canton dialect

   of the Chinese couple upstairs

   and the sound of the shower

   of the Republican businessman next door

   have gone elsewhere.

   Are they dead?

   Am I?

   

   I might as well drink courageously

   brandy and cognac

   to shake

   this ridiculous obsession

   called self-consciousness.

   

   It is reasonably said

   that Japan is a fragile flower.

   But I surely do not like

   a flower-arranging wife 

   devoted to children

   a boring boss to bow to

   and sleeping away my life

   on subways with empty men.



   In the mirror

   I find my face covered with bloody tears.

   Spreading my arms, I hold the torso of night tight

   then see that what in front of me is you.

   I was just thinking of killing myself from loneliness.

   I know you are awfully busy

   but would you talk to me awhile?

   I will fix strong green tea smelling of the Japan Sea.

   Removing the top of the tea can

   I see grotesque Caucasian faces 

   filling it

   saying, "This tea stinks

   like filthy Oriental breath!"

   I push them back under the lid.

   Those guys just don't take us seriously.

   I can't conceal their words

   that crush my brain.

   Life hits the bottom.

   I will never forget them

   like nightmares after turning over

   on a stinking mattress.

   Goddamn it!

   Am I that yellow

   that ugly

   that inhuman?

   

   You would never understand

   back in the bureaucracy

   where there are no surprises -- 

   after graduating from a National University

   counting on a beautiful, intelligent wife

   who still loves to shop with her mother

   ecstatic in a department store--

   you would never understand the reason

   why I came this far to America

   a vagabond

   ripping my hair

   crying and struggling over

   existence and identity --

   no problems in Japan.

   You cannot understand

   why I cannot be you:

   how I detest the Japan of sentimental folk-songs.



   The other day

   watching "Seven Samurai" in Urbana

   the rain on the battle at the end

   was my rain

   my flood of resignation.

   I almost lost my mind.

   My life is still damp.

   It will never dry out

   even back in Japan--

   that eternally damp country.

   

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   HOW DO YOU LIKE AMERICA?

   

   Taking off from Osaka

   I saw my mother standing

   with a handkerchief over her eyes

   and my father trying to hide

   a hole in his heart-mind.

   Then my country blurred.

    

   For seven years I have heard:

   "Where do you come from?

   China? Korea? Japan?

   How long have you been in America?

   Is your family still in Japan?

   I sure bet they miss you!

   Did you meet your husband there?

   Does he speak Japanese?

   You speak English very well!

   Where did you learn to speak it?

   How do you like America?"

    

   I pity, fear, and love it.

   America is huge and sick

   optimistic and terrifying

   immature but lovable.

   

   Americans' friendly questions

   dislocated my Japanese bones.

   I automatically answered

   like a dog watering its mouth:

   "I was born in Kyoto, Japan.

   It is a modern ancient city.

   I've been in America since

   Jimmy Carter was President.

   My parents are still in Osaka.

   Because I'm an only child

   we miss each other a lot.

   I met my husband at a bus stop

   near Osaka University

   where he taught.

   He has been learning Japanese

   ever since.

   I have studied English

   since I was 14.

   Though I am working on a Ph.D.

   English is still very strange."

   

   "How do I like America?

   I like America very much!

   It's a beautiful country!

   People are kind and friendly!

   Life is so comfortable here!

   Furnaces keep us warm!

   Public places are clean!

   Not so many people smoke

   here as in Japan."

   

   "So you are from Japan!

   My son married a Korean

   who eats kim chi on pancakes.

   It's unbelievably hot!

   Do you like it too?

   My husband was in Japan after the War and loved it!

   I used to know a Japanese girl in Hawaii.

   She invited me for sushi and tea-ceremony.

   Her name was Keeko too.

   Her hair was so straight and black.

   Such a cute little thing.

   Japan is one of the places I'd love to visit some time.

   It must be very beautiful.

   My mother does flower-arranging in Traverse City.

   How do you like America?"



   How do I like America?

   These cheerful Americans

   much better at talking than listening

   throw balls persistently without receiving any

   and flash commercials of their lives.

   Life goes on in many entangling circles.

   Americans are hectic and confusing.

   When do they calm down?

   The land is airy, spacious, masculine.

   No canes to hold to here, to stick to:

   you can draw your own road where you wish.

   It's a country of gushing power

   uncontrollable.

      

   Suspended between Japan and America

   a stranger in both lands

   alienating every being

   I have stayed awake all night

   hearing drips of

   Japan America

   Japan America

   Japan America

   

   I have lost myself many times

   eroded by changing dogmas.

   My friend A, becoming a separatist-lesbian

   left me

   like an old towel under the sink.

   My friend B, a conservative pro-family housewife

   insists only womanly virtues

   are pleasing to her husband

   producing many children.

   My friend C cannot find a steady job

   because he has long hair, like a little girl

   and really believes in his poetry.

   My friend D, always frustrated

   about her health and family,

   worries in a suffocating room

   with no windows.

   My friend E, embittered

   by the political impasse

   arrogantly retires to nature

   to be a weekend hermit.

   My friend F, still plays like a kid,

   dreaming of making money

   to buy perpetual comfort.



   Divorce has forced many children

   to fly through the air

   helpless and resentful

   their hearts beating in vain.

   The word _Marriage_ rings hollow

   The family is replaced by therapists.

   As more people consume their energy 

   in jogging, aerobics, and health clubs

   where is the food where it's needed

   on the other side of the world?

   People dread fat more than

   nuclear bombs.

   

   In Japan I was suffocated

   panting for sheer freedom

   but there I suffer from too much air

   too chaotic to feel free.

   

   My honeymoon with America

   has ended

   something has ended

   I am ready for a separation.

   America is blurring.

   Just as we cannot count snowflakes

   my karma piles up across the Pacific Ocean.

   

   My parents are opening their eyes.

   They see me winging to them.

   In Japan I will speak again

   transparently, as I wish

   to mother, father, and strangers.

   I simply want warmth of hands

   I want tears turning me into a river.

 



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   SHORTS



   Train whistle

   pierces the opaque night:

   where does the sound go?



   * * *



   "Marry me,"

   he said to the bald woman

   from chemotherapy

   vomiting sorrow and joy.



   * * *

   

   You and dog.

   Dog and you.

   Which is which?

   You bark too.

   Dog saddens too.

   

   * * *

   

   "I still don't trust people

   in suits and ties," said he.

   "I don't trust people,"

   said the chipmunk: period.

   

   * * *

   

   Dreaming the present

   recollecting the future

   I float in air

   looking for an island.





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The poems in this collection were written after the publication of STIR UP THE PRECIPIBLE WORLD (in Japanese and English, Milwaukee: the Burtons' Morgan Press, 1983). I am grateful for publication of some of these poems in the following:

U. S. A.:
Other Side of the River: POETRY BY CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE WOMEN, edited by Leza Lowitz. INTERNATIONAL SHADOWS PROJECT - MILWAUKEE 1990 CATALOGUE, edited by Karl Young, Kenosha, Wisconsin: Light and Dust Books, 1990. KOKORO: HEART-MIND, poems and prose with Morgan Gibson, Frankfort, Michigan: Kokoro, 1981. NEXUS, edited by Bob Moore.

Japan:
KYOTO REVIEW, edited by Katagiri Yuzuru. PRINTED MATTER, poetry edited by Daniel Webster, Tom Dow, and Denis Doyle. THE PLAZA, edited by Nishida Shunji, Taylor Mignon, and Joel Baral.

Copyright &169 1994 by Keiko Matsui Gibson.


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