Wednesday, January 20, 2010

January 20, 2010


Guilt, confusion, anger?








the guilt
inside you, a
dragon's lair
filled with treasure
belonging to others


robert d. wilson
©2010






Here we are, again, back inside my mind, a mind that's not yours, so why the hell are you here? Am I a sad reminder, a mirror that disturbs you, a dream within a dream, the day dream dream if infant's breath? Am I a ride under arched bridges in the rice fields.  I love America but don't live there.  Instead, I live in the Philippines, a section of southeast Asia, not unlike Vietnam, with jungle, villages, sari sari stores; my closest friend, a carabao that grunts . . . most of the young girls enamored with kanos, who they think are rich, and the filipino guys, resentful of kanos who take their women away because they can't earn enough.  What are toilets without toilet paper and lids?  An unwed woman is not unusual in the Philippines, but unlike America, unwed mothers here is this Catholic country are looked down upon, fodder for gossip, and get no monetary support from the government let alone the child's father who barely makes enough to live on.  What does a teenage mother do to support her baby?  


Many drop out of school, some beg, others whore themselves out to older Filipinos or Kanos, and some just exist, living with family members, working as a maid(sometimes sleeping under their bosses' table, for $50 a month from sun-up til late at night with no days off.  Like everywhere, the poor get poorer and the rich get richer, and to top it off, the Philippines is the only nation in the world that has only ten years of education instead of twelve.  1st and 2nd years of college are in essence the junior and senior years of high school.  The rich and the powerful like a subservient people who must do as they're told to survive.  


Many of these women become bargirls, guest relations hostesses (GRO's), working in seedy bars servicing men from their backsides, looking up every night at fat men, skinny men, foul smelling men, the gentle, the rough, "hell I paid for it, gimme what I want, slut!"  They become actresses, learn to hate men, sometimes have sex with one another, and in the morning, they feed their children, parent's, in shanty houses infested with rats and cockroaches that run across them as they try to sleep for a few hours in humid, hot room without fans or electricity, the only toilet, a hole in the floor and a bucket filled with water to wipe their butts off.  They hate their lives, but what to do?  In Vietnam I knew a bar girl who whored at night and attended the university of Saigon during the day majoring economics, her husband a victim of the war.


These women survive in an ambience of blinking christmas lights and cigarette smoke laced with the smell of stale beer, their bodies the property of whoever rents them for an hour, two hours, the night, and if they resist, they are beaten to a pulp and tossed out into the streets.  Cops take bribes, post office employees steal money sent in the mail, workers in the malls wear pants and shirts without pockets, the average wage in the Philippines, $2 to $4 a day.  I've been there, folks, as
a patient in the Philippine Orthopedic Charity Ward sharing a room with forty other patients, that has no fan, the windows are broken, cats wander in and out of the room, and the rooms are literally infested with thousands of small cockroaches.  The charity ward, compliments of the Catholic Church, has several rooms like the one I stayed in, and share one toilet without a lid or toilet tissue, and stands in 2.5 feet of dank water, the stench, something from the bowels of a sick animal left to die on the side of a road.  After I moved to the Philippines, my retirement was put on indefinite hold proceeding the final outcome of a messy divorce from a Filipino woman who'd married me for a free ticket to America and when I asked her for a divorce, she who brutally verbally and physically harmed myself, our two children, and one from a previous marriage, begged me to stay and even said, "if this is about sex, you can bring girls upstairs and fuck them."  I turned down the offer, and instead, offered to live in a separate room for the year it'd take to get the divorce, and to pay bills like I'd done in the past.  Needless to say, rejection is not her thing coming from a poorer than poor family, and I had to leave the house, rent a place of my own, hire an attorney, pay utilities and our credit card debts, hers and mine . . .  I suffered a nervous breakdown and had to resign from my career as a teacher of troubled children, leaving me to live off of $450 a month, the military sent me as a disabled Vietnam vet.  I had no choice but to move to the Philippines and live with my intended in a squatter's house, unable to pay child support for our children and my daughter from a previous marriage.  In the Philippines we lived off of rice topped with various toppings and recorded music CDs for less than a dollar each.  Some days we didn't know what we'd eat the two meal we ate each day.  The heat was unbearable, and my depression getting worse by the second until I got to the point where I didn't know what day it was or when it was night or day, living 24 hours, except during meals and relieving myself, in our bedroom.  I now get more money from the VA but my Ex wife gets part of that and my entire teacher's retirement pension for child support and will soon get more.  And check this out, when I asked the Judge to do a psyche and custody evaluation, she ignored me, conned by my Ex's acting prowess and, instead focused the hearing on how much money I should pay her and questioned why I was living outside of the U.S.  Could the Judge exist on $450 a month in the U.S.?  Can anyone?   I live a better life now thanks to my country who is grateful for my service in Vietnam.  And thanks to a wonderful, supportive wife who loves me for who I am and not for money.  


I understand the plight of the poor in southeast Asian countries, the hell they must endure so companies like WalMart, Toyota, and Shell Oil Company can make a killing.  


To hell and back. Welcome to The Wonderland Amusement park, part illusion, part real, a city of mirrors, where nothing is as it seems.  Enter at your own risk.  Who knows what you'll learn about yourself? And during your visit, lucky you, become a member.








take me 
into the dream you 
dreamt when 
you were a star
in a homemade video




still water . .
   no sense of self swims
through my mind






am i an
afterthought left on
a table
til dawn, waiting for
a maid half my age




check-points . . . 
withered grass beside
the highway




does a tree
ignore the fruit it
bore . .  . 
deeply rooted,
grasping groceries?




summer dawn . . .
a mute leather skinny
corpse begging






kiss me 
between the lines
when no one
else is around and
time's a semi-colon




tomorrow, 
a newborn shredding
dried fish




the guilt
inside you, a
dragon's lair
full of treasure
belonging to others




treasure her
later when she's a
cloud dancing
thru photo albums in
the gray side of your mind




as if spring
had a choice . . . bowing
to summer




twilight . . . 
behind the trestle,
a day moon,
playing hopscotch
with another's child




twilight dawn . . .
you sing accapella
in my heart 






her desire
to sleep through the
appointment
is a book i'd
rather not read




winter? 
watching the newscast . . .
than at me




afraid of 
shadows shredding
what's left of
themselves in back rooms . . . 
the bar girl's half black son




snow geese . . . 
the dull gray sky
of late spring




once again,
our impulsiveness
with money
takes us through an abyss
made in china




with the rain,
insufficient funds . . . 
and leafs




with the rain
and heavy traffic,
weathered men
hawking what's left
of their spirits




the guilt
inside you, a
dragon's lair




it'll take 
more then an attitude
to persuade
the wind in the trees
to tell me a lie




care if i
join you sipping stars
from skin cups?




on our
anniversary,
we ate on
banana leafs,
staring out the window




dreams . . . 
we pee into after
a typhoon




if i were
a young man, would
it make
a difference . . . 
counting pesos




another dream . . . 
the over ripe fruit
in the bowl? 




robert d. wilson
©2010



1 comment:

  1. Robert,

    You have forty-one so-called 'followers'. Probably, some email you privately. I just don't understand; what is the matter, what is wrong, with those who know you to come out of of the shadows....pajamas

    ReplyDelete

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