Monday Morning Musings:
“I could be
In someone else’s story
In someone else’s life
And he could be in mine. . .”
–Benny Andersson, Björn Ulvaeus, Tim Rice, “Someone Else’s Story,” from the musical Chess
“People’s personalities, like buildings, have various facades, some pleasant to view, some not.”
-François, Duc De La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680) Moral Maxims and Reflections, no. 292
On a sunny day–
spring in February thinking of May–
we stroll through sun and shadows
façades that hint of love inside
I wonder if it is—
and who they are–
wonder about their stories
(someone else’s story)
All of the stories that have been lived
as the centuries turn
eighteenth to nineteenth and on
through changing façades–
those that remain–
past and present merge
modernized, expanded, reformed–
like this church–
where beneath the surface
lie the remains of those
who once lived and breathed here
their breaths becoming part of the ecosystem
their steps leaving footprints,
sometimes larger in death than they were in life.
Other people’s lives,
Someone else’s story
When they lived,
did they wear their hearts openly—
like the cutouts on the door,
or did they keep their feelings buried
deep inside
behind a façade of smiling respectability?
I wonder how many had secret lives
yearnings that they could never admit?
Complex creatures
we divide ourselves
closing doors—saying this is not allowed
we must not live that story,
but times change
and churches, too,
and love is love is love
In the quiet here, there is not silence.
Do their ghosts walk by my side here?
that sound
the wind,
or their sighs
telling me their stories?
In the unquietness of this place,
filled with hundreds of stories
of birth, love, sorrow, and death
a living child with his mother screams in delight
and runs over the graves. . .
what happens at night behind the gates?
We wander back to the movie theater to see
someone else’s story—
there up on the screen
A Fantastic Woman
and she is
what does it matter that she was born a man
(we all have our façades)
but she was loved
and still is by her sister and friends
and a dog–
who doesn’t care about societal labels–
some do not treat this woman well
they threaten and humiliate her
but life and her story go on
because she is a fantastic woman
And after –
we talk and walk
to where fire recently destroyed part of a block
nineteenth-century buildings
one will have to be demolished
all but it’s first floor cast iron façade–
the stories of these places–
the people who lived there now displaced–
and while we stand there
gazing at the devastation,
I get a text from a friend,
find out about her son’s illness—
the dangers of the invisible world
within our bodies
beneath the surface,
we don’t always see or know what is there–
(thankfully, it seems he will be okay)
and though this is someone else’s story
they are my friends,
so it becomes part of my story, too.
The next day, it turns cold again–
February’s story–
we turn the heat back on
eat homemade pizza, drink some wine,
huddle under blankets,
watch Netflix–and our cats—
we text our daughters,
sending virtual hugs–
behind the walls of our house
this is our story,
and I don’t want someone else’s life.
A Fantastic Woman stars the fantastic Daniela Vega, a trans woman (who also sings in the movie). The movie was made in Chile, and it is nominated for best foreign film. I keep thinking about it. See the trailer here.
The architecture of the fire-damaged buildings is described here.
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