Poem: “Fix” by Alicia Suskin Ostriker, from No Heaven.
Fix
The puzzled ones, the Americans, go through their lives
Buying what they are told to buy,
Pursuing their love affairs with the automobile,
Baseball and football, romance and beauty,
Enthusiastic as trained seals, going into debt, struggling —
True believers in liberty, and also security,
And of course sex — cheating on each other
For the most part only a little, mostly avoiding violence
Except at a vast blue distance, as between bombsight and earth,
Or on the violent screen, which they adore.
Those who are not Americans think Americans are happy
Because they are so filthy rich, but not so.
They are mostly puzzled and at a loss
As if someone pulled the floor out from under them,
They’d like to believe in God, or something, and they do try.
You can see it in their white faces at the supermarket and the gas station
— Not the immigrant faces, they know what they want,
Not the blacks, whose faces are hurt and proud —
The white faces, lipsticked, shaven, we do try
To keep smiling, for when we’re smiling, the whole world
Smiles with us, but we feel we’ve lost
That loving feeling. Clouds ride by above us,
Rivers flow, toilets work, traffic lights work, barring floods, fires
And earthquakes, houses and streets appear stable
So what is it, this moon-shaped blankness?
What the hell is it? America is perplexed.
We would fix it if we knew what was broken.
I was riding with Carolyn the other day and we were commenting on all of the excess that folks here tend to indulge in. We had to get a climate controlled storage unit for some of the furniture and electronics we have been getting for the TG Center and we found it humorous (and a bit sad) that Americans rent little air-conditioned apartments for the stuff that could no longer fit in their homes.
When was it that citizens became consumers? When was it that we began to believe that happiness is about stuff?
Getting, having, doing, debt…
What is it that we are really hungry for? When I am in my death bed, will I be thinking about all of my stuff or my credit rating? I hope that I would be asking myself “Did I love well… Was I there when it mattered?”
I wonder if other cultures suffer from the hollowness the above poem talks about?
“After” my transition, I was left with a quasi-normal life. I found myself being more cognizant of the overt pull to be a happy shiny person by buying the next newest thing. All of my life has been so inward-focused due to the management of my own gender incongruence that I had little attention left for the culture of need. When I purchased things like cars, the question in my mind was if it would fit the image I needed to project, not if a car would somehow equal a happy/successful/fulfilled life.
This is yet one more thing I’ve found to be grateful about when it comes to being trans. Somehow, I seem to have (at least on some levels) managed to escape being fully indoctrinated with the culture of Western consumerism.
ヘ(^_^ヘ) Woot! (ノ^_^)ノ