• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

MAYDAY

  • Culture
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
  • Nonfiction
    • Contests
  • Translation
  • Fiction
  • Poetry
  • About
    • Submit
      • Contests
      • Contest Winners
      • MAYDAY:Black
    • Open Positions
    • Masthead
    • Contributors

When You’re Dead
by Melissa Buckheit

October 1, 2016 Contributed By: Melissa Buckheit

When you’re dead you no longer have to think about the experiences of your childhood, get up morning after morning or cook meal upon meal until you no longer wish to eat. When you no longer wish to eat, you may be dead.

I kept a collection of newspaper articles documenting airplane crashes in my great-grandmother’s mahogany-stained vanity when I was a child  blank  I collected the articles after ‘tragic’ plane crashes would occur, and stuffed them in the bottom-left, corner drawer  blank  My great-grandmother came to America from County Galway, Ireland. The furniture was left to my mother by my great-grandmother, when she died of Alzheimer’s, after being ‘disowned’ by my mother’s side of the family  blank  She was sort of a bitch but I never met her  blank  and I was only told of her existence after she’d died. No one went to her funeral. “Your Great-Grandmother died” “Who?”  blank  Said as if they were having lunch  blank  In the drawer, each article was usually a front-page special, depicting the most eerie, disturbing, and matter-of-fact image of a burning plane.

The burning planes transfixed me. I didn’t know why. Each time I saw the image of a wing on fire or the charred crash revealing the body of the plane with a portion ripped out, I stuffed the entire section of the newspaper into the bottom drawer  blank  Call it a talisman against suffering  blank  There seemed to be so many crashes over the two years I lived in that apartment where I began collecting  blank  It flooded while I lived there with my mother and her drunk boyfriend  blank  How common is it to be in a plane that crashes? Natural Disasters? Beginning that summer, I imagined that if I were about to crash, I’d relax my entire body so that upon impact, I’d remain alive  blank  The hacked body of a plane eerily resembled the limb severed from the body of a crash victim  blank  Part for the whole.

My parents had recently divorced, and I was thirteen. That summer after seventh grade, I’d take long walks at dusk, alone, through the neighboring streets for hours  blank  One time a creepy old man stalked me and I hid in a enormous pine tree  blank  I was scared to death but bent on survival  blank  I listened to a Judy Garland mix tape of mostly early songs from Easter Parade, Meet Me in St. Louis and other pre-50’s musicals, every night as I tried to sleep  blank  I pretended to have a French twin as to avoid speaking English to my neighbors or to avoid being in my life  blank  I’d dress up in late-Edwardian clothing to imagine myself away to imagine myself away from that space. That space  blank  I raised feral kittens and fed feral cats in our laundry room. I lived in one of the ugliest cities in our state  blank  I read through two of my mother’s bookcases, each containing books about a single subject; the first was Hollywood, and the other was the Holocaust. My mother was busy smoking pot, having sex and ‘re-living’ her teenage years  blank  I don’t like to speak of it  blank  blank The drawer full of articles in my great-grandmother’s mahogany vanity was a secret, which was mine, a reality I controlled  blank  People were constantly dying in plane crashes  blank  when another article appeared, I was never surprised. People dying in plane crashes were real in a way the living could never be  blank  Surrounded as I was, a ghost.

 

 

 

Return to table of contents for Issue 10 Fall 2016.

You May Also Enjoy Reading...

  • Mockingbird
    by Melissa King Rogers

    At nineteen my former student jacks a car with a toy gun. Give me the keys! he says, but he carries her groceries in, unlocks her door—can't leave her alone in the cold, she looks so…

  • Recluse
    by Melissa King Rogers

    We were drawn to them the way kids crave adults who are not their parents, camp coaches we could carve out crushes on and not feel creepy. He was a grizzly, big hands, a mean…

  • Privilege
    by Allison Blevins

    I’m going to stop coming out in the usual I don’t want to offend you way. I’ll tell the next children’s librarian who asks me my husband’s name about the time a cop held my wife against…

  • Yearning
    by Jennifer Morales

    An animal scared silent, rabbit atremble in the morning grass, belly fur slick to the ground, the ground warming to the hands of sun and light. A salt lick, discovered in a day-to-day field, crusted…

Filed Under: Poetry Posted On: October 1, 2016

Further Reading

The Owner of the Sea by Richard Price
reviewed by Jacqueline Schaalje

The Owner of the Sea by British poet Richard Price, published by Carcanet, is a poetic retelling of three Inuit stories. It’s not a translation of those stories. They are based on folk stories told by elders and some other sources such as tales by the Danish explorer Knud Rasmussen. Price describes them as “poetry based on prose translations of live storytelling.” If you thought Inuit busy themselves with fishing and chewing seal skin all day long, let these poem refresh your perspective!

Rebel Irreverence: Tamara Santibañez at Selenas Mountain
by Corey Durbin

It’s October 25th and I’m making the trip to Selenas Mountain in Ridgewood, Queens, for the opening of Tamara Santibañez’s Rebel Irreverence. I arrive shortly after the start, expecting the least amount of traffic for the day. However, I’m met at the front door by Olivia Swider (gallery co-founder and curator with partner Michael Fleming), […]

Eight Contemporary Female Irish Artists to Fall In Love With Immediately
by Aya Kusch

Ireland is a lush island full of the kind of creativity that verges on magic. Instantly you may think of its entrancing folklore, its grand literary tradition, and even contemporary authors such as Sally Rooney (endorsed by Taylor Swift) and Anna Burns (winner of the 2019 Man Booker Prize). Now I introduce you to your […]

Primary Sidebar

Recently Published

  • Two Poems
    by antmen pimentel mendoza
  • An Excerpt from Until The Victim Becomes Our Own
    by Dimitris Lyacos, translated from the Greek by Andrew Barrett
  • MAYDAY Staff Poll: Best “Break Up With the Job” Films
  • Roost Profusion
    by Karen George
  • Stigmata
    by Gabriella Graceffo

Trending

  • Eight Contemporary Female Irish Artists to Fall In Love With Immediately
    by Aya Kusch
  • Transcriptions
    by Kathleen Jones
  • An Excerpt from Until The Victim Becomes Our Own
    by Dimitris Lyacos, translated from the Greek by Andrew Barrett
  • MAYDAY Staff Poll: Best “Break Up With the Job” Films
  • I Know Who Orville Peck Is
    by Robin Gow
  • Sellouts 1970: Love Story: The Year a Screenplay-Turned-Novel Almost Broke the National Book Award
    by Kirk Sever
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Footer

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Business


Reprint Rights
Privacy Policy
Archive

Engage


Open Positions
Donate
Contact Us

Copyright © 2023 · New American Press

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.