Motocross Legend, Love of My Life, Pt. 9 (Poetry)

If you haven’t read all the previous parts or you don’t remember them well, I urge you to read this short story (or novella) from the beginning (link here).


After my pregnant lawyer quit smoking,
Her poised persona devolved
Into furrowed brows, clenched jaws,
Shifting in her seat, pacing aimlessly.
To keep her mouth busy, she snacked constantly
On nuts and seeds like almonds and walnuts,
That she seasoned with soliloquies
About her research into dietary changes
Which would maximize fetal health.
She increased her intake of kale and spinach,
Chock-full of folates, nutrients for a growing brain.
She switched to whole grains rich in B vitamins,
And integrated more milk, yogurt, and cheese,
Hoping that one day, out of her would emerge a baby,
Instead of some godforsaken abomination.

Together we researched cribs and strollers.
She shelved her popular novels and self-help books
For guides on babies’ developmental stages,
Creating a nurturing home for a child,
And balancing motherhood with a career.
As if bracing for a shadow boxer’s pounce
From the corners of her mind to sucker-punch her,
She swung words at phantoms, often striking me.
During legal arguments, she found her wit blunted,
Her sentences faltering, her thoughts scattering,
And she suspected that those colleagues of hers
As useful as shadows in a blackout
Gossiped about her incompetence.
When one dared to rib her, she snarled
Like a cornered junkyard dog.
Until now a lawyer focused on her career,
She pondered reducing hours or working remotely
To dedicate more energy to our awaited baby.

The lawyer and I indebted ourselves
To a bank, my parents, and my in-laws
To buy a second-hand, two-bedroom apartment
On a fifth floor, with built-in wardrobes,
Electric heating, and an American-style kitchen;
Located in San Pedro Street, beside the Bidasoa River,
Near the primary school you and I had attended.

The largest bedroom bloomed into a nursery
Equipped with a crib of white wood;
A mobile adorned with stars; a changing table;
Wall stickers of lions, monkeys, giraffes, elephants;
A sturdy, comfortable rocking chair;
And set on a nightstand, a lamp with a dimmer.

Inside the master bedroom,
In a corner of the wardrobe,
I tucked the moving box
Housing my keepsakes of you.
The hems of my row of shirts
Draped over the lid as if caressing it.
In that confined darkness,
Your figurines, my comic strips,
Your motorcycle gloves
And handwritten letters,
The tapes with our pretend shows,
Photos that had captured you,
All aged second by second
While you remained eighteen.

Evenings lost in the glow of dramas,
Lying on the couch watching TV
With our legs and fingers entwined.
The heat emanating off her curvy body.
The scent of freshly-brewed tea.
Shelves of books and DVDs,
Framed motivational quotes.
The lunar landscape of my existence
Had become inhabited.

Her cravings escalated to chips, doughnuts,
Potato omelets, ice cream, fried pork meatballs,
And whatever she could munch or suck on,
From candies and energy bars to popsicles.
She gained weight, her breasts swelled.
I made myself useful by rubbing her feet
And massaging away the aches from her joints
While she, amidst balled-up snack wrappers,
Pored over childcare books, flipping pages
With her cigarette-deprived fingers.

She zigzagged along an agonizing route:
Aversions, headaches, insomnia,
Nausea, vomiting, constipation,
Anxious gynecological appointments,
Prenatal yoga, birthing classes,
Nightmares of miscarriages and stillbirths,
Of episiotomies, hemorrhages, C-sections,
Of premature infants hooked to machines.
At night, she clutched her belly,
Fearing the budding life inside
Would twist and strangle itself.

Whenever I failed to intuit her needs,
She snapped at me, and slammed doors.
At times, exhausted, loathing herself,
She sobbed inconsolably,
And repeated that she had botched her career.
Sprawled across the bed, backaches gripping her
Thanks to the demon’s growing weight, she cried,
“Why the fuck did I need a goddamn baby?!”

The echo of “Fly Me to the Moon” playing elsewhere
Resonated in the sepulchral bedchamber.
Dust motes danced in the beams of evening sunlight
Spilling through windows stained by time.
The light gilded an ornate, full-length frame
Adorned with carvings of wildflowers,
That encased a scratched and scuffed mirror
Whose bottom third was marred
By a dried-out splatter resembling rust.
Within that glass portal, you, my Izar,
Wore a dress with a pleated bodice,
Dyed like the blush of summer dawn.
Your caramel locks cascaded in gentle waves,
Framing your twinkling eyes and buoyant smile,
Both alight with recognition.

Through the mirror, you strode into the room.
As you padded barefoot towards a vast bed,
You made your dress glide over your head,
Leaving the fabric to flutter downward.
You rolled onto the plush duvet, lay supine,
And illuminated your face with a playful grin,
Showcasing those crooked front teeth.
Your satin, coral-pink panties glimmered
As you eased them down your thighs.
“Fly me to the moon,” you asked.

I awoke to faint snoring,
To a naked, round-bellied woman
Whose swollen breasts heaved against me
In the warmth of the night.

Before you vanished once again,
I shut my eyes tight
And gathered the dream’s fragments
As I fondled my partner to her senses.
Our breaths mingled,
Her ballooned belly brushed my abdomen.
My hardness delved into the silky folds,
Becoming engulfed in your warm currents.

I pictured you bouncing on me,
Your caramel waves bobbing,
Your breasts shuddering.
Light and shadow played across your torso,
Accentuating the ridges of your ribs
And the grooves of your abdominal muscles
Under smooth, taut skin sheened with sweat.
The outline of your pelvic bones emerged
With each rock-and-roll of your hips.

Your thighs trembled,
Your fervent moans grew ragged.
My hands clenched the bedsheets
And her nails dug into my back
As I thrust desperately,
Escalating the slaps of colliding flesh,
Until I released all that hurt and sorrow
Into the cushioning waters.

Under the moist bed linens,
Your figure merged with the lawyer’s,
Who nestled against my side
While the fetus’ kicks nudged me.
She loved me with an infant on the way;
It should have been enough
To hang onto and live for.

On a rainy Sunday morning,
A gush of clear fluid soaked the mattress.
The woman grimaced and cursed
As she clutched her belly like a wound.

Labor pains, hours of pushing,
Sweat and tears mixed in her eyelashes,
Her crushing grip bruising my fingers,
Tearing of flesh, blood loss,
Insults flung at me for knocking her up,
Feral screams and utter helplessness.

Ripped out of the womb with forceps,
Emerging into the harsh fluorescence,
Coated in blood and amniotic fluid,
Arrived a screeching, blue-tinged thing,
A sea creature destined to die ashore.

While our newborn’s wrinkled limbs jerked
And his scrunched, purple face twitched
As he protested against the indignity of birth,
The obstetrician cut and clipped his umbilical cord.
A nurse, efficient like a conveyor worker,
Suctioned the mucus from the baby’s nose,
Rubbed his skin with a towel to cleanse him of gore,
Then placed him in my partner’s trembling arms.
Weeping, shell-shocked, she gasped,
“Oh god, I’m his mother.”

Lying in a plastic bassinet, swaddled in a blanket,
My rosy-skinned, plump-cheeked firstborn fussed,
His miniature fists protruding from the binding.
My fingers brushed the silky tuft of black hair
That crowned his defenseless head.
Over the years, the clay mold of his body
Would take on the contours of the boy,
Then the man he would become,
Perhaps one who, despite life’s challenges,
Would never falter, never give up,
Who would pursue his dreams,
And remain free of sorrow.

On an October weekend, at Irún’s city hall,
The lawyer and I signed documents
Affirming our legal partnership.
While my mother-in-law held her grandson,
And my parents pretended you had never existed,
I posed for wedding photos alongside my wife
In a dimly-lit corner of the registry office,
Standing theatrically still.

I wore a well-fitted charcoal-gray suit;
My bride, a sleeveless ivory gown
Dappled with flower embroidery.
I had shoved my hands in my pockets;
She, solemn and lost in thought,
Clutched a bouquet of red roses.
My sunken eyes bore a piercing gaze
That stared past the confines of the photo
At someplace distant and unreachable.

Starting my own family, getting married,
Both promised a rebirth,
But even now, remembering that ceremony
Fills me with sorrow for her, and for this life
That carelessly tossed us together.
As a girl, my wife must have fantasized
About her special day, about prince charming.
Instead, she ended up bound to a wreck
Whose cracks oozed tar,
Who dreaded to look beside him at his bride
In case a dead teenager gazed back.


Author’s note: today’s songs are “This Is How It Always Starts” by Grandaddy, and “Only in Dreams” by Weezer.

If you enjoy my free verse poetry, I have three books worth of it yet to be self-published. Check it out.

Motocross Legend, Love of My Life, Pt. 8 (Poetry)

If you haven’t read all the previous parts or you don’t remember them well, I urge you to read this short story (or novella) from the beginning (link here).


When I worked a nine-to-five at Zuatzu Business Park,
I spent the lunch breaks on a bench sanctuary
Nestled under a verdant canopy that provided shade.
I read technical books on website design and development,
Immersing myself in technique and precise logic
As I nourished my body with vending machine sandwiches.

A pair of stockinged legs halted next to my bench.
The woman offered a smile like a business card,
Radiating the composed confidence of an adult,
Though most people seemed older to me,
Whose clock had frozen in nineteen ninety-nine.

“Mind if I sit down?” she asked
As she claimed the space beside me.
I wondered where I knew her from,
But I didn’t; she worked as a legal advisor,
Negotiating contracts and handling disputes
At one of the legal firms housed in the business park.
During lunch breaks, her gaze had sought me out,
Perhaps drawn by the cold flame of my brooding,
A contrast to her life’s rigid rhythms.
Unprompted, she offered personal advice.
Upon discovering our shared roots in Irún,
She grinned as if that were a fact to celebrate.

Should I describe this woman in detail?
I will share with you, Izar, what she lacked:
Your cascade of caramel waves;
Your eyes, twin pools of chocolate;
Your crooked front teeth that flashed
Whenever your bubbly laughter burst forth;
Your restless passion.
Unlike you, she didn’t shine the brightest
Before the dark, shapeless backdrop.

Sharing that bench became a daily ritual.
She brought her homemade lunches:
Plastic containers stuffed with quinoa salad
Enriched by grilled chicken and chickpeas.
Cross-legged, she would puff on cigarettes
As she dissected headline legal battles,
Ranging from corporate scandals to civil rights,
To point out how she would have handled them.
She named and described her coworkers
So I could picture them like fictional characters.

She took advantage of crowded train rides
To gobble up the novels everybody recommended.
Eager to discuss their finer details with someone,
She coaxed me from the refuge of technical texts,
Challenging me to explore popular narratives
Like The Alchemist and The Da Vinci Code.
Apart from fiction, she consumed self-help books,
Seeking to strengthen her mindset
Cultivating virtues and combating vices.

Nobody else allowed her to ramble on,
And she felt her every word sank into me
Like pebbles rippling a pond.
She admitted that recently, in her free time,
After coming across an intriguing article,
She had yearned to share it with me.

She invited me to grab coffee the coming Saturday.
In Constitution Square, we sat at an outdoor café
Packed with patrons enjoying their leisure.
The glossy metal tables glistened in the sunlight,
That also glinted off the wrought-iron balconies
Of the apartment buildings enclosing the square.
The robust stone archways cast elongated shadows
Onto the tiled pavement of the arcade.

Immersed in the hum of overlapping conversations
Broken by bursts of laughter from nearby youths,
I sipped my café con leche, and bit into a croissant,
As I stared at her opaque sunglasses,
At that face aglow in the sun’s warmth,
At those strands of hair lit like fine gold.

To meet me, she had donned a pleated skirt,
A crisp white blouse, and a burgundy jacket
That matched her glossed lips.
I wondered what they would taste like.
Later that evening, I found out:
They tasted of cigarette.

Those soft lips, our tongues probing each other,
They bestowed on me a respite,
A detachment from reality and grief,
As if resuscitated from a surgery’s anesthesia.
But a few breaths later, the truth awaiting
At the periphery of consciousness
Flooded back in like tons of icy water
Through a dam’s drain hole.

Izar, I felt the shape of your body in my arms,
The scent of your hair tickling my nose,
As if we were lying on your childhood bed
Like in days long gone, when the sun’s rays
Still warmed and nourished our skins,
When we imagined the foreign sights
We would behold together.
Those sensations, stored in my neurons
Away from conscious recollection,
Vanished again like a dream upon waking,
Despite my struggling to cling to them.

I boarded the train bound for our hometown
With this woman whose saliva I had tasted.
She sat beside me, and grabbed my hand.
“This feels right, doesn’t it?”
The tracks clacked steadily,
The landscape blurred past.
Her breath brushing against my ear,
She kept whispering to her patient listener
As I slipped deeper and deeper
Down the well of my mind.

In Irún, after she and I parted ways,
I was ascending the sloping Pintor Berrueta Street,
Trudging in the gloom under overhanging stories,
When my internal stasis cracked.
I found myself holding onto the rusted security grille
Of a closed storefront, a bankrupt shop,
While my gut writhed, twisted, and churned
With an acidic, gnawing guilt.

The duty of preserving your memory,
Alongside the promises made,
Had convinced me to keep breathing.
Yet, I tainted these lips that had kissed yours
By smearing them with someone else’s molecules.
Didn’t I know that any contact with another
Would corrupt, contaminate, and diminish
The fading traces of you?

During lunch breaks, occupying that bench,
Hadn’t I looked abandoned and broken?
Couldn’t this woman tell, at a single glance,
That I only contained undigested pain?

Like a stray dog, I had wagged my tail
At the first hand offering kindness,
At a stranger that had become invested
In a damaged boy unable to care for himself.
Her warmth was akin to a camping lantern
Illuminating a spot in a pitch-black forest
Where I could huddle and wait for dawn.
Izar, a part of me yearned to trust,
To let my defenses crumble.
I couldn’t stomach a whole life doomed to be
A sun-starved seedling trapped in concrete.

Five minutes away from La Concha Beach,
At a one-star hotel: two single beds pushed together,
Draped in pristine white linens,
The pillows patterned with white roses.

I hoped to disappear in ecstasy,
But once, I had ventured too near a star,
Leaving my skin blistered, my soul charred.
After that woman and I fucked,
With my sperm confined inside a condom,
She padded to the bathroom for a smoke,
And I wet the white roses with tears.

Alone in my childhood bedroom,
I flipped my sketchbook swiftly to a blank page.
Armed with my collection of colored pencils,
I focused on scraping the virgin sheet with graphite
To render a facsimile of my memory:
A halo of sunlight bathed her tousled locks.
The reflective surfaces of her sunglasses,
Mirroring the expanse of Constitution Square,
Concealed the sharp, analytical gaze beneath.
Her tender lips, slightly parted in contemplation,
Were embellished with burgundy lipstick.
She wore a white blouse, the first button undone,
And a jacket that draped elegantly off her shoulders.
Hunched over, I drew and shaded every crease.

The following Monday, on that secluded bench,
As she grumbled, vexed about a colleague’s errors
That forced her, yet again, to pick up the slack,
I kept thumbing the elastic strap of the file folder
Cradling, along with the portrait I had drawn,
Comic strips, relics of happier days with you.
When a pause beckoned, I cleared my throat.
“Listen, have you ever been into comics?”
She glanced sideways, took a drag of her cigarette,
And with a practiced flick, cast off the ash.
“What’s that about comics now? Please,
I’ve outgrown childish nonsense.”

My blood cooled abruptly.
I lowered the file folder beside me.
I had been chosen, indeed, by a prim lady
Fitting of her role in this world.

One afternoon, when I returned home from work,
I collapsed onto my bed, eager to recover from the toll
That forced smiles and hollow exchanges had exacted.
As my every fiber trembled, undone by exhaustion,
My cellphone vibrated in its pocket,
Its chirrup evoking dread.
This woman wanted to listen to my voice,
Chatter about trivial stuff, or bore me with legal jargon,
Even though I yearned for nothing more
Than to be left alone.

Izar, had I ever resented your presence?
Ours was a shared solitude:
As we nurtured our private language,
We played games we both enjoyed,
We read stories that entertained us both,
We encouraged each other’s dreams.
Now, in the lawyer’s gaze, I felt evaluated,
As if she catalogued my screw-ups,
Every flaw, every deficiency,
Storing them away for future indictment.
After mere hours in her company,
I required some leeway to breathe fully.
Still, I appreciated her more than anyone
Ever since you rode away for the last time.

Raindrops drummed on my umbrella
While the woman and I strolled arm-in-arm
Along a rain-soaked, glistening promenade.
Under a heavy, slate-colored sky,
White-capped waves of the restless sea
Crashed relentlessly against the breakwater.
On the opposite shore, past a line of buildings,
Rose the tree-covered Mount Igueldo,
Capped by the tower of its amusement park.
I smelled fresh rain, salt, and seaweed.

Rainy days thinned the membrane
Separating me from that final ride
To which my dreams hurled me
Whenever I needed to repent.
I felt an echo of that wet, frigid wind
That had etched itself into my bones.

To my regret, to my resentment, I opened up:
I confided in this lawyer about you, my Izar,
Who on a rainy night had crashed her Aprilia
And bled out on a lonely slope by the highway.
I confessed to squandering a year as a recluse,
That ever since, I struggled to relate to others
And their delusions of a just and ordered world.
I spoke of the weight of each day
Like an endless march up a steep incline.
To survive, I had erected a fortress of barbwire,
Encircling the raw viscera of my grief.

How many times have I berated myself
For voicing my pain aloud?
Did I hope this woman would encourage me
To guard and cherish your memories?
You know, Izar, you had spoiled me:
Whenever I handed over my pain,
You had cradled it against your chest.

This woman’s thoughts were filtered,
And those deemed offbeat, discarded.
But who else could I blame except myself?
I had accepted a simulacrum of love,
One lacking the fire of passion, of dreams,
And the sense that we were meant to be,
Like a Macedonian general leading his troops,
Knowing that a glorious destiny awaited
At the fringes of the known world.

Those locks whipped by the stiff breeze,
That profile fixated on the heaving sea.
She asked if I had attended therapy,
As if I could want anybody to exorcise you.
I swallowed the taste of bile.
“I cannot be fixed.”

Unlike those who dispense their hearts freely,
Unburdened by ties and promises,
If anybody shared their core with me,
I would preserve an echo of its beats.
I was a miser hoarding bits and pieces
Of what used to make me whole,
But I had grown tired; I couldn’t stand alone.
That lawyer, a level-headed lady,
Had invested in a lost teenager, an invalid.
Yet, I never loved her. How could I have?
My patched-up heart treasured the frozen fire
Of my girlfriend, whom I would never see again.
We had promised to love each other forever,
And I will.

The woman approached my secluded bench
With her earlobes and lips bare,
With her hair tied back in a hurried ponytail,
Loose strands escaping the bond.
She wore a pale-blue, wrinkled blouse that clashed
With her earthy-green skirt of textured cotton.
The odor of cigarette clung to her.

Beside me, slumped on the bench,
She toyed with her purse’s clasp,
Her gaze darting away to avoid mine.
I pressed her, “What’s wrong?”
Guessing that she intended to break up.
Instead, she pulled out a pregnancy test.

My eyes glazed at that pair of blue lines.
For how long had I known her? A year?
She asked, stripped of pretense,
“If I decide to keep the baby,
Are you going to leave?”
With all the resolve I could muster,
I hugged her to my chest.
“No, I won’t leave you.”
“Do you actually love me?”
“Yes, I do.”

Ropes, chains, shackles, zip-ties,
Meat hooks impaled into my flesh;
A child would anchor me away
From razor blades, pill bottles,
Bridges, cliffs, and incoming trains,
From the urge to leap into the dark
And find you there.


Author’s note: today’s songs are “Same Thing” by Islands, “17” by Youth Lagoon, and “Todavía una canción de amor” by Los Rodríguez (also this live version).

If you enjoy my free verse poetry, I have three books worth of it yet to be self-published. Check it out.

Motocross Legend, Love of My Life, Pt. 7 (Poetry)

If you haven’t read all the previous parts or you don’t remember them well, I urge you to read this short story (or novella) from the beginning (link here).


I worked my first entry-level gig designing websites
In Gros, at an apartment converted into office space.
Multiple workstations with CRT monitors
Set along both sides of a long, narrow room.
Bulky radiators beneath the windows,
Worn hardwood flooring that creaked.
I spent my mornings developing interfaces,
Coding their layout using HTML and CSS,
To advertise the services of companies
Such as a patisserie and an antique store.

Apart from the greetings I mumbled,
I only spoke with our project manager.
I dodged gazes as if they could look inside me
And spot the congealed mass of scars.

Once, a guy whose face I hadn’t retained
Told me to follow him, and I obeyed,
Believing we would discuss a work-related issue.
I found myself amidst a coffee shop’s hubbub,
Seated at a table with other team members
While two of them chattered about a ski trip.
I felt as if I had been strapped to a chair
And forced to endure a documentary
About a foreign culture I didn’t want to visit.

I was a feral creature thrown into captivity,
A cancerous blight at the core of a tree.
The merest social interaction drained me.

Sometimes, as I typed,
Flashbacks of us assailed me
Like a hail of buckshot.
I hunched over, rested my elbows on the table,
And pressed my palms against my eyes
Until I hoisted myself out of the abyss.

I was reading up on the quality of wines
For an online shop we were developing,
When I got to meet my first HR professional.
Wielding an apologetic smile, she asked
If I thought I would work well in a team,
A euphemism for “You don’t belong here.”
My manager had praised my work,
But, I admit, I was a silent wreck.

When I exited that apartment building
For the last time,
My lungs loosened in relief.

At my second job, more PC towers
Emitted a cacophony of whirrs
That blended with the din of typing,
The intermittent squeak of chairs,
And colleagues’ humdrum prattle.
Cables snaked across the floor,
Leading to servers, routers, printers.
I wore down those morning hours tainted
By the burnt-plastic smell of CRTs,
So I could soon return to solitude.

I got dragged daily into meetings
That often devolved into venomous griping
Over coworkers whose oddities
Were but a tiny fraction of my own.
I kept my head down; by then I understood
That neither effort nor proven skills
Would anchor me within office walls
If my presence unsettled some higher-up.
After they closed the door on me,
My contract left unrenewed,
I savored an entire Monday morning
In bed.

To fit into society, I needed to behave
As though I hadn’t died when you did.
I needed to lie in a million ways
To the world and myself.
Izar, through sheer will, I clawed a foothold,
I pieced together a patchwork self
Stitched from the shredded remnants
Of the boy who, in your light, once dreamed.

A constant vigilance to hide my damage
Made each second tick by agonizingly.
As a reward for my efforts,
Coworkers ambushed me with small talk.
While kids in their mid-twenties rambled on
About whatever the hell they talked about,
I would rearrange my mask into smiles.

However, my coworkers intuited
That a vital chunk of me had perished
As if blood flow had been cut off.
At times, they treated me like a stray cat,
Fearing I might suddenly claw at the eyes
Of whoever extended an unsolicited hand.

During a break, I stood at the rooftop balcony
With my project manager and a programmer.
Our breaths lingered in the morning chill
While a steaming cup warmed my hands.
The programmer, garbed in skinny jeans
And a graphic tee bought from Threadless,
Stopped describing T-shirt designs
To inquire why I seemed so gloomy sometimes.
On impulse, I blurted, “My girlfriend died.”
A shocked silence, a shuffling of shoes.
“Shit, dude. Sorry.”

Seated around a break room table
With the team of developers,
As we listened in acquiescence
To our supervisor prattle on about her guinea pig,
I realized that I yearned to be anyone else,
Or to disappear entirely.

I had ventured into the wild and survived,
But my heart remained broken.
Day by day, I witnessed my body, a stranger’s,
Push forward through the unending grind:
Eat, piss, shit, work, sleep, repeat.
Stripped of meaning, drained of colors,
Life had morphed into a grayscale smear,
A murky, polluted expanse of sea.

The relentless thrum of machinery
Melded into a mechanical chant:
“Stay complacent. Stay ignorant. Stay docile.
Bow to the inevitable end.
All fades into the abyss unfathomed:
Your name, your knowledge, your works.”
What was the goal of this journey?
So I could afford the down payment for a home
That would demand sacrifices from then on?

The weight of decades ahead
Felt like a collapsing skyscraper,
Its rubble crushing me to paste.
You were gone, so why bother?
Instead of fueling a bleak routine
Set on a loop till retirement,
Was it not better to surrender
And let the anguish devour me?

Two sets of railway tracks vanished
Into the tunnel of an underground station.
From the depths of that kilometric gullet,
An end-times rush of wind approached.

As the tunnel entrance brightened,
A stark-white light glided along the inner walls,
Revealing the rough texture of concrete,
And reflected off the veering rails.
From the curve emerged a metallic serpent,
Its headlights piercing the dimness,
Its row of windows glowing amber
As if its innards were filled with a lazy fire.

In the abyss, the abhorrent question:
“Didn’t you love Izar enough
To join her in the grave?”

I shut my eyes tight, I held my breath.
I locked my muscles in place.
The train’s heavy rumble reverberated
As its brakes screeched against the rails.
With a dying whine and a series of hisses,
The would-be reaper slowed to a stop.


Author’s note: today’s song is “I Bleed” by Pixies.

If you enjoy my free verse poetry, I have three books worth of it yet to be self-published. Check it out.

Motocross Legend, Love of My Life, Pt. 6 (Poetry)

If you haven’t read all the previous parts or you don’t remember them well, I urge you to read this short story (or novella) from the beginning (link here).


One day, I dared to face my reflection.
My hair, greasy and stringy,
Had grown to brush my shoulders.
My skin had acquired the grayish hue
Of a dead leaf.
The hollowness of my cheeks
Revealed a tomb within,
Its walls shrouded in spiderwebs,
Its floor carpeted with dust and bones.
Those eyes rimmed by dark shadows
Should have mirrored a wild beast’s,
But the surviving modicum of sanity
Pierced through my squalor,
And at this ghastly echo of myself,
I shuddered.

Izar, if that crash, instead of killing you,
Had fractured your limbs,
Marred your beautiful face with scars,
Or even confined you to a wheelchair,
Extinguishing your motocross dreams,
You would have still found ways to shine.
You would have challenged yourself
To defy the world, to carve a path
Through the wreckage and rubble.

Izar, my beloved Izar,
You had filled my days with wonder,
You had taught me that life is worth living,
That dreams are meant to be chased,
That courage should be wielded
Even in the face of despair.
Yet, I failed you daily
By being incapable of moving on,
Of doing something valuable
With what remained of my life.

Your death had crippled me
In ways no transplant could repair,
And every day forced me to wade
Through a tar-like mire of anguish
That threatened to suck me under.
I would never become a comic book pro,
But maybe I could aspire to normalcy.

Armed with an electric razor,
I sheared the oily tangles off my head,
Airing out my reddened scalp.
Then, I tamed the thicket of my beard.
From beneath the mask of neglect
Emerged a stranger’s face.

My body had become a rusted motorcycle
Sinking into cold muck.
Yet, I dragged myself outside.
The sky, once colorful, now a gray shroud,
Cradled the lone sun, a shriveled ball
That pulsated like an ailing eye.

My hometown teemed with creatures,
Rubbery, bulbous-headed aliens
That gabbled in shrill tongues
To the devices they cradled to their ears.
As they floated past, they ignored me,
The shell-shocked wanderer
Gaping at the ruins of his city.

Although I had missed the final exams,
I was granted a high school diploma
Due to my exemplary grades
Along with some extenuating circumstances.
The weight of a job would have crushed me,
And I couldn’t commit to a college odyssey
When plans might shatter suddenly;
All living beings are branchless twigs
Flung into a raging river,
To be tossed, turned, and tumbled,
Dragged under and spat out.

The dot-com bubble had recently burst,
But in my seclusion, I had befriended the internet.
Curiosity had led me to download Dreamweaver
To figure out the bones of websites.
I had come to decipher HTML,
And understand the potential of CSS
To lay out sites and style their elements.
I had lost myself in Flash animations,
Brief escapes that sparkled in the gloom.
Perhaps I might withstand the grind
Of a year-long web design course.

Soon enough, I would expose myself
To the scrutinizing stares of classmates.
Like you rode to the mountain and trained,
I forced myself outside every day.

At times, the growl of a motorbike rose:
A throbbing, rumbling bass dense as lead.
It made me picture a blaze of yellow,
A comet streaking through the darkness.

Amidst rows of desks and students,
I sat rigidly, my hands clasped,
While I burned,
Engulfed in a cold, black flame.

At the witching hour,
Covered by sweat-damp sheets,
I knelt on the mattress,
Eyes squeezed shut,
Digging fingernails into my scalp.
The following day, I would confront
Those classes, those strangers,
More judgemental eyes and voices,
With a mind gouged by insomnia,
Without you by my side.

Clenching my teeth, I stifled sobs.
I punched the pillow over and over.
That night in nineteen ninety-nine,
How could you have sped in the rain?
If you had headed home like you said,
We would have traveled through Spain.
One day, I would have married you.
We would have raised a kid or two.
Instead, I suffocated daily
Under an unrelenting landslide,
Buried alive.
Why had you offered me a future
Only to fuck off and die?

I begged the void for silence:
Leave me alone. Leave me be.

Through the numbness clouding my head,
I realized that some fresh-faced classmate,
Their eyes brimming with the naivety of youth,
Had turned toward this blank mask of mine.
That kid’s mouth contorted, forming words
That sounded like spoken underwater.
After translating their alien utterance,
If I understood that a response was demanded,
I had to first push through the filter
Of “Why bother answering? What’s the point?”
I forced myself to cobble together a sentence,
Then hoped that the words wouldn’t evaporate
Before my tongue could shape them.
By the time my lips were about to part,
That classmate, weirded out, had moved on.
In my inscrutable face, they saw themselves;
Some apologized for bothering, some got pissed,
Others shrugged and forgot immediately.

I shed tears at mundane sights:
A patchwork quilt of sunlight
Glowing through the slits of the blinds,
A sunburst in which dust particles
Shimmered like dozens of tiny crystals,
A wildflower poking through a sidewalk crack.
Stripped of skin, I was defenseless
Against any force that grazed my flesh.

Unannounced, unwanted,
In class, in crowded shops, on bustling buses,
A swelling heartache would ambush me,
My eyes flooded with tears,
And I found myself gasping for air
While in my mind, an unforgiving sentence
Blazed like a burning brand:
“I let her die alone.”
Once, amidst the indifferent throng,
I collapsed to my haunches,
With my face buried in my palms,
As I mumbled apologies into the void.

I bought a weight bench and weights
Along with a barbell and dumbbells.
Working out to failure became my addiction,
An escape, a punishment, a way to feel alive.
As my muscle fibers tore, my limbs trembled,
And rageful groans erupted from my throat.
Pain is the sole genuine language:
With each of its words we are graced,
It tells the truth.

Although I had engaged in a course
Imparted in a vocational school,
They had planned a graduation ceremony,
And I was obligated to participate
So I could collect a piece of paper.
Around me, gleeful classmates buzzed
As they organized a dinner outing
To celebrate the milestone together.
Diploma in hand, I was drifting away
When one of those kids approached me
Brandishing an unburdened grin,
And invited me to tag along.
I replied, my voice flat and detached,
That I wasn’t interested.
“You sure? It’s your last chance.”
I turned around and walked away.

When I flipped through my notebooks,
I discovered, or rather remembered,
That sketches had colonized many spaces
Between notes taken in messy handwriting.
In one sketch, drawn with an ink pen,
You were seated astride your Suzuki RM125,
Your boots planted on the ground,
Your waves cascading over your shoulders,
While you stared blankly at me
As if reminding me you still remained.

If only for your sake, I racked my brain
Struggling to come up with story ideas,
But a single narrative crystallized:
It charted the wild adventures
Of Izar Lizarraga, motocross queen,
A seeker of freedom, a lover of speed,
Who traveled on a bright-yellow Suzuki
To find a place where she belonged.
However, no matter how fast she rode,
The demons clung to her heels.

In a desert stretching into the horizon,
Its towering dunes like waves in a sand-sea,
You raced at breakneck speed,
A silhouette against the setting sun.
You followed a winding mountainside trail
Along a sheer cliff’s edge
Overlooking the crashing waves below,
To end up leaping across a chasm
While the ocean’s spray enveloped you.
Through a tempest-wracked landscape,
As lightning forked across leaden clouds
And thunder drumrolled,
As wind and rain battered your skin,
You welcomed the sting,
And roared onward, undeterred.

You had been a streak of flame
Cutting through the night.
How could my art illuminate anyone’s existence
When the light of my life had been extinguished?

Hadn’t your love been wasted on me?
Given how bright you had burned,
A better man would have been inspired
To blaze new trails for you.
Had you also, in choosing me,
Acted recklessly?

I stored the keepsakes of our love
In a sturdy moving box, its surface marked
By the scuffs and stains of time:
A sacred reliquary for the dead,
Whose cardboard lid I lifted
Whenever I needed to delude myself
Into believing your heart still beat.

As an adult, shackled to my ever-aging body,
I found myself conscripted into the workforce,
Even though I had been carrying out my mission:
To remain tethered to your ghost.


Author’s note: today’s songs are “Tuff Ghost” by The Unicorns, and “This Song Is the Mute Button” by Jason Lytle.

If you enjoy my free verse poetry, I have three books worth of it yet to be self-published. Check it out.

Motocross Legend, Love of My Life, Pt. 5 (Poetry)

If you haven’t read all the previous parts or you don’t remember them well, I urge you to read this short(ish) story from the beginning (link here). The whole thing is supposed to be experienced in one sitting, but I didn’t want to go radio silent for about a month (or two).


Regarding the last echoes of my teenage years,
Followed by the dawn of adulthood,
I remember feeling encased in a plastic bubble
Whose smoky-gray membrane dimmed the world
And muffled every sound and scent.
Inside, the air was stripped of oxygen,
Leaving me gasping for whispers of life.

The warmth in my chest had disappeared,
Replaced with a yawning, frigid void
That threatened to collapse my ribcage.
A squirming, screeching anguish,
Like myriad critters drowning
In a pool of poison,
Seared through my innards,
Corroding every fiber that once bound me,
Exposing my raw nerves to the wind.

During that years-long nightmare,
I was trudging through the indifferent city
When I turned a corner on Cipriano Larrañaga Street.
Shambling down that narrow, grimy sidewalk
Lined with multicolored trash bins,
Your father, a relic of another life, headed my way.

The imaginary sutures that struggled
To keep my copious gashes closed
Unraveled at once.
The rush of blood to my head
Rendered the world’s clamor mute,
And I stood paralyzed.

I pictured myself lunging at your father
And wrapping my hands around his neck.
The more he wheezed and spluttered,
The more his eyes bulged,
The tighter my grip would squeeze,
Making the tendons in his neck creak.
As his face shifted from crimson to purple,
His last light would be spent
Staring into my wrath-contorted face.

I had known your father as a volatile man
Who dared to threaten you, his own daughter,
Before the eyes of the boyfriend who loved her;
He knew that, if pushed, he could overpower me.
Yet, that lingering image of him
Contrasted with his present, slumped self:
The deep wrinkles carved into his features
Spoke of decades aged prematurely;
His mouth hung slack in a silent gasp;
His hair, gone gray, was disheveled,
With strands splayed erratically;
Dark circles ringed his vacant eyes;
A once-white T-shirt, sweat-soiled,
Clung to a protruding belly.

Your father lumbered toward me
As if he failed to register my presence.
A sour stench of filthy skin and clothes
Emanated from him like a black flame.

I stepped aside, letting your old man pass.
His footfalls and ragged breath faded away.
My rage had melted into tears;
He already looked like he’d been killed.

About a week after you died,
My mother, turned activist overnight,
Drove me to the spot of the accident:
Grassy, uneven terrain that sloped up
From a curve of the GI-636 highway.
A succession of vehicles whooshed by,
And the wind tugged at the placard
That my mother held in her intimate protest.
Before a television crew, she ranted
About the treacherous curve
That had reaped many young lives.

As the reporter nodded, the camera captured
The stillness of the roadside memorial,
Adorned with bouquets of wildflowers and a cross
Beside which rested a framed photograph
From a birthday celebrated in our home:
Your ponytailed self seated at the kitchen table,
Your chocolate eyes aglow with a joie de vivre,
And you showing off those crooked front teeth
As if they would never burn up in a furnace
And their fragments be ground to ash.

The cameraman aimed at the metal guardrail,
Its silver gleam patinated by rain and wind,
That your Aprilia had crumpled.
Then he panned over to the spot of the slope
Where your eyes had gone dull and lifeless,
Where your blood had drenched the grass
And seeped into the earth.

My mother kept me high on sedatives
That sapped the marrow from my bones;
Otherwise, if my lungs still drew breath,
I would have knelt before that spot
Packed with your blood,
And with my hands, I would have dug a hole
To crawl into and disappear.

I know you, Izar:
You were anguished,
And speeding in the rain.

That night in nineteen ninety-nine,
After you left me at my doorstep,
You told me you would head home.
Why did you end up in a highway?
Where were you going, Izar?
Did you even know?

My mother crowdfunded a memorial stone
To commemorate you, who had dreamed
Of becoming a motocross pro.
They installed it in a wooded lane,
Surrounded by the whisper of leaves.
Whether my mother bothered out of guilt,
Seeking the spotlight in a play of mourning,
Or to bridge the chasm between me and her,
I couldn’t say.
I guess it doesn’t matter.

Nightly, you visited me in dreams
To gift me the warmth of your presence
Along with your wild laughter.
I woke up reaching for you,
Only to clutch at emptiness.
A respite from the agony,
As my mind forgot for a moment,
Then I remembered anew.

In a numb, sunless haze,
I sleepwalked as if summoned
To locations we had frequented.
I stood unsteadily at a park near my home
While blurred people passed by,
My gaze fixed on the traffic,
Anticipating the sight of a Telepizza scooter,
Of you clad in the scarlet cap and polo shirt.

At the ecological park of Plaiaundi,
In the twilight glow of the setting sun,
I followed a tapering dirt path
Covered with needles, leaves, and twigs,
Ending at the staircase of an observation post.
I was clambering the weathered steps
When I looked up and there you were,
Leaning on the wooden balustrade,
Your caramel waves tossed by the breeze,
And you smiling down as if welcoming me.

At Aingura Park, near the marina of Hondarribia,
The humid air of an overcast day filled my lungs.
On the lush-green grass, I searched for our spot
Where we had lain to stare at the stars.
Beyond a row of maritime pine trees,
Absent fishermen’s rods leaned against
The rocky barricade of the shoreline barrier.
A lone man cast a line into the slate-gray sea.

You had always seemed to me
Too large for the world to contain,
But now, if I let go of your memory,
I would never find you again.

With each passing month, going outside
Felt more like venturing into a foreign country
Where I couldn’t make myself understood.
I languished for hours in the dark,
Lying in bed, covered up to my forehead.
Through headphones, I listened to the tapes
In which your middle-schooler self
Played the energetic radio host,
Riffing on manga series we enjoyed
And video games we tried to beat,
Pausing only to munch on snacks.
Your bubbly giggles echoed through the years
While tears streamed down my temples.

Who were these carefree souls
That dared to laugh and joke around
As if taunting the universe that waited
To punish them for their joy and hope?

On my cluttered desk, papers lay blank
Beside pencils and pens, markers and erasers.
Drawing and writing had come naturally to me,
Like a baby grasping for their mother’s breast.
Why draw? Why concoct stories?
What were my dreams worth
If you wouldn’t see them realized?

I felt it as achingly as a knife stuck in my eye:
I wouldn’t get over you.
In this life, if you’re lucky,
You meet one precious person.
I had found mine. I had lost her.
I was condemned to continue
Long after my Izar disappeared,
While the world spun on.

Where would I go after you?

Without a say, I merged with the voiceless
That had been rendered unfit for society.
How many people out there,
From the profoundly autistic
To those whose hearts shattered irreparably,
Vanish from the lives of friends and acquaintances,
Sequestered away in some psychiatric hospital,
Or the rooms of their childhood homes?
Breath by breath, they would wear away,
And fade further from the memories
Of even those who had promised to remember.
Decades on, a once-close friend
Might stumble upon that person’s obituary
And wonder what untold stories had been lost.

One afternoon, my parents had left
To wherever they went,
And I had armored myself in human garb
To shuffle through the post-apocalypse,
But when I grabbed the front door handle,
A revulsion shook my spine;
I refused to withstand again the glare
Of that traitorous sun.

Instead, I retreated to my bedroom,
To the sanctuary of its walls
And a door locked shut
That protected and isolated me
From a meaningless world.

A day became two,
Became a week,
A month,
A year.

The sounds and sights of that alien world,
A film projected onto the wall of a cave,
Tormented me through the windowpanes:
Beams of sunlight slicing up the shadows,
The muffled laughter of children,
A couple strolling hand-in-hand.

In the gloom inside, a shrine to the dead,
I worshipped the mementos of our shared past:
Your EVA figurines,
The comic strips I drew for you,
Your motorcycle gloves,
Your handwritten letters,
Mixtapes of your favorite songs.
I spoke softly to your photographs,
Like a penitent monk conferring
With the images of his saints.
I befriended spiders.
I stashed piss bottles under the bed.

In one hand, I held that picture of you
Astride your Aprilia Red Rose at night,
Your luminous face resting on your palm,
Your chocolate eyes crinkled in a grin.
On that photograph’s flip side,
A note in your chicken-scratch read,
“To my beloved artist,
Please sign the comic strip I enclosed,
To sell at some fan convention
Once you’ve become famous!
Love forever, Izar Lizarraga.”

In my other hand, I held a knife,
Its sharp tip pressing against my carotid.
I wasn’t strong enough to kill myself,
So I would stay within those four walls
Through every sunrise and sunset,
Through the ages of this world,
Forgotten and gathering dust,
Waiting patiently for my self to rot.


Author’s note: the songs for today are “Lonesome Town” by Ricky Nelson, “The End of the World” by Skeeter Davis, and “The Scientist” by Coldplay.

If you enjoy my free verse poetry, I have three books worth of it yet to be self-published. Check it out.

Motocross Legend, Love of My Life, Pt. 4 (Poetry)

If you haven’t read all the previous parts or you don’t remember them well, I urge you to read this short(ish) story from the beginning (link here). The whole thing is supposed to be experienced in one sitting, but I didn’t want to go radio silent for about a month (or two).


The twenty-seventh of April.
With each year’s circle back to the beginning,
I accumulate a fresh pile of website designs,
Churned out at the office in exchange for pay,
And my kids hit every milestone
That most children reach at the same age.
But when the twenty-seventh of April approaches,
In my dreams, and whenever I close my eyes,
I’m yanked to that date in nineteen ninety-nine,
Like a ghost doomed to start again
From the spot where his heart gave up.

Dinner had settled in my stomach.
I was yawning on my way to the bathroom
When the landline rang.
My father’s footsteps padded to the entryway.
Seconds after the ringing ceased,
He forced his voice into a strained assertiveness,
Like a woodland critter facing a wolf,
Telling the caller that she shouldn’t have called.

As I clenched my jaw, I crept to the entryway.
The lamp’s glow glared on my father’s bald crown.
His stooped figure gesticulated
While he peered hesitantly at his wife,
Who, arms crossed, presented her back to me.
Inside the receiver, your voice sounded trapped,
Demanding to be freed.

Trying to talk over you, my father stammered,
And that disgusted my mother enough
To seize the phone
And command you to stop bothering her son.

How could anyone direct such a barbed tone
Toward you, Izar, my personal sun?
This meddling crone threatened
To sever your light from my life.

I barked an indignant “Hey!”
That made my parents whirl around
As if I had lobbed a stone.
I ordered my mother to give me the fucking phone.
When she complained about my language,
I snatched the receiver from her grasp.

Your voice was a tinny, thin string
Coated with tears.
“I need to see you. My father…”
“Where, Izar? Where are we meeting?”
“I’m calling from the nearest payphone.
I’ll park by the candy shop.”

After I hung up, I spun to confront my parents
And seethed through gritted teeth,
Punctuating my words with a jabbing finger.
“Izar didn’t call you, nor you.
She wanted to speak with me.
Don’t ever, and I mean ever,
Interfere with our relationship again.”

I stomped off to my bedroom,
Where I scrambled into some clothes,
My fingers trembling as I buttoned and zipped.
I had expected my mother to pursue me
While threatening to ground me for a month,
But I only heard my heart’s wild gallop.

My mother stood stiffly by the front door,
Her eyes welling up with tears.
She frowned like she resented life
For insisting on abusing her.

“Don’t you dare let that girl give you a ride,”
She said as I wrestled into my rain jacket.
I grabbed my keys and flung the door open.
My mother’s last words echoed through me.
“Are you going to throw away your life like her?”

That night itself, a cloak of frigid air,
Still makes me shiver.
The streetlights lit streaking raindrops
That resembled scratches on film.
The intermittent ripples on pooled water
Reminded me of piranhas at feeding time.
Down the gutters, rainwater meandered,
Churning like a serpent with reflective skin.

Sheets of rain cascaded around
A solitary figure flanked by bollards.
Raindrops drummed against your helmet,
Its visor a slab of opaque.
You were wearing your sleek red jacket,
Now adorned with a glossy layer of water.
Your soaked jeans clung to your legs.
In your gloved hand, you held my half-helmet.

When you noticed my presence,
You hurried to me,
Splashing puddles in the one-lane road,
And engulfed me with your wet embrace.

I had wrapped my arms around your waist,
I had closed my eyes as if waiting to slip into dreams.
Your Aprilia Red Rose rumbled between my legs.
The cold rain lashed my eyelids, cheeks, and lips
Through the gap in my half-helmet,
While the whipping wind threaded through
Every crevice of my clothes.

You always drove me away
From the bitter prison where I grew up.
The grip around my chest eased,
And at last I could breathe.
I imagined we were drifting through space
In a ramshackle starship,
Away from all constraints, from every society
Other than our society of two.

We were riding on a rain-drenched freeway,
Immersed in the growling of your Aprilia’s engine
Amid the rain’s patter, cars’ whooshing,
And swish-swash of wiper blades.
The scarlet smudges of taillights
Glided across the slick tarmac
As if I were peering into an ethereal world
Through tinted and warped glass.

I wished to end up stuck in a loop of then,
Plunging through the enveloping darkness
While smears of streetlight flew by.
I longed to never again see another face,
Nor be anywhere else,
Nor do or know anything else
But your presence pressed against mine.

In my embrace, your body trembled;
You were crying, or at least on the verge,
And you channeled that anguish
Igniting your steel beast’s roar
With a wrench of the throttle.
Jettison your worries to the wind,
Let speed drown out the pain,
And in this state of euphoric nothing,
Feel yourself drift into eternity.

The wind buffeted our clothes
As the downpour assaulted us
Like a barrage of liquid arrows.
I pictured the bike flipping,
You thrown and rolling,
Your helmet shattered,
Your skull crushed.
I raised my voice over the cacophony
To plead with you to slow down.

Where were we? On our left,
A navigable stretch of the Bidasoa River
Separated us from the city of Hendaye.
The haloes of streetlights revealed
Terracotta-roofed white dwellings.
“Where are we going, Izar?”
You said you didn’t know.

Maybe for me, you pulled up
By an open, desolate sports court
With faded lines,
Encroached by patches of grass.
At each narrow edge of the pitch
Stood a netless goal.

You pulled me by the hand
Toward a storage or utility building
Close to a rusted basketball hoop,
Seeking shelter from the rain
Under the eaves of the gable roof.
We plopped down beside each other
On the gritty, wet, cold asphalt.
You hugged your knees,
I draped an arm around your back.

Our breaths fogged in the night air.
Rainwater streamed from the roof.
An unseen metal fence kept clinking.
Built on a hillside past the sports court,
Rural-style, two-story houses
Stood silhouetted against the dark.
Their windows, like low-burning embers,
Glowed through the swaying foliage of oaks
While their branches rustled and creaked.

Did that place even exist?
Like a couple of astral travelers,
Maybe you and I rode out of reality,
Slipped into some liminal space.
I have never dared
To return there.

You slowly rose, turned toward me,
And lifted off your helmet.
Your face emerged, flushed, tear-streaked,
Strands sticking to your forehead.
A stark, mottled mark contrasted
The light-beige of your cheek.
Within the bruise, that bore the imprint of fingers,
Red pinpoints indicated ruptured capillaries.

I clenched my fists. The tendons creaked.
I ached to kick down the door of your house,
And bash in the teeth of that bastard
Who must have felt so mighty and untouchable
While hurting you, his own daughter.
But only through blind rage
Would I have overpowered your father,
And afterwards, how would you return home?

To calm myself down,
I took a deep, turbulent breath
Of that night’s cold, damp air.
Then, with my trembling fingers,
I pulled off my half-helmet.

“What was it this time?” I asked, my voice hollow.
You recounted that after returning home from training,
As you were cleaning the mud off your motocross bike,
Your father, on his way home, frowned at you,
Then waited at the apartment, ready to argue.
He refused to let you waste your life, as he put it,
Chasing a mirage that would never materialize,
So you would need to look into trade schools.
You matched his tone with equal fire.
After he slapped you hard,
He stood there shocked, his hand still raised.
You stormed off into the pouring rain,
And hopped on your Aprilia.

You recognized the frustration in his eyes,
And that bothered you the most.
The ever-present itch for perpetual motion
Coursed through your shared blood,
But instead of striving for a life akin to his urges,
He settled for that of a fish caught in a bucket,
Seated at a desk for eight hours a day,
Shuffling papers and answering calls,
Enduring a meaningless routine
That would drive any decent soul insane.
When the pressure mounted to an extent
That numbing it with booze failed,
Rather than delve within for elusive answers,
He cast his gaze outward for targets
To blame, to accuse, to hold responsible
For his damnable existence.

“Our parents doomed us
With their own demons.
Unless we break free,
We’ll end up the same.”

You stepped into the downpour
And paced up to the basketball hoop.
While the wind tugged at your ponytail,
You scratched flakes of paint off the pole,
Revealing the metallic core underneath.

Raindrops shone on your skin,
Linked together in a twinkling lace,
And droplets tipped off
The limp, wet waves of your hair,
When you spoke the words I had dreaded
As if you had come with a deadline:
You were set to leave the city.
My chest clenched in a visceral ache.

“Let’s go far, far away from Irún,
Where nobody will find us,
Where we will be left alone
To live and love freely.

We don’t need to follow their map, you know?
Did you ever want to become a doctor, an engineer?
Do you think we should waste our lives
Obediently conforming to our parents’ wishes?
You were born to create stories,
And I was born to ride.”

You had decided to sell your beloved Aprilia Red Rose,
And spend the money, along with your savings,
To travel on your bright-yellow Suzuki RM125.
You wanted to hit the trails at Sierra de las Nieves,
Near Marbella, whose tourism industry offered odd jobs.
You hoped to compete in the Ponts track, near Lleida.
At Jeréz de la Frontera, with its own world-famous track,
You wished to meet other riders, maybe find a mentor.
If we yearned for a secluded life,
We could buy a rundown cottage at Sierra Nevada,
Itself excellent training grounds for motocross.

Your dreamy smile dropped,
Tinged with a sudden sadness.
“I’m sorry for mom,
But one day she’ll understand.”

I pictured myself furtively stuffing
A travel backpack with necessary items,
Expecting to rough it in the wild:
Food, water, flashlights, sleeping bags,
First aid kits, maps, rain gear, spare clothes,
My sketchbook, a ream of paper, and pencils.
You and I would sneak out at night,
Leaving goodbye letters behind.

Your Suzuki would rumble through Spain
Under the weight of two reckless people,
Winding over hills and through vales,
Over bridges and through tunnels,
Past vineyards, olive groves, and orchards,
The sun’s warmth settled on our shoulders.

In a secluded forest clearing veiled by wildflowers,
We would unfold our sleeping bags over the grass
And lie embraced under the stars.
We would stroll along a rocky beach
Wearing nothing but our underwear.
In the dappled shade of an olive tree,
We would sip sangria and make love.
Seated beside a crackling campfire, hunched over,
I would sketch scenes from our adventures.

You and I would share an apartment,
A poky, one-room affair
With dusty windows and screeching plumbing.
We would cover the floor in clothes,
Pizza boxes, and video games.
We would cook noodles with seasoning packets,
Wash our underwear in the sink,
And listen to music while dancing haphazardly,
Bumping into each other and laughing.

Every memory of our love
Would hang suspended in time,
To glitter like dust particles
Spinning and spinning in the light.

My ribcage had become a butterfly trap;
Its captive fluttered, trying to escape.
You were asking me to choose
Between you and a predictable future.
Could I really leave my family,
And every expectation thrust upon me,
To throw myself into the wild with you?

On my own, would I have ever known adventure?
What if I missed the train? What if I lost my way?
What if I failed to locate a shelter before the sun vanished?
How could anyone dare to camp in the wilderness,
Engulfed by a nightmare-laden darkness?
Beyond the walls of my parents’ home,
The world awaited patiently to hurt me,
And behind every smile hid a monster.

An umbilical cord, ropelike, gnarled,
Pulsated as it fed into my abdomen.
Despite the wrenching pain,
I yanked and twisted the cord
Until it ruptured with a wet snap.
The torn end spewed a torrent
Of viscous, tar-black sludge
That befouled and corroded the ground.

Let us travel to the farthest corners of Spain,
Let us witness the edge of this world.
As long as you were with me,
I was home.

When I pushed to my feet, I met a pleading gaze:
Your chocolate eyes shimmered with tears.
Raindrops trickled down your cheeks,
And dripped from your nose and chin.
In a faltering voice, you told me to consider your plan;
You could wait the two months left until I graduated.
“For now, in this moment, please, will you hold me?”

I held your shivering form,
I inhaled the ozone of your soaked hair,
While the rain pelted down,
While your chest heaved against mine.

If making such a vow
Still means anything,
Let me promise this, Izar:
I would have chosen you.

One day I would find myself squeezed into a seat
Overlooking a dust-churned motocross track
Where a throng of racers garbed in colorful jerseys,
Helmeted like avant-garde gladiators,
Jostled and swerved for control.
Dirt bike after dirt bike, sunlit mirages, raced by,
Their frames adorned with sponsorship decals,
Their tires flinging up sprays of dirt.

The bikes would bellow and scream
Like barbarians taunting each other
As their riders crested bumps,
Skidded around tight turns,
And launched off ramps.
I would hear the thud and crunch
Of bikes landing after a jump,
And the rapid-fire crackle of debris
Striking the underbelly of the beasts.
A fine cloud of dust would hang
In that dry, sun-scorched air,
Mixed with the acrid tang of motor oil
And the earthy scent of disturbed soil.

Once again, you raced into sight:
Izar Lizarraga, renowned motocross pro,
Astride your bright-yellow beast,
Its wheels ripping through the track.

Approaching a ramp, you gunned up the Suzuki
And leaned forward, bracing for a jump.
At the peak, your bike pounced like a predator,
Soaring through the air.

A moment of suspended flight,
A full-body shot captured in posters:
The tire treads of your Suzuki packed with earth;
Your gloved hands gripping the handlebars;
And behind your visor, your chocolate eyes,
Speed-spellbound,
Fixed on the distant finish line.


Author’s note: the songs for today are “Ladies and Gentlemen We’re Floating in Space” by Spiritualized, and “Lau Teilatu” by Itoiz.

If you enjoy my free verse poetry, I have three books worth of it yet to be self-published. Check it out.

Motocross Legend, Love of My Life, Pt. 3 (Poetry)

If you haven’t read all the previous parts or you don’t remember them well, I urge you to read this short(ish) story from the beginning (link here). The whole thing is supposed to be experienced in one sitting, but I didn’t want to go radio silent for about a month.


My mind often revisits, perhaps as punishment,
My mother’s face dominated by a scowl
That deepened the creases long etched
Through years of worry and resentment.
Her lips were pursed as if holding herself
From unleashing a hellish rebuke,
And her eyes, intense and narrowed,
Assured that wherever her gaze landed,
She would find some detail to fault.

As damning evidence,
My mother showed a tied-up condom:
A limp and deflated rubbery sheath,
Its head filled with creamy-yellow fluid.

My mother ordered me to explain this gift
I had left for her to find while cleaning my room.
I wanted to shake my head and spit out bitterly,
“Sure, Mother. After my girlfriend and I made love,
I tossed the condom aside and forgot about it
To screw with your persecution complex,
To express contempt for your brand of parenthood,
Your desire to control every facet of my life,
To mold me into the perfect son you wish me to be.”

I apologized, but suggested she could appreciate
That my girlfriend and I use protection.
My mother scrunched up her nose
Like she had stumbled upon a pile of dung.

Her voice rose in pitch and volume as she said
I shouldn’t be having sex with “that girl,”
Whom she had welcomed into our home for years.
“No wonder your grades are slipping
If you focus on pursuing vices instead of studying.
Think of your future, think of your career!”

She had called your mother to inform her
Of the grievous sin we were committing,
But your mother already knew
Because she had heard us going at it.

“How could that girl throw away her potential,
Squander the sacrifices made by her parents?
Her mother gave birth to her, nursed her,
Stood at her crib every morning,
And hoped that she would grow into a good girl,
Only for her child to become a disgrace.”

My mother referred to you as a bad influence,
A rotten soul going nowhere fast,
A walking advertisement of aimlessness
Who would end up pregnant and homeless.
She forbid me from bringing you to the house,
And added that if I were mature enough,
I’d know that I should stay away from you.

Had I foreseen such a confrontation,
I would have imagined myself yelling,
But I saw my mother for the first time:
An aging woman who followed a script,
Who needed to straighten every life’s crooked lines,
Who met my father and shortly after got hitched
Because that’s what people are supposed to do,
And ever since, they argued as often
As loving couples exchange smiles.
My parents, my life’s givers, lived trapped inside
Something too awful and intractable to escape.

Still simmering from the confrontation,
I accompanied you and your mother
To a bike dealership in Astigarraga
That smelled of leather and new rubber.
The polished frames of motocross bikes,
In screaming colors like red, blue, and yellow,
Gleamed in a line-up,
Resembling museum exhibits.
Those knobs in the bikes’ tire treads
Would dig into the dirt for maximum grip.

You fell in love with a Suzuki RM125,
Its bodywork clad in bright yellow,
Its mechanical heart laid bare
And ready to be flecked with dirt,
Its front suspension forks
Like the limbs of a seasoned athlete.
The high-mounted guard would prevent
Mud from splattering your lovely face.

At the counter, when time came to pay
And your mother pulled out her credit card,
You grinned, clasped your hands,
Let out a squeal of delight,
And bounced on your tiptoes.

You had dreaded surrendering your Aprilia
To fill the void in your hard-earned savings,
And found yourself marveling at your luck
When your mother offered to chip in.

Bless that woman, bless her heart
That beat with love for you, her little star.
I will be forever grateful
She kept opening the door of her home
Despite knowing how you and I spent our time
Whenever the adults left us alone.

Her words echo in my mind,
As clear as if spoken yesterday:
“I’ve never seen Izar this serious about anything,
And even if I tried to stop her, I know I can’t,
Because she’d just pack up and leave.
She was always the wild one:
Uncaring for the rules,
Unafraid to do whatever she wanted.
Nobody had to teach her how to be free.”

For encouraging a “ridiculous dream,”
As your father called it,
Your mother’s support opened a rift,
And now they argued more often than not,
As most couples are destined to do.

During my lunch break, you and I met
At the restaurant that faced my high school.
In a dining space that smelled of garlic and olive oil,
Surrounded by the clink of cutlery
And the chatter of youth unfolding,
You were savoring a potato omelette sandwich,
And dropping breadcrumbs on a motocross magazine.

You charted the steps to conquer the racing world:
Seek out the motocross tracks in Gipuzkoa;
Immerse yourself in racing clubs, your gateways
To structured training and expert instruction;
Compete in races and secure victories
So local scribes would ink your triumphs,
Drawing to you sponsors willing to invest.
From there, ascend to regional championships
With prize money and notoriety at stake.

You had brought a bulky backpack
Although you had the day off from work;
You needed to refine your riding technique,
So once I returned to my classroom,
To that monotony of chalk and textbooks,
You would head to the trails at Mount Jaizkibel.

I envisioned you astride your Suzuki RM125,
Navigating those winding, weathered paths
Lined with prickly shrubs,
Skirting cliff edges,
Your bike kicking up clumps of soil,
The distant roar of waves crashing on rocks
As your sole company.

In my mind, your front wheel caught
On a deceptive patch of loose dirt, twisting viciously.
Your world turned into a blur of sky, sea, and earth
As the ground vanished,
And you and your bike hung weightless
Until the rocky outcroppings below
Rushed up to meet you.

I asked you to bring me along;
I could stand around and watch you train.
If you suffered any injury,
I would run to your side and patch you up.
You told me to rest easy: you’d be careful.
Besides, you refused to let me skip class, arguing
That I shouldn’t sacrifice my grades for your sake.

You brought up my mother’s disdain,
Which whispered to me of never again
Holding you tight while lying on the bed
That my parents chose for their son,
Nor smelling your lingering scent on my sheets
As if you were sleeping beside me.

You inquired about my sudden glumness,
And after I confessed, you smirked and assured
That our love wasn’t tethered to any room.

At night, we rode in your Aprilia to Plaiaundi,
And ventured into the deserted ecological park.
In that moonlit, forest-like gloom,
Fireflies meandered like drifting candle flames.
After the rain, the earth exhaled a damp scent.

We ascended the steps of an observation deck
That rose on sturdy wooden stilts
Above the embracing wildness of foliage.
I settled upon the moist boards of the deck.
You nestled into my lap, straddling me,
And draped your arms around my neck.

Leaves whispered, rustling in the breeze,
And crickets chirred in the undergrowth.
My tongue laved over your pebbled areola.
I caressed your nipple with my lips,
Teasing and tugging on the turgid peak,
Gradually drawing it into my wet mouth.
I savored the silky texture of your skin
As it pressed against my taste buds.

Whenever you met me in the evening
Wearing your pleated, knee-length skirt,
You made the wordless promise
That our date would find us heading
To a building with a rustic stone façade,
That back then may have been a minor college.

We wound our way to the building’s rear.
It faced a desolate park and the highway.
In a shadowed colonnade, I claimed a stone bench.
You climbed into my lap, your favorite spot,
Then unzipped me and eased down my boxers.
After your panties joined my keys in my pocket,
You curtained your hips and my legs with the skirt.

I remember what it felt like in the night breeze
When you lowered your hips and slid me inside,
Engulfing me with your slick, velvety depths:
The warmth of a hearth in wintertime.

The same dude used to show up;
He stood in the light cone
Of the sole street lamp,
Drawing puffs from his cigarette
And waiting for his dog to poop.
You and I kept still, embraced,
Your inner walls gripping my length
While our hearts beat as one.

Shoulder-deep in the cool waters of Hendaye Beach,
My bare feet digging into the soaked sand,
I shut my eyes and basked in the warmth
Of the sun’s rays dancing on my face,
And of your tongue, that tasted of salt.
My fingers roamed the skin of your back,
Over the bumps and ridges of your vertebrae.

The sea rolled and receded around us.
The rhythmic lapping of waves against the shore
Blended with the cawing of gulls overhead
And snippets of conversations in French
As if coming from a gramophone in the next room.

Dark strands of your slicked-back hair
Stuck to your cheeks and neck.
Droplets scattered across your smooth skin
Caught the sunlight and glistened.
Your eyelids drooped to a half-lidded stare
As you broke into a mischievous grin.

When you leaned in, I inhaled
The coconut aroma of your sunscreen.
Your thumbs hooked inside my swim shorts.
While your wet lips brushed the shell of my ear,
You asked me to pull down your bikini bottom.

With the spandex garment bunched up mid-calf,
I cupped your firm and fleshy ass cheeks,
And you wrapped your legs around my waist.
As the tip of my member nudged your folds,
I worried about the lack of lubrication.

I wish I could remember how it felt
To make love to you in the sea,
But that memory cuts to a bald old man
Who swam in our orbit
While gawking with a smile spread wide
As if partaking in a private show,
Even though you kept glaring at him.
“What the fuck is that idiot doing?”

Beyond the scrubland at Mount Arburu,
The undulating hills were blanketed in patches
Of dark evergreens and deciduous trees,
Whose trunks had withstood storms
And decades of growth.

Seated at the rear, I clutched at the rider
While your Suzuki shuddered and jolted
Over bumps, rocking us back and forth,
While you wrenched the handlebars
To dodge rocks and bristly bushes
Dotted with yellow flowers.

We lay supine on eroded, sloping bedrock
Beside the feathery fronds of ferns.
Birds chirped in the nearby woods.
My lungs filled with crisp mountain air
That carried the scents of pine and grass,
And the sweet rot of decomposing vegetation.

The sun stretched the shadows of trees
And bathed the scrubland in gold.
Soon enough, our god would hide.
Under that ungraspable, azure dome,
Each succesive hump of the far-off mountains
Became lighter and lighter,
Watercolor washes on a canvas.


Author’s note: today’s song is “Hey Jane” by Spiritualized.

If you enjoy my free verse poetry, I have three books worth of it yet to be self-published. Check it out.

Motocross Legend, Love of My Life, Pt. 2 (Poetry)

I urge you to read the previous part of this short(ish) story. The whole thing is supposed to be experienced in one sitting, but I didn’t want to go radio silent for about a month.


For the millionth time, I cast my memory
Back to your bedroom, my ’90s haven:
Jeans-blue walls plastered with posters
Of motorcycle idols in riding gear;
Dream bikes, like your Aprilia;
Misato Katsuragi making a V sign;
Pictures of faraway places that beckoned:
Mount Fuji rising up from the plains,
The Eiffel Tower’s wrought iron lattice,
Lady Liberty’s green patina,
A sunburnt desert stretching into oblivion;
Alongside drawings I created for you.
Worn wooden shelves covered in stickers,
Overflowing with manga volumes
And pricey figurines of EVA units.
On your desk rested your black helmet
Next to piles of VHS cassettes.
Perched on a corner of your CRT television,
A single sock.

Nestled side by side on the carpeted floor
Among a scattering of your clothes,
Facing your plugged-in Playstation,
You were guiding Jill Valentine frantically
Through a shadow-laced, pixelated attic
Of that mansion infested with zombies
As you primed and fired your grenade launcher
At a slithering, grotesque serpent
That chased Jill with nefarious intent.
But lost in a sensory trance, I kept drifting
To the scent of your strawberry body spray,
And every shift of your bare arm against mine
Ignited a tingling trail of shivers down my spine.

Once the serpent fled through a hole,
You spun towards me with a victorious grin,
Flashing your wet, crooked teeth.
What did you say? I didn’t hear anything;
That face had kindled a spark inside me,
Made me feel like a flame
Dancing in a fireplace.

I leaned in and molded my lips to yours.
They tasted of cherry chapstick.

When I pulled away, you were frozen,
Your chocolate eyes wide and unblinking.
Had I gone too far? Had I ruined us?
Blood rushed to my cheeks
And words tangled in my throat
As I tried to apologize,
But you exhaled, bit your lip,
Then tossed the controller aside.
“About time,” you said
While climbing into my lap.

Our tongues wrestled,
Our breaths mingled,
Our teeth clicked,
Our noses bumped.
Your fingers raked through my hair.
I gripped your hips,
Then slid my hands under your T-shirt
To stroke the warm curve of your back.

My thoughts dissolved in a bath-like heat.
My self, that I thought forever isolated
Inside airtight boundaries,
Seeped out to meld with you.

I don’t know when we stopped,
But I remember holding onto you,
Feeling your heart calming down
As it beat against my chest.
Your wet lips rested against my neck,
Your hot breath tickled my skin.

To your annoyance, your father had removed
The privacy lock from your bedroom door,
And that brooding overseer of yours
Invaded your space whenever he pleased,
So if we ached for some privacy,
We had to make out in public.

During your shifts as a pizza delivery driver,
Each time your rounds hinted
You might grace my area of Irún,
You called me so I would wait at a nearby park.
I stared anxiously at the traffic,
Eager to spot your scarlet polo shirt.

After you pulled up on the company scooter,
We sat on a bench, you took off your cap,
And our tongues played like two puppies
As your soft ponytail brushed my hand.
The scent of melted cheese and oregano
Still returns me to those days.

One evening, in the solace of my bedroom,
While my parents argued somewhere outside,
And the last light streaming through the curtain
Bathed our lying forms in a dusk-touched hue,
You explored my naked chest and stomach,
Mapping them with your fingertips.

I cupped the nape of your neck
And brought your mouth to mine.
I wished I could merge with you,
To live within your heart,
To breathe from your lungs,
To laugh with your voice.

One afternoon, you called from a payphone
To tell me, breathless, of an accident:
After some dickhead veered into your lane,
You swerved, but your Aprilia skidded
And bucked viciously, throwing you off.
As you slid over asphalt, it clawed at your leg,
Tearing through your jeans,
Grating against your flesh.

I had never felt such a panic surge in my gut;
I pictured your leg flayed to shreds.
While you complained that the accident
Had marred your bike with scrapes and scuffs,
I urged you to call an ambulance.
You refused; if your father found out,
He would attempt to take the Aprilia away.
However, your leg seared with pain,
So you needed me to patch you up.

I grabbed a bottle of water and a soap squirter,
Then rushed out toward the nearest pharmacy
To buy gauze, bandages, and antibiotic ointment.

When you opened the front door,
You greeted me quietly.
We had lucked out, you said:
Your father wouldn’t return for hours,
And your mother was nursing a migraine.
But that left leg of yours belied our luck:
A jagged tear in your jeans
Revealed the raw red of road rash
Caked with blood and grime.
My heart lurched.

After washing my hands thoroughly, I found you
Lying pantless on your hot-pink bedspread.
I knelt by your bedside and inhaled
The coppery tang of your life essence
Mixed with adrenaline-induced sweat.

I soaked gauze in soapy water
And dabbed it on the raw red of your flesh
To clean off the dried blood and grime.
The white gauze bloomed crimson.
You winced, your eyes watered,
But you gritted through the pain.

I squeezed a glob of antibiotic ointment
And smeared it gently on your road rash.
After I climbed onto the bed,
I started wrapping the bandage
Around your injured leg,
Unwinding the roll and draping it snug.

My throat had closed up;
I felt your pain like it was mine.
You were right, we had been lucky:
Instead of swerving,
You could have crashed headfirst
And broken your neck.
Next time I saw you, you’d be lying in a coffin,
And I would never hear your laughter again.

I leaned forward, hugged your legs
And pressed my lips against your inner thigh,
Planting wet, lingering kisses,
Longing to feel the steady thrum of your life.

In the silence, your breathing grew heavier.
You propped yourself up on your elbows,
With your caramel waves cascading to the pillows.
Your eyes were glazed over, your cheeks flushed pink.

Your sunny-yellow panties,
Their stretchy cotton material
Featuring a pattern of fern-like imprints,
Contoured to your pubic mound,
And over the cleft, the fabric was soaked.

Wordlessly, I nuzzled your vulva,
Warming my face with the heat,
And inhaled the hint of laundry detergent
Mingled with a mouthwatering musk.
Your dampness clung to my tongue
As I lapped up the salty tang,
Which made you grip the bedspread.

You arched your back and wiggled your hips,
Grinding against my face,
To slide your panties down my nose and lips.

Behold a lush, dripping flower.

Our hands were clenched together,
My face buried in your muff,
Your pubes tickling my nose,
My tongue teasing, tracing, flicking
Your moist labia and turgid nub
While you gasped and mewed.

Even if your father’s words stabbed through you,
Or school made you want to jump down a well,
I could offer my warm hands and mouth
To make you forget.
I would always be your refuge
Where you could let go and be yourself.

You pulled my hands toward you
And whispered, “Come here.”
I crawled, skin to skin, over your body
So your tongue could thank mine.

We peeled off each other’s shirts.
I unhooked your bra and kneaded your breasts.
Your fingers unbuttoned and unzipped,
Then tugged down my boxers.
You gripped me, stroked me up and down.
Pleasure settled in my groin like solid heat
As you wrapped your thighs around my waist
And guided me into your warmth.

While your bedsprings squeaked,
We breathed shallow gasps in and out,
And you dug your fingertips into my back.
The rhythm of our bodies synced together.
Something inside me cracked wide open.

If your mother had opened the door,
Ready to complain about the noise,
She would be outraged about more
Than our clothes strewn about the floor,
But any shouts, I’d boldly dismiss;
What we did and what we were
Was a cause to celebrate.
My heart pulsed with an aching joy
At the miracle of finding you, Izar,
And of being found by you.

From the day we made each other adults,
In the sanctuary of your bedroom or mine,
We spent our time huddled together,
Playing games, reading manga, watching shows,
Anticipating a knock on the door
And one of our parents to speak of some errand.
You and I would drown in silence, listening
To the sounds of our guardians leaving.

My body stirred with an electric tension.
Your eyes glittered, starlit with yearning.
Your nipples poked through the top.
Once the front door closed with a thump,
And the key turned once, twice in the lock,
We would allow a brief eternity to pass,
Counting heartbeats and hushed breaths,
Then our clothes would fly off.

When we lay in each other’s arms
On a tangle of sweat-smeared sheets,
The room melted away
To the slick friction of skin on skin.
We became the only people in the world,
Talking and laughing and making love.

Hand in hand, we strolled to the end of Meaka
On a gravel path speckled with moss
Past the hydroelectric plant of Irugurutzeta.
Shadowed by the massive wall
Made of layers of weathered, lichen-clad stones,
We came across wandering chickens
And a dog that glanced at us from its kennel.

I breathed in the rich, loamy scent
Of damp earth and decaying leaves.
We nestled on the bank of a meandering creek
That babbled as it flowed over riverstone.
A stockade of skeletal trees obscured the horizon.
To our left stood the ruins of Roman furnaces.
On the opposite bank, stacks of blackened logs
Loomed like burned tombstones.
Here, where human activity had ceased,
Leaving behind only traces,
Life sprouted, grew, and died untroubled.

Your mood hung heavy like the overcast sky,
But I knew you’d open up when you were ready.
Turns out your parents had found out
About your disastrous grades,
And lost their shit when you declared
That you were dropping out of school altogether.

I remembered how my mother scolded me
For bringing home sevens and eights
When I could, she said, easily ace tests;
Thus, if I chose to drop out,
She would probably drop dead.
I asked if you had rushed to this decision,
But your mind had known for weeks.

Algebra, geometry, physics, chemistry;
They were rusty spanners in a junkyard
To you, who had dreamed of riding a bike
On undulating dirt tracks
Through jumps, berms, and whoops.
So instead of surrendering your youth
To the hands of glorified babysitters,
You chose to chase the road forward
Before the mirror showed a stranger.



Author’s note: the song for today is “Your Hand in Mine” by Explosions in the Sky.

If you enjoy my free verse poetry, I have three books worth of it yet to be self-published. Check it out.

Motocross Legend, Love of My Life, Pt. 1 (Poetry)


Wide awake at midnight,
As I lie in the oppressive dark,
I stretch my arm into the abyss of my mind,
Seeking the warmth of your hand.

I imagine the apartment’s buzzer ringing;
You’ve come to take me away.
I put on clothes, kiss my sleeping kids goodbye,
And rush downstairs to join you.

Garbed in your sleek red jacket,
You’re straddling the leather seat
And resting your elbows on the handlebars
Of your nineteen ninety-four Aprilia Red Rose.
Its lemon-yellow body, streaked with white,
Shimmers in the streetlights’ glow.
The sharp beam of its headlight pierces the night.

Amber radiance outlines your caramel-brown hair,
But your face is lit by an unrestrained smile
That creases the corners of your chocolate eyes,
That shows off your crooked front teeth.

Once I climb onto the pillion behind you,
I wrap my arms around your slim waist.
You start up the beast, making it rumble,
And we roll down the road.

Streetlights blur to yellow streaks
As we rocket through the streets,
Zooming past cars and trucks,
Past darkened houses and shops.

The mechanical purring of the engine
Ebbs and flows through my bones.
The crisp wind of autumn stings my cheeks;
It smells like wet pavement and gasoline.
Your jacket and wavy hair rustle,
Your laughter rings in the night.

Life is a wild and beautiful sickness.
In this universe of racing colors,
We are invincible.
Through the darkness we soar
Like two lonesome shooting stars
Tearing across the heavens.

We reach our park by the Bidasoa River,
Where freshwater meets saltwater,
And the salty scent of the sea mingles
With the aroma of pine trees and earth.

Lonely benches line the path, facing the water,
But we sit side by side on the cool, dewy grass.
Pine trees etch their silhouettes against a night sky
Bathed in the silvery glow of a full moon.

You ask me if I’m living the life I dreamed of.
I confess that things didn’t pan out like I wished:
I never became a comic book artist.
But through designing websites for corporations,
I employ what little creativity I have left,
Or at least that’s what I’d like to believe.

You ask me if I still remember us.
I tell you all the ways I do.

I was drawing my comic strip,
Sitting at the base of an oak tree
In my favorite spot of our school grounds.
The rough ridges of the bark dug into my back,
And the sunlight streamed through the leaves,
Falling in pools of amber-orange on the grass,
Bouncing off the paper in my lap.
Suddenly, there you were, towering over me
With your wild brown waves down your shoulders,
A carefree smile playing on your lips.

You asked what I was always drawing
That kept me alone and with my head down.
I tried to hide the pages, but you snatched them.
As your eyes darted over ink and graphite,
I tensed up, bracing myself for your mockery
Of the tale through which I lived vicariously.

It tracked the adventures
Of a team of heroes for hire
That drifted through the cosmos
In their ramshackle starship.

Guybrush Threepwood, mighty pirate,
Charted stars as their cunning captain;
Redheaded terror Asuka Langley
Was their fierce-eyed, unyielding gunner;
Ranma Saotome, fluid as water,
Their covert infiltration specialist.
The rest of their motley crew was filled
With characters from games, manga, and anime
That in days of solitude and sorrow
Had brought comfort and distraction.

While you flipped through the pages,
My pulse quickened, anxiety gripped me,
But you laughed out of delight.
Seated beside me, you kept reading.
Under the canopy of leaves,
Your chocolate eyes glittered
As you pointed out jokes and references
That I thought nobody but me would get.

Days later, you asked me how come
I used characters created by others.
I didn’t dare come up with my own;
What if they were stupid and lame?
Wouldn’t that mean I was talentless?

You told me I was a special kind of idiot;
Of course my first tries would suck.
Greatness takes effort, perseverance,
And a willingness to make mistakes.
If I kept working hard and learning
From the masters we both admired,
I too would one day create art
That moved hearts and minds,
That inspired others to dream and do,
But if I gave up, wallowing in fear,
I would end up like those pathetic adults
Who believed their dreams never came true
Because they didn’t wish hard enough.

That couldn’t be right, could it?
My mother always told me
That I was an intelligent boy,
Her bright, shining star,
Who’d nail every challenge
In the first try.

You invited me to your parents’ place.
I spent my, until then, best afternoon
Playing Super Metroid on your SNES
And munching on barbecue fritos.

We recorded mock radio shows
On your dad’s tape recorder.
You acted as the host
Interviewing me, your guest.

“Hello, citizens of Irún!
It’s me, Izar Lizarraga,
Your one and only radio DJ,
Bringing you a special edition
Of ‘Izar’s Takeover,’ coming live
From the studios of Channel 52.
Great lineup today, folks!
Our very own Guybrush Threepwood,
Bonafide pirate and space pioneer
Admired by millions, loved by all,
Reports to us from the ninth dimension.
How are you doing out there, Threepwood?”

“Well, it’s been quite the thrill.
I’ve been trying to find the source
Of this mysterious pink goop
That’s been popping up everywhere.
So far, it’s led to a lot of shootin’,
Scoopin’ and lootin’ in this cosmic void.”

You showed me motocross races
From your collection of videocassettes
Nestled beside your bulky TV.
Dozens of racers clad in protective gear
Darted and wove amidst the pack
Astride dirt bikes with coil spring shocks,
Their knobby tires kicking up plumes of dust.
The racers zoomed and skidded,
They surged up series of steep ramps
And vaulted in graceful arcs
Before crashing back down to earth.

The races blurred before me,
A storm of dust, noise, and fury,
But that flickering screen illuminated
Your childlike grin.

Before I met you, I wasted entire days
Secluded in my darkened bedroom.
Now that you summoned me to your side,
We made memories out of our adventures.

At the arcade, we fed coins into Bubble Bobble.
You picked the green chubby dragon, I picked blue.
Like maniacs we jumped on 2D platforms
And trapped our foes inside colorful bubbles.
As we clutched the joysticks and punched buttons,
The warmth of your arm grazed my skin.

We hit every wooded area in the city,
Where we climbed trees
And swung from low-hanging branches
Although we kept landing on our asses.
We sneaked into construction sites
To slide downhill on cardboard.

At night, we climbed the chain-link fence
Of the primary school we had attended.
Here’s where we played hopscotch,
Here’s where I drew cartoons with chalk.
We rested our plastic buckets and shovels
Inside this little square filled with sand.
That night, we shot some hoops in the shadows
Until the custodian chased us off.

How often in comic book stores
Did I distract the cashier while you slid
A volume of manga down your pants,
Securing it with the waistband of your panties?
Remember when you lit firecrackers
In one of the toilets at our middle school?
That porcelain bowl burst like a grenade.

As we lay prone on gravel,
Your lighter’s flame kissed
The tip of a hapless leaf,
That blackened and curled.
As an orange flame rippled
Like a flag in the breeze,
A white, incandescent band
Glided down the blade,
Leaving behind ashes.

One time you brought me to your home,
Your father picked a fight, I don’t recall why.
He spoke to you like scum,
Like you were no daughter of his,
And threatened to go beyond words.
After he slammed the bedroom door,
You burst into tears. I hugged you tightly.
Your warm tears soaked my shirt
As I stroked your soft hair.
You whispered that you couldn’t wait
To move far, far away.

I had also come to distrust my parents.
How many times did I hold my breath
While I pressed my ear against the door,
Eavesdropping on one of their quarrels
In case they decided to break apart my world?

I learnt how it felt to miss you for days;
You filled your afternoons after school
Studying for your motorbike license
Or working part-time as a cook at Telepizza.

One evening, lying on the grass at Aingura Park,
As the setting sun poured molten gold upon the river
And stray cats padded over our bellies,
You confessed, your eyes alight with dreams,
That you were saving up for a bike and riding gear,
That you intended to pursue your childhood dream
Of becoming a professional motocross rider,
Traveling the globe, competing at the highest level.

You made me board a bus
To an industrial park west of town.
As I meandered aimlessly
In front of workshops and warehouses,
A solitary figure emerged
Wearing white sneakers, jeans,
Padded polyester gloves,
A black motorbike helmet
With a tinted visor,
And a sleek red jacket.

You took off your carbon fiber helmet,
Freeing your caramel-brown waves.
Your eyes crinkled into half-moons
As you let out a hearty laugh.

After I met your beloved Aprilia Red Rose,
A treasure made yours from another’s hands,
You tossed me a half-helmet;
You wanted to take me on my first ride.

Weren’t you searching for a motocross bike?
Why choose this one instead?
You couldn’t resist such a bargain, you said,
And you could save up then trade the Aprilia in.

You slipped your helmet over your face,
Visor down to shield against the bugs.
The half-helmet’s padding hugged my head
As I fastened the strap under my chin.
Once I swung onto the bike behind you,
I clung to you like a koala.

You turned the ignition key
And twisted the throttle.
The engine growled and sputtered,
The exhaust let out raspy rattles.

As we raced toward an invisible finish line,
The roar of the engine echoed down
That sun-drenched industrial thoroughfare.
The bike’s rumbling quivered through me,
From my feet braced against the foot pegs
To my fingertips curled around your waist.
Spilling out the sides of your helmet,
Wind-whipped hair danced against my face.

I found the ride exhilarating, terrifying,
Like a rollercoaster, like flying.
My heart pounded, my mouth dried up.
I wanted to scream into the void
And let the thrill consume me.

What happened to that poster-size picture
I drew of you, that you hung on your wall?
Against a backdrop of blurred lines,
There you were, an anime-style Izar,
Riding your yellow-and-white motorbike,
Your caramel-brown hair flowing behind you,
Your favorite Evangelion T-shirt rippling in the wind.
Your face beamed with an open-mouthed smile,
And your chocolate eyes stared straight ahead
To wherever the road would take you.



Author’s note: the song for today is “Brown Eyed Girl” by Van Morrison.

Now that I have determined all the plot points and imagery that I want to include in the narrative, this side project of mine will likely take up to a month.