• hopilavayi: an erotic dictionary

memories of my ghost sista

~ the dead are never satisfied

memories of my ghost sista

Tag Archives: Peace Corps

disgrace

10 Thursday Oct 2013

Posted by babylon crashing in Armenia, Poetry, sonnet

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Tags

1995-1997, Armenia, disgrace, P.T.S.D., Peace Corps, poem, Poetry, Post-traumatic stress disorder, sonnet

These memories, these harsh memories, marred
with the stink of self-hatred and hard drink.
Meager flowers. Petals. Sparse leaf. A shard
I still cannot dislodge. I use to think
that time would dull them; to think that time’s cure
would make them all fade. Then I tried to write.
But what words are there for the dead? What poor
sequence or meager spell would ease the spite
I feel for myself? P.T.S.D. … they
said. Survivor’s guilt. A world with no lust.
Let me write my erotica, pretend
that the spiritual life is the best, pray
that this shard will loosen one day. It must.
I must. I must begin. I must begin.

][][

notes

P.T.S.D., Post-traumatic stress disorder, is a severe psychological condition that might develop after a person is exposed to a traumatic event. This diagnosis may be given when a group of symptoms occur, such as disturbing recurring flashbacks and nightmares, avoidance or numbing of memories of the event, or a high level of anxiety continuing for a long period of time after the event happened.

I was diagnosed with it after I returned home in disgrace from Peace Corps.

Image

geghard (1995)

06 Monday May 2013

Tags

1995-97, Geghard, Գեղարդ, Peace Corps, photo

geghard1

geghard2

hyestan1

kathy @ the river

rose
My friends and fellow volunteers at Geghard (Գեղարդ), 1995.

Posted by babylon crashing | Filed under Armenia, photograph

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view from gyumri of mount aragats

07 Sunday Apr 2013

Posted by babylon crashing in Armenia, Illustration and art

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Aragats, Armenia, art, Peace Corps, psycho vac, suicide

view from Gyumri of Mount Aragats

Everyone talks about Mt. Ararat as a glorious mountain because it’s out of touch, but Aragats is the mountain I love. It was where I went to wander one dark, dark December night until the battle-fey found me. I was 26 and wanted to fade away in the blizzard that shut the mountains down and I decided to walk to Yerevan from Gyumri because I couldn’t live with the weight of having the children I tried to take care of in the orphanage die.

the lord byron #20

20 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by babylon crashing in Armenia, Illustration and art

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

1995-97, Armenia, first English-Armenian dictionary, Gyumri, Lord Byron, Peace Corps, School #20

lord byron 1

lord byron 2

lord byron 3

This was the reason I was sent to Gyumri, Armenia. To teach English at the Lord Byron school. It was a gift from the British government after the earthquake. Turns out that Byron helped to create the first English-Armenian dictionary. There was a statue of him outside the main building. My students had less of an idea of who Byron was, though. One day a boy, Aram, told me “please, next time you see Mr. Byron, tell him he is a very nice man.” I smiled and told him that I certainly would.

the city that lived

20 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by babylon crashing in Armenia, Illustration and art

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

1995-97, Armenia, Gyumri, Peace Corps, ruined building

Gyumri building

They say they’re rebuilding it, which is a blessing. It is located in northern Armenia, on the edge of this endless, flat valley surrounded by mountains. So flat and endless that you can’t even see the mountains on the far side. If you drained all the water out of the Red Sea and found a city at the bottom of it, that would be like living in Gyumri. In 1988 it was destroyed in an earthquake. Seven years I ended up living there for two years. Nothing had been rebuilt. Whole city blocks lay in ruins — factories collapsed, streets with ripples in them, schools where classes of hundreds of children were killed in an instant. They’re finally rebuilding the city, I’m told, which is good, but it shall always be a ghost city to me, devastated yet beautiful, like our souls.

Image

yot verk

20 Wednesday Mar 2013

Tags

1995-97, Armenia, Cathedral of the Holy Mother, Gyumri, Յոթ Վերք, Peace Corps, Yot Verk

Yot Verk

This is the Cathedral of the Holy Mother, in my old stomping grounds of Gyumri, Armenia. Everyone called it Yot Verk (Յոթ Վերք) when I lived there. It is located at one end of the huge main square that makes up the heart of the city. There were only a few large buildings left (at least when I was there), this cathedral being one of them.A friend of mine got married in it and when you leave the building you are not suppose to turn your back on the center hall so we are had to slowly shuffle out walking backwards, trying not to trip.

Posted by babylon crashing | Filed under Armenia, Illustration and art

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tsovinar

07 Thursday Mar 2013

Posted by babylon crashing in Armenia, Illustration and art, Poetry, sonnet

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Armenia, ghost city of my soul, Gyumri, memory, Nar, Peace Corps, sonnet, sorrow, Tsovinar

sky child 2

I.
I was twenty-six when my neighbor sold
me his daughter. She was twelve, he explained,
and if I didn’t pay drams, dollars or gold
for her, the brothel in town would. He feigned
sorrow at such an act, though my neighbor
had been happily drunk the day before.

I was an oddity: a foreigner
living alone. I despise the word whore.
Pimps are poltroon dogs. But at twenty-six
I was easily confused; too frightened
that I would become the sort that inflicts
hell on a girl by saying no. Orphaned

for a month worth of cheap vodka, I paid
$82 dollars for her. All that night

we cried, sitting in my one-room hut; prayed
that there was some quick answer to make right
things that are neither. I could barely speak
her odd, harsh language. Nar knew no English.

She owned one dress, but no shoes. All that week
I went clothes hunting; hoping to furnish
for her at least underwear. But no one
sold such things at the market. Malnourished

and lice-ridden I shaved her. Her fallen
mane writhed upon the floor. Nar’s small, anguished
face looked foreign like me without her hair.

All that week she did not speak; lay in bed
and cried and cried. All that week my despair
deepened too. It was as if we had known
there was no easy out. I bathed her clean
and fed her full of lavash, khorovadz
and tahn. Even so, I felt obscene,
queasy, with my stomach tied up in knots.

II.
Nar will visit me sometimes. It took me ten
years to quit blaming myself. I never

have stopped blaming myself. Again, again,
again; the whole sick night, like a fever,
returns. Sweating and shitting and throwing

up all I gave her, Nar grew weaker, day
by day. I had no medicine, nothing
to ease her pain. Neighbors all stayed away;

even the bastard who had sold my Nar,
my lost Tsovinar, to me. Each visit

of hers is bitter-sweet. She travels far
for a boy who went mad; burnt down his hut,
got sent home in shame. I’ve never forgave

myself for leaving my Nar in her grave.

Notes:

The name Tsovinar (Ծովինար) is very ancient and very sacred. It was given to one of the pre-Christian deities in the Armenian pantheon. Tsovinar, or Nar, is the goddess of water, sea, and rain. A fire creature, she forces the rain and hail to fall from the heavens with her fury. Her name translates as “Nar on the sea.”

The Armenian monetary unit is called the dram. I also use several words in the poem which are the names of various Armenian dishes. Lavash (la’vash), bread of the gods, is soft and flat and when made by hand is rolled out and slapped against the walls of a clay oven. Khorovatz (xorovatz) is the Armenian word for barbeque and is often served using chunks of grilled meat rolled up in lavash. I found it similar to the Middle Eastern shawarma. Finally, Tahn (t’an) is a sour milk soup prepared by diluting yogurt with water. Often in Gyumri cucumber and dill were added.

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