“Writing the Apocalypse” is a weekly series featuring the poems, essays, and recollections of Puma Perl, with subject matter influenced by her experiences as a NYC resident during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In a preface to this week’s poem (which appears in her current book, “Birthdays Before and After,” Puma Perl notes:
This week, I participated in a film that Bowery Poetry Club is making. It will celebrate and support our city’s restaurants. Seven poets across the boroughs were asked to choose their favorite restaurants, and to be filmed there, ordering and eating some food, and performing a poem.
I chose the B&H Dairy Kosher Restaurant (127 Second Ave.), because, since 1938, it has been a mainstay on a block so special to many of us. B&H is located a few doors south of where the Gem Spa was (it recently closed), and a few doors north of the Second Avenue explosion of 2015. I chose the B&H because the food is made with love and, for me and my late husband, was the closest we were to our grandmothers’ kitchens. My son took some of his first bites of food there, over 40 years ago.
I chose to read an excerpt from The Taste of Rebellion because, along with B&H, it brings me back to the Lower East Side streets of my late teens and young adulthood. We have both survived. I dedicate it to everyone marching through the city streets right now, and to the Black Lives Matter movement. Thanks to Fawzy Abdelwahed, owner since 2003, his wife and B&H co-owner Ola, and the great and loyal staff. Thanks also to Bowery Poetry Club Executive Director Mahogany L. Browne, founder Bob Holman, and Ram Devineni, who filmed and coordinated the project.
The Taste of Rebellion | By Puma Perl
What did your rebellion taste like?
Mine tasted like long-haired boys
Sounded like 4AM rock and roll,
felt like the bottom
of my mother’s staircase
after she kicked me out
for coming home too late
My rebellion tasted of not going back,
smelled like $34 in my wallet,
dug into me like the knife
resting in a sheath on my hip
the day I changed my name
to Puma, just like my knife
My rebellion felt like never going home,
Feelings began in my legs,
exploded like the orgasms
I’d never even had yet,
smelled like pot and silk scarves
burning shade on lightbulbs,
looked like paisley,
reds and blues melting
on purple
Sounded like Jimi and Janis
before they reached 27
and draped the Fillmore in black
Nobody witnessed my rebellion,
everybody caught up in their own
My family had already labelled me
crazy, hopeless, a lost cause,
a loser nobody would love
They were wrong and they were right
His rebellion was dropping out
of Bronx Science, hiding a gun
in his bureau, black jeans so tight
he “customized” them
with slits up the calf
and could hardly walk up the five flights
leading to our Tenth Street apartment
with the police lock, the brick wall,
the loft bed, the bathtub in the kitchen
Where we lived in our shared rebellion
Our rebellion was his criminality,
my welfare, our books and music,
the dog he called Stagger Lee,
nights in Tompkins Square Park
days on St. Mark’s Place,
armed love, cigarettes
leather jackets
My surrender was to heroin,
His was to money
A baby born in the middle
of our separation
His rebellion would be raves,
speed, cars, girls, and survival
The drugs are gone
Stagger Lee was stolen
from outside a bodega
and his owner’s life surrendered
to the gun held in his own hand
My rebellion is quiet and solitary
Broken down Tuesdays
and hot summer days when life
seems to go on too long
Today is Wednesday, July 4th
Fireworks but no celebration
I order Chinese food and search
for a black and white movie
If new Coltrane tracks can be found
Maybe there’s still some hope
for rebellion without surrender.
© puma perl, 07/04/2018
Puma Perl is a poet and writer, with five solo collections in print. The most recent is Birthdays Before and After (Beyond Baroque Books, 2019.) She is the producer/creator of Puma’s Pandemonium, which brings spoken word together with rock and roll, and she performs regularly with her band Puma Perl and Friends. She’s received three New York Press Association awards in recognition of her journalism, and is the recipient of the 2016 Acker Award in the category of writing. Her most recent books can be found by clicking here.
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