Monday, December 31, 2018

the crazy ex wife

bone thin,
hollowed out by laxatives,
and a vegan
diet,
purging
the few calories
she took in
that day of carrots and kale,
she bends over the toilet
with a set
of boney fingers down her
throat,
then exhales.
she tells me that she wants
to leave the world,
end it all
like celebrities do
by rope or pill.
again? i say. but
i'm too tired to have this
talk again. so i shut
the door
and leave her in the room
where she's cradled
in a fetus like ball,
in darkness,
her raccoon eyes smeared
with make up
and confusion.
i go down the stairs
leaving to her woes,
and think
i'm in a bad dream, that this
is all
a crazy illusion.


turning over a new leaf

it's new years
and everyone is turning over a new leaf.
everyone will lose
a pound or two,
read another book,
attempt to be kind and nice,
to be sweet
and patient.
the lies will stop.
pies will be baked.
push ups will be done,
sit ups too.
we'll drink more water,
go to church and pray
more.
volunteer
and just be good souls
through and through.
this is the year we'll
dust off that resume and get
a new job,
we'll save some money.
take a trip
to Timbuktu.
yeah, things will be different
this year.
you'll see, just wait.
i'm going to be a different
person, fun and bright,
full of positivity
and so will you.

vacancy

there is another
road
out of this town I ask
the stranger
standing on the side of the road
with his tin
cup. he looks like
he's been in a fire.
ashen
and streaked with dirt
and mud.
I've taken a wrong turn
and can't find
my way back.
he looks at me
and smiles.
once here, you cant get
out he says.
the road you took to get
here,
ends here.
welcome home.
this is my corner, but you
can have
the one across the street,
that's been vacant now
for some time now.

Sunday, December 30, 2018

the human condition

you wake up
and think about what a horrible
human
being you are
at times.
the lies, the deception.
you cringe at the hypocrite
you can be
when things get tough,
taking the easy way out,
the low road.
it's almost like there's
two of you.
the good and the bad
always at war with one
another.
the devil on one shoulder
and the angel
on the other.
it's so easy to point a finger
and say hey,
can you believe what
he's doing, while doing
the same thing the next
day.
you shake your head
and say to yourself one day
at a time.
one word, one thought,
one action. just do the right
thing
you promise yourself,
try not to be so human
for once in your life.

it all depends

would you take a bullet
for anyone
my friend jimmy asks
as we sit in the park
handing a brown
bag with a bottle in it
back and forth.
hmmm, I ask, taking a swing
of the harsh
cheap whiskey.
anyone?
probably not, I tell him.
but you never know
about these things
until it happens.
until the gun goes off
and what you had for
breakfast that day,
or your last argument
with a loved one
as you left the house
slamming the door.
it all depends.
yeah, me too, he says.
taking the bottle from
my hands, finishing off
the dregs. not sure if
everyone is worth
saving.

dogs run free

the stray
dog is in the woods.
he looks happy
in the trees,
down by the blue sleeve
of a cold stream.
the blonde brush of his hair
gleams in
the soft
light
of a low sun.
no collar, no tag,
or leash.
he's on his own.
free,
free
from whoever had him,
whoever let
him go.

Saturday, December 29, 2018

real love

there was the time
we were in Chinatown in nyc.
it was near
the end of our relationship,
both done
with each other, living
on fumes, neither one
of us, as Gladys would sing,
wanting to be the first
to say goodbye.
but we were hit from behind
by a tourist
as we rolled slowly
along looking for a place
to eat.
no damage done.
we all moved on.
I remember that it was
raining, and cold.
I remember looking at her
in the early morning fog
and thinking
this has to end
at some point.
we stared at each other
with this thought in mind.
I remember that moment,
eye to eye
as we stood in the street.
the bloom of our breathing
in front of us.
hungry for real love.

the midnight oil

I keep telling myself
that next year will be different.
I make a list of all
the positive things
that i'll do and accomplish.
no more procrastinating
about anything.
i'll turn my frown upside
down.
i'll have a spring in my step.
i'll put my nose to the
grindstone,
foot to the pedal, i'll
burn the midnight oil,
and maybe just maybe
i'll stop using
clichés and be more
original. maybe.

at peace

i admire the neighborhood
black cat.
how she endures
the weather, the cold,
being put out at night
to wander.

i saw her the other day
walking slowly through
the parking lot
in the pouring rain.

not a care, not a hint
of trouble in her gait.
she's been through so
much, i think. nothing
bothers her now.

she's at peace with what
life has served her.

she almost seems to smile
with her candy green eyes
when she looks over at
me, standing in the door.

i believe she even winked
at me.

the worker

nothing is what it seems.

you look out
the window
at the painter on the ladder
at 8 am
on a Saturday morning and wonder
what's going
on in his head.

he must be cold out there.
does he have a wife,
children?
is he behind on his bills?

is he
happy
with that brush in hand,
happy to have a
job, to be working
this deep into winter.
is he in love?

nothing is what it seems.

what goes on in anyone's head
is unclear.
what they say,
what they're feeling, who
they really are
is a mystery unsolved
even in death.

this love we all want
and feel that we need, what
is it?
what does it really bring
into your life?
pain, joy, both perhaps
in equal measure?

nothing is what it seems.

I take coffee out to the man
on the ladder.
he doesn't speak English,
but nods and smiles.
he points to where I can put
the cup, then
continues with his work.

Friday, December 28, 2018

words of advice

I try to explain
to my father the complexity
of my life
right now, but he's 90
and sees only
in black and white.
his advice has always been
there's more
fish in the sea.
whether death or divorce
has occurred.
I shake my head and listen.
what is there to say.
you only want to hear the words
I love
you, and i'm here for you,
whenever
and for whatever you need.

the good life

i take the tree down.
bulb
by bulb, unwinding the strings
of lights.
the ornaments go back
into the box
marked xmas. pushed onto
a shelf in the cellar.
off goes
the tinsel, the angel
hair, the star
on top. the blanket
below
where the stand holds
tight.
the needles are dry.
it sags
in the corner.
but it had a good life
serving well
through many days
through many
holiday nights.

while the iron is hot

they say that revenge is best
served cold,
but I disagree,
I say strike while the iron
is hot.
slay the beast, the dragon
and be done
with it.
why lose another second
of sleep.
go sharpen the blade,
load the cannons,
light those flaming arrows
and let them fly,
arching like
comets into the night.

Thursday, December 27, 2018

her story

her stories went round
and round.
a circus
of thoughts
flying off in all directions.
her mind
was a bee hive
struck with a stick.
each bee a word, an idea
trying to find
it's way
but never
reaching a conclusion.
but she was loved
and made
the best apple pies
this side
of the state.
so you listened and ate
her pie.
went back for seconds.

near the red barn

I take a sharp
knife
to the bark.
I sit
on a stump
near the barn.
the sun
is between the arms
and legs
of bare
trees.
there is a whistle
of wind
through the loose boards,
the rusted
roof.
I go at the thick
branch
with gentle ease.
I whittle it down
to the bone.
to the flesh.
all things must die
and become new again.

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

check is in the mail

the check is in the mail
I tell
anyone who
calls my phone. I've been lax
lately
with paying my bills.
lost track of time and days.
my credit score must be dropping
like the stock market.
i'm in a calendar fog.
I don't know if it's Tuesday
or Wednesday.
i'm upside down.
the new year
will set me back too.
a different number at the end.
i'll put a note
or two around to remind
me of that.

I thought I just fed you,
I tell the dog.
didn't I just pour
some water into your bowl?
a week ago?
really?

no pony

i'm surprised that I didn't get
a pony
this year
for Christmas. it was
the only thing on my list
which I handed out
to everyone I know.
my mother knew,
my father,
my entire family.
all my friends on facebook
and the real
friends too.
one pony. any color.
but no.
no pony.
I got a book,
a shirt. some socks.
some candy,
a fruit cake
and flannel pajamas.
but no pony.
the disappointment
though
will fade.
i'll survive. there is always
next year.

a late night drink

I find an open
bar
on Christmas eve.
it's late, past midnight.
the revelers have all gone home.
the wait staff is leaving,
laughing as they rush out
with cash in hand,
bottles of wine,
champagne. one drink
I say as the door almost
closes and gets locked.
the bartender
is a kind man
though and says sure,
just one
and pours me a tall one
over ice.
I find a stool and settle
in.
he tells me please
don't take out your phone.
talk to me he says,
elbows on the mahogany bar,
tell me the story
of your life
what brings you in here
on Christmas
night, alone and red
cheeked from the cold.
don't look at your phone,
or deep into the drink
I just poured,
talk to me.
okay, okay. I tell him.
join me.
and so we talk and talk
until there's nothing
left to say
that hasn't already
been said.
two stories. two men talking
about love won,
love lost.
getting old, getting back up
and doing it again.
it's Christmas eve and the bottle
is finally empty.
we're both sadly happy
and content. good night he
says and shows me to the door
as the snow
begins to fall. take care
he says.
I will, you too.

the baby's room

it's a nice paper.

prepasted, vinyl.

flowers. birds. foilage.

I rarely get
to use the word foilage.

so here it is.

it goes up easily,
as I smooth one side to the other.
cutting carefully
at the top and bottom.

measuring twice for good
measure.
the bubbles go down as the paper
relaxes
and breathes and becomes part
of the long wall
beside
a baby's crib.

she'll see it for years and never
know the hands
or person
that put it on the wall,
which is fine.

most of the worlds art,
not that this is art, goes
unnoticed
or forgotten as
life moves on.

Tuesday, December 25, 2018

each year for more

the lake
is a Russian blue on this
Christmas morning.
five miles around
through woods and stones.
no boats
disturbing the water,
no one fishing.
hardly a soul
about.
the geese are on the shore
in groups
of grey threes
and fours.
it's cold. it's winter.
it's the beginning
of things.
the end of
others.
the lake holds a truth
that lives inside
me.
it's why I return
each year,
for more.

throw the dog a bone

you know something's wrong
when
you wake up
at ten a.m.
with tears in your eyes
on Christmas morning,
when you
have no hunger.
when every word spoken to you
sounds like
a lie.
the sun is a nuisance.
the cold
hardly matters.
their could be something
amiss
when you don't answer
the phone.
when your dog wants to play
and you got
nothing.
was it a bad year?
yup, but a new one awaits
around the corner.
it can't come soon enough.
clean the slate and
bring it on.

365 till next year

I see all the santas
going home,
dragging the empty sacks,
their red suits dirty
from the car
fumes.
the drool of children.
the spill of bourbon
from
flasks kept in their woolen
suits.
I see the crumbs of
cookies and pies,
the drip
of food and drinks
on their beards,
their boots.
I see the fatigue of
red in their eyes.
another season under
their belt.
they did what they could
to bring
happiness and joy
to those
who need it most
and now they go home
to sleep it off.

Sunday, December 23, 2018

the abandoned mine

the abandoned mine
has a sign
outside. do not enter.
danger.
your life is at risk.
stay away.
I can't help myself
and go in
with a small flashlight
attached to my
forehead. I carry
my yellow canary
in her small cage.
my dog comes too.
we explore the danger.
going down into the wet
black
depths of an old cave.
we like the fear.
the essence of uncertainty.
chaos is our home.
our comfort zone.
we like when the earth
shakes
and the debris of the mine
rains down upon
our heads. the wood creaks.
it's childhood all over
again.
home sweet home.

what is true is seen

ah, the clues.
the finger prints, the foot
prints.
a hair, a fiber.

an unlatched door.
the window
ajar and left open.

the drip of water.
the smell of smoke.

a picture tucked inside
a book.
an amulet hidden
in a pouch.

you don't need to be sherlock
to see
what's going on here.

under the bed.
in the closet

in a mailbox with a key.

the eyes tell it all.
the voice.
the tremble of hand.

what is true is seen.

the tree

the tree lights
remind me of something.
of someone.
some decade. somewhere.
it was cold.
it was winter. another
Christmas.
another time. another age.
another world
where I once
resided.
the tree lights remind
me of so much.
and this tree too will be
a memory.

his job

it was nothing for
Benito our house keeper to
pick up the litter
of new born
kittens still cloaked
in blood
and toss them into
a burlap bag.

he'd walk them to the
the Mediterranean Sea
and drop the bag
into the cold green water
until the job was done.

no words. no remorse.

it was the way chosen
to the keep the world
at bay. it was his job
among many.

Friday, December 21, 2018

this was my life

the attic
is where I am today.
i'm into the basement too.
the deep
corners of closets I haven't
peeked into
in forever.
i'm digging into coat pockets.
finding
slips of paper,
notes in between the pages
of books.
cards and letters.
scraps with phone numbers on
them.
i'm reconnecting
with my past.
looking at old photos
and wondering what happened
to each and every one
of these young
faces still young by
kodak.
i'm in the attic.
sitting in an old chair.
I smell the rot of wet wood.
I hear the flutter
of bat wings,
the tapping of mouse hooves.
the boxes all around me
are open.
there is joy, there is pain.
this was my life.

going electric

i watch a show
at seven in the morning on
the mysterious reappearance of bob
Dylan's electric
guitar circa 1964.
some words he wrote on scraps
of paper
are in the case too.
the skeleton beginnings
of some masterpiece.

they find out it's really is.
the handwriting matches.
the grain in the wood is the same.
there's a picture of him
holding it in his hands.
it's the one he played
at Newport when he
went electric and they were
going to cut the cable with
an axe.

judas they called
him. how dare he
bring such a racket to this
crowd of folkies.

i wished they'd give it back
to him though.
let him strum it one more
time and change the world.
let him plug it in
once again
and tell everyone about
highway 61.

what fun

I buy myself
a power saw for Christmas.
a gift to myself.
it's a black and decker
with variable speeds,
both battery powered
and electric.
it has several blades.
some for trees
some for hard wood,
one for soft wood
that needs to be cut gentle.
I can hardly wait to plug
it in and start sawing
stuff down the middle,
to tear it all down
and begin to build it all
up again.
I have a new hammer too,
oh and a large heavy
crow bar too.
what fun.

click click click

there is no original
sin.
they are all old and dusty.
used
and reused.
the ten commandments
are apparently just suggestions
to most of us.
those tablets held by
moses, those words
carved in stone
are simply an ancient text
no longer in need
in these modern times.

people used to be scared
when the car
was invented.
how the lonely and
disappointed will stray
from their mates
and find love
in the next town,
so easily reached
with a tank of gas.
but now sin is just
a click away by phone
in the bathroom
with the door closed.

Thursday, December 20, 2018

rosebud

what do you want
for Christmas santa asks me
as I sit on his lap
with my finger on my chin.
I don't know,
I tell him. I have so much.
a house, a car,
a good job,
my health is fine,
my son is somewhat happy
and living in
the sunshine of southern
California.
well, well, santa asks,
looking at the long line
of children
getting fidgety behind
the velvet rope.
i'm just not sure, I tell
him.
of course I want peace
on a earth
and a new president,
and hunger
to be eradicated,
not to mention saving
the environment, but
those are all givens.
love and happiness, as
al green sings, would be
nice to.
just tell me santa says,
I don't have all day,
plus you're killing my leg.
how old are you anyway?
okay, okay, I tell him.
I got it.
I want a new sled, the old
fashion kind made of wood,
with iron runners
and rope. one like I used to have
when I was a kid.
that's it? that's what
you really want?
yup.
good lord!
okay. get out of here.
next!

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

been here before

I've been here before.
in another life.
this all seems familiar.
the same
words,
the same situation,
the same everything,
all day
all night.
I know this place
i'm in.
I know this door, this
stairway,
this room. this bed
where I sleep.
i'm doing my life
all over again,
will I ever get it
right?

rosie

she's handy
with her hammer,
her screw driver and pliers,
her level and
drill
tucked
inside her
tool bag wrapped
and snapped
around her waist.
she can fix anything,
I hope.

one bathroom

we had one bathroom
at the top of the stairs
of the brick duplex.
there was always a knock,
at the door.
a line of begging
voices with shoes doing
a jig.
one hardly
had time to take a bath
or finish a
comic book in there.
don't use up all the hot water
was a common
lament.
eight toothbrushes
were lined in a row
along the porcelain sink.
the bar of soap
whittled down to
a communion wafer.
but somehow we managed
to stay clean,
to stay brushed and combed
and presentable
to the outside world.

the new saint

in his later
years they deemed him a saint.
all sins
forgiven
all memory of the pain
he inflicted
now faded in the light.
fragile and ill,
his halo
sits
above his brow,
the pages of his story
have all been
torn out.
he's outlived his
enemies
he's won. in the court
yard there's a statue
of him now.

this face

this face.
these ravines.
the carving of age
and
gravity.
the worn mask says
so much
about the joy,
the pain
endured.
the loves lost,
ones gained.
what else is there
to know
but to look into
ones eyes
and see
how their life did
go.

the house plant

it was a common
house plant. green with leaves.
a stem or two
jutting out and up
always leaning in the direction
of sunlight
which was scarce
from my balcony view.
who gave it to me, I don't
know.
did I purchase it on
a whim,
was it here before I moved
in?
but it grew despite my
general lack of care.
just a water can to pour
into its dry pot, few words
were shared
between us.
I felt for it though.
seeing it
sometimes littered with
a cigarette butt
from a visitor or two.
a chewed piece of gum.
a wrapper. bottle caps,
a button come loose.
such indignities never seemed
to bother her though.
she stayed green.
she stayed true.
such a friend I've never
known before. no one has been
so loyal and kind,
so understanding,
not even you.

in the early morning

I buy a box
of donuts for the painters
working outside
in the cold.
four cups of coffee.
I hear the clack of ladders,
the chatter
of their lives
as they work, their arms
moving with
a brush or roller,
laying on the greys,
the whites.
they smile and say
thank you in another
language.
their faces are red
and raw from the wind
and cold.
I wish there was more
that I could do for them,
and they look at me,
deep into my eyes,
and wish the same.

baby it's cold in here

lying beneath
a thick blanket I get up
in the middle of
the night
and turn the heat up.
it's snowing inside
the house.
there is ice on
the windows.
I spread a bag of road
salt going up the stairs
and put out some
orange cones leading
into the slippery
kitchen.
I see the dog stiff
against the couch.
I breathe into his mouth
and bring him back to life.
I make him a cup of hot tea
then carry him upstairs.
it's cold in here.
I call up betty and ask
her if it's snowing in
her house too.
she says yes. brrrr. it's
cold as hell.
I tell her, I thought
hell was supposed to be
hot. she laughs. I guess
you thought wrong
buster brown.

false prophets

question everything.
everyone.
see through the rhetoric
the thick
words of manipulation,
see through
the sales pitch,
the flim flam.
don't follow the bouncing
ball.
read all the fine print.
don't inhale the smoke.
disregard those men in gowns
telling you what sin
is.
telling you how to run
your life, your marriage
your money.
your children.
they are insulated and
dour, there is no joy
in their hearts. they are
full of fear and misgivings
about their lives.
don't drink the kool aid
of that church.
go and worship. but take
it all with a grain
of salt. they are not
gods, they are not Christ,
they are mere men, like me
and you. beware of false
prophets, they are here
among us.

Monday, December 17, 2018

Merry Christmas One and All

we play house,
a tree
goes up in the corner
for Christmas,
a string of lights,
a few
store bought ornaments
are hung.
a few
gifts are wrapped
and set below 
the dried out needles.
there is no joy
as we go through the motions.
if only she knew how much
i hate her,
would she finally leave?
if she only knew how
i cringe when i hear
the door open,
the jangle of her keys
when she comes home 
from work,
the heels coming
up the stairs, maybe then,
maybe then,
she'd go back to her married
boyfriend,
her felon ex husband,
her life of lies,
and leave.

Sunday, December 16, 2018

back in the night

back in the night
we used to go downtown
to drink
and dance. search
for love.
the four or five of us
packed in one car.
dave and josh,
steve and jim acs,
perry.
miller lites in hand.
a few smokers
with their Marlboros.
we would close the joints
down, sweaty and tipsy,
then grab a hot
dog on corner of M
and 19th.
we were full of ourselves.
leather coats
and wide collar shirts.
flared pants
with boots.
we were brothers for those
short fast years,
until life
came along and took us
away. it's still taking us,
farther and farther away.

you're going to live

I like my new doctor
she's not like the last
one. gelda von stroppenheimer.
I don't know what happened
to her, although I heard
an intern whisper the word
deportation when he was pushing
a wheel chair down the hall.
whatever the case may be
she just plum
disappeared.
what she lacked in bedside
manner
and common sense, she made
up in....in.
well i'm not sure what,
but let's just say, she was
punctual and leave it at that.
the new doctor has an espresso
machine.
she has candy and treats, up to
date magazines.
and wi fi.
there's art on the wall,
green live plants in the corner.
low music playing.
I almost want to order a drink
when i'm in her office
and ask someone to dance.
patients often get up and leave
after sitting there for a few
minutes. healed by osmosis.
I should make an appointment
for her to check out every single
liver spot on me.

the church is cold

the church is cold.
the pews
are hard
and empty.
we listen to
the message.
it's stale. it's old.
just a few have come
to listen
and repent.
there's me.
there's you.

whose blood is this?

whose
turn is it?
husband or wife.
spy versus spy.
is the game on,
is the stealth enough.
are the prints off
the knife.
are the shoes full
of mud,
whose blood
has leaked along
the dark road.
who is the cat,
who is the mouse,
who creeps
along
the walk way
approaching a darkened
house?

the deep

the water
deceives you. it's
deeper
and faster
than you realize.
you step in
and feel the surprise
of the hard
surge,
the tug and pull
of what rules
the earth.
there is no fighting
it.
just go,
let it take you where
you need to be.
from creek
to stream to river
to bay
then ocean, up
into the air
to begin again.

the sky is dark

there is someone
in the hedges.
a car rolls by,
a cough,
a stumble. footsteps
in the street,
a shadow
eases in and out
of sight.
the rattle of keys.
the sky is dark.
suspicion,
accusations.
something's gone
amiss
something's not right.

Saturday, December 15, 2018

not every apple

not every apple
gets picked
and bitten into, enjoyed
and savored.
no less sweet
than the others,
no less red or green,
some just fall to the ground
or die on
the vine,
never to be known,
or loved.
or to have seeds taken
from to be grown

i need coffee

it's raining.
I need coffee. I need to
get out
of this room
this town
and stretch my legs.
I need a new
book, a new idea
to write about.
I need a kind voice
on the phone.
a human touch.
I need arms around me
telling me
not to worry.
everything will be fine.
you'll see.
I need to get out of this
bed
and out of my
own head.
it's raining.
I need coffee.

nothing

so much
is out of your hands.
there is little
you can do
to control what others
do,
what others think.
their behavior
is beyond
your control.
so what to do?
nothing.
we are human.
people will always fail
you. lie and betray,
it's the way
of the world.
get used to it
and try not to do
the same.

the christmas prayer

we make our lists.
our christmas list.
our wish list.
but there is nothing
material that i want.
not a single thing do
i desire or need.
i just want my cheating
wife 
to be gone.
for her to leave.
to take with her all
the pain and lies with
her. the sooner
the better.
i don't bother telling
santa,
instead i fold my
hands together,
get down on my knees
and plead.

we let go

we let go,
release our hands
from the grip,
we leap
and fall into the warm
abyss.
we empty our minds,
our hearts.
we get clean.
get fresh.
go back to who we once
were so long ago.
we start over
vowing to never again
stay dark
stay sad
for so long.
let the new year begin,
as the old
one fades
into the past.

Friday, December 14, 2018

the pharisees among us

the church
can be a wonderous thing.
a place of comfort
and love.
guidance and wisdom.
but it can also
be a house
of pain, of guilt, of
man made,
unbiblical
rules and more rules
that darken our hearts with
the inability to follow
them day in
day out.

do this
or go to hell.
you'll never get to heaven
unless you
obey our strict
man made rules that have
nothing to do with the message
of Christ.

kneel. sit. stand.
sing.
pray.
do this do that. follow
what we say, or else
off you go into the lake
of fire.

what folly
there is in so much of it.
the Pharisees
are still among us.
there they are in their long
gowns, their hats.
their gold
crosses, their ornate
palaces of worship.

compassion and forgiveness
is all that
matters. faith and repentance.
Christ died on the cross
to end
this madness
and yet it's still here
making people
miserable.

roadside motel

I hit the road
and search for a beat up motel
in the middle of nowhere.
twin
beds. fine.
no room service, fine.
no cable. no phone. so what.

i'm good with a vending
machine
outside the door.
a sink
a tub
a toilet.

no need to get undressed.
I wont even put a quarter
in the machine to get
the bed
to vibrate.

i'll just
lie there for a few
days
and let the cold hand
of night slap me around.

i'll let the sun rise
through the thread bare
curtains, the bent blinds.

i'll listen for a few
days
to the couple on the other
side of the thin
walls arguing
about
all the things life serves
up without reason.

i'll smell the stain of smoke
from decades gone, saturating
the flowered
bed spread, that love
seat against a green wall.

i'll rub my nose at
the stench of spilled beer,
bad liquor in the shag carpet.

i'll ignore the cracks
in the ceiling. the drip
of the faucet. that bug making
his way up the wall.
his whole family behind him.

i'll pretend not to notice
the vague despair of broken
hearts that lay here before me.

I'll take the Gideon's Bible
from the drawer
and turn it randomly to a page,
putting my finger
on a line
and believe that it's God's
specific message to me.

then i'll leave and get well.
as I always do.

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

don't know jack

my friend
jack
tells me what I should do
with my life.

he's so wise
when he's had a couple
of cold ones.

he's got all the answers.

but after three, he's
got nothing.

with one drink,
he's Gandhi
with two he's albert
Einstein and
freud
wrapped into one.


but after three, he's silly.
he's pee wee
herman

with the giggles, which
I actually like better.

rinse and repeat

why the glum
puss
my therapist says, smiling
in a therapeutic way,
crossing her
legs
and studying
my body language
like a cat on sill
staring out the window
at tweety
bird.
oh, you know. I tell
her.
same as last week.
rinse and repeat.
rinse and repeat.
wash me clean doc,
then hang me out to dry
in the cold December
air.

hooked

the fish
he pulls from the river
wants no
part of this display,
it has no
desire to be weighed,
to be in the pan,
to be scaled, and cut
fileted.
life was so wonderful
a few minutes ago.
the salt
and brine, the seaweed
below,
the thick sand, and rocks
from eons
of the earth turning,
the rain falling,
the blue and green
water
forever a safe place
to live
and love, to play.

those blue suede shoes

I get in line
for a lobotomy at
the local
insane asylum, I also
sign up
for three electro shock
therapy sessions.
you pay for two, but
get the third one
for free. I get the Sylvia
plath special, which
cranks the volts up extra high.
the line is long,
but it's been one hell
of a bad year
psychologically and I could
use some serious
cranial zapping. it's well
worth the wait
if I can clear my
mind of the last 365 days.
just shake and clean
the whole thing up like one
of those etcher sketch screens.
I meet napoleon and
Moses in the queue,
both have a cup
of coffee
and a scone, which they
refuse to share.
mary Magdalene
and
joan of arc are there too.
love the robe, joan
says to mary.
silk? oh, this old thing,
she says. something I found
lying around in the tomb.
as the line slowly moves forward
we have a lovely conversation
about the world
at large, about our
love life, our
work, our children
and parents, how they didn't
hug us enough.
everyone laughs when that
comes up.
so what brings you here,
I ask one of several Elvis's
standing there
in his rhinestone
white jump suit
and a hound dog
at his side, ah shucks mister,
he says.
same old, same old.
i'm bluer than my shoes,
he says. just plain blue.

jumper

when I leave
the house I see my neighbor
with
a snarl of jumper cables
in his hand.
it's cold.
there's ice on the windshields.
the thick frost
of night hastaken hold.
jump me?
he says.
okay, I tell him
and pull my car around.
it's the third time
this week.
I suggest that maybe
he needs
a new battery, to which
he says, yeah,
you might be right.
I point at his front left
tire that is beyond
low. he nods
and says. man.
I give him the jump.
with the cables clamped
I churn my engine,
and away we go
once more.

come sit next to me

she's old,
but still has retained
her sense
of self,
of mirth and mischief,
of
pointed
observations that prick
the skin.
she's a walking antique.
if you don't have anything
nice to say,
come sit next to me
she says, not unlike
Alice of so long ago.
so I do.

the ocean has been here already

I find my calendar
and
black out
the dates I once thought
to be
memorable.
my phone is purged.
my emails,
my paper mail.
my infatuation
that turned into a love
trail.
I etch out
the stone where I carved
initials,
I chop down the tree,
then go to the dark
sand shore
where I dragged my
finger into a large
heart
of her and me,
but the ocean has already
been there
and taken care of that.

the masquerade

it's a masquerade,
a ball,
a dance in suits
and gowns where no one
knows
who anyone really is.
who's behind
the smile, the frown,
the shy
mask worn as if it's
a true self.
even the priest is
wearing one,
hiding behind
his holy personae
as he sprinkles holy water
upon the crowd.
his secrets and sins
are just as
bad as ours, but for
him, where is there
to turn, when can he pull
the mask off
and say this is who
I really am.

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

that cat

the neighborhood cat
is jet
black. long haired with green
eyes.
she reminds me
of someone I knew
in college, a thousand
years ago.
the same meow,
the same slow gait in
her legs as
she came towards me,
needing
something I couldn't
give her.

bone dry

we have a talk.
another talk.
another deep self analyzing session.
it's grueling.
it goes nowhere.
it's a circle.
I've said the same things
for over a year
now.
nothing changes.
more distrust.
more deceit, more lies.
more smoke
and mirrors. I sigh.
there are no
more tears
inside me.
i'm bone dry.
I look up and see the vultures
gathering.
waiting patiently.

cheer up

I cheer myself
up
with a cup
of crazy,
a big bowl of nuts.
I imagine
i'm on a deserted island
with no
one else around,
except for one true love.
the trees full of fruit,
the ocean
full of fish.
the sun warm,
and a freighter full
of books
aground
on the coral reef.
oh, and an open bar
with a bartender
who delivers right to
the sandy beach.

when the lights go out

my father
despite his failing
vision,
his muffled ears,
his wobbly
legs
insists on living alone.
no
senior home
for him.
no spoon fed meals,
no lights out
at ten.
he'll go down
swinging.
doing it the way
he's always done it.
fiercely independent
of everything
and everyone.
and when the lights go
out,
when it finally
ends
i'll be happy
and grateful
for who he's been,
not just a father,
but a close
and loving friend.

Monday, December 10, 2018

the truth

once
the truth is known,
the light shone
brightly

on the lie,
it's
hard
to believe
what else
is true or false.

what else is unknown?

what words
can be trusted.
actions.

one lie, two,
three.
tips of icebergs
beneath the cold
green sea
of doubt.

it makes the liar
not stop,
but instead be more
careful to cover
their tracks,
delete deny
and mask.

bad motel

it was a bad motel.
but it was raining.
cold. we were tired
of driving.
look, over there, she
said.
pointing to fluorescent
lights
holding only a few
letters in
the word vaca..y.
the room smelled with
the years
of other men
and women, children too
bunking down
on the stiff mattresses.
sharing the lights,
the bathroom.
no cable, no ice, no
complementary breakfast.
just a vending machine
with crackers, cigarettes
and cokes, outside.
but we were in love.
and love would
make it all okay.

room without a view

she's in
a cell. a cold dark
damp
room
in solitaire.
punished.
whipped and beaten
with silence.
she needs
to learn a lesson.
don't cross
the warden,
there's room for
you too
if the line is
crossed.

Sunday, December 9, 2018

ruby or gold

i look through
the looking glass, the long
mirrored
sheet of clean clear
tempered glass
at the jewelry store.
what to buy for a loved one?
what possible
ring doesn't she have,
what bracelet or
necklace, or amulet
or broach is not in her
box, not tucked away in
some safe place,
rarely displayed.
a diamond, an emerald,
ruby or gold.
what says too much, what
says too little.
it's hard to know these
days
which way to go.

a cold comes on

a cold comes on.
he sniffles, she coughs.
they
slip into big
clothes,
hold
a bouquet of Kleenex
in their hands.
the water
boils,
the blankets go
on.
tis the season
of snow,
of fever of lights
on the tree
blinking,
the endless playing
of holiday
songs.

Saturday, December 8, 2018

early is the time

early is
the best time to write.
when most
are still in bed,
asleep,
husbands and wives,
children,
the lost and lonely,
the single
souls,
the infirmed lying
in strange beds.
before the sun rises
is the best
time to sort through
the lines
that mingle
in your mind,
waiting waiting for
your fingers to go,
to write them forward,
with or without a
rhyme.

coal this year

it's Christmas lite
this year.
no eggnog poured, no
mistletoe hung,
no tree
in the corner with
lights and ornaments.
it's a gift card
kind of season this time
around.
no carols sung by
the open fire, no chestnuts,
or gifts with bows
and ribbons,
with the words love you
always thanks for a wonderful
blessed year.
the stockings are empty.
Santa will fly by,
the elves too.
the reindeer won't even
take a look,
no need to set out a slice
of pie
or glass milk for him.
it's coal this year
for you.

broken

it's a mystery
how brokenness works.
the length of time
it takes
to crumble you into
splinters
and split boards.
how much longer can you
go on,
with your glue and nails,
your hammers
trying to put yourself
back together again
only to be stepped
on once more.

bad part of town

your life
once a bowl of cherries,
once
a piece of cake,
a slice
of pie is different
now.
you've detoured off
of easy
street into a bad
part of town.
the fruit is rotten
in the bowl.
the flies buzz,
the mice are in
the cupboard
a line of muggers
have taken all you have,
left you
gagged and bound.

Thursday, December 6, 2018

seeing further

i lie
down in bed
shoes off
clothes removed.
head on a pillow.
the lights gone.
i stare at the watery
shadows on the ceiling,
then through
the ceiling.
i can see the stars
align,
white pricks in the black
cloth of night.
i see
the carved face of a lonely
moon,
unvisited or
thought about, expect by
poets and children
for so long.
i see farther,
i see the shortening list
of tomorrows,
of things to do.
i see no heaven, just
the winding down
of my imagination,
my universe such as it
is
coming to an uneventful
close.

the cold paint

I hear
the painters outside
scrapping
at the side of my house.
the clang
of ladders as they rise
and rest
against the brick,
the sills.
it's 33 degrees out
and the paint won't stick.
but there's a job
to do,
money to be made.
they are bundled like
robbers,
only the eyes show,
or lips
when they take a break
to smoke
and drink coffee.
they arrive at first light
and will
leave
as the winter sun melts
yellow
behind the trees.
the paint will last a week
or so,
never curing, or drying
in the wet
cold air.
but it's work
and Christmas is coming.

lawyered up

lawyered up
my
dog
appears before the court
pleading
not guilty
of all charges.
he's washed and clean,
his nails trimmed,
his teeth bright and white,
which I can tell when
he snarls at me
across the courtroom.
he shakes his head
at the bevy
of evidence that has
been presented.
the chewed
sunglasses,
the ripped pants,
the leg of a chair,
the cushion,
the window sill,
the rug where he
sunned himself
thread bare
and torn.
a wad of money shredded
and eaten
then spit up into a green
presidential ball.
he raises his paw
to be sworn in and
gives me a look.
growls and bares
his teeth.
i'm in trouble, deep
trouble
if he gets out of
this and comes
home.

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

new born

from hand to arm
the new
baby goes,
swaddled in a fresh
cotton
shroud
to keep him warm.
how we love
new life,
how we want to hold
what tomorrow
can bring,
what this child will
mean
to a mother,
a father.
what joy there is in
new life.
pass him around
one more
time
and say a prayer
that they will get it
right.

a silver bird

a small silver
bird
appears in a dream.
she's lovely
on wing
the low winter sun
holds her
bright
in my eyes.
she's hope, I say
to myself.
she's what tomorrow
will bring.

another christmas

someone at the party
says
left skip Christmas this year.
let's not
go to the mall with a list,
go online
with our credit card
to just get it done.
let's not bake a single
cookie
or sing
a single carol,
or hang a bulb onto a silver
tree,
or tinsel.
let's skip Christmas
someone says, but
the drinking goes on and
the mistletoe gets hung,
the feast is on the table,
the gifts are
there, kisses are made
white Christmas
gets sung. another year,
almost done.

flame out

the poet
and her oven, the flame
doused.
the doors
sealed,
the children safe
in their cribs.
the gas
turned high, her
second, her third
her final
try.
brilliant and brittle.
she left so much
on the table,
so much, so many words
unwritten
left behind.

manipulation

it's so easy to see
from the outside looking in,
the faults in others.
their achille's heel.
their foibles and mistakes.
it's so clear
how they are manipulated
and lied to.
promises, promises
that never get answered.
how easy it is for them
to accept gifts and cards,
flowers,
and jewels and think,
oh this is what love is.
he put our initials
in the sand, carved
them into a tree with
a heart, so
it must be true.
soon, soon, he'll be mine.
and yet they don't see it,
don't see the obvious truth.
everyone else sees it but them.
they go through life
trapped. gaslighted.
tricked and fooled.
forever lost,
and unknowing when love
really happens.

undone

tomorrow i'll find the courage
to do
what I need to do.
to say the things that need
to be said.
i'll summon up the bravery
buried deep
within my soul
and speak clearly the words
that stick
to my tongue.
i'll force them out
and finally let it all
come undone.

nowhere

we have no plans
to go anywhere.

we are here to stay.
to live
out
these days
in sublime quiet.

the memories are thin
frayed sheets upon us.

we have books.
we have

the television.
food and drink.

we are here, but
we are nowhere.

we are growing older
and older.

we have the past to keep
us warm
on our cold
winter days, approaching.

the other room is hers

the other room
is
hers.
the secret
place
where doors close,
where shutters swing tight
into darkness,
the dry wet weeds
of hidden
things.
mementos of past loves.
the closet dark and forbidden,
the drawers
locked
tight.
the bags
and bags all bundled shut.
what lies
beneath the layers
of this world.
these layers of sediment
and guilt,
this shadow world of
yesterdays.
who is she.
what have I not seen,
what is there
to this person
who sleeps beside me
that I don't already know
or don't want to know.
the other room is hers.

mirage

some souls
lost in their own
desert
of broken hearts
keep crawling under
the sun.
nothing stops them.
they
no know other life
than
to stay thirsty,
to stay lost,
to stay heart broken.
a drop or rain
or two
keeps them going though.
a morsel of food.
that mirage
in the distant
wind blown sand
gives them hope.
she likes to give them
hope.

the etchings

so many pet names
they have
for one another.
silly and cute, fun
and loving.
their initials carved
on the trunks
of all the trees
they passed when
meeting secretly
along the wooded paths,
the hearts on napkins,
or against the wet
concrete wherever
found.
in the sand at the shore,
in the dirt,
upon a layered cake
thick with icing.
a heart, an arrow.
such love the world has
never known.
an anniversary for everything.
with love always.
how sweet, so sweet
it almost makes your
teeth ache with such
displays of adolescent
confectionary
affection.

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

simple joy

the boy
skipping the stone with his
father
near the pool
of sky
blue,
talking with one another.
him gently showing
the boy how to hold
the rock,
how to let if fly
and glide across the still
water.
skip skip skip, then splash.
what joy there is in
that.
what simple happiness
they'll share.

just one day

I just want
one normal happy day.
one twenty four
hour spin around
the clock of
no angst, no sadness,
no one lying to
me, betraying me.
no anxiety
with the constant
swirl of a roiling
ocean.
one single solitary
day of joy, of
peace of
love and compassion.
one day
of clear skies
and calm
water. one day.

taking a stand

i'd like to think that i'm
not a violent person, that I've
evolved into a more gentle
and compassionate human being.
i'd like to think that I've
embraced some sort of peace
with the world, that i've
conquered the demons within
the dark part of my soul
and moved on. i'd like
to think that I've grown
with higher learning,
with spirituality,
always trying to do the right
thing, but there are times
when there is evil in this world,
when there are
manipulating lying predators,
sick people
that threaten your world,
that have no boundaries and
disrespect you, take
you for weak. it's then that
you have to take a stand.
sharpen and focus
your anger, put on the armor
of righteousness and go
to war.

be happy that way

I get a dog to take my mind
off of things.
I need a distraction.
something fun
some thing, some living
thing
that wants me,
adores me, can't wait
for me to come home.
but this dog isn't like
that.
she's aloof and cold.
she keeps running back
to her other owner, she
won't fetch the paper,
and leaves
a mess when i'm not around.
I start thinking about
a cat, or maybe a bird.
or maybe i'll just take a
walk in the cold
be happy that way.

Sunday, December 2, 2018

fiddle dee dee

she says things like.
i don't cotton to that idea,
or i was on that unruly man
like a chicken on a boll weevil.
i ask her what's up
with this
strange way of speaking.
cotton?
when was the last time you were
even near a cotton field,
i ask her.
the war's over, i tell her.
the south lost. thank god.
oh hush. she says back.
sometimes you make my blood
boil,
it makes no never mind what you
think.
the south will rise
again. you'll see.
that war of northern aggression
will one
day be rectified.
oh brother, i say, taking a long
sip of a mint julep
that she just put in my hand.
sometimes i wonder if you truly
adore me like you say you do, she says,
blinking her eyes,
feigning tears as she stares
off across
the parking lot to a dunkin
donuts sign next
to a goodyear tire center.

what's next

hardly a leaf
remains on the trees beyond the fence.
a wet fire
of oak and maple
adorn
the yard,
lie against the fence,
the chairs,
the patio.
they've surrendered their
brief lives
in a fine
display of colors.
going out
in glory, making room
for what's next.

being human

I never thought of myself
as a jealous
person. one
who snoops and plays detective
trying to find
out if a love
is lying and cheating on you.
I've never been one
to look
into closets, or drawers,
or beneath a bed
for some clue
as to what is going on.
what's on that phone,
in that computer, I have no clue.
I thought I was beyond that.
more mature and spiritual,
trusting the Lord
for all things, as St. Paul
says. I really believed that
I was beyond that lowly form
of life. but no.
i'm human like the rest
of this sick world. green
with jealousy and fear.
weak when it comes to
love and feeling betrayed,
abandoned. i'll sit in
the cold shadows for hours
wondering when i'll know the truth.

we all have our say

the death of a poet.
a minor
one
to be kind
and gentle about it
still
strikes me
in the heart. I've
gone through his pages
for decades.
dog eared my
favorites, underlined
the lines
that gave me
a spark.
how quickly the ink
dries
on all of us, read
or unread,
major or minor.
we all have our say
before we're forgotten
and gone
away.

Saturday, December 1, 2018

december

I've been
through a few Decembers.
some
I remember well,
others I've blocked
off,
and want to forget.
using socks
as mittens
comes to mind,
as does
slipping on a bed
of black
ice with a ropeless sled,
with dull runners.
this one's open
for interpretation.
what's it going to be,
rain
and snow.
a pounding of sleet,
a cold lock down
inside
with the schools closed
and the bread
gone from the shelves?
or a bright sunny
stretch
of strange warm
weather
with a blue bird
on the sill.

rescue dog

i get rescued by
a rescue dog,
a dog no one wanted.
a brown mutt with a wiry
tail
and one eye.
he limps too
and has a scar
down the front of his
long
wet nose.
he likes to lick
and cuddle though.
he'll chase the ball
and howl at the moon.
he answers
when i call.
he keeps me warm
at night
and never never
once lies to me
or betrays me.

eat out

i burn my
hand
on the stove.

three times.

but now i know.
now i know,
now i know.

it's time to eat out
more often.

i know what you're cooking

i know what you're thinking,
what you've done,
and said,
and written,
well
sort of.
because who can really know.
but I get
the gist of it.
I get the vibe,
feel
the energy
that emanates from
every fiber of your body.
I see the aura,
smell the coffee,
taste
what's in the air.
I know what you're cooking
dear girl,
but it doesn't matter
anymore.

iron and silk

she's made
of iron
and silk, her day is long.
there is a line
out the door
that needs
her care.
her
eyes look into
mine
and say when.
a glass of wine, a book
a show to watch
in the quiet
of her home
at the end
of a cul de sac
nearby.
soon, I tell her, soon.

Thursday, November 29, 2018

out of the hood, yo

it's a gated house
on a normal road
lined with vanilla
low brick ramblers built
in the early 60's.
but this house is grand.
three stories with an
elevator.
roman columns.
a fountain. a butler,
a maid,
a housekeeper.
a special code to let
you in.
Caligula would be happy here.
it's a cavern of
opulence. a magazine
layout of new things.
white and grey, white
and black.
fireplaces are lit.
wine and caviar are being
served.
a well behaved pair
of long chinned dogs
sit with diamond collars
at the head of the stairs.
chandeliers light
the Persian rugs
the crystal vases.
llama covered couches.
there are cameras
everywhere.
I smile and wave.
i'm there for an hour
get the job done
and go back to the hood
where I feel much more
at home. yo.

start drinking heavily

my doctor
stands back from the table
and sighs.
he has a green mask
on.
surgical gloves
and booties around his white
sneakers.
a white smock covers
his green
loose fitting hospital
garb.
he doesn't want
to get near me, not
even to look into
my mouth or
to listen to my heart.
you've got it bad,
he says. my oh my.
I haven't seen a case
like this
since Richard
burton and liz taylor
got married for
the fourth time.
I pretend that i'm not
that old, that I don't
know what he's talking
about, but I do.
I don't know what to tell
you he says, but my advice
is to start drinking
heavily. he laughs, sorry,
that's from
animal house after flounder's
car was demolished.

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

chopping wood

all day
the man stands in the yard
splitting wood.
cord
after cord.
he swings the heavy
axe down
and breaks each
new piece into two.
he grows weary
in the cold sun.
his wife stands at
the door and smiles,
she wonders how long
he can go on like this.
when will his
happiness end.

the enormous bug

a brown bug
of unusual proportions
finds his way in,
crawls slowly
across the laundry room
floor.
the cold has
staggered him
as if he was on
a pub crawl
in the streets of
Georgetown.
it would be easy to
snare
him in a bag or by
broom
toss him into the cold
flush
of water, but why.
how long can a brown
bug's life be
anyway.
let him go for now.
I don't think he bites.

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

who's that?

I see on
the social network
photos from the past.
i click the pages over,
ones
I've never seen before.
they are dusty
and torn,
yellowed
with age,
the faces are different
the weights
and lines
have changed.
the thinning of hair,
new colors,
the gravity at play.
how young we were
back then,
how fast the years
go by.
how quickly we
fade
into the future,

poison apple

the well
is poisoned. a single
rotten
apple
has fallen into
the water
with a cold splash.
no need
to draw the bucket
up
anymore. let's wait
for rain.
open our mouths,
our hands
and wait
to start all over
again.

a new place to live

there is no new world.
not here,
not on mars,
or venus
or mercury.
this is it.
the good
and bad together.
strange
how we think that distance
will change
us.
that a new locale
will save
us from ourselves,
our past,
that our dark
and sinful
sides will disappear
with a new land
to live on.
how foolish we are
in not knowing
that the true place
of change
is within.

slight of hand

I hold my tongue.
I don't
show my cards, my slight
of hand.
I wait it out,
letting more rope
fall
into hands.
I sit and watch
as it unfolds.
all in good time.
all secrets all lies
will
one day be exposed.

the race track

in the late 70's i lived
behind
a race track.
it lay just beyond the woods,
a slight stream
and a parking lot.
the cloud like glow
of light reached my windows.
at night i could hear
the thunder
of hooves, the call of
the race. the shouts of
a happy, unhappy crowd.
i thought about the horses.
their lives
arranged by others, unable
to run free.
always, beneath the weight
of others,
always rushing, rushing
towards some finish
line. i had to move.

getting ready for the day

i fasten
on my dark sunglasses.
attach
blinders to the sides.
i stuff
my ears with cotton.
stich my
lips together
with twine, I
erase my thoughts.
i'm ready for the day
now, wiser
and at peace
by saying, hearing,
seeing
and knowing
nothing.

a light

i'll get past this.
I always do.

there is always a light
at the end
of this

dark
tunnel.

I can see
a blue sky,
a warm white sun,

two arms awaiting
me,
saying it's okay
now.
it's over.

just breathe

a plate full of hours
is on
the table.
the white cloth holding
the black
handed
clock.
the sun has shifted
through
the trees
the shadows
bend over the roof,
the fence,
against
the umbered rainbow
of fallen
leaves.
I have places to be
in time
but for now i'll
sit here
and close my eyes,
just breathe.

Monday, November 26, 2018

in the early morning rain

traffic
in the rain is
barely moving,
inching
forward.
the soft sparkle of tail
lights,
the street lamps.
the dashboard
aglow
with amber numbers.
I breathe
and open the window
just so.
a song
comes on,
something I know the words
to from
so long ago.
mister lightfoot
and his guitar.
I begin to sing.
I know this song
by heart.

let's make a deal today

I ponder a new car,
but I hate car salesmen.
I don't need one, but i'm a moth
attracted to the flame,
see the last
nine hundred poems if you
doubt me.
but I fancy a new set of wheels.
I desire the smell
of freshly minted factory
plastic and vinyl.
those new tires, not a crumb
on the floor or seats
to be found.
not a single drip of coffee
on the dashboard.
oh, if not for those salesmen.
how they pester me with emails
and texts.
phone calls. they have me in
their cross hairs with the slightest
bit of interest.
one simple question leads
to a firestorm of
when can you come in to test
drive. can you make a deal
today? we want your business.
we have balloons and coffee
to help your stay.

hanging on

it's been awhile.
been too long
too many days and nights
have gone
by
the world
keeps spinning.
i'm hanging on though,
trying not
to be that feather
in the wind.
it's been awhile,
been too long,
too many days and nights,
but i'm ready,
i'm more than ready
to be happy
once again.

here to stay

having second thoughts,
I cancel my trip.
unpack my bags.
I wave the cab away.
i'm staying put.
going nowhere.
this is where I was
meant to be.
I tear up the maps,
the tour books
the new currency.
I cancel the cruise,
the train,
the bus.
I put the camera away.
i'm here,
going nowhere. i'm
here to stay.

too thin a word

so good to be home
for lunch
this early in the day.
the rain
a curtain of wet cold
coming down.
no sounds
but that. the percussion
on the panes,
the roof.
the tin house of birds
below.
so good to be home
in the comfort
and bliss
of quiet and warmth.
blessed beyond measure
with love
from others.
having been given so
much for so long.
forgiven too.
grateful is too thin a word
to name this feeling.

let them be together again

I wish I wish
not upon a star or on a coin
tossed into a well,
no I wish
in the form of a sincere
and giving prayer to a much
higher power,
let's call him or her God
for now
and send it there.
I wish for the two
star struck lovers
to be together again,
that they could
reunite and find the joy
they miss so much.
no longer hiding in the shadows
whispering their many pet
names to one another,
no longer
deceiving the ones they're with
with lies and denial.
it is a love like no other.
keeping track of every anniversary,
every moment captured
in a camera, a video, a card
or letter,
a simple napkin with a heart
and their initials inside.
the carved trees, the hearts in
the sand.
how they miss one another and long
to be together.
let them have what they want.
the past can become the future
for them once more.
let the light shine on them
and let no one keep them apart
any longer.
let them be happy and free.
they were meant to be with
one another. a luminescent
light together. a force to behold.
true loves from the moment
they first kissed
so many years ago along
the wooded path. the electricity
of their feelings still
alive inside of them.
such love should not go
unrequited, should not go
without a happy ending.
it would be a tragedy
of Shakespearean proportions
otherwise.
I pray on both knees
and wish that they will
be together again
and live out their lives
in perpetual bliss, this is
my wish for them. my prayer.
my thinking has been all wrong.
but now I see the light,
the truth of what should be.

Sunday, November 25, 2018

good times

by morning I had chewed
through the straps of my straight
jacket
and was able to breathe
through my mouth.
at last I could talk out
loud.
I struck up a conversation
with a neighbor in
the padded cell next to me.
hey, I said.
are you up yet.
he was recovering from a failed
lobotomy
and electroshock therapy
but was quite lucid and
awake.
hey there old chap.
he said. they have me chained
down here to my
bunk, but I can chat if you'd like.
quite a night, wasn't it?
he said.
all of that dreadful screaming
down the corridor. I do
wish they'd put some carpet
down, or drapes to absorb
some of these ghastly howls
at night. hard for a bloke to
get any good winks, if you know
what I mean.
I know, I said. spitting out
chunks of leather and strands
of nylon thread.
I could use some breakfast, I said.
ham and eggs would be nice.
I agree, he said. perhaps a hot
spot of tea would be delightful
as well. maybe a nice butterpie
to go along with it.
how long you in for I asked him,
swinging from the hook contraption
I was attached to. I was trying to
get some feeling back into my legs
having been wrapped up for the last
ten hours in a cocoon.
well, I hope to go home soon, he
said. I actually feel quite well
today. feeling like my old self.
I drift in and out personalities
at times. it's all quite annoying
to family and friends as you can
well imagine. and what about you
old sport. in for long?
I came in for a head cold a few weeks
ago and that mixed me up with
someone else. it's seems to be a
a paperwork thing, or should I say
a computer glitch, but I hope to be
home for the holidays.
well.i wish you the best my good man.
I hear the orderlies coming down
the hall, so mum's the word. when
we get out of here perhaps we'll
meet and have a pint or two,
reminisce old times.
sounds great, I tell him. by the
way, where are you from anyway.
Kentucky, he says, but I prefer
to speak in the king's English most
of the. cheerio.



what i know to be true

in another life
I would
have put up a shingle
outside the clapboard
house i'd probably be in.
poor as poor can be.
but telling the future
and knowing
so much when lightning
would strike, I could
see and know for certain
what others could
not see. come in and sit.
look me in the eyes. give
me a minute or two.
it's not a hunch or a guess.
it's the left hand
of God
pushing me towards what's
true. why do they even
bother lying to me?
it's scary at times
and I fight it, but I must
do what I must do.

the willow tree

I am easily fooled,
duped.
I believe everyone
no matter
how untrue I know
things to be.
or at least pretend to.
I forgive, I compromise.
I am
in the wind,
in any storm
the nimble trunk and
branches of
a willow tree.

unstuffed

the cranberry sauce in
a can
was a surprise
having been promised
grandma's secret recipe.
as was the boxed
stuffing
and tin packaged gravy.
the tofu
turkey I must say did
raise some eyes,
as did the carob
cake
and raw celery.
all washed down with a
glass of bottle
capped wine,
but no one gained an
ounce of weight, no
one fell asleep or
felt the slightest
of belly aches
and there were leftovers
galore
for the tupper ware
to wrap
and take.

the ones that love us

the ones that truly
love
us
aren't here.
they're far away in miles,
with tears.
how they long
to have us back,
to hold us in their
arms.
safe and warm,
embracing us in any
storm.
it's how life should
be.
not a lie
not a struggle
not a game of cat
and mouse, of pretend
and fear.

house is not a home

the house
is not a home if there
is no
love
to be found.
no kisses shared
in any room
by window
a fireplace, or stair.
the house
is less than
a home
without laughter,
without joy.
it's empty
and for sale now,
welcome.
better luck with
you
and yours as you
move in
to make it your own.

Saturday, November 24, 2018

wake me when it's over

i used to care,
but things have changed.
I've lost heart,
lost my way,
lost my mojo, my swag,
my sway.
i'm teetering on my
feet.
unsure of which way
to turn,
who to trust. who's
lying, who is full of
deceit.
it's a shadow world
i'm stuck in.
gaslighted while i slip
and slide
on the cobblestones
hoping for hope,
treasuring sleep.
wake me, wake me
wake me
when it's over, please.

the expert on everything

the expert on everything
is here.
he knows
so little about so much,
just
enough to hold court,
to rail
and rant, to speak loudly
as if
he needs to be heard.
in his mind,
they hang on every word.
the places he's been,
the things he's seen.
he knows the history of nearly
everything.
no need to speak
when he's around he'll
answer and ask all the questions.
just sit there
and listen.
the expert has arrived.
let's listen.

what's to come

the birds
are on me. pecking
at what they think is dead.
sure,
I haven't moved
in a while.
eaten or slept
in days.
and yes, i'm lying
prone
in a dry blank field
of cut
hay,
but i'm not dead yet.
so let them
peck, let them
find out the hard
way
of what's to come
when I arise.

the horizon

the scales fall
away
from my eyes. the fog
disappears.

I see
clearly now what
was so unclear
last year. once blind
my vision
is right again.

the horizon is mine.

the sail
of my soul is in
the wind
and off I go.

the happy man

he's happy
with that hammer,
that saw.

those nails in his
pocket
can hardly wait to be
driven
into wood.

how the drill sits
idling,
the lamp on it all
as dark
approaches.

the lines draw
as to where to cut.
a plan
made.

how happy he is
for the simple task
of work
leaving behind
tomorrow.

the ocean rises

it was a mission of
sorts.
that emotional brass ring.
that heart
drawn in the sand,
that
forever thing.
how the ocean
rises
though
doing what it wants
and changes
everything.

Thursday, November 22, 2018

her meal

i remember
the olives my mother would stuff
with cream
cheese.
stalks of celery too.
the gravy bowl.
the fat turkey glistening
from the basting of
juices.
i see the mounds of potatoes,
white
and topped with pads
of butter.
the hot rolls from the oven.
i see
the cranberries in a bowl,
the greens,
the squash, the stuffing.
i see my mother, sweating
at the stove.
everyone but her eating.
how happy she was
in these moments. all together
as one
like it used to be.

the window

not smart
enough to understand
or to figure
things out.
to make decisions based
on fact
not doubt
I climb the wall to
look out
into the yard.
I hold onto the bars.
I see the blue
sky
full of birds.
I feel the warmth of
a kind
sun.
I hear children laughing.
I see her
beyond the fence,
waving.

i want to sleep in

I want to sleep in.
but can't.
I hear the cars out in the lot.
the birds
in the trees.
I hear
a truck and a man
coughing.i want to sleep in.
but I can't.
too much is going on
in my
attic.
too many bats and mice
are alive
and well in
the shadows of my mind.
I want to sleep in,
but I can't.
the bed is so warm,
the sheets soft,
the pillows hold my
head in comfort, but
i'm up. i'm up and into
the day.

tough cut

it's time
to swallow what's been
chewed,
what's been torn
from itself
and eaten.
no spices will do,
no pounding with a mallet
will make it
more tender.
no extended stay
on the stove
in the oven
will change the gristle
and the bone,
the hide of this thing
i'm into.
it's a rough cut
of meat this meal.
the knife is hardly sharp
enough to cut
through.

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

waiting on the past

the night
is longer than expected.
no stars.
no moon.
the streetlights are pink
to deter crime.
I get up
to look out into the woods
and hear
the fox cry.
whether pain
or in pleasure, who's
to know.
there are things to do.
so much
is left undone.
and that keeps me awake,
waiting on
dawn.
waiting on the paper
to slap
against the porch.
for the milk to arrive
in glass bottles,
for someone to holler
down,
come back to bed.

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

next

we passed the last gas station
an hour ago.
we should have filled up,
but we were in the middle
of an argument
about gun laws
and global warming,
then went off into a deep
discussion about the best
way to make turkey gravy.
but I had a good feeling about
this.
she was soul mate material.
she was the one
I would take home to mother.
i end up pulling over
and let her drive
for awhile. my trust
and affection is enormous for her.
I start counting cacti
along the road, fast slithery
things moving
from rock to rock.
I squint my eyes in the
blaze of a desert sun.
I had broken my ray bans
when I fell asleep
in the back seat
and then rolled over on them,
snapping the frame in two.
we're almost on empty
I tell her, my girlfriend
that I met in vegas ten hours
ago.
really? she says, staring
at the amber glow on
the dashboard.
we should have gassed up
when we had the chance.
how much water do we have
I ask her, thinking of
survival. no clues, she says.
I ask her her name.
she says V, pointing at
blue green tattoo on her neck.
I'm Joe, I tell
her. boring she says.
I stare at her. at the lizard
tattoo that goes down
her arm and then disappears
under her torn pink t-shirt.
the word next in blood
red ink on her arm.
her lips are a shade of black.
I wish we had some drugs
she says, turning the dial
of the radio finding nothing
but country. or jack daniels.
I find a warm coke in the back
seat and pop it open,
sending fizz everywhere.
what the hell she says.
now i'm all sticky.
I take a sip and hand it to
her, she takes a long gulp,
then the car dies. it chugs and
stutters until it stalls.
she guides it into the sand, slapping her
hands against the steering wheel.
that's it, she says.
what? I ask her.
i'm done.
i'm leaving you.
okay, I tell her. it's been
a pleasure. can I have your number.
no,she says.
she grabs her one bag from the
back seat and starts walking,
thumb out.
I watch her as she walks, her long
shadow jerky on the side
of the road. the spikes in her
jet black hair pointing towards
the pale blue sky.
a truck comes up and stops
to let her in, then she's gone
just like that. the love of
my life.

we swim alone

we swim alone.
we dive
into the deep end
and start kicking.
start spinning our arms
churning
our legs.
the other side
of this is there,
we've seen it before.
but the water is cold.
what lies below is unknown.
there is no time to rest,
no time to catch our breath.
we need to get
there,
to the other side.
we swim alone.

boneless hams

the line at the honey baked ham
store
is wrapped around the block.
the blue
pulsating lights of cop
cars
spark the cold night
as
we stand huddled
against one another in
the slow
snake like queue, coupons
in hand.
traffic is slowed and halted
for the carvings
of pig and turkey. parking
is limited.
credit cards
and lists are at the ready
in mittened hands.
a woman passes out in
the middle of the line,
tumbling onto the velvet
rope that keeps us from
being a riotous crowd.
some eager patrons step
over her. then a good Samaritan
places a slice
of honey swirled ham
near her mouth, the salt
and brine of it wakes her up,
arouses her from her
winters nap. we get
her to her feet
and hold her as the line
progresses.
the wind picks
up
and we hunker down.
we make new friends.
we learn each other's names
and share pictures of our
loved ones. we feel safe
to offer up our secret
recipes of cranberry sauce
and stuffing.
we sing along to the music
piped in from overhead.
there's still time, still
time. the counter is oh so
close, so close. we need,
we want
our hams. with or without
the bone.

Monday, November 19, 2018

tom cat

the battery on
my father's cell phone is
dead.
I call and call, no answer.
his voice mail is
in Spanish, a language
he doesn't speak, so I leave
no message.
I try the land line.
no answer there either.
he's either napping, at
the grocery store,
in the yard pulling
at imaginary weeds, or
over at the Italian lady's
condo doing god knows what
beyond pasta bread and wine.
at ninety
he still has some tom
cat in him.


fruit cake

I take out last years fruit
cake
and put it by
the back door to hold it open.
the crows
in the backyard
are interested.
they flutter their oily
wings and turn
their beaks
towards what they see.
have at it I tell them,
waving
them towards the brick
loaf
of fruit and nuts.
a solidified mass of
molasses and flour,
sugar and what not.
sparrows come closer.
a wood pecker, who I think
and capable of
such a thing.

the examination

the doctor
is bright with kindness.
her touch
upon your shoulder
is gentle while
your skin slides
upon the crinkle of parchment
paper, feet
dangling off
the table.
the cold outdoors
is forgotten
under her care. she listens
to your heart.
looks
into the cave
of your mouth, two
ears, then weighs
you.
she wraps your arm
for pressure and sighs.
she is sincere
when she asks you where
it hurts.
it hurts right here
you tell her,
pointing everywhere.

the short visit

the industry
of the aged building
homes that aren't homes.
the sticks
and canes, walkers
by the door.
the oxygen if
needed.
the small brown
tubes
of pills, soldiers
on the sill.
the house
too warm for guests
too cold
for those
in shawls, in robes,
in tattered
clothes, slippers
unfit for use.
the television
is a fire full of voices
without meaning.
the gay wreathe
and lights of the tree
are small
wonders.
the few faces who
visit are almost
strangers. spoon fed,
a sip
or two from a long straw.
dinner is served.
how they rock and rock
towards sleep.

Friday, November 16, 2018

morning coffee

I stir
some sugar
into the black cup
of coffee.
I pour a dollop of cream
to lighten it.
I cut a piece
of pastry from
the box, then place
it on a small white
plate.
I go to the window.
sit at the table,
pulling a chair out.
I see the snow icing
the yard, the edge
of the brown fence.
I watch
the bird feeder
with a few sparrows
dipping in for seed.
a red cardinal flies in,
regal against the white.
we have our
breakfast together.
the peace
of the world is this.

hell on wheels

the crazy
drivers are even crazier
in bad
weather. speeding,
tailgating,
zig zagging from
lane to lane,
on their phones,
drinking,
waving, having
conversations with
themselves and others.
lines and signs
along the road have
no meaning to them.
they have no
regard for
cars
behind or beside
them.
you slow down to let
them go on
their merry way.
you'd like to live
and not die in a fiery
crash,
at least not today.

counting

I can't sleep
so
I count sheep.
I count
other things too.
people.
places.
things done
or undone.
I count the slats
on the blinds.
the pillows on
the bed.
I count my fingers.
my toes.
I count the numbers
on the clock.
I count how
many times I've
counted.
I count down the hours.
then the sun comes
up.
so much more to count
and unsleep
about, but work awaits.
I count on that
too.

Thursday, November 15, 2018

noon?

I say
meet you at noon.
he says.
one. I say Saturday.
he says ok,
then calls back and says
we'll be out of
town then.
how about sunday,
I offer.
at 3. he says four,
the kids
will be napping
at that hour.
okay.
one day next week?
he says. I say okay.
tell me when then.
what hour,
i'll hover the area
until you
make up your mind.
he says okay,
i'll be in touch.
can I call you tomorrow?
what time? I say.

compromise

we are separated by
time zones.
by continents,
by oceans
and mountains. by
any geographical
boundary
one can think of.
even our beliefs
are different,
our taste in music,
in books,
in what makes us
laugh or cry.
it's just the way
it is. we adjust
for love,
we compromise.

why wait?

it's a round
table
of
those loved and lost.
the seven, or is it
eight now,
the last one won't answer
her phone
and at 95 I think
the worst.
but we
eat, we laugh, we
remember
the joy, what was
once sad.
there is plenty to go
around,
the wine is poured,
the drinks
stirred,
there is more dessert
than
necessary.
we get full on the meal,
on each other's
love.
this would be a nice
rendition
of what heaven could
be like,
or maybe just now,
in this place,
on earth, why wait?

the good sleep

you fall asleep
in the early darkness
of afternoon,
you slip into slumber
to the rain, to the wind.
to the sound
of tires
in the snow,
a plow, a bird,
a voice
calling across
the courtyard.
it all takes you
into a dream.
onto a soft
bed of feathers,
a cloud
where you are in flight,
defying
the gravity of
trouble,
away
from it all
far far away
from this life.

once broken

once broken
there is no further
one can
go
down
into the depths of
proverbial hell.
once crisp
and shattered
in the embers,
turned to ashes,
there is no where left
to be
but up, risen,
restored to new.
and free.

find a heart

don't lose
the hunger. don't let
desire fade
into the light,
into the darkness
of that good night.
keep
the fire burning.
find love,
find a heart that
wants you
keep it close,
hold it to your
chest, let it
renew your life.

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

in all of us

there is violence
in all of us.
some primitive urge
to protect
what we think is ours.
to slay the foe,
kill
the beast, surround
ourselves with
walls
and fire.
there is a cave man
in all of us.
lurking
waiting to hear a pin
drop
of betrayal,
a drip
of lies,
a sniff of deception
or deceit, then the blood
rushes,
the muscles tighten,
the chest widens,
red
fills the eyes.

out of the blue

I take a cold shower
of truth.

I shiver
in the white porcelain
tub.

I surrender to the icy
world
of knowing
what I've always known.

you come in with nothing
and leave
with the same.

I've been gone
a long
time, but i'm back,
alive
again.

i'm Lazarus,
a phoenix rising.
left for dead
but on my feet
and out of the blue.

mother love

they miss
their mother. her baked
bread,
her cookies,
her gifts wrapped.

her warm soups and stew.
how nice of her to
send a sweet card
picked especially for them.

they miss
a kiss
upon the forehead,
to be tucked in,
a pat upon the back, her
voice, her hugs.

how they send her letters
and pictures
of where they've been,
postcards of their travels
whether by land
or sea.

i'll call you tomorrow
if you can get free.

they want her to know
when they hurt
or get sick or feel
sad,
or have come unglued.

they want her to know
when
they feel alone,
alone and blue.

it's almost as if
they have no one else
to turn to.

hardly a day goes by
without reminding her
of what's happened
in the past,
what's new.

they miss their mother.

the summer wind

I find peace
in
an apple.
a cup of good coffee.
a nap.
a good nights sleep.
a book,
a poem.
a finished job
with check in hand.
I find joy
in the little things
in life.
the smile
of an old woman.
the touch
of a friend.
the kiss from a loved
one.
a card
hand written.
the caress of
a summer wind.

lines in the sand

I draw a line
in the sand.
then move the line
another foot back.
I draw another line.
make another proclamation,
another demand.
it doesn't matter.
i'm ineffectual when it
comes to lines,
to ultimatums
and promises.
and now i'm out of sand.
out of sticks with which
to move it
in a straight line.
now I stick my head into
the sand, and hope
for the best.

what's been done

it's no good
to have enemies. to think
badly
of others,

to dismiss their lives
as road bumps
in your way to serenity,
to see them as
poison apples
afloat in your wishing
well.

it's not Christian
or even
Buddhist to
let them get under your skin.
to grind your
teeth at night
and cringe at the thought
or sight
of them.

but we do.

it's a struggle to see
the good
in everyone when you know

what's been done.

time to go home

I've been on the road
for so long now, I don't remember
where home is,
or what it's like.
my memory is vague.
who lived there?
was there a dog,
a cat,
a wife?
where did I sleep
or eat,
or write.
are my clothes still
where I left
them
some in the closet,
others tossed in the air.
shoes under the bed.
are there dishes
still in the sink.
dust must be everywhere.
the grass long.
the weeds and vines having
their way.
did I leave a light on?
the stove,
an iron?
are my neighbors wondering
where I've gone?
I imagine
the plants are dead
and the mail is stacked
up
coming through the slot
and dropped
to the floor.
I've been on the road for
so long now.
it's time to go home.

the condo board

the condo board
elections
are this Wednesday
and they need a quorum.
I sign the sheet
and mark no
on everything and
everyone.
they are storm troopers
run
amok
in the neighborhood.
towing cars,
raising the fees,
eliminating
grace periods
and fining anyone
they please.
it's the same five
people
who have nothing
better to do
than make life miserable
for their neighbors.
they run the show.
a club
of egos, an alliance
of witches.
a retired cadre
of old soldiers with pens
and forms.
don't leave your
Christmas lights
on too long. don't park
here, or there.
don't paint your door
a different color,
or hang a flag.
or place a bag of trash
too early on
the curb. you see them
walking around
daring you to break a rule,
waiting just waiting
for you to make
one wrong move.

Monday, November 12, 2018

getting ready

i hear
that Christmas is right around
the corner.
i take out
my Charlie brown tree,
my fruit cake,
my snow globe and a string
of lights.
i'm almost ready.
i clean the chimney
nail a stocking
to the mantel.
i send out some cards
from a list that grows
smaller and smaller
by the day.
it seems like yesterday
when i did this
same thing.
i wait patiently.
i look out window
into the star washed sky.
i hope as i always do
that someone
will appear.