Thursday, September 30, 2021

will they miss me when i'm gone

who hasn't leaned
over
the edge of a bridge 
when one's world
had darkened and
thought
will they miss me
when i'm gone?
if i fell, or leaped
in a heroic swan dive
to the bottom of some
abyss,
would their world stop,
or would only mine?

when you first realized it wasn't love

it was while eating
shepards  pie at Kennedy's
in New York City
when i first realized
that i didn't love her,
that i was merely
ok with her.
conversation was fine.
the love making too,
was well, okay.
but we were companions
of a holding hand sort,
each taking a turn at
flagging down a taxi.
taking pictures of one
another in front of the Met,
or under the arch
of Washington Square.
but it was the first hot
bite, when blowing on
the fork, and she had gone
to the bathroom,
that i thought, it would be
fine if she didn't come back.
again, a villainous thought,
no doubt, but true.

awaiting a wave

we save things
as if
they matter. ignoring
in our human way
that one day
the sun will burn out 
and everything
will go.
all these books,
all these poems.
the cards and letters,
the art,
the journals that we keep.
photos of you
and me.
all metal
and stone, will disappear.
everything being
just a finger dragged
in the sand
awaiting a wave
to draw near.

will i miss september

will i miss september?
most likely not.
as is true
with the month preceding it.
i have no calendar
on the wall
depicting the season
we are in.
the leaves falling,
the green of spring, 
the ocean of summer,
then of course,
the snow.
no need to tack a calendar
anymore.
i've stopped counting
days,
or years. it's unnecessary
to warn me
of what lies ahead.
i only need my window.

with hands pressed together

rarely does a night go by
when i haven't
pressed my hands together
and prayed,
but the prayers are vague
these days,
less about getting me
out of hot water,
or in finding a job, or
a girl to date.
they are different now.
i pray for others, 
that their lives will
be blessed
with a minimal amount
of pain.
its a strange turn of events,
from how i prayed,
in younger days.

how to get your way

we learn early
to cry
and whine, to make a racket
when we're hungry
or wet,
or in some sort of pain.
we learn
this in the crib,
how to get what we need,
lying in
the little cage they set
us in.
one whimper and they
come running
to see what they can
do to make us smile
again.

your so called poetry

i don't like your poetry,
she tells me
in a harsh letter,
a farewell letter
to be exact.
penned not long after
i set her things
out back.
it's not poetry at all,
she writes.
it's your life,
your daily observations,
you're no robert frost
my friend,
not even e.e. cummings,
it's a diary,
a journal. but not poetry.
and the reason i know this,
is because i read
it every day
to see what you've written
about me.

terms of endearment

as the farm girl
gives a name to the pig,
or cow,
or chicken,
the lamb or goat,
a term of endearment,
falling in love
quickly
as she feeds them,
despite the warning
by her mother,
saying best not
get too close.
do we not do the same
with our new
infatuations, 
being too quick to call
each other 
an endearing name,
perhaps baby, or honey.
or both.

the Ephesus rugs

the man leading
up to the ruins
of Ephesus was quite convincing
with his wool rugs,
and other wares.
there was a white vase
i really liked,
and a black shirt with
sequins. i touched the fabric
and asked
if it would shrink
after a cold wash.
no, he said, and if it does,
you can bring it back.
maybe on the way down,
i said, feeling guilty
for lying,
as i went up the hill
to visit the land where
St. Paul preached.

being hopeful

being hopeful,
i have traveled
great distances for a bad time,
bad food
and bad conversation.
hundreds of miles sometimes.
i have sat
and endured the hour,
as they did with me, knowing
how anxious i was
to turn the car around
and leave.
hope can be a dangerous
thing.

that's all she knows

the woman
in the coffee shop feeding
her baby
her full breast bared
with no
concern that others might
see,
the baby is hungry
and that's all she knows.

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

the nice man from medicare

i keep the Indian man
on the phone for nearly an hour,
using my crackly elderly woman voice.
i call myself sandra pinchot.
age 78,
alone, and lonely, but quite wealthy.
he wants my social
security number
and my medicare card number
in order for him
to send me
a new plastic card.
one with a gold star on it.
i'm fixing tea, and then sitting
in the garden with my imaginary
cat in my lap,
Juniper, he's a nice cat, i tell the man,
whose name he says is James.
do you have a cat, James?
if not you should get one,
they're such great company.
hardly anything ever goes
wrong with them.
i go on about my dead
husband, Clifford, but we called
him Cliff.
his golf game was stupendous,
i inform James, he could go on
and on for hours telling me about
his short game,
but his drinking did him in.
do you drink, James?
i like a little hot toddy before
bedtime, but my
martini days are way behind me.
don't get me started on those days,
thank god the internet didn't exist
back then, or those damn cell phones,
Holy Hannah, would i have been in trouble
back then.
ma'am he says, i just need you to
verify your numbers, could you
read them off your blue and white
card. you have medicare A and B
don't you?
hold on young man, let me get
my reading glasses,
they're in the other room
in my purse, my white purse,
or was it the black one?
when i come back after i find them
i want to hear a little bit about you, okay.
i've been doing all the talking here.
unfair. let's find out
what makes James tick? 

saint joan

i fall into the couch
coming home
from work
and flick on the tube.
it's a 1928 silent movie
about joan of arc.
a silent film, with
music and what sounds
like opera singing.
the close ups
are what make it work.
the tears,
the faces
in black and white,
etched onto the screen
as if by a charcoal
pencil.
it's a violent film
without special effects.
one of betrayal 
and deception. lies.
even the clergy have 
something up their long
sleeves.
and then she dies,
a martyr until the end,
going up in flames at
the age of nineteen.

the meet up group

i will
not attend anything
that requires a name tag
be put on my shirt.
don't ask me to stand up
and review my
life going backwards
to birth.
let me sit quietly and figure
out if this is worth
the effort.
is there any fun in this
for me.
what do i get out of it,
besides,
killing an hour or two
with a bunch of old people
pushing seventy.
i'm not ready for shuffle
board,
or pickleball,
or gin rummy until
someone says, i have to go
now, it's my knee.

with scissors in hands

how would i know
how that lipstick got
on my collar,
it's a surprise to me as well.
don't you trust me?
when have i ever hurt
you
or lied to you" i ask
shelly
as she holds a pair of
scissors
in her hands.
sewing today? i ask her,
maybe, she says.
it all depends.

the nearest exit heading south

i don't miss the hangover
days,
those mornings of dry
mouth
and blurred vision, 
the head drumming
with a beat that won't stop. 
losing my phone 
beneath a bed.
my pants somewhere
in this house i've never
been to. which way is the door?
will that dog
bite me on the way out?
i hate to wake her, but
i need to find the nearest
exit to the beltway
heading south.

three payments of 29.99

i try to think if i've ever
bought something because i
saw it on tv
in a late night commercial.
tempting yes, the complete
catalog of chubby
checker, or tanya tucker,
or a set of ginsu knives.
that facial cream that will
remove ten years off
your life.
i've never bought that car
wax that will protect
the metal from fire
or being keyed by an
angry girlfriend or 
ex wife. i've never picked
up and dialed the number
for a rolex watch, or a diamond
ring, only two left, call now,
or to get in touch with
a departed relative
from the great beyond.
the chat lines too,
with the scantily clad
buxom young ladies, tempting
you with wagging fingers
and coos.
but no. it hasn't come to
that quite yet.

blood on the pillow

when you wake up
and turn the light on,
and see blood
on the pillow and sheets,
you wonder where
the leak is, where
have you scratched
yourself in the middle
of a dream.
there's no knife to be
found,
no wife either, so it
must have been you.

what do you want?

with the romance phase
of the relationship over,
the sex done,
the midnight rendezvous
and the weekends
long, all gone,
you still call to stay in
touch,
believing it's a lifetime
of friendship love,
but when you say hello,
she says, who is this, what
do you want? and then
you know it's time to move on.

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

saying farewell at the bus depot

as i stand at the at the bus depot
i see a beautiful woman
in the window,
she's waving.
she blows me a kiss.
i smile and blow one back.
i blow back several kisses
as the bus pulls away.
i love you, i say out loud,
i miss you already,
come back,
then a man standing behind me 
taps me on the shoulder
and says, i think that was for me. 
who's to know, for sure,
i tell him, walking happily away.

room 100

in the dark
i make the third trip to the loo,
once known
as room 100 by a french
woman i once knew.
the radical
life change
of eating has put my
kidneys
into over drive.
how much liquid can there
be in there
on such little food.
and not just a trickle
but a stream
not unlike a racehorse at
the starting gate,
the gate being my bed
and pillow,
somewhere across the room.

it's so you

how nice of you
not to come.
not to appear here on
my doorstep.
to pay respects.
thank you for not sending
a card
or gift, or flowers.
no call, no text.
i appreciate your lack
of concern for my
well being.
it's so you.
nothing less or more
did i expect.

a new season

i miss my better 
half, sometimes.
the kind me.
the compassionate and forgiving
me.
i tire of the other side.
slinging my scythe at all
that have
have harmed me.
i miss the laughter,
the grin,
the easy going nature
that i was born with.
but to all things,
their season.
the calendar page will
turn.

hope and despair

it's a dangerous
thing,
hope.
it keeps one in a state
of anticipation,
waiting
for an answered prayer, or
for the rain
to stop.
or for love to appear. hope
is a bad thing.
it keeps you
in a place of stillness.
despair is much
better.
it makes you work
towards
getting out of it.

when the child lets go

when the child
let's go, at last, parting
the air
and road with his own
desires.
you reluctantly let go,
as your
father once did.
your mother too, but less
and less so.
no door is ever closed
with her.

a room by the sea

as you put your bag down
you study the room,
placing a few dollars into
the waiting hand
of the boy who turned
the key.
the bed is large, the blanket
smoothed out over
white sheets.
there's a mirror, a dresser.
a window
that looks out over the sea.
a chair at a small desk.
the door closes as you
turn the light off and slide
the chair over, parting the curtains.
you hear the ocean, the lapping
of waves not far off.
in the pale light of moon
you see two lovers, arm
in arm, walking slowly
through the sand.
you want to yell out to them
that you're on their side.
but you don't say a word.
it would reveal too much of
your own past, your own
diminished life.

a book left open

i remember
their houses,
grandparents
and parents.
how they lived was
in the air.
the essence of them,
their  appetites, their desires.
the old wood in 
the fireplace,
the stove unclean,
a faucet leaking,
a window cracked
to let in
the garden mint,
or snow.
the curtains
dust laden, pulled closed.
the rugs that needed
beating,
the stuffing in a sofa
exposed.
a book left open, 
with a few pages left
to go.

the tin of ashes

strange to confine
the dead
in tombs, or boxes
with a stone for a lid.
six feet under, or
in an ash filled tin
for the mantle.
how odd to save
the remains
and mark the spot,
when
they're gone forever,
not waiting
quietly for a visit,
not giving any of it,
much thought.


fire and ice

there is something
good
in fire, as there is in ice.
both
leading
in the same direction.
taking
from us
what once was strife,
both
kind necessities
when moving forward.

as the snow rises

will the snow cuff
us to the house, the couch,
the things
we choose to wile away
the hours.
will we find each other
again
when the roads
are closed and the lines
go down.
will we build a fire
to stay warm,
and lean into the love
that once was, quietly
conversing, finding
each other's heart, 
as the drifts rise up.

if i were famous

if i were famous,
well known and loved around
the world,
for these words i write,
i could at last
show how humble
and modest i am.
how giving
and charitable my heart
truly is, but no,
no such luck, alas,
my attributes are going
to waste
without fame and fortune
cast upon me.

Monday, September 27, 2021

guilty pleasures

is there one pleasure
removed
from guilt?
the slice of rich cake.
the ice
cold martini with an olive
afloat.
make it a double,
the sleep in late,
the love making.
the laziness of sunday
not going to church,
what doesn't
make you feel the pinch
of God's fingers
upon your soul?
is there anything good
that isn't bad
in this world of yours?

i'd like to remember her that way

she's old now.
and weak,
bone thin, and grey,
but
i'd like to remember her
as a young
woman.
pretty and smiling
for the camera.
i'd like to keep her that
way, fresh
in a golden frame.
never aging,
never sick
or sad, always with that look 
in her eyes.
holding in her heart
a joy that will never fade.

at last we know

we grow into ourselves.
like
our clothes, well worn,
and comfortable, at last.
the wool,
the blends, the style
and fabrics,
a pair of shoes
that suits us best.
we know who we are, at last.
and now,
we just sit back and wonder
why we worried
so much,

and laugh.

going out with a bang

i spend the afternoon raking
leaves.
pulling them
towards the middle of the yard,
my hands curled 
on the wooden handle
as i work.
yellow and brown,
red and orange.
a bouquet of sorts
piled high,
from nothing, then green,
then to this,
going out with a splash of color,
a bang of sorts
is not a bad way to cease
to exist.

let's have another round

we clink glasses
together
at the glen echo irish bar.
a small piece of Ireland
is here.
there is music.
dancing of some sort.
the clicking of heels
by red haired
girls with green eyes
and pale skin.
ruddy large men
are singing,
drinking pints of  beer with
their flat caps snug on.
we clink our glasses
and listen
as best we can as a helicopter
hovers near.
doing a water rescue
in the river,
saving a life, perhaps,
or finding one
afloat behind all reach.
we raise our
hand to the waitress
for another round, this life
being so fleet.

blue suede shoes

i don't need new shoes.
but my
feet say yes.
why not.
you haven't bought a new pair
in months.
what's up with that?
go browse,
go click, go search and find
another pair
of tie up boots,
or leather dress shoes,
or sandals,
or loafers.
let's go with a different
color this time.
the closets are full of brown
and black,
or grey.
how about blue?
maybe suede.

dolores

she was a sweet woman,
at least
when i met her,
our relationship was not very
long.
and when word reached
me of her death
at 92
it darkened my heart
more than i thought
it would.
how kind in greeting
or farewell she was,
sitting her chair,
a kiss to each cheek,
whispering gossip
about her children
and husband,
a neighbor,
that i dare not repeat
or tell.
i truly liked that side of her.
with her bird like
voice, the french
in her still there. the wry
grin.
she'll be missed.
she was a soft feather, 
now in the air.


beating the light

if the light
turns yellow before
i get there,
i don't care.
let it go amber, then red.
i'm fine
with that.
to sit there and wait. i'm
done with beating the lights,
trying to go
fast
and get ahead.
but i know it bothers
you,
which pleases me somehow.

the family portrait

we called in salvador dali
to come
in and paint our family holiday
portrait.
not rockwell.
he was too busy
with the neighbors.
but dali
captured our true nature
to a tee.
the melting clock,
the hands
dripping,
the bare branch tree.
the strange sky.
and the faces and eyes
of all of us,
staring out in fish like
wonder,
pulled from a violent sea,
not quite understanding
what this is was all about,
what anything means.

the suit of grey

we are all cowards
to some degree.
never saying what we should
say, vaguely saying what
we mean.
we rarely take the leap
from the ordinary life.
we wear the same suit of grey,
take the same route home,
take our shoes and clothes off
in the same way.
we obey the rules.
we live our days as if
there's an unlimited 
supply of time.
doing what we're told
from birth, until the final
breath is taken,
when death takes hold.

you are home

when you stop,
when you
leave the crowd.
turn off the set, put
down the phone.
when you quit, not join,
you are almost home.
when you
leave behind
everything you have
owned, when you submit
to what is,
what was and what will be,
then you are almost
home.
when you desire
less, take less,
and give more, 
wanting nothing in return,
suddenly
your old skin falls away.
and at last you have arrived,
you are home.

the black umbrella

i often think of women
in terms
of the umbrella they hold
over her head and yours
in the pouring rain.
with the click of a button,
the fabric spreads open, 
i think of pastel colors,
maybe yellow,
or sweet pink.
the comfort of blue,
a mischievous green,
the laugher of polka dots,
and then there's the black
shade of a few,
where no light gets in,
held over your life 
not to hold back the sky,
but to bring you rain.

Sunday, September 26, 2021

this is what i do

the bathtub spigot
continues on

despite the hard twist left.
even when i'm not home.

the hot water
keeps pouring out,

slowly,
but still
the breaths of steam

cloud the mirror.
i can't turn the faucet

hard enough
to put an end to it.

so i call a plumber.
it's what plumbers do.

they fix things like this.

take baths
is what i do.

down to a trickle

i tire myself
of
the near past. grown weary
of the tale.
dark thoughts
have bled me dry of my
empathy.
so i stop.
i let the thoughts go 
through my
mind
like water down the stream,
down to a trickle
soon
to a stop.

no one at the wheel

i will not pass
down
to my son what i do with
my hands.
he will not learn
this trade.
he will not climb
a ladder,
or hold a brush,
or paste a wall for
paper.
the young are not
inclined to sweat and bleed,
to hold fear
in their hands,
that the work will dry up.
they find
other ways.
each generation does,
as the plows rust
in the field,
the machines leak oil
and ships
run aground with no
one at the wheel.

p.s. i love you

when we would hand write
letters
to one another
in the previous century.
a pen in hand,
thoughtfully jotting down
our days chores,
or what transpired during
the week, with
kids and school, work
and such.
we would say how bright
the moon was last
night,
i wish you were here with me
to see it.
i miss your arms around me,
your kisses.
the sound of your voice.
we would go on and on,
rambling forward
until the end where we
would sign off with
affectionately, or with love,
or adoringly, then p.s.
i love you. as if necessary
to say so,
the preface not being enough.

the cat's eye marble

i would never
place
my favorite cat's eye marble
in the center
of the dirt drawn circle.
it was too risky,
too much of a gamble to lose
what was so important
to me.
the emerald
green inside the glass.
the perfect beauty of it,
round and smooth.
it was the one they all
wanted,
the one i kept
and still have. safe in
my drawer
with other things,
like your photograph,
and things i love best.

those that will never lack

we admire the hard worker.
the man
behind the plow,
the man on the roof,
the woman
with her hammer,
her iron,
her apron on.
the night workers.
the late shift.
the early risers.
the thirty year men.
nose to the grindstone.
standing at the factory machine.
we admire
the dirt, the crust of them.
the bloodshot eyes,
the broken fingers,
the bent backs.
we admire the over time,
the weekends,
those that push
through the heat of summer,
the ice of winter,
those that will themselves
forward, those who will
never lack.

Friday, September 24, 2021

the cliche club

i see a club, a wooden club
in the window
of a store.
it's thick and looks heavy,
made out of hardwood
i imagine,
but with a nice handle
so that one could
pick it up and swing it
with relative ease.
my curiosity sends me
into the store to ask
the proprietor what it's for.
it's a cliche club, he says.
whenever someone
says something like
have a nice day, or
money doesn't grow on trees,
or it is what it is, you
hit them over the head with it.
they're selling like hot cakes.
give me two, i tell him.
no need to wrap them up.

maybe we should wait on the flowers

Lydia is dying,
did you hear? yes, it's true.
she doesn't have long to live.
no one is sure
what it is, but it's taken its
toll on her.
i saw her at the train station
the other day.
she didn't look herself,
she smiled as best she could,
but had nothing
much to say. hello. goodbye,
that sort of thing.
it was almost like we were
never friends.
we should visit her soon,
before it's too late,
or send her flowers, or should
we just wait?

lost in space

i made up a dating profile once,
stating that i was
an astronaut.
i had been to the moon,
circled the earth a hundred
times in my capsule.
i posted pictures of me
in my space suit, standing
next to the flag
on the lunar surface.
i embellished and polished
my story.
in time i was invited
to parties, to embassies,
to the grand opening of
an apartment complex.
i made up my name. my age,
my height.
there was nothing about the profile
that resembled me
in the slightest.
but oh how i was loved
and adored.
wanted by those on Kalorama Road.
they wanted me to come
and regale them with my journeys
into space.
it didn't end well though 
when i came clean
and told them who i really was.
anger ensued, despite me
offering free estimates for 
a paint job and  a power wash too.

before the waiting bed

so how did you get here?
how did you
somehow survive
through it all and be sitting
here
with a bloody mary in hand,
how did all those days
and years go by
to bring you to this point
on a friday night.
not worse for wear,
tapping away at what you
do best.
remembering. rambling.
laughing the tears away
before a waiting bed.

the broken glass

it's just a small,
dent, a fissure in the window
from an errant stone,
but tomorrow
it will be longer,
and larger, deeper
as it crawls its way
across the glass,
making it impossible
to know the truth.
in time it will fail.
that's all it takes, really.
one small lie.
one betrayal.

the long game

i suppose i could tell you the truth,
but then it would be your turn,
and well,
we know where that would go,
don't we?
so let's just play the game.
my move, then yours.
let's sit at this table and slide
our pieces back and forth,
with no winner, just losers
spending time together until
one or the other files for divorce.

so much lifting

life is a lot of lifting
and setting
things down.
children and groceries.
boxes and bags.
weights.
carrying a loved one
across the threshold.
a pen onto a paper.
a drink,
a fork.
a book.
we raise what we need
into the air
until we're done with it,
or her
or him.
whatever the case may be,
then move on.

fish in a barrel

i remember the look in my
therapist's eyes
when she asked me if i was
worried if i'd ever
find someone else again.
if that was the reason i wouldn't
kick the nut cake out
of my house.
and i said, too quickly,
hell no. that's the least of my
worries.
you can just go online and it's
like shooting fish in a barrel.
oh my, she said, and scribbled
something down on her
yellow legal pad.
it seemed to be a turning point
of some sort.
that i was more troubled
than she realized. this could
take years.
it was a cha ching moment.
i could almost hear
her credit card being swiped
at Neiman Marcus.

the catch all drawer

i study the kitchen drawer.
the catch all
drawer.
if i ever wanted to do myself
in, all i would have
to do is stick
my arm into the disorganized
cluster of implements.
across the wrist would
go the knife.
the potato peeler.
the cheese grater
and the broken whisk,
one wire out.
it wouldn't be long before
i'd be on the floor,
grasping for the fancy napkins
that i've never
used, too nice to be set out.

tea talk

she would hide
behind
a cup of tea. her lips
lingering on the warm edge
so has not to show
her disapproval
of what you've said.
then set
the cup down.
and we'd begin again
at some new
beginning. a new
topic we could disagree on,
sparring
gently,
around and around.

The Tiffany Wedding Cake

i stop by the bakery on Lee street
to browse
the donuts, not buy,
when the little girl
behind the counter yells at me.
hey mister, she says.
aren't you the dude who ordered
a wedding cake?
you and that skinny angry woman?
it's shaped like a blue Tiffany box?
maybe, i say to her,
squeezing a bag of just baked buns
on the rack.
so hot and soft in my hand,
yummy.
well. it's ready, she says, while
maniacally chewing a wad of gum.
the cake is ready, would you
like to pay for it and take it home?
it's been sitting
in our refrigerator
for almost three years now.
it took us hours to figure out how
to make those stupid ribbons
out of icing.
she brings it out with the help of
a grumpy man in a white bakers hat,
and sets it on the counter.
it's beautiful with that Tiffany
blue color, a little stale, but
still looking good.
what the hell, i tell her.
put it in a box and i'll take it home.
it may be the only good thing
to come out of that nightmare.
do you take paypal?
and could you wheel it around
to my car?

duck fat

i buy a jar
of organic duck fat.

it's come to this.
fake sugar,

fake pasta.
zero bread.

no starch.
i'm beating a cauliflower
into submission

over the sink.
but duck fat.

we're taking this to a whole
other level.

come here rib eye
and jump in.

it was just my turn

you've been through a lot,
she says,
putting her hand on my shoulder
and letting
out a sympathetic sigh.
pffft. i say.
life.
what are you going to do?
live long enough
and your turn will come too.

get back in the saddle?

when you fall off a roof
it's hard to get
back on the ladder and go up
again.
same goes for a horse,
when it throws you
and your leg snaps in two.
you are cautious about
getting into the saddle again.
same goes
for indian food, 
as you curl yourself around
a toilet and make
vows to God that
you'll never keep
if he gets this strange meat
out of your
body.
same goes for love.
i'll spare you the details
on that one.

the village called

what we have here
is not
a failure of communication,
but something
deeper,
darker.
beyond my pay grade
or intelligence.
i don't have the education
or the patience
anymore
for such souls.
the village called and
they're missing
their fool.
please call them back,
they're worried.

the gravy train

there seems to be a lot
of older children still at home,
or living under
someone else's roof, with no
jobs, or prospects
of employment.
everyone is afraid to tell them
to get the hell out
of this house and pound
the pavement.
don't come back until you
have work.
you're 32 years old with
a college education and you sit
around all day twiddling
your thumbs and playing
video games.
but no one ever says that anymore.
people are afraid of losing
the love of their children.
instead they say.
i did your clothes, and we're
having dinner at six,
so be home by then, dear.
have a nice day while i'm
a work. if you have time, 
please try to walk the dog
at some point. thanks sweetie.

have you been outside today?

when it's nice out,
people say all day, you have
to get outside,
have you been outside today?
it's so nice out.
it's absolutely perfect.
take a walk, or do something.
it's really really nice out.
maybe talk a walk, or a bike
ride, do something, but get
out. promise me you're going
to get outside today, okay?
it makes you want a
rainy day again.

do you want to hold my baby?

when you hear from someone,
this is my baby.
and it's a dog.
a little two pound dog
with runny eyes.
run.
this is not going to go well.
the dog is wearing
a hat and a little dress.
a bracelet for a collar.
it smells like jasmine
inside it's little carry on crate.
do you want to hold my baby?
she asks.
i can take her out if you'd like.
she likes her belly patted,
but gently.
be careful, she may tinkle
when you do that.
let me take a picture of you two.

there is hell to pay

you get a vibe sometimes.
a gut feeling.
a weird spider sense tingling
that someone
you are with is possibly
crazy and a bad person deep
inside, or not so deep inside,
but on the surface too.
once you scrape off the make up
and get the rosary beads
out of their hands
you see the truth of the matter,
and as the saying goes,
the truth shall set you free, brothers
and sisters.
but you put the blinders on.
you stick with it.
this never turns out well and
suddenly you realize that
freedom is a long ways off.

the boat wedding

the last wedding i went to
was on a boat.
two women
were getting married.
the captain,
Frank was going to perform
the ceremony.
i was one of three men
on board.
the captain, the photographer,
and me.
the rest were women.
lawyers, doctors, waitresses.
some tattooed, some
wearing girly clothes,
others in leather with
rhinestones.
about fifty women
in various stages of anger
and inebriation. us men,
we stuck close together.
life vests on.
holding our plastic cutlery
close, just in case
we were attacked.
but nobody died and the wedding
went on.
food was served.
drinks were poured,
toasts were made and then
the cake.
there was dancing too as
the boat cruised up and down
the river.
of course they're divorced
now, but so it goes.
i'm still waiting on a call
about that chicken wing recipe.

Thursday, September 23, 2021

first world problems

patiently i listen
and wait,
nodding when needed
as she tells me
all her troubles.
mostly first world problems.
she tells me about
the coffee machine at work,
her parents,
her dog,
her broken nail,
shoes that are on back order,
and her ungrateful
children,
she rolls her eyes and tells me
how she can't get an
appointment to get the grey
out of her hair.
she's a month over due on
her botox treatment.
she hasn't had a massage in
over a week
and her therapist is booked
solid until Christmas.
at last it's my turn
and for the life of me
i can't think
of anything at the moment,
except that i'm dangerously low
on vodka and limes.

where are my galoshes?

we talk about
the rain
as if it's never rained before.
how the river
has crested,
the flash flooding.
the pools of standing
water
to be careful driving
through.
is the bridge out?
has the levee broken?
we look up
at the sky and squint
at the grey clouds
bursting
with even more rain.
we wipe our eyes, then
grab our umbrellas.
how will we survive
such inclement weather?
who knows, 
but coffee first.
where are my galoshes?


one hundred per cent

at a certain age
one spends more and more time
at hospitals
and funeral homes.
at the side
of freshly dug graves.
it makes you realize that
your turn is coming,
no doubt.
so far no one has gotten
out alive.
a hundred per cent,
by last count.

on little cat's feet

i still like people,
but am more wary and weary
by most.
i can tolerate
the one hour visit
at best. but often
send regrets to any
rsvp. i'd like to come
but i have so many
socks to iron.
pants to darn, things
left undone.
i need an exit, a back door
strategy
when it's time to disappear
and on little cat's feet
leave.

get out of there

some babies
don't want to come out.
the nine months are up
but they refuse to budge.
they have to pull them out
kicking and screaming.
gasping for air,
squinting their eyes 
in the new light.
their bottom slapped
to bring them to life.
i understand completely
why they hung on so tight.

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

the nine to five trap

don't quit your day
job
people say.
but i think i've quit
or been
fired
or laid off from every
day job
i've ever had, except
the one i have
now, which is me
working for me.
it's not really a job,
but it pays the bills
keeps me
in new shoes and gin.
shelter and a car.
it's paid for a few
divorces, alimony,
child care,
and an assortment of
engagement rings,
diamonds that i never got
back. (insert bitter emoji here)
but once you get over
the fence, quit
the corporate world, you
never go back.
there is another way
to live your life.
it takes courage and brains,
guts and foolishness.
but it's worth every hour
away from
the nine to five trap.

Dixie was her name

in the eighties,
yes, way back then.
i had a bartender named Dixie.
slender blonde
with blue eyes
and pig tails. she looked
like she just
came out of a fjord in Norway.
she had an ice
cold miller light in a bottle
waiting for me
on the bar
as soon as i came down
the steps at Bojangles
on M Street
in DC.
we would talk, and flirt,
but never
cross the line.
there was definitely
some pitter patter of the hearts
between us, but
her being the bartender
and me being me,
some dude off the street
drinking beer and dancing
awkwardly
to Fleetwood mac, etc.
it never went anywhere.
then she was gone.
word was that she moved
to Colorado
with some guy she met
here at the bar.
i've never recovered.

one down, begins with L

some days you feel smart,
not Einstein smart,
or Bill Gates,
but smart.
smart about the world,
life in general.
your knowledge of insects
is amazing.
if you have a question about
a butterfly,
i'll do a two hour discourse
on the subject.
and then there are other
days where you can't
get past one down on
the monday crossword
puzzle.
four letters that describe
a strong emotion between
two people that begins
with the letter L.

let's just fool around

if i knew less of you,
we'd be in love
right now.
if i didn't know about your father,
your ex husband,
your children
your financial situation,
your electro shock treatments,
and the mileage on your car,
i'd be down on one knee
with a ring.
but i know too much at this
point.
so let's just fool around.

i was going to write a poem

i was going to write
a poem
today
but instead i baked a cake.
a chocolate
cake, with cream cheese
icing
and sprinkles.
two layers.
i set it on the sill to 
cool down.
everyone will like this cake.
which is better
than a poem,
a poem that not everyone
will like and want
a copy to carry home.

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

who will kill the spider?

who will kill the spider?
a black bean
with slender legs,
crawling beneath the couch.
who will fetch
the spray
or broom, or a long stick
handy.
perhaps a cane
or crutch will do.
how about that shoe?
or should we let her live
and go about
her way, spinning her
strong and sticky web
for catching flies, or
or other such prey.

Lilly is Fine

the missing cat
appears
from beneath a car.
black and shaggy,
but not worse
for wear.
she's been gone for over a week.
i take out the flyer
and call the owner.
i leave a message.
Lilly is here, i tell her.
she's sitting on my porch,
lying in the sun.
she just licked up
a small dish of cream.
we may go to the park 
together.
or for a ride to the pet
store
to get some treats.
just wanted to let you know.
Lilly is fine.

mid century modern

i admit it.
i have no bling.
no rings
no bracelet, no watch.
no necklace
with a cross.
no earring
that dangles from my
ear.
nothing in my nose,
no piercings,
no tattoos above
or below
my clothes. i'm
as mid century modern
as one can get.
vanilla through
and through.
going out, pretty much
the way i came in.
just thought
you should know.

life is too long

you see them in line,
online,
on the phone,
at the complaint window.
they have
never been happy, not
a single day
in their life has brought
joy, just
dismay.
nothing is right.
everything is wrong.
everything is mailed
back
or returned to a store.
for some
life is too short,
while for others, and those
around them
it's way too long.

you wonder why we drink

he's angry.
on the phone, a disgruntled
man.
the husband
making the call,
sight unseen while
doing the job.
but being the man,
being
who he is, he wants
to lodge a complaint.
flex his muscles.
you put a gouge in my wall.
(an impossibility, since
i was never near that wall)
there is paste
on the floor,
my wife had to take a sponge
and clean it.
it took her nearly
ten seconds of her precious day.
we see a bubble in the paper.
(it takes three days to dry, i tell him)
but still,
we're appalled at your work
and lack
of professionalism.
we're you in a hurry.
giving us the bums rush?
i tell him, no. but i'm sorry
about the dollop of paste.
i'll stop by. i'll be there
in ten minutes
to alleviate
your issues. fix the problem.
i'll even give you your money
back if that pleases you.
i'll even give you extra money if you
promise to never call me again.
no, no.
we just wanted to complain
and let you know how
unhappy we are.
we may have more work
done in the future though,
so we'll be giving you a call.
have a nice day. good bye.


local fear

the next door neighborhood
forum
is skittish.
nervous.
there's a strange van riding
around,
white with two men
inside.
someone twisted the knob
on my door last night.
i saw footprints
in my vegetable garden.
did you see the fox
in the street, when you see
one, you know there's
more around.
a snake came up my drain
pipe. left a skin
inside my sump pump.
it's local fear, not fit for
the national news.
but we just thought you
wanted to know.

who needs them

i hear them talking
around
the table.
i'm in earshot,
eavesdropping on
their conversation.
five women
in their fifties, a few
older.
healthy and attractive
women
surrounded by shopping bags.
the topic is men.
how for the most part
they are done with men.
done with dating,
done with sex.
done with the drama
of love.
carefully, i get up and
walk away.
somewhat saddened,
but understanding
where they're coming
from.

some years are like that too

some days
are just days. nothing
good
nothing bad has come
of it.
a 45 degree day.
neither memorable
or noteworthy.
a day looked back upon
with wonder.
what happened
that day?
where did i eat, or go,
who was i with?
how did i fill the hours
that day.
some years are like
that too.

Monday, September 20, 2021

well mannered

i don't trust
people who smile too much,
who laugh too loud,
who wear
too much perfume or
cologne.
if they are too well mannered
and wear the finest clothes
i don't trust their words.
i feel like there's
something wrong.
there's a glitch in the system.
they're up to something,
beware.
my gut has told me so.

what was it like?

someone asked me
once,
so what was it like being married.
having someone cook,
someone there
to help clean
and wash the clothes.
a loving soul
who hugged you when
you came home?
listening to your woes.
i bend over laughing.
what world are you living in.
it was opposite
for me.
obviously you've never
met any of the wives i chose.

rarely is parting sweet sorrow

when we part
at times,
though rare,
we often say it was a bitter
sweet goodbye,
a reluctant farewell.
no hard
feelings my dear, 
but it's best we
go our separate ways,
parting being
sweet sorrow.
in truth though
it seldom goes that way
and instead
a door gets slammed
behind a set
of angry words,
and a fire
burns with everything
left behind.
sweet sorrow?
hardly.

going old school

you get into a contest
up at the coffee shop.
each of you going old school
then older school
then older.
someone mentions
the milk man,
how he brought bottles
of milk to the door,
but he's topped by the guy
who milked cows
in his barn,
which is trumped
by the woman
who made cheese out of
goat milk.
someone shouts out the name
Eisenhower.
suddenly we're off track.
but hey, we're old.

just lie there for awhile

it's not how you fall
but how
you get up,
he tells me, putting his
hand on my
shoulder.
but sometimes, i tell him,
you just want to lie
there for awhile
and stare up at the sky.
look at the clouds,
relax and absorb
the moment,
let the pain sink in.
know it
and remember it for the lesson
it will bring.

the prom queen and the physics teacher

no one was surprised
when the high school physics
teacher
married the prom queen.
he was young and handsome,
a hipster of sorts.
she was younger, but so what.
they found
true love
in the teacher's lounge
after school.
homework and extra credit,
no doubt.
i wonder sometimes what
became of them.
did it last.
did they have children or
was it just a fantasy
they both fulfilled.
did he continue to teach her
physics as the years
rolled by?
can she still fit into her prom
dress?

update your resume

before she leaves
to be on her
own once more,
having worn out her welcome,
i see a note
on the table, a list.
numbered.
in block print.
rent
groceries
insurance
the phone bill
gas
and utilities,
car payment and
miscellaneous.
beside each word
is a number
then at the bottom
the sum
total of her future monthly
expenses.

below that a reminder.
to update her resume,
and get a job.

and in parenthesis,

(call an ex husband for
possible free room and board)

nearly always grey

some people are different,
odd
and quirky, but in a good way.
they think
with both sides
of the brain,
smart and creative, you
never know what they might do,
or say,
while others.
never change. predictable,
colorless, and numbed
by the world, nearly always
grey.

the admiral

i see the admiral
in safeway
picking up a can of black olives
pitted,
studying the label for sodium.
his pants are baggy,
his shirt untucked
and stained.
he sees me,
but says nothing.
i remember him
in his navy whites,  young
and strong,
saluting the flag while
on a ship in Spain.

finding bottom

each rise and fall
of generations
thinks the same, when
we're gone
the world will fall to pieces.
things will never
be as good then
as they are now
or were yesterday.
and it does seem like
a downward spiral
that we're on.
can bottom be far off?

Sunday, September 19, 2021

this feels like home

there are places
that feel like home that aren't
home.
it could be a lake,
a path
in the woods.
a seat at a bar.
it could be nothing but a
song
in your head,
a piece of art.
the smell of hot stew 
on a cold
day.
your feet in the sand
as a sun sets.
it could be a smile
from a stranger,
it could be so many things
that you pay
little mind too,
but to you they feel like home.

which side of the bed

there's a hero
side to you, 
a fun and friendly side,
but to be
honest.
a dark side too.
you hate and love people
all in the same day,
depending
upon which side of the bed
you woke up on,
and with who.
coffee seems to help,
but not so much when
caught in
the rain
and the sky is an awful
grey,
or an ominous 
shade of blue.

what next?

as the amazon
driver
carries the small box
to my door,
holding a food scale
so that i can weigh
coffee beans,
he shakes his
head at me and says.
you have to stop.
we're here everyday
with another package.
a spiralizer, a toaster,
a strainer
another cookbook.
what next?

a new way to live

it takes courage
to walk away.
to leave a job, a place
where you don't belong.
it's a brave
thing you do when you cast
aside
friends that aren't friends,
lovers
who don't love.
it takes muscle.
it takes guts.
it takes all of the above
to close the door
and face
yourself in the mirror,
alone,
finding a new way to live
in this world.

everything is fine

you imagine the small
bump,
or rash
or ache
is just the very beginning
of things
going down
a dark path.
the x-ray may just be
the proof that
you need, telling you that
the end is near. your 
heart tells you.
to get your papers in order.
there's not
much time in the hour
glass
say your goodbyes
to those you
hold dear.
and then suddenly.
everything is fine.

a room with a view

we all want a room with view.
the honeymoon suite.
the seat by the window.
we want the good table,
a clear shot of the sea.
we want prompt service 
and a piece of chocolate
on our pillow.
we want to be on the A list,
to be recognized when we
arrive, we want the tip of
the hat, the polite hello.
we've missed you, and
the hug and kiss when it's
time to say good bye.

the fisherman

he tells me about the day
he had fishing out on his boat.
what a fight one fish
put up, he said,  as he reeled it in.
he smiled proudly as he
described the epic battle
in embellished detail.
he was a large man with a beard.
strong as an ox.
the fish was two pounds
and had a hook lodged into
his stiffened lips.
i said nothing, as he showed
me the limp fish in his
cooler, opened eyed and 
cold lying next to a can of beer.
are you going to eat it,
or hang it on a wall? i asked him.

pick you up at eight

when i see the man
outside
wiping down
his new truck, the size
of a small mountain,
i see me
when i was younger.
me with a bucket of suds,
rags,
and brushes.
windex for the windows.
towels to dry.
the radio on.
getting ready
for that nights date
as i made my ride shine.

vanilla sex

she told me once,
with our faux marriage
in shambles,
full of lies and deception,
as we lay in bed after
going through the motions 
of vanilla sex,
that i seemed
more relaxed,
less tense
afterwards.
not as full of anxiety
and fear
as i had been since
the day i met her.
i looked at her and said,
you're very observant
aren't you?
well, maybe in a month
or two
well do it again,
she said with a smile.

why worry about money

i seem to have a knack
of getting involved
with women
who have no mathematical
skills.
no financial
understanding.
neither holding jobs.
money was water to them,
credit cards
maxed to the roof.
always in debt
and yet wearing the finest
clothes
and eating the best foods.
the nordstrom shoe salesman
knew them both
by name.
why worry about money,
one would ask,
you'll just paint more houses.

corn bread

she staked her claim
her reputation
her legacy
on corn bread.
just that.
buttery and sweet,
it crumbled gently
off your lips.
you could hardly wait
to take the next warm bite.
a secret recipe passed
down from
one grandmother
to the next.
it's what she brought
to every holiday gathering.
every birthday,
every celebration
and to everyone's
joy, she baked
a tray
just it time for her
own funeral.

what love is

love is 
allowing someone
into your life
who has the power
to destroy you,
and trusting 
that they don't.


the red flags

if you don't love your self,
truly love
who you are,
and who you've always been
you'll let the bums
in.
they'll burn the house
to the ground.
destroy you.
be aware of the red flags,
the gut
feeling.
they're never wrong.

sunday night

cords are cut.
ties
severed.
doors are bolted
and blocked.
the phone tossed.
you're in the for the night.
not going
anywhere
and no one is coming in.
enough
for one week.
enough.
you put a chicken in the oven,
and sit back
and wait.

Saturday, September 18, 2021

the mountain hike

i go on a ten mile hike
up the mountain.
i've been told the view
is life changing, but
after about a half mile,
i stop and sit on a rock.
i take my shoes off and rub
my feet.
i see a blister coming on.
i'm thirsty and i have to pee.
i look up the steep hill
as couples pass me by.
boy scout troops and 
old people with walkers.
they all seem so
happy with their hiking
boots and hiking sticks,
their hiking clothes
and binoculars.
i look back down to where
my car is parked. i can
see it. i think i can make
it back down if i go slowly.

the cheese

is it luck,
is it fate or destiny?
is God up there rolling the dice
despite what that
wild haired
Einstein said?
are we in some mad game,
mice in a maze
trying desperately
to get to the cheese.
the cheese being
wealth
or love, or contentment
found in some
purchase.
do we ever stop and say,
enough,
i'm done with this charade.
i think it's time i
stop the madness and truly
go my own
way?

up and at em

there are some mornings
you wake up
and you're full of energy,
full of yourself.
you throw clean sheets onto
the bed.
put another load into
the washer.
you vacuum and dust.
the radio goes on,
you pull a window up
to let in a breeze.
you start looking at recipes
for dinner tonight.
you make a few calls on
the phone as you wait
for the coffee to boil.
then it hits you. you have
become your mother.

a rat's butt

as i sit
on the darkened steps
near the water
alone
with my thoughts, is
there any other way to be
with one's thoughts,
than alone?
anyway.
a security guard approaches
and asks me if i live
here.
here, i say to him.
on the dock, the pier?
is this my home?
look wise guy.
we don't want any trouble.
have you been
drinking?
it's three in the morning, why
don't you go on
home to your wife.
she's probably wondering
where you are.
i doubt that, i tell him.
i doubt all three give a
rat's butt
where i am today.
and the feeling is mutual.
then i lie back down
to look at the moon
as he radios in for back up.

what am i doing here

i feel myself
getting bored and suddenly
tired
as she talks
about things i have no interest in.
we have nothing
in common and never will.
my mind
wanders,
my eyes drift to a dark
haired woman
sitting across the room.
she seems much more interesting.
i sip my drink,
i nod yes without
thinking
as i look at my curved 
reflection in an unused spoon.
what am i doing here?
i should leave money
on the table
and walk out, but i don't.
i stick it out.
like a soldier in some vague
war
i don't believe in.

Friday, September 17, 2021

he's one of us

if i see grease
beneath his nails,
a raw knuckle,
a scar or fresh cuts along
his arm
or cheek,
i know he's one of us.
the slow
walk,
the bend of body,
the bloodshot eyes,
and look
of drink, the gaze.
i know about this.
about
the hours, his nights.
his days.
when i see the pail
next to his folded legs
as he sits
on his porch smoking.
his wife
at the door with her arms
folded,
warming a cold dinner.
i know about this,
i know
he's one of us.

her long black boots

she had these boots.
have i told you about her boots?
stop me
if i have.
but they went way past her knees,
they were almost
pants in fact.
black and shiny, soft leather.
buttery would be the word
i use.
i remember them.
but most everything else
about her
escapes me.

reading in the quiet yard

when young,
you couldn't wait to get out
of the house.
to leave and go where there
might be fun.
music and dancing.
where love might be found.
where friends are.
adventure is what you wanted.
excitement.
you desired new things.
new thoughts, new views on
the world.
but that was then
and this is now,
as you open a book
and sit calmly on a saturday
night, reading
in the quiet yard.

no forwarding address

how will you leave.
will you pack,
will you do what needs
to be done.
inform the post office,
obtain a forwarding address.
will you tell others
of your new
location, your new number,
if there is one.
or will you just
go quietly in your sleep
after a good meal,
a nice walk, a smile
on your face with
a childhood dream.

never to be known, or read

some poetry is not meant
to be written, or at least not shown
to the general public.
there is too much blood
on the page.
how dare you say what you
really mean to say.
save your personal grief
and grievances
for therapy.
better to stuff them beneath
the mattress,
under the bed ala
Emily Dickinson.
or not seen at all, tossed
into the fire, never to be
known, or read.

with fond wonder

with friends, true friends,
mind you,
there is the gentle rub of 
prying,
the jab and push
of humor.
there is the sweet unsaidness
of affection.
long bought,
and still savored upon
each less
and less visit, as you both
grow older
into your slowing lives.
how easy it is to touch.
to smile
to gaze into each other's
eyes
with fond wonder.

Thursday, September 16, 2021

the perfect shot

the best shot,
or pass,
or swing of the bat
were the ones not thought
about.
not a single technique
was in
your brain,
no coaching tip,
no voices telling you
what to do. no crowd,
or father in your ear.
you were unconscious
and in the moment.
it was just natural.
the mind and body
as one
doing what it was meant
to do.
and so it goes with this.

the christmas wish

i remember the last
christmas
i was with her. leaving
the house
of darkness. the tree unlit.
no stockings
hung.
no fire, no gifts beneath
the tree.
no christmas meal in the oven.
the gig was up.
everyday was misery.
full of lies and deceit.
infidelity.
and yet, there she was.
still there, still with me.
i remember leaving the 
house that day,
and driving, driving.
it was raining.
i circled my life.
going around and around.
i must have driven five hundred
miles that day,
and still couldn't get
far enough away.
i'd never been so empty
and lost,
so duped.
so angry with myself
for letting such a despicable 
person
into my life.
i stayed out until it was
no longer
christmas, then went home
hoping she was gone.
which she wasn't.

what happened and why

it's funny how the new
pair of shoes
become your favorites.
you go everywhere
with them.
while the others
stay home, slid
beneath the bed, into closets.
left in the laundry room
to sulk
and sigh, wondering what
happened,
and why.

sloe gin remorse

the first time
i got drunk, 
and then sick,
i was maybe
seventeen years old,
hair down to my shoulders,
in love with
vivian mysior, the captain
of the cheerleaders.
she didn't love me though,
thus the over serving
of myself
of sloe gin.
a pint bottle did the trick.
we were on the ball field
late at night with
friends i'd seldom see again,
sitting on the stands.
i remember the world
suddenly spinning,
the stars above me bright
clusters, like clumps
of lights, it was a new world,
a painful world of bad
choices,
one i would repeat over
and over again,
and try to understand.

more water this time

i step away from the pot
steaming
vegetables.
and walk away for awhile.
the water turns to vapor,
then nothing
but a bone
dry bottom burning,
all of it gone brown.
i smell it from the other
room
which makes me put down
my new book,
The Stranger,
and i start over.
but this time with more
water.
lesson learned.

creating love out of thin air

like a sculptor
or artist, or writer,
our imagination runs wild
sometimes.
we believe
in what we want to see,
not in what is.
the block of stone,
the blank canvas,
the unwritten page
are full of hopeful possibilities,
but the trouble begins
when it comes
to wanting love
when there is none
in front of you, 
just nothing.

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

math class

there was something
satisfying
about math class.
there was always
an answer, and a way
of getting to it.
the chalk on the  board,
the slide
rule.
the equations
all made sense.
it may have been the last
time you were ever
so assured about 
the complex world
in front of you.

you must love dogs

she liked dogs.
dogs liked her.
people not so much.
and when they died,
the dogs,
she'd carry their ashes
and dust in small wooden
boxes with their
names on the lids.
but people were a
problem.
there was no unconditional
with them
which made for a long
and difficult life.
it was so hard to put
them on a leash
and keep them from
running away.

how to be famous

it seems these
days
that to be famous
is easy.
the larger your derriere is
the bigger
the paycheck.
talent is unnecessary,
as are brains,
or cleverness.
just boobs.
one song.
one movie,
one brief marriage
to someone in the news
and away you go
down the red carpet.

let me taste that

there's something wrong
with the thin people
reaching over the table
with a fork
and taking something off
of your plate
without so much as a polite,
do you mind?
they've usually ordered
salmon
and asparagus,
no bread, no butter,
no salt or sugar.
if you wanted the fried chicken.
get the chicken.
if you wanted what i'm
drinking, get that too.
they are quick to spoon
into your dessert.
before the waiter sets it
down. you see that look
in their eyes, and hear
the gurgle in their hungry
stomachs.
they can't wait to get home
where they can actually
eat behind closed doors.

low hanging fruit

do we shake the tree
to free
the fruit,
take a stick and swing,
do we reach up
to grab what's hanging low,
and say,
this will have to do.
i don't have time to climb
and get
what's best for me.

i can't remember

i wonder where
this  bruise came from.
what door did i collide with,
what wall
or ladder
did i bump into.
who was she that
hit me hard?
it's a patch of blue, turning
green.
it's sore.
i touch it and shake my head.
i should remember where
this pain
came from, but i don't.
perhaps, that's best.
i'll be more cautious now
to avoid more.

take a long look

you have to careful who
you let in the door
these days.
don't trust pretty,
or be swayed by a soft voice.
take a long look out the peep
hole, before
you turn the lock,
and crack it open.
be ready, with the club
and sword,
you keep in the corner.

we know what we like

we are creatures
of habit.
the morning cup,
the side we sleep on.
the way we sit
on the sofa when no one
is around.
the way we linger
in the tub,
how we cook our eggs,
stir our
drinks.
how we listen to 
the same
songs,
or go to the same show
or movie.
how many times have
you read
that same book of poems?
we know what we like
and stick to it.

staying in the dark

not everyone has a light on.
some stay in the dark
forever, never
lighting a candle,
let alone flicking the switch
on a small lamp
on the table.
it's easier not to know,
to not move forward
and out of the cave
of their own misfortune,
their own delusions
of who they are and what
the world might be.

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

be angry with me

i like when people are mad
at me.

finally, some honesty.
you know where you stand

with them.
anger pulls back the curtain,

opens the mouth
to what one really thinks.

be angry with me, it's fine.
we don't have

enough time
or days left to pretend

who we aren't.

three times a day

i tell
her to put some clothes on.

you're naked
as a jaybird, i tell her.

she says that all birds
are naked.

not really, i answer.
they have feathers.

don't you like me with
my clothes off?

of course i do.
i also like cake, but

i can't have it three
times a day.

getting the green light

we are all waiting
for the green light 
so that
we can go.
the caution yellow
is just not
good enough.
we need the green light
for the next job,
the next kiss,
the next love to press
yes, so that we can
move forward and
get on down the road.

coin into the fountain

we wish.
we toss coins into the well.
we close our eyes
when we see a shooting
star
and wish some more.
for luck we rub
the rabbit's tail.
we drop to our knees
and pray
for mercy.
if life was really that easy
and magical
there wouldn't
be a hell.

the lamp won't work

the light wobbles,
there's a loose wire somewhere
in the lamp.
i could take it apart,
read the diagram,
you tube it,
and go at it to make
things right.
but i'm tired of doing that
for everything
and person
that i come across that's
broken.
trash
is what it is.
begone.

Monday, September 13, 2021

sleep like no one's watching

live long enough
and this will happen.
you will join the masses
in all things.
there is no other way.
if you have a heart it
will be broken.
if you have a body,
it will crumble in the end.
pray that the mind
stays sharp,
the rest is inevitable.
so what is the answer?
live a good life.
an honest life. as
best you can,
don't get hurt and don't
hurt anyone.
sleep and live,
like no one's watching.

if i was younger

if i was younger.
i'd try
harder to be in love with you.
i'd bring you flowers,
chocolates,
i'd write you poems.
give you gifts.
i would call you and
we'd have long
talks on the phone, 
we'd lie in bed for hours
after making love
and share
what we thought of
the world.
if i was younger, i'd
even miss you
when you were gone,
i'd do all these things for you,
and more,
but i don't,
and i'm sorry.

five easy pieces

i saw
the movie when i was
17
in a crowded theater
in georgetown.
i don't remember
the name of the girl i
was with.
a cousin of a friend
of mine,
someone i would
never see again.
but the ending of
the movie
has stuck with me through
all these years.
i have felt that way
many times,
wanting to just go,
to let go,
to leave everything
behind
and start over.

the dull tip

there are days
when
the point is sharp,
when the words flow,
the pencil
moves easily across
the page,
and then there are
other days
when the dulled
tip, is round
and fat,
the lead resistant
to all the words
i want
and need to say.
it's then that i turn
to the red
soft saving grace,
of an eraser.

i can't keep a secret

i have a hard time
keeping
secrets, so please don't
tell me anything.
whatever you tell me
will not go into the vault,
but will be spilled
all over main
street.
i may write it in the sky.
so whatever you're
leaning over
to whisper into my ear,
it's best you just keep it
to yourself
unless you want the whole
world to hear.

the first time

the first time
is usually the best time.
the first
time you taste chocolate,
or bite
into stew that your
mother made,
the lick of an ice cream 
cone.
the swallow of a sweet
drink.
the first time,
is the best.
the first kiss. the first
love who steals
your heart.
the first time,
whatever follows, 
seems less.

Sunday, September 12, 2021

where's my shovel?

we  talk about moving my
mother
into another grave.
perhaps one closer,
one beneath a shady tree
with a headstone
and a metal bench
for us to visit, and say
what's on our minds.
let's dig her up, he says.
maybe cremate her, put
her ashes in a jar, one
for each of us.
something for the mantle.
oh, how she must be bent
over in laughter, 
at the thought of it all.

out of mind

you go from switch to switch,
button
to dial
to knob.
off, off, off.
let the cacophony of noise
subside.
let the voices die.
don't preach to me anymore,
i know
enough already.
don't tell what to feel,
or who to vote for,
don't sway me with your
detergents
and pizza.
leave me be without intrusion.
get out of mind.
there's not enough
room for all of you.
just one will do,
and that would be mine.

and then there's us

we make a game of it
as we sit
in the dark bar, drinking our
gin and tonics.
the music is loud, the bartender
quick to fill
our empty glasses.
she whispers into my ear
and says what about them,
or her,
or him. that couple over there.
and i tell her,
he's russian, and she's going
to marry him
to keep him here,
but it won't last.
the young girl alone,
has run away from home,
see the bag next to her stool,
she has nowhere to go.
the couple
at the end of the bar
are too much in love
to even notice
that anyone else is here.
at some point
they'll come up for air
and eat their food gone cold.
the unshaven boys, almost
men, are looking for a good
time, but scared
of the blonde sitting perfectly
alone, pulling at the strands
of her long hair.
admiring her fading
beauty in the mirror.
they draw straws to see who will
ask her her name,
and see where it goes
from there.
and then there's us.

the stolen apple

to steal an apple
is a sin,
a small sin, especially if one
is hungry,
one easily forgiven
and forgotten.
but what about a thought
a phrase,
an idea snatched
from someone else's
book, or mouth,
or page.
is that too forgiven?
i hope so, because if not
i'm going to hell
on a speed pass.

Saturday, September 11, 2021

the last party

leave your politics
at the door,
your religion too.
leave your dietary 
restrictions, your sober
ways, your
celibacy.
leave it all at the door.
i won't allow it in here.
not tonight, tonight
we are going
to be human, to lie
to one another
and tell the truth,
we're going
to make love, to become
friends, to disagree
and argue
and then make up.
we'll play music and dance.
we're going to eat until
we're full.
drink until the last bottle
is dry. we'll
laugh until our eyes tear up.
we're going to be young
again tonight,
we're far from being through.

loneliness

you see the loneliness 
in their eyes.
in the way they walk
towards home.
you see it in their faces
as the bus goes
by. 
fatigue
in the smear of windows
behind the cold fall
of rain.
you see it in men at bars,
nursing drinks
until three a.m., in the women
with their children
pushing forward.
you see the loneliness
in the teachers, the long day.
the traffic cop.
the whores in lipstick
walking
the plank each night.
you see it the salesman,
the maids,
the shopkeepers, the priests
in black.
each one alone,
in the end.
you see it in each 
and everyone,
and in your own face as
you stand before the mirror.

don't put a poem to music

don't put a poem to music.
don't drape yourself
in black and adjust the lights.
don't make yourself the center
of attention.
let the words suffice.
don't use your poetry voice.
don't dance, don't be a clown.
don't mourn
the loss in tears, in shouts,
in groans.
simply write it down.
use words that people understand.
no need to rhyme, no need
to use mythology or ancient
history. be accessible, not
an unsolvable puzzle.
don't write something that will
make people stop reading.
but if you do, don't stop.
to hell with them. it's your
life, your blank sheet of paper,
your heart, your pen.

could this be home

when you pass through small towns
heading west
past winchester and beyond
you wonder, not out loud,
so as not to worry your passenger,
but you wonder
if you could live there.
could you be happy in this place.
with its one main road,
the general store,
a barber shop, a cafe,
all with windows
gleaming in the morning light.
and there in the fields are horses.
there are weather vanes, rusted
and pointing on the peaks
of barns, there is tall grass
and playgrounds,
a clapboard church,
a school house.
could you live here, could this
be home.
you'll never know.

confrontation

i can discuss
or debate, or make my thoughts
known,
but i don't want to fight with you,
especially when
you're wrong.
you go your way and i'll
go mine.
let's not quarrel
any longer, why waste our
time.

august days

some days are longer
than others.
they drag out
like the last days in august.
full of heat
and sighs,
afternoon rains.
some
are brief moments in time.
all of the hours
rushing by.
a carousel spinning, 
we need  both i think
in order to survive.

punching in

i had a job once,
actually several jobs,
manual labor,
blue collar, brown collar,
sweaty dirty collar
jobs.
each one had a time clock
where you slid
your card into the slot
and it stamped
the date
and time that you checked in.
at the end of the day
you did the same thing.
it's been decades, but i can
still hear the thump of that machine,
the man
keeping track of me,
as i made a few
more dollars to press on
and stave off hunger.

i want my cup back

a month ago,
my neighbor knocks on the door.
he wants to borrow
a cup of extra virgin olive oil.
i don't even know his name,
or his wife's name.
who are these people?
i hear the dog barking,
the baby crying, but i never
get a hi from them.
now they want olive oil.
i shrug and say why not.
i'm really trying to be a good
neighbor lately.
wait here i tell him then go
get a cup of olive oil.
that was a month ago.
i want my cup back.

where we go to die

i think about moving to Florida.
all that sunshine.
all those oranges
all those women strolling the beach
in bikinis.
and then i think of the four
or five people that i know
that have moved there, all of them
dead now.
so maybe i'll hold off on making
plans to move to Boca Raton,
or Tampa.
give it another year or two in
the snow, and then maybe.

what's next

i buy a bag full of nutrional
yeast
on amazon
and two bottles of Dano's
seasoning.
i never heard of either until
yesterday
when looking at another
endless stream of keto videos.
i'm a sucker for whatever's next.
and that's why i'm dating you.

let it grow

i'm done with pulling weeds.
let them
do whatever they want.
at least they're green
and filling the yard.
whatever is on the outside
of the fence is now
inside. i'm letting God
be my gardener, and while
He's at it, he can take another
shot at my life.

Friday, September 10, 2021

taking the low road

have you been faithful?
when it comes to love,
the answer would be yes.
when it comes to uncertainty,
no.
perhaps we're all this way.
defining our morality
as we go.
justifying guilt
and  taking
the low road.

the next blank page

put the bag of ifs down.
the boxes of maybe.
erase the question marks
and replace them with periods.
move on
to the next sentence, the next
page.
stop trying to rewrite and correct
the last day.
go on.
dip your pen into the ink
and proceed to have a future,
write it clearly on
the next blank page.

over night

you wake up
with the taste of last night in your mouth.
the salt of love,
the spice
of lust.
the overindulgence
of her body.
she's asleep,
in dream. but not far.
not too far
that you aren't imagining
things.
this is real.
you can smell her soul.
her skin.
the perfume on the pillow.
you could
wake her if you chose to do so.
you could reach over
and touch her arm,
or whisper into her ear
that you're leaving now,
but that would ruin everything
it's better this way.
to slip out.
to glide back into your life
without her
and see what happens next.

the funeral buffet

someone once said
to me at a funeral, well. it is what it is.
i looked at him
and said, what?
what does that mean?
and he says, you know,
it is.
what it is.
no, i said, i don't get it.
what is,
what is what it is.
that's the stupidest phrase
i've ever heard in my life.
this person just died.
people are grieving, crying,
beside themselves
and that's the best you can do
is say that inane
nonsense.
you don't have the intelligence,
the articulation
to express some sort
of sadness, or sorrow
for a human life leaving
this planet forever?
nope.
that's all i got, he said.
you know? it just is what it is.
come on.
everyone says it. hey,
are you going to the buffet
dinner after the service?
i heard they have lobster
and water chestnuts wrapped
in maple bacon.

i start my day with a smoothie

what's wrong, she asks
on the phone, you sound so tired.
i am i tell her.
very tired, but there's more.
what?  she says.
what else?
i'm kind of bitter too
and holding in a lot of anger
and resentment.
i've been having ruminations
about the witch
i was married to for a short while.
oh, my she says.
drinking her strawberry smoothie.
i hear the slurping of her
straw at the bottom of her glass.
have you tried yoga
and meditation?
it works for me.
no. i tell her. it's been mostly
gin and tonics.
slice of lime.
i see, she says. well for me,
every morning, i go outside
and get into the lotus
position and thank the world,
the universe
for all that it's giving me.
i get in touch with nature
and my inner child.
i pray to that higher power,
that some call God, or whatever
and make my peace
with Him, or Her, or
whatever
and then i start my day,
making an organic smoothie
with whatever fruit is in season.
you're making me
even more depressed, i tell her.
gotta go. namaste.