Saturday, December 31, 2022

got that over with

i do a mass
happy
new year emoji,
gif,
texting thingy.
fireworks, etc.
with party
noises,
to three hundred
close
friends.
whew.
that's done.
at least for now,
but it's only forty-five
days or so
until valentine's day.
it never
ends.

beef liver for dinner

i keep reading 
and watching informative
videos
about how good liver
is for you.
packed with vital nutrients
for better health.
the French call it foie gras,
for duck
or goose liver,
but what do they know?
so i buy some beef liver
instead,
a bloody
pack at the grocery store.
a dollar ninety-nine.
it's about the size and shape
of a deflated
football,
but solid red, almost blue.
boneless of course.
after draining the blood
off,
i toss the slab
into a frying pan
with melted butter.
i'm gagging already.
wincing
as the organ meat fries up,
throwing a grey unfamiliar odor
into the air.
what was i thinking.
should i add some
onions, garlic, season it?
finally it's cooked, i think.
so i slide
the mess onto a plate
and cut off a small piece.
i grimace and put it in my
mouth,
slowly i chew.
then i think, i'm eating 
a cow's liver.
i've crossed some line in the sand
that i might not
be able to go back to.
animal organs.
what's next, hearts,
kidneys,
lungs? bladders?
i can't spit it out fast enough
into the sink,
then turn on the garbage
disposal.
i rinse my mouth out with
water, gargling
as much of that liver taste away
as i can,
then quickly floss
my teeth, after a thorough
brushing.
finally after
settling down, with my hands
no longer trembling,
i go back to the fridge.
how about scrambled eggs
tonight and bacon?

the gypsy souls

they move,
they travel, they have
no home,
no roots,
they never stay in
one place
too long,
or fall in love forever.
it's all
temporary.
what's great today
is gone
tomorrow.
you've known them
all along.
they've always
been this way. 
unsettled,
unsure of what to do
with their lives,
where to go.
who to be with,
where to land.
what's next?

that went by fast

who likes
the ticking clock,
the loud
strike
of hands
within the machinery.
it never stops,
does it?
always, tick tick tick.
relentless
as the hands continue
to swing around
to another hour,
in another day.
there is no rest for
the clock.
there's little
rest for us either,
as we flip
the calendar page.

give me five hail marys

my last formal
confession
was a few years ago
in Father Smith's office
over at St. Bartholomew's.
it was a nice
office with statues and pictures
of holy figures
scattered about, 
and on one wall
a black and white photograph
of the 1950
New York Yankees,
autographed by
all the players.
as i knelt on the plush
blue rug,
praying and confessing,
i squinted up
at Yoki Berra's signature
under his grinning face.
he wasn't a great
player, but he was
funny. durable, lovable.
a team player,
which makes up for a lot
shortcomings.
finally i finished my list
of sins,
your basic, lust, anger,
jealousy,  a dab of envy,
here and there, etc.
i looked over at Father Smith,
who was now staring at me.
that's it, he says. that's all
you got?
no other sins you want to
confess to? are you sure?
you know it's an even bigger
sin if you're lying to me?
i shrug, nah, i think that's
it. but the day is young.
he didn't laugh.
nine hail marys, two
our fathers, and i want you to
wash and wax my car.
detail it, inside and out.
what?
we stand up and he tosses
me the keys.
pull it up out front when your
done, i've got an exorcism
to take care of this afternoon.
i blurt out a name, an
ex wife.
he looks at me, stunned,
how did you know?

finding faults

okay, okay,
i admit it, i tell her.
i too, yes even me, i too
have faults.
oh, do tell she says,
smirking,
while she brushes her
hair in the mirror.
well,
for one, ummm.
i had one, hold on,
let me think on this.
short term, memory?
she says.
no, that's not a fault.
that's not one.
okay.
go on.
i'm too forgiving of
people, i finally blurt out.
oh, brother she says.
that's it? really?
and i drive to slow
sometimes
in the left lane.
okay, we're done here,
she says.
i'm going shopping.
do you need anything at
the store?
nah, i'm good.

give me that pitch

you want the pitch
fat
and hard
right down the middle,
of the plate.
you want
to see the stitching
of the seams,
the words
inked on the white
leather.
you want that pitch,
not the curve ball
down and away,
not the inside slider,
and definitely
not the knuckleball,
slow and tumbling
through the air
when you're standing
at the plate.
give me fat and hard,
you want that pitch,
and then
you wait.

Friday, December 30, 2022

finding your way through darkness

when
waking up in the middle of
the night
in the pitch black
lightless
room
you find the dresser,
then the wall,
then the doorway
to the bathroom.
your fingers
using the house as braille.
the thought
actually crosses your
mind
that's this is how
the genius
Stevie Wonder
gets it done all the time.
if only
you could sing and play
the piano.

staying out of trouble

please
remind me of your birthday,
our anniversary,
and whatever
other holidays
you hold dear.
write them down.
text me
the dates.
scribble them on a pad
by the door.
write them in the sky
if you have to.
then tell me what you
want this year,
make a list,
cut out some pictures
from a magazine.
sketch
what you want, flowers,
clothes,
maybe another diamond
ring.
just let me know, okay.
some advance
warning, please.

you can stay one more night

it's one fly.
one blue
black winged thing
buzzing about.
i open
a window,
the front door and try
to shoo
him out,
but it's cold
and the wind is blowing.
white flakes
of snow are coming
down.
he flies back to the light.
circling
circling looking for a place
to land.
who can blame
him,
the warm glow
of the bulb. 
his sun.
i tell him okay,
but
just one more night.

coming home

stuck
in the mire, the mud,
the swamp.
knee
deep in shallow
water.
it's Friday,
late
in the day.
late in the month.
late
in life
but i see light
up ahead,
and i smell
what you're cooking
on the other side.
put a plate out.
i'm on my way
home.
no need to worry, 
i'm coming home
tonight.

end of month sale

the saleswoman
at the car
dealership calls again
to tell
me that there are no cars
in production
anymore.
in any color, shape, or
size.
what do you think about
a rickshaw,
she says.
bamboo. hardly used
by a Chinese man
in Peking.
it's got maybe ten
kilometers on it, at
best. it's on the lot now.
come on in, when you can.

a suitcase by the door


when everything seems
to be okay,

the most feared words
to a man are,

'we need to talk'.

nothing good
follows that.

now? you ask, 
right now?

i was just going
to take the dog

for a walk.

yes, she says. now is
as good as time as any.

please, sit down.
she's grim 

and looking away,
then you notice

her suitcase by the door.

please, can we do this later?

not unlike
your body, the machines
in the house
tell you
when they need a rest,
need to
be replaced
or fixed.
they leak, they wheeze
and squeak,
there's a rattling
noise
in the washer,
steam
rising from the pipes,
dripping
water.
i put my feet up on
the couch
and go back to drinking
my coffee
and reading the paper.
later.
i tell them all. later.

not too old

i can get there
from here.
i'm sure of it.
i just need to watch
my step,
find my balance.
place
one foot after
the other onto the stones
in the cold creek.
i've crossed over before,
and i'm not too old,
not yet, at least.

can i get a jump

when i hear
my neighbor's old truck
cranking
its engine, unable
to start,
coughing
and sputtering,
i know that in about
two minutes
there'll be a knock at the door.
it's winter after all.
but i have
the jumper cables
ready and my
boots and gloves on.
i may buy him a new
battery
for Christmas.

cracking open the new nut

when i need to,
i study psychology,
especially
when i have some new nut
in my life
that i have to understand
or get rid of.
i dive into
the deep end of Freud
and Jung.
i immerse myself in
YouTube videos about
narcissism and all the other
personality disorders.
i read books, i go to
therapy.
i take cold showers
and lower my carb intake,
I exercise more.
none of which is necessarily
connected
but it seems to help.

what's with the big spoon


they tease you
with a bump in a pay.
it's always been that way.
a ten-cent raise.
another
dollar, matched
in your retirement.
social security sending
you notice
that you'll get a few
more hundred of your money
back each month,
that they so nicely
saved for you.
restaurants do it to with
their big spoons,
ladling on
the rice and beans, the meat,
the spoon half full.
why have a big spoon if
you're not going to use it?
come on man.
quit being so stingy
with the money, the food.

you go on ahead

if someone
tells me that they want to
buy a Winnebago
and cross the country
to visit the Grand Canyon
and ride a burro
down the narrow
rocky path,
i immediately break up with them.
it's a deal breaker
on so many levels.

same old sunrise

do we
get bored with another sunrise?
do we
no longer wake
up
as the colors
spread across the horizon
and take
note,
of the beauty and majestic
wonder of it all.
the cascade of pastel hues.
yes. we do,
but it's no one's fault,
you've just
been around for a long time
and seen
more than a few.

Thursday, December 29, 2022

okay, i give up

it's just
a paper cut, a small
thin
slice of skin, but it's painful
enough
to give up
all my secrets,
where the money is,
everything.
no need to torture
me any
longer,
i'm all in, i'm on 
your side now,
put the paper
away. and get me
a Band-Aid,  please?

her last dying words

as she lay dying,
my aunt Delores,
famous for her Italian meals,
called me over to her bed.
candles
were lit,
statues of saints
had gathered on her nightstand.
the Priest was finished
with his job.
she was old.
very old, but able
to whisper
and with her finger curled
beckoned me
to her ear.
she told me what she had
to say,
then closed her eyes
and died.
i cried. the room cried.
then someone asked
me what she said.
I told them.
keep stirring
the red sauce, she whispered
to me with her last
dying breath.
use low heat
or else it will splatter
all over the walls and your
nice white shirt.
keep stirring
and when it comes to a boil,
then you add the meatballs.

the longest day on the couch

i'm more
tired doing nothing, than
i am working
all day
going to the post office,
the market,
the gas station,
then out to the stables
to feed the horse,
chasing
the flies away.
she nods, and hands
me the remote.
lying around is exhausting,
i tell her,
tapping her leg.
hey,
are you asleep already,
it's half past eight.
let's see if we can stay
up for the news,
it starts at ten today.

the blood drive

it's strange
to watch the blood curl
in burgundy
waves, wispy strands
out of the vein
and through the tube
then bagged,
to be used
by others.
someone you don't
know, both stranger
by face and name.
you may save a life
with your precious
O negative brand,
of juice,
or your own.
it's mainly the needle
going in
that you can't stand.

getting lucky

i'm afraid to look under
the bed.
it's never good.
there's always something under
there
left behind.
a shoe,
a skirt, a pair of earrings,
or a watch that you have
to now locate
the owner for.
sometimes it's a tube
of lipstick,
or a phone charger. or
a wobbling
empty bottle of red wine.
but sometimes you get lucky
and it's a pack of gum,
unopened.
the spearmint kind.

wrong side of the bed

you wake up
in a bad mood, but you don't
know why.
everything is basically good.
the heat is on.
you have food.
the bills are paid.
the coffee is hot and it
looks like a nice
day outside. plus
you're no longer in communication
with the ex-wives.
why the bad mood?

it's all downhill from here

you hear
people say, it's all down hill
from here.
the rest is gravy.
we're on the home
stretch.
these are usually people
not doing the work.
they're standing
over
the road being tarred,
or the ditch
being dug.
they're wearing a white
helmet
and drinking coffee.
whistling.

a can of boiled potatoes

i stare at the dented
can
in my cupboard.
boiled potatoes.
i remember reading about
botulism
in a health magazine
in jiffy lube
when i was waiting
for the oil to be changed
in my car.
i'm afraid to open it.
i don't even know where
this can came
from.
who would buy a can
of boiled potatoes.
and then i think of Dasha,
my friend in
St. Petersburg.
i think she sent it in an
effort to get
a visa.
.

top of the speed dial list

she went
from being at the top of my
speed
dial list
to being blocked and
deleted.
no contact.
funny how that goes
in such a short
time.
one never knows
who sticks.

leader of the pack

at the end of our
senior year
rob may,
the unofficial
leader of the pack,
wrote in my yearbook,
thanks
for helping me with my
physics
homework.
i owe you a bottle
of sweet cherry wine.
best wishes
in the years ahead.
he passed away
a few years later
in Viet Nam.
i never got my wine.
but i've
got the memory of
his C plus on the test.

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

suddenly the light goes on

the light went
on
in my head
when i was standing
outside
the dressing room
waiting
for her to try on another
dress.
i can't do this anymore.
it was an 80 degree day.
perfect
weather.
sunny.
i could be anywhere
doing anything,
the beach,
a ballgame,
a walk around the lake.
but here i was
holding
two dresses
waiting for her to come
out from behind
the curtain and ask,
how's this? do i look
okay?
i think blue is my color,
don't you?

castles in the clouds

he fictionalizes
his life.
puts a polish on the rotten
apple
that it is.
he turns the fruit
around
to hide the dying
spot of
brown.
the bruise when he
fell from
his imaginary castle
in the clouds.
he whistles
in the dark, spins
a good yarn
as he
dances around the whys,
the hows.
the lies.
it's not
all wine and roses
anymore,
you can
see the sorrow in his
eyes.

where you were meant to be

it's just brick and mortar,
wires
and glass, wood
and tin,
pipes
and vents. coats
of paint.
it's just a house. but
you don't leave
it without a tear in
your eye,
a scar on your heart.
it's been home for so
long. it's
held you in its arms,
bathed you,
let you read books
by the window.
kept you warm 
in winters.
you've watched 
the trees rise above the roof.
raked the fallen
leaves.
you shoveled snow
away from the doors
to let love in.
it's where you belonged.
it's a part of you,
never to be forgotten.

don't let them in

narcissistic
people have a diving rod
for finding
calm
and normal.
for seeking out
empathetic souls.
they want
what you have.
they want to get out
of their own 
world of cold,
take hold,
and steal what's yours.
your peace,
your soul.
don't let them.

the distorted blur

in the beginning
there weren't enough mirrors
in the house
for the both of us
to preen in.
young, we were, pretty
and unlined.
at least in our own eyes.
she went her own way though,
and i went mine,
aging apart.
we are both now i imagine
down to the reflection
in our toasters,
our spoons, our glasses
of dark wine,
squinting at our image
in the distorted
blur called time.

down to one candle

it's a small cake,
with one
candle.
to add the correct
number would
cause a prairie
fire now.
it's a birthday
cake.
round
and in it's 
soft blue
jacket.
chocolate
with white icing.
we're happily
down to
a single flame now.
which is more
than enough.
thank you for
no longer keeping
count.

the pepper mill

the large pepper
shaker
is kept in the vault
in the manager's office.
not far from
the arc of the covenant,
and shroud
of Turin.
only when the plate
of food arrives
are you asked
if you want some.
tell me when to stop,
the nervous
waiter says, trembling
as he turns
the enormous pepper mill,
carved out of wood
from a nearby forest.
it's too risky
of a seasoning
to be left on the table
with mere salt, or left
to the hands
of unskilled patrons.


those late night monologues

did Shakespeare
have 
a large eraser, or did he just
cross things
out
with his feathered pen,
and write below
what
he just wrote. did he
say the lines
out loud, to himself.
i think so.
it must have driven
his wife
crazy, whoever
she was.
ah the stories she 
could tell
about Will and those
late
night monologues,
roaming
the house in
character,
while she tried to sleep.

we got this

it's mostly
men
lingering in the tool aisles
at the big store.
salivating
over saws and hammers,
wrenches
and power
tools.
stroking lumber,
eyeing
the rigidity
and plumbness
of two by fours.
we need to make things.
we like to
build
and tear down,
start all over
again.
that's why love is such
a great
challenge to us.
we can start to build
it once more from scratch.
stand back,
we got this.

2023

no gym,
no club,
no orange theory,
or planet
fitness.
no pool, no track
to count the laps.
no dumbbells to lift,
no cross fit
gizmos.
no pull up bar,
no rowing machine,
or stair master,
no tread mill,
or stationary bike.
no leaden ball
to throw around.
just some push ups
maybe a bike ride
and
occasionally
a brisk walk
around the lake.
of course no sugar,
no seed oils,
no processed foods,
low carbs
with good
sleep and love.
that'll work.

Tuesday, December 27, 2022

a mere thought

it's just a thought,
a mere
memory of years ago,
words said,
but it's enough
for you to tilt the clock
at three a.m.
and see
how little you have
traveled since then.

polishing an image

her act
of kindness was part
of it,
part of
the image she wanted
to portray.
virtue
signaling with
each
vegetable on her plate,
her insistence
on
prayer at each meal,
or with an orange
sliced.
the beads
that hung from her
mirror.
the peace sticker on the car.
the rescue dogs,
now dust
in jeweled boxes.
the visiting of graves.
all a part
of her
failing, yet obvious
play.

between the lines

as much
as we desire simplicity.
we
need the complex,
the nuance,
the slight of hand
reference.
wit
and cleverness.
it can't all be checkers
and tic tac toe.,
pratfalls
and easy laughs.
we need
the game of chess
too.
we need to read
between
the lines.
it's why i need you.

she's light, i'm dark

she likes
the hallmark channel.
the boy
and girl
reuniting in a small
town,
both coming home
for Christmas
to inherit the family
llama farm.
it's always Christmas
on the hallmark
channel.
i like
the dark and quirky
fare on the tube,
the noir,
the mysterious
ending,
the anti-hero, the twist
and turn,
the ending
that you didn't
see coming. we try
to indulge one another,
but 
it's good to have two
tv's in the house.

tip toe into love

it's better to inch
towards
love.
tip toe into the deep
water
of affection.
the leap
is usually fatal.
love
at first sight
is fool's gold.
give it fifty years
or more,
and then,
if it's still alright,
give it a go.

a tenth row seat

don't buy
the cheap seats,
and don't buy
the front row either.
find something not too
far,
not too close.
it's a lesson
to live by for baseball
games
and comedy
clubs alike,
you don't want to be
hit by a line
drive,
or catch the comic's
eye
and be the star.

by the time we got to Woodstock

after the summer
of love,
and the summer of Woodstock,
you could
see the teachers
in our high school
change.
suddenly they were wearing
their hair long,
wearing
bright colored clothes.
the women
had flowers in their hair.
the men
had a strange a look
in their eyes,
as if they'd seen something
on the other side.
but they still had geometry
to teach,
sentences to diagram,
history to unfold, and
explain the differences
between sine and cosine.

peeling potatoes

she'd sit on
the kitchen stool, close
to the floor,
a pail beside
her, a box of potatoes
to her left
then begin
to peel.
her red hands shaving
off the brown
skins.
one after the other.
so many mouths
to feed,
and yet, she felt
blessed.

it's not my fault

if we can
find someone to blame
it all on,
we feel better.
it's not our fault
for where we are
in life, our
current state of affairs.
it was our mother
or father,
the color of our skin,
our lineage,
our hair.
our lack of money,
or education.
our gender.
nothing in life being fair.
we like being
the victim.
it gives us reason
for failure.
for underachieving,
for misery and despair.

Monday, December 26, 2022

throwing dice against the wall

Einstein
said,
God does not play
dice
with the universe.
but it
feels that way
sometimes
when you're out
in the world
and there's so much
chaos
and mystery,
so much
confusion and death.
you can almost
hear the rattle
of dice
rolling
on the floor 
the moment you
wake up.

where'd they go?

people disappear
all the time.
they just go, move away.
for one reason
or another.
a marriage gone bad,
financial troubles,
or just wanting
better weather.
they pack up their
belongings
and drive south,
or west
and make a life there.
they cut
all ties, 
leave everything
and everyone they ever
knew behind.
you wonder
what happened to them
as the years go by.
they don't
return your calls,
there's no forwarding
address,
no texts,
nothing.
just poof
and they're gone.
so long.

it never sleeps

you have to hand it
to rust.
it never
gives up.
never stops eating
away
at metal
once past the paint.
with tiny red teeth
it just eats
and eats and eats.
twenty-four seven,
it never sleeps.

take the bus

don't get in a small
plane
in any kind of weather
especially
if you're a musician
in a band
with a thimble
full of fame.
so what if you have
the money,
take the bus,
a car,
uber.
hitchhike
if you can.
the list is so long
of the ones gone down.

punch the clock

i've
never heard a bird
complain
about the wind,
or rain, 
the lack of worms
in the hard
ground, or
a turtle
coming out of the stream
murmuring
about the water
being too cold.
i've never
heard a red fox
gripe
about the weather,
or that he's
hungry and tired
of hunting the rabbit
or mole.
they just get up
and get it done.

the two ends meet

as when born
we are now
at the mercy
and kindness
of others,
our mouths open
for the spoon
of warm
food, soft enough
to swallow.
we are looking
for safety
and comfort.
if someone would
read to us,
that too would help
us sleep.
how quickly the circle
closes 
from birth until death,
where the two
ends at last
will meet.

the fruitcake murder

it was the first recorded
murder
of this Christmas.
a woman
hit her husband in the head
with a
loaf of fruitcake
a gift he thought
would please her,
because
of the cherries
and other assorted fruits,
like jewels
embedded within
the thick
inedible brick
of sugar and flour,
and other mysterious
ingredients.
he chose that for her
special Christmas gift
instead of the diamond
necklace
she showed him
online, nine weeks ago.

the day after

ahhh, the leftovers.
the cold
bowl of potatoes,
a mini Everest
with a peak.
the once silken gravy
now mud,
the turkey slices,
limping
their way home
as if lost
on the shelf, no longer
the center of
attention.
where are the bones?
the hard rolls,
unbuttered and waiting
to be resuscitated
by the tired stove.
whatever was green
is less green now,
hidden away
beneath plastic sheets,
everything seems
ready
to be swept into
the can, opened by
your foot,
only the bread pudding,
and cookies,
will get a kind reprieve. 

life of the party

at this
age, now, 
in the winter
of her life,
it's easy
to concede
that she's a marvelous
antique,
an heirloom of sorts,
fragile
with silvered hair
and skin like a parchment
scroll
from the Dead Sea.
when she speaks
we listen,
and when she doesn't
speak we wait
for some snippet
of wit,
or wisdom to fall
like petals
from her soft spoken
lips.
they say she was life
of the party.
still is.

Sunday, December 25, 2022

a better gift

it's not
the biggest box
wrapped
beneath
the tree, it's not
the most expensive
thing
bought,
it's not the shiniest
or the newest
gizmo
on the block,
it's just this, this
kiss,
this gentle hug
in friendship,
from the heart.

the mystery of gravy

gravy
is my Achille's heel.
not
sex, or food,
or drink,
or work,
or money. not greed
or fame.
lust or envy
just gravy.
i'm unable to master
this culinary
mystery, so
help me.

just human

you can't pick
your children,
or parents.
siblings too.
you get what you get,
for better or worse.
you navigate
your way through life
with them.
loosening the reins,
forgoing arguments,
at last,
as wisdom sets in,
you accept the fact 
that like you,
they're just human.

pick your dish

pick your holiday
dish.
would you like
it bitter
and cold,
full of regret and remorse.
unable to move
past
the past.
or would
you rather feel cheerful,
and grateful,
with a big spoon
of sugar
in your Christmas
bowl.

one less reindeer in the sky

he won't tell us
what it is,
the grey slab of meat
on the Christmas
table.
seasoned
and surrounded
by small
potatoes and carrots,
peas.
just eat, he says, smiling,
you can't help
but notice
the antlers on his
wall,
the shotgun
propped up in the corner.
still warm,
his orange
hunting vest
forever on.

Saturday, December 24, 2022

my future bride to be

i meet my future
wife
at a rib roasting class
down
at the elementary
school.
a late night
three-hour session,
non-credit,
detailing all the things
we need to know
about cuts of meat
and au jus.
we learn through
an excruciating lecture
what temperature
to turn the stove on, etc.
blah, blah, blah.
we're both
wearing chef hats
and aprons.
when we arrive,
clicking our sharp knives
together.
like her
the only culinary success
i've had lately
has been PBJ's on
Wonder bread, 
her too.
it's meant to be.

the beauty of aging

the beauty
of aging is that
you say
what you mean,
and mean what
you say.
and have no qualms about
the consequences.
you've never suffered
fools gladly,
but now
it's turned up a notch.
you have no
patience for the angry
or selfish,
for the rude and dumb.
it's refreshing
now, to block and delete.
to walk away
happily, to just click
and move on.

hitting rock bottom

they talk
about rock bottom.
that's when things get turned
around.
but not always.
some like it there.
some
feel at home
with almost nothing
owned,
with no one
to care for
and no one to care
for them.
they don't want pity,
or help.
they've surrendered
to the world
and no longer
want to join in.

the wind off the Hudson

sure
the ocean is swell.
all that blue
and salt in the air,
the gulls,
the long stretch
of white sand,
it screams
of sun
and youth.
but a day at the beach
is no longer
a day
at the beach
for me.
give me the subway
car,
the jostle
of Manhattan,
give me the bum in
the alley,
the neon,
give me the chaos
of taxis,
the steel and brick
of it all.
art and movies.
martinis.
pastrami.
give me the wind
off the Hudson, give
me a place
where imagination
is born.

being grateful


when it's cold
like
this 
grateful sets in.
you aren't
on a steam grate
bundled
in rags,
or under a bridge
in a makeshift
tent.
you have
fire,
you have wood
and shelter.
you have food 
and water.
even love
is in abundance.

we have the car you wanted

the manager,
there are not salespeople
anymore,
just managers,
at the car dealership
texts to say that she has my car
on the lot,
finally. it's red, she says,
with red interior.
i tell her no, i want
black, with parchment interior.
all wheel
drive, she says.
no.
just front wheel drive.
it has the advanced
package.
i don't want that, i tell her.
i want the technology
package.
there's only twelve thousand
miles on it.
i want new.
it also has all season
floor mats,
no extra charge for those.
when can you come in?

no prescriptions necessary

i text my pharmacist
friend
in India
to inquire about prednisone.
Nida Shaikh.
he calls me brother,
and tells me to call
him Brian.
fifty pills at ten mg,
i tell him. no knock offs,
the real stuff.
he takes his
time about texting me back.
maybe because of the ten
hour time
difference.
he's pretty reliable.
and i trust him.
no prescriptions needed.
he has a farm
outside
of Delhi,
sometimes i hear sheep
and roosters
in the background
when we talk.
what could go wrong?


oh please, go on

so many
conversations are one way.
we sort of listen
to the long story about how
the cat was
stuck in the tree,
or how
your father used to take
you over his knee,
three eggs, not two,
really,
but
you wait patiently
just the same,
tapping your foot,
waiting
for the other person
to finish
so that you can say what
you have to say.
a lot of nodding
is involved,
a half smile,
blinking. pulling
at your ear,
just looking for that slight
pause
to jump in.
then finally it's your turn,
but you've forgotten
what you had
to say.

the big parka

nine degrees.
who can survive nine degrees?
single
digits.
ten, i can handle.
twelve
or thirteen, ok,
we'll figure
it out
with the big parka,
earmuffs
and mittens,
but nine.
that's ridiculous.

the morning city

the morning
city
is different. different
from
the night.
the debris
is present. the glow
is off.
the shine
diminished
by the broken shade
eeking light.
who was fun 
is now
tired and half asleep.
the wallet
emptied
the desires
drained
by the stranger lying
next to you
on your right.

Friday, December 23, 2022

what time do you get off?

at 2 a.m.
it was coffee
and cigarettes at 
the roadside diner.
how we sat
there, taking off
our winter coats.
our hats,
rubbing the winter
out of our hands.
we were
exhausted from a night
of carousing.
we kidded the waitress,
all of nineteen,
and asked
what's good here.
and she'd reply
nothing.
not even me,
to which we'd say, no doubt,
then order
steak and eggs
and hashbrowns,
toast, and jam. 
keep the coffee coming
we'd tell her,
then ask
what time she got off.

who they really are

with anger
you see the true soul.
the dark
side
of someone.
their thin
skin
and insecurity shows.
it's been there all along,
but it took
a few cross
words
to bring it out,
to bring it home.

when the curtain falls

the curtain
falls,
the stage is cleared.
the actors
have taken
their final bows and wiped
the grease paint
from their faces.
it's back to the real
world now,
where there is no
script, no lines
to read,
no director
telling you how hard
to laugh,
how long to cry,
or when to bleed.
the hall is emptied
as the lights go up,
and everyone,
exits onto the dark
cold street.

man in the cellar

who's in the cellar?
who's banging
their cane
against the ceiling.
is it too warm, too cold.
is he hungry again.
whose turn
to sponge bath him.
someone go down and
check on him.
it's hell getting
old and living down there.
but he pays
the rent on time.
so there.

keep all receipts

i keep all my receipts
my mother would say,
showing
me her cigar box
full of them from
years gone by.
you never know,
what fits today might
not fit tomorrow,
maybe you've lost
your taste for green,
or a style that's passed
by. be prepared, honey,
mark the date on them.
and hope you can return
things, before the time
expires.


non-stick

carefully
i take the scissors
and approximate
the amount of wrapping paper
i'll need for
this frying pan.
non-stick,
mind you.
Cuisinart.
the handle part is the
hardest.
a lot of tape
comes in handy
there.

the frozen snow

it's hard to tell
if she's bitter, or happy.
the Botox
for Christmas has set in.
one expression
fits all moods,
all circumstances that
she finds herself in.
she's like
the new fallen snow
out the window.
but a little colder.

a girl and her luggage

it's just for two
nights,
i say to myself as i watch
her
pull luggage out
of the car.
her bags are a happy
green.
i put my shoes on
to go out
and fetch the larger
ones.
she takes the one
on wheels,
i grab the ones with straps
pulling them
onto my shoulder,
down my back.
i've learned
not to ask.

the Christmas card

it's a very shiny family.
you can see
that in the Christmas portrait
made
into a card
sent out
to friends and family alike.
each boy, each girl,
an ornament
catching the light.
hung onto the tree well
watered,
by man
and wife.
even the dog has a glitter
about him,
red bowed
and still, waiting for
someone
to take him out
to do his business
in the cold night.

now what?

you remember
quite well
the first girl you kissed.
how it
reddened
both your faces
as you negotiated
tongue and teeth.
lips pressed too hard,
too soft.
what to do with your hands?
where
do you place
your feet?
but by summers end
you had
it down.
now what?

poetry air balls

from here,
this chair, i can ball up a piece
of paper,
crumbled
because i didn't like
what i wrote,
and toss it to the wastebasket.
sometimes
i hit dead center,
while other times, like
most of the time,
it rims out
onto to floor.
i need to move
closer, or stop printing
each poem
out.

destination divorce

we planned
a destination divorce.
she went
to France
with her new boyfriend,
Carlos,
while
i went to New York
to get a hot
pastrami sandwich.
with Betty.
from each location
our lawyers
struck the deal.
we split the money
down the middle,
she got the cat, Fluffy
and the Williams
Sonoma kitchen gear,
while
i got the dog,
Rex, 
and the weight machine
in the basement.

are we scared?

are we scared?
does
the weather make us worry,
put us
ill at ease.
does the frantic
voice
of the weathergirl,
make
us go to our knees
and pray.
what about our milk
and bread.
our coffee?
how will we survive
this rain,
this ice.
wind? when was
the last time we had wind?
is this how it all ends?
nothing like
this has ever happened
before,
it's the first
snow ever.
stay tuned, we'll let
you know
who lives and who dies
after this brief commercial
break.

Thursday, December 22, 2022

grab your coat, it's cold out

i've lost
my taste for debate,
for arguing
a point
about the world
at large.
i care and yet i don't care.
it doesn't matter anymore
what you
think,
what i think.
let's just leave it at that
and move on.
grab your coat,
it's cold out,
let's walk
in silence,
no need to bring
our phones.

don't wait up, i'm going out

she was stuck
with the aging husband,
separated by
drywall, and a floor,
now
in the basement.
old and sick,
an invalid too soon.
his finger
on the bell.
no insurance.
obese and penniless.
what was there to do.
but feed him,
pay his bills,
do his laundry.
yell down the stairs and say,
don't wait up,
i'm going out.

the bricklayer's helper

the bricklayer
with a cigarette clenched
between his teeth
and last nights
drink on his breath,
said
show me your hands.
i held them out,
eighteen
and wanting a job.
he felt
the smoothness of them,
turned them over
and laughed.
you won't last a day,
he said.
but come on.
pick up my bag
and follow me.

blood in the socks

it's a small
blister on the back of your heel.
blood
and skin.
new shoes
will do that
to you.
they have to be worn,
broken in.
put some miles on them
the leather needs
to bend.
but tomorrow
it's back to the old
loafers, soft and 
comfy, time to slip
them on
once again.

he's had enough

he's got winter
in his hair,
in his bones, his blue
eyes
are ice
his teeth, brittle,
his voice
soft
and low.
he's seen it all,
done it all.
but he doesn't talk
about it much.
he's not worried about
tomorrow,
or the next day.
he's had
enough.

just passing through

don't get angry
don't get blue,
no need to worry,
no need to cry,
put it all behind you,
i'm just passing through.
you've known it all along,
i'm just passing through.

finding love on the cross-town bus

the young woman
beside me on the bus,
with her 
shopping bag from Garfinkle's,
between her feet
falls asleep.
her head eases down upon
my shoulder.
her hair is lovely
and soft
against my neck.
i'm immediately
in love with her.
i imagine what our life
will be
like.
how many kids?
will we have a dog.
will we live in the suburbs
or in the city,
perhaps near a park
where we can
ice skate in the winter.
i try not to move
so that i don't awaken
her.
it's nice to have dreams
that aren't disturbed.

going back to school

i go back to university
soon,
not to
take classes or to learn
anything new,
but to teach.
i've given them my
resume,
which happens to be this
blog,
and marital history.
and extensive knowledge
i've acquired on
youtube and
webmd.
they immediately
accepted me
as a tenured
professor.
i start next week.
i have my choice of classes.
psychology.
nutrition.
creative writing.
and grilling meat.


made in China

can we trust
where these things come
from.
the Virginia
peanuts,
the Boston cream pie,
the north Atlantic
salmon?
how do we really know
who made
our Maple Syrup,
can we be sure it was Canada,
or Vermont.
who's really making
this sweet amber goo?
every gizmo i turn
over says
made in 
China.
i thought we were mad
at China.
what's the deal here?
can anything be true?

boney fingers

they find
the bone of a finger in a cave
and this
changes everything.
it's a whole new
line
of prehistoric
men and women,
move over paleolithic man.
slide down
mister neanderthal.
these were thinkers,
look at the way
the finger curves.
they put it to
their chin.
artists, writers, philosophers.
look how
large their foreheads
were.
they sat straight up
and pondered,
they weren't just out there
killing
the wild animal
that galloped in herds.

the tiresome trio

when
did musk become king
of the world.
bill gates.
trump.
when will they go away
and leave
us alone?
a tiresome
trio
of over achievers
who keep
beating their
own ego
laden drum.
please, get off the stage.
stop
with the madness.
it's no longer fun.
oh and Putin too.
that makes four.

marketing 101

no mystery
that
sex sells. 
the pretty girl holding
a can
of beer,
a pretzel,
soap suds.
the woman at
the wheel,
the come hither
look on her face,
the leg
bared.
buy me,
buy this.
get her.

critics be damned

the energy
wanes, the critics point
to old
paintings,
old novels,
ancient poems,
they say he's not the same.
his best
was in his early
days.
when he was young
and ambitious.
when he
was the hunter,
the matador in the ring.
sad how
the brilliant fade,
why don't they just
stop
and go away.
fuck the critics, the artist,
the writer,
will say.

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

a six month lease

the empty
small apartment,
one bedroom,
one bath is
waiting to be rented.
a starting point
for the young, or
a stopping point
for the old.
the walls
with a fresh coat
of white paint.
the stove
cleaned,
the bathrooms too.
a coat of wax
on the wood floors.
a set of new keys.
the bus stop out
front will sell it.
it's waiting,
waiting
for someone in between.
someone waiting for
the pages
of their own life
to be turned,
waiting for what's
next before
once more they leave.

a lot of crumbs

i was watching
the neighbor
vacuum out his car
the other day
and it occurred to me
that maybe i should
do that.
i can't imagine
how many crumbs
from scones
and sandwiches
are all over the place.
or maybe i should
get a small dog again.
short but with a long
nose, flexible little
fellow,
to get between
the seats.

ne're-do-wells

the old adage
that crime
doesn't pay, doesn't seem
to be holding
up anymore,
has there ever more
of a crime
wave
than now.
each phone call is
some sort
of thief
or ne'er-do-well
wanting
you to get your
wallet out.

no vacancy

with the guest
bed
gone, you are safe once
more
from overnight
visitors,
relatives arriving
to tour
the city.
there's a small
couch
in there now.
a bureau,
a desk,
a window with a
pleasant
view. some books
parked
along the shelves
of a small
bookcase.
there's no one
there in the early
morning hours,
for you to politely
knock on the door,
and ask what
they want for breakfast.

this changes everything

i haven't had a conversation
with my
mailman in over ten years.
we pass each other
with hardly wave
or nod,
and then
yesterday,
he stops me as i get out
of my truck,
hands me my letters
and asks
what do i know about
painting cabinets.
this changes everything.

the frozen pond

it looks safe.
the thick ice picking up
the blue
in the sky.
you throw a rock
across
the pond and watch
it skate
to the other side,
you press a stick into
the ice
until it breaks.
it looks safe.
should we give it
a try?
but in your ears
you hear your mother's
voice,
saying no.

why did i come here?

there are days
when you can't find
what you're
looking for. even when
the grocery clerk asks
if you did.
you search
without a list,
up and down the aisles,
then the moment occurs
when you don't
even remember
what you came into
the store for.
it comes back to you
later,
when it's time for dinner,
and you sit down.

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

the shrinking thesaurus

as a kid,
and even as a teenager
i rarely
used salty
language,
and if i did as i
grew older,
they were muttered
underneath
my breath.
but now i can't stop
swearing.
despite all
the words i've learned,
all the reading
i've absorbed,
certain words just
seem to fit
best when
angry, or a story
needs a good telling.

oops!

who hasn't
left
the stove on
once or twice in life,
left the door
unlocked
all night, who hasn't
turned
off the iron
as it sits hot on
the board.
who hasn't
left their keys
in the door, or
let the water in
the tub overflow
until it came 
through the floor.
who hasn't
called
someone by the wrong
name,
when expressing
affection,
telling them they're
adored?

act one

present
the big bed.
the soft bed.
the room with a view.
roll out an ocean.
a full moon.
let's set stage
for romance.
que the music,
light the candles
and pour
the wine,
enter you.
quiet on the set,
now action.

the smaller version of God

we make
our god small,
we
limit him or her,
or whatever
the case may be
as being like us.
maybe old,
maybe with a white beard,
maybe
a judge of sorts,
angry at times,
but loving too.
caring at times,
but aloof
and distant.
we think of him as
some wise grandfather
figure,
with a gavel and sword.
a scale
to balance out
the good and evil
that we do.
but i suspect He's nothing
like that.
nothing like us,
but more,
impossibly fair,
infinitely true.

careless

despite our
best efforts to kill
ourselves, the body
does
it's best to keep
us alive, to
keep us healthy.
but we
feed it junk.
sugar,
processed foods.
we smoke
and drink,
feed ourselves drugs.
we leap off cliffs,
we dive
deep
into the pool of
fools.
we want to touch
the stars,
climb
Everest.
we're not satisfied
in being
content and happy on
the ground.
we're so careless
with what we
put into our minds,
into 
our mouths.

better night than day

some days,
july days in particular
the sun
feels closer,
a hot
bath of light.
too bland
and too much.
while other days,
and nights,
it's the moon
that hangs
tight over your
shoulder.
a cold smile on
it's rocky
face. more mystery
is my take, the
nights are much more
interesting
than days.

living underwater

i can swim
better
underwater, than i can
on the surface.
the same
holds true
for living.
bending like a fish
through
the troubled
depths
of life, hidden
in the shadows,
the murky
light.

washed ashore

the debris
of you, of me, floats
to the surface
washed
ashore
by time and waves.
by
storm and disrepair,
the sinking of it all,
driftwood.
algae.
old green bottles
holding messages
from those
still lost
at sea.
the timber of our
hulls,
bent and detached,
little is left,
most
is gone.

the same Christmas card again

as usual,
the best Christmas
cards
come from the Exxon station
up the street
where i get my oil
changed,
and from my dentist
who cleans
my teeth,
not to mention
my lawyer
and tax preparer.
they're beautiful cards,
oversized
with embossed lettering,
brilliantly colored
pictures of mangers
and other religious
scenes.
pieces of art that
should be framed.
they never send the same
card, year
after year, like i do.
sending one out from
the box of one hundred,
which seems to 
never end.

raised by wolves

raised by
wolves we were,
and television,
and what we learned
on the street.
the parents were busy
with their
own drama filled lives.
work and babies,
keeping
the house afloat,
making sure there
was something,
anything
to eat.
no words of wisdom,
no pondering
of our futures,
no planning a path
for us,
schools or talents,
or otherwise.
just grow up
and stay out of trouble.
get a job.
everything will be fine.

just a few hours late

i got lost
going to Fell's Point
in Baltimore
one year.
i told her seven o'clock.
she was making dinner,
i was bringing
the wine.
i took the wrong exit
and started
back across the bridge
again past
the glowing
Domino Sugar sign.
finally
i arrived
and she put out a plate
for me.
the strip of salmon
more dried
than any fish i'd ever
seen.
delicious i said, and
poured the wine.
it was almost nine.

one thing well

to do one
thing well is a blessing
in life.
whether
hammering
a nail.
or grinding metal
at the factory.
the baker
up all night
icing
his wares.
one thing well.
that's all you need 
to make
a lifetime
rich
and fulfilled.

a good starting point

penniless,
or weak, sick and 
lost.
beaten down.
these are good
starting points,
for when
blessings arrive
you'll understand
and be grateful,
having seen
both sides.
beware of the silver
spoon in a child's
mouth.
they never know
struggle, or less,
everything given
to them
too soon.

Monday, December 19, 2022

the humming bird

the nervous
yellow
bird,
never still,
a bright splash
of color
floating,
and darting
from
flower
to flower.
the life of springs
party,
too pretty for
it's own
good.
not unlike you.

sleep on it

sleep on it.
give it a night,
maybe two.
do nothing, but wait.
the answer
will come to you.
make no rash decisions.
just sleep on it.
you'll see.
when tomorrow
comes,
you'll know what
to do.

a love poem

why don't you write
a poem
about me,
she said.
oh, you don't want
that,
i told her.
let's make love
instead.

before life began

in the night
shade
of my room, the blue
lights
of my Pioneer
receiver,
setting some sort
of mood,
i'd lie in bed and listen
to the stack
of lp's
i mounted on the turntable.
Elton,
and McCartney,
Croce,
Dylan.
i knew each crackle
in the vinyl.
each skip, each word
forever
etched in memory.
it was before so much,
almost
before life began.

asleep before me

she talked
about ending things,
of moving on,
not from us, but from
the world
at large.
life was too hard.
she said it sincerely
and i believed her,
but instead,
she brushed her teeth,
and set out
her clothes
for work the next day.
then fell asleep
before i did.

that time of the year again

as the holiday
grows nearer in celebration
of the birth
of Christ.
and the stores
get crowded,
the roads jammed
with traffic
in all directions,
a man reaches
out the car window,
as he beeps his horn,
and waves
one finger in my
direction,
his face red with anger,
and scorn.
it's that blessed time
of year again.

the vegan restaurant

for her birthday
she
wanted everyone to go to the vegan
restaurant
in Vienna, because
she was special
and everyone wanted
so hard to please
her,
an impossible task
to begin with.
but we did it, 
or else faced
the consequences
of silence
and brooding.
it was a well known gathering
spot
for anorexics
and tree huggers.
there was
no meat.
just pretend meat.
fake meat
made out of some bizarre
soy
concoction.
a veritable plate, or bowl
of rancid
vegetables,
straw and twigs,
indigestible
kale
and spinach, leeks.
after a visit or two there,
and being sick
for days,
i took things into my
own hands
and stopped
for burgers along the way,
grilled
beef.
cow meat.
short ribs and steaks.

dr. feelgood

i see my
doctor at the bar
chatting it up and having
a good time
with the local pharmaceutical
salesman.
laughing,
hitting each other on
the back,
clinking glasses together.
they should get a room.
i'm buying,
the salesman says,
a round for everyone.
go ahead
get the big steak.
we had a good week,
a good year.


don't make me pull over

you can't take kids
to mars,
they'd be in the back seat
of the space
capsule,
moaning, are we there yet?
i'm bored,
i have to pee,
i'm hungry.
can't we stop somewhere?
i can't see
out my
window, my stupid sister
keeps
bugging me
with her boney elbows
and knees.
it smells in here,
someone just cut the cheese.
can i open the window?

a new birth

the seed
pushes itself upwards,
forward
to the sun,
into the rain.
the world pushes onward.
the rush
of cars,
the rush of trains.
nothing stops,
everything
keeps growing
and dying.
a new birth
for each new grave.

Sunday, December 18, 2022

the orange shag rug

at the start
of the marriage,
the first house,
had
orange shag carpet,
wall to wall,
ala 1980,
and
blue vinyl siding.
there was
a squared mud yard
out back
where
the new dog
would go to do his
business and bark.
the front porch
had concrete
steps
with a loose
handrail that her mother
insisted we'd
be sued if we didn't
get it fixed.
the front
door was white, though,
with a pineapple
knocker, faux gold.
which gave us
hope.
eventually we changed
the carpet,
before it ended in
divorce.
it was
a low pile oatmeal color,
which said
everything.

what's the weather

science,
not unlike the weather,
has a way
of changing.
what's good for you today,
is bad
for you tomorrow.
they keep
you on the edge of
your seat,
snow shovel,
or umbrella?
never quite knowing
what to drink
that's healthy,
what to eat.

the large fish on a board

it's a large
fish, presented to the table
on a charred
wooden
board.
tail intact as well
as head 
with flat doll like eyes,
staring glumly,
night black.
some clap
some oooh and aw.
how long ago it swam
in the sea,
we wonder,
flash frozen,
or fresh, or laid
out in ice behind
the butcher's glass
for weeks?
our aching bellies
late into the night 
would like
to know.

maybe twelve percent

as i sit
pondering twenty percent
of the bill
for the waiter
often
unresponsive
and lacking
in memory.
aloof
in his casual care
of work.
she got my steak,
i her
fish,
the drinks uncold,
the butter
stiff.
i wonder if he would
even care
if i lessened his tip.

Saturday, December 17, 2022

a learned lesson

your gut
is your true brain,
it holds more neurons in
it than the one
cradled in
your head.
it's instinct,
it's premonition,
intuition,
it warns you of danger.
of someone
with toxic energy.
it gives you
fear
and pause.
it's the wisest part
of your body.
listen to it,
don't ignore.
this friend, this lover,
is not good for you.
move on.

the glow of you

there is a roundness
to you,
a soft glow,
of sun
and water as you
lift yourself
from the sea.
i'm happy that it's
allowed
you back onto dry
land,
and back,
walking towards
me.

at three a.m.

it's in the wee
wee hours, 
when we are awakened
by thought,
a dream
curtailed,
it's then that we truly
examine our
life.
where have we won,
or where we may
have failed.
there is no stick to
measure
the depth of fear,
or joy.
we are just wading it
seems in unclear waters,
going nowhere
faster and faster
with each
new year.

the new Christmas sweater

i tell the clerk 
at the liquor store 
that i'm attending 
a Christmas party tonight,
and need a
recommendation
on a drink
that will make me
smart and funny,
clever, and able to withstand
a few hours of small talk,
but not drunk,
or obnoxious after
three tumblers.
maybe a little buzzed,
but not
swaying, or getting
sick.
hmm. he says.
i think i have just
the thing for you.
are you possibly having
a romantic interlude
that evening? we don't
want to ruin that, you know?
maybe, i tell him. i'm
hopeful.
i'm wearing my new Christmas
sweater,
so i may get a lot of attention.
let's see he says,
as we walk down the long
aisles of alcoholic
spirits.
wine? nah, the tannic
acids give me a headache.
what about,
rum, no, i got sick on that
in high school and now
i can't even smell the stuff.
tequila?
hmmm. maybe.
or perhaps a good scotch.
people are impressed when
you drink scotch, he says.
makes you look
literary and mature. wise.
you just sip it and observe
the crowd. no need to talk
much.
that's it, i tell him.
give me the big jug
and ring it up.

express replacements

no one fixes anything
anymore.
the washer
on the blink, get a new one.
down
the block there's a store.
the tv
on the fritz,
amazon
will bring you a new one
tomorrow.
the computer
screen
gone black, no problem,
so easy
to replace that.
along with phones,
and all the other gizmos
you possess.
even marriages gone south,
not to worry,
get a new wife, a new
husband
on dating.com,
there's a no-fault lawyer,
cheap,
with a coupon willing
to get you out.

seemed like a good idea

we went down
to see
the cherry blossoms.
but everyone else had the same
idea.
there was no where
to park,
so we circled the monuments,
got stuck in a detour,
waved on by cops.
tomorrow
it was going to rain
and be windy,
the trees would
be bare again. this was
our last chance.
but we were running out
of gas,
then finally gave up,
going home
to look at the blossoming
tree in our yard,
which was beautiful
enough.
in the fall we have plans
to go
to the mountains,
to look at
the foliage,
what could go wrong?

Friday, December 16, 2022

employee of the month again

i'm thinking of giving
myself a raise,
a small increase
in salary
and maybe a few more
days
off next year.
a bonus for Christmas.
after all i have
been employee of the month
for 28 years in a row now.
do the math.
i might give myself
a gold watch too,
and a window office.
but i don't want to get
ahead of myself,
let's see how December
goes.

ten inches away

alone
reading, 
alone
on a walk
deep into the woods,
or biking
on the trail.
alone listening to music,
or watching
a show,
alone eating,
alone
at the movies,
alone
at work, alone writing,
alone in my head,
and yet never 
ever lonely,
i only felt that
way
when you were here,
ten inches away,
sleeping
in my bed.

that's what i'm talking about willis

it's interesting
how the preacher, or priest,
or minister,
can find a single line
in the Bible,
and run with it.
he'll analyze
the words, in Greek, in Latin,
and finally
in the language that 
you know.
he'll take it apart like
fileting a fish,
picking the fine bones out.
carefully dissecting the hidden
meaning.
he connects the dots
to another verse
in the Old Testament,
about two hundred pages
before that
said by a man with a name
beginning with Z, that
no one uses anymore,
because it's too hard
to pronounce.
see that, he says. hitting his
hand against the pulpit
which wakes everyone up,
do you see that? yes. yes.
that's what i'm talking about.
but he doesn't end
it with Willis.
as i would.

the christmas parade

as a parade
goes by, men
and women, small children
dressed
as santa's helpers
wave to the crowd.
the firetrucks,
the cars
decorated like candy
canes roll by,
and then at the very
end
is Santa on a made
up sleigh, which
is actually the back of
a Toyota pickup truck
filled with hay.
there's a tiny tyke
standing beside me
in a ball cap,
sucking on an enormous lollipop,
fun, huh? i say to him.
he looks up at me and says,
not really. this stinks.
lame.
like we're supposed to believe
that's Santa Claus.
i've seen him before,
at the mall,
he sold my mother a 
pair of shoes.

the grey mouse

how
do you kill a mouse?
why,
when they eat so little,
so quiet
in their ways,
soft and small,
a lighter shade of grey.
up and over
counters,
they find a way in,
they find a way out.
but they seem 
well mannered.
think of them
as tiny
butlers,
small maids, cleaning
up the crumbs,
the mess
that you've made.

who is that girl?

after she got her new nose,
and her skin
tucked
behind her ears,
making her face tight
as a drum,
and her tummy
squeezed clean of fat,
i almost didn't recognize
her when she walked
into the room.
her eyes were blue now,
not green,
and her curves seemed
to be more curvy.
but then i knew it was her
when she ordered a martini
and a basket of fried calamari
and onion rings.

young whippersnappers

when the clerk
asks
if you want the senior
discount
on your groceries,
and asks
if you need help with
your bags
in getting to your car,
or when a young
man holds
the door for you and calls
you sir,
you want to scream,
i'm not ready for this,
not yet, go play in
your sandbox, 
and i'll let you
know when i'm old.

Vice-president of sales

everyone's a manager now.
a vice president
of operations, of sales.
a CEO,
a chairman,
chairwoman,
a senior officer of some
sort.
there's no worker bees anymore,
no little people.
just big wheels.
look at their
business cards,
everyone is important.
you can tell by
the raised gold lettering.

in the dog house again

i see 
Father Smith coming
down the center
aisle 
about to give mass,
the little altar
boys trailing
behind with the cross,
and staff
and other assorted
instruments
of faith.
i give him
a nod,
a little wave, but
he scrunches up his mouth
and rolls his
eyes.
he's mad at me.
i've  written too many
poems about
him
and the church.
i'm in hot Holy Water
with him,
i'm banned to the
the proverbial doghouse,
a perpetual
state of purgatory, or is it,
limbo?

picture book triage

my father
used send me pictures of the fish
he caught,
or the steak
he was cooking,
a new shirt,
a new car every
fifteen years.
but now
he sends me a picture of
a bump
on his shoulder,
or the veins
on his hand gone blue,
or perhaps
a foot, swollen
and bruised,
and asks,
what's this look like
to you?

the tilted shades

there is something
missing,
gone
from view,
that chair is an inch
out of place.
someone has
tilted the shades.
left the stove on.
who's here?
who came and went.
was it the wind,
a ghost,
or is it
my memory failing me
once again.

something's happening here

i ask
the activist guy
next door if there's
any
protest
marches going on downtown
today.
the weather is perfect
for a rally
of some sort.
he's out walking his dog,
that he named Greta Thunberg.
a small wiry mutt
that bites and barks
at everyone.
i have the day off
and i feel
like yelling
or carrying a sign
in front of the white house.
there must be something
going on,
women's rights,
a war,
babies, global warming.
inflation,
general malaise,
disease, something?
nah, he
says,
we got nothing right now.
spring is best.
any ideas?

fruitcakes

i see the mailman
coming up
the street bent over,
the mail sack
weighing him down.
i wave,
he manages a nod,
as he
he hands me my
mail.
fruitcakes, i ask?
yup.
he says, slapping
at his bag,
they're killing me
this year.

the snowoman


while the other
kids
were building a snow
man
out of the freshly
fallen
snow,
getting us out of school,
i was busy
with a snow woman
ala
Sofia Loren,
with all her curves,
pleasing
my father as he 
looked out the window.

Thursday, December 15, 2022

retirement

i see my retired friends
at the grocery
store
reading
the backs of tuna cans.
perusing
oranges with a squeeze.
looking for the most
ripe tomato.
i see the coupons
in their hands.
or the receipts
adding up the cost
to see if the clerk
got it right.
i see them going into
the library
and coming out with nothing.
or down at the lake
with a loaf
of bread to feed the ducks,
now fat and overfed.
i keep waiting
to hear the gunshots
signaling,
it's over.

my stumbling block

it would
be impossible for me to give
a speech,
or accept an award
in front of a crowd
of people.

it's the only
thing holding me
back from
fame and fortune,
immortality
in the written arts.

one day i whisper, one day

i haven't sharpened
a number
two pencil in ages.
i could if i wanted to
but i don't.
i leave it in the little
basket staring at me.
new and unpointed,
it's school bus yellow
never fading.
the red tip of the eraser
unused.
one day.
one day i whisper to it.
don't you worry.
i'll find something for
you to do.

there are no losers

it's
the first participation
award
we get, when born,
the birth
certificate.
you had nothing to do
with it,
and yet there it is.
the legal document
of your existence.
more trophies will
follow that mean little or
next to nothing.
but they will be saved,
and cherished.
the plastic statues,
and gaudy tin,
reminders of a last
place finish.
why try when
there are no losers,
when everybody,
even the average, wins.

the long hot shower

where once
he stood in the shower
until
the hot water
gave out,
singing in
the small tiled room
steamed
like a Turkish 
bathhouse.
he'd rub the ball
of his fist
to clear the mirror
then shave,
then brush his teeth,
brushing
back
his thick curled hair
with cream.
and now,
even the ledge of
the porcelain
tub is too far a reach,
unable
to lift
his leg to enter.

the new world of woke

they're digging up
graves,
removing statues,
burning books,
rewriting history.
faces are x'ed out,
history erased.
people are losing their jobs.
jokes are no longer
acceptable,
sarcasm is punishable
by death.
we are to the extreme
left of left
where movies are banned.
language is changed.
genders are neutered.
welcome to the new
world of woke
where the inmates are
running the asylum.
the nightmare
has just begun.

i thought you said casual

it was our first date.
she wore
a short black
cocktail dress with
heels
and stockings.
a low
cut blouse, lipstick
her hair
pulled back like
a tango dancer.
i was in shorts and a 
soaked t-shirt,
just finishing
up a three hour
morning of full court
basketball.
luckily i had some
old spice cologne to splash
around selective areas
before we went into
KFC for a three piece
chicken lunch, 
extra crispy.
she didn't want her apple
pie, so i wrapped
it up for her in a napkin
to take home.
i told her she was the 
best looking
woman in the place
which made
her blush, and say, oh my.
really?
i think we hit it off pretty
well, except
for the dress
miscommunication. 

the atlas map

you had
to have good eyesight
back
in the 80's
and the century before that.
we had to turn
on the dome
light in the car
to read road maps,
not unlike the ones used
by bombardiers
during world
war two.
we'd flip through
a twenty pound atlas
bought
at the Esso station
to plot where you were going.
we had to
read phone books too
chained
inside a booth.
the tiny letters
and numbers,
scrunched up on thin
parchment paper.
everyone wore glasses
back then,
or had a
magnifying
glass and a flashlight
in the glove
compartment.
everyone had a headache
and put
a bag of ice on their head
after taking three aspirins.

don't be that fool

i was always buying
her flowers.

roses,
a bouquet

of some sort.
daffodils,

orchids,
petunias.

i was trying to win
back

the affection i thought
i once had.

an apology of sorts.
of falling

on my own sword.

chocolates too.
i believed

in the power of hallmark
cards.

of lover letters,
poetry.

jewels.

it was all in the game.
a game

where i thought i knew
the rules.

but didn't not, really,
it takes some years to

get wise
to women,

to wake up
and not be that fool.

when the cop pulls you over

the cop
aways asks, as he stands
at your car window,
his party lights
on behind you,
do you know
why i pulled you over?
or do you
know how fast you were
driving?
they never ask you,
where
one might get a good steak
around here,
or where
to get coffee
and donuts, not the
store bought kind.
they rarely ask you if
you've lost
weight, or
how to make the perfect
Bundt cake
for the holiday gathering
you're rushing to.
if you were a tree,
what kind
would you be?
they never ask you that
either.

unfixable

you can fix
a flat tire, or a broken
down
car.
you can patch a leak
in the roof.
you
can mend a torn dress,
clean up
a spill
on the floor.
but humpty dumpty
falling to the ground
is a problem.
not unlike you,
unfixable.

your cheating heart

while her part time
lover,
the podiatrist
is in the water, she shoots
me a text
and asks how
i'm doing.
it's eighty degrees here,
she crows,
and sends a picture
of the shoreline,
an island off
the coast of the Dominican
Republic.
i can see a large shadow
of a man
in the distance.
a very white whale on land.
the doctor, who's paid
for the trip.
he's coming back now,
she says,
i think Irvin found a watch
or something
with his metal detector.
i'm having my morning
pina colada,
and scrambled eggs
with crab meat.
and a smear of cream cheese
on my bagel.
more later, kisses.

another twenty minutes

i'm killing time.
drinking coffee.
i'm in my underwear at
this machine.
i'm looking out the window,
waiting for ice
to melt.
for traffic to die down.
i'm in limbo.
i'm idling,
waiting for the day
to start.
i'll give it another ten
minutes,
then i'll heat up a cup
of joe
to go.
put some clothes on,
shoes.
bundle up
and hit the road.

while sitting in her blue chair

it goes by fast.
my friend Mary, 
at ninety-five
used to pine as she made
us tea
and opened up
a tin of cookies.
she'd say
i still feel like
the twenty-five
year old girl who moved
into the city
during the war.
i met Kenny the next
year.
he worked for the trains
like i did.
it goes by fast,
she says,
sitting in her blue chair
from 
the Hecht company.

left with no choice

like the bee
you swing at with the newspaper,
your hand,
a book,
keeping him
away,
one can only
take some much abuse.
and you
find a way
to fight back,
to land on a tender patch
of skin,
and sting.
you've been left no
choice but to
attack.

ten miles away

my mother,
despite living a mere
ten miles
away,
would often ask
if we were getting snow
now,
or rain.
was it windy there
like it was
where she lived.
is there ice too?
she was glued to
the weather channel.
be careful
it's really coming
down
and the man says it
won't be over
soon.

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

going along for the ride

i always
wondered why people of
a different faith,
or no faith
at all
put up a Christmas tree
for Christmas.
they nail a wreathe to
the door,
exchange gifts
and hang
stockings
on the mantle.
they string lights around
the house.
They don't believe in
God,
or that Jesus
is the Son of God,
savior of the world,
but they go along
with the festivities just
the same.
why, because it's fun?
the singing, the food,
the opening of presents,
the office party,
the punch bowl
full of rum.
my father who never
stepped inside a church
or prayed,
used to win the neighborhood
Christmas yard decorating
prize
every year.
he called religion a bunch
of malarky, but
there were the three wise men
in his yard, a manger,
the baby Jesus,
Mary and Jospeh,
colored lights
and elves, Santa on his
sleigh and behind him
all those reindeer.

the Christmas list

i pull out my list of
excuses
for not attending the annual
Christmas
party across
the river
where we have to exchange
gifts
and dance,
eat fruit cake.
i go through the list,
unravelling
the old piece of paper
i stuffed into
my wallet.
rain,
traffic,
covid (just recently added)
sprained my ankle
putting the tree up.
the heartbreak
of psoriasis.
my grandmother
died again.
getting married that weekend.
kitchen fire.
water heater
blew up.
there's a squirrel in
the house
and i think it's rabid.
can't find my car keys.