Sunday, December 31, 2023

the end of year evaluation

i call my
therapist up for an end
of year
evaluation
and tune up, not unlike
when
i take my
car in to the shop.
i tell her i'm having
a mid
life crisis.
which makes her laugh.
that would make
you a hundred
and forty
then, when you die, she says.
give or take,
i tell her.
i just need to vent a little.
talk about
my mother again.
i'm not sure if she even loved
me.
sometimes she'd forget
my birthday.
stop, she says, save it.
i'm in the middle
of stuffing olives
with cream cheese and
making punch.
okay, okay.
so when?
i have an hour open
on New Years Eve.
but bring a bottle
of champagne
and a party hat, okay?
the Dick Clark Times Square
show starts
at 7.
and if you could be a prince
and pick up
some onion dip on your way
over.
that would be nice.

cancelling the wedding

i get the call to come quick,
my friend
Lizzy,
is out on the ledge of her building
threatening to jump.
i get there,
and try to talk her down.
hey, hey, i say to her.
what are you doing out there?
come on in.
come on down.
it can't be that bad, can it?
what's going on?
Harry asked me to marry him,
she says.
holding her hand out,
showing me the ring.
i just don't think i can do it.
and there's only
one way out, which is to jump.
oh, come on, i tell her.
just say no. call it off.
i can't, she says. 
i bought the dress, ordered
the wedding cake,
and sent out over a hundred
invitations. the bridesmaids
have already rented their
peach colored dresses.
a three tier cake is being made
as we speak,
and Harry has already booked
a flight to Rome for our honeymoon.
i don't even love him.
i was drunk and confused when
i said yes.
you know how i get when i'm
drinking tequila.
geeze Marie, i tell her.
look, it's only three floors up,
go ahead and jump, but try and hit
those hedges over there.
deflect the landing a little,
you might just break and arm
or a leg and get scraped up,
but you'll be in the hospital
for awhile, and get out of this
mess your in.
hold on for a little while
longer, i'll go down
and throw some of your
couch pillows around to soften
the landing in case
you miss the bushes.
try and roll when you hit
the ground, okay?

the Christmas gin and tonic

her father
gave me a jug of Gordon's
Gin
for Christmas
one year.
i think he wanted me
to do the drinking
that he no
longer could, with the bad
liver and all.
he was a good
man
when laughing
when the wife and the daughters
weren't around.
when he could be
himself.
no longer depressed
about life,
stuck in his house,
no longer
having to curb the words
that came out
of his mouth.

live and let live

i take
a few minutes out of the day
to rake leaves
in the small
back yard.
critters and birds
start jumping
in the commotion.
i push and pull
the autumn
haul into a pile
in the corner,
where,
i suppose they'll
decompose
i'm all about the earth
these days.
nature and what have you.
live and let
live i think, except
for snakes,
which i take
a hoe to.

leaving on a jet plane

she's going
to Spain
for a few months,
to run
with the bulls,
he's going to Costa Rica
for a year,
to fish
and drink,
and get old.
She's going to London,
to live
her life,
to read,
and eat, to be a wife.
i'm going
up to Wal-Mart
to purchase a giant
bag of orange
marshmallow peanuts,
and to get
batteries,
four double A's
for my
flashlight.

a half loaf

half
is less than whole,
but sometimes
a half
of loaf
of love is enough
to fill
you in 
the moment,
and keep you wanting
more.

Saturday, December 30, 2023

chicken again?

chicken again?
was a common phrase when
growing up.
despite how poor
we were,
there seemed to be a lot
of chickens
around.
we took turns
saying it,
chicken again, mom?
seven children,
seven days in the week.
it drove
my mother crazy, which
was a short
drive to begin with.

the harmonica player

when it comes
down
to sitting on your front
porch
all day,
playing your harmonica
badly,
and whittling
wood,
it's time.
your life has pretty much
come to
an unsuccessful end.
unless of course
you're selling
your
wooden spoons
and forks at the local
flea market.
if that's the case, press
on.
you've got that going
for you.

the short history of early man

early man,
built from a skull fragment
the size of a nickel,
was found
somewhere
in Africa
a hundred or two hundred
years ago, he, or she,
or possibly them,
had a large forehead.
very large,
with  a prominent nose,
and enormous eye 
sockets.
from the fragment of bone,
they recreated
a whole
person.
he wasn't well read
they said,
no schooling, no witticisms
were found
carved onto
cave walls.
he may have been married,
with children,
but was he happy?
they aren't sure.
life was hard back then,
no transportation
to speak of,
no coffee breaks, no television
to wile away
the hours.
clothes were hand made
out of 
wooly mammoths skins,
and they used aloe
leaves for diapers.
not to mention that
fire
was non existent, which
resulted
in a lot of shivering and head
colds,
especially with the large
foreheads,
indicating enormous
sinus cavities.

the cardinal at the window

the cardinal
at the window surprises
me with
his tapping, his flapping
of cherry
red wings
against my pane.
he's trying
hard to get my attention,
and at last
has it.
stubborn as i am,
i sit
and wait and watch it,
again and again.
i understand.
things must change.

the sound of crickets

i pick up
the house phone to see if
there's a dial tone.
there is.
i check my cell phone,
it's charged
and working.
so what's up?
i go to the door and look
up and down
the street,
no one.
crickets.
i feel like
something's going on
and i'm not
in on it.

bring your lunch

i see my activist friend,
Wanda, who recently changed
her name to Hope,
sitting on her front porch,
spraying
Bactine onto her bare knees,
and squeezing
out globs
of Neosporin.
she's scraped and bleeding
all over.
elbows and chin.
cuts and bruises
are everywhere.
yo, i say to her.
what's up. oh my God,
what happened to you?
oh, i'm okay.
i'm fine.
just got a little banged up
yesterday
when we closed route
95 heading south
for six hours.
about a hundred of us
sat and laid down in the road
in protest.
we're trying to end the war,
stop Big Oil,
and support
transgenders.
oh, i see. interesting.
we're going down to the
white house today,
to chain ourselves to the fence,
and pour
red paint everywhere.
red paint?
yeah, it represents blood.
so what's your cause today?
we're not sure
yet, but we'll come up with
something.
do you want to come?
i look at my watch, ummm,
there's a really good game on today
at noon
and i have a load of clothes
in the washer right now.
plus i'm so far
behind on all of my New Yorker
magazines.
can i take a rain check on that?
sure, sure.
do you have any sandwich
baggies, by the way.
i ran out and i really want
to bring a lunch.
oh, and some mustard,
not the yellow stuff, but the
grey Poupon?
i'll check.

she hasn't changed

in a rare
moment of chivalrous
endeavor
i attempt to help
an old lady
across the street.
she's wheeling
her grocery
cart behind her.
she hits me with her handbag
and screams
let go of me.
i know what you want,
you men
are all the same.
Men!
i look into her eyes,
she's about
my age,
she's someone i used
dance with,
and date.
we once went to Las Vegas.
she hasn't changed.

a final round before dark

it's a beautiful field.
green slopes,
manicured lawns,
a paved path
that winds
between the oak trees
beyond
the iron gates.
there's flowers there too.
it's quiet
and stately,
i imagine a fairway
and a green,
a club house
off the first tee,
but there are no sand traps
here,
just stones,
tilted and aged,
inscribed with dates
and names,
with coins left behind,
imprints
of knees that knelt
to pray.

Friday, December 29, 2023

left behind crackers

my 
god, these crackers
are so
dry
and stale.
a half sleeve
of pale salted squares.
i have crumbs all over me.
who left them here?
who's trying
to kill me?
not even
a swath
of peanut butter
or jelly
can save them.
i'm choking
on the soft
hard crumbles,
jagged
going down.
i'm gagging.
let me call you back
later.
that is
if i'm still around.


surviving the big bang

we're we on the same
page?
aligned
next to each other in
the Dewey decimal system,
were we even
in the same book,
in the same
library,
on the same shelf,
in the same state,
in the same city,
on the same
continent,
on the same planet
in the same
solar system
in the same universe,
hell no.
alcohol and sex
will often confuse you,
causing
regrettable decisions.

the alimony negotiation

after catching
the ex
cheating and sleeping
with Carlos,
my son's karate teacher,
i filed for divorce
and then
i negotiated
the alimony down to two years,
making the audacious
claim
that she was capable of
work,
since she was
only 32 years old and had
a degree in
marketing.
it was a bitter fight.
she wanted
alimony for life, and half
of everything
i every made, and would
make until
the end of time.
this made
the judge laugh and laugh
and laugh.
he finally slapped
his gavel down 
and said no dice, 
but nice try Jezebel.

one of a kind

it's from
the Ming Dynasty, she tells
me as I
take a look
at the blue and white vase
on a pedestal
in the hallway,
beneath
the quality print
of a Monet.
it's one of a kind,
she says
in a whisper.
later on the way
to the rest room,
i pick it up
and turn it over.
it says
Home Goods,
from
Bloomfield, Indiana.
i say nothing, 
but go on red alert
for what might
come next.

the blood stream

early on,
in the formative years,
after
so many Sundays of mass,
so many
Saturdays
of catechism,
the idea of heaven
and hell,
sin
and punishment,
confession,
was forever in my
bloodstream.
there was no turning
back.
and now, at this age,
reciting
the prayers
of childhood.
i'm still unsure as to
where i'm going,
lying awake in bed,
praying,
with hands still clasped.


youtube, the new wizard of oz

he tells me that his
son
has dropped out of Harvard.
he says,
why go
to school
when there's YouTube on
his phone.
ask me a question,
ask me
anything, the son told him,
and i'll give you the answer
in three seconds.
why fill up my brain with
useless information,
when its right there
for the asking.
i guess he has a point.
the family
is buying
a new house, a new boat,
and taking
longer vacations now
with no
more tuition.
YouTube is sending him
a certificate,
giving him an honorary
doctorate
for googling.

baby you can drive my car

i have a corvette now,
a sting ray,
she says,
rubbing her hand along
her smooth
skin,
her lineless
cheeks
and forehead,
recently injected with 
a heavy
dose of Botox.
she brushes back
the extensions of her long
blonde hair.
her breasts don't bounce
like they used to,
and 
the visceral fat
has been
drained
from her now slender
waistline.
you'd have to do carbon
dating to
find her real age now.
you've changed i tell her.
i know she says.
but only
on the outside.
the inside is still the same.
do you want to drive
my car?
it's emerald green.

jumping the shark

when my
mother posted a recipe for 
chicken
noodle
soup onto her Facebook page,
with a series
of photos
showing the process,
i kind of figured
that the jig was up.
the venue had jumped
the shark.
she got
about a thousand
likes,
and acquired
more friends
than i'll every have in
a lifetime.

let's lie down on the highway and other moronic ideas

if we lie
down on the highway and block
traffic
making
the lives of others
miserable,
the war will
end,
oil consumption
will disappear,
hunger
will no longer be an issue.
peace will
arrive
by the new year.
if we glue ourselves
to the road,
and join
arms,
marching down Broadway,
chanting loudly a dr. Suess
styled
poem about genocide,
we can make the world
right again,
at least in our eyes.
come join
us and let's shut down
the city,
let's block the road on
route sixty-five.

Thursday, December 28, 2023

troubles solved

two drinks,
of scotch on ice
would often be enough,
but three
would 
definitely suffice,
allowing
the epiphany to arrive.
troubles solved,
with elbows
on the bar of a smoke
filled room,
but soon forgotten
in the morning
light.

the big muddy

it used to be,
we'd think, that this too will
blow over,
that things
would settle and some sort
of normalcy
would return. but
it just doesn't feel that way
anymore.
we're neck deep
in the big muddy,
sinking slowly, but
surely
into a bottomless pit
of quicksand.

church mice

poor at first,
church mice eating the crumbs
of wedding
cakes
and rice.
she hung
the curtains in the window,
lace
white,
while i put shelves up
for the books
we were
yet to buy.
was love enough, to go on.
for awhile
it was,
but not for long.

the harbor lights

the water,
an endless horizon
of cold blue,
a plume
of a
distant
moon, the arm of it
on
the bay,
between the harbor lights.
the boats are in
at last.
the beach is clear of
children and tourists,
of lovers
hand in hand,
only the elderly are out,
sleepless,
gouging the sand
with bare feet, 
walking, seeking refuge,
a meaning
to their life.

driven to whiskey on a winter night

it says wireless,
and yet
here i am with a snake
pit of wires
in my lap.
Bluetooth, dear lord,
save me
from this technological
wrath.
i just want
to hear a song,
i want to drop the needle
on the long
play
record, i want to flip
the switch
and turn
my transistor radio on,
i want to hear what i want to hear.
i don't want to
pair anything, or download
software,
or connect
anything to anything
anymore.
i don't want my device
searching the universe,
like Telstar,
for a speaker.
i just want to hear the music
and dance
like in the old days,
once more.

absent of fantasy

no longer
in love with what's sweet,
what's
shiny,
what glimmers in
the light
of day.
no longer persuaded
by whispered
words,
or seductive
eyes, i've moved on
to a healthier
way of living.
a life absent of fantasy,
absent of lies.

we'll talk about my heart tomorrow

it is the book half
read,
turned
on its face, waiting
for you
to read more,
it is
your purse
on the table, open
from when
your hand last entered
for a brush,
or phone,
or lipstick.
it is the cup on the counter,
three sips gone,
the note
on the door.
the cold food
for tomorrow on
the shelf.
it's the soft dent in the pillow
and bed
where you slept.
it's this and more
that defines your absence.
we'll talk about
my heart
tomorrow.

the rain is coming


be patient
the clouds tell you.
thick and dark
in the distance.
we're coming,
we're on our way.
hold on.
sit tight.
get ready.
your prayers are
about to be
answered.
we'll make your
barren land
right.

fame and fortune

sales are down.
people
are not buying the books.
books
that i slaved
over
sitting in my underwear
drinking coffee
before work.
how will i ever make
a buck,
or gain a smidgen
of fame,
this way?
where's my Pulitzer,
my Nobel Prize,
where's the fame and fortune?
maybe it's no ones
cup of tea
after all.
oh well.
next page.

an excusable mix up

as the return line
edges
forward
at the lingerie store,
snaking out the door,
i hold
the light boxes,
and the receipts in my hand.
how could i
get the wrong
sizes again,
i look at the tattered list
of names.
medium
small
and large, Lisa, Donna,
Joanne.
in my mind,
it's an excusable
mix-up 
once more.

a hard snow

the snow
is falling so fast and hard
that it
fills my
footsteps before
i can even look back.
i'll be lost for sure
in these woods.
the dark stones of trees.
i'll freeze to death.
no one knows i'm out here.
no one knows
that i've left.
but i press on just
the same.
i'm half way in, half way
out,
again.

a life half over

the children
in their thirties are still
on
the gravy train,
the government dole,
asleep
in the cellar
of their parent's home,
grad school,
an endless
process
with no job
in site.
no love interest.
the bills paid, the laundry
done,
dinner at six,
the blue
screens alight.
allergic to work,
to ambition,
afraid
of an adult life.
waiting for the trust fund
or will
to kick in
when the old folk
finally die.

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

all the pretty girls going by

their charms
are visible.
quite visible,
aligned seductively
in a series of curves,
and 
creases,
shapes
held together by
a polyester blend
of new age
tights.
we're suckers for
such charm,
from birth
through the middle years.
all the way
until closing time.
we can't help
ourselves,
even at ninety-one
on the park
bench,
bearded white,
we watch intently
at all the pretty girls
running by.

dill pickles are the reason

disturbing news?
oh really,
do tell,
what news isn't? where
are the cats
stuck
in the tree,
the canary singing,
the bake off
down
the street, where
are the boy scouts,
the girl
scouts, the skaters
on the pond.
the choir of elderly?
show me
the woodpecker
in the tree,
the geese flying south.
where is the oldest man
alive
who ate pickles everyday,
claiming it to be the reason
for his longevity?
give me
some soft ball reports,
so tired of gloom
and misery.

the pancake train

it's hard to shake,
that image,
waking up with pancakes
on your mind.
large round
fluffy
pancakes
with a side order
of sausage links,
dripping in syrup,
fat pads of butter
melting at the top
of the stack.
it's like sex, once on
your mind
settles
on something,
and the match is lit,
it's hard to turn
that train around,
and go back.

eating dead things

i take the dog
into the animal hospital.
again.
credit card in hand.
he's eaten
parts of a dead bird, or squirrel
or some undefinable
animal,
on the edge
of the road.
he's quick with his bite
into the greying
carcass,
no pull on the leash can
stop him.
and now,
there he goes into the back
room,
muzzled, and shaking
with fear for what comes
next.
the blood drawn,
the mouth opened,
feathers and bones
pulled out,
the stomach pumped.
he knows.
he knows.
my love has weakened
for man's
best friend.

alone but not lonely

living alone
has it merits, i think, as
i sit
here in my BVD's,
sipping coffee,
with the window open
and the music
turned up,
just right for my ear.
and those clothes on
the floor,
those dishes
in the sink,
the clutter of newspapers
and shoes
strewn about,
no sweat.
three games on the tube
this 
Sunday,
i need to place my bets.
i hear no voice telling
me,
to get my feet off the coffee
table,
or take your shoes
off before you track mud
on the rug.
and dear, once more,
you left the butter out,
here, wake up,
do you hear me,
you need to go to the store,
i have a list,
i believe the milk
has gone sour.

finding our natural home

it is true.
we, as humans, we get
used to anything.
bring us
heat or cold,
misery,
or turmoil,
and we take it. we
take it
and sometimes hold
on to it.
it's imbedded 
in our childhood
DNA,
we seek it our whole
life,
wanting to replicate
our natural home.

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

the inheritance

the maid
who
outlasts the elderly
couple,
childless and old,
cleaning
for decades their floors,
making
the beds,
doing the wash.
becoming
the family she never
had,
being there to listen,
and at times
hold.
and now in the end
inheriting
all the things she once
cleaned,
at last lying
in her own crowded
room, at rest,
with no need to work
 anymore.

nothing is lost

nothing
is truly lost.
the keys
will found,
and so will you.
keep looking,
keep searching,
keep at it,
check every drawer
and pant pocket,
look under the bed,
on the counter,
the table.
on the hook that says,
keys
by the door,
oh, there they are.

ten years ago

in midair,
falling, i could see how
harsh
the sky was,
blue and full
of everything,
mere seconds to fall
so far,
nothing
to hold onto, nothing
to grab
to save myself,
from imminent death,
or worse,
only
an angel guiding me
to the ground,
to a soft hard landing
in dirt,
to live on
a little more.

the other cheek

the other cheek
turned
is not so easy, the sting
remains
long after
the strike by an angry
hand, or word.
and yet
we try.
we read a line
that says it's the thing
to do.
to love those who
hurt you,
to forgive,
to be God to some
degree. at times i try
and yet,
at other times
i don't have it
in me.

blessed

blessed
are the cobblers,
the cooks,
the roofers,
the cleaners, the foot
soldiers.
the policemen.
blessed are
the meek,
the kind and merciful,
blessed
are the children,
the hungry,
the poor, the lost,
the lonely.
the weak.
blessed
are the homeless,
the sick,
the infirmed.
the doctors, the ministers,
blessed
are those who walk
the earth
with no intent
to hurt anyone, or
be hurt.
be one of them.

i'll be back soon

i can tell
you're gloomy, she says,
touching my
hand,
as if i might break
into pieces,
as if i'm
a fragile ornament
fallen
from the tree.
it's a nice blue, i tell her.
leave me to it,
i'll back
in a while,
no worries. i'll be back
soon.

the divining rod

with
divining rod,
we seek
the sweet water, the calm,
the spring,
the gurgle of
clarity
rising to our lips.
let's call it love,
and when
we find it
we can hardly speak.
amazed
at what lies 
in front of us,
the well at our feet.

unconditional love

we talk
of love, of love without
restrictions,
or borders,
love beyond
human love, beyond
understanding.
a lofty
idea, a well of wishes
that will never
come true.
forgiveness, forgiveness,
forgiveness.
unconditional love?
i don't think
so.
if hell didn't exist,
perhaps,
but
even God with his sword,
raised high,
can't buy it.

the clearing at the pond

it's a mere
thorn
among hundreds,
but just one,
just a single sharp
prick
against my arm,
then
thumb,
bringing the poetry
of blood,
in crimson drips,
that
makes me both weary
and wary
of the world
we live in.
but still foraging
through
the thickets, the bramble,
looking for
that clearing
at the pond.

dry ice to me now

i see the dead
ghost
of you,
not unlike dry ice,
the wisp
of heat
and cold evaporating
on the ground.
it's all
that's left,
a thin transparent
visage,
of you were and what
you mean
to me now.

feathered friends

your life long
flock
of feathered friends,
whether
fair weather or not,
have flown,
south,
flown north,
east and west as
well,
some, or rather
many have gone
underground or been
turned into ash
floating mysterious
into the air.
at times, you feel
as if you are the lone bird
on the wire.
wondering
where they've all gone,
pondering how quickly
they've taken wing
and disappeared.

a slender bone

it's not
the white bones,
the slender
sticks
of something eaten,
chicken perhaps,
on the back end
of this holiday,
alight in the early
sun
like a candle
by the curb,
that worries me.
it's everything else
that had to take place
to put it there.
the machinery
of the world,
the farms,
the land,
the hunger, the work,
the labor
of countless
souls,
plucking feathers,
and at last into 
someone's
greasy hand.

breakfast could wait

in the morning,
almost
before morning, we'd
step out
onto the cold porch
in our bare
feet and grab
the bottle of milk
and cream
from the metal box
marked Embassy.
there might be eggs too,
and sausage,
a pound of bacon.
juice if
my mother was flush
that week.
pastries if our luck
was good.
we'd peek
into her room,
quietly crawling
into bed
beside her as she slept.
the dog too. we'd
let her dream of a different
life a little longer,
breakfast
could wait.

the party light

it's a long
night
of talking. of circling.
of being
kind to one another,
of avoiding.
of keeping it light
and breezy.
most 
of what is bothering
us
goes untouched.
slights
are ignored, troubles
buried
under the layers and layers
of good will
and drink.
food
and music.
it's the holidays,
why
veer off the road?

it's a yearly thing i tell her

the woman,
frantic
in the parking lot, 
asks me,
what's going on, why
are all the stores closed,
Trader Joe's, Whole Foods,
even the bank
is closed.
i can tell she's not from
around here,
that maybe she
recently arrived
from a different continent.
i tell her,
7-11 is open.
make a left at the light,
and turn into
the lot next to the drycleaners.
she's exasperated.
frantically
looking around.
what's going on here?
why is this?
it's Monday, right?
yeah, it's Monday,
i tell her, but it happens
to be Jesus's
birthday.
you know, savior of the world.
son of God.
Bethlehem, that whole
deal.
virgin birth, three wise men.
the manger.
every year on the 25th,
almost
everything closes
in celebration
for the arrival of the baby
Jesus.
she looks at me, stunned.
really? she says.
what about tomorrow,
will it be over then?
 

the first tree out

i see the first
tree
dragged to the curb,
set upright
still full of tinsel
against
the hydrant.
so soon?
a trail of angel hair
and broken
ornaments
litter the sidewalk.
dry green
needles
carpet the road.
and there it is,
tossed
in the heap of garbage,
a clue to it all,
the mistletoe.

the snipping of vines

word comes
via
the old tattered grape
vine.
trouble
in paradise.
the fruit has spoiled.
love
is broken,
the moving trucks
are at the door.
addresses
will change,
rings will be removed.
Facebook
needs to be tidied up.
divorce
is such a chore.
and it's the holidays
no less.

behind blue eyes

it's rarely enough.
the surface love of things.
the ice
on the pond
in full bloom of sun
and blue
of winter.
we want more
than what
the eye beholds, we want
a depth
unknown.
we want to look further
into the eyes
of a loved one,
see what stirs within
their soul.

Monday, December 25, 2023

woman across the way

i see the woman
across the way, shaking her rug
out
on her porch.
hard throws
against the rail.
even from here
i see how
blue and wet her eyes are.
i see the bloom
of her breath
in the cold air.
i want more for her
than this,
but there's little that
i can do,
though i imagine
the world has tried.

hold on tight

the light
is perfect for this book, this
thick
new book
of poetry,
cracked open
on Christmas morn.
why has it taken so long
to read
deep into
thoughts of Rumi?
where has
this love
been all my life?
from now on, i'll
hold 
him tight.

i'm on my way

i lean into
this wind, hand deeps into
the pockets
of my long coat,
buttoned
to the top, collar up.
i trudge forward,
hat on,
scarf wrapped tightly
around my neck,
eyes down,
i keep going, keep going.
one foot after the other.
this storm
is nothing.
nothing at all.
let the snow fall,
let the wind blow.
i've been there, i've
done this before.
i've always seen the light
at the end
of every
dark tunnel.
just leave the light on,
i'll be there soon.
it won't be long before
i'm at your door.

not what it used to be

it's too warm,
too bright, too unmerry,
this
weather,
this sunlight.
i'm in my shorts and tropical
shirt
with bananas
and coconuts all over
the teal
blue polyester.
my ray bans on tight.
i'm sitting
in the yard wondering
where the snow is
while i eat a slice
of mince meat pie.
where is the wind
and ice,
the sleet of my youth?
where are the plows,
the sand
and salt trucks.
where are the snow bal
fights?
the holidays are not what
they used to
be,
but what is?

intruder in the night

we had an intruder
last
night.
but thankfully the ADT alarm
system
was set off,
the motion detector,
and the ring camera,
the pit bull
went wild.
there was nothing left
of him
in the morning
except some shreds
of a red
burglar outfit,
and stands of white
hair
in the dog's mouth.
we need to close off
the chimney
before next year.

Saturday, December 23, 2023

let me get my pants on, hold on

how do i look?
she asks me as she spins
around
in her new red dress
showing just a little
too much leg.
spectacular,
i tell her.
i love the shoes, the whole
outfit.
where are you going?
to the Christmas
party,
the one you said you didn't
want to go to.
i should be home
by midnight.
i look at the short dress,
the low neck of it,
the stiletto heels,
how tight it fits around
her waist.
i smell the perfume on her,
her nails are done
a shiny red.
her hair is blonder than
usual.
she looks absolutely
fabulous.
hold on, hold on, i tell
her,
let me get my pants on.
i'm going with you.

negotiating the Christmas tree

i try to negotiate the tree down
a few bucks
with the guy in the church
parking lot.
but he's not budging.
two hundred dollars
for a five foot
tree, i tell him, really?
the needles are already
dry and falling off.
look buddy, he says,
leaning towards me,
breathing whiskey.
i'll knock of ten bucks
if you keep it to yourself.
the Monsignor is on my
case this year for low sales.
he's looking out from the
vestry right now.
see him,
the red hat, wave.
go on wave and smile.
i turn and wave,
then hand the man 
two one hundred dollar
bills, expecting change.
what, no tip, he says?
what kind of Christmas spirit
is that?

the race to the border before the election

i get a call
from an old worker bee
in Guatemala,
sent back
for legal technicalities.
Francisco.
he's pleasant
on the phone,
much more pleasant
and
energetic than when
he worked
for me,
but he's an honest and good soul.
i'm coming back,
he says.
my family too.
do you have room
for us to stay in,
and work?
we're on our way to the border
now,
hopefully your President wins
again before we get
there, it could take
awhile,
what with the long walk,
the banditos,
and grande crowds.
we've heard a rumor here
that everyone that votes
for him and the lady,
has to take three migrants in.
is that true?
who is this?
i ask. the line is breaking up.
it's me,
me, Francisco.

still on the nice list

the ghosts
of Christmas past arrive
in the mail via
greeting cards
hand signed
saying love,
let's catch up sometime.
you scratch
your head and wonder
why
you're still on someone's
nice list,
when you've been naughty
for a very very
long time.

the gift that keeps giving

there are roads
i avoid, music that i won't
listen to.
there are days
on the calendar
that still fill me with a thimble
of dread,
there are moments,
just standing
in a store,
when
i tremble,
when i feel uneasy
with a mere
glance at the back
of someone's head.
thank you
dear,
for such memories.
but i'd like to regift.

freeing the art from his hands

the famous
confessional poet,
the daddy of the genre
died
in a taxi
of heart failure,
clutching a portrait
of his last
wife
in his frozen grip.
at last free
from pills
and psychiatrists,
asylums.
was she
the love of his life?
who knows, but
they had to break his
arms
to free the art
from his hands.

the year end game

it was around
this time of year, where we'd
gather
for a year ending
game
of touch football.
the cold or snow
made no difference.
Mike,
and Steve, John and Dave.
Gary,
Gino, Jim and Perry,
Breck
and Bill.
Lloyd and Bobby, Ken.
half of them
are gone now, and the other
half are too
old.
but we had our days in sun,
our nights too.
nothing is forgotten.

holiday travels

she asks me
if i'm traveling for the holidays.
yes, i tell her.
same as last year.
my route is as follows.
i go from the bed,
down the stairs
to the kitchen where
coffee is made,
perhaps a light breakfast,
and then i go
to the big easy
chair
to read the newspaper
after i've made
a detour and retrieved it
from the porch.
from there
i go around
the dining room table,
avoiding the pumpkin
pie in a box
that i bought three days ago.
sometimes i'll veer
off into the bathroom
to shower
and shave, i'll take stock
of what i look like
without turning the light on.
but then i'll take the stairs
and head south
towards
the sofa,
where the light is good,
for reading,
or for looking out the window
at birds.
i've picked up the nut
dish along the way and a pint
of eggnog.
i'll rest there
for a few hours, before
heading back
to the kitchen, again avoiding
the pie on the table,
but weakening.

the aim is still true

i crumple up last years list
of my new years
resolutions.
few if any
never quite met.
be kinder.
make new friends.
lose weight.
floss.
stop bothering Betty
with my problems.
read more,
drink less.
go to church or at
least stop
talking bad about it.
my aim is still true as
i toss the ball of paper
and hit dead center into the can.
so where should i begin,
what is it about
me and my life that
i need to improve.
what possible new things
can i start doing to make
me a better man?
again, i'm stumped,
but my aim is still true
as i toss
another crumpled list
across the room.

no place to hide

he had
run out of places to hide
his bottle
of scotch.
she found it under the sink,
on the upper
shelf
of the hall closet,
behind the attic
door,
a chest of drawers
beneath
quilts and dresses
she no
longer wore.
so now,
he sat on a park
bench
as night fell, and drank
it empty
before the long
walk home, 
yet, still wanting
more.

the poem yet written

as i stand
graveside, listening,
and observing
the process
of death, the wails
filling
the air
as tears
fall, as the first shovel
of dirt
covers
the coffin of another
fallen
friend,
i smile
internally, in knowing
that this too
is worthy of a poem
yet written.

Friday, December 22, 2023

embracing ignorance

i feel better
if i don't watch the news.
if i don't
look at my phone,
or answer it.
if i stay out of stores,
if i stay
off the roads.
leaving the television
dark,
the computer too.
i almost feel that everything
is okay,
that the world
is fine and dandy.
such bliss
there is in this ignorance,
that i embrace
with both arms.

the music of words

language
used to be an art.
the world seemed to be full
of richly
emotional souls
like Dylan Thomas,
or Oscar Wilde,
Emerson
and Thoreau.
words were music.
everyone
had a poet inside them,
holding court
at a local pub or
around a dinner table,
to tell a story,
to embellish, or to enrich
the lies
or truths they told.
rare these days
to hear
such lovely written
or spoken prose.

the bird watchers

it's a group
of older men and women,
silver haired,
all
with expensive cameras,
tripods,
their folding
chairs,
their lenses
and back packs full
of sandwiches
for
the cold afternoon
observing nature.
each whispering to the other.
pointing
towards a tree,
or water,
look, look, right over
there,
a beaver, a heron, a red
winged black
bird. and what's that
in the lair?
carefully i tip toe by,
not saying
a word.

busted for peeing in the woods

to clear my head
and get some quiet time alone
away from the hustle
and bustle of the holidays,
i take a long
walk into the woods,
off trail at Huntley Meadows.
unfortunately, i've had
two large cups
of black coffee before the walk
and now
after strolling by
a rambling, noisy stream
and seeing a fox
lift his leg up against
a tree, i have to go too.
i look around, there's no one in sight,
so i unzip and let it go,
the steam of me
rises into the crisp cold air.
but then, out of nowhere
a park ranger disguised
as a mulberry bush jumps out
and tells me to stop.
i see his hand on his holster.
quickly i zip up, but it's too
late, and he's got me
in handcuffs and reading
me my rights.
you're under arrest, he tells me,
for urinating in public
and desecrating an oak tree.
did you not see that box turtle
nestled under the leaves?
look at him, he's soaked.
he puts me into the back seat
of his car
and starts driving me to the police
station for lock up.
i'm sorry, i tell him, i just had
to go, and i couldn't hold it in
any longer, especially after
hearing that babbling brook
and seeing that fox
relieving himself.
he looks at me in the rear view
mirror and shakes his head.
no excuse he says.
i'm tired of people peeing all
over mother nature.
but i had two Venti black coffees
in me from Starbucks.
over thirty-two ounces of caffine
and water.
what's a Venti? he says,
scratching his chin
a Venti is a large, i think
it's Italian,  meaning large, i tell him, 
okay, so what's a medium?
Grande.
hmmm. and a small.
they call that a tall.
geez marie, he says, why don't
they just say small, medium and large?
i shrug my shoulders. i don't know,
i guess they want to jazz it up
to excuse their high prices.
you shouldn't be peeing in a state
park, he scolds me again,
shaking his head.
what if a bunch of kids or old
ladies were walking by, you'd be
in a heap more trouble than you are now.
sorry, i say, again. i just couldn't
hold it anymore, and these are
my good corduroy pants.
if i wet them, they'd freeze on me.
you ever try to walk in frozen pants?
huh? he says.
i mean, what do you do when you
have to go really bad,
and you're in your patrol car?
say you're on the hunt for a rabid
coyote, or someone is on the run
after fishing without a license?
he smiles. i got that handled, he says.
my wife was an arts and crafts major
at Swarthmore and she made this for me.
he holds up a giant red cup.
he tilts it so that i can see the large
hole with a funnel at the top.
she made this for me
on her work bench in the basement.
she calls it the Pee Cup. she's trying
to have it patented and then
selling it on Amazon.
wow, i tell him. she's a genius.
he smiles and looks at me in the mirror
again.
that's why i married her, he says.
for her ingenuity,
and for her buttermilk biscuits. he
gives me a wink,
which makes me think he's not really
referring  to buttermilk biscuits.
i wish i had had one of those cups
with me while i was walking in
the woods, i tell him, feigning sadness,
and letting out a sigh.
yeah, he says. yeah, rubbing
his chin again.
suddenly he pulls to the side
of the road, then leans over
the seat to look at me
after sliding his bear trap
and skunk repellant
out of the way.
you know what, he says, it's three days
before Christmas and you seem like
a nice guy,
hold up your hands and let me
uncuff you. i'm letting you go with
a warning. but don't let
me catch you peeing in the woods again.
Okay?
that poor little turtle. cripes.
i won't, i promise, i tell him. i won't.
and you know what, he says.
i'm really in the Christmas spirit, 
so i'm giving you my pee cup,
wow i tell him, rubbing my wrists
and shaking the pain
out of my cramped hands.
thank you, thank you so much.
but i'd wash it out real good first,
okay. i've been drinking from
my thermos all morning, hot ginger
spice tea,
and well, i had to use it a few times.
now get out of here.
Happy Holidays.

cleaning up Christmas

so why
are you putting up a tree
and buying
gifts, i ask
my atheist friend
Diablo.
i see you covered your
house in lights.
habit, he says.
i like the holidays.
the lights,
the music.
the gathering of people.
it's fun.
the kids love it.
i wish they could take
out that whole
thing about Jesus though.
the virgin birth,
the manger,
the three wise men.
kind of wrecks the whole
holiday spirit
with the guilt
and shame for how we
live our lives,
but we're getting closer
to eliminating
Him from the holiday though,
it's a work in progress.

i need a new scale

i think there is something
wrong
with my scale.
i've been starving myself
for eight hours.
i ate nothing but
a few cookies and
a chocolate bar
for the whole day,
plus a protein shake,
and a Big mac,
with a large order
of French fries,
washed down with a coke,
and it says that i haven't
lost a single
graham of weight.

the inevitable foxhole

more and more people
are coming
out
and proclaiming that they
don't believe in God.
this whole Jesus
thing is a farce,
a charade.
we came from nothing.
it's all
a bunch of made up stories,
malarky
from the middle ages
to keep people in line.
they don't believe
a word of it.
they don't have an
ounce of faith.
they don't pray.
they laugh about it all,
mocking the Saints
and cross.
time and near death
will tell.
they've yet to be in that
inevitable foxhole.

is everyone unhappy?

i go down
to the barn for fresh eggs.
but there are none.
i reach
into cage,
nothing. not a single
egg,
the chickens are nowhere
to be found.
i head towards
the cow
for a pale of milk,
she's not there.
the pigs are gone too,
the goat,
even the horse has
strayed.
everyone has flown
the coop.
what's going on?
then i see them out in
the street
with their placards,
marching and
chanting
in their own peculiar
ways.
clucking and oinking,
the neigh.
demanding better living
conditions,
and higher pay.

better days are coming

better days
are coming, better nights,
too.
the whole
lot
of twenty-four hours
will be
an improvement
on what
happened yesterday
and the day
before that.
hold on,
hold tight, this is all
temporary,
this hell you are going
through.

Thursday, December 21, 2023

reflection in a store window

when you catch
a reflection of yourself
in the store
window
as you walk by,
you hesitate
for a moment,
and examine the person
that you've become.
am i really, that old?
that tired,
that heavy in the waist,
do i really slump like
that when i walk.
is there really no hair line, 
is this how others see
me now?
the eyes squint
in denial,
assuming bad lighting
and the angle,
before quickly moving on.

the ruby slippers

do we really need to climb
that mountain
to give
meaning to our lives,
to put everything
in perspective.
do we need to hike
a thousand miles,
jump out of a plane,
or deep sea dive.
go flying off into the stars?
buy more and more and more?
why are we perpetually
unsatisfied
with what we have
and where
we are in life, what keeps
us searching
for meaning,
when it's right there in
front of us.
just click three times.

knock on wood

i carry
a small board in my back
pocket
nearly everywhere i go
these days.
mainly
because nothing is made
of wood
anymore,
it's all plastic
and vinyl, or glass,
or some manmade
material
created by
mad
scientists
in a Chinese lab.
it's just a small piece
of balsa wood, but
it'll do when the time
comes,
as it often does
in conversation, 
to knock on wood.

piano legs

she told
me often about how her
mother
would scold
her as a child,
and call her piano legs.
it stuck
with her for all these
years.
and now,
as she lay
there in bed
beside me,
the blanket pulled to her
neck,
she managed
to break down
in tears.

full of baloney

i tried
but i failed
at trading my sandwich
in grade
school.
wrapped in wax paper,
a lame
bologna
on white bread
with a swath
of generic mustard.
how i envied the peanut
butter sandwiches
beside me,
crunchy with blueberry
jam,
the ham and cheese,
the roast beef
thinly sliced on rye
with a pickle
on the side or
the club sandwich
piled high.
no one was interested
in my poor
bologna sandwich,
hapless and dry,
the story
of my life.

walking on eggshells

when the ex wife
woke up
one morning and suggested
that i should
get a life
insurance policy
of a million dollars, it
made me nervous.
i started to let
the dog taste all the food
she had cooked
before i ate it,
i drank nothing from
an open container.
i looked under the car
to check the brake lines
for leaks
or cuts.
i hid the aspirin bottle,
and monitored
the gas and carbon
monoxide
when she wasn't home.
i was crazily suspicious
and walking
on eggshells
when i came home early
from work
one day
and she was screwing 
a silencer
on her new
shiny handgun.

an interesting demise

it's an interesting
book
about how poets and writers
have died.
some through
no fault
of their own, 
disease or accident,
but many
by their own hand,
selecting
bridges
to leap from,
or ovens to gas
themselves, pills,
guns,
and sharp
knives.
indulging in alcohol
is also a very
popular way to die.
i've been extremely
careful
ever since reading about
Sherwood Anderson's
demise.
a martini toothpick
with an olive
stuck at the end,
swallowed
and stuck halfway down
his pipe.

ain't over until it's over

you know,
you just know, you have
a gut
feeling
sometimes when
you know that you'll never
see someone
again.
the curtain has fallen
on that relationship.
the ship has sailed.
the fat lady has sung.
it truly is over,
Yogi Berra.
no doubt about it.

relentless

the damn
rust on these bolts, on this
hinge
is relentless,
despite the scraping
and sanding,
the naval jelly,
and rust removers.
the aging won't stop
until the gate falls
to the ground.
truly it
never sleeps, and lately
neither do i.

open it

as
Frank Zappa
once
said,
the mind is like
a parachute,
you have
to open it
if you want to live.

no such thing as an original sin

there is
no original sin.
there is
nothing new under
this sun
and moon that i can
think of,
no wrong,
or act of cruelty
considered new,
and yet
we are daily surprised
by what people
in this world
can do.

when the phone rings

it used to be a pleasant
thing
to have the phone
ring,
a friend, perhaps
checking in,
a brother or sister,
some loved one
far away.
we'd sit for an hour
or more and
chat, sipping coffee.
smoking cigarettes.
how's the weather,
the kids,
your work, we'd say.
your health.
we'd cover the world
at large, and end
the talk
with i miss you, or i
love you.
hope to see you soon,
get well,
but now.
i hardly pick up the phone.
it's no one
i know or want to know.
the phone
has lost its spell.

they are animals not babies

it's a dog,
it's a cat, it's not
a baby
or a small child.
stop dressing your
dogs
in coats
and scarves,
little hats,
putting ribbons
on your cat's neck.
a pink tutu?
stop with the little
booties
on their paws.
and that monkey over
there,
that chimp
playing the harpsicord,
take his vest
off.

cry me a river

maybe we don't
cry enough.
we hold back the tears.
leaving the toxic
waste
stuck in our bodies.
everyone needs
to crumble over at times
like a cookie in milk,
and have a good
cry about the world,
or relationships,
or whatever has tied
us into knots.
go ahead, i'll stand
here with the box
of Kleenex.
i use them a lot.

i know what it is

something
has gone wrong.
and i believe i know what
it is.
the aged,
the wise ones have
departed
the scene,
and now we're
left with
kids.

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

the ice box

it's my own
personal
Antarctica, a frost bitten
tundra
of sorts
of frozen meat and
vegetables.
leftovers
from another era
in time.
when i reach in for
the ice tray,
i look at the whitened
landscape
of wrapped
fish,
cold beans,
bread and a slice
of wedding cake,
perpetually frozen
in time.

i'll be less without you

i learned
of your illness via
the grapevine,
of which you are
a part of.
the slender
crawl
of vines that have
attached
themselves
to my own brick
wall.
i need you in
my life.
please,
don't leave, i'll
be less
without you.
survive.

mea culpa, light

i wouldn't call
it a sincere apology.
it was a weak
attempt at saying i'm sorry.
there was not
an ounce
of mea culpa in it.
obviously
she was trying
to change the subject,
to move
on
from being caught
with her drawers down.

six dogs on a leash

i see the dog
walker
struggling
up the street
with his six dogs, each
different,
each
trying to go in a different
direction,
each with his
own
choice of hydrant
or tree.
each longing
for what's
in the man's pocket,
a treat.
the man looks at
me
and smiles.
better him, i think,
as i walk away,
better him than me.

optimism

a warmer
coat
on this December day
would
be nice.
i'm shivering
in the wind.
hands deep into
my pockets,
stepping
lightly over puddles
of ice.
i'm not sure why
i took
the lighter jacket.
as usual,
my optimism
has gotten in the way.

we're still hungry

why
are we here, here in this
fancy
restaurant
paying 56 dollars for
a tough
piece of meat,
or day old fish,
a small potato
and a smattering of
lettuce leaves?
i can cook better
in my sleep.
we made reservations
for two,
we waited at the bar,
drinking
twenty dollar drinks.
we paid to park,
then walked in the cold,
paid
to have our coats
hung.
and now, three hours
later,
after a twenty per cent
tip,
we're done,
and still hungry.

beauty or regret

the clean
canvas is scary, the white
sheet of paper
waiting
for the pen.
the paint
brush,
still in your hand.
each day is like that
when
there's no where
to go,
no one to tell you what
to do next.
what's it going to be,
beauty,
or regret?

it's what the young do

soon, not now, but
soon,
they won't have time
for this.
blocking the roads,
screaming
nursery rhyme chants.
they will
one day have jobs,
and rents to pay,
children of their own.
responsibilities
to take care of.
it's what the young
do, though,
march and protest,
clearly with little knowledge
or wisdom
in their head.

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

the back row seat

through
seventeen years of school,
i never
once raised my
hand
to give an answer
or to ask
a question.
even if i knew
the answer.
i preferred
the back row seat.
crouched
in a open book,
doodling,
or half asleep,
bored and anxious
for the bell to ring.

she loves me for my toast

it's an art,
truly it is, the morning
toast.
browned
just so,
never blackened
or burnt,
a light sand colored
piece of bread,
freshly popped
from the toaster,
warm and ready
for a swath of butter,
then blueberry
preserves,
gently spread.
she loves me for my
toast
more than anything else,
so she says.

give it to me Ingrid

tired
and whipped
by work, and life
in general,
i go down
to my local massage parlor
to have
Ingrid walk
on my back, and pummel
my muscles
until they're nice
and soft again.
it's been a long week.
give it to me,
i tell her.
she only weighs about
a hundred
pounds,
a canary of a girl,
but i can take it.
tell me if i'm hurting
you, she says
in a soft
voice. tender,
almost loving,
nah, you can't hurt me,
hop aboard
and show me what
you got.

a bucket of water near the door

with hope
and imagination
i used to keep a bucket
of water
near
the door in case she
came back.
i'd seen the movie
the wizard of oz,
too many
times
to not understand
how to get rid of witches
like that.

age is just a number

age is just
a number, my friend jimmy
tells me,
as he sips
on his prune juice
and lathers
his face
with wrinkle cream.
what's your
number, i ask him.
i lost count he says.
i'm somewhere
between birth
and death
is all i know, and the train
is rolling
down the tracks
mighty fast.

farm yard scammers

i hear
a chicken clucking
over the phone,
a rooster
crowing.
a cow mooing,
a goat
baying and a horse going
neigh.
where are you, i ask,
the man
on the phone
telling me that i've won
the mega millions
jackpot
again.
i'm in my office he says.
now go and get
those gift cards
from dollar general,
and stay on the phone.

ornamental faith

her religion
was more ornamental
than
internal.
the rosary beads, the pictures,
the hymnals,
the statues
and crosses.
the home made altar,
and
the attendance
at mass.
it was a good show
for  awhile,
a holy mask.
but of course,
it didn't last.

heading to St. Pete's

what
makes them fly south,
the boy
asks,
staring up into the sky,
watching
the v shaped
flight of geese
honk their way south.
how do they know,
when to go?
we all do i tell him,
as i pack up
the u-haul
and head to St. Pete's.

it's our turn now

it's not
your world anymore,
maybe
it never was,
nor the generation before
you.
ideals
have changed, morality.
respect
and kindness seem
to be lacking.
there's none
for anyone, not even
the elderly.
out of my way the new
world shouts,
it's our turn
now.

Monday, December 18, 2023

the suggestion box

when i worked
in an office
i was always putting notes
into the suggestion box,
that was positioned
near the front desk.
French roast coffee, i wrote.
i'm sick
of this lame Folgers.
and
instead of a nine am
start,
how about we have flexible
hours, say
ten to two. with a long
lunch.
followed by an early happy hour.
can someone please
tell Betsy not to wear so
much perfume.
she's like a new age Irma La Duce.
i'd like a window with a view,
please,
i' feel like a trapped
rat in a sewer
with this cubicle.
oh, and by the way, can
we turn down the fluorescent
lighting in here.
this flickering
is triggering my migraines.
and the heat,
please, why is it so cold
in here.
my feet have frostbite.
is there anyway we can
get a day bed in the break room
for an afternoon snooze.
i didn't last
long.

i don't want to know

we all have
a story,
don't we? but we all don't
need to write
a book about it,
or have a never ending
poetry
blog,
to tell the world every single
thing going on in
one's life.
guilty on all charges.
but a book,
nah.
too much drivel already
out there.
do i really need to read
the about
the trials and tribulations
of Scott Baio
and the Fonz, or 
Beyonce
and Cher?

one toke over the line

he liked
his dope, his weed,
his ganja,
his pipes and papers,
his brownies
and jello.
hashish.
he had a tattoo of
a marijuana leaf
on his chest.
he was
blissfully happy
and sleepy all the time,
hungry too.
but a little on
edge
when the po po
rolled down the street,
or when someone
knocked on the door.
he was going to be
somebody,
he was going to be
rich,
successful,
with all the trimmings,
but he chose the couch,
the weed,
the music,
the long afternoons
and nights
with a smile on hs
face, instead.

would you like a two year warranty?

the clerk
at the shoe store,
asks me if i want a warranty
on my
new shoes.
two years, no questions
asked
return policy,
or one year, repairs
and a new
shine applied if leather.
if a lace breaks,
we got that.
just bring them in,
the soles
come loose, or the rubber
inserts get
twisted, we've got that too.
of course
unusual wear,
say in bad weather,
or a dog gnarling on them,
will invalidate
your warranty.
plus if you're on your
feet all day,
or dance in them more
than twice a week,
the warranty
will no longer be good.

More Daily News

with nothing on tv
i make the mistake of watching
the daily news.
first the right wing station,
and then the left.
each with their
own twisted and extreme
views of what's
taking place in the world.
there seems to be no middle
ground
with this mess.
murder,
rape, war, drugs,
illegal immigrants,
fires and floods,
kidnappings,
mass shootings,
terrorists and campus
riots. viruses, 
politics.
after about fifteen
minutes of non-stop horror,
i go take a hot
shower
with lava soap,
and weep as i curl on
the tile floor, afraid once
more to leave
the house.

can i get an amen brother and sisters

i sent some money
to the prosperity church,
to the smiley guy
with the slicked back hair
and enormous
white teeth,
because they said
that a significant donation
would
be a blessing and that
God will heal me of my
chronic sinus issues.
it's been a week
and i'm going through
kleenex, well, like kleenex.
i called them
and they said to come on
down, my problem might
need some hands on
hallelujah healing,
plus another check of an
equal amount.
so i go down.
they put me in the front
row, despite my sneezing
and blowing of my
nose, i'm full of Flonase
and prednisone,
and feeling woozy from
shooting tree oil
and saline solutions
into my nostrils.
finally, after three hours
of singing and preaching,
they call me up
for the healing portion
of the program,
and the minister dressed in
a silver roy rogers
costume slaps me on my
forehead, which makes
me fall back into the arms
of several large men
of a suspicious nature,
smelling like garlic and onions,
who suddenly are going
through my pockets
and holding my wallet
and watch.
they drag me off backstage.
one guy,
who reminds me of
Joe Pesci,
throws my wallet back into
my face
after emptying it, the other guy
is wearing my watch.
you keep your mouth shut,
you hear, the little guy
says, slapping
a baton in his meaty hand,
or you're going to be pushing
up daisies
in the jersey river.
now get out of here.

layers of sediment and sentiment

every now
and again i'll find
a trinket
of hers,
an earring, a clasp
from a bracelet,
a contact lens,
beneath the bed, or
a strange
looking pill,
a receipt, or a shoe.
all left behind,
clues
of some ancient
history
i used to know.
layers of sediment
and sentiment.
it's an
archaeology
dig, unveiled with
each pull
of the hoover vacuum.

traveling for the holidays

plans
for the holidays, people ask.
are you 
sticking around
or going 
somewhere?
i'm not sure yet, i 
tell them,
i have so many invitations
to respond to.
i'm
sorting through
them
as best i can.
but of course i'm staying
home.
what crazy person
would want
to fly
or drive this time 
of year.
i've got my canned
cranberries,
my pork roast,
my beer
and my remote control.
i'm good
to stay here.

insatiable

when my
dog rolled over into my arms,
brushing
his cold
nose against my cheek,
then licked my
chin.
i mistakenly took him
to be
an ex girlfriend.
the insatiable
Kimberly, from
Rhode Island,
the flight attendant.
not now i mumbled
with my eyes closed, can
we wait until
morning?
ruff ruff, the dog lightly
barked,
to which i said,
i know.
i know how you like it.
ten more minutes,
please.

the Sunday Morning show

the morning
Sunday
television program,
hosted
by Jane, is a gem of a show.
you want
softly thrown
balls, well here you go.
you want
to know where
an old movie star or
singer
went to, Jane will tell
you all about it.
a craft show,
a sewing circle,
a child prodigy playing
a kazoo.
she has that too.
authors and poets,
chefs,
kings and queens.
good stories
to warm your heart.
it's a refreshing ninety
minutes,
of old fashion talk,
you sit back and relax
and almost
forget the real the world
you've woken up to.

the Caribbean cruise

i buy
a new pair of sans a belt
stretch
pants for the upcoming
cruise
around the Caribbean.
i've  packed
my lobster bibb,
and my
favorite steak 
sauce.
my wife has selected
her new clothes,
all from the Momma Cass
line of fashion.
tent like
dresses.
seven days on the ocean,
all you can eat.
who cares about the weather
or these poor
hurricane destroyed
islands.
it's dinner time around
the clock,
bring it on.

dog world

like dogs,
you have to train people,
she used to tell me.
they respond
the same way
to reward and punishment.
sit, beg, heel.
it's no different.
then she tells me that
perhaps i'll
get lucky this weekend,
if i don't
make any mistakes,
or misbehave.
point made.

often in denial

most of us are in denial
about
how good things are.
we let the news
weigh us down.
we stare into our phones
and let
the craziness
seep into our minds,
our souls.
things can be worse
of course, but for the most
part we should thank
our lucky stars.

elevator music

as a rock band
you know your life has been
a success
when you
hear the instrumental
versions of
your songs
being played in an
elevator,
or in a grocery store
as you
peruse the last chance
aisle.

Sunday, December 17, 2023

what's wrong with me?

i don't why
or how it happened, but i wake
up in a good mood.
almost cheerful.
something
must be wrong,
what did i eat last night?
did i get too much
sleep?
this is all very strange 
being
so content
and relatively
happy.
what the hell is going on?
mamma mia,
i hope i snap out of it soon.

running the country from prison

what if they both
go to prison,
can a country be run
by a man
behind bars?
drug king pins do it
all the time,
so i don't see
why not.
with the right phone
set up,
and daily visitors,
the orange man,
or the geezer man
might pull it off.
things probably couldn't
get much worse.

the dinner party talk

we've all agreed
that we can't talk about
politics,
religion,
education, race, gender,
immigration,
the current wars,
sexuality,
and money.
so it becomes
a very animated
conversation
about the weather.
i start things off 
by talking about
the cold front moving in.

will you still love me tomorrow?

will you still love
me
tomorrow, she says to me,
as we
sit on the couch,
by candlelight,
Marvin Gaye
playing softly,
kissing,
and trying to figure
out the mystery of buttons,
snaps
and zippers.
that's a song, i tell her.
Carole King, right?
ummm, yes.
she says.
but it's still a viable
question.
if we do this, will you
still love me tomorrow?
pffft, of course,
now, about this dress,
i'm having trouble
with the tiny clasp
in back.

singing like a canary

i imagine that i wouldn't
stand up
well to torture.
my cowardice is too
deeply ingrained
in my psyche.
i'd give up my own
mother if i heard
a chain saw
rev up, or drill bit
spinning near
my mouth,
or see someone coming
at me with
a scalpel, holding my
hand down.
i'd give them the nuclear
code,
the combination 
to my safe.
the addresses of
my current children,
and those not born.
my country would mean
nothing to me,
if they put me in a cage
with wild rodents.
i'd be singing like a canary
in about three
seconds.

strangers in a strange land

we're all strangers
to most
people,
those not in your circle
of friends
or family.
mere acquaintances.
people cross
the street when they
see you coming.
they don't give
up their seat for you.
you're nobody,
really.
there's no paparazzies
at your doorstep,
no reporters,
or adoring fans,
or worse,
those that hate 
where you stand,
but you make due.
being
anonymous
is actually not a bad
way to go.

Saturday, December 16, 2023

we need them, don't we?

there's something about
the human 
touch,
the intimacy
of a hand in yours,
or lying
together, skin
against skin.
as much as you dislike
so humans,
we need them,
don't we?

there's always greener grass

there's always
greener
grass
on the other side
of the hill.
a better job, a better
home,
a better car,
a prettier a girl
to see.
it may be green from
afar,
but you've learned
your lessons
the hard way.
stay put, lean back
and relax.
don't be fooled again
by what lies
beyond
your yard.

all this loose change

i don't know exactly where
all the loose
change comes
from,
but i'm running out of bowls
and saucers,
tin boxes,
and empty
jars to put it all in.
i scoop handfuls
from the dryer
and washing machine.
finding it
between the cushions
of two sofas
and an easy chair.
the bank is rarely ever happy
to see me
coming in with my
bucket of change.
lugging it with two hands.
security is alerted
as i stagger to the coin
redeeming machine.
i spend no less than
an hour at the machine
sorting through
lint and screws, paper
clips, nails
and
odds and ends
just to get some paper
money
to start all over again.

doing her Christmas cards

my mother would set
aside
about five hours to do her
Christmas cards.
with a pot of black coffee
and a pack of Virginia Slims
she'd get to it
using her favorite blue
ink cartridge pen.
waving us away,
demanding that we leave
her alone.
i'm doing Christmas cards,
she'd say.
suddenly on holy ground
where she couldn't
be reached.
go outside and play.
but it's three degrees out,
we'd tell her,
well then
put on your coat
and stop teasing your sister.
your mittens
are in the dryer.

tell me about your cookies

as i stand
in line at the post office with
my one
box
being sent to Bangor, Maine,
to an old girlfriend
who broke my
heart,
i feel
nostalgic
for Christmas.
music is playing,
the clerks
are wearing Santa hats.
i try to shake myself out
of this
sentimentality, but i can't.
the woman
in front of me
is wearing a long red
coat with a white
scarf,
there's tinsel in her hair,
and she smells of cookies
and cinnamon.
she's holding
a tin.
i want to ask her what kind,
but don't.
you can't do that anymore.

animals know as well

within
minutes you figure someone
out.
seconds, even.
it's a look,
a smile, a grimace,
body language
of some
sort giving you clues
as to what
you are to do, or say,
or possibly get up,
and move.
animals know
as well.
they'll tell you with
a wagging tail,
or growl.

the empty space beside you

when you have been married
forever,
forever being
more than ten years,
say twenty, or thirty,
and it ends,
you still reach over in the middle
of the night
for some comfort.
your hand slides over,
but there's a different
kind of empty space
beside you now.

where are you going now?


she likes golf.
in any weather,
sun or rain,
a cold wind.
okay,
she loves golf,
she's got the arms and legs,
and disposition
to be good at it.
she tells me about the front
nine, the bunker
on eleven,
the wedge,
the six iron.
she goes on and on
about the greens,
and the slow group
in front of her.
how far away to the pin
from the tee.
in the morning 
after looking out the window
for a whole three
seconds, i watch
her putting on
her golf pants,
her golf shirt,
her golf shoes and hat.
her gloves.
where are you going now?
i ponder, but
truthfully,
i don't even have to ask.

don't buy a boat

whatever you do,
she said,
don't buy a boat when you retire.
you'll be
spending all day
down at the docks,
cleaning,
rereading all of your navigational
maps.
you'll end up
buying one of those
silly anchor emblazoned
hats.
a boat will suck you dry of
every penny
you ever saved.
my father had
a boat his whole life,
and we never
saw him.
he drowned at sea, we think.
i laughed.
believe me, i told her,
i'm not a sailor,
i like to observe
the ocean, the lakes,
or even a swimming pool,
from dry land.
although i do enjoy
a long hot bath.

at four in the morning

i'd hear
the stumble of his boots,
in the late night,
after
the dying of his car,
the light
go on
as he climbed the stairs,
his body heavy
with
the life he chose,
trying so
hard to be quiet,
but we all heard him.
and then
the door would
close.
would there be words,
would
another argument
unfold?
with pillow
over our heads, we
prayed otherwise.

Friday, December 15, 2023

show me who you are

when young
and punished
by the silence
of a friend or a loved
one,
it hurts to the bone,
worries
your heart.
you want to make amends
for whatever
wrongs you
did
to cause the silence to start.
but as the years go
by,
this narcissistic behavior
has worn thin,
it has no power over you
anymore.
you laugh in the face
of it
and welcome the end.
good riddance,

water

as clear
and cold as it may be,
as
willing
as it is to come up
from the ground,
to fill
an ocean,
or fall from the sky,
or flow
down a stream,
be careful with it,
things aren't always
what they
seem.

where are you going?

there was the pocket
knife, black and dull,
used when fishing,
the marbles,
the keys, the chain
attached to nothing.
the coins
and folding money.
assorted baseball cards
for trading purposes,
and gum.
a short black comb
and magnifying glass
for burning up ants
on the sidewalk.
maybe there was a small
red radio, a transistor,
but that was all 
i could fit into my sears.
and roebucks' dungarees
when leaving the house
in the morning, with
my mother in the kitchen,
yelling out,
where are you going?

old brown shoes

funny
how over time
you don't
miss people.
people that were an important
part of your life.
once gone,
and the years roll by, 
the memory becomes
vague,
you can't remember
the good 
or the bad times.
i have shoes like that too,
stuffed in
the back corner
of a closet.

the round tin of cookies

the red
round tin of cookies
from
Swiss colony arrives
in the mail.
small
crumbly things,
factory wares,
nestled into paper cups.
my father sends it every year.
sometimes
i open it
and nibble on
selected ones, but for
the most part
they're hard
and stale.
i feel bad about regifting
them, but i do.
it truly is, though,
the thought that counts.
i'll miss these tins
at some point.

the laser beam in the morning

it's a laser
beam
that's hitting my eye
at nine
in the morning.
i hold onto
the rails,
my head secured
in a contraption
and strap
worthy of keeping
Hannibal Lechter
immobile.
it's a short procedure,
cleaning
out debris,
the fog and haze
from a lens that replaced
a cataract.
in three days, the doctor
tells me
you'll be able to see the world
clearly.
i tell him, i'm not so sure
i want that.

please, go away

someone sends
me a book,
a self-help spiritual book
called
don't waste your life.
i'm insulted
by the title alone.
and it makes me think
of all
the workers
in the world,
the machinists, the cooks,
and waiters,
the sailors,
the fishermen,
the housecleaners
on their knees
scrubbing floors.
the nannies, the trashmen,
the landscapers,
making what they can,
while they can.
putting food
on the table,
clothes on the children.
should we send
them the book too?
will you tell them too,
that they're
wasting their lives?