Wednesday, April 30, 2025

word of the day

i say no.
no.
i like the sound of it rolling
off my tongue,
out of my
mouth
into the air.
no.
it's a word so rare,
but not
anymore,
my dear.
here, let me say again,
come near.
no.
did you hear it.
no.
are we clear?

who has the time?

with hand
made signs and streaks
of color
in their hair,
weighed down
by an assortment of metal,
pins
and hooks,
rings,
with enormous
holes
in lips
and ears,
they appeared to be of a low
wattage
group
of souls, protesting, while
children
in cribs, in schools,
in the woods,
waited at home
or near about.
was there work being missed?
books left unread,
clothes to fold?
was there a pot left
unattended,
waiting to be stirred
on some stove?
these chants, so much like
children's
nursery rhymes.
who has the time?
where will this all go?

things would never be the same

i came
home early from work one day,
the ex-wife,
number two,
was packing up all of my books,
books i've bought
and read
since the ninth grade.
they were all boxed
and ready to go
out the door when i arrived.
not a second
too late.
what's going on, i asked her.
what are you doing
with all my books?
my Raymond Chandler,
Larkin and Lowell,
my Cheever and Updike,
my Plath and Sexton,
my Raymond Carver
and Bukowski,
my Mark Twain.
i'm giving them away, she said.
i need more room
on the shelves
for nick knacks.
maybe the homeless would like
things to read.
then i reminded her
of a place called
the public library.
what else was there to say?
things would never be the same.

the nightly news on msnbc

in a month
or so,
we won't have food,
or milk
to drink.
no water, people will
be picked
up off the street
indiscriminately.
arrested
for nothing more than
a bad hair cut
and deported to
El Salvador.
dogs will be put down,
no singing will
be allowed,
there will be locusts
and droughts,
famine.
floods and pestilence.
the world will end
in a few weeks.
unwanted babies will be born.
boys won't have surgeries
to become girls,
and no longer will they be
allowed to
compete in girls' sports.
vaccines
will be unlawful.
everyone will be saluting
the orange man,
sieg heil.
the elderly will be taken
off welfare
and oxygen
and set out into fields
to die.
democracy will end.
the constitution
burned.
so that's the news for now.
but we'll be right back
after
this brief message
from our friends
at big Pharma selling us
Prozac
and boxed wine
and a new book
describing
the environmental dangers
of flatulence 
from cows.


the geometry of cheese

i like
to circle the cheese section
of the grocery store.
it's a pentagon
shaped
area surrounded
by cool bins
of wrapped cheese.
there's a man
and woman back there
in white smocks.
cheese surgeons, i guess.
busy with
knives as they cut
enormous
blocks of cheese
on cutting boards.
all this cheese, the varieties,
the sizes,
the bricks
and rounds,
the triangles.
the rhombus cuts,
the squares and rectangles.
i circle and observe,
circle and read
the labels
until security comes.

finding love on the bus

sometimes
i pretend
i'm choking on a walnut
or something
so that
people
on the bus will ask me if
i'm okay.
are you okay
sir?
they say.
do you need help?
can you breathe?
do you want me to sit
with you a while,
give you a Heimlich
squeeze?
yes. i tell them,
yes,
please.
i'm that desperate
for love
and affection these days.

it's a bird, it's a plane, it's...it's oh, a weather balloon

everyone
has
a phone that can take
a picture,
or a video,
and it's perpetually
in your hand,
and yet, there's not
one clean
clear shot, or
close up of a UFO
or a little
green man
from Mars or Jupiter.
no photo of big foot,
or the loch ness monster,
but fall
down a flight
of stairs and you're
immortalized
forever.
detailed and in living
color
as you tumble
and flop.

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

and finally nameless

once sharp
and bright as any light,
she suddenly repeated herself
in conversation.
asking
the same
questions
over and over, forgetting
what she
had said
two minutes before.
a button had been pushed.
the rewind
button.
it was a long five
years
from that point,
until the end.
finally
remembering nothing,
not even
our names.

sprinkles and nuts

it takes
so much energy to hate,
to be
negative.
to live in the dark
stew
of resentment.
swallowing
that poison
day after day.
give
me the elixir of love
please,
the ice-cream
of happiness.
a banana split
at the drug store
counter
with Marracino cherries,
sprinkles and nuts.

bricklayer's helper

just one
long day in the dirt and debris
on a barren
site,
where timber
and steel
went up.
i pushed a wheel
barrow along a narrow board,
filled with
bricks
and stones,
i heard the men groan
as they
built the walls.
raising them,
one brick after another,
quietly
and slow.
they were silent for the most
part,
other than curses,
and vague talk
of women.
their skin was
bronzed and burned,
with hard hats
tilted on,
Da Vinci sculptures
with muscled necks, and rope
like veins
on their arms.
they exhaled the whiskey,
from the night
before.
over here, they'd yell,
over here kid,
what the fuck, come on.
more bricks, more mud,
not knowing
my name,
nor would they ever know it.
it was my first day
on the job,
and my last.
the next morning i never
felt such pain,
and was unable to get out of bed.
i stared at the ceiling
and wondered how
those men could go on.

the heat of summer nights

okay,
i'll admit it.
i was in love with her.
i stood outside
her house
and threw pebbles at her
window,
until she came
out.
it wasn't sex, it was
nothing like that.
we were
young, too young to understand
what made
this world go around.
it was more
like two fireflies
buzzing
about,
our hearts
flashing in the heat
of summer nights.

shaving her head while she sleeps

i stare
into the shallow pool
of water
sitting
in the sink and sigh.
where's the plunger?
i yell
to the wife.
where's the Drano,
where's
a clothes hanger?
she doesn't answer,
she's in the other
bathroom,
brushing out her foot
long red hair
into another sink.

the once shiny apple

i can
no longer shine
the apple
of you or hide
the brown
spot
were rot has formed.
i know too much now.
the flies
have gathered.
you're on 
your own from
here
on out.
was it fun while
it lasted?
honestly, no.

smoke em if you got em

everyone
used to smoke.
my mother smoked,
my father,
my grandmother always
had a pack
of Virginia Slims
next to her
cup of Earl Grey tea
short cake.
ashtrays were in every home.
doctors smoked,
construction workers.
men,
women.
office workers.
cigarettes were free
in the military.
men about to be executed
by the firing squad
wanted one
last puff
before the bullets hit
their heart.
people smoked after sex,
after dinner,
in night clubs,
at bars.
it was cool, hip, slick
and sophisticated
to puff on a cigarette.
rich or poor.
everyone was a movie star
with a Camel
clutched between their lips
with a ribbon of smoke
in their eyes.
it didn't matter
what the research said,
or what was
printed on the side of
the package.
just one more puff,
one more.

one small nibble of a donut

it takes
one small bite, a mere
nibble
of a donut
and i'm back on the sugar
train.
slipping a pack
of Oreo
cookies into my cart,
along
with ice-cream
and cake.
Twizzlers
and junior mints.
how easily we're tempted.
maybe being fat
is just our fate.

i don't like people anymore

as i sit
in the DMV, it occurs
to me
that i don't like people anymore.
the woman
sitting next
to me
is eating from a bag of
Doritos.
crunching loudly
each bite
into my ear.
a kid
behind me keeps
smacking
my seat, and making
monkey noises.
and the man sitting across
from
me,
won't stop looking at me
as he flosses
his teeth.
i look at the ticket in my
hand,
number one hundred
and nineteen
and they're only on six.
i've had it with people.

the lost train of thought

i was on
the brink of a new thought,
a new
way of thinking,
a door had
opened up.
a brilliant poetic topic
had appeared
like an angel
in the clouds,
and then
it was lost.
i lost my train of thought.
the damn
phone
dinged again,
that toilet that continues
to flush.

Monday, April 28, 2025

i'm still your friend

i don't care
if we disagree, i'm still your friend.
it doesn't
bother me,
the purple hair
and nose
ring or
our
political differences.
none of that matters.
i'm still
your friend.
if you fall, i'll help you up.
if you're
hungry i'll feed you,
if you're sad and lonely,
i'll sit with you
and talk.
no need for this friendship
to end.
if you're thirsty, here,
take my
cup.

the wrong side of the bed

is there
a wrong side of the bed
to get up
on?
is that true,
or just a myth.
i try it out one morning
after you've
left
and trip on your
high heels,
your balled up clothing
and make up kit,
falling
into the closet door
banging my head.
it's true
after all. there is a right
side and a wrong
side to this bed.

the ship is tilting our side

the cruise
is all
about food and drink.
we'll never leave this ship
and go
onshore.
it's about
meat and potatoes,
fish
and desserts.
pizza
and sushi.
puddings and pies,
pina coladas
galore.
we bring our stretch
pants,
our spandex,
our extra-large robes
and undergarments.
it's seven days
on the high seas.
the feedbag is on
as we stretch out on our
chairs
by the whirlpool.
snapping our fingers
at a waiter
for more drinks,
more food.

the barb wire fence

the barbed
wire
should do it, keep
the chickens
in.
keep
the wolves out.
the fox
from
finding their own
convenient
dinner.
it's a squared
yard
for them to peck at
the ground
until
fat.
it won't be long.

valid once more

i stand
in line at the DMV
to apply
for my Real I
D.
the passport, the birth
certificate,
the bills
and credit cards are not enough
anymore
to prove
my legal
existence.
i bring my mother and children
with me
to be a witness
for my proof of life,
my valid
citizenship to these united
states.
it only
takes a mere ninety minutes,
circling the room,
from chair to chair,
and i'm
out the door.
valid once more.

bless you

there's an
inch
of yellow pollen
on the car,
the sill where the window
has been
raised.
the cars,
the table,
the lamps.
it's a wind of tiny grains
of seed
and sand.
i bend 
and sneeze, again,
again.

Sunday, April 27, 2025

very very quiet people next door

i see
a baby in the yard.
the man
sitting outside fiddling
with a spade
in the dirt.
i say hello,
and stare
at the little baby in
the small
crib.
he has a shock of black
hair
and wandering
fingers
and eyes.
pink arms
stretching out into
this new
unknown world.
is that yours? i ask him.
yes.
he says.
my wife and i, it's ours.
five months
ago. oh my,
i say out loud.
i haven't heard a sound.

the smudge of a kiss

she used
to send me postcards
from
whatever city she was in.
from
whatever country
she visited.
whether Paris
or Rome,
Perth or Bonn.
a brief note
handwritten on the back.
wish you were
here.
with love,
Allie,
along with
the smudge of a kiss.
and then they stopped.

knowing every word to every song

is it over
for the rock and rollers.
soft or hard.
has
all the good
music
been done.
from the late 50's
into the 80's.
is that it?
no more Buddy Holly,
or Zed Zeplin,
no more
Elvis,
or Pat Benatar.
no Croce,
or Dylan,
Costello or Elton.
no more songs
to dance
to, to sing too,
to roll the window
down in
the car
and drive to, knowing
every word
as we sing along.

we need more babies

we're running
low
on babies,
the population is dying out.
all colors
and sizes,
races
and religions.
we need more babies.
come on
people,
get busy with getting
more born
before it's too late.
let's have some fun
like in the olden days.
come on.
let's go.

Saturday, April 26, 2025

playing at funeral

in a cardboard
box
we take
the small bird, a parakeet,
no bigger than the palm
of a hand,
bright yellow
and green
now folded into
it's own wings,
we take it
to the back of the yard
for burial.
behind the shed, beneath
old brush
and trees.
we're playing at death
now.
teaching
the young,
how it's done.
we take the shovel
and dig,
set the box into
the shallow grave and cover
it up
with freshly turned
dirt and grass.
we say
a few words.
we thank the bird for
it's short
sweet life,
the whistling we heard,
then go out to lunch
for happy meals.

being judgmental

you're so judgmental,
i tell my friend
Betty
while we
sit in a restaurant, staring
at a menu.
she's a circuit court judge
in town.
well, that's my
job,
she says.
i carefully listen to both
sides of the story
and determine
by facts, not emotion
or political persuasion if
the perp is guilty or not
guilty.
and then i hand down my
ruling.
i'm rarely ever wrong.
so what do you see on the menu
that you
want to eat, my judicial friend?
hmmmm.
she says.
i can't decide.
do the cooks here
vote on the left
or right?
right.
oh no, well,
we can always go somewhere else.

it's hard being God

i stare
at the fish washed up on shore,
bloated
with air
and rot.
i poke it with a stick,
it's dead,
of course.
do i push it back into the water,
or let the sun
and gulls have
their way with it?
it must be hard being God.

finding the right protest to go to

feeling bored
on this wet Saturday morning,
i get an itch
to get out of the house.
tired of being in.
i need to go somewhere, but
where?
i go online to see if there's
a new protest
going on,
something i can participate in.
i could make a sign,
a banner of some sort.
maybe paint my face, or
wear a colorful outfit.
i go through the list of protests
that i find online.
there's a save the whale one
down on the mall,
mixed in with saving a variety
of shellfish
and turtles,
and another one where you chain
yourself to the white house fence,
for some obscure cause.
something about plastic.
there's one more at the National
Zoo, for the release of all
the animals unfairly caged
and improperly groomed.
i can't decide, but then it starts
to rain really hard,
so i give up on the idea,
and take a nap on the couch.

making new friends

the almost
famous
singer wants to friend me on
Facebook.
she's beautiful,
so why not.
i confirm our friendship
with a push
of the button.
but before
long,
after some flattering
small talk,
she asks me for money.
just a little to
tide her over
until her next world tour
and gig
in the states.
she suggests using
pay pal, or Zelle,
or a cash app.
i ask her, what's that?
suddenly
we're no longer friends,
and she's gone.

a little personal time

i call
my boss, Mr. Jones, and tell him
that i'm
not coming in to work
today.
i need some personal
time.
another personal day off.
i'm going through
some issues
with family and finances.
my mental health
and my
dog who has fleas.
he listens to me rattle
off my reasons
for not coming in.
using a soft low whisper
to win over
his sympathy.
i see, he says,
then tells me plainly
that if i'm not in by nine
a.m. today.
i'm fired. it's time to join
the human race.
he says.
grow up, grow a pair
and get in here. we need you.
quickly i take a shower,
get dressed,
and run
for the bus, i don't want
to be late.

Friday, April 25, 2025

they know rain

the leaves
turn up
in the quick breeze
like small palms
or cups
ready
for what's coming next
under
the darkening sky.
they know,
before we
do.
they understand
without complaint.
it's not love
exactly,
but they know rain.

the duplicate key

i see the doorknob
turn, a twist
in the soft light,
testing to see if i've
left the door
unlocked,
which i haven't.
then
the click of a key,
pushed in and turned,
then taken out.
are you home?
i hear you ask,
in a half whisper,
using that old familiar
voice of yours.
i see you standing
in the hall,
wet from the rain,
dropping your bags
to the floor.
what now?

why do you live here?

years and years ago,
we tied
the small boat 
we arrived on 
to the pier.
pulling
tight
on the knot,
but the water pulled
at it,
wind and rain,
working it free.
casting
the boat back
out onto the waves,
back out
to sea.
it's why we live here
now.

the man in you

the man
in you,
the father, the son,
the brother,
the boy,
the teenager, the child
of you.
is all wrapped
into one.
dumb and smart
at the same,
time
wise
and foolish.
each day a set 
of new
choices
to be made, or
undone.

self portraits

the portrait
gallery
is full of faces staring back
into ours.
no pictures
or photographs
but an artist's rendition
of who
these people were.
oils
and acrylics,
sketches made
in charcoal.
some shadowed
some
basking in British
sunlight.
we learn
their lives
as we walk down
the alley
of art.
wondering if we're ever
happy with
who we are.

Thursday, April 24, 2025

i will never run out of ink or socks

it's hard
to walk by a set of ink pens
in the store
without buying another pack
of them.
fine pointed,
or roller ball, black or blue
ink.
i haven't counted,
for who has the time
for that,
but i do believe i have over
three hundred
and seventy-nine
ink pens in my house.
in drawers,
on tables,
in pockets. 
in the cubby holes of my car.
don't even ask me about
pairs of black socks.

what is a woman?

how did it become
a hard
question?
what is a woman?
i take out a picture from
my wallet
of my mother,
and say,
there you go. she's a woman.
seven kids
came out of her,
and then
a picture
of Marilyn Monroe
in a bathing suit.
she's a woman too.
factory parts, nothing added
or subtracted.
Jimmy in a dress
wearing lipstick is not a woman.
why is this question
so hard?

the onslaught of propaganda

it's nearly
impossible to watch the news
or listen
to anything
coming out of someone's
mouth and not
think it's
a lie, or some kind of distorted
half truth
heard
from
an unreliable source,
called
the newspaper
or a magazine, or God forbid.
a news
anchor on tv.

sugar craving

when
the desire for a sweet
hits
your brain,
that's it.
you're stuck until
something
gooey
is in your mouth.
the craving has begun.
a gum
drop will do,
an old candy bar
from
Halloween,
a candy cane with the
plastic
glued to it,
or 
that plate of Christmas
candy,
melded together,
still on your mother's
coffee table
in the other room.

sampling throughout the house

i carry
books around the house
for future
reading.
a novel
here, a poetry book in the bedroom,
a book
full essays,
in the kitchen.
against the tub and shower
famous quotes
from comedians
and politicians,
(is there a difference?)
each book opened and turned
to a page
earmarked for a line
or phrase,
underlined,
something of interest
i want to steal at some point
and call my own.

some birthdays are better than others

she settles on one
candle
for her cake.
a cup cake, because,
we're all continually
watching our
weight.
she buys herself a gift,
wraps it,
then unwraps it after
blowing out
the candle.
she feigns surprise
at the silver necklace,
then opens
up the card that says,
i love you,
another year,
but we're still alive.
a card she sent last week.
she's alone, but pours
herself a drink.
sings happy birthday
to herself.
the cat is asleep on
the windowsill.
she puts some music
on and dances
across the room.
some birthdays are
better than others.

and now what?

why does
one country want
to destroy
the country
beside them, 
to conquer the land
and people,
to bomb the buildings,
villages, towns and cities.
schools
and churches.
to wreak havoc everywhere.
what's the point?
it's all rubble now,
it's hell on earth,
but at last it's yours.
so, are you happy?

he's unbroken

the dog
chases everything.
he's that kind of dog.
the kind that doesn't listen
or obey.
he breaks all the rules
and jumps
the fence.
he's unbroken.
we're
the same.

keep rowing

no land in sight,
but we keep rowing,
we keep
at it.
what else is there to do?
get some sleep,
i'll continue
on through the night.
together we can get there.
rest your head.
i'll let the stars guide us.
sleep well.
i'm here for you.
you'll see, in the morning.
we'll see land,
we'll see the other side.

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

rainy day money

it's rainy
day
money in the blue
bowl
on top
of the refrigerator.
coins,
nickels and dimes,
quarters,
pennies.
will it ever rain
so hard
that i will need it?
i hope not.

Saturday Morning in the barber's chair

he was a large man
with fingers
like sausages.
i was
a small boy sitting in
his barber's chair.
i could smell the onions
on his fingers,
the garlic
on his breath,
the salami, the prosciutto 
the provolone.
his belly bumped
the chair
as it spun around,
there was a long striped sheet
wrapped
around me,
my shoes dangled
in the air
not reaching the leather
step.
i heard the scissors
snapping
like crickets,
dancing
around my ears.
the girls will love you,
when i'm finished,
he said, with a laugh,
dusting my neck with
a cloud of powder,
then giving my cheeks
a gentle
slap with a blue cologne.
i drifted off, as if
in a dream,
wondering which girl i'd
pick,
which one would be
the lucky one.
who would be my queen.

after what you told them

it feels like a strange
city,
now, this place
where i used
to live.
the roads have changed.
buildings
torn down,
new ones risen from
the graves
the old.
i have no idea where
i'm going but
i'm getting looks from
people
on the street.
windows
are being closed,
curtains
drawn,
i can hear the dead
bolts slide
as each door is
locked.
i should have never
come back
to my hometown
after what
you told them.
i'm taking the next
bus out.

waiting on your arrival

the cat
is unbothered by our lack
of attention.
the feeling
is mutual.
but the dog is another story
altogether,
anxious,
worried about love
and affection.
staring out the window
wondering
when you'll be home.
just like us,
no different.

limping home on one shoe

i'll return
this shoe you left behind
at some point.
i'll call you up
and tell you
that i have it.
it's black and almost new,
worn once
or twice,
quite nice.
i wonder how you limped
home without it.

sweeping up birds

why
some birds fly into the window
i'll never know,
they have the whole
sky to themselves,
blue as far
as the eye can see,
and yet.
clunk,
another one decides
to end
it all, to see what's
inside, where
i am,
behind
the glass wall.

rebels with a myriad of causes

the protest
is a mishmash of concerns.
it's not
just one issue
they're here for. it's many.
from
wars
and climate,
to transgenders and 
government spending.
it's everything
under the sun,
that they're screaming
and marching for.
it's not
just for women's rights,
or the unborn,
the price of eggs,
or immigration
reform,
it's a whatever's ailing you
march.
come one,
come all.
wave whatever flag
you want,
in some crazy way
it's something to do,
it's fun.

a row of turtles

it's a line
of turtles on the long branch
resting
in the water.
a set of helmets,
dark brown,
like steel
and hatched, necks out,
long
into the sunlight.
a dozen or more,
no sound,
no quarrel.
just bathing in the warmth
of spring
side by side.
end to end.

whether left or right

you have
to laugh, you have to have
a sense
of dark
humor to survive
in this world.
you have
to shake your head
and scoff.
it's the only
way to move on from
all the craziness
out there.
why argue, why fight,
why try
to make
someone see the other
side.
it's hopeless.
whether left or right.

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

i used to care but things have changed

my complaints
are less
verbal these days and more
internal.
i breathe them out daily,
though.
exhaling
the toxic fumes
i've taken in.
with age i've come to realize
how pointless
it is
to rage.
i used to care, as Dylan says,
but i've changed.


in the hands of others

the mail
is unreliable.
it comes, or it doesn't come.
there's a new
mail
person every other day.
sometimes
it's late,
sometimes
it's in a neighbor's box,
or torn
or wet from the rain.
i find
on the street my retirement
statement,
a valentine card
from a sweetie.
last months electric bill,
now late.
so often our lives turn
on the hands
of others.

remembering nearly everything

even at the end
of a long
life,
lying in bed, nearly done,
with eyes
closed,
the sound
of a screen door
slamming, or the bark
of a dog,
will bring to mind
nearly
everything.

in line for a bagel with everything

as we
stand in line for a bagel,
a block
from Central Park,
the snow
covers our hair,
puts roses on our cheeks,
puts sparkles
in our eyes.
the line crawls slowly
to the door.
but we're in no hurry,
the waiting
is divine.

from a distant star

from
another planet or star,
from
some far away
galaxy,
as they look down upon us,
do they see
that not everyone is crazy
here.
that there
are good people too.
sane
and reasonable?
not at war
and full of hate and pain.
do they laugh at us,
at the riches
we have,
the blessings of an ocean,
and wildlife,
flowers?
do they not see the smiles
on children's faces
as they bite
into the cold red fruit
of a summer
watermelon?

Moe's Diner

everyone
needs a corner diner.
an old place
that should have been
torn down years ago,
but still serves
a decent breakfast,
brought to your table by
a busty woman
with red hair
named Marge.
you need the skinny guy
in the back,
with a paper hat,
working the skillet.
still rattled by war or something
in his childhood.
but he knows how
to flip and egg or
flap jack.
his bacon is perfect.
and the coffee keeps coming.
there's a juke box
on the table
with songs by Elvis
and Nancy Sinatra.
Mel Haggard.
it takes nickels and dimes,
quarters.

there is no breaking news

there's breaking news,
as proclaimed by
the enormous
red lettering
pulsating on the screen
damaging your retinas.
but not
really.
it's old stale news
from yesterday
but wrapped up
nicely with a few more
juicy morsels of maybes.
they've put a ribbon on it
and will be opening
it after
the next commercial
break, stayed tuned.
don't change the channel,
don't move.

Monday, April 21, 2025

the cafeteria line

the fat
women in white smocks
and aprons,
some shorter than we were,
with
hair nets,
and muscled arms
were behind the counter
setting up
more plates
of Salisbury steaks
and green
beans.
a dollop of 
mashed carrots
in shallow bowls,
lining up dixie cups
of stewed tomatoes,
and then
the Jello,
squared onto a plate
with a puff
of cool whip.
we avoided
eye contact with them as
we slid our
trays along. was it really
food?
who's to know.

2 pm Physics class

we sat
in school, bored.
staring
out the window
at spring.
the teacher at the front
of room,
bored too,
but continuing to write
on the blackboard
with her white chalk.
she wanted
to go home too.
the clock would never
move,
the black hands
defying
the laws of gravity
and physics.
all the things we were
supposed to learn
and understand.

the Senator's number one priority

so what
are you worried about, the newsman
asks
the Democratic
Senator
heading to El Salvador
to rescue a gangbanger
covered in tattoos,
and gang colors.
who has been in front of nineteen
judges so far.
what plans
do you have in the future
for your constituents?
better roads?
and housing, maybe more
research and money
dedicated to disease and
addictions.
improve the schools and our
children's education?
what exactly do you want to
do during your
term as Senator
to serve your state and country.
what do you want your legacy
to be?
oh, he says.
pausing,
with tears in his eyes.
my number one priority
is to bring back
a known gang member
from his own country,
back to our state,
and set him free.
i don't care if he's
a man who belongs to
MS-13, a man who beats his wife,
and is here illegally.
and is suspected
of human trafficking.
nothing is more important
than this man.
i dedicate my every waking hour
to obtaining his freedom.
the bridges and roads,
education,
and cancer, etc. can wait.
the fate of democracy depends
on this man.

scheduling sex

what about
Wednesday night, i ask her.
between seven and nine p.m.
after softball
practice,
no, she says, i can't. i told
my sister that i'd
go shopping with her.
okay, okay.
how about Thursday then,
i wish, she says,
but i have meetings all day,
and after work
i'm going out with friends
to a movie.
Friday?
maybe, she says.
we'll see. my mother is making
dinner that night,
meatballs and spaghetti,
if you want you
can come with me.
hmm. Saturday?
sure, sure. that should work.
i'll get back to you on that,
but if not Saturday.
Sunday after church between
one and three
should be perfect.
i'll leave the key under the mat.
i'll be upstairs
taking a nap.

not quite whole foods study group

i've become one of them.
one of those
people that stand
in the middle of the aisle
at the grocery
story
reading labels.
examining the ingredients
of every jar,
can
and package that i might
put into my cart.
it's crowded.
some people have brought
their own
folding chairs and flashlights,
they scroll their
phones looking up words
they've never heard of.
researching the countries
that have caught these sardines,
or grew these tomatoes
in this red sauce.
we help each other,
warning each other, showing
the rashes on our arms,
relating how that brand
made us sneeze, or choke,
or gave us the hiccups.

giving blood

she tries
one arm, sticking the needle
in.
but no blood comes
out,
no blood drizzles
into
the line, 
then vial.
she pulls the needle
out,
rubs the vein,
then tries the other arm.
tapping
and wrapping a band
around.
ten minutes
later,
someone is
putting a pillow 
under my head
and making me
bite into an oatmeal
cookie
and sip from a dixie cup
of orange juice.

raised by wolves

i'm
wearing a white suit in the photo.
i'm twenty-two
years old.
a mere
child,
and yet i'm walking arm
in arm
with an even
younger person down
the church aisle.
this is what happens
when you're
raised wolves.
and there's
no one around
to give you advice,
or pull you
aside to tell you,
not yet, not now.

a picnic by the river

she insists
that we go on a picnic.
she's been looking at too many
Claude Monet
paintings.
she buys a basket
and makes
sandwiches with the crust
cut off.
cucumbers
and pate.
she packs two apples,
some cookies,
that she made,
a bottle of wine, corked,
and a glass
bowl of grapes.
isn't this romantic she says,
throwing down
the clean white
blanket,
not seeing the ants,
the field mouse,
and in pursuit
a slithering snake.

internal squabbling

because
of internal squabbling
and sibling disagreements
the traveling carnival
has split up into several
factions
this year.
they argued
over prices,
and retirement programs,
dental plans,
insurance.
who's turn it was to clean
the monkey
cages.
that's why there's only
the Scrambler
this year
in the mall parking lot,
and a cotton
candy stand.
next week half of the roller
coaster
will appear.

field after fields go by

on the way
to the eastern shore
we see
nothing
but farms, fields of soy,
corn.
we have nothing to say
to each
other anymore.
in the past
we would point out
an old
barn,
or horses,
cows, as we drove.
but now we roll the window
down
and let the wind
do the talking,
the tires on the road.

no fault of her own

through
no fault of her own,
one leg
was shorter
than the other, which
made it easier
to hear her coming
when she approached,
the larger shoe
clunking against the floor.
but i loved her
just the same, as she
loved me
with my multitude
of faults,
too many to mention here
in such short poem.

a passing fancy

we have
all been under one spell
or another,
whether
it's the spell
of love
and infatuation,
a political ideology,
a writer,
a poet,
a Hollywood actor,
or singer.
maybe it's a religious
cult.
but
we've all
drank the Kool-Aid
from someone we've
looked up to,
and brough more home,
for others to taste
and agree
with you.

Sunday, April 20, 2025

please Oprah, tell me how to live my life

it's not
easy being a celebrity.
with everyone
loving you,
thinking your beautiful,
talented
and smart.
even after one Disney
movie
where you
played
a dolphin come to life.
a sequel coming soon.
you believe the adoration.
you want to
tell people who
to vote for,
where to spend your money,
how to live.
you write a book
about
eating vegetables,
and protecting
turtles.
you go on tv
to promote a face cream,
and Cheez whiz.
you want the best table
to eat at,
no lines for you.
you've arrived, but sadly
because you never read
a book
you're still dumb, still stupid.

the arc of words thrown

i ball up
the long letter that i just wrote
by hand,
on a clean
sheet of white paper.
i've read it over
a dozen times,
but have no intention of
mailing it out.
i can't decide if it's too harsh,
or too kind.
i toss
the ball of paper across
the room
to the trash can
where it sinks into middle,
with perfect aim,
swish,
onto a hundred
other balled
letters never mailed.
i'm getting good at this.

can we park here?

i have
never driven into the city
and parked
on a street
without getting a parking
ticket.
no matter
how many times i read
the wordy
signs,
loading zone
on Saturday,
no parking Monday
through Friday,
unless it's a federal
holiday.
street cleaning
on odd days, but even days
are fine.
Sundays only
if you have a permit,
or a handicap
sticker, but only
between the hours of
7 a.m. and 9.
and in red,
emergency snow road,
if towed,
please call, open on
Monday,
use online banking
to pay your fine.


fhe devil works in mysterious ways

how in God's name
we got
from
the empty tomb,
to the resurrection,
to this.
Christ risen
from the grave.
jellybeans
and marshmallow peeps,
chocolate rabbits
and parades,
i'll never know.
the devil works
in mysterious ways.

off the grid for two nights

tired,
of everything,
we move off the grid,
quit our
day to day lives
and move into
a log cabin in the woods
off the coast
of Newfoundland.
we're strong
people
with strong back bones.
but there's
no
electricity
or running water.
no food,
just living off the land.
neither of us can
skin
animals or sew.
in three hours we have
blisters
and callouses on
our hands.
we last
two nights,
then go back to town.
we're not
of that kind people.
we love coffee
and toilet paper,
television
and our phones.
next year we're travelling
to Iceland.
but staying
at the Hilton.

Saturday, April 19, 2025

i just want ten minutes of your time

it was easy
dodging the door to door
salesmen
back in the day.
before
robo called took over,
calling you
a hundred
times a day.
when you saw the man
at the door
with his satchel
of cleaning products,
a new fangled
vacuum,
or encyclopedias,
or insurance plans,
you dropped
to the floor
and turned the lights off.
you held your breath,
until he gave up knocking
and went sadly away.

flying ice cubes

i crack
open a tray of ice,
the old fashion
metal type,
circa 1965,
an heirloom
from my grandmother.
i snap back the handle
which
sends
a few cubes flying
across
the kitchen
floor.
i'll find them later
when i step,
wearing socks,
into a cold puddle
of melted water.

a week in review

the stock market surges,
then drops.
immigration, protests,
schools shut
down.
trans athletes
on top.
crazy car burning mobs,
shootings,
deportations,
watching the wars
from afar.
violence and rhetoric,
politicians
pulling their hair out.
injunctions,
delays,
tariffs and trade,
judges and courts.
in total disagreement
over nearly every law.
Hamas and Putin,
Iraq
and Iran.
Musk
and Trump.
the Pope waving
with a small pale hand.
Biden bumbles and stumbles
all over again.
the Shroud of Turin.
eggs are up
eggs are down.
eating a ham
sandwich
at the couch while
the world
goes around.
next week, guess what?
more
of the same.
pass the mustard please.

the store limit of ten cartons of eggs

i see a woman
carrying ten cartons
of eggs
in her arms.
brown, white,
organic,
and farm raised,
made by uncaged chickens
who were
able to stroll
around the grounds.
ten cartons
is the posted limit for this store.
she's smiling
from ear to ear
as she sashays to the counter.
she's almost glowing
with contentment.
i have no idea,
what's going on,
but Easter is near.

the sugar high mass

on Easter
morning, before she chased
us out of the house
to go to church
in our new pants
and shirts,
we bit off
the heads
of chocolate rabbits,
disappointed
that they were hollow,
and stuffed
our mouths with jelly
beans
and yellow peeps
floating in the shredded
rainbow of
confetti in our Easter
baskets.
no one ate the colored eggs
which would
be around until June.
it was a jittery hour
at high mass,
squirming in our pews,
fidgeting,
and kicking our skinny legs.

filet o fish

like an old
big
fish, you too have
hook
marks and scars
on your lips
from being
wrangled to shore
by some damsel
in distress.
she reeled you in,
put you
in a bucket,
saying sweet things
all the way,
then took
you home to be deboned
into a malleable
filet.

two tin cans and a long piece of string

back when
we virtually had tin cans
attached
by string
in a phone booth, you
had to feed
it with coins
to make a long distance
call.
there was no
small talk.
you had to get to your
point, you were
on the clock,
before another five
quarters
went through the slot.
forget the weather,
the blah blah blah.
just tell me what's up,
when are you
coming home,
what airport and what
time can i pick
you up?
and then before
the call drops you ask
do you still love me?
but it's too late,
the operator has cut
you off.

ET go home

i see
the senator on tv
having margaritas in El Salvador
with the latest
hero
of the left.
a criminal deported.
although i'm sure
he's a fine
upstanding young man,
jobless
except when he's transporting
people
from Texas to Maryland,
in a van,
driving without
a license.
he's only
beat up his wife a few
times
that we know of.
a black eye or two,
some scratches
and clothes ripped off her.
according
to the police reports she filed.
the dispute was
something about burned
toast or playing
her music too loud.
he's wearing
a tropical shirt
and sandals, as he has
lunch with the Senator,
the Denny's grand slam,
and is doing his best to hide
his gang
tattoos
on his hand and head.
the senator wants him to
come home,
like ET, on his private jet,
although he's in the country
where he was born
and raised.
it's just another day.
another day of crazy
in the land
of the free, home of the brave.

a late spring snow

it's late spring,
but it's snowing.
we're in our shorts and 
t-shirts,
our sandals.
but it's coming down,
heavy
on the trees,
the streets are white.
we put away our skates
and bikes,
our volleyball and tanning
lotions,
we go to the big closet
to find our shovels
and salt,
our cross-country skis.

Friday, April 18, 2025

her tight leather pants

how many
times
have i asked you to not wear
those leather
pants
when you come over?
we never make
it out of the house
when you do that.
we're always late,
for the show, the party,
it takes you an hour
to get in and out
of them,
even if i help with the
shoehorn.

the key lime pie evaluation

i'm not convinced
that his key lime
pie
with a meringue
topping
is delicious.
a crumb crust
is holding it altogether
in a beautiful
dish.
the first bite
was quite delicious,
but this will take some time,
some milk
or tea to wash it down,
might help me
decide.
why cut a single slice,
when i can carry the whole pie
to the coffee table,
and take
my time.

avoiding the army

i think
Wednesday will be a good day
to go
see the doctor
to have him weigh me,
take blood from my veins
and spin a vial
of it
around in the lab.
he'll
look into various orifices.
maybe tap
my knee
with a little rubber
mallet.
he'll ask me
to look this way
then that,
i'll stick out my tongue,
and on command,
drop my
drawers
and cough.
at last he'll take my blood
pressure,
which will be
through the roof,
from fear.
will it keep me out of the army
again,
out of the draft.
i hope so.

please, dear God, stop whining people

here's what
you do if you don't like
your marriage,
your partner,
your friends.
if you don't like
your job,
or where you live,
the car that you drive,
the restaurant you're in,
if you don't
like your family,
or the circumstances
that you're stuck in,
or the country where
you live,
here's what you do.
first shut up and quit
whining.
no one likes whining.
then you leave.
it might take a day,
or year,
or more.
but make a plan and
stick to it,
pack your backs and
skedaddle.
leave. 
we don't want to hear your
whining anymore.

pricing by the pound

they weigh our meat
at the grocery
store.
steaks
and ground beef.
pork ribs,
and sausage.
they weigh the fish
and fruit,
produce,
flour and sugar.
everything goes
onto the scale,
measured
by the pound
or gram.
we pay a price
for what it weighs,
and yet
when we board a plane,
it doesn't matter
if you're skinny or
enormously round.

she's back home now

she sent
me
a picture of her under the Eiffel
Tower,
another
while standing in
the Roman
Coliseum,
riding a gondola in Venice,
one more
at the Plaza Hotel,
in her suite,
then a postcard
from Dubai,
with a picture of her
in a Mercedes limousine,
so it was strange to run
into her
at Walmart
buying a giant bag of
marshmallow peanuts,
toilet paper,
and Drano for her sink.

spring cleaning

a good spring cleaning
will
do the trick,
brighten the day.
let's get started, shall we?
open the windows,
throw up the shades,
rip off the sheets
and blankets,
bang the pillows and dust
off the shelves,
the sills,
the mantle.
let's get out the mop
and bucket,
the disinfectants
and sprays.
are you with me?
are you with me?
no? tomorrow?
okay.

the hidden thorns

beware
of the rose bush,
the flowering
red
and yellow
roses.
so beautiful
in the early morning sun,
but
go gently when plucking
them for
your vase
at home.
the bite is bloody,
as it is
with every
hidden thorn.

everything is hunky dory

it's easier,
when asked if everything is okay,
to say,
yes.
i'm fine, all is well.
and you,
how are you?
why tell them
about the bee sting,
the rash,
the tax bill. why get into
what your
mother said,
or how your children
won't take
out the trash.
there's no use telling them
about the line
at the store, what the dog ate,
or how your wife
doesn't love you anymore.
why burden
them with all the details
of your life
run amok.
it's better to just say,
i'm good.
i'm fine.
and how are you?

the memory of you is like gum stuck to my shoe

the memory of you
is exactly
like this pinkish grey
gum
stuck to the bottom
of my shoe.
i scrape at it day after
day,
but it's deep into the tread.
hardened
like old clay.
impossible to completely
gouge away.
maybe it's time
for a new pair.
maybe today is the day.

billions and billions

everything
is counted
in billions now.
tax dollars,
expensive handouts
and wars.
programs
for schools,
for the poor.
for windmills, and turtles
crawling
along the shore.
what it cost to do anything
is counted
in billions now.
the budget, the cuts,
the waste.
millions
is so old school.
mere drops in the bucket
of revenue.

the good thief on the cross

the good
thief
on the cross, is the one
we're
nearest to.
finding faith in the worst
of circumstances.
no longer
in fear
of death
or life. forgiven
and
about to enter paradise
in the blink
of an eye.

one good thing

it's a blessing
to find one good thing
to do
with your
hands.
with your mind, to stand
in one spot
or sit,
and make
something that you're
proud of,
something
that someone can
buy or use,
to eat or enjoy,
and thank you for it.
it's one
good day after another.
not as king or queen,
or even
prince.
just a person,
whether man or woman,
making their way in life
honestly.

Thursday, April 17, 2025

eleven expensive minutes in space, barely

the Russians
sent
up a few dogs,
we sent up a few
monkeys.
nothing much
has changed.
things go up
and come back to
the ground
again.
now it's celebrities.
no buttons to push,
no levers,
no steering wheel.
just a window
and cushy seats.
not even a cup
of tang.
eleven minutes,
whoopee.

buried seeds

will
these seeds i've
buried
come up
soon,
will the rain
help?
will the sun
bake
the ground
and make
the sprouts rise.
is prayer
like
that?
tell me the truth.
no lies.

the sugar cube was the best

there
are things we had as kids
that
we
usually don't worry about
anymore.
measles,
the mumps,
whooping cough,
having our
tonsils taken
out.
we got all the shots
back then.
kids would miss school
for months
at a time
with scarlet fever,
or diphtheria,
small pox
and the German Measles
otherwise known
as Rubella.
we'd look around the classroom
and wonder
where the hell
Jimmy was
or Clementine.
they'd line us up in 
the cafeteria
and fire vaccines
into our
boney arms
as we tried to muzzle
our screams.
sometimes
the medicine would be
tucked away
inside a sugar cube.
sweet and squared like
dice.
we were inoculated from
head to tail,
through and through,
nearly every day
at lunch,
before we ate our Jello,
and dug into
our lunch pail,
a nurse would be sticking
a needle into our arms.

let's prove them wrong

insurance
companies are clever
with their actuary tables,
their
measures.
taking note
of your weight
and height,
your race
and lifestyle.
they know more about
you than
your own
mother.
they can predict within
a small
margin
of error, the length
of your life.
the years left
on earth
you have to survive.
let's prove them wrong.
the bastards.

things left on his desk

there
were things left on his desk.
a letter opener,
a stiff
blade meant
to cut open
a sealed envelope,
a magnifying glass he
used for
the small print
which was getting smaller
each year.
there were stamps,
and ink pens.
pencils in a jar,
erasers. cut coupons,
a calendar
placemat
with coffee rings embedded.
an address book with the name
and numbers
of all his children.
a check book
with one check left.
his will.
his wallet.
and a picture of his
dog beside
his bright blue car.

this will always be here

when
you're out in the middle
of the ocean.
it strikes you how
that this has always
been here.
always,
and will always
be here,
this vast sea of blue.
virtually
unchangeable,
and yet
you live your life a thousand
miles away
never giving
it a single thought
as you go about your day.

the rinse and repeat protests

the crazy thing
about
protests
is that they do absolutely
nothing
to change things.
they only annoy
and make
those that disagree laugh
and mock
their behavior.
sure
they're fun,
and exciting,
being with your like minded
friends,
screaming and yelling
at the top
of your lungs,
waving signs
and foaming
at the mouth, but in the end,
for what,
to what end?
should we meet here 
next weekend?
rinse and repeat
all over again?

five consecutive sneezes

after sneezing
five
times in a row,
and coughing
up
a wind filled wave
of pollen,
the dog
looks up at me and wonders
if this it,
how will i live
on without him?
how will
i get the bag of food
off the counter
and drag it
to my dish.
who will walk me
and throw
the ball to me?
i see worry in his eyes.
who will brush me
and get
ticks off of me?
what about water,
i can't reach the sink
or turn
the knobs. i'm a dog
dammit.
and then,
i'm suddenly okay.
and he lets out a big
sigh
before circling three
times to go lie
down on his cushion
in the corner.

he didn't want to work for money

my son
told me once when he was about
34
that he didn't
want to work
for money.
he was above such labor.
he didn't want to waste
his life
on mundane
tasks at some job
he had
no interest in.
he was creative
an actor, a singer, a dancer.
no factory work for him.
no office,
no construction
job, or trade.
he'd been living on the west
coast for
sometime now,
a mother
nearby,
a girlfriend who didn't
mind working
and paying
for all they had.
i cringed
and thought about
his college tuition down
the drain.
i stared at my hands,
worn
from 40 years of work,
cuts
and calloused.
curled with the tools i held
onto,
hoping that work would
never end.

in love with a bartender

there
was a bartender in a bar
called
Bojangles down
on M street,
Dixie.
short blonde hair,
blue
eyes. she may have
been from
Finland,
or some far away place
where everyone
is pale
and knows how to ski.
but she knew what i
drank, a long pour
of vodka
over ice and tonic,
a slice of lime,
it was waiting on the bar
for me
when she saw
me coming down
the stairs with
hair blown,
cologne splashed
on my face.
grinning from ear
to ear to see her.
then she was gone.
someone told me she
moved to Colorado.
i still think about looking
her up
for one last pour.
how could she leave me
this way.

when the party ends

it's not over
overnight, it never is,
but it feels
that way,
as if this party
will never end,
this current life,
of love
and fun,
dancing the night
away.
making wishes
on stars,
throwing coins
down
wells, into fountains.
the frivolity
comes
to a halt,
and you wake up one morning,
suddenly old,
missing so many
friends.

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

we want our criminals back, dammit

some
people want to send the criminals
out of the country,
while others
want to keep them
here
and take care of them.
feed and clothe
them.
save them from themselves
and their criminal
lives.
and if they're
gone, sent
back to their home countries,
they want to bring them
back here,
at all costs, despite
the charges,
despite the crimes.
it's an upside-down world
sometimes.

the Chinese fortune cookie

i could
never quite figure out if my dog
truly loved me,
or just showed
affection
because i may have
wiped
my fingers
on my pants after
eating
a leg of fried chicken,
or a slice
of pizza from Ray's Original.
he loved
my sweaters
and coats,
full of crumbs,
chips
and spills,
remnants of cinnamon
buns.
he couldn't wait for me
to get home
and jump
into my lap
to dig into my pocket
for a Chinese fortune
cookie.

business has been slow

i care little about
things
i used
to care about a lot.
the weather,
fashion,
what's on tv,
the price of eggs
or cars.
haircuts,
visible scars.
i just don't care anymore.
i have
what i need.
i'm no longer the shopaholic
i used to be.
same goes for love,
that shop
is temporarily closed
for now,
business has been slow.

she knew where everything was

if we couldn't find
something,
we had
a magician living in our
house.
we called her
mom,
or mother sometimes.
she knew where
everything was,
no matter
how obscure it was,
hats and shoes,
baseball gloves,
books,
pens and paper clips.
a pet turtle
or box of rocks.
she had eyes in back
of her head.
she knew
what was in every closet,
every nook and cranny
of the house,
basement or attic,
and sadly
what we hid beneath
our beds.

the same old tired words

it's easy
to dislike politicians.
slick
and well groomed.
rich
and smart.
they look good coming
into a room.
but then
they open their mouths
and out comes
the same old words 
you've been listening
to since you
were a child.
promises
and vows made,
none of them ever done.

the maintenance man Podcast

like almost
everyone, the Super in my
building,
Frankie,
has a podcast.
he's on YouTube
and 
X.
Facebook
posting videos of what
his day is like.
the backed up
toilets,
the bugs
and mice. dealing with
angry
tenants who come home
drunk and want to fight.
he spent an hour
on one episode explaining
what all the keys
hooked to his belt are for.
some days
he's on the fire escape,
or the roof
chasing pigeons off, or
wrapping duct
tape around a pipe.
sometimes his wife
joins in,
asking him to turn that
damn thing
off.
next week he's doing
a compilation,
a best of video of the building
he watches
over.
i can hardly wait.

it's not your turn

the sirens
are going off all night.
the screaming
trucks
and cars
racing by with their
party lights on.
hoses and ladders,
Dalmatian dogs
barking,
squad
cars.
something is going on
somewhere
close by.
but it's not your turn
apparently.
so back to sleep,
good night.

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

shopping on Madison Avenue

i often
tell people when
the conversation awkwardly
lags as we walk
along the path
and it's cold out.
i say,
by the way,
do you know
where i bought these gloves,
these gloves
that i'm wearing
right now?
i hold my hands up
to show
them the brown leather gloves.
spreading my
fingers for effect.
they look at me in a strange
way,
the way one
looks at crazy people on
the subway.
no, they say.
but do tell.
where did you get those
nice leather gloves?
i tell them
Madison Avenue in New York City,
a few years ago.
a little shop along the way,
next to a deli,
but it's not
there anymore.

a stranger looking into my window

i don't know who he is,
but i see
a man,
standing across the street
staring into
my house.
i lower the blinds
and peek
out.
he's wearing a hat,
a grey flannel suit.
he's around fifty
years
old, i suppose.
there's a briefcase 
in his left hand,
and what looks like
a subpoena in his right.
he's wearing sunglasses.
i want to go out and find
out who he is,
ask him what he's
doing here,
and why he's standing
across the street
staring into my window.
but i'm not wearing
any shoes,
or pants,
so that ends that.

seven minutes at lovers lane

the first
time we made love was in
the back
seat of a car,
a Dodge Dart Swinger
of all things,
with plastic
vinyl seats
and windows that would
never quite
roll down.
we parked on a curve
of Owens Road,
not far
from the Dairy Queen
in town.
it was summer, so
she was
wearing
shorts. i remember
her long
tanned legs clearly,
but forget the rest
of the story.
the next seven minutes
are all a blur now.

return to sender

women in general
are good at returning
things.
they never
take the tags
off until
the last moment.
they save
the receipts,
they keep the bag
or the box,
the wrappings
that the item
came in.
they know how print
a return
code and where
to go
if need be.
they have scissors and tape
at the ready,
stamps in their purse,
if necessary
they're prepared before
the package
even arrives,
to send it back.

time to go

your yawn
is a hundred words held back.
the way
you rub
your eyes and glance
at your wrist
watch.
i know it's late,
i know
you're tired.
no need to tell me that
it's time
to go. no excuses
are necessary.
let me get your coat
and hat.

to the moon Alice

they stuff
five
rich women into the top
of a rocket
ship
and send them
into the fringe of outer space.
but on the way,
two
of them
have to use the bathroom
and the other
one forgot
her phone
and makeup,
so they have to turn
back
and there's a delay.
mission control has to
yell at them
to be quiet
for five
seconds to inform them
which button to push
for this emergency
re-entry.

when Mary moved to Miami

when
Mary moved to Miami
in her
eighties,
to become queen of
the senior home
she moved into.
i figured that i'd never see
her again.
i was right.
but she did send me
a card
every year
for my birthday,
for Christmas
and for
no reason at all sometimes.
occasionally
she'd call.
and then
they stopped
coming.
so i knew, despite
not knowing,
i knew she was gone.

the first snowfall

it's just
snow falling. i've seen
it all
of my life.
the long soft
curves of drifts,
the sparkle
of white.
but that doesn't make it
less beautiful.
it's like when
you come into a room.
it's as if
i'm seeing you 
for the very first time.

straight A's in the fifth grade

when my
son was in elementary school
he showed
me his test paper
with an A plus on it.
i tried to read it,
but every other word
was misspelled,
the handwriting
looked like
chicken scratch.
most of what he had written
was copied
from somewhere.
i asked him
how he got an A with
such crap.
and he told me they don't
care about
spelling, or handwriting,
plagiarism,
or things like that anymore.
he got straight A's
that year.
i no longer had to help
him study.

the open door policy

my wife
leaves the door open
overnight.
the next morning there are people
all over the house.
eating,
sleeping,
watching tv.
she's serving them food,
and drinks.
putting clothes
on their backs.
handing them money.
i ask her who are these people
that trespass?
she tells me to lighten
up.
they've traveled a thousand
miles to be here,
leaving their own
homes,
risking robbery and death.
perhaps you
should get a second job
or a third
to help them out.

Monday, April 14, 2025

they never age

i've seen
the movie a million times,
at least.
black and white.
late night.
the actors long gone
but still young and beautiful.
i know the lines.
i remember
the plot,
the twist at the end,
but that's fine.
it's a nice place
to go
from time after time,
rarely
do i turn it off.

the handshake

no one
wants to shake
the clammy
hand,
the fish shake,
the flounder wiggling
at the end
of someone's arm.
we want
a firm grip.
whether man or woman.
we want to know
that you're present,
that you're strong.

a basket of yarn at her feet

it was
an enormous straw
basket
full of colored
balls of yarn,
pointed
metal sticks
and patterns folded
over,
that she sat with
in her chair.
i can still
hear the clicks,
like
a broken clock,
but faster
as with quick fingers
and wrists,
she left this world
for another,
to furiously
knit.

if it taste good, it can't be bad, can it?

the supermarket
tells
you all you need to know about
commercialism.
this place
we live in,
shop in,
die in.
bright lights and soft
music piped
in overhead.
shiny apples
stacked like pyramids.
there's a smile on everything
but the store clerk.
with brightly
colored
packages to subtly lure
you in.
so much
we don't know
and don't want to know
about what
we're eating.
when exactly did that cow
die?
what country
sent those tomatoes
green on the vine?
if it taste good, it can't be
bad,
can it?

bumper stickers

we like to
advertise our feelings.
with
placards
in the yard, t-shirts
printed
with who we love
or despise.
displaying the accomplishments
of our children,
or who we voted
for by
bumper stickers
on our cars.
it's easier that way
than talking
about it.
though thankful
for the garage.

the line in the dirt

we're all
nice
and compliant, easy
to get along with
until
we break,
and then at last
the hidden
true self
is revealed.
some break easy,
some break
hard
needing time to be
pushed just
once more
across that drawn
line.

burning bridges

i look
back at all the bridges
burning
behind me.
the blazing
fires that
will keep me from
ever going
back in a moment
of sentimental
weakness.
burn on.

Sunday, April 13, 2025

please, go on with your story

i'm not ignoring you.
i'm just studying
the sole  
of my boot.
the heel
is loose
and the stitching is frayed.
plus, i seemed to have
stepped into
a wad of something,
part pink, part grey,
but go on. please,
go on with your story.
i'm listening,
really, i am.
i could listen to you talk
all day.

her barn full of hay

our grandmother
in North Reading,
would
send us across the road
to steal
ears of corn for dinner.
we'd cross
the vacant stretch of dirt
and gravel
with our baskets and snatch
the ears
right off the stalks
which towered over us,
then scurry back,
gleeful at our theft.
she said she knew the
farmer and his wife
which made
everything okay. 
years later we found out
that she was sleeping
with farmer Joe,
which explained everything.
the cherry pie on the table
half gone,
her barn full of hay
and the jug of milk
now cold.
it was our first encounter
with bartering for goods.

we seldom run away

who hasn't
wanted to run away at some point
in their life,
whether
at the age of ten
or sixty,
we wonder what lies
over there,
way over there,
on the other side.
away
from this,
whatever this might mean.
but seldom do we pack
that bag
and go.
change is hard,
and for the most part we're
cowards.
we stick with what we
know.

the accident

it was
odd to see something
so large
lying
on the street, the horse
turned
over
with the wagon, struck
by a car
at a high speed.
and the man beside
the horse
crying into his hat,
weeping as if
she was a loved one,
a spouse
a child, a friend.
and the policeman with
his revolver,
the single shot
of the gun, bringing
the street
drama to an end.
and yet looking out the window
of my father's
car, i remember
the fruit upended onto the street,
strangely ignored
by everyone,
the apples and pears,
the bananas, broken melons,
all set free.

guilt free littering

as i unwrap
the paper and foil 
from the stick of gum,
a gust
of wind
takes it out of my hand
and sets
it sailing far
down the road.
when i was
younger
i might have chased it.
being the good
person
that i am.
but i guess i've changed
from who i was
back then.

the good light

it's a good
flashlight. an old lamp
kept
on the top shelf of the hall
closet
along with
hats and gloves, winter
boots
and salt for the steps
off the porch
when ice arrives.
i flick
the switch and the beam
shoots across
the room,
making light where
there was none
with the power down.
good
bones, good steel,
strong
batteries.
like you, my dear.
bright when darkness
tries to overcome.

the cracking of eggshells underfoot

you have
people in your life,
friends,
relatives,
etc.
that you have to be careful
with
so as not to trigger them.
you are perpetually
walking on
eggshells,
hoping not to upset
or hurt
their feelings.
God forbid
you talk about politics
or religion,
things of that nature.
it makes for a long day
and a non
interesting
conversation
when it's always
about the weather
and what's for
dinner.

we differ

we decide
to begin knocking things
off on our
bucket list.
things to do
before we die.
her list is different than mine.
she wants
to visit the Sphinx
in Egypt,
jump out of an airplane,
and go
deep sea diving.
i show her my list.
item number one,
is to buy a double scoop
of ice cream,
rocky road
and mint chip
on a sugar cone.

the human globe

my cousin big Bertha,
decides to get her entire
head
covered with tattoos,
down to her neck,
and nether regions.
torso, front and back,
arms and legs.
it's a map of the world
in great detail.
with latitude and longitude
lines going north and south,
east and west.
she's very helpful now
when we travel.
if lost,
there's no need to google anywhere
with her around.

com si com sa

it's either the end of the world,
or the beginning
of a golden age,
it all depends on who
you listen to on tv.
what channel you turn to,
what newspaper you read.
is there an in-between?
a fat middle of everything
is pretty much okay?
com si com sa.

Saturday, April 12, 2025

chicken again, honey?

i put
a chicken in the oven,
a fat roaster
from Kroger's,
then wipe
my hands on my
new apron,
which i bought online from
Martha Stewart's
merch store.
i start
dicing carrots
and potatoes, tossing
about a Ceasar salad,
using my
own recipe for the dressing,
not handed down.
my wife yells at
me from
her easy chair.
she lowers the tv,
and her phone,
taking sips of wine.
we're not having chicken
again,
are we dear?

perpetual Halloween

why
argue, why fight?
if you
want to call yourself a man,
or a woman
or something
in between, or none of the above,
have at it.
it's your privilege
your right.
wear a wig,
a dress, put on a helmet,
grow muscles
and fight,
grow a beard or alter
your body
parts, 
slice and dice away
who you used to be. 
who cares?
go dancing
with your new
found self.
it's all okay, it's alright.
let's play
Halloween all year round,
all day,
and all night.

we used to like you

we used
to like you. 
for years we've read
what you wrote
and laughed,
we used
to think you were smart
and clever,
a good person.
but after
what you wrote last
week,
we'll our love for you
has passed.

still happy, regardless

he liked
to fish, the old man.
he liked to get up early and dig
for worms
in his back
yard
then put them in a paper cup
to take
down to the river,
where he'd
stand in the morning sunlight
and wait
for the first
bite on his cast
line and hook.
sometimes the fish
would
come home with him,
still alive
in a white
pail,
and other times it was
just him.
still happy,
regardless.

man peeing outside of the 7-11

there
was a man, a grown
man
with a Christmas beard
and a long coat on,
peeing
beside the trash can
in front of the 7-11.
we looked
at each other as we
sat in the car,
and asked
how badly
did we really
want a hot dog and a big
gulp,
and another lottery
ticket?

don't go into the basement, she said

she wouldn't
let
me see her basement.
what was
down there?
bodies?
feral cats,
wild dogs?
mice and spiders?
what was she hiding?
money,
love letters, her diary,
a life
when
she broke the law?
a portrait of her
with nothing on?
she kept
the door locked.
the dead bolt slid tight
into the slot.
sometimes
i'd put my ear
to the door
and listen. but nothing.
nothing but the smell
of wet laundry
and the ticking
of a clock.

the crying towel

some actors,
can
cry on a dime,
make
tears come out of their
weepy
eyes
with a little twist
of their
tongue and mind.
she was like that.
which was why
i kept
a crying towel
nearby.

when the boys came home

when the neighborhood
boys came back from
the war.
they
were different.
shorn of hair,
thin
but muscled, a look
of joy
and forlorn
on their aged faces.
relieved
to be home again but
still in creased
uniforms.
before
they left
we sat on the porch
and talked
about girls
and sports, we flew
kites
in green fields,
and drank
beer on the bleachers
behind the school.
now they say little,
staring off into a place
you can't see,
or want to.

Friday, April 11, 2025

no I.D. to vote?

we need an I.D.
to apply for welfare, Medicaid,
Social Security,
to make a claim for unemployment
benefits.
we need an I.D.
to get a job,
to apply for a passport,
or to drive
a car, or rent a car,
to sail a boat,
or to board an airplane.
we need an
I.D. to buy a gun,
to buy a bottle of whiskey
or wine,
or to get married,
or to adopt a pet,
or a child.
to get into Costco
or to check a book out of the library.
we need an I.D. to 
rent a hotel room,
to acquire a fishing license,
to get health insurance,
to buy a cellphone,
to visit a casino,
to pick up prescription drugs
at the drug store.
you need an I.D. to donate blood,
or to purchase
nail polish.
but you don't need an I.D.
to vote,
the most
important thing a person
can do
in a democracy?

let's take a breather

we need
more humor, more fun,
more
forgiveness
and
empathy.
kindness.
it would be nice
if we
all got along,
regardless of political
affiliations,
race
creed or color.
live and let live.
make love
not war.
no violence.
let's take a break
from all the wars,
personal
and far away.
let's take a breather
and pray.

a black bird against the blue ceiling

i was
watching Bill and Nancy
dance
while i drank
my beer
and nibbled on peanuts
at the Knights
of Columbus Hall.
it was back
when you could smoke
anywhere,
and everyone did.
young and old,
men and women.
i finished the peanuts
then
the waitress brought me
a club sandwich.
i ate it,
putting mayonnaise
on my lips
and on my jacket.
Bill and Nancy were still
dancing,
third song in a row.
i wished i could dance
like that.
after i finished my sandwich,
i ordered
another beer,
then lit up
a cigarette,
and blew smoke rings
up into the blue ceiling,
where a single
black bird
was flying around.

Lucinda and fried beef

is everything
we consume made in either
China
or Mexico?
i ask my wife,
Lucinda.
yes, she says,
showing me
the little tattoo
on the nape of her neck
which says
made in Tijuana.
then we go
out to dinner,
to Hunan West, for 
Peking
fried beef
and broccoli.

back then there was no Burlington coat factory

from my
calculations, the weather in 
the Garden of Eden
must have been pretty nice.
maybe around 68 degrees,
slightly
overcast.
they had no clothes, so in
order to survive,
things had to be just right,
with a limited
chance of sunburn
or frostbite.
it was like San Diego,
sort of
in the spring,
back in the sixties,
during the Summer of Love,
but then it all changed
with that damn
apple.
now we're buckling up
galoshes
and wearing hats,
putting on an extra layer
of clothes
because it's freezing
with three feet of snow
on the ground.
we're at the beach
lathering on sunscreen
in our bikinis and speedos.