Sunday, November 17, 2019

why are you making so much noise?

she came down into the kitchen
once.
eight o'clock on a sunday morning
and screamed,

what are you doing?
I can't sleep because you're making
so much noise.

I was buttering toast.
making a cup of coffee.

her eyes were bugging out of her head.
she'd be angry for the next
week.
with no words said.

I was dead to her after that awful
incident.

then there was the time
there was a thin coat of ice on
the cars.
which melted as the sun rose,
or was quickly wiped away
with the brush of a hand.

and she screamed and said, my
married boyfriend would have warmed
up my car
and cleaned my windshield for
me. maybe I should go back to him.

maybe you should, I told her, which
sent her off into a rage.
a bomb about to explode.

one snowy afternoon
she saw me looking at her book,
the modern version of the joy of
sex which made
her start crying.
why are you looking at such things,
she said. and I replied.
ummm, it was on the table, and
it's your book, you bought it
and brought it into my house.
just getting some ideas.

she ran upstairs and curled into
a ball on the floor,
in a darkened room
and rocked back and forth for hours
on end, pulling at her hair. moaning.

another time,

I asked her why she kept a photo
of her married boyfriend
in her worn copy of
the bridges of Madison county,
in the nightstand next
to our bed,
a book she had underlined over
and over again, believing her
affair was just like how it was
in the stupid maudlin book.

he's my best friend, she said.

I tore the photo up, which she
quickly replaced with another.
their photos of one another were like
rain drops, endless.

and so it went. you can't argue
or reason with crazy. you want
them to be normal and see how nutty
they are, but they'll never see
the light.

there is no light inside their
dark souls. thank god I escaped.

the bend in the road

the bend in the road
does not
indicate the end
of the road, but if you
don't make the turn,
it can be.
so you slow down,
adjust your speed,
and turn the wheel enough
to alter
direction, as it
should be.
a life without change
is unsafe
at any speed.

the faces

the faces
you have known, have aged.
as
I have.
some, though, are frozen
in time.
death having come
early.
never to grow old.
these lives,
these souls
are vines, that run
up
my tree of life.
forever are we entwined.

charity

the man at the pot
in front of the store has arrived
early.

two weeks before
thanksgiving.

he's wearing a Christmas
costume
of some sort. red with white
trim.

he rings a bell incessantly.
hello.
hello.
hello.

he chants to the open air,
to anyone walking
by
with their lists, their
carts,
their minds
elsewhere.

the ringing never stops.
you drop a dollar
in.

some change. only two
more months
of ringing to go.

the funeral march

the so called honeymoon period
was brief.

I think it lasted a few weeks.

then the orchestra started playing
Beethoven's
funeral march without a break.

suddenly the doors closed.
the sun
went black.

a cold wind swept through
floorboards,
from
the cellar to the attic.

there was much weeping
and gnashing of teeth.

I know i'm being overly dramatic.
but it felt
like that.


peace be with you

occasionally we'd play
the parish of St. Thomas More
in a practice
game of football. we were a rag
tag
bunch from oxon hill.
hardly enough boys to take the field.
the one thirty five pound team
in a scrambled league.
the coaches thought it was
a good idea to play them.
it would toughen us up.
we were in junior high
too small for the varsity.
they'd beat us to a pulp.
smarter, faster, more disciplined.
they seemed to find pleasure
in grinding us into the ground
after going to mass just an hour
before the kickoff.
communion wafers just melted
in their mouths.
their brilliant white uniforms,
with red stripes
and a small red cross emblazoned
on their chest.
there would be nuns on sidelines
with blood thirsty cheers.
priests, sipping from flasks.
high fiving after each blow we'd
take. it was a blood bath.
and in the end, we'd line up
and shake hands,
what was left of us and
listened as one by one they each
said, peace be with you.

Saturday, November 16, 2019

let's go to mars, yo

let's go to mars
they say. let's settle
the red planet.

come on, it'll be fun.
expensive as hell, yes, but
hey,
we can take it out of the education
fund.
or siphon it off from
cancer research,
or how to stop global warming.

let's go, they say

completely forgetting that there's
no air,
no water, no
Starbucks there.

don't they realize
that humans will
be inhabiting
this strange red planet.

look around, are we doing a good job
here.
hardly.
what would be different a million
miles away.

are we sending jesus, and ghandi.
mister rogers?

no, we're sending the likes of us.
human, with all our
faults, our prejudices, our
troubles and cares,
our woes.

maybe fix earth first before
wrecking another planet, just a
thought.

mindfulness

apparently to sell a book these days
all you have
to do is put the word
mindfulness in the title.

cooking with mindfulness.
running,
walking, eating, talking.

work.

sleep.
make love with mindfulness.

mow the lawn,
rake the leaves, scrub
the pots and pans.

be in the moment. be in
the now.

empty your mind. still the waters
of your
chattering brain.

be mindful.

whatever.

two cans of whipped cream

I get an early jump
on thanksgiving and buy two big
fat drumsticks.

some stuffing and cranberries too.

it's a preemptive strike
on the big meal.

I take out my cookbook. I can
never get the gravy right.

it's like building a nuclear
reactor. complex.

I ponder a pumpkin pie, but decide
to wait until
I get my stretch waistband pants
from amazon.

and my big sweater too, the one
with reindeers on it,

and snowflake.

I do stock up on whipped cream
though.

you can never have too many
cans
of cold whipped cream
ready to go in the fridge.

sunny side up

I don't like going to the dentist
but I go.
tax time, I dread, the paper work,
but it beats
jail time.
car inspection is painful.
waiters that are too friendly.
baristas
too.
I don't like long lines,
or crowded rooms, big events,
i'd rather be alone.
I don't like needles,
tetanus shots,
flu shots.
any kind of shot where a sharp
needle punctures my skin.
i'm not happy with the weather
when it's too hot
or too cold.
scraping ice or shoveling is
not my thing.
answering the phone these days
is tough.
so is writing an email, or
a letter or sending out a card.
all that writing. stamps
to put on.
loud people. get away.
stingy people.
crass and crude people, out the door.
pea soup, no.
lima beans, or liver. good lord.
carob
or kale? check please.
indian food, or food I've never
eaten before.
forget about it.

the small print of attraction

I've been reading all these
law of attraction books, and how
what we think we attract.

thoughts are things. we put out vibrations
to bring in like vibrations.

which scares me when I think about it.

did I attract that person into my life
with how I thought. yikes.

so I start thinking differently.
erasing all negativity as best I can
with my child like mind.

what do I really want, what kind of
person.
what are her attributes, etc.

tall, short, lean, stout?
smart, sexy, fun and patient?
sure why not.

financially secure, not too messed
up mentally by their childhood
and parents? okay. put that down.

just a small amount of crazy meds.

someone with girl parts, no need
to draw a picture there.
kissing skills, okay, yes to that.

someone with an edge, but not too
edgy, but a little sarcastic.
artsy, creative, a positive thinker
and knows how to bake a cake.

of course I need to work on me
first and clean out the attic,
drop a few pound and do some push
ups, but hey. we're thinking positive
now. no more of that gloom and doom.

let's see what we attract now.
i'm leaving wackadoodle out of the mix.

but then again, happiness should
come first. be happy being alone
should be a priority and then
if God willing, the right person
comes along, so be it.

closing time

it's impossible that another year
is almost over.

how can this be?
where o where did the days and weeks
go.

I look back and try to remember
significant
events, days where something good,
or even
bad occurred that will
be remembered for a long time.

unfortunately most of the memories
in the first four months were
horrible,
with a few good ones sprinkled in
the mix.

once the chain was cut though,
and the dead weight was thrown
overboard, things
did get better, and the sailing
was smoother.

but it's closing time on the year.
and everything must go.

tack the new calendar to the wall.

wring out the old, ring in the new,
or something like that.

breathing is a good thing

my man, my main man at jiffy
lube, Ed,
says
you need a new cabin filter.
he brings it into
the little
cell, called a waiting
room and shakes his head.
there's a leaf
and some dust in it.
ninety dollars, he says.
but you need to breathe,
right?
I think about it for a
second.
then agree, breathing is
a good thing.
put in a clean one, I tell him.
oh and the wipers, they
ain't working too good
are they?
seems to be smearing
the windshield when
you put them on. as your
oil technician I would advise
that you put in
new ones, it would be good
to see where you're going,
wouldn't it.
I put my ten year old
people magazine down
and nod my head yes.
seeing is also a good thing.
thanks, Ed.

too much

it was hard to tell where the sea
left off
and the sky began,
both a soft muted blue
with no separation, no clouds,
a sun rising
against the wet stretch of
sand.
it's not unlike looking at
the stars
at night, when
the radiance of each star
is sharp, a silvery
white.
there seems to be no end
to this,
no end to us, what we are.
you can't wrap your head around
eternity.
it's too much, way too much
to even try to
understand.
you just accept it. accept
the mystery, and go back
to your own small
world, fighting all fears,
all doubts
with faith, if you are
so blessed to have one.

Friday, November 15, 2019

Is that all there is?

somehow the peggy lee song,
is that all there is comes on the radio.

oldies. xm 60's channel.

it was followed by jimi Hendrix
are you experienced.

but I really like the peggy lee song.

it's quite maudlin and ridiculous on
many levels, but
I really like it.
and once I hear it. it sticks in my
head like bubblegum
to my shoe.

if that's all there is my friend,
then let's keep dancing....

I often say that when I pull the last
potato chip
out of a bag,

or when I go for the last slice
of chocolate cake,

or when I tip the bottle of grey
goose and few drops
trickle out,

or when the love of my life turns
out to be
not the love of my life, but some
figment of my fertile
imagination.

that shallow, really?

is that all there is?

i'm thinking of getting that phrase
tattooed to my
arm,
or on my chest.

is that all there is,
after I have the word next removed
by a laser.

I hope no one ever says that to me.
is that all there is,
although,
I think they have.

this one is just right

i ask a woman standing by the stack
of avocados
to help me pick one out.

what makes a good one, i ask her.
she looks
at me like i'm a crazy person,

but sees that i'm basically a
harmless man
pushing a grocery cart around

with nothing but meat and ice
cream in it.

okay, she says, picking one
up. this one is not ready. too
hard. feel it.

i take it from her and nod.
i see. i see, i say, pressing
my fingers against the tough
green skin. it is hard.

she picks up another one, and
this one, too mushy.
i press a finger into it.

oh my i say. very soft.
too mushy.
that can't be good.

the third one, she holds
up to the light and cups it in
her hand. this one, she says.
is just right.

feel that? perfect.

she hands it to me and says.
there you go.

making passionate love

are you done,
she used to say,
when we were
making hot passionate
love.

is that it?

I can't tell when you're finished
sometimes.

no, I'd tell her, just resting
a bit.

oh, okay. I thought you were done.
let me know, okay?

okay. just give me a minute to catch
my breath
and grab my inhaler.

just going to roll over and reach
into the drawer.

hold that thought, so how was work
today?

busy, she'd say, staring up
at the ceiling. very busy.

and you, the new boss?

same as the old boss I say,
inhaling deeply into the inhaler.

come soon, please

for some reason my house
is a mess.

i'm the only one who lives here.
no dog, or cat.
not a single living plant.

no wife underfoot with her clothes
and makeup
and avocado skins,
yogurt cups left about.

no, none of that, just me.

so many wet towels, and shoes
tossed about.

who did this?
these crumbs and cups left
on the table.

the sink piled up
with dishes. a tray
of chicken wings, cold
in the oven.

who left the light on in
the basement? the door ajar.

who forgot to pull the plug
on the tub,
or put the milk back into
the fridge?

guilty as charged.
not sure if I can wait two
more weeks for the maid to come.

I might have to throw up
the beam of light,
with the broom and mop, shine
it against the clouds,
to signal her rescue.

the good doctor

I talk to my doctor
on the phone, she has a pleasant voice.
she's busy.

very busy. her life is stacked with notes
upon her desk.
patients at the door,
on the other line.

I envy her.
the work she does. the healing.
the importance
of her day.

she was born to be what she is.
a life not wasted.
not a minute or hour,
not a careless thought,
thrown away.

one more time

you hear down the grapevine,

the whispers, the confidential cupping
of hands
to ears

that someone has gone off the deep end.

millions lost
houses and cars. investments.
tossed out of another rented room.

and now he's behind the wheel of a yellow
cab.

it's not an unfamiliar story.
up and down.
the rollercoaster life, the chaos
he embraces,

I understand, having living under
the same roof
with him as a child.

it's sad. but there is nothing you can
do. or anyone else.
it starts with him to turn his life
around.

again.

Thursday, November 14, 2019

the good sister

the sister used
to dye her hair blue, streaks of blue.

she was over sixty.

her and her boyfriend loved to eat.
ask them
where to get the best chicken
legs in town
and they'd give
you their top five places,
the addresses and streets.

both retired. both living small
on what came in.

food seemed to be their primary destination.
it was a feast when
the Chinese boxes arrived.
a duck, a fish, fried rice
with no end.

they kept a clean house. some guns
were lying about.

no cats though, or dogs.
a crazy sister in the mix. a set
of aging parents
who

battled daily over the salt shaker,
or sugar bowl.

but i really liked them. they were
real people.

eccentric and odd, but genuine souls
who lived and let live.

they were fun. generous and bold.

the eight o'clock pick up

i used to pick jake
up down by the metro station in old town.

he liked the steps there.
he liked watching all the young girls in
their summer
dresses heading for work,
getting on the train.

sometimes he'd whistle, or say something
offensive.
but he meant no harm,
sitting there with his lunch bag,
and baby blue thermos,
a cigarette dangling from his
bearded mouth.

he'd be in his white painter pants
and paint splatter coat.

his hair slicked back from the shower
he just took at the shelter
before walking over in the cold.

howdy doody, he'd say, as he climbed
into the truck and then start in on
the goddman shelter, or his goddamn
doctors, or his goddamn brother.

those were the days he was in
a good mood.

the condo board of cardinal square

through the slot
the uprising of the neighbors
comes through in a hurriedly printed
note.

come to the board meeting.
we need to burn these people at the stake.

they want to be paid
for doing volunteer work.

they want to take away our parking spaces.
our shrubbery.
they want to raise the fees.
hire relatives.

chop down perfectly good trees.

they want to rule our little world
with an iron fist.

it's strange how even the small get
corrupt once
they gain a thimble full
of power.

her bags of tricks

i see the ghost of her at the airport.

in uniform, her airlines
pin on her navy blue jacket.
her starched white blouse,
and a printed scarf.

the not too short matching skirt.
her shiny black hair.
her heels.

her bright brown eyes. lipstick
just applied.

hand on her hip with that come hither
look
that flight attendants
are trained to do.

one bag at her side, but heavy
as a load
of bricks.

her bag of tricks.

my intuitive skills

it's not a good sign
when they stop calling and texting.

leaving you sweet voice mails
on your machine.

when you get nothing in the mail
any more.

there are no packages.
no bags of cookies, or cakes
on the porch,
left for when you get home.

there's nothing. just empty air.

in time, because you have great intuitive
skills,
you realize that hey, this relationship
is over.

I am under the bus again.

it stuns you at first, but then as
you look back
and see all the clues, the evidence
that has piled up.

you know that you're probably right.
but you never
know, the governor might call
at some point, at some midnight
hour
and save your life.

but not for long

you're so dramatic
she'd say
as I set fire to the valentine's
card
that she was going to send to her
married boyfriend.
I laughed and nodded.
I guess in a way I am, I said,
as I put the love note
into the pan
and lit a match.
I knew it was just one card
of a half dozen endearing cards
that she had hidden in her purse,
or car,
in a drawer behind things,
or at work.
she didn't budge, or try
to grab the card, signed with
love.
I wish I could tell the world
how much I love you,
she wrote
with little hearts around it.
I told her that I wished
someone would send me
a card like that sometime
as I watched the five dollar
card go up in flames.
I wish I had a wife who cared
about me that much.
and then put my finger to my
chin while the ashes floated
up to the ceiling and said,
wait a minute, you are my wife.
but not for long.

how to cook a duck

i watch an hour show of a guy
cooking duck.

i just get caught up in it.
i couldn't watch any more of the senseless
babble
of the impeachment hearings.

he's guilty. hang him, hang him
high,
or pull his pants down in public
and spank him.
but be done with it.

isn't there work to do. people to feed.
jobs to make. healthcare, education,
etc. etc. etc.

both sides of the aisle sound like
a bunch of old
women fighting over some loser.

anyway. back to the duck.
it looks really juicy and tender.
there's boiling involved and frying.

my mouth waters by the end of the show
and i decide to get my own
duck real soon.

that's my plan

what are your goals, she asks you.

what's your five
year plan.

where do you want to be five
years from now.

tell me.

I look at her and smile.

I got nothing, I tell her.
I stopped planning for the future
a long time ago, especially when
it involves other people.

in five minutes i'm getting
a cup
of coffee and going to work.

beyond that is a mystery.

that doesn't seem too wise, she
says, shaking her head.

we all need plans, goals. something
to look forward to.

I look forward to a hard
day at work,
then a nap and dinner.

and hopefully seeing lula belle
on the weekend.

that's my plan. you have yours.
I have mine.

in reverse

he had a pale blue
chevy.
57.
gull wings.
baby moons. for a while
it only drove
in reverse.
the transmission
busted.
but it didn't stop
him from driving
around the neighborhood.
backwards.
he lived his life
like that.
in reverse.
starting out so old,
a boy scout, walking
the straight and
narrow,
but getting
younger
as the years went on.
trouble on top of
trouble.

Wednesday, November 13, 2019

she loved to gossip

my mother loved to gossip.

over the fence while hanging wet
sheets on the line,
or on the phone.

she kept a list of everyone
she knew
on a sheet of paper, laminated,
hanging on the kitchen wall.

the hot line.
she liked the juicy stuff.
she liked
knowing the dirt, the skinny
on everyone.

she'd always share it with you at
some point,
you could easily break her down
by showing up with a cheesecake.

you couldn't keep her quiet.
she'd start out with the weather
and then
away she went.

she just had to tell you what
was going on
and with who.

but then she'd put her finger
to her lips and say,

don't tell anyone I told you this.
but I swear, every word,
all of it is true.

sometimes you hate people

sometimes you just hate people.

the way
they drive, or talk.

or need to get past you
at the store.

you dislike it when they're
loud
and obnoxious.
when they pretend to be what
they aren't.

when they preen or brag.
the way they constantly stare
into their phones.

or when they don't say a word.
not a polite bone
in their body.

no thank you.

there are times when you don't need
people.
you can live without them
quite easily

in splendid isolation.
but then are nights where you roll
over
and wish

for love.
but again that involves people,
doesn't it?

some came back

i remember when older kids
in the neighborhood got drafted
and went off into the army.
went overseas to germany, or viet
nam.
some died, some came back
with that stare in their eyes.
they left with long hair
and came back with crew cuts.
wearing green, with black boots.
we hardly recognized them.
their medals, their sewn on
patches. they showed us their
scars, the ones they could.
they were never the same.
these kids. these boys on skate
boards, bikes and hooligans
hanging at the bowling alley.
they came back no longer boys
in the neighborhood, but different.
they came back as men.

the sky sure does look religious today

i wrote a story once,
quite a few years ago about a small
boy going to church with his mother.
i had one line in it that
i still remember.
the sky sure looks religious today,
don't it mother?
the little boy said.
it was a light story, no one died
or got killed,
although there was a car wreck.
there was infidelity involved,
and a dog. and a church going mother.
like i said.
it was years back. but even now
i can relate to it.
eventually i had it published in
a small college magazine, but by
mistake they put someone else's name
as the author. my name was no
where to be found.
it didn't matter though, payment was in
copies, which i got a few.
they had my address right, at least.

the last letter

i write a letter.

a long letter. five pages in all.
took me hours
of writing, editing, revamping.

then i print it off,
read it again before tossing
it into the trash,

crushed into a ball.

i get nowhere with letters like
that.

I've sent so many, trying to make
right things right, or get
even
in some maniacal way with some
fool girl
i got entangled with.

the poison pen and all that
nonsense.

the little man in me shouting,
i'll show you!

but in the end. you just have
to leave people alone.
move on.

you can't change them. they were
sick before you met them,
sick when they were with you,
and will be sick
forever more.

get on with your life.
shut the door and don't look
back.

to hell with letters.
i won't send them anymore.
except for this one, the one
that took so long to write,
but that's it,
no more letters,
i'm done with that.

no school tomorrow

we'd be out in the snow
until midnight. sledding down the packed
slush and sleet,
the ice
before the trucks came
onto the back streets
with their salt and wide
hard shovels.
there'd be no school tomorrow.
the moon was out,
the snow finished for the night.
our hands
so cold, red and raw.
we found socks to cover them
when the gloves
got soaked
and froze.
there was joy in those nights.
riding the curve of the road
down Winthrop street
to Dorchester.
the dogs would be out there with
us,
running beside our sleds
we laughed and hollered,
raced, seeing how far
we could go.
to the mailbox, to the pole,
to the street over.
those nights were gold.

another dope

it's hard to watch the news.
especially
when it's politics
all day, all night.

nothing done. repeat
and rinse.

the babble is endless.
nothing changes. just new
faces.

deception and lies.

new criminals running the show.
flags on their lapels.

the band plays on.

people starve, grow old.
another war,
another scandal.

another vote, another dope
from either side
of the aisle,

away we go.

back to square one

I keep checking my mail
for the thanksgiving
holiday invite.

I ask the mail man everyday.
anything. anything?

and he shakes his head no.

I check my email, my texts.
I shake my phone.

nothing. no dinner invitation.
no room at the inn.
every one is booked.
not an extra plate even at
the kid's table

of any friends.

finally I go to the store
for some turkey wings.

and look online for a gravy
recipe.

I buy a pumpkin pie and some
whipped cream.

back to square one.

the crowding room

as if in the fog
people fade.

they slowly disappear
losing
form

and color. their voices
no longer
in reach.

their footsteps
gone.

they add on to the others.
the crowding
room of ghosts.

past friends, relatives.
lovers.

leaving, always leaving.
never to return

or be heard from.

Tuesday, November 12, 2019

the benefits of not being married

there's some simplicity in not
being married.

having waffles at nine o'clock
in your under wear
sitting in front of the tv.

lathering on the butter and syrup.
eggs and bacon, go for it.
put a rib roast in the oven
before you go to bed
and set the timer.

you can even leave the butter
out all night, if you so desire,
you can leave
the dishes in the sink, or even
on the table.

all sticky. leave as many books
as you like all over the house.
open to where you last read them.

the bathroom is all yours.
wet towels on the floor.
so what.

why bother setting all the clocks
in the house back
when they'll spring forward in six
months anyway. leave em.
who cares what time it is.
look out the window.
it's day, or it's night.

you can throw your dirty clothes down
the steps. who cares.
leave your shoes all over the place,
no one's around to complain
about how they keep tripping over them.

it's okay.
the tv is all yours. watch what
you want.

your jailer is no longer around.
maybe pulp fiction one more time,
or the big Lebowski. another binge
on Netflix. it's been weeks since
your watched Bad Santa
or the Shawshank redemption.

she used to like cartoons.
or the catholic channel.
Disney movies, the hallmark channel,
the kind of stuff
she used to watch with her kid
or her parents
in an effort to show them how
wonderful she was. ha.

mindless for the most
part, though painful in a painless
sort of way.

I know though that this fun, this
freedom will end one day.
i'll meet someone new, fall
in love again and the party will be
over. this freedom will be
extinguished like blowing out
a candle.

i'll be scraping ice off their
car windows, or be at the grocery
store asking them
what kind of seafood they want
for dinner tonight and if
they want kale or spinach,
as sides.

oh well, need to enjoy it
while I can with a cold coke
and a bag of waffle chips by
my side.

he's in town

beware
of those who attend church
religiously.
they punch god's clock,
as if he's
keeping score.
a time sheet, that he'll
review when the end
comes.
they think of him as santa claus.
have you been naughty
or nice?
better watch out.
he's coming to town.
but I've got news for you.
he's already in town.
he's in the bars,
in the basements, in the attics,
in the bedrooms,
in the whorehouse,
the meth labs, in the crooked
banks.
the casinos,
he sees the murders,
the robberies,
adultery. the lies upon
lies. the sickness
of mankind.
he's there right now.
he's not waiting at the altar.
he's here.
he's in town.

the love manual

most of what i know now
has nothing to do with school.
teachers,
classrooms.
in fact most of what i learned
there,
i rarely use.
what's of value came later,
came today,
or yesterday.
looking into people's eyes.
finding out who they
are, what they're made of.
no one teaches you about the heart.
about love.
about pain and sorrow.
there's no manual
for any of that. you learn
that on the run,
on the street.
the teachers are too busy
with math
and English, history for
god's sake.
the pain you felt the first
time your heart was broken,
is no different than
the last time,
how do you even begin
to teach a child something
like that?

i'm working on it

i wish no ill
on anyone, and yet there is within
me
a streak of mean,
a flash of red in
wanting revenge on those
who've hurt
me.
it's a human thing.
not turning the other cheek,
that sick ego doing what
the ego does in
keeping us alive.
it's a problem, but
i'm working on it.

the drive home

it's cold.
grey.
the wind is harsh,
stings like shards of glass
against my skin.
I have tears
in my eyes as I drive
away.
heading home
this late in the day.
I put the radio on,
the song doesn't help the mood.
nor does the traffic.
the horns.
the fists of clouds,
violet in the dusk,
an angry blue. I don't know
why I have tears
in my eyes, but I do.
they roll down my cheeks.
I don't wipe them away,
I let them come.
it's a good cry.
some days are better than
others,
like memories, and
some you wish would fade.

the high rise

it's a high rise.
a giant building sitting between
a dozen
big buildings.

the roads are tight
in this valley of concrete
and glass.

no sunlight. it's dusk all day.

you have to push the button
to get in
after stating your name.

show your id, explain why you're there.

tags to your car.
how long?

and who are coming to see.
there's no parking.

you get a pass for the dashboard,
then go back out
to move your car
out of the visitors spot.

no easy way to get from the lobby to
the tenth floor,
you find the elevator to the east wing,

you walk, you walk,
it's quiet.
not a soul around,
and those you pass in
the darkened hallways
say nothing.

they keep their heads down.

you zig zag, reading the signs,
the numbers,
you knock.

and finally, someone lets you in.

Monday, November 11, 2019

behind closed doors

I lived in a house
once
where doors were slammed.
doors were locked,
shut tight.
no talking things through,
no kiss goodnight,
just the dead
silence
of anger simmering.
it was hard to sleep in
a house
like that.
you could feel the pain
through the walls.
the secrets,
the hidden things
under beds, in books,
in drawers,
in closets.
beware of those behind
closed doors.
it's the tip of the ice
berg
of what you know.

take the higher road

it seems that those
who get the short end of the stick
get
it all the time,
or at least most of the time.

they trip and fall,
the miscues are endless.

they throw their hands up to the sky
and say why me.
what now.

I have no good luck.

and so it goes. it rarely changes
until
they stop saying that, thinking
that and
accepting the road
they'[re on.

go left, go right, go in
any direction but the direction
you're headed in.

and stop saying, woe is me.

where he would be found

she had an old horse.
sway back, bleary eyed and brown,
thin
in legs, it's tail constantly
at the flies
that filled the barn.
your eyes watered when
you entered.
the cats, the mice.
the wet hay, the steel tub
of tepid water.
she didn't ride him anymore,
but brought him carrots
and apples
which he nibbled at with
broken teeth.
she'd brush him, and wash
his coat.
she couldn't let him go.
couldn't say goodbye or take
him down.
he'd have to do it himself,
he'd have to wander
out into the farthest pasture
and fall
into a pool of sunlight,
where he used to run, where
he once was young,
a place she knew, where he
would be found.

the smiling mask

her first husband
used to beat her, she said. so
that ended
quickly

and the second one, did the same,
but worse.
she settled though, thinking
this must be how it is
with all marriages.

I might as well stay
and pretend
that everything is fine,
that nothing truly hurts.

two dozen years later,
nothing has changed.
her smiling mask in tact,
a wasted life of hidden
bruises,
with no one but her
to blame.

into the valley

the traffic slows
to a crawl, then stops
for the funeral
procession.

the beams of headlights
reach out
from each car
in the half dark of day.

the black hearse rolls
slowly towards the green
hills, dotted with stones,
to the freshly cut
grave.

there is not much to say.
the usual words.
the open bible,
the talk of into the shadow
of the valley of death we go.

there are women crying in the rain.
men too.
children
bewildered by it all.

life is hard,
we swallow it uneasily,
death is strange.

no news is good news

i hear nothing back
but the roar
of silence
from the ex.
no footsteps creeping
up the alley.
no cars idling in the lot.
no mail,
snail or otherwise.
no text or call.
no cookies baked.
it's good to hear nothing
back.
no news is good news.
i got the monkey
off my back.

the seven year itch

I found him,
she tells me, I found the one,
my soul
mate,
the love of my life,
my knight in shining armor,
my boy next door,
the one I've been waiting
for forever.
and as soon as he leaves
his wife,
he's all mine.
he even crossed his heart
and hoped
to die, if he's lying.
I trust and believe him.
he's honest and true,
good
and wholesome. he's
everything to me.
how wonderful life will
be when we can stop sneaking
around,
and he files for divorce.
it's only been seven years
of us together,
but I feel that this is
the year, he'll tell her.
tell his wife adios and be
all mine until the end
of time.

Sunday, November 10, 2019

when elmo went to war

i used to read to my son
before he went to sleep.

but over time, we read so many
books over and over
again
that i had to change the lines.

i took the cat in the hat story
into a whole
other direction. barney and elmo,
Kermit.

the cat robbed a bank,
or stole a car,
or barney got drunk in a bar.
Elmo went to war, or became
an astronaut.

my son played along, and before
you knew it,
he was telling tales.

making up his own stories,
and now he's doing that
from three thousand
miles away
in Hollywood.

it's okay if you're late

it doesn't bother
me
when people are late.
I used to care
but things have changed.
i'm fine
twiddling my thumbs,

or reading,
or staring out the window
at the falling rain.

sipping on a drink
and observing the world
around me.

there's no place
i'd rather be
than be with me.

I have a better time
alone
these days than
reliving the tales of
someone's yesterday.

all the way to love town

I see the pattern of my ways.

i'm very self aware
at this stage, this late
in the game.

sorry for the language but

I've fucked
up time and time again,
making bad choices
when it comes to
women.

but I get it now. the road is
full
of mistakes, looking back
at the wrong turns

with the wrong person.
a trail of lies and broken
promises.
diamonds on hands that didn't
deserve them,

detours, wrecks,
cars over turned and burning.

I let them have the wheel.
trusted them
to drive me
all the way to love town.

I went to sleep, happy to have
them at the wheel,
the radio on,
their hand on my knee,
taking me along to where
I've always wanted
to be.

take me to love town,
mon Cherie.
take me all the ways to love
town.
and then we'll marry.


it was raining hard in frisco

some can't handle
money. can't handle success.

they can make it. make millions.
have cars
and houses.

women and trips to exotic
places.

they wear gold rings,
expensive watches.
they have pianos
and chandeliers.

to the outside world

that have it all.
they're suntanned
and fat. happy with the lot
they've earned,

but
it's a Richard Corey kind of thing.

one day you
here what's happened.

they're gone. they're driving
a taxi

living in one room
in a basement
on the outskirts of town.

they've lost it all.
again.


so you say

i'm depressed she tells me.

i'm sad.

i'm lonely. i'm disappointed
with life.

i'm thinking about ending it all,
maybe jumping
off a bridge,

or taking a handful of pills
and drinking myself

to death.

she tells me all this while she
spins around
in the room in her new
shoes and a new black dress.

have you seen my stamps

he used to collect stamps.

all kinds.
different countries, rare
stamps,
limited editions.

it's what he thought about
morning, noon and night.

it was his life.
these tiny squares with the

faces of presidents on them,
inventors,
writers,
poets and astronauts.

he kept the books in a safe,
but was quick
to bring them out when anyone
came over.

did I show you my stamp
collection, he'd say,
and regardless of your answer

they'd come out. hour after
hour
he'd turn the page
and give you the history
of each

stamp, there was no escape.

and when he died, they got
tossed into bags
and thrown out.

I miss him. crazy stamp collector.

there was no turning back

what is your intention with my
daughter

her father asked me.
he was Italian, old school, muscled
and
hard with
whiskey and cigars.

a tattoo of a ship was blue
on one arm.

I sat on the edge of the couch,
twenty two.
nervous,
ready to run out and call the whole
thing off.

I want to marry your daughter
I said softly.

what? he said. I didn't hear you.
I said it again, but louder this time.

I thought so, he said.
do you have any money? a job, a car?
a place to live?

yes, I said, thinking about the eight
hundred dollars
I had in the bank,

and my beat up car that hardly ran.
I had a one bedroom apartment
across the tracks

and a job waiting on tables.

I wanted him to say no. no you
cant marry her, she can do much better
than that,

but he didn't, he like everyone else
didn't stop us.

two children. deer in the headlights
of oncoming life.

and then the cake
was ordered
the invitations put in the mail.

there was no turning back.

time has a way

time has a way of erasing
nearly everything.

it all fades, gets lost
in the turning
page.

what seemed so important
is less.

people that you once loved
have left.

there is no new water on this earth.
it just takes
a different shape.

as we do as time
takes our lives, our memories
and begins
to erase.

Saturday, November 9, 2019

love can be like that

I remember falling in love
with an imaginary person.

I carved her out of stone.
kissed her lips as if they were real.

I felt her skin
against mine.

I listened to her voice and believed
every word
she said.

I fell, I fell. I left. I wandered
into
the deepest darkest
depths

of hell.

love can be like that, even if it
doesn't exist.

and was never real

I moved forward. but the scars are
there.

the wounds.

the brutal lies still ring within
my ears.

nobody reads poetry

nobody reads poety anymore.

they don't even read the paper.

they read, emails and texts.
notes written on the run.

beach books.
mysteries and easy to digest
efforts,
that make you weary, make you numb.

no one steps out and reads the hard stuff.

the real thing.

the blood of us, the bones,
the heart of who we really are.

we soothe ourselves with soft
lullabyes, with
the inane, the middle of the road,
what the masses want.

little thought, little strain,
let's go gently in to that good night
with never knowing who we are,

why we're here.

let's change the channel and surf
the wasteland
without tears, without fear, without
a soul.

a life unlived and never whole.

the chicken sandwich

i read in the paper where a man
has been
stabbed and killed
over a fried chicken sandwich.

he cut into the long line,
too anxious
for his meal to wait,
and get in line where it began,
out the door and around
the back.

how horrible, i think at first.
what craziness.
the poor guy, the loss
to his family. his own life.

and then i think about the sandwich.

how good must these sandwiches
be

and where can i get one,
safely.

damsel in distress

i see her on the side of the road,
hitchhiking.

her thumb out. crying as usual.

one bag slung across her back.
she's on the road again.

where to now?

who's the next knight in shining armor
to save her?

what set of eyes can she pull
the wool over
this time?

not mine. mine are wide wide open.

i got no more saving damsels in
distress
in me.

been there, done that.

someone at the door

there's a knock at the door.

do I answer it?

I lower the television and peek
out the peep hole.

the shadow of my eye
is clear
to whoever it is that's standing there.

a stranger.
a woman. what now?

she knocks again, harder this time,
with some
need, some problem, something
that I really
don't want to deal with
at this late hour.

I see a clipboard in her hand.

she could be part of the neighborhood
coven of witches that run
the condo board.

I let her knock and knock again,
until she finally gives
up

and goes to the neighbor next door.

I feel good about my decision
to not open up.

just seems that way

you can change a lot of things
in your life.

the clothes you wear, where you live,
your husband,
your wife.

but who you are inside seems to stick.

you make adjustments,
learn and grow, but the core of who
you are,

seems to stay the same no matter
how much
religion you get,
or therapy,
or how many books you read.

you try, try hard, but the increments
are slow
and slight.

most people that are bad stay bad,
and the good ones
stay good.

just seems that way.

we're here honey

we finally make it to florida,
retired,
the gold watch on my wrist.

the kids all grown.

everything we own is in the trailer
that we've pulled for the last thousand miles.

I have my flowery shirt on, my sandals.
my shorts
and wide brimmed hat.

sunglasses in place.

I grab an orange off a tree,
peel it and take a bite,
letting the juices run
down my chin.

i look up

at the ever present sun. a yellow
hot face
spreading its warmth
over everything.

the blue water and white sand
stretches out forever before us.

I notice there's a lot of old people
here sitting in chairs
fanning themselves with menus.

I tell my wife of forty years, well,
here we are.

we're done.
and she sighs and says, it's too
hot, and look
there's a lizard running towards us.

i'm getting back into the car,
and turning it around,
tell me when
you're done.

Friday, November 8, 2019

a sign

i remember the dead bat
that was stuck
between the house, the brick
and the downspout,
a small thing, grey,
a ratty ball of fur,
but with sharp wings, and
tiny ball eyes looking out.
it was an omen of some sort.
each time i looked at it,
i felt a wave of dread, a darkening
cloud if i continued with this
person. it was there the day
i met her and was still there
the day she moved out
and in with me.
it was just a small dead bat,
but it was an omen, a true sign
to run, telling me stop,
don't go any further.
but i ignored it and paid the price
dearly.

the touchstone

after she died I found a smooth
stone
in her back yard. I picked it up
and held it to the sky.
a small stone. grey, without color.
I kept it.
i put it in my pocket so that i'd
remember her anywhere I went,
no matter who I was with.
I used to put my hand in my pocket
and hold the cold rock
in my hand, feel the smoothness
with my fingers. i'd roll it over
and over. a touchstone
that reminded me of her love.
our relationship. I held
onto it for a few years, then
stopped. I put it back in her yard,
which was now my yard having
bought her house.

write a poem about me

write me a poem she says
out of the blue.

I need something to read.

I tell her where to go to find
a few thousand
raggedy scribblings

that have come out of me over
the years.

no, she says, I want a new one.
I want a new poem, something fresh.

just about me, and only me.

I scratch my head and look
at her.

her long legs, her black nails
and lips like rose
petals wanting
to be kissed.

I try to kiss her, but she
pushes me away. no she says.
I want my poem first.

there'll be none of that, not
until I get my poem.

I had work to do.

we don't need no stinking sandwiches

I asked my part time workers once upon
a time, when they were still around,
Francisco and albert,
jose and Wallace why they didn't
bring their lunch to work.
why were they spending ten dollars
a day
on greasy fast food and sugary drinks,
when they could make a lunch
and bring it with them to the job.
the money they would save.
they were all bone skinny when I took
them on. having traveled far,
across deserts and woods, being chased
by banditos at every turn.
but now they were rounded out, cheeks
filled, their clothes tight upon them.
why don't you pack a lunch I asked them,
and Francisco stood up, being
the leader of this pack of painters
and laborers, cement mixers and rough
carpenters, and he said proudly,
thumping his fist against his barrel
chest and said we are men,
we don't cook.
I laughed and shook my head,
and said, i'm talking sandwiches here.
two pieces of bread with something
in the middle. they waved their hands
at me, dismissing me in their own language,
then went back to eating their stuffed
bags full of Kentucky fried chicken.

my personal florist

I get a call from my personal florist,
Evan.

He sounds in a panic, his voice high pitched
and trembling.

are you okay? he says. please tell me everything
is okay.
I've been so worried about you.

i'm good, I tell him. just fine.
what's up?

well, you haven't bought any flowers from us in
months. that's not like you. you've
been buying flowers from us for almost
thirty years now.
I thought the worst, God forbid.

nah, still living.

you haven't put any holiday orders in,
no anniversary, no birthdays, not even your
regular bouquet of apology flowers.

got divorced, I tell him.

oh my, he says and gasps, already.
you were sending her an apology bouquet
nearly every week
i'm surprised all those flowers didn't
work.
we do miss your business. i'm so so
glad that you're okay, but

i'd be remiss in not telling you that

we have a special this month on a bouquet
of make up flowers, daffodils, petunias,
daisies, paired with a nice
apology bouquet made of red roses with
baby's breath sprinkled in.
50 per cent off for our valued customers.

it comes in a nice crystal vase with a card
that says all the things you need to say
but haven't thought of. a little mushy,
but women like mushy, don't they?

i'll pass, I tell him, but keep my account
open, one never knows what's
up the road.

you betcha, he says. we miss you bud,
hope to hear from you soon.

nothing left to eat

don't drink milk.
or eat
meat, red meat.
that chicken has been shot
up with anti biotics.
stay away from sugar
or anything
in a box, or bag.
processed food.
salt, sweeteners equals death.
msg
on the salads, on the box
of rice.
nitrates.
read the label. it's a chemistry
exam.
forget about orange juice
in a bottle. coffee too.
those eggs are bad
for you.
that piece of fish,
you don't know where it's been
swimming. it's
full of mercury,
farm raised. no.
not good.
butter, oils, not good.
starches
and wheat,
throw them all away.
even the apple, be careful
it might be sprayed.
there's not much
left to eat anymore
if you read
the papers and watch oprah.
even the
tap water will kill you.
I remember when bacon
used to be at the top
of the food pyramid,
followed by milk and eggs
and a rib eyed steak.
those days are gone.

this is not so bad

they move him
from the I C U
to a room in a hospice
for full time care.

his head wrapped where they
cut into his skull
to stop the bleeding.

his teeth are back in,
he's smoking again.

more chemo to come.

they can't kill him, nor
can he kill
himself.

he's invincible. coated
with the hard
shell of youth, of bad parents,
bad luck
and bad decisions.

he stares out the window
at the woods
and remembers living
there,
down by the creek, by
a fire, wrapped in the only'
things he owned.

this here, he thinks,
is not so bad. the tubes
and wires an annoyance,
but what the hell. it's a
bed with clean sheets,
a room with a view.

what's for lunch, he asks
the pretty nurse
as she walks in smiling
with a tray of hot food.

music in the house

there' music in the house.

at last.

it's been awhile. I sit back
and listen.

going back to the old standards
of youth,
mid youth and middle age.

it's what I know, what vibrates
joy and love

inside my soul.

the new doesn't resonate as much.
it's half baked,
a copy,
a mimic.

I want the real stuff. I want
what I like.

which holds true for most
of life.

Thursday, November 7, 2019

it's hard to tell

the cat
stretches in the sunlight,

arching her back.

her day is long.
is she happy, it's hard to tell.

it's hard to tell with most of us.
we hide
our day so well.

ask and recieve

thoughts become
things.
every thought has a frequency,
a vibration
sent out into the world.
a magnetic signal.
send out joy
and joy returns, send out
hate
and resentment, get ready
it's coming back to you.
think
believe and receive.
if you focus on what you
don't want,
that's what you'll get
but if you think of what
you really
want it comes, in time,
relax, let it go, it
comes.
thoughts are energy, be
careful
with what you think,
the universe is listening.

getting the ring off

you can have your keys back,
she said, in tears,
throwing them
across the yard through the chain
link fence.
and here's your ring too.
but she couldn't get it off,
trying hard
to twist it. she even spit
on her finger to loosen
it up, but it didn't budge.
her finger had fattened up
somehow, maybe it was the weather,
or her drinking, or
high blood pressure.
I told her, let me give you
a hand with that.
so we went inside and ran
her hand under the cold water.
I rubbed some soap on the ring
and finally it came off.
her tears had dried, and she looked
at me differently in the yellow
of the kitchen.
her hair was everywhere, flying
about,
the door was still open,
the wind pushing in against us.
I should go she said, handing
me the ring. I told her to keep it,
and slid put it back on her finger,
then she kissed me,
gently at first, then harder,
and we made love on the table
after closing the door.
i never did get the ring back.

how things change

when we got serious,
when i'd go over to her house
on the weekends,
she'd stand in her kitchen,
lipstick on,
wearing something sexy,
an apron, at the stove,
she'd wink, and say
as i came in and sat down.

why aren't you kissing me?
and so i'd get up, put my arms
around her and we'd kiss
and kiss until the smoke
alarm went off. later that night
we'd fall asleep in each other's
arms after making passionate
love in her bed.

several months later
we got married.
but within a few weeks, she'd
say why are you touching me.
you've become so clingy.
i'm sleeping in the other
room tonight.
how things change.
how things change.

not knowing is a blessing

it's a selfish act.
I admit.

the pleasure is mostly all mine,
sitting here
at this keyboard.

some days I can't wait to get to it.
to see what arrives,
what dreams, what memories
what failures
get written about.

it's an island, an oasis.
a fortress of solitude.
no one can get it when I've shut that door
and begin.

I have no clue when I sit down
what might come out. it's a mystery.

it's better that way.

in fact life is better that way,
not knowing
is a blessing.

the guard dog

the old dog
barks and barks when you come in.
a stranger.
he can hardly see,
or walk,
but he's on the job.
sniffing at your shoes,
you outward hand,
keeping danger at bay
as best
he can
at this ripe old age.
he was good dog, still is
but
the tooth is long,
and not so
the day.

the corner store

we loved the corner store.

the apples
out in the sun in boxes.
red rows
and yellow, sweet, not long
off the tree.

the peaches.
the melons.
the flowers in water basins.
fresh
and crying out for hands
to be held.

the corner store. sodas
and candy.

ice cream rounded out in
with a metal scoop dug into
the bins.

I can see the deli in back.
the sausage hung,
the duck in the window.

and us with our pennies
slid across the counter,
eye high, to buy
what we could.

getting a handle on those love handles

I jump on the scale
and the scale breaks, good lord,
what the hell
happened.
then I look at the kitchen counter
there were
three rows of oreos
in that bag just yesterday,
no there's a half of one.
that pint of ben and jerry's
in the trash can,
that opened bag of waffle chips.
I've got to get a handle on
these love handles.
I laugh at that in a chubby
rubbery
bouncy sort of way.
I look at my three chins
in the mirror.
are my shoes tied, I don't
know, I can't see
my feet anymore.
my butt is in a different zip
code. the buttons on my
shirt are popping off.
I carve a new whole for my belt.
my dad jeans
are skin tight on me.
I've got pork rinds
for fingers
and a turkey the size
of a small dog
in the oven just for me.
okay.
here we go.
starting now.
water and more water.

no time

the world is
complex.
it's become harder than
Chinese algebra.
there's no relaxing.
no stopping.
no putting down the phone.
we are rats in a maze
that we created.
work is twenty four seven.
children and pets.
parents dying.
the house, the maid,
all the ex's in a row
knocking perpetually at
the door.
there are leaves to rake.
the weeds need pulling.
the phones never
stop ringing.
there's no time
for true love, for true
conversation,
no time to sit on the porch
and swing
as the sun sets,
as the breeze blows
softly against our skin.
hand in hand.
heart in heart. before
you know it, it's over
and you realize how much
of life you wasted.

fb wasteland

you dip back into facebook
out of pure
boredom, just to see if anything
has changed.
nope.
same old wasteland.
same old
stuff.
the big couch of slumber
with stuffing pouring out,
springs set loose.
cakes, and kids, dogs
and cats.
cars and boats,
affirmations, both good
and bad.
rants and raves.
do this, do that.
vote.
don't vote.
we need money for our cause.
we need hope.
we need affirmation
and affection.
like me like me like me.
a whirlwind of postings,
not a single
thing of value,
there is nothing there
to save.
the world keeps changing,
but face book
never does, I guess there's
some comfort in that.

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

zoo girl

I called her zoo girl.

she lived across the street from
the screaming monkeys
and the roaring lions.

right over the zoo bar that played
Dixieland music
on Friday nights.

when I met her she slept on a futon
in the back room.

and a had a television
that dated back to the late sixties,
rabbit ears and all.

it was an old building.
the halls and stairwells smelled
of cabbage
and chicken.

soups and stews boiling over.

her radiator would talk all night.
grunt and groan,
and whisper at times
in a gravelly sigh,
as if it was having nightmares
and working things
out
on its own.

there was a coffee shop down the street
on Connecticut
and a yogurt shop,
right next door
to a liquor store.

we'd take long walks up
the street to Cleveland park,
bundled in our coats and each other

in the winter wind.

the office stapler

I stare at the black stapler
on my desk.

it's the same one I stole from my office
when I worked
in IT
a thousand years ago.

if they were going to lay me of
than by god they
were going to pay dearly for it.

so I took a stapler
and a box of staples.

security walked me out the back entrance,
taking my chained badge
from around my neck.

I carried my box of papers,
pencils and erasers out with me,
the stapler carefully hidden
under a box of snicker bars and

all the great snacks that I kept
in a drawer at my desk.
I laughed knowing that the whole office
would be missing me,

seeing that I was the go to guy
for snacks.

jelly beans, crackers, chocolate bars,
gum, or beef jerky, I was the man.
fireballs and candy cigarettes, you
name, I had it.

I knew I was a bad worker,
always at the coffee pot or the phone,
so I deserved to be let go.
I hated the job. it was coal out
of a mountain. it didn't matter
that I was released from Maggie's farm.

I didn't miss the work, but I missed
my peeps.
my buds, my coffee mates,
my lunch gang, I missed
volley ball and happy hours.
the Christmas party.
the new receptionist that changed
from week to week.

they got rid of me, but I got a stapler
out of it. shiny and black
and a box of staples.

revenge is sweet.

negative results

the test results come back
electronically,

all negative.

it seems i'll live another day
or two.

years, perhaps. so i'm pleased
with that.

but the doc wants me to come in
for a visit,
a friendly
take your shirt,
your pants and shoes too,
a medical chat.

I put her off. I make up
one lame excuse after another.

it's separating sock night,
I tell her.
you have no idea how many pairs
of socks I have.

and I play bingo
on Tuesdays.
yes all day. Wednesday I
go to the movies,
and again, all day.

and Friday, well, it's fish day,
so I have a lot of scaling
and deboning to do.

she shakes her head in her
return email. my oh my she writes.
you're a grown man,
but in reality a true
scared e cat.

you need to come in and see me,
STAT.

okay, okay, I tell her.
i'll take care of it,
keep your stethoscope on,
don't lose
your hat.

thrown under the bus

good luck, she says in her note
and card,
take care of yourself,
bye bye, she says
and waves before pushing
me out the door.
I roll under the bus,
the wheels crushing
me flatter than a flap jack
at I hop
on a sunday morning.
see ya, don't want to be ya.
adios.
don't let the door hit you
on the way out. I brush my self
off as I get up.
rebutton my torn coat,
find a stick to brace
my broken leg, then
wipe the blood off my face.
oh well, I say, looking down
that long empty road,
here we go again, then put
my thumb out.

i'm walking on sunshine

sometimes a song will creep
into your head
and stick with you the whole
day long,
depending on the day, the mood,
what state of emotional
turmoil or not you are currently in.

yesterday I was singing
I ain't got nobody that I can depend on,
as i was hard at work.

and the day before that was
I can't get no satisfaction.
no need to extrapolate on that.

today I've been humming the beatle's
Yesterday
all day long, and tom wait's
inbetween love.

i'm hoping tomorrow
it's katrina and the wave
with
i'm walking on sunshine. I really
like that song.

out of context

I see my dentist
at the coffee shop.

she's had her hands
full of syringes,
drills
and water pics
putting them
inside my mouth for ten years.

but we don't recognize one another
right away. our meeting is out
of context.

she's not in her white coat,
but wearing a mink stole
and a leopard print pill box hat.
I see her getting out of a chauffeured
limo.

we make eye contact
and then it hits us both at the same
time that we know each other.

I open my mouth widely to give
her a look
at the thousands of dollars
of work she's done,
and she says,

oh, oh, yes. hey, how are you?

the fairy tale

in the fairy tale

the lovers after an emotional trial,
go back
to one another,

they kiss and make up.
they sit together
and talk things out.

they meet in the middle
and become lovers once again,
but better
people for the mistakes
and forgiveness
they've both learned from.

their bond is stronger than it
ever was.
they live happily ever after.
they grow old together
in the comfort of
each other's love
and affection.

in fairy tales,
this happens.

today we look into our phones
and move
on.

i can't eat this meat, it's stringy

it was years ago, but I remember it well.

we went to the West End dinner theater on Duke street,

to see the local theater group's production
of the west side story.

the jets versus the sharks.
who hasn't seen it, or doesn't know many
of the lines by heart.

Puerto Ricans versus the white bread
boys
and girls of the Bronx, or some other
borough of new York city.

leather jackets, stiletto knives,
chains and slicked back hair.
lots of gum chewing.

dinner was served by the performers
in between numbers.
there was a lot of swish going on.
the boys were, well, not quite as menacing
as one would think,
off key,
forgotten lines, impossible to duplicate
the music
and score of leonard Bernstein.

the audience was mostly senior citizens
bused in
from jersey or the eastern shore,
or local
old folk homes. they clapped mildly,
more worried about their
food and drinks.

I remember one man, who was somebody
once upon a time, short
and bald, with a raspy voice who jumped
up in the middle of Maria
and yelled out, I can't eat this meat,
I can't even chew it,
it's stringy, and it's cold too.

to which everyone clapped, but the song
went on. at the break someone brought
him a new plate of meat and mashed
potatoes. I think it was one of the Jets.

throwing the first stone

i feel bad about some things I've
done.

blowing up someone, ratting them out,
letting the world
know who they really are,
but then i think.

they deserve it.

then i think, well, who am i to
toss stones, I've been
equally bad,

no sin being greater than another.

then i look at all the bruises
and cuts,
the bandages around my
head and arms,
my busted heart and torn psyche,

and think, what the hell, why not.
it's your moral duty
to call them out.

it' a dilemma trying
to decide what to do.

sometimes you let them off the hook
while other times,

you know it doesn't matter
what you do,
they will be who they are until
the end of time.

your exposing them will just
be a minor bump
in the road

and off the go, doing what comes
naturally to them.

deceit, corruption, immorality
and lies.


The Secret

into the wee hours

I watch the movie the secret
about the law of attraction.

how we are all vibrating energy
attracting the things
we send out
through thoughts
in waves.

everything you want is there for the asking.
love, money, cars and boats.
houses.

just imagine them and soon
they appear.

I buy into it. I get it. I've
had experiences that
prove it works.

midway through I try to attract
a ham
sandwich.

I visualize it in my head.
I ask
I believe.

today that will come true.
I will go to the Italian store
and receive.

it works.

cats with nine lives

they survive.

no matter how they live their lives,
depending on the kindness
of others,

they have learned
how to land on their two feet.

human cats with nine lives.
full of stealth
and lies.

no matter what they do or say,
how immoral
or corrupt they are,

they find a way, a place
to live in comfort,

to have what they need to get by.

they survive.
somehow, they are forgiven
and allowed
to stay.

they have once more pulled
the wool
over everyone's
eyes.

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

art worth framing

I start with a blue sky.

taking the brush, dipping it into
the little tub
of blue.

I add some clouds, dabbing white.

then the ocean...some green, some more
blue.
I swish
in some waves.

drop in a gull or two with a fine
brush.

I throw in some rocks along the shore,
then a sailboat
with the sails full of wind.

I stand back and take a look. it's
a mess.
a primitive van gogh
at best.

a ten year old could do better,
but I think i'll have it framed

and hung with others, in the den.

it's in me

she tells me
she's not reading my poetry
anymore.
she's done with it.
this is supposed
to hurt my feelings
i guess.
get in line.
they all say that
at some point, but they
read on
regardless of how much
they despise me
for my lack of attention,
or love,
or regret.
it's all in there, but
i keep it buried. keep
these emotions
locked up.
I've spent it all, it seems.
the tear ducts are dry.
the heart
a soft beat of fatigue.
it's in me, and they know it,
but
like Bukowski's bluebird,
why change course now,
and have people think I've
gone soft.

everywhere is home

some days you can't get to where you're
going.
detours,
traffic, the lights are all red.
but it's okay.
you're in no rush.
you'll get there. there's no one
waiting at the end
of this road.
no one at the door or window.
there's no hot meal
on the table.
no lover waiting in my bed.
so why go fast, why be bothered
with this slow roll home.
this is home.
everywhere is home when you're
alone.

get back up again

after awhile
you stop looking. stop waiting,
stop
thinking too hard about
it all.
you move on.
there are books to read.
movies to watch.
poems to write.
you get your house in order.
your life.
you get tired
of being tired.
you don't even check your phone
anymore,
or your e mail.
and at night, you just lock
the door
and go up
the stairs. there is a whole
other world
out there. it reaches a
point of giving
up and finding someone who
really cares.
it's not how we fall, but how
we rise
and get back up again.

a midnight decision

when we were young
we'd pile into the car at a whim.

and down route 50 we'd go
to the eastern shore.

to ocean city.

we threw our money together for gas
for food.

sleeping bags in the trunk.
no girls.

just boys, still boys even at nineteen.
we had the doors
on the radio.

Dylan.
Hendrix.

we waved and yelled at the girls
in cars going in the same direction as
we were.

we had nothing but hope. nothing but
fun and joy in our hearts.

no jobs, school an afterthought,
but we had each other.

we had the beach, the ocean once
we got there.

and that somehow was more than enough.

it's 2 a.m.

the waitress,
mid life in pink. her hair
up
in a yellow ribbon.
her hips
thick,
her legs once could stop
a clock,
coming or going.
too much lipstick, to much
sauce.
what brings her here
at two a m.
carrying plates of ham and eggs,
scrapple,
and coffee
to the night crowd,
half lit from beer, from wine,
from gin.
the truckers, the cabbies.
she's seen it all.
done it all.
the kids are grown, the husband
run off
with a best friend.
she's working.
she's alive under this silver
moon.
her feet hurt.
her pockets full of change,
and closing time is never
quite around
the bend.

no closed doors

there are no closed doors.

no locks. no bolts. no screws
to keep them shut.

they all swing freely
allowing you to pass
in any direction you want
to go.

the right one is in front of
you,
if you ask
an answer will arrive,

which one to choose, will
then be known.

the smile is gone

when the deal goes down,
things change.
the world is no longer what it once
was.
you see it in the eyes of
others.
they know just enough
to alter the course
of life.
what's hidden is out there
for all the world to see.
the light is on.
the curtain pulled back.
now what, she says. now what.
the deal is down,
there's no longer any
need for all of my masks,
the fake smile is gone.

another tail

like a dog
sometimes you chase your own
tail
around and around
in a circle you go.
it's fun for a while,
but then you get bored
and need someone else
to chase.
another tail.
sorry.

the days are nights

some have no funny bone.

laughter is hard. there is no
joy,
no sense
of humor.

they live in the dark,
weighed down

by chores, by responsibility.
by seriousness
all the time.

the world is hard.
they see no light at the end
of any
tunnel.

it's a cave without joy.
even the days
are nights.

they all can't be winners

I read a line
in brennan's book ruthless trust,

that everyday is not a ten.

and agree wholeheartedly.

such expectations we have,
making each day
a gem,
a polished stone of accomplishments
and growth.

sometimes it's less.
a five,
or even a two at times,

an on occasion a zero, barely
able to catch your breath
and get out of bed.

we want so much out of life.
love and money.
affection.

and the world lets us down
time and time again.

there are no tens, not in days
or people.

take what you get, and surrender
to it.

they all can't be winners.

Monday, November 4, 2019

just wait, you'll see

if you had to explain
to a child
what love is, where would you begin.

what words
could you explain in simple
terms
such a complex
thing.

a feeling, the butterflies,
the joy,
the anticipation,

is it the absence of someone,
or the presence.

is it longing or clinging,
or is it letting
go when
one is no longer
wanting to go on.

is that true love, giving
them a way out.

it's an impossible task
to tell
a child what love is,

so you just say wait,
you'll see.

you ease into it

you ease into it.

this age thing. the minor aches
and pains,

the grabbing of rails
to get up a flight of stairs.

being called sir
and having doors opened for
you.

slowly you rise in the morning,
or from the car
after a long drive.

stretching out those legs,
those tight
once reliable knees.

you laugh at it though.
you remember bounding nearly everywhere,
a step ahead,

impatient to get from
here to there,
brushing by the slower crowd,

and now you let others pass,
you slow
and stop to breathe,

to take in the moment,
realizing how quickly youth
has passed.

blue is a nice color

the boy at the window,
and I say boy,
only because he is so much younger
than I am,
although he may be twenty,
or even older,
but the boy,
making me coffee and taking
the change from my
hand says,
are you painting today?

I nod, yes. I am.
I can see it on your hands,
he says.
on your face.
your hat. you shirt.
I look down and smile.
he tells me that he'll be
painting his room
tomorrow on his day off.

he's getting married, he tells
me in the few minutes
that we have.
she picked out a blue, he
says, and she wants to make
clouds out of white,
like the sky.

blue is a nice color, I tell him.
i'm happy for you.

and I truly am, as I see
the joy and hope in his eyes,
so young, so new to this world
and what it will bring.

I take my coffee from his hand
and drive off.
there is more work to do.

the baker

the man spends his night
at the wide wooden table
making bread.

folding over the dough
into flour.

the sugars go in, butter,
salt, whatever it takes
for things to rise,

he bends to the power
of his hands,
against the white board.

the dust of baking is in his
eyebrows, his nose,
it clouds his hair.

his mind though is elsewhere
as he thinks
about love,
about his children, what
tomorrow might bring,

he wonders about his
life, should there be more
than this.

he slips
into the ovens what he has
molded . onto the hot shelves
where each loaf
hardens and softens
at the same time.

at the end of the night,
he sits.
he stares at the bread ready
for the morning,

when the bell rings
and the patrons come to stare
at glass cases,
at his work, pointing,

but he'll gone by then,
home,
dreaming of how he did
not one thing, but many,
many good things.

feeling at times that
life is more
than fair.

the critic

how generous she was
with her critique, soft on my
unbearable poetry.
the runaway train that it is.

but she said nice things.
encouraging things,
though much it was never her
cup of tea.

she preferred sonnets.
love poems, true love poems.

Emily Dickinson. or even frost
when he wasn't
dark and morbid.
Rilke and Rumi.

which is fine.
but she'd read them line
by line.

my raw boned stuff and smile.
saying cut here,
add this.

but she knew, she knew
deep inside
that i'd never change a bit.


an irish embrace

she was small but fierce,
as the Shakespearean quote
goes.

those crystal green blue
eyes.
the black hair.

the irish freckles splattered
about her pale
face.

that prominent nose.

an odd girl, strange in a delightful
sort of way.

an English teacher
in calvert county.

it wasn't love, it wasn't meant
to be,

but it was fun, interesting
for the length of
its brief

embrace.

good news

you get good news
in the mail.

a kind letter.

hand written, which is the best
of all.

the smudge of ink,
the misspellings,

the punctuation all wrong.

it's wonderful.
it's gold.

you'll fold it neatly back
into the envelope,

you'll keep all life long.

get off the wheel

what you want is on it's way.
ask

believe
receive.

it's that simple.

life is not to endured,
or survived,

but enjoyed and lived
to its fullest.

get out,
get off the wheel
of negativity,
that downward slide,

get off the ride.

it's time to open
your heart,

your eyes.
ask, believe, receive.

there's still time.

the ice scraper

I hear the scrapping
on the windows of cars, and look
out,
the dreaded coat of white
ice
is upon us.
I see people bent
over the hoods of their
running cars,
crunching a plastic
spoon against
the windshield.
good lord, it was eighty last
week
and now this.
I need a new wardrobe
to handle
this sudden weather change.
I have no idea
where my hat is,
my gloves,
my big boots and shovel.
what happened to global
warming?
only six more months til
spring.

ghosting

ghosting is the new way

of breaking up.

just disappear. no word. no mail,
no nothing.

into the wind we all go without
a sound.

it's easier that way.
the coward's way out.

what you thought was real,
is not.

you can put your hand through it.
the apparition
of love
and affection.

nothing drags on. it's the guillotine
the quick hanging.

the chair.

and off you go, another ghost
without a place
or soul
to haunt.

a blue light and knock

it's a dark
bar, a strange unlit place

on king street.

you have to knock to get in.
the blue light
outside the door.

the bartender is more of a scientist.
mixing
his drinks.

with his apron on.
his suspenders.

his well groomed beard
and slicked hair.

it feels like 1899 in there.

there are tubes and flasks,
the ceiling is tin.

the bar a hard carved
slice
of mahogany.

you can hardly see your hand
in front of you
as you sip

your strange drink.
it may be gin. it may be
something else.

but down it goes.
then aspirin.

Sunday, November 3, 2019

another gift

it's Christmas
everyday with amazon delivery.

the big white truck
stuffed to the brim
with gifts.

another book, another shirt,
another pair
of shoes,
another something I don't
really need.

from me to me.

thank you. thank you.

two bags left

i have two bags of candy left.

it was a small
bunch of goblins and witches
this year.

i know that if i open them
i'll eat
every last bite sized bar
of chocolate.

and then feel guilty about it,
pinching my
waist to check the damage
done.

so i put them in the freezer
where everything

goes forever, never to be
seen or touched again.

my personal Siberia for leftovers.

the chewing gum solution

I think every kid in school
should chew gum.

it relaxes you.
takes the edge off.

have a can at the front of the room
for disposal
once the flavor falls flat,

or the gum gets too hard
to chew, and the risk
of swallowing it
becomes clear.

spearmint, double bubble,
whatever.

even the teacher should chew
gum.

and then time out could be called
from
all the learning
to blow bubbles.
snapping and popping them
loudly.

it's too stressful all
this teaching and studying.
tests and quizzes,

class after class,
give them gum, I say.
give them gum.

it'll help everyone relax.

revisionist history

after the dust settles,
the chaos
subsides, the wind dies down
and we
finally sit back
and relax, we think about
what happened.

we begin to review
and examine what was said
and done.
we reroll the tape, looking
for clues as to what
went wrong, or right.
what could have been said
differently.
what other roads could have
been taken.

with a fine tooth comb
we sift through
the debris of our life.
the raw reels of it all
are sprawled upon
the floor.

editing and revision will
follow shortly.
it'll still be our story,
but we'll take great pains
in crossing the t's
and dotting the i's.
deleting, and rearranging,
until we get it
right, with everything,
at last, leaning towards
our side.

turning over a new leaf

I look the window
at the maple tree, in glorious
disarray
of colors
and falling leaves

and I think I can do that.

I can turn over a new leaf.
(again)

so I write down all of my
errant ways.
my destructive
patterns of thought
and behavior and truly
decide to change.

to be a better person.

this takes awhile
and a lot of paper
and ink,

but I get it done.

I date it, sign it
and tape it to the wall.

i'm way overdue for
some positive changes,
to take my life in a new
direction,
for these dead leaves
to fall.

the caretaker

the caretaker
of the land, the two houses
where we
lived,
trimmed the hedges,
swept
the pathways,
raked and repaired
the wood,
kept the fences up.
the pool clean.
he was kind and quiet,
efficient
at his job. rarely saying
a word,
just a tip of his beret.
a satchel of wine
around his
neck.
it was in Barcelona
and we were children.
and how surprised we were
when the man
took a burlap bag
full of kittens,
just born, down to the
sea to
drown them.

our addictions

we all have our addictions.

our sugar.
our cake,

our desires that run amuck at time.
whether
food or drink,
affection.

we all need comfort from some source.
through
exercise,
or art, or serial love.
even work or

movies, books, television.
a drug,
or drink.

we need
some sort of escape

to keep us sane, to give
our minds
our hearts a break

from what bothers us,
most
of which started from day
one

in the embrace, or lack
of embrace from
who made us.

turning back the time

how nice to push the clock
back
an hour, to get that
extra
sweet time
for rest, or sleep,
or making love.
but how better life would be
to push
back a year,
or two.
and start fresh with a new
calendar,
a new
day, knowing what
you know now.

Saturday, November 2, 2019

black birds on the wire

how simple
their lives are, these black birds.

wings glossed black,
the pointed beaks,
those
perfectly
round eyes, unblinking
at the future,

at the past.
how easy it is for them to
move on.

from tree to limb, from
wire to wire.

no care, no regrets, no
sorrow.

unlike us, they have wings,
carefree
as they glide
away,

no worry as to what's next.

at the end, saying yes

you visit the old folks home.

they are lined in a semi circle
in wheels chairs

and overstuffed couches. you wonder
how they
can up, having sunk in so deep
and for
so many hours in front of
the tv.

one sings.
one cries, one reads.
several have fallen asleep.

you ask each one if they have
any regrets,
what they would have done differently
if they had
another life to live,

they all say yes, then look off
into some distance
you'd rather not know about.

you don't want to be one of them,
at the end,
saying
yes.

all in it together

three brother
and three sisters, most
of them
in the wind, doing their thing.

hardly a word comes back
or goes out to any of them.

I remember how we lived
as children,
stuffed into a small duplex
house

off the beaten track.

one bathroom. the absent father,
the panicked mother.

we didn't think much of it.
the poverty,
the lack of space
or privacy.

we were all in it together,
surviving on the good
will of the church
and neighbors,

at peace
for the most part,

strange how good things
come to an end.

thank you thomas edison

I want to thank you
Thomas Edison
and other inventors
for providing us with light,
for telephones, for running water,
for toilets
that flush,
for buildings
with elevators, and blankets
that keep us warm
at night.
thank you world for
milk in a carton,
meat
and eggs
ready to go.
for figuring out how to squeeze
a grape
and make wine.
for fountain pens.
thanks to all those before
us with
their crafty ideas
on how to
build, how to make this
a livable world. how they must have
been up all night
figuring these things out.
tossing and turning.
thank you for glass,
for steel, for
the printing press,
another great idea, and
polyester, vinyl,
plastic. cotton sheets,
never iron shirts.
the medicine
that keeps us alive,
keeps us sane, keeps
up on our own two feet.
the cars, the boats, the trains,
everything that
rolls.
the wheel. thank you so
much for the wheel.
and let's not forget fire.
good lord. fire.
i'm not sure what I would
have done
in a world without fire.