Saturday, July 11, 2020

those rare souls

there are certain
writers,
poets and what nots
that inspire you.

you can barely get through
a page,
or hear a song
they've sung
when you have
to run to the keyboard
and get it down
in ink,
before the thought fades.

there are some people
like
that in your life too.
rare intuitive souls
who know
what's what.

you listen to them speak,
to them ramble on
with their vision
of life and death,
and you
can't get enough.

and in the end

some people will always be poor.
no matter how much
money they make
or have
it will leave them in the blink
of an eye
and they'll have to start all over
again,
from scratch, from zero.
a dollar burns a hole right
through their pockets.

and the same goes for love,
no matter how many women
or men they sleep with, in
the morning they're all gone.
the lovers add up over the years,
but at some point
they're alone, looking at
themselves in the mirror wondering
who's next. will there even
be a next.
will there be more?

fainting

in the tightly knit
rooms
stuffed with items marked
on sale,
last chance
the ac is broken.
i see a sign on the wall
that reads,
smile.
you have one life to
live.
live it as a blonde.
my eyes are wet
with salt.
my mouth is dry.
i step gently upon
the ladder
to reach the ceiling.
the fuzziness of fainting
arrives
as i tumble to the floor.
it's a sweet
passing out.
with dreams, with nothing
left to worry
about.

living on the edge

it's eerie.
strange and bizarre
to be in a room with someone
who wants
to end it all.
curled in
a wet ball.
rocking back and forth
in the dark room.
muttering their dire
needs.
they are unreachable.
there is nothing you can
do.
but call who needs to
be called.
let the doctors know.
the priest.
the family.
you are not equipped to handle
this kind of crazy.
this kind of
lost. you have been
on the edge yourself,
but never
never quite this far.
you say nothing as she
teeters,
not a single word,
even a whisper might
make her fall.

letting the mob go by

i stand aside
and let the sheep pass.

they are armed with disinformation.
armed
with
naivete and inept
education.

without morals,
without a code.
without faith

they strike and burn, tear
down
what disagrees

with their hurt.
i step gently into that
good

night.
lock the door and find a
good book
to read.

they have lost their
love
of life.

lying in the ashes

with nowhere
to be she travels far
inside
her mind.

she goes where she's been
with others.

this
will
be her life.

all the cards have been
played.
there is only shame

and the ashes
of sin.

Friday, July 10, 2020

the good sleep

when
entering bed, alone.
the cool sheets, the windows
open
to a breeze
to a moon full of wonder,
i laugh
to myself.
true love
is this.
quiet with arms
draped lightly
around
me.
my arms.
there is no absence
of anyone, just the fullness
and joy
of being whole,
being one.
being free.

the sketch

i remember staring
at her elbow,

her arm.
where it led.

and beyond. i was taking
stock of
her

for memory.
a sketch, a photograph,
an image

impressed upon my mind.
i knew
it wouldn't be
long
in coming,

the necessary end that i
welcomed
and prayed for,
but

i wanted to remember this
arm
this elbow
and the places it led

for reasons
unknown.

she wore a red dress

for her sister's wedding
she wore a bright red
dress.

she did not go unnoticed.
she bloomed

while the sister withered
and
aged, gone
brown

in her white lace.

she wore red and made a speech.
a long
sonnet
from shakespeare.

memorized
and acted out for the attentive
crowd.

she won.
she wore a red dress.

no ring, no beau.
but victorious.

the queen at last despite
no crown.

apathy

apathy is home now.

the broad cool
room of uncaring.

the past
no longer mine to be concerned
about.

i smell
the perfume of new love.
the innocence

of fresh starts.
i taste the peaches of lips.

my chin drips with desire.

apathy
wins the day.

no attachments. no suffering.
join me,

or don't
i'm fine either way.

agree to be agreeable

religion
politics

let's throw in love
too

as subjects to be avoided
amongst friends

with drinks
poured
and the long hours of
night
ahead of us.

let's leave as we arrived.
friends
who talk of nothing

of consequence.
it's better that way.

we preserve the past,
protect
the future, and make it

easier to live in this day.

the spare key

there was a spare
key
on a nail
in the lightless
damp
of the shed.
but how were they to know
that?
how could
they possibly know
anything
other than
the doors were locked.
she didn't
show up at work
and no one would
the answer the phones.

was it a surprise
after entering through
the broken
glass
to find her in her bed,
reaching sky
ward
in death to some unseen
figure.
an angel
perhaps, or someone who
arrived
before her. hands stretched
out in
agreement
that this life was over.

there was a spare key
in the shed.
i told them that, afterwards
when
the body left under
a  white sheet
in the throes of winter,
the tree adorned in the corner,
christmas to come
in barely a week.

from what i've been told

yesterday.
she was not grey.

she was not asleep in the chair
facing
the window.

a book in her lap.
the tea beside her cold.

she was not
old.
we were in love.

yesterday
seems so far away.

she was not grey
and neither,

was i from what i've
been
told.

the memes

i'm

memed out.

is that even a word?
how do you pronounce meme?

shouldn't there be an accent
grave, or aigu
somewhere over
a letter?

does anyone actually say something
clever

or unique, or original
that hasn't been

posted on the internet.
are we
sheep

or what?
incapable anymore of reading
books,

writing books.
thinking and creating
from our own

souls.
we need for others to tell
us what
our morals

should be. how we should think,
what
we should believe.

i'm all
memed out. yo.

the unfixable

you think of people
at times

as fixable.
turn a screw here,
tighten

up a bolt, a belt.
put a new plug in.

change the oil,
wash
and polish.

we think we can put
a new
shine

on them.
pull out the manual
and figure them out.

put air in their tires.
wipe
them down.

fill them up with gas.
but it doesn't

work that way,
you can't fix the unfixable.

be thankful that
they're gone,  gone
at last.

at the end of the day

life is busy

until it's not.
and at the end of the day,

the end
of living

you lie there and wonder
what was

that all about.

when you know it will never work

i came home from work
early
one afternoon and saw a dozen
boxes

all taped and closed. ready
to be carried out
to a truck in front of the house.

i asked my wife, what's up.
what's going on,
what are in these boxes.

she stood there, hands on her
hips and said. i packed up
all your books.

i need the shelf room for nick
knacks
and things.
i have no where to put my
porcelain pig
collection.
your books are taking up
too much space.

and besides you've read
them all.
we should give them away so
that poor people can
have the chance to read
them too.

i told her about this place
called the library and she
she said. yes, but it's not
the same.

slowly, i unpacked the boxes
and put my books,
my life long friends back
onto the shelves.

waiting to read once more.

Thursday, July 9, 2020

each drop a work of art

the uncertainty
of life is with you when

you open
your eyes in the early morning.

the sun, a yellow melt
slipping
geometrically through the blinds.

the warmth of july
has her arms around the house.

the tomorrows arrive too quickly.
the yesterdays
fade

with nothing to write about.
the dull razor

is the only thing that brings
excitement.

the trickle of blood like a wet
firework
against the porcelain
sink.

each drop
a work of art.


the deep clean

i had the priest
come over

and swing his metal box of incense
all

over the house.
he rang some bells

and said things in latin.
he went room

to room
exorcising the demon that was once
here.

i followed him
around in his white robe
and tall

hat.
he seemed to really know
what he was doing.

i'd suggest you
open the windows, he said
when finished,

and have your maid
scrub
deeper,

using bleach or something
like that.  a pine cone smell

might be nice.

the big family

the big family myth
is that you

all love each other and can't wait
to be gathered
together

in a small room
to celebrate some holiday
or event.

not true.
i've stared holes into the clock
waiting

for such ordeals to end.
in laws,
out laws

siblings, crazy friends.
with a plate

on my lap,
dogs running wild.
the blare

of the tv
the voices talking loud.

grudges and misunderstandings
have a shelf life

of a thousand years.
is there a window

i can jump out of?
is there a back door i can
quietly slip away through?

only 364 days
until next christmas.

breaking news

news

is fear. wait for it.
we'll tell

you after the commercial
break

how the world will end.
how your

life will come to a close
you won't

believe what we've been
told.
breaking news.

stay tuned.
you'll want to hear this.
don't touch

that dial.
call your friends and family
gather around

the glow and sound
of our fury.

we have more fear per hour,
more than

any other station,
any other show.

we're breaking news,
all

day, all night. wait for it
and then
you'll know.

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

i am the fitted sheet

i stare at the fitted sheet
balled
and bundled
upon itself, warm from the dryer.
there is no way
to properly fold it.
no way to make it fit
upon the shelf and lie
there, to behave like the others.
the towels,
the washcloths,
the flat sheets, all neat
and organized
in colored stacks.
the fitted sheet is a rebel.
it refuses to join in.
to conform.
i am
the fitted sheet.

let's not talk anymore

it's no longer a discussion.

it becomes an argument.
swords are out.

verbal sparring ensues. we have
different opinions
on everything.

varied views.

there is no middle ground.
where once
we talked about sports

or women, or jobs, or books
and movies,
we've suddenly

become political hacks
debating
a world no longer round,
we can't escape

the news.

the highschool queen

he tells me too often
about his
wife.

how beautiful she was in high
school.

how gorgeous. how lean,
how
desired she was.

he takes out a folded picture
of her
in his wallet

and sets it on the table.
black and white,

the corners crimped.
look at her, he says, looking

into my eyes for approval.
was she something else,
or what?

she's wearing a cheerleader
outfit, her leg kicked
high in the air
in the stadium lights.

and then she returns with a drink
in hand

she smiles. a tooth is missing.
one black.

she's limping. her blouse is out.
a tent
about her.

her hair is a reddish silver,
thinned. her arms
are fish

that wobble as she pulls out
a chair.
like her legs, they swim.

there's a small blue smudge
of a crab
on her hand.

he takes away the picture before
she sees it.

and we go on with our laughs,
we pretend.

the false self

for some
it's the mirror. the image of
the body.

the face.
the hair. it's the false self.
the polish

of the external that keeps
them well.
keeps them safe

from truth.

while others it's money.
it's a green
bouquet

in their wallet.
with money, what can go wrong.
who can
say

less about them.
they have what others don't
and that makes

all the difference.

trying to fly in

boredom
sets in. the sky is a line
of dirty

laundry hanging still
in the pre rain.

the world is cold
despite the ninety degrees
on the red

blood
of the outdoors
thermometer.

i see a dead bird
below the window.

killed by his own reflection.
can we too

die by pondering ourselves
too much?

trying to hard to fly in?

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

women like that

there was a girl

in the ninth grade whose name
was penny.
she sat in front of me
in biology.

blonde pigtails.
light blue
framed glasses. soft smattering
of light freckles.

i had never seen skin so pale.
she was almost

translucent.
she had a soft voice,
a gentle whisper that made
you lean

in close to her, so close
that you could smell the lavender

soap you imagined she used
that morning.

she was bird like, all feathers
and bones. delicate in nature.

but when it came
to dissecting a frog, pinning
it's

stretched out limbs to the board,
she never flinched or

blinked when taking the scalpel
to cut
and remove

it's heart. i have known and fell
in love
with women

like that. and they too have
removed my
heart without a sound.

going to hell

she told me once
that it was a husband's job

to get his wife to heaven.

i scratched my head and said what?

i have no idea where she got
this crazy idea.

the radio, a book, her ex or someone
she met
on the street. joel osteen, perhaps?

i flipped aimlessly through the Bible
searching
for this idea.

nothing.

it was an impossible task,
to die
not only for my sins,

but hers too. if i'm not mistaken
i think someone
already did this.

i imagined the nails going
through

my wrists, the crown of thorns,
the lashings.

i was not qualified nor did i want
this job.

so hell it is for her, i guess.

the marriage

he cleans

she cooks.
he takes care of the yard.

she dusts
the shelves, hangs paper
on
the wall.

together they make it work.
him

outside,
her in.

they wave from the window.
their

secret lives are hidden
behind

soft grins.

the aging spider

the spider

is hungry. the web though full
catches

more and more.
it's a beautiful thing

wet in the sunlight
tight

and woven
all night. a tapestry.

she's hungry
but the hard work is done.

her beauty
will
bring her more,

but one day, she will age
and there

will be none.

Monday, July 6, 2020

The Chat with Father Smith

I stop by the old church, 
St. Bernadette's,
a stones throw away
from my front door.

I see father smith out on the front
steps
smoking a cigarette.
there's a brown paper bag
with a bottle in it

tucked in his lap.
he's wearing black. a long
heavy
robe,
he's got the white collar going
on and
boots that remind

me of a pair of Cuban boots
I had back in
the 70's made of Spanish leather.

we actually called them Beatle boots.

hey. I say.
walking up. what's up? hot as hell
out today,  isn't it.

how would you know about the temperature
in hell, he says in a snarky non priest
like way.

just a manner of speech I tell him.
sorry.

it's okay, he says. i'm a little
grumpy. he rubs his unshaven
face.

i just went through some
tough confessions.
excuse my French but there are some really
fucked up
people in this congregation.

true, I tell him, but you've got one less
since my ex departed
to another parish.

yeah. he says,
can't say I miss her.

she was killing me with her confessions.
an hour long and the same thing
week after week. not to mention her
perfume.

her and the married boyfriend, 
the water skiing santa, 
what the hell was that
all about?

I think half my robes smell of her perfume.
we had to exhume the entire booth
after she left.

yup. I tell him. oh well. what are you gonna do?

hey, what's up with the black robe,
very nice and stylish, but
don't you guys have summer outfits.
something white, or light blue or green.

maybe with vents in the sides for
air flow or mesh.

oh, this old thing, nah. budget has been
tight with the virus and all.
we're low on wine, on wafers,
and on incense. we're waiting on a shipment
from the Vatican.

I tried to get some on amazon, but no luck.
that Bezo's is the devil, I tell ya.

I take a can of pinto beans out of my
pocket. do you mind dropping this off
in the donation box when you go back in?

the can is dented but I think the contents
are okay. oh and these salmon packs too.
they've been in my cupboard for over a year
now. I can't eat that crap.

former tenant left them behind when i
booted her.

sure he says. sure. thanks. maybe i'll have
them for lunch if that's okay.

hey, it is Friday, right? I assume you're still
doing that fish only thing, aren't you?
help yourself.

the human embryo

there are more laws
in saving
frogs and whales,

eagles,
the eggs of a snake.

the snapping turtle
crawling
in a swamp.

state laws
federal laws
local laws

protecting wildlife,
born

or yet to be born, whereas
the human

embryo is out of luck.

the study of an arm

I studied her elbow

how it
angled into an arm.

the bone
of her.

olive toned and lean, no muscle
no fat

just the flimsy coat
of skin.

a strange unwelcomed
flap.

sticks, perhaps.

this is not an arm, I thought
that i

want around me
anymore.

I can do better than that.

what i like in my man

she said

what I like in my significant
other

is two things.

and I said, a job, money,
status,

power. physique and charm?

no, no, she said, all of that
is fine,

but I like my man to have nice
eyebrows.

what?

that's your specifications
of your new love
interest?

yes. oh, and big man hands too.
calloused, rough and raw.

bitten nails turn me on too.

so, that's your list.
hands and eyebrows.

you don't care if he's a little
person
or a giant,

heavy or thin, or if he's
collecting change at a toll booth
or an astronaut?

nope. don't care.
eyebrows and hands is my kind of
guy.

save the trees

I call the hallmark
card

factory and talk to the man
in charge.

yes. he says. can I help you.
I tell him.

you're killing me.
these cards cost ten dollars now.

I don't want to keep
sending ten dollar cards to everyone.

there are some people that are
only worth a five dollar
card,

or two dollars at the most.

the bells and whistles
are all a waste of time.

how about we have one card
for all the holidays.

and you check off the appropriate
boxes

for the whole year.
people can keep it on the mantle,
pin it to the fridge or

use it as door stop.
but enough with the cards
and these faux

holidays.

good news and bad news

when the phone
rings,

when it dings,
when

it vibrates, I ignore it.
I grey

rock it and don't give
it the time

of day.
things can wait.

no news is good news.
bad

news will keep
all night,

all day.

let the light in

block
block

delete.

slash, burn, discard.
take

out the trash.

my thumb is calloused
from

weeding out
the dark

that clutter the soul.
time to pull

back the curtain
and let the light in.

Sunday, July 5, 2020

a thousand miles from shore

it's easier to talk about love
from a distance.

easier
to remember it in more glowing
terms.

those rose colored glasses
still on.

the amnesia of pain settled in.
it's easier to discuss

beauty, and kisses.
of bodies

entwined. lovers
skin to skin.

distance puts a shine on
what it was,

what it wasn't.
in time it looks like a far away
ship

plowing through a blue
ocean

a thousand miles from shore.

between the green

there has to a heaven
you convince yourself over tea

as you sit
outside
amongst the birds

afloat on a summer breeze.
how sweet
and yellow the sun is,

half risen and sparkling
between the green.

there has to be a heaven.

i do concede.



she will remain

we gather at the grave
to see

a friend off.
but to where is she going.

strange
not to wave and say goodbye
and have her

turn with her smile
so bright,
so wide.

it will be odd to not hear
her voice,
the sound of her laugh

across
the line.
but there will be no sadness
in her absence,
instead she will

remain.
perhaps she's only late,
she broke a nail
or heel

as she often does.
maybe she misplaced
her umbrella and ran

back to her flat
in the pouring rain.

while rome burns

i watch

the hot dog eating contest
on tv.

july 4th.

the contestants
are introduced before jamming

Nathan's hot
dogs down their throats

with wet buns dipped
in buckets
of water.

it's sickening.
one man eats 75.
his eyes bulging, his face red.
his stomach
swollen

with the meat and bread.

it's America.

the crowd roars with
gladiator pleasure.

it feels like the end of a good run.

Nero  fiddling
while Rome burns.

coffee in venice

i asked

the Italian store keep for
a cup
of coffee to go.

he stared at me as if i killed
one
of his children.

you want to leave
and drink

my coffee he said, shaming
me in
front of the crowd.

yes i told him.
please, a cup to go.
i want to walk around your grande
city

and drink your wonderful
brew
while doing so.

more laughter ensued.
reluctantly he poured a little
coffee
into

a paper cup, then said, go.

second hand clothes

second hand

clothes.
hand me downs.

borrowed
shoes.

a runny nose.
not all

childhoods are the same.
some

are best
forgotten.

some memories
you

have to let go.

Saturday, July 4, 2020

the new business venture

a lady in the supermarket
yells

at me, because I put a hole in my
baby blue
mask

in order to slide
a straw into mouth and sip

on my r.c. cola.

you're going to kill us all she
screamed

running down
the aisle, the wrong way, I
might add,

with her nineteen cans of cat
food.

the manager comes over and i
show him how i
have a small flap that seals

up the hole once my straw is
removed.

he nods, his finger to his chin
and says,

you know what. you've got something
there.
I think we can sell these
things.

can you make me a few a dozen
and i'll split the profit with you.

sure I tell him. no problem. we'll put
them at the front of the aisle

near the hand sanitizers
and the entemman donuts.

changing names

for some strange reason
my mother

gave me the middle name
Lee.

whether she had a crush on the confederate
general,
I don't know.

but I suspect she liked
sarah lee's baked

goods, and when pregnant was
eating
a doughy sweet concoction

of factory processed cheesecake
and named
me Lee

after staring at the box,
while tilted towards
her mouth for the last savory
crumb.

but now I guess I have to change it.
because

of all the political correctness
going around.

I have a short list at the moment.
jimmy, I've always liked
the name
jimmy, or Gordon, after the
tv chef, but

LeBron or maybe Jordan
would be nice too,

because I love basketball so much.
or maybe

Lincoln, that way I can keep the L
as my middle
initial.

someone with girl parts

smart is good.

funny is even better. one usually
comes with

the other.

if they don't get sarcasm
or dark

humor, then they don't have a clue.
run.

kissing skills.
baking skills are on the list.

good manners.

self less, not selfish.
minimal amount of baggage.

carryon. not a trunk with locks.

appearance is nice, but over time
it's
what's inside

that counts the most.
honesty. integrity.

a good heart.
a good soul.

someone willing to give love
as much

as be loved.  someone perfectly
imperfect,

of which I am in spades.
someone like me,

but with girl parts, don't make
me draw a picture.

Friday, July 3, 2020

The Pool Is Open


the pool is open.

I get my three pages of rules and regulations
in the mail slot.

a yellow pass is stapled
to the instructions.

no diving.
no running.
no hanging onto the ropes.

no smoking,
no drinking or eating,
or chewing gum.
no carousing or
talking

loudly about anything,
especially politics,
no gambling.
no splashing,

or swimming with unusual strokes.
no pointing at people
and laughing.

no music.
no peeing in the pool,
that goes for you too grandpa.

anyone wearing a diaper or
depends
will not be allowed in the water

until the last fifteen minutes
before closing.

that includes those with open wounds
or runny noses.

no spitting. respect your 15 year
old just
certified life guard.

obey the whistle, his three hours
of training
could save your life.

if you don't know how to swim,
don't get in the water.
you can dangle your feet in the shallow
end,
but that's it.

you must wear a bathing suit.
a mask
and have a clean bill of health

authorized by your doctor,
or web md. .

everyone must take a three minute
hot shower
using soap before entering

the radiation chamber.

you must remain there until the red
light turns green

then proceed to an assigned
spot on the pavement
six feet apart from the next nearest
towel.

temporary vision loss and vomiting
may occur.

have fun and enjoy what's left of
your summer.


the inflatable castle

it's lord of the flies
out in the parking lot.

kids are running wild
with

water guns. their faces painted.

yelling and whooping.
the parents are in the shade

drinking beer
while the kids pummel each
other

and curse.
making vows of mayhem
at one another.

one of the parents has blown
up a giant

inflatable castle.
orange and red, yellow.

a giant balloon they can run
into
and out the other side.

I want to join in, but I feel
awkward,

like maybe i'm too old to have
any fun.

I look at my watch.
where's betty?

the middleburg fox hunt

she says
let's go on a fox hunt.

she's wearing her riding boots
and sharp

black jacket
with a matching hat.

quite snazzy.
there's a riding crop in her hand

and a bugle in the other.

come on, it will be fun.
the dogs will chase them out of the brush

and then we'll shoot
them.

I don't know I tell her. I don't really
want to eat
any little foxes.

oh no, she says, we aren't going to eat
them.

just kill them and maybe make
a little coat out of them.

come on, it'll be fun, the woods
are full of foxes.

don't be a stick in the mud.

but I don't have a gun, or rifle, or
even a sling shot.

it's cool, I have one you can borrow.
it's loaded

so be careful. ever been on a horse
before.

no. horses scare me, can't I just run
along side you? or get on my bike?

no.

maybe we can just scare the foxes
and not kill them.

hit them with a rock or something,
but gently.

why are we doing this anyway? it's hot
out.

and there's bugs all over the place.

when the deal goes down

my father has  five million
dollars

tucked away in an insurance
policy
under his mattress.

when he passes, which seems
nearly impossible
at the age of 92, the racoons

will come out of the woodwork.
especially two sisters.

but his will is iron clad.
so it's going
to be a wild and crazy

ride, as it always is with families,
when
the deal goes down.

the pie is cut two ways.
not nine. sad to say. I do have
a charity

in mind though.

aren't you a patriot?

my right wing
gun
toting friend who listened
to the radio all day,
turned all the way to the right
used to ask
me
aren't you a patriot?
don't you love your
country?
and now
my left wing
friend,
marching for civil rights,
and
free speech
and occupying the block
while burning
and looting, with
no police asks me
the same thing.
i'm confused. I need a nap.

the 4th of july at jimmy's house

i'm disappointed that there
won't be a pie
eating contest this year

over at jimmy's house for the 4th
of july.

no watermelon seed spitting
contest either.

no rockets in the air, no
sparklers burning the children's fingers.

no yapping dogs, or dives into
the frog infested
pool.

there won't be any hot dogs on
the grill.
or burgers.

or singing, or yelling, or throwing
up.
jimmy won't be wearing his flag
colored

underwear.

oh well, maybe the next year.

parting is not sweet sorrow

it's usually a problem

getting the spare key back.
the parking pass.

getting everything left behind
to the curb

in large lawn bags.
the guitar, the jewelry,
the lingerie.

they can be like gum stuck
to the bottom of your shoe.

no matter how hard
you try to scrape it off, there's
still

some stuck between the treads.
parting is not
sweet sorrow, but just

a pain sometimes, better yet
to throw those

old sneaks away.

Thursday, July 2, 2020

and then dessert

my grandmother
would go out

to the bricked back yard
and grab

a chicken
from a coop,
fat and white.

thick with feathers,
and ring

it's neck like it was nothing.
a quick loud snap
and the struggle was over,
then

she'd sit out
in the shade of her olive
tree, sipping red
wine,

plucking, plucking,
until the skin

was bare, dimpled pink,
stark white.

we watched from the window.
our round faces
in our hands.
we saw

the blood, the violence
of dinner.

but it didn't matter, we
had seconds,

and then dessert.

you've had your fill

you reach a point
in life when

the wind of time
has greyed your hair.

creased your brow, darkened
your eyes.

you are no longer the child
you once were.
you have

no patience for fools,
for liars,

for women
who prance by without a heart.

all legs and lips.
breasts

and perfume.

you have no desire anymore
for the likes of them.

for whispers and webs.

you've had your fill of darkness.
of their

false world.
you have sobered up to

their magic tricks.
there is no rabbit in a hat,

everything is remarkably
clear.

the girl that got away

like old cars

rusting in the yard, up
on blocks,

homes for pigeons
and bees.

the men sit
on their porch swings,

and sip from their
brown paper bags of
brown whiskey.

long island tea.
they talk longingly of

some long forgotten dream.
the factory.

the rail road yard.
the roads not taken.

there's always a girl
that got away.

a dollar lost a dollar made.
the stories

are long about
the big fish almost caught.

the gamble.
the roll of the dice,
the wheel spinning,

putting it all down,
the time when they lost.

a fight won in some bar
in Chicago,

or was it Philly?

the bugs die in the purple
light of the porch.

police cars roll by,
but there's no trouble here
now.

none at all, not anymore.

all the dead flowers

the girl crying
on the curb, at the end of the
road

has been there for a while.
centuries.

she's the same girl
believing
in princes, in kings, in

ruby slippers
and crowns.

she's delirious, disillusioned.
she believes

in love.
in the prince charming

on the white horse,
the house,
the home.

the picket fence.
she's swallowed
it all.

she believes in the dream,
even now.

in her white dress, aged
and weak,

head bent, crying, sobbing,
weeping,

she believes, she believes,
despite

all the dead flowers.

people in the ice box

they come, they go.

like seasons.
like leaves on trees.

like
food in the  fridge.

it's there one day, and
gone
the next.

people you think you can't
live without.

lovers. friends. wives
and what

not.

you hang onto them like
like all

the frozen food in
the freezer.

ice cold and covered
in frost.

and why?
beats me. you were doing

just fine before them,
and doing

better without. time to get
the butter

knife out and defrost
the hell out
of the ice box.

scuse me while i kiss the sky

I had the radio up

really loud while driving
around, doing errands,

dropping my mother off at post
office.

purple haze by Hendrix was on.
and the only good way

to listen to it, is full blast.
I played my

air guitar as I  drove,
and beat out the drums on
the dashboard.

at 17 or 70, it's purple haze
to the grave.

I looked over at my mother,
and she shook

her head. you can let me out
anywhere, she said.

you're going to go deaf playing
that music

so loud, you know.

what? I said. can you pick
me up a book

of stamps while you're in there?

slob world

we are in the era

of sweat pants. pajama pants.
shorts
and sneakers,

flip flops.
t-shirts and sweat shirts.

loose fitting,
baggy

clothes that we swim in.
we are lazy,

unshowered unkempt,

disheveled.
in fashion and in thought.

not a book in hand,
just a phone, texting.

the world
is not coming to an end

as we know,
but it feels that way
at times.


Wednesday, July 1, 2020

home sweet home

it's a wonderful

thing
to come home to no one.

no angry face.
no

sick significant other.
no argument

or lies. no one pushing a button.
no doors

slammed.
no looks, or rolling
of eyes.

it's a beautiful thing to come
home

to no cat
or dog, no gold fish,

or parrot mimicking
your words.

no one needs to be walked.

no plants on the sill
that need attending to.

no water bucket to wet
the soil,
no spinning of the pot towards
sunlight.

sweet solitude, where have
you been

all my life?

jake the snake

I was thinking about old jake
the other day.

he passed away on Christmas day.
lung cancer.

he was basically a pirate who went through
a time portal

and ended up here.
a grizzled beard, a pony tail,
and a new set of teeth.

a great worker when hungry and sober.
funny.

and a chain smoker and heavy drinker.
he was in and out of jail.

shelters, tents under the  bridge,
but
he rolled with the punches.

always landing on his feet somehow.
sure, he'd fall asleep

on the roof of a house,
or hide
behind some bushes when hungover.

but he  worked hard when he had to.
when I ride

by the 7-11 where I used to pick him up
I look
over and half expect to see him,

cigarette in his mouth, a big gulp
in his hand,

his paint splattered work clothes on,
and smiling ear
to ear.

whistling at any woman who walked by.

jake was the man.

I can't go, sorry, Covid

I go through the list

of people that are mad at me.
either slightly

or red eyed mad.

usually it's over something
said.

some small thing, or discussion
about current events.

but then it turns ugly and  feelings
get hurt.

oh well.
what are you going to do?

maybe you don't want to attend
some party

or go some where that you don't
want to go to.

the  annual fourth of july party
with potato salad

and hot dogs. screaming kids
running around

with their hands burned from
sparklers.

they get mad, feel slighted,
that you can't make the party,
but the good thing now is that all

you have to do is say Covid.
it's your get out of jail free card.

can't go, sorry. Covid.
how can anyone be mad about that.

you shrug, put your mask on and
say, see ya. maybe next year.

the new hot tub

have you lost weight

the salesman says to me, as he
pulls out

the paperwork
for a new hot tub in the back

yard.
you look marvelous. you look
a lot younger than your age.

what's your secret?

I look at my stomach.
maybe a pound or two, I tell
him.

but i'm hungry all the time.

so let me tell you about your new hot
tub, he says, while pushing

candy bar across the desk.

it's got nineteen jets, seats
seven. this baby is state of the art.

cup holders. wifi, stereo.
apple play.

low maintenance. it's the gold
standard of hot tubs.

you'll be in this thing all night
and all day

and your girlfriend or wife
will love it. he winks, maybe all
three of you at the same time.

if you like to party, and who doesn't,
there are handles all over that you
can grab onto
if you start to slip under

and pass out.

no one has ever drowned in one
of our hot tubs.
there's an alarm that goes off
if more than ninety eight per cent
of your body

goes under water.
i'm telling you, chicks love
hot tubs.

you'll be living like Hefner in
this thing.

so what do you think?  can I put
you into a hot tub today?

running with scissors

I used to pull right
up

to the curb to let her out.
especially if it was raining.

if I didn't she'd dash across
the street

into traffic like a five year
old,

or a dog with no street
sense.

I got tired of yelling,
look out

to the cars streaming by
with their windows
fogged,

hand pressing at the horn.

what are you gonna do
with crazy people?

do you like my hair?

I go visit my doctor.

she just had her hair done.
girl has a lot of hair.

thick and luxurious in a very
modern
cut.

stylish and hip.

it's sort of reddish brown now.
I ask her
if I can put

my hand through it and pull
it from behind.

she says. sure why not?
so I do.

three hours later
we go out to dinner

and her hair still looks
fabulous.

thank you for your service

did you ever serve
in the military

she asks, as I fill out the form
for

a passport to escape
this country

while it burns and changes
for the worse.

nope, I tell her.
I was in the cub scouts for
a few weeks,

but went over the hill.
the rules
and regulations.

the uniforms and tasks
like
tying knots

and making key chains
out of strips of colored plastic

was killing me.
I went over the hill after

one meeting of cookies
and milk.

ducked out to use the bathroom
and took off
running

never looked back.

Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Three Rabbits

I think about

planting carrots in the back yard.
I get a trowel

some new soil.
a few package of seeds.

a bright picture is on the front
of the plastic
pouch.

fat orange carrots all bundled
together with a green

tie.
I look at the yard, there's plenty
of room.

I turn the package over
to read the instructions, then
look over

to where the gate is open.
I see three rabbits

looking in, nodding their
heads
enthusiastically,

yes. yes. yes.

We Need to Talk

we used to have these
long

talks after I caught her with
her married

boyfriend, or writing a check
to her ex husband

or lying about something,
anything.

they were circular conversations
going nowhere.

full of dead ends, word salad.

we'd sit down in the livingroom
and talk.

we'll i'd talk. and she'd sit there
texting on her phone
like a fourteen year old.

i'd ask her why
she's still

seeing a married man.
i'd ask her about the visits
to the ex

husband.
i'd go through a list of lies.

my voice would go hoarse.

she'd sit there
and stare at me, or through me

with those dull blank eyes
and shrug.

and? she'd say. so what's the problem?
are we almost done here.

I have to go somewhere really really
important.

this fish stinks

you know when the relationship
is over.
you can smell it.

it's not unlike
when fish goes bad.

it stinks.
you cringe when you unwrap
the paper.
and hold it to your nose.

you know it
when she comes home
through the door.

just hearing the car pull up
and the brake

engaged is enough to make
you sprint for the back

door.
no matter how much you season
that rotted fish,

no matter how you cook it,
fry,
or roast, boil or
steam, not matter what you
do to that
slab of seafood,

it's over. that fish stinks
and it's time

to think of other options for
dinner, not to mention
a few other

things.

Just Doing My Part

I stare at the box of dixie
cups

stacked in my cupboard.

I have more upstairs beneath
the sink.

little paper cups
for rinsing after a brush

or gargle.

nice little cups that old

a mere ounce or two of
water

or vodka if you need a quick
jolt
before

going to church or work.

I might have three hundred
dixie cups.

what do I do? keep them hidden?
I hate to throw them

away, but I feel that I must
do my part

in making America great again.

tonight i'm having Northern
Fried chicken

too. wish me luck on that.

secret lives

i'm always amazed
at how many people have secret lives.

secret boyfriends,
secret wives.

two families, three jobs.
an extra

dog and cat at a different address.
the exhaustion

of all those lies, all that juggling.

I can barely keep one life
straight.

how do they do it? where do they find
the energy

and time to pretend to be other people?
to have fake

lives?

the p.o. box,
the hidden cell phone.

the secret rendezvous. who has the time
for all that

monkey business?

and where does it end?
all these strangers standing over

the grave,
each saying to the other,

who are you? have we met?

facebook update

you stop by

your old facebook profile to see
if anyone is baking

any cakes,
or if their kids are on the honor roll.

there's a few new
cat videos and one with a racoon

going through a bag of trash.

lots of memes about the riots,
about

the virus.
and look there's an old face
in the crowd.

a ghost from the past.
same picture from fifteen years
ago.

the indian vest. the long hair.
the fright mask.

but it beats the old photo shopped
pics.

air brushed to the nth degree.
nobody at sixty
should try to look 23.

delete and block, I mean are we
really friends?

some people never change.
I scroll
and scroll and scroll.

I should post something on there.
but what?

I just scrambled some eggs, that'll
have to do for now.

oh, and there's a worm on the sidewalk.

click and post.
I need to find some more new friends
though.

i'm lagging behind.

the tire store

what can be said

about a flat tire that hasn't already
been said.

a lot.

a nail, a screw, a shard of glass
stuck
into the tread

and out the air goes.

can they fix it, plug it, seal it
back up
and away you go?

hell no.

you need a new tire. no one plugs
a tire
anymore. but it' only has a hundred

miles on it, you tell the man
in his clean blue shirt.

it's the inner lining, he says, stroking
his mustache and tapping
his belly.

damn liner is shot.

so you sit and wait
in the stiff chairs, with the stale
coffee

and people magazines with liz
taylor on the front.

you wait for your new tire.

it's a tire store, but they don't have yours
in stock.

they never do.
they have to send for it across town
or in

Baltimore. but you're welcome
to wait,
or go.

it's up to you. the cab home, walk.
uber.

we'll call you when it's ready,
or maybe we won't.

we're very busy here with tires.
we don't have any

but we can get you one if you want.
have a nice day.

Monday, June 29, 2020

wanting no one

we all need

a safe zone. a home.
a place

of no fear. no anxiety.
a peaceful

island
away from it all.

we all need the silence
of one

in order to regroup,
recharge,

to be not alone, but
to be happy

with oneself.

and for the moment
wanting

no one.

less light

less light

appears. less of everything

draws
near.

less of you. less of me.
we

are all diminished by time,
with each

passing year.

less light though,
is nothing

to fear.

we make love

it's raining out.

a hard rain, thunder.
swift wind.

streaks of lighting against
the far hills.

we make love
and the rain is part of it.

it's tender and sweet.
it's furious.

and when it ends,
we listen

to our hearts and to the rain
still

falling sweetly now
against

the window pane.
we fall asleep.

and when we awaken,
we'll do it again.

counting lies

I used to count

her lies.
write them down on a piece
of paper.

she said this, did this,
etc.

etc.

I used to count them all
up

as if it mattered.
it didn't.

now it's hard to remember
why

I even cared, or took the time
with such

a person.
strange how life takes

a turn for the better once
free

from a toxic person.

sheep

I was protesting

the protests when I was told I couldn't
do that.

who are you to think
you can have free speech

or  a different opinion than
the mob

in the street.

be one of us, a sheep.
quit thinking on your own.

now march with us,
or else,

do not listen to the sound
of your own drum beat.

sleep well

happiness

is not easy. but there are steps
you can

take to get there.
one is to work hard.

educate yourself.
love yourself.

get rid of toxic people from
your life.

eat well. exercise.
read read read.

find a creative outlet.
find peace

in the small things.
let go

of the past. look forward
to tomorrow.

but live in the now.
speak less.

listen more. sleep well.
be true

to yourself.

Sunday, June 28, 2020

1939

the world

is walking on eggshells.
everyone afraid

to voice an opinion that goes
against

the mob mentality.
we bite our tongue, speak

delicately.
we censor our minds, unable

to say what we
really want.

it reminds me of another day,
another time,

in another country

1939.

Saturday, June 27, 2020

it never happened

I like to erase.

delete and wash clean each mistake
made,
as if it
never happened.

I like to hang the clean
sheets

on the long line,
my bare feet in the cold grass.

I like the blue
sky of april.

the new year arriving in spring.
I keep

no score. no record of the past.

I like to erase.

keeping the blood in

we stop the bleeding

whether
a wound, or a dollar lost,

the market,
love
leaving.

another heart arriving. we stop
the bleeding.

life is about tourniquets.
bandages,

thread and needle.
the surgeon's

scalpel.
keeping

the blood in
for as long as we can.

what lies above

the wind

speaks whispers into
the coffins

of trees.
trees bent towards sun,

towards water,
always grasping,

always in need.
all life is slow dying,

without love.
and even then,

you wonder what lies below,
what

lies above.

beyond belief

we wonder how the wicked
sleep.

how they can lie there
head against the white pillow

with hands folded
legs entwined in sheets.

how can they
sleep, when we stare into the dark
void
of night

and listen
to the woods moving
outside, beyond

the shaded
window, beyond belief.

the way out

you see the way out.

the red exit sign high on the wall.
you see

the steps, the path that leads
to the door.

in your mind, you practice leaving.
slowly.
then you run.

you leave everything behind.
all that is wrong.

your new life

lies beyond that door.
you can get to it when you're ready.
when

courage arrives.
when hope is lost.

when the time is right.

you see the way out.

you rise and begin.

the unwritten future

she tells

me about the babies
that failed.

twins
and one other

that never made it into
the world.

her eyes drift off into some
unwritten

future.
she smiles, a false smile.

it's an offering
that I take

before
bowing out and going
in.

we won't talk of this again.

a reader of labels

I have become a reader
of labels

at this age.

I have become one of them
standing

in the aisle with a can or jar
of something

and squinting at the small
print

examining the contents
of beans,

of fish, of olives.

how much sugar is here,
the salt,

the syrups or carbs.
what am I putting into my

body.

i need a chair to sit and
ponder

this package in my hand.

they believe

they believe.

truly they believe that
if they

make a sign
and go downtown

and march, and yell
and scream.

if they throw rocks
at the police

smash cars and break windows
set fires
to the stores

pull down the statues of
once heroes,

that things will change.

they believe that the world
will right

it self, that the color of
your skin

will not matter, that sin
will end,

that men will at last see
the error of their ways

and make amends.
they believe this with all their
hearts.

well meaning, and naïve.

but soon they tire,
there is work to do. lives
to lead.

they grow old
and grey. their bones turn white,
as the ashes
rise

from their graves.

Friday, June 26, 2020

yelling out the window

I can't help myself,

but when I see two young women,
in the prime of their
precious life

walking
into the bridal shop

with their mother, I can't help
but 
roll down the window

and yell out, don't do it. stop.
don't.
please, just think about this.

they look at me like i'm a crazy
old man,

which is pretty much true.

they don't laugh, but hold their
swatches
of

lime green and peach colored
fabric
in their hands

and run on into the store.

time to protest

my friend asks me if i'm
going

to the protest march today.
I ask him,

what's this one about?
he looks at his schedule.

well, we have one at ten a.m.
for human

rights,
another at eleven for abused
animals,

then one at noon, for books
the we want

banned. there's a lot of words
out there that go against
our liking.

I tell him, maybe.
I have to work,

but if I can break away for a little
while after lunch,

I might be able to do the
animal one.   what should I wear.

black, all white, zebra stripes?

something casual he says,
easy to run in.

okay, I tell him, by the way,

are you bringing bricks and
torches?  or just signs

this time?

Thursday, June 25, 2020

the cat walk

I watch the woman
walking

her cat down the street.

the cat's collar is attached
to a gold leash

with little rhinestones.

slowly they meander along
the sidewalk,

the yard.
the cat wants to go under
a car,
but no.

the tree holds interest.
but no.

the woman wants the cat
to walk
on the sidewalk.

but cats have a mind of
their own.

it's a short walk.
the sun is out.

she comes my way, but i
go in before

I say anything about
the cat.

leave me alone

her left leg

is a lot like her right leg.
I can see

that now.
I am a great observer of
legs.

and torsos.
etc.
etc.

it's been a life long obsession.

legs.
i'm sorry. sue me.

I know we're living in
the dreadful

era of extreme political
correctness,

but I don't care.
I like legs.

leave me alone.

the red flags

the body
and the mind

protects itself from harm.
instincts.

self preservation
inborn

from the start.
pain is a warning.

anxiety and fear
are

your friends, listen
to them.

observe the red flags
all around you.

obey them.
get out and get on
the mend.

the illusion

I like

how milagro
stacks

my books. rearranges
the linen

closet.
the eggs.
the tomatoes.

separating, the cheese
from

the rest.
she seems to know where
everything goes.

shoes in the closet.
dishes,

look at how the bed
is made.

the shelves are dusted.

she makes no comment
on what she sees,

what I've left out on
the table

or in the sink.
silently, she goes about
her work.

giving order where there
is none.

keeping the illusion of a
good life alive.

you're looking well

some are always
sick.

the leg, the arm,
the head.

the gut.

the hair falling out.
the knees

sore. they point at a kidney
and wince.

or a scar,

and they never fail
to tell
you so once asked,

to pull out an x-ray,
or form,

from a doctor.
you learn in time to not

ask how are?

instead you say, good to see
you.

you're looking well.

God's Explanation

we know
what we know without speaking it.

we know the truth.
we know

what's a lie.
from birth we know the order
of things

sleep
food
the comfort of love

when to cry.
we take this with us each

year
we survive.

searching for meaning,
for reason,

for God's explanation
of it all,
one day

at a time.

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

learned fear

as the  two
men work. ladders angled upon
the house,

and the new windows go in,
as the old

ones go out.
I offer water.

I tell them i'll be back.
I think of

hiding things of value.
but why?

there is nothing here
that

can't be replaced.
and why wouldn't I trust

these two strangers?
what is it about us that we
suspect

that we fear?

learned, perhaps.


the cracked egg

if she was
an

egg.
she'd be cracked

and spilled.
gone

sour and sick
within

her own shell.

if she was an egg.
there

would be no
hatching.

no coming to life.
just

part of
a set of twelve

left behind. cold
stored

until later that night.

the summer wind

there is a point in childhood,
half way out,
half way in,

where you wonder,
when will

childhood end. when will
these games

these small
issues,
these playgrounds with
swings,

the slides,
us children, spinning,
like leaves caught
in

summer wind,
come to an end. and then

it does.
and you wish and wonder,
how to get

back there once again.

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

a serious talk

you have to ask yourself,

she says to me, almost in a whisper,
is this the person

you really want to be with for the rest
of your life?

hmmm.
I say.

hand on my chin, pondering her
question.

then I start to think,
is this the house I want to live in
for the rest of my life.

is this the place I want
to be
forever and a day.

is this the shirt I want to wear today.
these shoes.

black or grey?
an onion bagel or blueberry?

toasted, or not? butter or cream cheese?

do these pants make me look fat?

no one here

we pass one another

in the hall. wordless.
her to her room,

me to mine.
it's early.

sleep was hard. waking
even harder.

I hear the water run
as she steps into the shower.

I get  dressed, make coffee.
I stand by

the window, before leaving.
the woods are
bare.

the grey arthritic limbs
of winter trees
fit the moment.

quietly I leave, there really
is no one

here.

heaven and hell

we talk about the devil,
whether or

not he's real.
if he actually exists,

if there is a heaven or a hell.
how could

God, if there is a God
be so cruel

as to send someone into the flaming
pits of hell,

for eternity?
what kind of a God does that?

i can see the dark aura
around her

as she speaks. I feel the black
vibe
of her soul.

I know the depth of her
history, having watched it up

close.

she's worried about this for
a lifetime

of reasons. heaven yes, but
hell

hopefully no.


the attic box marked done

I place
all the things I have forgotten

and the things
I remember but no longer

need
in my mind

into a box, marked done.

no date, no explanation.
just one word.

done.
which says it all.

I find the deepest part of
the attic

where the cobwebs
have layered
their traps in fine woven

webs. and say, good.
perfect.

I slide the box in, shut
the ceiling door and climb down.

wiping clean my hands
of the whole

ordeal.

Monday, June 22, 2020

everything you need to know

a lie, one lie,

one deception told without
the blinking

of a single eye,
is a thread, a loose thread

on a thick sweater.

pull on it, pull that lose thread
and watch

that life unravel right
before your

eyes.
one lie and then the skin
is laid
bare.

everything you need to know
is there.

the caught fish

as the fish

rises out of the river,
pulled heavy

on my line. I feel
sympathy for him.

the prickly silver hook
caught in his jaw, the awful

air suffocating his
lungs.

he stiffens in  panic
wanting to be back in the water
he was born in.

the blue sky more blue
than

he ever was aware.
what life is this, to be out

here, he thinks,
as I twist the hook from his mouth.

I mourn for his life.
his beauty, the pattern of his
scales

a work of art,
his small heart

heaving towards the distant sun.

time for the next great flood

people used to be happier.

I really believe that.
maybe it's romanticizing the past

as most elderly people do,
but it just feels

different now.
the world is a chaotic mess.

I see no one on the porch
with a glass

of tea,
reading, or talking quietly
with a loved

one.

there is no peace.
just anger, confusion, violence

and grief. let the rains fall,
hard and fast.


they

it's confusing.

he or she, they.
the undecided are multiplying

it seems.
the barista is either jim or jaye,

karen or rob.
depends

on the day.

you are cautious in saying
miss

or ms. or sir, or mamm.

it's none of your bee's wax
what's going

on down there,

to each his or her own
gender, but i'd like

to go out the way

I came in.

whispers

you take some thread
and

sew your lips together.
whatever

you want to say, or might slip
out

could be offensive.
you've lost so many so called

friends this way.

better to be quiet than express
your opinions.

once a free speech country,
it's

the 1984 all over again.

Sunday, June 21, 2020

the hallmark card

I sign with love

to the card, the hallmark
nine dollar

fold out, musical
thick

card made especially for this
fake

holiday.
I seal the envelope, put
a stamp

in the corner and lug it down
to the post office.

whew. I slap my hands together.

glad that's done.

the parking ticket

are you a parking ticket

by any chance
she says

sidling up to me in
the crowded bar.

because
you got fine

written all over you.

I laugh and tell her that i'm

going to steal that line
and make it mine.

go right ahead,
she says,
I use it all the time.


the day comes

we mourn the loss

of dogs
hard, if not harder than

others that we love.
their lives shorter than

ours for the most part.
ten years

or more.
maybe twelve.

then old age embraces them.

like us the legs go,
the vision blurs. the hearing

shot.
they hardly come when you
call.

they sleep long, or not
at all.

when the child was the young
the dog
was too.

so many pictures line
the shelves.

the puppy, and you. and then
the day comes.

always. the day comes
and you are left with the bed,

the still ball.
the food and dish from where
he ate.

the leash hung on the hook
in the hall.

fallen soldiers

I see the noose
around old Robert E. Lee's

neck
as they pull him and his bronze
horse

down off the pedestal.
his sword is still

in his hand,
his hat secured.

his uniform tattered with
graffiti.

his eyes still focused on
some distant

field, bloodied and strewn
with corpses.

it seems he's lost the war
again

and will ride no more.

Saturday, June 20, 2020

adjusting the points

as a young man

on a Saturday, like today.
with sun

and blue skies, i'd wash my car
under a shady tree.
my

marroon 67 camaro Chevrolet.

a bucket of suds.
rags,
and sprays.

inside and out, then the turtle
wax

to give it a shine
with that chamois cloth.

i'd check the oil. the fluids.
i'd adjust

the points using the sleeve
of a pack of matches.

and if I had a date that night,
i'd

hang a little scented christmas
tree from the rear

view mirror. good times.

the dog chained to a tree

he kept his dog
on a chain tied to a tire
tied to a tree.

a circle of dirt
around it.

bones chewed thoroughly
down to the marrow
littered

on the ground.

a shallow bowl of rain
water

full of black flies was nearby.

was he ever loved?
or always a burden

seen from afar.

the cold blue sleeve of streams

I remember finding

a letter that she wrote to her married boyfriend.
telling him

how much she still loved him,
missed him.

wishing that she could tell the world
about her love
for him.

she drew little hearts around the words.
colored them pink.

then posted it on a tree
where he had left the same for her.

I remember looking at the ring on my finger
and pulling it off

and flattening it with a hammer
on the street.

flat and silver. a thousand dollars,
maybe more.

I remember sailing it like a stone
across the water of the broad

creek..
watching it sink into the cold blue
sleeve

of dreams.

no more.

no time

no one has time anymore
to stop.

and meet, or talk.

they have nine watches
on their arm.

you can hear them ticking
from a mile away.

busy. busy. busy.
they are pale.

approaching grey.

they have no time, no room
on their calendar.

they only have this phone,
this cold piece
of metal,

without a soul, but leading the way.

don't stay, go home

some towns are ugly.
smoke
pouring out of stacks.

a grey fringe of clouds
hiding
a puddled
yellow sun.

traffic and horns blaring.
words cursed

from rolled down windows.
the factories,
steel boxes

of lives fading away.
the percussion of drills and hammers
never ceasing.

you drive through the tunnel
and pause
when you arrive.

the greased roads,
the food
for the fat.

the ancient bones of those
grown old

rocking on peeling porches.
their blue eyes

steeled in yesterday's work.
even the churches

sagging with worried faith,
beg, don't stay. go home.

the pious mask

she's going

to confession now. I hear through

the grapevine.
good for her, is my response.

a life of adultery, lying, deception
and abuse
is finally

weighing her down?

but I feel bad for

the poor priest setting aside
so many hours

and still not getting
the truth

or real penance out of her.
that pious mask.

oh, how I know hers well.

the old sunset

you reach
a point in life where

there is nothing left
to need or want.

it's all there.

stuffed into closets
and attics

laundry rooms,

shelved and boxed in
garages where the cars
never go.

two of everything it seems.

but then
you look at your list
of dearly

departed friends. growing
longer with each

old sunset.

you could use a few more
of them.

Friday, June 19, 2020

which plate to throw

when my mother would throw a dish

at my father
after coming home late

to a cold dinner.
lipstick on his cheek that he

didn't bother to wipe off,
she'd choose the chipped plates.

the old plates.
rarely did I see the next morning

broken on the floor,
in wild cut shards,

her blue favorites. her good
china.

her heirlooms.
even in her anger she had good taste.

the truth

if you want

to truly know who someone is
these days.

look
into their cell phone.

no need for a polygraph,
or
interrogation.

no need to put them in a room
with a hot
light

upon their brow.
just pick up their phone and scroll.

and there
you have the truth of who

they are.

california dreaming

she reminds me of
California.

or what I used to think california
was.

a beach.
a blue sky.

white gulls.

sunshine and blue eyes.
tanned

and golden
in red.

she reminds me of California.

a place I've never
been.

mythical in my youth, just
as she is

now.

Thursday, June 18, 2020

i'm all out of sorrys

I reach into my bag
for one more

sorry.
but i'm out.

I used them all up last week
after

commenting on the news.
disagreeing with

people.

I have a new order coming in
though.

a box
of one hundred.

freshly minted sorrys.
ready

to be doled out to the next person
I unintentionally hurt.

insult, or dismiss

as stupid.  sorry.

found that one on the floor.

orange

I roll the orange in
my hand.

squeeze it gently.
I smell it.

hold it to an ear.
it has nothing to say.

the color is bright.
I own nothing of this color.

but it appeals to me
in some
strange way.

orange, I say out loud,
then take a knife

and slice into quarters.
it's sweet in my mouth,

tart upon my tongue.

the life of it dripping
off my chin.

memed out

don't be angry

forgive and forget.

move on. let it go.
don't look

back.

be true to yourself.

don't get fooled again.
listen

to your gut.

your mother was right.

etc.

etc.

I hate memes.

all of their tomorrows

it smells like
rain

the leaves all fat and green
cupped

upwards.

the southerly breeze.
only

the sound
of trees.

the conversation of branches,
the bending
of trunks

before a cloud breaks
and they drink

into life
all of their tomorrows.

another day

she finds
her fish dead, floating

on top of the bubbling clear
water
of the tank.

the others don't seem to mind.
they go about

their way, swimming.
down they go between the castle,

the windmill.
the bright green plastic leaves.

nothing is real.
this is all an illusion, they say

to themselves.
more will come.

it's just another day.