Monday, May 27, 2024

not enough aspirin

a third
of my day is spent trying
to synch
a phone
to the car, the truck,
pairing it
to speakers
in my house.
to the television,
the computer,
to the world at large.
good lord
how i miss
the phone hanging on
the kitchen wall.
and the turntable
with an lp
spinning
out a song.

the mailman's pouch

i do my best complaining,
my most
true
admonishing by
word,
not by word of mouth,
but by
taking pen to paper, or
clicking away
on this keyboard,
then sending
said letters
out.
regret comes later, of course.
but there
is joy
and a delicious taste
in my mouth
once the stamp
goes on, and the mail
is in the mailman's
pouch.

small bumps in the road

it's disappointing.
the flat tire,
being out of milk,
the power
going out
during a favorite show,
and the rain coming
down.
but all is well.
not setbacks or bad
times,
just
small bumps in a road
that's been
quite smooth
lately,
very straight and calm
since you've
been gone.

Sunday, May 26, 2024

another brown egg

how many
eggs
have i cracked on the edge
of this black
pan.
scrambled, or
turned over easy.
how many dozens
of eggs
have i eaten
in a lifetime?
with toast,
with bacon, with
hash browns?
washed down
with orange juice
and coffee?
who knows, who's counting?
i drop
the butter in
the middle,
then crack another.

the villages

she tells
me about her new golf cart
that she bought
after moving to
the villages in Florida.
she goes
on and on about pickleball
and dancing,
bowling
and concerts
at the park.
she's doing tai chi now
at the crack
of dawn.
it's a house like
all the others
she tells me, but i put
up my own
art.
i'm happy here,
although i wish there
were more
men
who weren't in walkers,
men who
fall asleep as soon as
it's dark.
you must come down
to visit.

hospice 101

she was
turned, every so often
in her narrow
bed,
fed
through a straw,
by infinitely
small spoons
meant for babies,
a soft gruel.
they kept
her alive
despite all wishes
for her death.
i can still hear
her
asthmatic whisper,
the squeal
of springs,
the bird at the window
pecking
at the glass
to come in.

my new sailboat

i stop buying coffee,
the bitter
six dollar a cup coffee
with
the fancy cups
and logo.
i stop
buying the stale bagels
and pastry
they sell too
at five bucks
a pop.
next week i'm buying a sailboat
with all the money
i've saved
from going there.
after that i'm cancelling
the newspaper.
i don't like the news.

flying in for the weekend

i think
she had several lives going on.
the flight
attendant.
i'd ask
her how she got
the bruises and cuts
around her wrists
and why
she had a black eye,
a swollen lip.
she'd smile and wink,
and would tell me
it's none of my business,
then give
me a long hard
kiss.

limitations

i forgive you,
and you
and you,
and of course you.
and let's not
forget about you, too,
but no,
not you.
my empathy has its
limitations and
i have to draw the line
somewhere.

the carousel horse

am i dizzy from
lack of sleep, or food,
or water.
or am i at the age
now where
getting up too quickly
makes
me feel out of sorts,
the world
spinning madly
like i just got off
a carousels horse.

ready for my close up

as i age,
i prefer the camera to be at a distance,
the shot
taken
with friendly
lighting
as i sit in the shade
of an old oak tree,
i pray there's still
a good side
to my face.
i'm reluctant, but
ready
for my close up after
telling
the photographer
to please
step back,
just a few more
yards away.

it's the olives in me

we like
to tell people we're part
this or that.
prideful
of our ethnicity.
it's the Italian
in me,
the Greek,
or the Hispanic
blood
making me cook
or think
the way i do.
it's the salsa in
me,
the rigatonis,
the olives
from some ancient
tree.
turn the music up.
where are my canastas?
my Bocchi ball,
my burrow from
Santorini.
watch me dance,
today i'm Zorba
the Greek.

avoiding hard labor

i don't want to fix
things.
rebuild,
save or rescue,
or to
have directions telling
me what
screw to use,
what nail.
i don't want a box
full of parts
anymore
with a picture of
the finished
product.
come to me whole
and ready
to go.

Saturday, May 25, 2024

same as it ever was

as a child
church bored me.
the preaching,
the mystery of it all.
the robed
priests, the altar boys,
the nuns.
the smoke
and mirrors, 
the mass in Latin.
pressing us to fear God.
the horrible songs.
the collection box.
i felt bad about
myself,
the things i was doing
at ten, at eleven,
at twelve.
my thoughts,
my heart always filled
with guilt,
and never despite confession
and penance,
free of it all.
my knees still ache
from trying.
nothing has changed,
church still bores
me.
it's exactly the same.

don't be on their menu

we forget
the nature of animals.
wild beasts in the jungle.
even the ones
in the zoo.
they will bite
and kill you, 
they'll even eat you
if it
comes down
to that.
don't feed the bears,
or hold
a snake in your hands,
don't put your head
into an
alligator's mouth.
don't swim
with the sharks,
or wave a shirt
in front of a bull.
it's a mistake.
the end of you.

bring something to eat or drink to the picnic

bring something
to eat
or drink, the invite says
for
a picnic
on the holiday.
wear something red
white and blue.
i open the fridge,
then
the cupboard,
i'm down
to peanut butter
and
saltine crackers,
dill pickles,
or some
grapes going soft in
a bag.
i do have a jug of
tap water though.
maybe that.
i've always thought that
when you
invite people
to your house,
just bring yourself
and a friend.
that should do.

the scary ex-girlfriend

she tells me
in another letter,
another email,
another text,
that
just because
i check your
social media constantly,
and that
i drove by your house the other
day,
or dialed 
your number
and hung up, or
went by your work,
or visited the park
where
you like to walk, doesn't
mean i still
love you.
in fact i never did.
i hate you.
i'm just a psychopath
and love
to stalk.

bird brains

the bird
has found a home in the small
hole,
the unvented vent
in my
soffit.
a safe place above
the ground below.
i see her in the morning
worried
with her
eggs.
have they cracked yet.
have they
broken through
their shells to begin
their short
journey into the world.
but
the neighbor wants
them gone.
the noise and flapping
of wings
is bothering
their dog.
again i'm reported to
the condo
board.

animal children

some people
take
their dogs, their cats,
everywhere
they go.
to the store, the bank,
the coffee shop,
to the beach.
they want to share
their lives
with the animals,
not having
any kids.
they put hats on them,
clothing,
small jackets
and shoes on their
paws.
sunglasses.
the leash
was bad enough, but
now this.

it changed my life

when
i buy anything
anymore,
i look at the number of stars
attached
to the item.
i read the reviews,
the complaints,
the praises.
i get the inside scoop
from Linda
in Idaho
about how she loves
her new
mattress cover.
the one i'm perusing.
queen sized
and made of cotton.
it feels cool and comfortable,
i sleep
like i'm on a cloud,
she writes.
it's changed
my life.
i don't believe her.

political hair

the barber,
who gave me haircuts from the age of ten
until i was seventeen
used to stop
me on the street and
laugh
as he looked at my
long hair
down to my shoulders.
all of it held
back by a decorative
head band.
are you ever
getting your hair cut again?
he'd ask.
remember how
i used to part it on
the side
for you
and put Bryl creme
in your hair.
you were such a handsome
little boy.
i smiled and said,
we'll see.  maybe, 
once that war mongering
Nixon is out
of the white house,
maybe then.

unprivileged

am i spoiled?
yes.
i am.
i buy whatever i want
or need
at any given moment.
i eat
what i want,
drink what i want.
travel anywhere
i desire.
i have a roof over my head,
a car,
furniture and enough clothes
to last
a lifetime.
am i spoiled, yes.
but am
i privileged.
no.
after having nothing
and growing
up dirt poor
i worked my fingers
to the bone
to have
any of it. please don't
say i'm
privileged.
you have no idea what
you're talking
about.

Friday, May 24, 2024

cleaning the ice box

i remember my
mother
standing on a chair,
with old towels and sheets
on the floor
to collect the dripping
water
as the ice melted.
she chopped away
at the ice in the box,
the thick
layers of white frost.
slowly she chipped
away at
a small version of
the north pole.
she seemed to enjoy it.
a meditation of sorts.
getting it all
clean and shiny once
more.
tossing in the bags of
peas
and carrots
and ice trays at the end.
Tupperware containers
full of red sauce,
stuffing
the cold bin full
of wrapped meats,
before she closed the door.

cleaning the mail box

i open
up the mail bag,
the endless collection of new
and old
mail, whether
received or sent,
whether
spam
or significant.
slowly i sift through
the weeds,
the communications
of years gone
by.
people once in my
life,
and the ones
still nearby.
i take a cycle to the high
brush,
the low vines,
i clean house.
there's so much i save
that i really
don't need.

monkey uncle

i don't believe
we came
from monkeys.
or one
cell
electrified somehow
and then
a billion
living life forms
appear,
no matter how
many eons
or years
go by.
evolution is crazy
time.
explain to me the
evolution
of the human eye.
start there.

muscle less

tighten
the screw too much
and it
breaks,
the pipe
will leak, all hell will
break loose.
go easy
on the turn, the twists,
less is
more sometimes.
go soft
on each other,
muscle
less.

Thursday, May 23, 2024

they can't let it go

they can't
let color go.
the pigmentation of skin.
black
brown, a shade
of white,
yellow.
every conversation seems
to head
that way.
whether in sports
or crime,
politics.
they can't let it go, 
they
need it to validate
some
convoluted point
with race.
and because of that it
will never
go away.
it's no longer about
the content
of character,
but the color of one's skin.
each generation
has to start all over
again.

i need some cutlery over here, please

the entire
restaurant goes silent,
the staff,
the waiters,
the customers at their
tables,
even the kitchen
goes quiet.
not a pot
or pan can be heard,
not a rattle,
or burst of steam.
you can hear crickets
chirping.
all because i asked for
a fork and knife,
not chopsticks
at Hunan West Peking.

who are these people?

somehow
i'm caught in a web
of group
texting.
plans are made, arrangements,
destinations,
rooms
are saved.
do i go,
or stay?
who are these people
anyway
and how did they get
my number?

forever young

who doesn't
want to turn back the clock
on age,
remove
the wrinkles, the sags,
the pain?
who doesn't want to return
to that golden
age
when youth was held
in hand.
when
immortality
was a reasonable thought
to have.
when tomorrows
were endless,
when love was easy
to find.
when the world seemed
new
and kind.

it's what i expected

the wall
takes four coats of red paint
before
the bleeding
stops.
one dries
and i roll out another
tray
of paint
onto the long
flat wall.
by late afternoon
it's finished.
but do i like it?
can i live with one
red wall?
maybe not.
maybe tomorrow i'll
go to back
to blue again.

coins in the fountain

i make a wish
and toss
a coin into the fountain.
she does
the same.
an hour later, she's on
the bus
heading home,
i'm traveling
in the opposite direction,
sitting on
a train.

dark attachments

let go.
that's the only phrase
you need
to know.
let go.
let go of toxic people.
let go
of bad jobs,
bad relationships,
bad houses,
bad
clothes, bad food.
bad music.
bad habits.
purge and burn.
let go of all things
that tie
you down,
dark attachments
defeat you.
let go. at last
be you.

retirement plans

the man
next door has retired.
i see
he's dyed his hair.
he's getting a tan.
he's
jogging.
he's doing jumping
jacks
in the courtyard.
he's in his garden,
he's raking
leaves.
he's power washing
the porch.
he's playing
music
and now he has a dog.
there's a red
sports car
where his truck used
to be.
the top is down.
i see women
coming to visit him.
bringing
him trays of food
and flowers.
they don't stay long.
they visit,
then they leave.
he's joining meetups
for hiking,
for cooking,
for bird watching.
i've never seen a man
once grumpy,
so happy
and free.

the first time

the first
taste, or view of anything
magnificent,
sticks
with you
for all your days.
the first time you step
upon the sand
and see the ocean,
the waves.
the first taste of love
knocking
you over.
your belly full of 
something you've never
felt before.
the stars at night, the first
time you really
lay in the summer
grass
and look up
and see
the sparkling lights.
you think it will pass,
but it doesn't,
it lasts.

another town all the same

you have a window with a view
of this
earth
as you speed by,
is any of it true?
is it a stage, are these
houses props,
these cars,
these people.
whose dog is that 
tied to a dying tree?
so many vines from
pole to pole,
to give light
to flat roof houses with
no shades
on the windows,
there's no shame,
or fear
as they towel themselves
looking into
mirrors.
just lives living out
the string.
living out the years.
around the next bend lies
another town.
all the same.

packaging

it's all about the packaging.
the plastic
wrapping
around
the treat
of sweets, and you.
the sheen,
the shine, the way the light
catches
the bright
paint
and hope of what might
be inside.
it's all a mystery
until
you unwrap it and take
a bite.

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

saving all the fool's gold

we save
and back up everything
as if it's all gold.
download
download,
click,
save.
data,
documents, texts
and numbers, pictures,
contacts
and all other forms
of human
debris.
into some cloud it all
goes.
into the box
at your feet.
somewhere it all
gets collected.
saved
regardless
of what it was.
a foreverness is promised
despite the fact
that the sun
will one day burn out
and all of it
and us
will be gone.

the best wedding ever

bored
with the day, with
the usual.
i go to a wedding
at the local
church.
it's a Catholic proceeding
so i have time
i put on my suit
and
spruce up.
i slip into the church
and when it ends
i follow the cars
to the party
at a fancy hotel.
i dance all night
with the bridesmaids.
i drink
i eat, i tell jokes
and make
new friends.
i help myself to a second
slice of cake
and wrap up a third to
take home
at three in the morning
after falling
in love with some
girl named Willow.
it may be the best wedding
i've ever been to,
including
all three of my own.


a picnic in the park

i feel encouraged
when
she suggests that we
go on a picnic
for our
third date. i have high
hopes,
and the butterflies
take off
in full flight.
i think not only of the birds
but of the bees too.
she tells me
everything she's bringing,
all the little sandwiches
and cakes,
the full menu.
strawberries and cream
for dessert.
and candies
wrapped
in gold jackets from
a store
i can't pronounce.
she has a basket and a
blanket,
a bottle of wine
and real glasses.
i ask her what i should bring,
she winks
and smiles
and says, 
just you and maybe an
umbrella in case it rains.

a short poor time

there was
funny tasting water from
the spigot
to the mouth
by hand.
an old apartment
building
with ancient pipes
full of rust
and
time.
three flights up
by stairs.
not to mention
the bugs that came
out at night,
the rattle
of pots and pans,
and music
from the floor above.
strangers
in the hallway, lurking.
it was far
from heavenly
appointments but
it served its purpose
for a short
poor time.

on a roll

sometimes you're
on a roll.
the car
breaks down,
your dentist visit
is today,
your annual
physical tomorrow.
it's someone's
birthday,
it's mother's day.
it's get the oil changed
in your car day.
renewals of all
sorts ding
you on your phone.
the rent is due.
the trash truck has come
and gone.
the dog needs her shots.
i'm out of seed
for the bird
in his cage.
the neighbor needs
a jump start on his car,
and the maid
is coming
at some point today.
i'm forgetting something,
but it doesn't
matter.

no funny bones

did she ever
laugh?
barely, but only at the expense
of others.
i wasted
my best material
on her.
my hours 
and hours of freshly
hewn jokes
and observations
went for naught.
hardly a chuckle came
out of her
pretty mouth.
not even a smile
crossed
her face,
just a wince, a sigh,
and a
roll of her doll
black eyes.

find a home

if you can,
if it's possible, have a home.
have a place
to go to,
a sanctuary of sorts,
a nest,
a house
to retreat to.
a place where you
know the walls,
the floors,
the creak in the steps,
the rumble
of pipes.
you understand
the cold and hot
of it,
how the doors lock,
how the windows
rise.
make it yours, it will
comfort you,
it will save your life.

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

more daily news

i follow
the box scores of last nights
games,
then
the wars,
then the protests,
the political chaos,
trials
and arrests,
then the
climate
change. i keep up on
what's going
on,
not that there's a single
thing i can
do about any
of it.
but i like to stay relatively
informed.
even if most
of it is baloney
on a hard roll with
a swab of mustard
from
the right or left.

jimmy and sally

it's a bad
time to have an argument
when
you're in the middle
of making love,
but when
she called me jimmy
and not
my real name, i questioned
her.
no, no, she said.
i didn't say jimmy,
i said,
it's supposed to be windy
out today.
windy.
we should really take the umbrella
down off the deck.
i distinctly heard
you moan the name jimmy
when i bit your neck,
i tell her.
no, no, she said. i said windy.
so, while we're in the middle
of hot romantic
love you're thinking
about the wind?
about damage to the porch
umbrella?
kiss me, she said.
let's not talk about it anymore,
okay? let's move on.
my leg is starting to cramp,
plus i have a
hair appointment at noon.
okay,
Sally.

lamenting a lack of dinosaurs

people lament
the extinction of animals,
bugs
reptiles
and what not.
the sea is losing fish,
the sky
is losing birds.
they wonder if we're not
next.
are we on borrowed
time
like the brontosaurus,
like T-rex?
will we go the way of
the do doo bird
at some point?
probably is my best
guess.


when the lake evaporates

when the lake
retreats
from the long hot summer,
the year long
drought,
everything
that was thrown
into it
comes up for air.
cars and bikes,
bodies
are everywhere.
disposable things
and lives,
guns and knives, microwave
ovens.
even refrigerators
have somehow
been tossed
into the muck.
i look for you, but
you're not there,
somehow you got out,
you survived.

the jackhammer blues

the power
is out,
the water too,
they're digging in the street
again.
a dozen
men
in orange vests
and white
hats
are standing with
their shovels
about to begin.
the machinery purrs
beside
the cracked road.
it's a days work
for them,
thankful,
grateful for the watermain
break,
the power lines
being snapped
in a violent storm
last night.
whereas
i feel differently
about it
pouring bottles
of spring water upon
myself
for a shower
by candlelight.

Monday, May 20, 2024

do you have any references?

i'm amused
when people ask for references.
having been
in business for thirty-five years.
should i give
them the good ones,
or the bad ones,
the ones where paint spilled,
where the wallpaper
curled off the walls?
should i give them the number
of the job
where the ladder
fell, or the fire
started, or how
i flooded the hall?
i choose the happy people,
which are most of
the jobs, the ones
i got paid on, i give out
those numbers
for them to call.

where did everyone go?

where did everyone go?
the old
school,
the old friends
from the old neighborhood.
the lovers,
relatives?
where are they
now.
which state have they
flown to?
which country,
which city
are they resigned to live
out their days in?
which cemetery should
i visit to see
their names
on gravestones?

the daily crime report

there's the weather
report on the news channel,
giving wind
and rain predictions,
changes in
the temperature,
and then
there's the crime
report
which gives you
an update on where
to go
in the city.
what blocks are having
the most
carjackings,
murders,
assaults and robberies.
they use
red dots
for severe crime areas,
yellow
for moderate,
and green for all clear
at the moment, but
things could
change, so be prepared
and have
on your running shoes
when visiting.

a veritable grouch

when she
drove the car,
i was nervous.
when
she was
in bed,
i was nervous.
at the table,
on the couch, i was a bundle
of anxiety.
i was walking
perpetually on eggshells,
afraid
to open
my mouth.
how did this happen
that i ended
up with
someone i didn't
even like?
a veritable grouch.

water lilies

with time
on my hands, 
waiting for the phone to ring,
for my ship
to come in, 
i open the box,
the large puzzle box
of a Monet painting.
two by three feet.
it's another water lily number.
apparently
he had a thing
for water lilies. 
i wonder if he had to fight
of the mosquitos
when doing his paintings.
flies and bugs,
ants. bees.
there's a lot of bluish
and greenish
tiles.
yellow and pinks.
i start with some edges.
it's ten o'clock
in the morning, but by noon,
i've started to drink.
each piece
looks the same.
my eyes blur and a headache
starts to come on.
this is torture, madness.
i sweep it all up
into the box.
maybe tomorrow i'll
start again, but
i doubt it.

a failure to communicate

i read
the results of my CT scan.
i have
no idea
what they say.
i have no clue what opacified
means,
or polypoids.
just tell me doc
how much
longer do i have to live,
and if so,
will i eventually
be able to breathe again?

paper and pen

we still
need paper and pens,
pencils,
don't we?
please tell me that
these
have not disappeared
not yet.
i won't
surrender.
i won't keep notes
in my
phone,
my laptop,
i need a pad, a clean
white
sheet and a good
ink pen
on my desk.
a spiral notebook
is best.

Sunday, May 19, 2024

i stop and look back

i can't help myself.
i look back
despite
all urges to keep walking.
no.
i turn
and stop
and look back.
but why?
what is there left to see,
what is there
left
to know?
i pause and take a long
last look.
what is it?
regret, remorse?
i just can't
seem to let go.

leaving it all behind

we had
to sit for a while.
catch
our breath, get our bearings.
this death
was new.
and now there were things
that had to
be done
with so much left behind.
books
and pictures, clothes
and shoes.
all of it.
a lifetime of things.
all very old,
all very used.
even the keys from his
pocket,
the ring on his finger,
each
had to be removed.

caught up in some wind

it's a field
of apparitions,
ghosts.
light wisps of people
i've
known.
now gone.
caught in some wind
that comes
along.
i can still them though,
the shapes
of them,
hear their
voices,
their laughter.
sometimes i can even
feel their
hands
in mine.

the brown bag lunch

we brown
bagged it to school.
our names
scribbled on the bag.
we lugged our tuna
sandwiches,
peanut butter, or cold
slabs
of bologna
with a swipe of French's
mustard
on wonder bread.
to the bus stop.
occasionally there'd
be egg salad
sandwiches
which we had
to remember not
to put on the heating
vents
in the classroom.
maybe a cookie
or two,
an apple.
milk was 2 cents in
a small
carton. a straw too.
sometimes there'd be
a note tucked
inside the bag.
say grace before lunch,
love you.

the campus hunger strike

the hunger
strike
seems to be the most
peculiar strike
of all.
making demands
or else
we're not going to eat
anymore
despite our
parents paying for a meal
plan.
we're going to skip
breakfast
lunch and dinner
and never put another
quarter into
the vending machines
for peanut butter
crackers and ho-hos
unless you
stop the war immediately
and meet
our extensive
list of requests
and demands.
not another morsel
of food will go into
our mouths
until
you grant us all our
wishes.
and if that doesn't work
or get your
attention,
we will hold our breath
until we turn
blue, or the cows
come home.

the handy man

there was always
a guy
in the neighborhood,
a husband
or brother, an uncle
maybe,
that could fix anything.
a handsome,
charming fellow
who was crafty and smart.
ours was Joe.
he'd come over with
his tool bag
while the husbands
were at work.
he'd fix the washer, the dryer,
then
take a look at the furnace,
he'd figure out
why
your lights were flickering.
toilet running,
no problem,
he'd be on the kitchen
floor
with his head
under the sink
turning a wrench with his
muscular forearms
while the lady of the house
made him
coffee and muffins.
tv on the fritz, joe
had that too.
squeaky headboard
rattling
against the bedroom wall,
Joe could tighten
things up for you.
ten years later there were
a lot of children
in the neighborhood
that looked
exactly like Joe.

the cat is pleased with herself

when
one dog barks,
they all bark.
the whole street is full of windows
with dogs
barking.
it's a wild
fire of barking,
down
the block
into the next neighborhood,
and beyond.
the cat
is pleased with herself
as she
struts along.

hot dog

sometimes
it's best to stay dumb,
stupid,
if you may.
ignorance
being a sort of bliss
we can
live with.
why i looked up
how a hot dog
is made
is beyond me.
the ingredients being
a strange mix
of chemicals
and processed
meats
swept up into a skin
sweater.
it's ruined things for
the upcoming
holiday.
perhaps
just one slathered
in mustard and relish
this year
won't kill me.

the weight of you

in a moment
of clarity,
an epiphany of sorts,
i decide
to drop the weight
to the floor,
unstrap
it from my back,
my heart,
my mind.
no more do i need
to carry
you around
like before.

that kind of house is gone now

they tore
down the old house.
the rambler
built
in the 50's, the Eisenhower
Nixon
style house.
the brick and siding house
with a chimney
and a patio.
the conservative
black
and white tv house,
the mannered
house,
the apron
the tie, the square house
before
the music died
house.
the garden party house,
the martini lunch
house.
the church on Sunday
morning house.
the three kids
and a dog
house.
mom and dad, a chevy
in the driveway
house.
the manicured lawn
and rose bushes
house.
a grill in the yard,
a flag on the pole,
Christmas lights strung up
for the holidays.
that house.
it's gone now.

Saturday, May 18, 2024

is my turn now?

i feel a tiny
hope 
for humanity when the traffic
lights
go out
and everyone is
on their own,
on their
best behavior.
no one is in a rush,
everyone
being cautious, allowing
each a turn
at crossing the intersection.
making their turns
to the left
and right.
signals flashing,
lights on,
a wave, a nod, 
everyone being polite.
like in the old
days.

leaving the plant behind

for years
i possessed a plant,
a nameless
species
with giant leaves
that reminded me
of Paraguay, or some
distant land.
a gift from an old girlfriend
who
felt i needed something
in my little apartment
other than
a couch
a tv,
table and chairs.
beer cans.
it stood in the corner
for years,
turning various shades of
brown
as i forgot to water it.
people
would use it as an ashtray,
or a small
waste basket. cigarette
butts
filled the bottom,
young men being
the boys
they are.
did the plant mind the music,
the visitors
who came and went
at all hours, who knows.
but she survived
despite all odds.
at last i moved, but didn't
take it with
me.
i set it in the trash room,
nearby.

say everything or nothing

there are many
unsaid
words
that never reach an
ear.
getting older
can go
either way.
either you say everything
that's
on your mind
not worrying about who
hears,
or you say nothing
at all.
it's all been said before,
so who
cares?

making eye contact with a stranger on the path

i accidentally
made eye contact with someone on the path
the other day.
it was all blue
skies with a nice breeze,
a pleasant walk to the lake.
i nodded to a woman
and said,
good morning.
she screamed
and ran,
tripping and falling,
ripping her yoga pants,
then got back up and sprinted
away.
i said, hey, hey, i'm
sorry.
i shouldn't have run after her,
but i wanted to
tell her that i was new
in the area,
and didn't know it was wrong
to say hello
to people, strangers, when
walking
through the woods.
she had
pepper spray
and knew tai kwon do,
a newly minted yellow belt,
i presume.
she took a stance and made
a loud screeching
bird like noise.
she held the pepper spray
in the air
and warned me not to get
any closer.
thankfully i was able
to get away,
dashing into the woods
and circling
back home.

boxing lessons for pedestrians in NYC

it's a thing now
in the city
of Gotham,
to be walking down the street
and have
someone
walk up
and punch you in the face.
a simple
act of violence
for no reason.
makes no difference
if you're a man or a woman,
or if your
minding your own
business,
going to work,
to church,
just taking a walk in the park,
you may be punched at
any given moment.
i remember when
pigeons or wild taxi
drivers were
the main
problems in the city, or
panhandlers
in Times Square.
but now the sucker punch
is also
on the list.
it's best to
keep your head on a swivel,
duck and move,
slide
side to side. jab, jab,
stay light on your feet.
make use of the rope a dope
strategy, ala Ali
in the rumble in the jungle.

solving problems in the walk up

i tell the landlord
that
there are mice in the floorboards.
he calls
the super.
Max, who comes
over with
a flashlight and a hammer,
and a hunk
of cheddar
cheese.
one by one he takes care
of the mice.
anything else, he says
while i'm here?
yeah,
the radiator is making
noise at night.
he goes over and taps
it a few times.
okay, that should do it.
there you go.
sleep tight.

a therapeutical goldmine

you hear
the word trauma a lot these days.
post traumatic
or otherwise.
seems
everyone
has it.
it's the new
plague upon the world.
victimhood.
my mother,
my father, my husband,
my wife,
my significant other.
they all did
a number on me.
my job too.
my boss.
my landlord, my country,
my school.
a bird just flew close
to me.
someone mistook me
for a girl or a boy
when i'm
neither.
i'm so traumatized.
no seems able to just suck
it up
and move on anymore.
we need therapy
and
hugs, validation for
the trauma
we're going through and
can't get
rid of.
it's who we are.
a victim.

when your phone catches fire

i read
the small print.
it's complicated.
it's strange
and full of words no
one uses.
four pages worth
of
iron
clad statements
of liability,
and responsibility,
a formula
of payment
versus money down.
six months,
twelve
months. three years.
it's a spinning top
of babble
minus the music.
more data?
more minutes, an extra line?
insurance?
you just want out.
what can you do but sign
on the dotted
line.
your phone caught
fire
and now you need
a new one.

Friday, May 17, 2024

the Etcher Sketch

was there
a meeting at some point.
God
and His advisers,
angels perhaps
in deciding what
creatures would roam
the earth?
dinosaurs apparently
were a bad idea.
like the 
Etcher Sketch
pad
He seems to have
given the world 
a good shake 
and erased them off the face
of the earth.
but i have a few questions
to ask.
about such
things as snakes
and slugs, and
the Dodoo bird.
why here one day
and gone
the next?
makes me nervous.



we agree to agree on everything

early
on in the game.
we agree to agree on everything.
but with
time
and entanglement
and the
noose getting tighter,
we go
a different way,
the mask slips
and who
we really are begins
the see
the light of day.
i realize that
you forced yourself
to laugh
at my jokes,
and despite
not liking it,
i ate your cooking
anyway.

starting a new business

i have an idea
of how i can make money,
she tells me,
suddenly sitting up in bed,
and shaking
my shoulder.
it's three a.m.
i'm going to start a cupcake
business.
are you in?
what?
will you help me with my
new business.
you know how delicious
my cupcakes are,
everyone raves
about them.
are you in?
yes or no?
no.
is it a bad idea?
yes. do you know how
may cupcakes
you'd have to make everyday
for the rest
of your life
to make a profit.
a lot.
maybe ten million.
the world is not starving
for cupcakes.
now go back to sleep.


hardly one star now

it used
to be the plot
that put you in your seat
at the bijou.
the characters, the story.
whether mystery
or romance,
high drama of some sort.
all of it
on the big screen.
the writing bringing it
all together
with masterful strokes
of a pen,
but now
it's comic book heroes
and villains,
monsters and special
effects.
repeat and rinse
again and again.

the frayed red carpet

the meanness
took
the pretty out of her,
out of him
too.
funny how that works.
beauty
throwing
down
the red carpet, until
both are worn
and thin.
maybe karma 
really is a thing.

i'm not sure yet

i slip
uneasily into slippers,
and
a robe,
should i get a pipe
too
and do
retirement like
in the books,
with long
days
at late rising, taking
up golf,
pickleball
and such?
will i at last write the book?
is it time to celebrate
or mourn?
i'm not sure yet.

the blue stain of joy

the kid
with the snow cone
dripping
on his clean white
shirt, has
bit the pointed
bottom
off the cup.
the blue
goo
of syrup and melting
ice
goes
anywhere
and everywhere all
at once.
the mother smiles,
and sighs
but knows that
joy is fleeting,
ephemeral,
and
worthy of shirts
no longer being
white.

never is my guess

the radical
left
the radical
right
the silent majority,
a fine
mix
of polarizing crazy.
a hot
stew
of fear
and loathing,
ignorance and faux
bliss.
oh,
how will it ever end?
never
is my guess.

Thursday, May 16, 2024

the world is now too loud

it's a plunger of sorts,
a swirling
hot water
irrigation system, not
unlike
what Roto-Rooter might
use on a
clogged
toilet.
but this one is in your
ear canal.
seems there's a lot of sweet
potatoes
down there,
affecting your hearing.
both ears.
it's relatively painless
as it all washes
out,
but then you can hear 
everything everyone is saying.
each dumb
word coming out
of their mouth.
the world is suddenly 
too loud.

the catch and release policy

the new
policy is to catch and release
the criminals.
the prisons
are overcrowded.
there's
no more room
in cell block H.
there's not enough therapists
and social
workers to help
them onto the narrow path.
crime has become an easy
endeavor
to make a buck.
steal, rob, assault,
shoot em up.
you're never
locked away.
at least not for long.
a slap on the wrist
and out you go, with a 
warning to please, please,
we love you,
now try to obey.

checking the new box scores

i used to check
the baseball box scores
first thing
in the morning when i
retrieved the paper
from the bushes
near the porch.
how many hits did Mantle
get,
how many strikeouts
for Kofax,
or Whitey Ford.
who's in first place
with the Senators in last,
but now, i check the pollen
count,
the weather,
then turn the page
to see who has 
died, what caused it,
and at what age.

so far so soon

was it yesterday
the boy
was waiting
for the school bus,
then on his bike
going down
the street.
the toddler
with training wheels,
no more.
his kite in the air,
the ball
at his feet.
so far so soon
i think,
as i see him driving
his car.
already grown,
already
about to leave.

what should we be scared of next?

what are we not
scared of?
what new thing, what new
invention,
what online
presence
makes us pee in our pants
with fear.
the interest rates,
inflation,
the campus
chaos,
the wars far
and near.
what new scare will keep
us worried
and under our beds?
AI is next,
another virus perhaps,
put it up there with
sugar
and tobacco,
crime.

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

room for both

there are friends
that you tend to go into
deep
conversations with,
philosophical
and moral
discussions about the world
at the large.
life and death,
love
and regrets.
you fall back into chairs
and drink
and talk long
into the night
solving nothing, but getting
somewhere.
and then there are friends
that want
to discuss the score
of last night's game,
the ref's call,
the play made,
who won or lost,
how the weather affected
it all.
there's room for both
i suppose.

those cushions have to go

it's the domino
effect.
buy a new lamp for the small
table
in the corner
and the next thing you know,
you're shopping
for a new rug,
you're selecting paint
to complement
the shade,
and drapes,
art to hang on the wall.
what about a few
green plants?
the coffee table could
use a new
decorative plate,
and those old cushions
on the couch.
they definitely have to
go.

wallet in the back pocket

is my
phone secure, my
computer,
my assortment of laptops
and i pads?
is everything locked
down and safe,
all my accounts
and credit cards,
my social security
and Medicare
numbers?
is everything tucked
away
from prying eyes?
i hope so.
but i do miss the days
when i tapped
my back pocket to see
if my wallet
was still there.

they all came knocking

they all
came
knocking when my mother
was officially
divorced.
the fireman,
the milkman, the delivery
men.
they didn't care
about the seven children,
they just
saw the silhouette of her,
this Italian woman,
with long
black hair,
blessed
with curves
standing at the door.

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

reluctant acceptance

why measure,
why
take out the tape,
the spoon,
the glass cup
with markings.
why keep
track of anything?
the years
and days,
money, weight.
your height.
why are we so obsessed
with numbers?
telling us
we're losers,
or that we're great.
just wing it and stop
worrying.
make the most of it,
whether poor
or rich, giant
or small,
tubby or light.
give me a la dee da
and quit
whining.

why is there no sun anymore?

it will stop raining,
won't it?
the clouds will clear
and the sun
will
reappear in the blue
sky, right?
you do
remember the sun
don't you?
i do, but
vaguely. my memory
of it is
a large warm ball
of yellowish
white light.
who can we blame this
on?

purposely quiet

say
little and people
think
you're wise,
smart,
a thinker.
someone full of thought.
which may or may
not be true, but
talk too much and they
see right
through you,
all the way to the 
bottom
and back to the top.

finding the missing link

they find
a tiny shard of bone
deep
in a cave
in France
and decide that this is
the missing
link
between
ape and man.
this is the first real
indication
of thought and intelligence.
they think
it's his ring finger,
but there's no ring
attached.

going to the gym again

i'm going
to the gym today.
not to work out, but to just
walk up there
and around
the building,
then back home.
a good three miles.
i'll wave to the people
on treadmills
and bikes,
as they stare out the window
at the sunshine
and people walking
by.

let's play 18 today

when i'm playing golf, 
she says,
i don't think
about the world,
the news,
the whole catastrophe
of war
and famine,
crime and disease.
i think
about the bunker up
ahead,
the sand trap and
which iron to use.
i can get a birdie
if i reach the green
in three, she believes.
let's play 18 today, okay.

but it won't surprise you

little surprises you
these days.
campus revolutions.
ice bergs melting
into the sea.
sink holes
opening up on a road,
and the dead bird
my cat brought
home
and laid at my feet.
we are capable of bad
things,
but good things too.
you can't imagine what
will come next.
but it won't surprise
you.

the new bucket list

there are things
you will never do, things
you amusingly
put on your fad like bucket
list.
Kilimanjaro is out of the question,
as is swimming
the English channel.
you will not
be famous, or rich, you will
not live in a villa
in Florence.
nor will you marry a super
model
named Heidi,
or lose that last ten pounds
of belly fat.
no, the new list involves
taking a walk
around the lake with a
stale
bag of bread to feed the ducks,
then coming
home to take a nap.

Monday, May 13, 2024

okay, maybe we went a little too far

i'd love to be a fly
on the wall
of the tunnels dug deep
beneath the earth
and listen
to the terrorist commanders
talking
while they hide in
the sewers
below the day care center.
debating one another
about their
crazy blood lust
decisions
to murder, behead people,
kidnap, burn children
alive,
and rape.
jeez, i'm having second thoughts now,
one says,
wiping dried hummus off his face.
maybe we shouldn't
have started this war.
maybe we went
a little too far,
don't you think?
we should have thought
this through
a little more.
it's been six months
of nothing but us getting
bombed and running
in retreat.
this place is rubble now.
and what knucklehead had the idea
to film it all for the world
to see?
pass me some crackers
and peanut butter,
would you, i'm starving.
what day this is? what week?
my phone is dead.
i can't wait to take a shower
and get out
of this place.
anyone know where we
can get a white flag?
please raise your hand
if anyone here
has a clean white pillowcase,
or a reasonable pair of boxer shorts,
or a sheet?

a fly and his friends

i could chase
this fly
around all day as he
darts
between
the lamp shade,
the lights,
the curtains,
bouncing himself
off the screen
to the window.
i'm exhausted by him.
his endless
energy,
the constant buzz
of his wings.
i open the door to
give him
a way out, but in
comes more of his
friends.

Sunday morning bagels

it's Sunday morning.
i can tell
not because of the church
bells, but
because everyone is wearing
sweatpants,
or yoga
pants,
and flip flops
and crocs.
there's a hundred
people
in the bagel shop, the line
is out the door.
bags
of loaded bagels
are carried out.
weighted down with eggs
and bacon,
swabs of cream cheese.
there are dogs,
and more dogs
waiting for their owners.
some with scarves around
their furry necks.
it's a fashionable boulevard
besides
William and Sonoma
and Warby's.
Lulu Lemon.
across the street we'll get
a cup
of gourmet coffee.
it's the best. but sadly
no one sells the paper
anymore.

warning her next victim

i remember
paying alimony and child support
to the second wife
and not being
happy about it.
she never worked
and day in her life and
she was the one cheating
and sleeping
around,
spending money
like water,
but the judge and the lawyers
and the law
said, so what.
they cut everything in half.
savings,
investments,
equity in the house,
cars,
children,
and the dog.
the dog still has a scar
around his belly
where we had to saw
him in half.
to this day he runs when
i try to pet him.
i see where she's going through
another divorce.
i want to call
the poor fellow and
warn him
about how she taps the phones
and quickly
runs to the ATM.

the kiln ashtray

i remember making
my mother
an ashtray
for Mother's Day, she was
a pall mall
smoker,
two packs a day.
it was in the 7th grade
where we
had access to a ten thousand
degree
metal box called a kiln.
i constructed what looked
like a cave
fireplace
with a chimney at the top
for the smoke
to come out.
the front had an opening
where
the ashes would go,
or where the cigarette
could rest as she fed 
another baby with a bottle
of formula.
embarrassed to no end,
she quit smoking that day.
but thanked
me for the gift anyway.
my father
still uses it.

fast forward this movie

it's a bad movie,
two handfuls of popcorn
in
and i'm already
hitting the fast forward
button.
faster and faster
until at last i've
reached the end.
some books are like that
too, but instead
i stop reading and throw
them across
the room.

the night is long

it's a cold
night.
the bed
is a raft
in the north Atlantic.
your dreams
are sails
that pull you towards
dawn.
the moon is nothing
but a stone.
you shiver
and stare at the ocean
below you,
so much
that you still don't know.
you're adrift,
going nowhere,
the night
is long.

Sunday, May 12, 2024

who are these people?

there's a family
reunion
planned next month
somewhere
in New Jersey.
my mother's side
of the family.
each name ending in a vowel.
six Johnnys will
be there,
a few Joes and Stephens,
Leonard and Dolores,
of course,
Marie and Lena,
not to mention Sal,
and Enrico.
all the cousins will be there.
siblings,
aunts and uncles.
they've done
a group
text messaging thing.
pictures
are thrown in.
jokes are made,
who's coming, who
can't make it?
who will put away the grudge
for one evening?
is there free parking?
what's on the menu?
Uncle Francesco inquires
about his special
dietary needs.
who are these people?

the drop in visits

nice of you
to stop, but i wish you would
have called
ahead.
i don't like
surprises,
the drop in visits.
as you
can see by my clothes.
boxer shorts
and t-shirt,
no socks.
do you mind waiting out
here on the porch
for a while?
and by the way, what
do you want?
and i didn't catch
your name.

why even start a war?

do we have to pick sides?
are we
obligated to carry one flag
or the other,
can't we see
the middle ground,
see both sides a little.
or are we that stuck
in our views of the world.
opinionated beyond
change?
apparently so.
nobody likes war,
although
some like to start them
and blame
the other side.

Joe and Mabel's Crab House

the sign
says Fresh Fish
and crabs
daily.
let's hope so.
the newspaper covered
picnic tables
are alarming
though.
the cracker barrels
used as stools.
why are there bowls
of vinegar
on the table,
ketchup bottles galore,
pliers and hammers,
dental tools?
bright yellow boxes
of Old Bay seasoning.
what are these stiff 
fried crunchy
things
in baskets making us full.
hush puppies,
they say,
which reminds so much
of my
grade school
shoes.
and the beer, dear Lord,
the beer
keeps coming.
happiness
on a Saturday.

it's their turn soon

our batteries
are low.
the charge is slipping
away.
how we
walk
is slow.
the young don't understand
our ways.
we're
disappearing
as fast
as they made us.
beyond
middle age.
our wisdom and learning
will
be a part of the past,
it's their
turn
to make mistakes.

a single slice of her cake

what is it that you want,
not need,
but want.
which desire will satisfy you,
make you
at long last content.
is it money,
or fame,
a bigger house?
what thing that the world
offers
will please you
to no end?
maybe a slice of your
mother's chocolate
cake. if she was
still around to bake one.
maybe that will end all
longings,
maybe that will suffice.

i can't stay long

it's a hard day
for
people who hate their mothers,
who never
got along with
them.
who cringe at their nagging,
their lack
of cooking skills,
or tender
care,
absent of a single attribute
that most
mothers have.
it's tough to buy
a card
for them,
to smile and kiss them on
the cheek
and pretend
that you love them,
as you give them flowers.

the lime green house

the lime
green house on the corner
gets looks
from passerby's,
oh my,
they exclaim.
what were they thinking?
what a strange
color for the entire
house.
what are they trying
to tell us?
is it a cry for help or
was it just
left over
paint
half price at the paint
store,
on the floor, no longer
on the shelf.

Saturday, May 11, 2024

all the pretty green bottles

i research
what vitamins to take, then buy
a bottle.
this one
for hair loss,
this one for memory,
this one for inflammation,
this one
for clarity of mind,
and this one
to get the blood flowing
in a certain
direction.
after a week or so,
i forget what they're all
for and stop
taking them.
but they look nice on
the kitchen window
shelf.

nine decades in

even at this age,
wisdom escapes him. forgiveness
still
is elusive.
grudges are held.
even now,
nine decades into this life,
he's still
alone with himself
needing pleasure,
needing to be held.
but giving little in return.
this ship will never
turn around,
just sink
and lie there on some
dark
ocean shelf.

on the other side

i could
hear weeping, sadness.
there were
whispers made,
flowers were brought in.
people had to be
consoled.
there was music playing.
one by one,
they came up to peer
in, to see me lying there.
to catch a glimpse
of what death
resembled.
but i gave them nothing
i stayed still
in my fine suit, my tie
and ironed shirt.
wonderful things
were said about me,
over doing it,
while others
remained silent.
then someone put a rose
upon my chest.
but still i  didn't move.
i didn't let on that everything
was fine.
even better than that,
i had arrived.

oh my God, i can't find my phone

have you
seen my phone? she asks me,
as she searches
under the bed.
she's frantic.
worried, she's tossing the sheets
off,
throwing pillows
into the air.
i can't find my phone,
she says.
have you seen it?
her eyes are bugging out,
her face
is pale.
she runs into the bathroom,
then down
the stairs,
she goes out to her car,
empties the garbage
can,
i can't find it, she screams.
everything,
everything,
my life is in there.
finally, i take it out
of my pocket and hand
it to her.
it's only been lost
for five minutes, i tell her,
but
you've had
twenty-four text messages,
three calls
and thirteen emails.

being grateful

what isn't taken
for granted?
these hands for instance.
covered in
paint and grease, cuts
and scrapes.
old man hands.
my father's hands.
curled hard
from work.
they do so much for me
and others,
though i hardly
give them a thank you
by the end
of the day.

letting the boat list

the sailor
needs wind to get across the bay.
he needs
to know
his boat,
the rigging, the sails,
the rudder.
but he's tired of this
and lets
it all drift
and drift
some days are like that.
we just want
to let go
of the wheel
and let it all list.

the enormous room

the room
is empty.
it's a canyon
of sorts,
minus
cacti and tumbleweeds,
coyote
and vultures
circling. but
it's a large expanse
of nothing but
darkness
in the corners.
vague light
from the windows.
the absence
of you makes it
more
quiet and needy.
without you,
there's only the echo
of my own
voice.
i'll fill it soon.

a few hundred grand down the drain

i see my neighbor
scraping
the ivy league sticker off
the bumper
of his car.
he went there, his wife did
as well.
both proud alumni
and successful,
and now his
daughter is there too.
well she used to be,
she's now
expelled
for vandalizing
the campus,
using hate speech,
and terrorizing Jews.
she'll be home soon.
he asks me if i have anything
to help remove
the glue.

take a break and get some air

i see you
at the top of the stairs,
crying.
head in hands.
it's Tuesday.
your body
trembles.
i excuse myself as i walk 
by you.
what is there
to say
again, this time.
take a break
from your
self-inflicted troubles
maybe,
and get some air.

riches to rags and back again

rags to riches
and riches
to rags and back again.
success
is fleeting, as is poverty
if you
work and save,
and 
keep a clean nose
and walk the narrow path.
tragedies occur, for
sure,
health and accidents.
fate gets
in the way of many
trying,
but for the most part
it's up to you
to change things,
to turn your life around.

Friday, May 10, 2024

we were fish in the summer

we were
fish
in the summer.
sun burned
and awash with chlorine.
scrapes
on our knees and elbows
from the high
dive,
the low dive,
the rope in the middle.
our eyes, red and bleary.
but we
loved it.
diving for coins in
the deep end.
swimming from side
to side
underwater.
running and being yelled
at by the lifeguard
in her chair.
despite her demands,
most of us
loved her and believed
one day
we would marry
that goddess with a whistle,
the cream
on her nose,
the brown of her skin,
the blonde
hair flowing down.
what human being
had legs that long?
how we wanted for August
to drag on.
we were fish in the summer.

our making love schedule

in the early
days
we were rabbits.
was there a time of day
or night
when we wouldn't get
busy
with making love?
did it matter
if it was in the car,
in an alley,
an empty stairwell
in a parking
garage?
bathrooms were not
out of the question either
with a good lock on the door,
or on a picnic blanket in
the secluded hollow
of trees.
two three times,
maybe four
if we weren't exhausted
and sore.
ah, they were energetic
and sweaty
times. we were limber then,
extremely flexible.
where there's a will, there's
a way.
i think Churchill said that.
but now,
we're more selective,
we schedule
in a session.
we arrange our days,
we plan
our nights.
we say things like Tuesday
night is
good for me, you?
we try to get on with
it before
face the nation comes
on in the morning,
or before midnight
after the dog has been walked
and the trash
taken to the curb.
yes, we're
slowing down, but in
truth,
it's better now.

still life gone bad

she liked to paint still life.
but not
golden apples,
or fresh strawberries,
ripe
bananas,
green grapes catching
sunlight.
no,
she like the rotted fruit,
the brown spot
found,
the flies
buzzing over
blackened peaches.
oranges gone
rancid, berries
gone sour.
i couldn't help but fall
in love,
with someone like that.

sleeping well in spite of everything

i like the unworried look
in some
old people's eyes.
a look of peace
and contentment,
nothing phases them anymore.
little raises
their blood pressure.
they've seen it all.
a few world wars,
terrorism,
chaos and what not.
crime and divorce,
poverty
and bad health.
they've been there
and done that.
you can't rattle them.
they know that all of this
insanity is normal,
and will pass,
before it's time for more.
they seem amused by
it all.
not losing a minute of sleep
over a world
gone wild.

making the home presentable

as children
we were given the task
of cleaning up
after mom
and dad
battled into the late
night hours.
engaging in a full blown
domestic war.
one sister was in charge
of sweeping
up the glass,
while i rubbed the blood
off the walls.
a brother, nailed
the screen door back on,
while
another
hid the whiskey bottles.
we turned the chairs
back over,
we put the knives
and forks
back into the drawer,
scooped
up cold chicken bones,
and peas from
the floor.
we had to make the place
presentable before
the welfare
department came knocking
at the door.

the hunger strike on campus

you can't help
but laugh a little as the protestor
cries for help,
saying that
she's starving and near
death
because she skipped her 
snack between
meals while
screaming
about death
to others.
no snickers bar for her,
no bagel,
or bag of chips,
no ice cream or latte
from Starbucks,
no peanut butter chocolate
granola bar.
dinner is nearly an hour
away.
but she's doing her
part.
poor thing is wasting away.
she's faint and can barely
move her
lips.

the next new leaf

there are
many acts to each play,
each life,
there's a second
chance,
a third,
a fourth if need be
over time.
eventually all is either
forgotten
or forgiven
and life moves
on.
once more
we turn over 
the next new leaf.
we're all cats with
many lives.

in on the game

is the thumb on
the edge of every butcher's
scale?
cheating the weight.
is the world
rigged.
is there a huckster
on every
corner,
a thief, a scammer
in every 
call you take.
is nothing on the up
and up.
is anyone not in on
the game?
sometimes it feels
that way.

the common life

it's easy to rise,
to wake
up and do what you've always
done.
your mouth opens
for food
and drink,
your clothes go on.
you have a routine,
a common
life to follow.
today
will be much like the day
before.
be thankful
for that.

Thursday, May 9, 2024

the prosperity teacher healing

my allergies to tree pollen
have gotten so
bad that i place my hand on
the television
and ask the televangelist
preacher
to heal me.
i watch intently as i sneeze
and blow my nose.
he says that for a thousand
dollars
i can be free of this ailment
or any other ailment
the devil has cast upon me.
begone, he says to someone
on the screen, slapping
an old lady's head,
telling her to rise from
her wheelchair and toss
aside those crutches.
someone wheels her away,
as she seems
to be unconscious.
he suggests using
a credit or a debit card,
but will take checks too,
or an envelope full of cash
slipped under his mansion
door in Palm Springs.
i write a check and send it
off with a note.
writing the words,
allergy to tree pollen.
please heal me. thanks.
i'm waiting patiently
as i open another box
of Kleenex, and spray
more antihistamines
up my nose.

i'll do or say anything to get your vote

it's nearing election time.
both
sides of the mouth
are wide open.
the flip flops begin.
what was the truth is now
a lie,
and what was a lie
is now truth.
the spin is in.
tell me what you want
to hear.
i'll say and do nearly
anything
for your vote.
we need to win.
let's save this country
together.
and please ignore the last
four years
and what i said
an hour ago.

maybe tomorrow will be different

i miss the bus.
it's raining, but i keep walking.
i have no
umbrella.
before long i am soaking
wet.
my shoes have filled
with water.
my hair is matted
on my head,
my arms are heavy,
my legs are cold
and slow down,
but i keep walking. 
i start coughing
as i lean into
the wind,
but i need to get to where i
need to go.
isn't that what people
tell you to do?
keep going, don't give up.
don't surrender.
maybe tomorrow will
be different.

they are running

they are running.
i see them
in the park, around the block,
down
the paths
and streets.
circling, doing laps
into the dark.
they are going somewhere.
they need to run.
they need
to look at their watches
and pick up the pace.
they need to ignore
the pain,
the weather.
others in their way.
they need to toss aside
the idea
of aging.
they are running, running,
most unsure of
to where, or
what from.

time for a diaper change

the babies are crying.
i can hear
them
on the campus not far down
the road.
they're hungry
and tired,
they need a change of
clothes.
their voices are hoarse
from begging,
from whining.
demanding things they
can never have.
uneducated despite
being in ivy league schools.
and now it's raining,
and they're cold.

Medusa hair

in high humidity
her
bright red hair takes on a life
of its own.
the curls
take on more curls.
it's a bloom,
it's a bouquet of flowers
and vines,
thickets and bramble.
it brings Medusa
to my mind.

the devil's work, i'm sure

it's the devil's work,
i'm sure of
that.
getting stuck on thoughts
about you
or her, or him,
or someone
else that has gotten under
my skin.
dark ruminations.
i am a dog
with a bone with these
thoughts,
unable to cast them aside,
and move on.

something i haven't been told

a best friend
is gone,
so is another friend.
another.
a lover,
a parent, people
are disappearing
from
the world.
i feel like there is 
something
more to this,
something i haven't
been told.

Wednesday, May 8, 2024

more came to do the same

it was a lower middle
class
neighborhood, with average
children,
average
men and women.
factory workers,
hair stylists
and secretaries. blue
collar folk.
two cars,
a dog, a cat.
and a yard
captured by a chain link
fence.
duplexes
stuck together
with a flat tar roof.
everyone waved
and barbequed on the weekend.
they shoveled
snow together.
some went to church
on Sundays.
they borrowed things
from one
another.
became friends.
the women gossiped
while
hanging their wet clothes
on the line out back.
the men
bowled
on Friday nights.
wearing shirts
like Marlon Brando.
some moved in the later
years, went south.
some died
in their homes.
eventually they were
all gone.
but more people came
to do the same. why not?


leave the moon alone

i want the moon
of my
youth, the milk glow of it,
the poetry
of its face,
it's dark side.
i want the footprints
erased,
i want the junk removed,
the surface
cleaned and swept
free of
earthly debris.
please, leave the moon alone,
it's never hurt
anyone.

missing one another is never equal

as the train
pulls away from the station.
i see you
out the window,
standing on
the platform with
tears in your eyes,
hand
raised.
disappearing slowly
from view.
your blue coat
a dot now.
a blur.
a mirage.
i go back to my book.
missing one another
is never equal.
on the return trip things
will have
to change.

no change tomorrow

the window
is clear
with the green outside,
the red
bird on wing.
your life is up for grabs.
tomorrow
a mystery.
but what else is new?
has there
been a day
or an hour gone by that
you haven't
felt this way?
i see no change tomorrow
or the next
day.

compulsions

he had a thing
with cleanliness, washing his hands,
a dozen times
a day.
i'd see him over the sink,
with soap
and a scrub brush,
the hot water steaming,
fogging
the room.
slowly, he worked at his.
fingers and palm,
the nails and
knuckles, all the way
up to his wrist.
it was like a surgeon
before
the scalpel cuts in.
i always wondered what sins
he was trying to
wash away and push down
the drain.

i'm not really here

you can be somewhere,
physically
in the room,
in a seat, and yet,
not be there.
you're going through
the motions
of being there. you're polite,
and nice,
you shake hands
and make small talk, 
but
you aren't really there.
you're elsewhere.
you wonder if your smile
gives you away.
strange to feel this way
most of the time.

that's what friends are for apparently

because she belongs
to the country club,
friends and relatives
appear out of nowhere
and think they
belong too.
when are we eating in
the restaurant, drinking
beer in the pub?
they have a happy hour
that we'd love
to go to.
can we play a round of
golf and use
the pool, the gym?
can you take us there
again?
weekends are best for us.
please get us a tee time,
we love you, you're the best.
and don't forget parking
passes, that's a must.

maybe it's time to take down the tree

because
the trees are green again,
we go on.
we part
ways with winter,
gladly.
we put the heavy
coats
away, the boots and gloves.
the scarves.
and at last
we take down
the Christmas tree.
lights, then ornaments
packed.
May seems
like a good time for that.

the new tenant

the room
begs for light, for a chair,
a rug
centered in the middle.
it talks to you
as you stand
there in the emptiness
of walls
and hard floor.
it asks
you to make it
yours.
to bring it life. who
lived here
before won't mind.
they're curious too
as to what
this space could be.
sometimes you may hear
them
walking
around at night.

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Saturday Heaven

it was always a double feature
at the Atlantic Theater
next to the Rexall Store
on Atlantic Street in southeast DC.
cartoons and previews too.
there was an enormous
burgundy curtain that was
slowly pulled open
as the show began and the
lights went down.
we had popcorn and candy,
sodas as we settled in.
we'd spend the entire
Saturday in those hard
seats with the air condition 
blowing down.
it was heaven.
nothing quite like it
has ever been found.

heading to Florida

everyone
it seems of a certain age
is moving
to Florida.
collecting
their pay and heading south.
cashing in.
i see them packing
their cars,
their trucks
and vans. loading things
onto the roof.
the kids are grown,
the dogs
have died.
now it's our time they
say with
a weary smile.
golf clubs and fishing
poles hang
out the window
as they take off, 
but they don't get far,
they have to stop 
to pee
before the second mile.

tilt, game over

what's bothersome
about
catching someone in a lie,
is not that
they lied,
but that now you will
never believe a
word they say anymore.
there's no going
back. tilt, game over.

leave none

the exterminator
asks me
if i want all the rats
taken care
of,
each and every one
that's
been chewing up
the wires,
causing chaos
and fires,
do you want them all
gone?
yes, i tell him, of course.
leave none.

killing the bee

the bee,
after striking it with a large
book,
the latest
biography of Sylvia Plath,
called
The Red Comet,
struggles to stay
alive,
to take flight.
the anger is apparent
as the wings
flex and stinger
protrudes out.
the irony of it all does
not escape me.
seeing that Otto Plath,
was a beekeeper
for most of his life.
again i drop the book
down upon
the bee.
swiftness
is better than lying
there in
misery.

ants in their pants

as the pool opens,
i look over
at the blue squared
concrete pond
surrounded
by a chain link fence
and barbed
wire.
maybe this is the year
i finally go in.
take a dip,
go for a pleasant swim
in the neighborhood
pool
but then i see
the line of children,
dancing
with ants in their pants,
at the door,
and i cringe. i know
what children do
once they touch water.

there's a cricket in the house

there's a cricket
in house,
listen,
hear that? 
he's rubbing his little
green legs
together
as he hops about.
what is that, music,
morse code.
is he trying to tell
us something?
is he hungry, thirsty.
maybe i should
put a bowl of water
out,
a sandwich
with some chips
and a pickle.

dear Abby again

sobbing, she tells me
the story
of her ex-boyfriend, their six
year
relationship.
he was cheating the whole
time,
she tells me.
lying to me with a straight
face.
how can i ever move
on with my life.
i wake up every morning
with him
on my mind.
drinking doesn't help,
therapy
is a waste of time.
please, you've gone through
this a lot,
can you give me any
advice on how to move on?
delete, block, and no contact,
i tell her.
take back your life.
have a bonfire in the back yard.
burn everything
that they gave you.
then be thankful
you came out the other side.

the portrait painter

do people
sit for portraits anymore.
presidents
and big wheels,
dictators,
and movie stars?
are there people dressed
up and holding
the pose
just so,
being still so that the artist
can capture
the essence of who 
they are,
or who they're
pretending to be?
or is it just the phone now.
click
and before sending,
edit
to clean up the wrinkles
and bags
under the eyes.
maybe do some reverse
aging with AI.

peeling off some Benjamins

i click
the dials of the safe
and pull
open the door.
i need
some money,
some paper money, some
hard cash
in my pocket.
i peel a few Benjamins
from the stack.
i feel like buying
something
frivolous today,
something
i don't need, but want
just for the hell
of it.
i'm open to suggestions.
but by the end
of the day i'm
opening the safe again
to put it back.
there's nothing i want,
something
i'd never thought i'd say.


finding the strange world

what magic
these
bugs were, these fireflies
on the hands
of children,
unafraid.
slow winged
and easy to catch.
captured
in mason jars
with perforated lids.
what a strange world
it was
to be discovered
back then
and still is.

Monday, May 6, 2024

the woman in the French bikini

while tanning
himself in the backyard,
stretched
out on a plastic lawn chair,
cradling
a cold beer
in his hand.
i cautiously asked my
father if he'd
like to play
catch.
he squinted at me in the blazing
sun, 
and said, what?
it's a little hot for that,
isn't it?
maybe later, okay.
then i looked over at the yard
beside ours,
and saw
the woman
in a French bikini putting
coconut oil on.
sure dad, i said.
sure.

banging pots and pans together

he sends
me his poems.
i cringe, i can barely get through
the first ten,
two hundred
more to go.
if he was a musician,
this would be the equivalent
of banging pots
and pans
together
and calling it music.
how do i tell him this?
how do i break
his heart,
when all his friends
tell him it's gold.