Sunday, December 15, 2024

a savior in overalls

i'm waiting
on the front stoop for the plumber
to arrive.
i've given
up
on the wrench,
the leak,
the drips,
the puddle of cold water
on the floor.
i need a savior
in overalls.
i pray that
a blank check should
suffice,
that it will save me 
once more.

nothing to see here, all is well

like enormous
bees
they arrive in droves
buzzing up
and down,
between the clouds,
the trees.
dozens of them.
large as cars,
small
as dogs.
strange drones.
what are they?
biological
weapons,
nuclear bombs?
hovering with no
rhyme or reason.
are they eyes,
not so secret surveillance
on our lives?
but the government says,
with a grey coat shrug,
beats me,
but 
all well,
no worries.
nothing to see here.
go back
into your homes.

president elect

let me tell
you
about the speed bumps
in our
development
of a hundred
houses.
why o why
are there
three foot high
concrete
embankments
that we need to cross
over
in order
to get to the red light
and out
onto the roads
beyond
our confines.
a mere fifty yards
away.
the bottom of the car
scrapes
and moans,
sparks fly
even at a crawl.
next year i'll running
for the board.
and they
will be gone.
welcome to community
DOGE.

Saturday, December 14, 2024

what knees are for

there are days,
sometimes weeks, when
you feel like God 
isn't real, 
almost
like He doesn't exist,
and never
did.
the dark thought 
goes through
your mind
that maybe
religion
is a hoax. a myth.
and then
tragedy occurs, 
and before the sun
goes
down,
you're on your knees
in prayer.

not a lost moment

we drive
two hours in bad weather
to go
hear the famous
poet speak
and read his poems.
many that we know by heart.
we have his books
on our
shelf, on the floor,
or near
the bathtub,
a few
in the car when traffic
stalls.
dogeared
and worn,
pages torn.
coffee stains on the cover.
we each
have our favorites.
and then
the announcement is made
as the room
fills, and settles in,
removing coats
and hats,
woolen scarves.
he wont
make it tonight.
he's ill.
quickly i take out my notebook,
there's a new poem in here
somewhere.

if you could read my mind

nobody knows
you.
not really.
nobody knows
exactly who you are
and what
you're thinking.
and you
don't know them either.
mind reading
would be a disastrous
ability to have
in most
relationships
that are arriving
or leaving.

the red tin of cookies

i get the round
red
tin of cookies that my father
sends
every year
for Christmas.
he used to send
the large
tin,
but this year it's the smaller
version
holding
the three tiers
of cookies
in little aprons.
i go down my list
of possibilities
to see who
i can regift it to.

checking on the temperature

i stick
a bare leg
out the door
to check on the weather.
and sure enough,
it's cold
out.
i look down the block
and see other
legs
sticking
out from other doors.
some with socks,
some without.
i see the woman
three doors
up with a fishnet
stocking on
and a high heel.
it's a long leg
pointing up to the clouds.
i hear she used to be
a Rockette.

bread to die for

at some
point i have to pay a visit
to the new
local bakery
that everyone is raving
about
on the next-door app.
the cinnamon rolls
are to die for,
the cakes
and bagels,
the cookies and pies
are amazing.
go early
and get the bread
fresh and warm
right out of the oven.
yelp gives it four stars.
it's located right next
door to the pharmacy
selling boxes
of Ozempic.

Friday, December 13, 2024

the writer's group

i join
the Wednesday night writers' group
at the local school,
Franklin Elementary,
7 until 9 pm.
unless it snows.
there's a picture
of Benjamin
Franklin
on the wall.
i'm angry at myself
for doing so.
i'm not above
this
or below this, i just feel
out of place,
like i don't
belong.
i say nothing and sit
there
like a stone.
slowly
i make myself smaller
and check
the nearest exit.
maybe i can get at least
one pedestrian
poem
out of this before i
sneak out,
but these two hours
are so long,
and the desks
so small.

seven games on tv today

i used to like
sports.
played them all 
from
baseball
to tennis,
to football
and basketball.
i watched the games,
on tv,
one per week.
i read the sports page
every morning
to check the box scores
on my favorite players,
or teams
i had cleats and jerseys,
gloves
and pads,
helmets and whatever
each sport
needed.
i played in the mud
and rain.
i sat on bleachers
in cold stadiums,
or on
hot July days.
i wore the colors.
i sang the songs, i hung
the flag
out on the porch.
i yelled and screamed
with each
loss or win.
and now.
not so much.
there's too much money
in it. too much
worship.
too much narcissistic
fame.

taking the bullet train

we become
fast
new friends. we text
and call,
we are
so much alike,
we are on
the bullet train
towards love,
and then,
like so much life,
you're gone.

your long left leg

i remember
your
left leg. just the left leg
for some reason,
not the right
one.
it's the one leg you let
hang out
from under
the sheets
and blanket.
letting it drape long
and pale
over the side of the bed.
i can still
see it now.
it's the leg of a statue.
cold marble,
unalive.
the opposite
of Venus De Milo.

i'm not lost, just delayed

i'm lost
but i refuse to pull over
and ask
someone
where i am.
i learned this from my
father.
it's cheating
to use my navigation
system, or
gps, or Waze.
i'd rather drive
for another hour
or so,
burning gas.
i continue on
wandering through
this maze.
but then,
mother nature calls
and tells me
to stop.
and ask,
it's either that or
i wet my pants,
or find
an old coffee cup rolling
around in the back.

as long as you don't get married again

so where are we now,
i ask
Betty,
my tax consultant
and
life coach,
all around advisor
on things,
large
and small.
do i have enough dough
to finally
quit work
and sleep in late?
she readjusts the wig
on her head,
and wipes
her fogged glasses
on the sleeve
of her
mountain dress.
she flips through my
paper work,
licking her fingers
with each turn
of a page.
well, she says. with what
you have
now, you
should be good for
another thirty years
or so,
as long as you don't get
married again.

Thursday, December 12, 2024

waiting for my presidential pardon

i'm waiting patiently
for my
presidential pardon.
i know old Joe
is busy
and probably has carpel
tunnel syndrome
from signing a few thousand
pardons
of his nearest and dearest
friends, but i'd like
the years between 1970
and 2023 to be
covered,
ala Hunter.
i can't remember half
of the things
i did,
or may have done,
or have been
accused of doing
by disgruntled siblings
and girlfriends,
but a full pardon
and clemency
would be a nice Christmas
gift this year.
thanks, Joe.
i didn't vote for you, but
i think you're
a swell guy.

the incident at St. Raymond's

i accidentally
sat down in a pew,
at church,
in a spot where an
old couple had been
sitting
for forty years.
excuse me, they said,
but that's where
we sit.
i looked over
my shoulder at the dozens
of empty pews,
and said,
i'm sorry, but there's
plenty of room.
get up, the woman said,
or else,
holding up her umbrella,
the man
took out a cannister
of pepper spray
and said get the hell out of
our seats,
but i refused to move.
then the service stopped,
and the choir
came rushing over,
the altar boys
drew swords, the priest,
ran up
with his holy water.
but i grabbed
a hymnal and began to sing
and pray,
i hung on.

the narcissistic pandemic

when you
dive
into the whole narcissist thing,
reading a few
books
and scrolling through
the countless
you tube videos
on the subject,
you begin to realize
that the entire world is
narcissistic.
and you aren't
far from wrong, as
you stand
in front of the mirror,
examining 
your receding hairline.

yes, it is cold out today

at times,
i miss the lack of verbal
communication
with
wise souls.
philosophers and theologians.
teachers
and gurus.
i need a complex
thought
to ponder,
a stimulating conversation
of some sort
to awaken me.
my barista
where i get my coffee
just isn't
getting it done
anymore.

delete block and no contact

i haven't
had
an emotional crisis in ages,
i suddenly
realize
one morning,
getting out of bed.
knock on wood i whisper
to myself.
which i do,
reaching over to knock
my knuckles against
the scratched
and wobbly
headboard.
i haven't been sick,
or cried,
or been to therapy
in years.
i'm sleeping well,
eating right
and enjoying life.
can this be real?
yes, it is.
deleting, blocking
and going no contact
is a wonderful cure.

the one cure all for all ailments

chicken soup
was
my mother's answer to every
ailment,
or broken bone
or any emotional crisis
you might be going through.
blow your nose,
she'd say,
i'm making soup.
stop whining.
you'll feel better in no
time.
you've already missed
too much school
or work.
divorce?
no problem.
she'd be at the door
with a giant
pot of chicken noodle
soup
and a thermometer.
freeze what you don't eat,
she'd say.
it'll be good for
months.
and don't call me during
my shows,
okay?

110 over 75 after you visit

my blood
pressure is a roller coaster
ride
of numbers.
it's up,
it's down.
the sight of a white
coat
holding a needle makes
it jump
like a Musk rocket
heading
to the moon.
the sound of a baby
crying on
a crowded train,
or when it's tax
time again.
when i see a cop behind
me with
his party lights on.
my blood pressure rises
and my heart
beats like a rabbit.
only sleep,
and making love with you
seems to bring
it down
again.
come on over,
we can solve this.

drones and the slanted roof

strange objects
are flying
overhead, drones from
the beyond.
are they armed
with 
bombs?
biological weapons?
Barney Fife has his gun
drawn,
but no one
seems to care much.
the government
shrugs, the president
says,
beats me.
it's not unlike the danger
of a slanted
roof,
left alone.
let's move on.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

back scratching instructions

no,
i tell her. up,
three inches to the left,
use your nails,
enough
with this rubbing
nonsense.
scratch.
now
down,
go right a little,
down the spine,
there,
at the edge of my boxer
shorts,
lightly please,
now up again, near
my shoulders,
my neck.
a little harder,
there,
right there.
don't be afraid to dig in.
ahhh.
i think you've got it.

planning the big holiday party

we sit down
with some spiked eggnog
to plan
the big holiday party.
what food
to buy,
what drinks,
whiskey or wine?
should we 
have it catered this year,
or call in for help
from friends
and neighbors?
what about plates
and glasses,
silverware?
which people have special
dietary needs?
what about parking
and the noise
that might bother the uninvited
neighbors.
(Becky)
what music should we play?
what about
political
affiliations, will that
be an issue
this year.
do we have enough room?
should we move
the furniture
in case dancing takes place?
what about the dogs
and your crazy sister,
who was just released?
exhausted
we finally agree, 
let's go out this year.

what's mine is not yours

to cover
the round black dining
room
table,
modern
against the white
chairs,
she placed a pink frilly
cloth,
something from
the age
of Woodstock.
nearly a quilt 
for a love child
still
wandering in the rain,
lost.
it went against
everything
i believed in.
she knew that,
but did it anyway.
it took time,
before i took it off.
it burned beautifully 
in the bonfire
out back.

last light

narrow
light 
from a faraway sun
will find
a way
in
between the cracked
boards
of the bent house
falling
on its old legs.
white rays
still shine
against
shards
of glass hanging
on to window
frames.
what was here is gone.
but the light
comes in.

beyond the rough

i'm beyond
the rough, into the deep furrows
of thick
grass
and brush.
the hole is a hundred
yards away,
or more.
i can't even see the flag.
the wind
is blowing as i stand
here
with one
foot in water,
the other
in sand.
my eyes are closed
as i swing away.
some
days are all like
that.
stuck in the rough,
please call.

go on, it's your turn now

there are some
days
when you feel prehistoric.
everyone
is younger
than you.
policemen,
politicians, 
lawyers and doctors.
you look around
at all the lineless
faces
in the cars
flying by,
the full heads of hair,
you see
the spring
in their steps,
the young children
in their arms,
you sit down and watch
with a wry smile,
this brave
new world.
it's their turn now.
which
is fine.
you gladly make room
and let
them pass by.

the Christmas Sweater

i don't like
what i'm wearing, 
the Christmas sweater
is too red, 
with reindeer flying
through a snowy
sky, so i take
it off and start all over again.
i stand further
away from
the mirror and dim
the lights.
that's better.
should i wear black again?
i look out
the window, it's raining,
it's cold.
maybe grey today.
with a black scarf.

we haven't changed

the small
photo of a young woman
is still in
my wallet.
the edges yellowed,
crimped,
but she's still beautiful.
mona Lisa
in a graduation gown.
she was
my sweetheart,
my girlfriend,
my one
and only.
it's fifty years old,
at least.
i'm sure, she hasn't
changed.
the same as me.
one day,
i say to myself
and tuck it back it in,
for safe
keeping.

dazed and confused at the Mall

i haven't been
in a mall for years.
but
for an adventure i drive
over to
Springfield Mall,
famous
for car jackings,
assaults
and murders.
cameras are everywhere.
signs, saying
don't leave
valuables in your car.
break ins are frequent
and the barbed
wire
is disturbing.
i see a hooded gang
of miscreants
in the garage,
hiding in the shadows
passing around a large
drink
from Orange Julius.
quickly i make a mad dash
towards J.C. Penny's,
but the doors are locked.
the gang
is chasing me.
i follow the smell of 
Cinnabon's around
the corner,
and try that door, but Sears
and Roebucks is
closed too.
i see a security guard riding
by in his smart
car, licking
and ice-cream cone.
i try to wave him down,
but he waves back
and drives on.
i begin to empty my pockets
of cash,
leaving it behind
to try and slow
the gang down.
finally i make it to the main
entrance
and dive through the glass doors,
hitting my head
on a fountain spewing
up colored water.
woozy,
and glassy eyed,
i look around.
there's Spencer's
and Aunties Pretzels,
kiosks to get a battery for
my watch.
Hahn's and Kay Jewelers,
massage chairs
and Victoria Secrets.
i'm dreaming that it's 1980
all over again.
there's Chess King where i bought
my first ill
fitting suit
and Hickory Farms
with stacks
of beef logs.
and over there,
next to Radio Shack,
there's the food court,
where a woman
puts a piece of pork
on a toothpick
near my mouth and says,
want to try?
i say, yes, thank you.
home at last.
a tear falls from my eye.

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

autobiographies of Hollywood stars

the autobiographies
of new
stars, child stars,
unknown
and already fading
stars
is bothersome.
tv
people,
a cast of characters
in
cartoon movies.
singers
who sang one
song.
they put their lives
out there
for examination,
full of wisdom
and advice
despite
sill being babes in the woods
at thirty
or twenty-one.
it's page after
page
of baby food,
soft carrots and plums.
chewable
without teeth, 
just gums.

we were all beautiful once

we were all beautiful
once.
before we befriended
the sun,
before gravity
and grief
got a hold of us.
we were all lovely
creatures when
newborn, held in our
mother's arms,
we were like lights
walking about
with our smiles
and glistening hair, 
the gait
in our step, the cheerfulness
that one has
when not knowing
what is yet to come.
we were all
beautiful once, and many
still are
if you take the time
to talk to them.

i think he ghosted me

she tells
me
on the phone how her lover
of six months
has left her
standing at the altar.
well
not the altar exactly,
but at
Starbucks
on the corner of 59th
and Lexington.
i waited and waited,
she tells me,
but he never
showed up.
i bought him his usual
cup of coffee
and a maple
scone.
but he never arrived.
i texted him,
i called.
i looked up and down
the street.
i sat there and read 
the newspaper, i ate
the scone.
i had another cup of coffee
and then i had
to go in to pee.
that's when he showed up.
he looked around
and left when he couldn't
find me.
so i guess it's over.
i think he blocked me on
his phone.
what should i do?
i don't even know his last
name, or where
he lives.
i think he might be married
though.
i could see his ring
in his pants pocket.

act one is love

i lean
against the wall,
the adjacent
wall where the newlyweds
have moved in.
last night,
they were making love,
today
they're arguing
over
something i can't quite
figure out.
burnt toast?
i write it all down
for my new
play.
the dialogue is perfect.
act one.
the bliss.
act two, 
not so much.

praying in the fog

it's beyond
foggy.
it's a black and white
movie
starring
Claude Raines.
it's treacherous
out there.
the air is thick
and wet.
you can't see your hand
in front
of your face.
everything
is in slow motion.
even
the birds are cloaked
in black
and grey.
the stillness
and quiet of the earth
is eerie.
it's time to kneel
on the soft ground
and pray.

use the whole spoon

i question
the server at the Mexican take
out
why the spoons
are so large
if they don't fill them
when making
my enchilada.
they barely tip the end
of the enormous
spoon into
the guacamole
or rice
or beans, or sour cream
when making
my giant roll
of carbs and goo.
i have to beg
for more as the line
crawls forward.
please, i tell them.
a little more
beef or chicken, or shredded
cheese.
use the whole spoon
this time.

dumb and dumber and ivy league

people
are making weapons
from
3d printers.
killing
murdering in cold
blood
in hot blood
spilling
it with glee
on the street.
dumb
or dumber
or Ivy League.
there's something going
on here.
something
in the water,
the air.
the food we eat.
technology.
it's the beginning
of the end
it seems. and then
so easily
caught eating an
unhappy meal
in the middle of nowhere,
about to serve
life in prison,
breaking big rocks into
little rocks for what
seemed
like a heroic
idea
at the time.

Monday, December 9, 2024

it's not that i don't care

i read
the news about Turkey
and Pakistan,
Syria
and Taiwan.
the problems in Africa
and
West Virginia,
the fentanyl and tsunamis,
the starving people
and dogs
in Afghanistan,
and it's not that i don't
care, it's just
that i haven't
even started
my Christmas shopping
and my mind
and wallet
are elsewhere.

a story to every scar

there's
a story to that scar,
and that one
under my eye,
and the other, the curved
quarter moon
of pink.
the straight line
beneath
my chin.
the blue
unhealed cut
on my arm,
a new wound
from last
night. a fresh bruise,
a mysterious welt.
live long enough
and you'll have plenty
of scars
and stories
to tell.

maybe at last the cupboard will be bare

maybe one day,
they'll
go to the cupboard for more
bullets
and bombs,
missiles
and what not,
and find
that the cupboard
is bare
on both sides.
maybe then the war
will end,
lives will
be spared.
and maybe Santa Claus
will come
down the chimney
for real
this year.

dear landlord

the check
is in the mail.
i sent it three days ago.
please
mister landlord
don't turn
off the lights, cut
off the water.
give it some time.
i've got
prospects, i've got
a line
on a new job,
a new
career.
please give me
a little more
time.
i know i've been late
before
but this is the real deal.
i won't let you
down.
never again.
don't change the locks
on the door.
i just need a little more
time.

the fast turning of pages

it's not
just the days that seem to fly
by.
it's the months,
the years,
the decades.
how did we age
so quickly?
so cruel the world
is when
we are full
of memories.
sweet or bitter,
we hold them tightly,
we don't
let go.

i put more water on

i've waited too long
to take
the second
sip of coffee. it's gone
cold.
the nearly
full cup
on the sill by
the window is
frosty
now.
but the book was
too good
to set down.
i put more water on.

the unringing phone

i think
there's something wrong
with the phone.
it hasn't
rung in days.
i pick it up
and listen to the dial tone.
the long
benign
buzz of the world out
there,
disconnected,
not calling me.
maybe later.
i'll stay nearby
just in case.

it's a slippery world

it's a slippery
world.
hold on, hold the rail,
find a hand,
a shoulder
to lean on.
the road is slick,
the steps
are icy.
the sidewalk is covered
in snow.
the second
you are born, you
spend so much time
keeping
upright
and pressing on.

Sunday, December 8, 2024

staying in tonight

let's keep
it simple tonight, i tell her.
taking out
a loaf
of white bread.
a jar of peanut butter
and some
blueberry jam.
let's not get all
dressed
up and go out.
it's cold
and it might rain.
okay, she says.
and pours out two
glasses
of milk then
places three cookies
each
next to the sandwiches.
we take it out on the tv
trays,
and settle
in.

duck and run

i say the wrong
thing,
again. but it's too late.
the words
have left
my mouth.
the conversation stops
and
a woman
stands up and says
i can't believe you said
that.
just who do you think
your are?
i tell her that she sure
looks
pretty tonight in
that tight fitting short
black skirt,
usually you don't see
old women
wearing clothes
like that
out in public,
which makes it worse.

the country bar in town

i see no horses,
no cows,
no ranches, or fences,
nothing
to rustle
up for miles. and yet
i see a lot
of cowboy hats.
and big belt buckles.
boots and chaps,
and girls
with saddles.
there's a twang in
their voices,
country
in their stride.
everyone is
dancing in a line.
i'm lost in a Peckinpah
movie.
i've got to get outside.

when the school yard bully grows up

i've
shaved a minute
off
my drive by
taking
a short cut through
the park.
driving on the sidewalks,
scattering
pedestrians
and dogs.
i used my horn
all day.
i'm in a very big hurry.
i always am.
i'm short
and squat but in my circles
i'm a big shot.
i roll through
red lights, i jump
lines,
i ask
the cop do you know who
i am.
when i die
and they hold the funeral,
you'll need tickets
to get in.

Saturday, December 7, 2024

she just had to go to a dive bar

she only
wanted to go to dive
bars.
nothing local
of course.
no chain coffee shop,
or restaurant
would do,
nothing with linen
tablecloths
or candles or menus.
we had to drive
to the boon docks,
to a run down
shack,
serving
eggs and scrapple
all day long.
there had to be
liver and onions on
Thursday
which
would be written on
a chalk board
out front.
and they had
to have
their own beer of course
made
in the back
by some guy named
Earle.
some people had teeth,
some didn't.
and there was always a dog
chained
to a tire
around back.
most of the time, i'd eat
after
i got home.

what is crypto exactly?

it's money,
but it's not money.
it's electronic
currency of some sort.
bizarre wizardry
invented
by some unknown
tech guru.
it's bits
of this,
pieces of that.
there is no bank,
there is nothing
to hold in your hand.
no coin,
or folding
cash.
no gold,
or silver to back it.
it's just numbers
going up
and down.
i'm getting
a headache
with your explanation.
i'm sorry that i asked.

did you hear that, i think i heard something out there

she likes
to go camping.
the wood
fire.
the stars at night.
the breeze,
the ripple of the stream
nearby.
she likes
her cozy tent
and sleeping bag.
she enjoys
the sound
of the crickets,
the rustling of birds,
and creatures
prowling around.
she doesn't mind
the snakes
that appear out of nowhere,
or having to go off
into the trees
to relieve
herself.
or putting all our food
in a basket,
on a high
branch to keep
the bears away.
she doesn't mind the hard
cold ground,
or the fact that there's
no cell reception, 
at all.
whereas,
i like the Holiday Inn.

waiting on the first born

you can
always tell, in the waiting
room,
the men
who are yet to be fathers,
and the ones
who are
fathers already,
with three or more kids
long out
of the oven.
the first
group
of men, are pacing.
they look tired and scared.
constantly
looking
at the door for the nurse
or doctor to appear.
while the later
group of men are on their
phones,
placing bets
at the racetrack,
or ordering pizza
for when they get
home.

what if this is it

startled
by the thought of
what if
this is it
i sat up in bed and wiped
the cold
sweat
from my brow.
i hadn't
had that thought
in a while
not since
the last bad marriage.
whew.
i took a few
deep breaths, held
the dog
closer and went
back to sleep.

temporary stays

when
i met her, she was living
out of boxes.
no dressers,
nothing hung
in the closet.
i asked her how long had
she been
living in this apartment,
two years
she said.
she washed her clothes
in the sink.
and sat
on the floor
to do her make up,
using a toaster
as a mirror.
nothing changed when
she moved
in with me.

democrats fighting

he tells
me
the marriage is over,
he's nearly
weeping
as he sips his vodka.
she wants
me out,
he says.
gone,
that's what she said.
too bad
i tell him. marriage
is tough
at times when you don't
get along.
i thought you two were
on the same
page with the election.
me too,
he tells me. but
she wants me to march
around the white house
and i don't
want to march
anymore. plus
she's shaved her head
and is withholding
sex.
also she wants me to wear
a dog collar
and put me on
a leash, and
she's not even cooking
anymore.
do you have
any room
at your house, he asks
in a whisper.
cupping
his hand on the phone.
umm.
not really.
but i could sleep on
the floor,
or in the basement
on a pile
of clothes.
didn't we do this eight
years ago,
i ask him, staring into
the phone.

pop tarts and other assorted poisons

the new
nicotine is sugar
and
fructose,
corn oils
and a hundred other
unpronounceable
chemicals
that they
are putting in our food.
keeping us
addicted
to the good taste,
the dopamine
fix
of sweetness.
no wonder
everyone is fat
and sick.
taking pills
by the handful,
sticking
needles
into their bellies
to remove
the last dozen donuts
that they ate.
the playground
is full
of tubbies
in stretched clothes.
heart attacks, cancer
and diabetes
used to be rare
fifty years ago.
now it's the new normal.
the scale
is broken and the doctors
don't care.
there's money
to be made here in them
there hills
and rolls.

Friday, December 6, 2024

the long drive back home after visiting the parents

it's a long
boring drive from
Pennsylvania.
we take turns
at the wheel.
she puts her foot
out the window
when it's my turn.
she opens a bag of potato
chips.
some go flying
around the inside
of the car.
we're both quiet
and tired
from the trip.
the trunk is full of
rattling
Tupperware,
jammed with leftovers
from thanksgiving.
the radio
is on.
the signs go by in
blurs,
the billboards,
the telephone poles,
the dashes
on the road.
it's becoming night.
she points at a cloud
in the sky
and asks me what
i think it
looks like.
i tell her, i think it
looks
like a witch on a
broom,
angry and frail.
she says i think it looks
like your mother.
we don't talk
for a while.

conversation with a parking meter

i stare
at the parking meter, fumbling
for coins.
what is it this
time, a credit card,
a license plate? yes it's
you again
i say to the meters
face.
the metal
lips
gone cold.
the throat of it hungry
for gold.
i know you, i tell it.
i know
your ruthless
soul,
your skinny 
but bent steel pole.
i know i'll run out
of time
again before i leave,
before i
have to go.
i know
i'll owe the man again,
it's what you
people do.
i know.

love is not for the weak

she wants
a love
poem, a sappy bouquet
of flowery
words,
a Hallmark
card
of sorts,
but love isn't like that.
it's strange,
it's hard.
it's blood and guts,
it's
wandering
the night streets
with the insane.
love is a mysterious
and dangerous
game.
it's not for the weak
or faint
of heart.
it's not
a gentle summer
rain.

sorry, we're out of coffee

it's a coffee shop
in the heart
of town
with a big plate glass
window that
says Joe's Coffee.
French Roast.
whole beans and ground.
coffee from all over
the world.
Jamaica and Morocco,
Turkey,
and the far East.
yelp gives it five stars.
it's cold
and windy so we go in
and sit down.
but they're out of coffee.
they have
water, and tea though.
i ask them when
will they have coffee
again.
they shrug and say,
we're not sure.
we're waiting for the ship
to come in.
no Sanka, even?
no Maxwell house?
nope, sorry, but
would you like some
Lipton, or Earl Grey.
maybe some herbal tea?

have a nice day mister Wilson

i see you
shiny dime on the floor.
mister
Wilson.
i saw you
yesterday,
the sun caught your
shiny
face
when it came through
the window.
i'll be back
tomorrow.
but i have to go to
work
now.
i'm running late.
have a nice day.

a fifty-cent cup of joe

as i sit
here
sipping on my seven
dollar
pumpkin spice
gingerbread
latte,
with soy
and an extra
shot of whipped cream,
nibbling at my
pumpkin scone.
i think
back to the fifty cent
cups
of coffee i used
to drink from 7-11
and a donut
from the case,
approaching mold.

it's not about that

we're spoiled
here.
who's hungry, who's cold?
who's down
on their luck
with medical bills,
divorce,
an accident.
who needs a job?
sign here.
who's
disenfranchised?
there's
a shelter
nearby,
a soup kitchen
down the road.
we have safety nets.
we have
rehabs centers,
community outreach,
we have
free meals,
free clothes.
but it's not about that.
when the mind
is gone,
the mentally
ill are tossed out
into the cold.

Thursday, December 5, 2024

those days are never that far

i was
never burdened with a large
tuition
to pay
off once school
had ended.
i was fortunate enough to be
poor
and get into a community college
which i hitchhiked
to every morning,
it was the best
six years of my life
as i read
every book
i could borrow.
i educated myself,
i drank and sang songs,
i played a guitar.
and then
i dug ditches for a while,
washed
dishes, sold shoes
and
painted houses.
sold cars.
i couldn't imagine a more
productive
life. and still,
those days are never
that far.

the big chair in the middle of the room

nearly every man
has his
own chair in his house.
it's where he
sits in front
of the tv,
the fireplace,
he can see the whole
room from
this seat.
it's where the children
get up from
when he gets home.
the dog
and cats
scatter.
it might be faux leather,
or plaid.
there might be a newspaper
nearby,
it's his chair his throne.
maybe it rocks
back and fort
or is electrically warmed.
maybe it has
cup holders,
and the footrest extends.
maybe sometimes
he falls asleep in it,
and then, maybe then,
everyone at last
leaves him alone.

eat drink and be merry

being
an atheist
would be so much easier
than
having faith,
believing in a kind
and loving God.
there would
be no questions to answer
about death
and disease.
heartbreak
and sorrow.
why bother with the idea
of heaven
or hell.
there would be
no need to explain 
the world
at large, the mystery
of it all,
believing that
life is just cosmic
mistake.
you could just shrug
and say,
so it goes.
we're here one day,
and gone
the next.
so fare thee well.
eat drink and be merry,
it's getting late.

when the wheels fell off

my father
kept three jobs while
raising
his children.
he was in the Navy,
managing
the Chief's club,
and flipping
burgers
in some joint down
the road.
he was rarely home,
i'd see him
going through the drive-thru
at the liquor store.
it was too much.
too hard.
he never knew
his father, he had nothing
go on.
but he tried,
and he tried and then
the wheels fell
off and he left to find a new
life,
a new bride.

a gift from my Aunt Jane

we kept
the wedding photos,
captioned
and sealed
behind
plastic sheets,
in a large white album
under the coffee
table.
it was the first wedding.
a hundred
and fifty or so
of friends
and siblings, parents
and children.
all you can drink,
all you can eat.
there was a band too
playing Proud Mary,
and the Hustle
by Van McCoy,
and other
fabled tunes.
we kept
a tremendous
slice of wedding cake
in the freezer,
saved, to be eaten
on our one
year anniversary,
which never came.
i can still see
her walking up the street
a suitcase
in hand,
with a toaster
oven under her arm,
a gift from my Aunt Jane.

i'm sure she misses me

i'm sure
she misses me.
the coffee cup stains on
her wood
furniture,
my shoes
left in the hall for
her to trip on,
the cap
off the toothpaste,
the butter
left out
overnight on the counter.
the stubble on
my face.
i'm sure she
misses the sound
of my snoring,
my taking of all
the covers,
my concern over
money,
the oil changes in the car,
and her past
lovers.
i'm sure she misses me,
there's no doubt
in my mind.
it's just a matter of time,
before the phone
rings.

the forever strike zone painted on the wall

behind
the bowling alley,
sixty years ago,
we painted
a strike zone
on the wall with a can
of black spray
paint.
our ball caps on,
with a rubber ball,
one bat,
and one glove
we played
stick ball
until the sun went down.
our arms
would be sore,
our legs tired from
chasing
the ball down the street,
or over
the fence into
the storm drain
beside
the lot, or down a sewer.
i drove by there yesterday,
with the doors locked
on my car.
the strike
zone
was still there, but
little else.

his newfound happiness

i never
see the neighbor anymore.
the divorced man
who moved in
a year ago
with a wife
and three teenage
children,
a dog
a cat, a lawnmower.
the grass
is high now,
the bushes untrimmed.
the garbage cans
are full
beside the garage.
he's disappeared
behind
his closed drapes,
i don't see him anymore.
but i see food deliveries.
Chinese,
pizza,
sandwiches from the deli.
beer
and liquor
in boxes.
sometimes women
arrive
in taxi cabs.
party girls
in sequined dresses
and big
hair.
i envy his newfound
happiness.

the sinless hour

i make
a plan to go an entire day
without
sin.
no greed,
no lust, no envy,
no pride
or sloth.
and then
a young woman
walks by in her
summer
dress.

vanity is everything

with the change
in weather,
the dropping of the temperature,
i need
to rest
more on the city
bench.
i catch my breath
from the long
walk
and take
out my blue inhaler.
i look around
to see that no one is
watching,
then take a hit or two.
filling my
lungs with the chemicals
that will
me allow me to rise
and go on.
vanity is everything.

boredom will kill you

boredom
will kill you.
perhaps not as quickly
as sadness
and grief,
long sorrow, but
it will take its toll
in the long
run.
how many hours, or
days,
can go by
before you get dressed
and leave
the house?

the garbage of others

it was an old piano
left in the woods, a
dump
of sorts, unauthorized,
with
blue
refrigerators and pink
stoves,
toilets,
tires, clothes
left
to rot and dissolve
into the brown
earth.
we stumbled upon
the treasure trove
of
books,
and knives,
cracked plates, records
tossed
aside.
plastic dolls and toy
trains,
but it was the piano
that held
my interest,
and when i struck
the keys
a sound came out.
then more
and more. a hollow
off tune
ping.
someone played this
once before,
they sat
there turning the page
of music.
perhaps singing
a song.
a family gathered around.
them
in joy,
and now this, at the end
of a dead-end road.

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

the differences of men and women

women,
from what i remember,
would
put limits
on men.
how much money
do you make,
they'd ask,
where do you work,
tell me about the school
you went to.
your parents?
what kind of car do you drive?
are you healthy?
do you love your
mother?
so many questions,
so many
beer induced
lies.
when we only cared about
if they would go home
with us
when the lights went up
and the joint
closed,
and that she looked
relatively fine.

that faraway star

before
my sister took over my father's
finances,
he had
almost zero in the bank.
he was flat
out of cash,
bone dry.
all of it
spent on drink and women
of the night,
or afternoon,
maybe
mornings too.
lottery tickets, at twenty
dollars a pop
in the machines
at the grocery store.
he overfed
the vice.
and then the eyes went,
the car was sold,
the walk was too far.
he couldn't trust anyone
to tell him
if he was a winner
or not.
and now
he has money.
a lot of money.
but happiness
is like
a faraway star.

i can't get used to this

i've
narrowed down my
love
interests to one.
i've removed
the toxic people from
my life,
both siblings
and friends.
i've made
my bed.
i've swept the floor,
i've defrosted
the ice box, raked
the leaves,
cleaned the oven.
i've changed the locks
on the doors.
i've put flowers in a vase.
every picture
is rehung straight.
there's a fresh coat
of paint on the walls.
but now
i'm distraught.
i can't get used to
not living
in utter chaos.

the very short list

today,
tomorrow, maybe next
week,
or tonight.
i'll get to it.
i have
my list.
my very short list.
i've written
it in ink,
it's short and sweet,
but sadly,
once more, you
aren't on it.

the snow globe

i shake
the snow globe
that i bought at Coney Island
one summer
when traveling with someone
i thought
i loved.
i bought the globe
from a woman
with whiskers
behind
a glass cage,
she slid it through
the opening
and i gave her three dollars
and seventy-five
cents.
i take it out for the holidays
now.
i spin
the dial
on the bottom
so that music comes out,
jingle bells,
then shake it
hard
to make it snow on
the little people inside,
a reindeer on top
of the tiny
house.
joy comes
in strange ways sometimes.

i need glue again

there
comes a point where
i need
glue,
a strong binding
potion
of some sort.
half the room is held
together
by such a thing.
another dish
has cracked, a vase
broken.
the handle of a cup
has fallen
off.
the sole
of my shoe has
come loose.
i go to the kitchen
drawer
where everything
important
lies in wait.
but the plastic tube
is hard
as a rock,
i need more.

blue suede shoes

they are beautiful
shoes.
blue
suede.
ala Elvis, but i've
never worn
them out,
but
i can't bring myself
to throw them
away.
sometimes i step
into them
when no one is
around.
i dance, i dance,
i tap
i sway.

the soft landing

there's the lap dog
with runny eyes,
the white couch,
the floral
drapes.
i'm an old lady
living here
in my two bedroom
apartment
in Rockville.
i'm my mother's mother
with a green
and yellow
parakeet.
i have an electric
blanket,
a space heater in
the bedroom.
i have plants 
on the windowsill
that i water
everyday.
sometimes i talk to
the desk
clerk
for hours at a time.
my hearing
has gone so i don't mind
the neighbors
above or below, or
down the hall.
i'm worried though,
that this is it,
that this is all.



Tuesday, December 3, 2024

the enormous bone in ham

i get a coupon
in the mail,
it comes through
the door
and falls
to the floor.
it's for
for an enormous bone
in ham
at the grocery store.
fifty percent
off.
is this the universe
talking to me,
or Kroger's?

turning the page

never, never
never,
he says, never will i pardon my son.
this helps
to get votes,
when there were
votes to get,
and yet.
it's his own flesh
and blood.
so he does.
he goes back on his word.
but hey.
it's what
politicians do.
what people do. they say
one thing,
and do another.
from childhood
to death
you're forgiven for all
the things
you've ever done.
the known and unknown.
no longer do you have
a debt.
let's turn the page, 
my wayward
son.

the holiday apologies

i write
a long heart felt letter
of apology.
i fall on my sword,
i go
full mea culpa.
i sign it,
with a kiss,
then place it into
the envelope.
a stamp in the corner,
licked.
then look at my
list.
who gets this one
today?

Christmas money

the court yard
is full
of trucks.
plumbers come
to fix
the broken pipes.
the pipes
left on
when the freeze hit
overnight.
i see them in their
overalls,
their hats and gloves
on.
shovels
and wrenches in hand.
it's Christmas money
again.

three days away

when
i kiss you with this
rough
stubble
on my face,
at last home,
you don't move away.
you
don't ask
me to shave.
you accept me
for who
i am, my strange and
thoughtless
ways.
you tenderly drag
your hand 
across
my roughness
and ask me to stay.

in the hand of woods

i'm
spoiled by these woods,
the large
green hand
of trees,
that blue
sleeve
of stream.
by the absence
of cars
passing through.
not a neon
sign to be
seen.
i'm
unjealous
of the house on the hill,
the mansion
with a gate.
the penthouse
on the roof.
no,
this is good, good enough
for me.
an oasis
to escape.

burning the roof of my mouth

i should know
better.
i should have learned
by now
to blow
on the hot spoon
of soup
before a sip.
to not put half
of the slice of pizza
with the mozzarella
still bubbling
into my mouth.
i know these things.
and yet
i do them anyway.

good weather

it's good
weather, good cold air
from
the north
upon us.
the threat of snow
hangs
in the clouds.
i feel the shiver
in your bones.
it's a fine
day
to hunker down
and wait,
to say aloud,
i love you.

Monday, December 2, 2024

so, tell us dear boy, what exactly is it that you do?

i live
in a town, where the first question
someone asks
at a dinner
party is,
so, tell me,
what exactly do you do?
i usually tell
them i'm a circus clown,
or a bus driver
for the criminally insane asylum
on the hill,
or that i clean
out the lion cages
at the zoo.
which prompts for more
questions,
which i answer
at length.
it keeps me from hearing
what they
do.

having faith in deodorant

do i believe
that this deodorant, with
the scent
of spearmint
leaves
will keep me dry
and smelling nice all day?
or this toothpaste,
will it
do away with the coffee
stains,
the yellowed aging,
and brittleness
of my teeth?
this knife at 3 am,
on tv.
will it cut through wood
and tin cans,
slice a tomato
in thin slivers?
or this little pill,
will it give
me muscles and strengthen
my libido
like it was when
i was twenty-three?
hell no.
but i buy it anyway
and i swipe my card,
let's see.

making more room for them

strange
how
the poor and hungry
want in.
they've traveled
thousands
of miles to get to the wall
and fence.
while
the rich
and famous
want to leave.
it's not good enough
anymore.
i guess now
there'll be more room
for them.

it's fine, i'll take the bus

i believe
you.
i listen to what you say,
and hear
the words
you proclaim.
i make a note of where
you stand.
where
you are on us.
every word.
i believe you.
you can have the car.
i'll take
the bus.

keeping score already

i forgive
you
the burnt toast
and spilled milk,
if you forgive me 
for
putting my muddy boots
on the coffee
table
and stepping on
your cat.
it's early, but we're
keeping
score,
aren't we?

three sets of monogrammed towels

i never should
have bought
so many
monogrammed towels
with your initials
on them.
her initials,
etc.
bath towels,
hand towels,
wash clothes.
three terry cloth
robes.
ancient history
hanging on the bar
and door.
there's so much explaining
i need to do
about my past
mistakes.
i need to purge and
go to the store.

not missing, but hiding

as i sat
and ate my cereal, pouring
milk
over my cheerios,
i saw your picture
on the side
of the milk box.
missing,
it said.
an artist's sketch
of how
you might
appear today.
i wanted to call you,
or them up
and tell them
where you
were.
or ask you,
if it was true that you
no longer
had blonde hair,
but then you might mistake
me for
someone that cared.

promises promises

funny,
how few leave the States.
it's mostly
rich celebrities that have
said they would
depart.
they promised,
they
made vows,
they swore as God is their
witness that
if their man or woman
wasn't elected
they'd be packing
their bags
and heading
east or west.
they crossed their hearts.
they said they'd
be taking the next flight
or ship
out of here.
but they don't leave.
they burrow down.
they know which side
of the bread
their butter
is on.

i saw her standing there

the line
is short. growing shorter
each
year.
we are shrinking in
numbers,
those
of us who
did the twist, 
the limbo,
the Watusi and knew
every word
by heart
of the Beatle's
latest hit.

did you get any snow?

my mother
was fascinated by the weather.
rain
or snow.
sleet or hail.
a storm got
her blood going.
she tuned into the weather channel,
and kept
me updated
on the rising
tide, or how strong
the winds
were about to blow.
by phone
she'd inquire
if we got any snow,
asking
how much did we get
in our state,
which was
over the bridge and river,
three miles
away
by flight of a crow.

even from the ground

when
i used to climb
the forty
foot ladder to scale
a slate
roof
on a cold, windy,
wet
day.
i would pray.
dear Lord, protect me
as i work
today.
and still,
years later,
i say it now,
even from the ground.

throwing a snowball at a passing bus

the snow
is soft enough to make
a snowball,
formed round
in my hand,
wet
and hard
from the cold.
but now i need someone
to throw it at,
maybe a passing
car,
or truck, or bus.
i can't miss that, despite
the fact
i'm getting old.

where do i go to view your life?

you never
said a thing about my dog.
my pet,
after he
died.
you ignored it.
let it
slide.
you never called,
never
cried.
never said a word
of comfort
to me.
that's true, i tell him,
but how was i to know
what's
going on in your life,
which social
venue
did you post it on?

another year, just one more

you
know
when it's time to quit.
but you don't.
the job
no longer means
what it used to mean.
it's thinned down
to a weak broth.
your
age is holding you
back.
the stairs
you climb, your
lack
of remembering
what to do.
but they keep you on
for who you were,
the rain man, the glue.
you no longer hear
the whispers.
they keep you
at your desk
in your old grey suit.
they're leaving
the departure
up to you.

Sunday, December 1, 2024

the dangling key rings

men,
for years, not all men,
but a lot
of men,
had key rings that they
wore
around their
belt loop.
a dangling set
of keys,
a few pounds of them.
a key
to every lock,
to every door, to each
shed,
and car
they owned.
it was a statement
of some sort.
a fist full of keys
on an extension chain.
it was before fobs,
and
skinny jeans.
before men got manicures.
way before that.

puppy love

i can
tell they're in love.
just by
the way
he's holding her,
one arm
around her waist,
the other petting
her hair,
like you might do
with a Persian cat.
she has a finger
wrapped
around his belt loop
and is leaning
into his neck.
they've recently
made love
it seems,
or are about to for
the third
time today.
you can see it in their
eyes,
that happy
glazed look, tired,
but not
completely out of it.
i remember those
days.

a day of being cheerful

despite
my sore
knee and back, i decide
to be
cheerful today.
i'm going to give it my
best shot.
i will say
hello to people, i'll wave,
and ask
how people are doing,
despite
not really caring
one way or the other.
i'll give way
on the road, letting people
pass and not
blow my horn
when the light turns
green. i'll be polite
and not
judgmental
about what's in people's
shopping cart,
or why
they wobble when
they walk
so slow.
i'm turning over a new
leaf,
for the new month.
let's see how long this
goes.
perhaps, i should stay home.

the bi-monthly writers group

we used
to have a little writing group.
Dave
and Eloise,
Betty
and Lisa.
we drifted away
from the writing class
at the community center,
but stuck together
bi-monthly,
excluding holidays.
three of them chain smoked,
which made
it hard
to breathe.
the overhead fan
spun
slowly
in Betty's yellow kitchen.
i sat by the window, but
it didn't help.
i was drinking Scotch
back then
and
i started writing poems
about them,
and their
nasty habit of smoking.
Dave was working on
a biography of Ben Franklin
and Lisa was
writing television
scripts for Battlestar Galactica.
the room
was grey
and sticky with
nicotine.
they didn't like my poetry,
but i didn't care.
i was trying to get them to stop
in my
passive aggressive way.
three of them have
recently passed away,
cancer and emphysema.
i need a new liver
probably,
but it's all about being
in the writer's game.

Saturday, November 30, 2024

they want him gone

i see one potato
rolling
around in the crisper bin.
a fat
redskin potato
that never
made it to the pot.
it makes
a lot of noise
whenever
i open the door.
bouncing from
side to side.
squishing the garlic
and jalapeno
peppers.
the lettuce,
the carrots, the onions
are not
amused.
they want him gone.


what a specimen you are

the car salesman,
is good
at his job, he tells you 
how wonderful
you look,
have you lost
weight,
i can't believe you're
really that age,
he says.
my God what a specimen
you are.
do you run,
lift weights.
there's a gleam about
you.
i bet you get all
the girls, don't you?
wink, wink.
take a stroll
with me down to the back
lot,
have i got a deal for
you.
it came in yesterday,
hardly driven,
never been
in an accident. some old
church lady
dropped it off.
she went to church
and back.
it still has that showroom
smell.
this car is you.
come on, let's take a ride.
hop on inside.

the twenty minute rule

i wait
and wait
and wait, and yet
you
don't show up.
as usual,
you're always late.
it's your
thing,
as they say.
while mine
is leaving
before you arrive.

reading the room

i can
read a room.
feel
what's in the air.
whether
joy,
or happiness,
gloom
or doom, despair.
i can feel it
without a word
being spoken.
either way,
i know when
to leave,
or when to stay, i'm
exhaustingly
well aware.

the culinary road map

i see the road
map
of the weekend on my clothes.
the spills
of wine,
the drips
of gravy.
and
what's that there?
some pie
on my shoe?
whipped cream in
my ear?

searching for real news

i used
to watch the news.
Cronkite
and Rather,
Murrow and Brinkley,
daily,
to catch up on what's
going on
in the world.
but now,
after hearing so many
lies,
and distortions,
biased opinions,
i find
the truth on
the likes of 
YouTube.
though even there,
you have
to take it all with many
grains of salt.

food for a week

as i carry
the six Tupperware
containers
full of  turkey,
gravy,
mashed potatoes,
cranberry sauce,
and pie,
out to the car
in the snow,
i wave with my
gloved hand
as you stand 
with tears in your eyes
at the window.

i remember you

i remember
you.
not your name, or where
you lived,
not your
house
number
or phone number,
not where or how
we met,
but i remember you.
i remember
how you
kissed.

Thursday, November 28, 2024

she always ate last

she loved
to see us eat when
at last
she had a little money
in her purse.
turkey,
ham,
lasagna. an assortment
of pies and cakes.
home made rolls
and bread.
her instamatic
camera
clicking away.
she always ate last.
standing in
the kitchen with sweat
on her brow.
the music on her
little radio,
her parakeet in the cage
whistling. oh,
to have
one more holiday
like that.

eating pancakes like a lumberjack

we see
the B list movie star
in
a breakfast joint
in Tribeca.
a celebrity
sighting. 
we both enjoy her work,
so of course
we have to stare
at her.
she's eating
an enormous stack of
pancakes
like a lumberjack would
just coming
in from the cold
snowy forest.
she's talking with
her mouth full
and eating
bacon
with her hands.
there's a glob of grape
jelly on her chin.
we decide
not to like her
anymore.

slow bites

i'm not
reading this new book,
i'm
more or less nibbling
at the pages,
chewing
the words.
then going back for more.
starting over
for a small plate of
plot
and dialogue.
it's that good.
i don't want
it to end.
it reminds me of you,
when we're
together.

the daily dings

my phone
is insistent on sending
me messages
of things
and people i don't care about
anymore.
the ding
is relentless.
a cacophony of non-musical
notes.
i need to find
a twelve
year old,
to straighten out my phone.

nails down a chalkboard

i tell her, with
reluctance, 
that i write confessional
poetry.
none of that Wordsworth
stuff,
or old Robert Frost.
the look
on her
face is priceless.
she thinks
of nails
going down a black board,
or maybe
at the airport,
an annoying mime.
don't worry i tell her.
i will never 
write a word
about you,
which makes her smile,
and exhale a sigh
of relief.
i'm used
to telling such tall
tales,
and lies.

before we trim the tree

there is
a light feeling
of seasonal
joy
in the air.
maybe it's the lights,
the sparkle
of green
blue and red,
the star
like whites,
flowered yellows
strung
along the house.
the smell
of the fir tree in
the corner.,
still wet with the forest.
maybe
it's what's in the oven.
that plate of cookies
on the table.
that red
apron
you're wearing.
maybe it's the mistletoe
you
hung above
the kitchen door.
it almost feels like things
are back
to normal.

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

why worry?

i used to worry 
about things, mostly
things that i had
no control over.
people
and situations.
i'd toss and turn
all night
so much so that
i barely slept a wink.
i was
nervous all the time.
hungry
for peace of mind.
trying to figure out
the puzzles of
relationships,
the need for
money.
all the attachments
of life. i was
concerned
with my future
and where things were
headed,
but i'm over
that now,
now that the future
has been shortened
considerably.
why worry anymore,
with so little time.

the do not call registry list

i'm on
the do not call list,
the national registry, but
people
keep calling
despite of it.
my mother, my children
my ex-wives
and girlfriends.
the phone company,
the bank,
the pharmacist
the florist.
anyone with a buck
in the game
keeps calling.
old friends going through
hard times,
or good times,
they dial me up.
if the dead could call,
they would.
it's not working this
do not
call list.

at the movies with tiny tank

we found two center
seats
halfway up the aisle,
perfect for viewing
and stretching out.
early birds
we were.
it was
a double feature,
so we bought the big box
of popcorn,
the large
soda
with two straws.
two boxes of candy,
her choice being
dark chocolate
with almonds.
red Twizzlers for me.
something
to gnaw on
and get stuck in my teeth.
would we
make it
through both movies,
plus the intermission
and previews
without
making the whole row
rise up
to let us pass,
when we had to pee?
i made it.
she didn't.
twice she had to go.
tiny tank tiny tank the row
called her,
as she stood up
for number three.

the long path into the woods

we
are mad.
frenetic and woefully
dumb.
we let
the world control
us,
not the other way
around.
we
do what they tell us
to do,
how to act,
how to behave,
what
to consume.
we need the deep
woods
beside a stream,
and a log
cabin,
soon.

taking flight after looking in

the winter
bird on the sill looks
in
at me,
warm
beneath my own feathers.
my own
plate
of food,
my own shallow
dish
of water.
neither of us are
jealous
or worried
of the other though.
making
her flight easier
to
swallow.

Georgia's German Chocolate cake

i met
her in a bar of course.
Georgia
was her
name, though she wasn't
from there.
she was broke
as far
as money went, and i was
broke
as far as love
went.
so we were perfectly
matched.
she wasn't beautiful,
(but who really is?)
her nose
held her back.
and her blue eyes
were crossed a bit,
but i saw beyond all that.
she had other skills.
i took her
to the office Christmas party
that year,
where she
brought along her famous
German Chocolate
cake.
every crumb was eaten.
people were
licking their fingers.
it was shortly after new
year's eve
that we broke up. she
met another
guy with more money.
but she left the recipe
for the cake
on my pillow. i thanked
her for that.

from a mother's arms

it used
to be, back in the old neighborhood
there
was one
crazy guy,
maybe two,
maybe three, but no more
than that.
they each had their
own corner,
or box
to sit on
and preach or have
conversations
with the invisible souls
around them.
they seemed
impervious to weather
never
hurting anyone
that i know of. but people
were
afraid of them
walking
across the street
to avoid
their gaze
and rhetoric.
they were bombs
with the fuse lit,
we thought.
we wondered how did they
get there,
from a mother's arms,
from the warm
crib, and lullaby's,
to this.
who's next?

Beyonce and Oprah need your money

the losing candidate
is in
arrears twenty million dollars
from her
failed campaign.
so she
goes back
online
to butter up her
constituents
for more money,
brother can
you spare a dime
she says with that familiar
cackle.
she pleads
for them to take
another dip into their
empty pockets, 
but she's
half in the tank,
she's on the sauce,
she's into her third bottle
of Nappa wine.
it doesn't go
well,
then the lights go off.

waiting for my turn to talk

i give
the appearance
of listening.
i lean in, and nod.
my eyes
blink
slowly
with comprehension
to every word
you say,
each and every thought.
you speak
is heard to a certain
degree, but i'm
not there.
i'm
elsewhere.
at some point you'll
come up
for air.
and it'll be my turn
to talk.

calling dibs early, on a leg

i remember
my grandmother
in South Philly,
chasing
the turkey with a sharp
hatchet
in her small
hand.
in circles they would
go around
the pear tree,
until one or the other
wore
themselves
out.
usually, her.
and the turkey would
come over
to comfort her.
it was quite
a show,
but i'd close my eyes
when she
got his neck,
at last on the chopping
block.
i already had dibs
on a leg.

the online therapy session

i sign up for the online
therapy session
for a little tune up.
there's a holiday
discount going on, plus
i have
a coupon
from CVS
when i bought some
sleeping
pills and a bottle
of red wine.
when the screen comes
up, i see
a puppy of a boy,
not quite a man,
with peach fuzz.
he's a shaggy dog
come to life.
this is my chosen therapist.
by the end
of the session,
he's crying and i'm giving
him advice
about his girlfriend
and his mother.
and how he should try
and break away,
be on his own.
i give him my number,
and tell him to give me a
call anytime.

i'll take those pajamas as a clue

when she climbs
into bed,
yawning,
with her thick woolen
pajamas,
buttoned
up to her neck,
tight,
i sigh.
i don't have to be
Sherlock Holmes
to figure this out.
maybe in the morning,
i surmise.

toasting in the new year

when
we were young,
and spending
the night at a friend's house.
their
parents,
the wealthier ones,
had liquor cabinets,
with strong
wooden doors
and locks.
impenetrable
cabinets, with glass
on the front.
we could see
the loot,
but we couldn't touch.
we would rarely spend
the night
at those houses.
instead
they came to mine,
where
the whiskey
and wine were
on the counter
with plenty
of cheerful
Christmas mugs.

self-diagnosis at seven a.m.

when
the toes on my left
foot
begin
to tingle. i think of the bone
saw.
how far up
the leg could i
endure
with
some of it missing?
maybe it's the cold
air,
or my
awful circulation,
similar
to my mom's.
maybe i slept wrong.
this bug
bite, on my arm,
is not a tumor,
i tell myself.

Sunday morning bells

the church bells
used
to wake me up on Sunday
morning.
the loud
melodic clangs of the
big iron
bells on top of
St. Thomas More,
in the tower.
a sturdy white cross
hinged to the top.
but the local atheists
got together
and banned the ringing.
some sheep are
thankful,
and some, unfortunately
are still lost.

one book in you

everyone
has at least one book
in them,
that they
want or need to write
before
the lights go off.
the story of their life.
but not everyone
wants to read them.

Tuesday, November 26, 2024

the Jamaican tree frog

there was
a time
when everyone,
or nearly
everyone wanted a red
dining room,
or a red
accent wall.
maybe
a peacock blue
bedroom,
or a bright orange,
or granny
apple green
kitchen.
i carried
the speckles of these
paints on my
hands and face for
weeks.
often mistaken for
a Jamaican
tree frog, minus
the squeak.

in the midnight hour

she taps
me on the shoulder
and says,
are you awake?
i am now, i tell her.
i heard
a noise,
she says.
downstairs, i think
someone
is in the house.
the kitchen light
is on.
no worries, we're good,
i tell her.
it's an ex
of mine.
i told her to come over
and get
her leftover
yogurt and salmon
from the fridge.
she still has my keys.
it's good, she's
back on her meds.
she won't kill
us.
go back
to sleep.

back to pen and paper

the screen
is slow in coming up, 
what's with
this cold
curve ball of buffering?
i've
already
lost three
potential poems
when waiting.
maybe i should go back
to the pen
and paper.
candle light, the butter
churn,
and cans
attached to string
to call you.

it's health

it's health,
it's health,
it's health, of course
at any
age.
but a little dough
rey me
goes a long way
too.

not all of them have red hair

each
crowd has a bully.
each school
yard,
each work office,
or job,
has a bully on it.
each family.
you can
usually see them
in their cars,
in traffic, speeding,
red faced,
and cursing,
tailgating an
inch a way
from bumpers
as they flash their
lights.
they can't help
themselves.
and strangely not
all of them
have red hair.

the four-tiered shoe rack

sorry but i have no
room
for your red high heels.
my four tiered
shoe rack is full,
leaning
forward
heavy with so many
old shoes.
each
with a point, a purpose.
basketball,
running,
football cleats
with cobwebs,
the mud now dry.
brown and black
dancing shoes.
wedding shoes.
funeral shoes,
court room shoes.
tuxedo shoes.
tennis shoes,
and slip on loafers.
walking
shoes. blue
slippers for when
i go out
down the sidewalk
to get the daily
news.
maybe it's time to get
a rack for you.

the upper hand of silence

something
about
a holiday that makes me
weak
in the knees
with forgiveness.
my heart strings
are pulled,
wanting to put aside
past disagreements.
i buy a bushel
of olive
branches to hand out.
some take them,
others don't.
they prefer in keeping
the upper
hand
of silence.
and so it goes.

who's running this place?

you wonder
at times, who is really running
the country,
the executive branch
that is.
they take
so many vacations.
they disappear
onto islands
and beaches,
stretch out
beneath umbrellas,
away from questions
and staircases
that they
stumble up
or down.
they relax with
drinks in hand, the sea
in front of them,
eyes closed
to the world behind
them.
are their phones even
on?
or have they totally 
checked out?
done and gone.

Monday, November 25, 2024

the police report

you rarely
hear
the word brandish,
or use it in general
conversation
except when
it comes
to weapons and a cop
describing
the scene of the crime
and it's
perpetrators.
the three miscreants,
the report reads,
were all approximately
three foot two or
shorter, males,
chewing gum,
and blowing bubbles,
they were all standing
over the broken gumball
machine
brandishing wooden
mallets
apparently stolen from
their mother's
cooking utensil drawer.
the weapons
have been seized
and they boys have been taken
downtown
for questioning,
after using the bathroom,
under guard,
at McDonald's.

dark or white meat

finally
the talk of politics
settles
down.
and we sit in peace,
at least
for now.
dark meat for me, please,
i tell the host,
as she
slices
with her electric
knife
into the enormous
dead beast.

dropping the f bomb because i dropped the butter

i've noticed
this year
that i've been cursing more,
dropping
the F bomb
on occasion,
for the smallest
of inconveniences
or annoyances.
i never used to.
i think it has something
to do with the shrinking
of my frontal lobe.
but i don't mind.
finally i get to say what
i want to say
without recriminations.
people just shake their
heads and sigh,
and say. hey, it's okay,
he's old.

The Elon wife

Elon
reminds me of my ex-wife,
but without
the deep
pockets
and the brain power,
or lack
of a single job.
she wanted to buy everything
she saw
in a store window,
house or car,
boat,
or piece of jewelry.
how much
for that, she'd ask me.
we can't afford it,
i'd tell her,
rolling my eyes and
shaking my head.
well, why can't you work
harder?
get a second or third
job, so that we can.
Elon does it, Bill Gates
does it,
why can't you?

the home invasion

my neighbor,
Jack,
had his home invaded
by a group
of masked
young women.
they tied
him up,
and took his silverware
and his
cash,
his phone, and all of
the rib eye steaks
in his fridge.
the brownies
that were frozen.
they stayed for over
an hour,
played his music
and danced,
drank until the wine
ran out.
they made a nice fire
in the fireplace
and moved
his chair
closer to keep him warm.
one girl
loosened the ropes
around his wrists,
then they left him,
unharmed.
they even locked
the door
behind them.
he seemed strangely happy for
the visit.
when i talked to him,
but sad now
to be alone.

God's fault again

maybe
it's a rash. a bee bite,
a sting,
a nibble
from a passing spider,
or some
nearly
invisible thing.
the brush
of skin
against a toxic
leaf.
God's sense
of humor,
is endless, it seems

hospital food

i don't like
hospital food, so i do
my best
to not visit
them.
the stay
is hard.
the confusion
of illness
and death.
everyone
as busy
as bees
in spring.
the tapioca in small
cups,
the Jello,
the Salisbury steak,
the button
to push,
the ominous ding.

diminishing skills

the cold
orange from the ice
box is a project
you
can handle.
unlike many
things
in life these days.
the cut and slice, the
stripping
of the hard
peel is difficult,
but it's in your
skill set.
you haven't lost
it yet.

Sunday, November 24, 2024

by the way, the world is about to end

as i stand
at the window,
sipping on a cold bottle
of coca cola,
a pretzel
in hand,
i see off in the short
distance
where
the White House is,
and see
the beautiful bloom
of a mushroom.
cloud.
and in the roar
of wind,
i turn
to my wife,
and say, i love you
dear.
and by the way, the world
is about to end.