Thursday, November 6, 2025

the next great Exodus

from an aerial view
it looks like
the Exodus in the Bible,
thousands
upon thousands fleeing Egypt
for the promised land.
the Red Sea has parted
and away they go,
running with their cattle
and camels, goats
and chickens,
cows and horses,
women and children,
luggage and furniture
strapped
to the tops of their cars.
all heading south
away from New York City.
full speed ahead
for Tallahassee, Sarasota
Miami.

no money to fix things anymore

i should have thought longer
and harder
before renting out the three floor
walk up
in Brooklyn, but the price
was great.
i could see Manhattan through
the barred
bathroom window.
but then the heat went off,
there was rust
in the water, mice were everywhere.
i called the super
and gave him my list of complaints,
but he said, sorry,
no dice, nothing i can do.
the mayor has cut off raising
of the rent, so i don't have the money
anymore to fix things.
sorry dude.
try some cheese and mouse
traps, maybe
bottled war
to shower with
and an extra blanket at night.
rent's due tomorrow, by the way.

we should go on a picnic, she says

when
a woman asks you to go on a picnic,
you are in
like Flint.
when she spends the morning
making
cucumber
sandwiches with the crust
cut off,
and slicing apples into
eight parts,
it means she's thinking of other
things.
there's more
to the checkered blanket
than meets the eye.
look inside 
that country basket for
that bottle of wine
and glasses,
that slice of a fresh baked
peach pie.
there you go.
at last she's on your side.

where have all the flower children gone?

so many
angry people, obsessed 
with
hate
and acrimony.
waking up bitter and mean,
so sad,
so sad.
where is the love child
of the sixties,
the kind,
the merciful,
the peaceniks, the aquarians
wanting to make
a better way?
what happened to the flower
children,
with their crystals
and 
astrology, their yoga meditations
and magic
beans?
oh there they are, back on the street
protesting
with their hair dyed
blue and green.

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

the girl who loves horses

i see
her coming up the street
on crutches,
a cast
on her leg,
a surgical halo around her head
to keep
it from
bobbing
left and right as she
limps
towards me.
fell off your horse again,
right?
yes, she says, 
smiling wearily,
but it was my fault.
i shouldn't have
told him
to try and jump that fence.
i think i need
to lose some weight.
maybe get on Ozempic.
but i'll be riding again
soon,
maybe a year or two
once they put
a screw in my leg, and surgically
repair
my spine.
i have a down payment
on a new horse, though,
from a breeder in Middleburg,
the last one
didn't make it
when he crashed into the fence
then ran
into the road
where a tractor trailer
full of chickens
ran him over,
but i love horses, she says,
i can't imagine
my life without one.
do you have any extra-strength
Tylenol on you? by the way.
or morphine?

just 5 more democratic votes and the government reopens, easy peasy

all it takes

is 5 more democratic votes

and the government reopens.

snap

benefits go out.

EBTs will be flush again with funds.

workers get paid, planes

will fly.

the military men

and women get their hard

earned checks.

just sixty votes from the left side

of the aisle

to pass the same bill that was

passed 13 times in a row

and things

are fine,

but they won't,

they hold the country hostage

all in the name of giving illegal

immigrants 

benefits and money

they don't deserve.

they'd rather have

citizens starve and die, go broke,

go bankrupt,

get evicted.

and why? TDS, as usual.


cry me an East River

this will be fun,
entertaining, who doesn't love a good
spine
tingling horror/disaster movie.
i've bought extra popcorn
and butter,
nuts and chips,
cold drinks
on ice,
i've set up the big pillows on the couch
to watch what
happens next.
i've thrown another log
onto the fire.
i can hardly wait
to see
what happens to a once beautiful
and prosperous city,
a city that never sleeps.
let's watch
the caravan heading out of town,
as the wealthy flee.
oh my,  New York,
now under rule
by a communist nutcake,
Mandami.
turn off the lights,
it's going to get wild and scary,
hold my hand,
let's watch and see.

let the bread lines begin

what we
need is more government,
he says
on the campaign trail, more
taxes,
more rent control,
government
run grocery stores, free
food,
free buses,
free healthcare,
free gender transitions,
social workers, not police.
we need
to help the criminals
get over their bad childhoods,
help
the mentally
insane
and hug them, set them
free.
we need to follow the ways
of  Eugene Debs
a five time
socialist loser running
for president,
the last time
from the confines of a prison cell.
we need to be more like Cuba
and Venezuela,
North Korea,
and China and the Soviet Union.
East Germany during the cold war.
we need
to be like them.
under the government's thumb.
let the bread lines begin.
careful what you wish for,
my uneducated
and naïve friend.

foot in my mouth

i'd like
to say more, but i stop
myself.
taking
a shoe
and shoving it into
my mouth to keep
the words
from falling
out.
i've said enough for one
night,
one week,
one long life.
the rest let's keep
as mystery,
even to me.

look at me, i'm here

i forget
her birthday, our anniversary,
the day
we met,
and where,
when i forget her phone number,
her address
and her name,
she begins
to worry
and wonder if i'm really
into her.
which i tell her,
of course i am.
look at me, i'm here.

your muse, the sea

when
you take a long walk
in silence
along
the beach, when you stop watching
the news,
stop
talking to people
and converse
with your dog only,
and 
your muse,
the sea,
it occurs to you that the world
isn't so bad
after all.

signing up for the dance class

i sign up
for a dance class down at the 
Elenore Roosevelt community
center.
the ad says,
salsa, rumba, ballroom, the twist,
the Charleston,
and the monkey,
as well as
the limbo.
oh and freestyle, which is my thing.
i'm limping a little
from my
arthritic left
knee
but so is everyone else who
shows up.
it's a little awkward at first,
dancing
while favoring one leg,
but we go on.
a few off us topple
over when
the beat gets faster, 
wigs and toupees go flying,
dentures are everywhere,
but we
roll over
and get up.
finally 
they take Ten Years After,
playing Going Home,
off the record player
and put on
Moon River
with Andy Williams.
now we're cooking and back
on our feet again.

zero talk about real issues

at last
the airways are done with political
ads.
it was getting vicious
and down right
mean.
did you ever
kick your dog, or beat your
wife
in the last year or so.
yes or no?
what about that late night text
you sent
nine years ago to someone
named
Amber.
as governor will you allow
men
to come into your
house
and strip down naked?
yes or no.
do you think Somalian should
be our
first language?
how do you feel about snakes,
or alligators
in our rivers
eating escaped prisoners?
and what about that Maryland
Man,
will you rescue
him
and bring him home again?
if you were a tree
what kind of tree would you be,
and would you
call your opponent
the sap in a tree?
yes or no, you have three seconds
to answer.

New York City will be a paradise now

we're so excited
about the big changes in New York City
with the election
of the socialist communist
34 year old
nepo baby,
former rapper 
and food truck worker from
Uganda. now Mayor.
we love
the city,
walking around,
Central Park, the Broadway Shows,
pizza
and delis galore.
Chinatown is a delight,
as is
Soho and Noho,
the Village and Battery Park.
not to mention
the museums
and the chaotic fun of Times Square.
and now, my comrades,
let's praise
the Lord, or Allah, or whoever
you choose
to bow to,
everything is free.
free free free
with a social worker on every
corner
to hug us when we bleed.
how blessed we
are
with rents frozen for eternity.
no need to hop
the turnstile anymore
to ride the subway,
or sneak
onto buses, or ditch the check
at Katz's deli,
or Sparks,
the Rockefellers and Gatsby's got that.
no longer do we have to bring
three of our saved
paychecks
when we get off the bus at
Penn Station.
and thankfully there will be
less policemen
there to harass us
when being robbed of the few
dollars, watches and rings
we've brought.
paradise for you,
paradise for me.
let's rejoice, let's sing.

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

who's your daddy?

what's wrong, Tex?
i asked my cowboy buddy
as he
sat on the front porch twirling his
rope.
i'm tired, he said,
squinting in that cowboy
way he did
even when there was no sun.
i'm tired of rounding
up cattle,
riding the trail, eating beans
over a campfire
and wearing these stupid
chaps on my legs.
my toes hurt from these pointy boots.
well then, why don't you quit
and do something else
with your life?
get an office job.
i can't, he says,
slapping his dusty
hat against his leg, a piece
of straw
dangling from his parched
lips.
everyone knows me as a cowboy.
that's who i am.
plus the rodeo is coming next
week and my name
is on a poster.
i don't know if i can handle
another broken
arm or leg, but what choice
do i have?
thanks to my daddy,
i'm a cowboy until the end.

i hear she's doing this now

it's hearsay,
a rumor, a bit of gossip
whispered
over
lunch,
from one mouth
to another,
on the phone, a cryptic
text
passed down.
maybe it's true,
maybe it isn't. whatever
it may be,
it's so much more
fun than
the daily news.

careful what you wish for

strange
how different we are.
seeing
the same set of facts and yet
believing
differently how
things should go
in deciding which candidate
to vote for.
it seems to be an
open and shut
case.
but it isn't.
common sense seems
to have lost
its once
guiding light
and 
persuasive powers.

the endless paper

so much
paper,
in boxes, in drawers,
bins
stacked
in the closet.
taxes
and letters,
warranties and decrees.
receipts
and recipes.
manuals,
postcards, so much
paper,
so much debris.
drifts and drifts of life,
a sea
of history.
still yet to be swayed
into
believing in
things received
electronically.
there's no sympathy for trees.

Monday, November 3, 2025

what's it all about Alfie?

in my younger
days,
when i thought i was Tom Jones,
or Alfie,
playing the field,
juggling
girls
like colorful balls in the air,
i dreaded
Christmas.
i had to get a side job just
for all gifts
i had to buy
to keep them
in the rotation. i spent
many nights
carefully wrapping and putting
tags on each
according
to size.
plus, medium, petite and large.
it was always nice
to find
something
that said
one size fits all.
gloves and hats were easiest
to buy.
lingerie was a nightmare.

a real dive bar

it wasn't a faux
dive
bar
that we found in the woods,
no, it was the real deal where
the servers
had severe
dental issues,
and the owner
was on probation for
serving
minors,
and stealing cars.
there was a dog
tied up
out back to a truck tire
in the rain.
they specialized in sloppy
joe's
and liver and onions,
breakfast
all day.
from which animal it all
came from,
who's to know.
there was always a man
asleep
with his head on the bar,
sleeping one off,
and a women
in the back,
with her dress pulled up
as she
shaved her legs, and sang
a song.
the floors were tilted like
a sinking ship,
and the roof leaked,
we ordered eggs and sausage
to go, not staying long,
then ate it in the car.

Julie's two bottles of beer

almost
everyday, when i open
the refrigerator door
i see on
the shelf
two bottles of beer
in green glass,
the labels
nearly worn off from age.
Julie left them here
along
with one
shoe,
a dress, a book, and an
alarm
clock.
once day i'll put it all into
a box
and call her.
but not today.
i'm busy.

all those ticking watches

i open
the top drawer to look
at all of my
watches.
gifts, ones i bought for myself
because
they looked
fancy.
a few hand me downs.
all them still ticking,
behind or ahead
exactly
one hour.
gold bands,
silver,
rubberized straps,
leather bands,
black and brown.
red.
one is engraved and says
i'll love you
until the end of time.
that one,
the battery has run out.

we never went there Kim says

we never landed on the moon,
Kim K. tells
me
as she does her long nails,
and 
studies her phone.
adjusting her
enormous bottom
in a folding chair.
what?
i say.
what are you talking about?
we went there
six times.
fabricated, she says, it's a hoax.
a movie
production
to make us look great in the eyes
of the world.
no one could possibly
go to the moon,
it would be in all the papers,
in the news.
and why would they go there
anyway.
there's no air,
no water, no food.
just rocks.
there's not a single nail salon
up there.

Houston we have a problem

i bring
a book to the car dealership,
to wile
away the hours
as they work
on my car
and its flashing dashboard
lights
saying,
get out quickly,
run,
the brakes system has
failed,
abandon all hope,
Houston we have a problem,
run far.
say goodbye
to your loved ones
and get your house in order,
or bring it in for the oil
change
and brake fluid
replacement.
you're overdue by ten
hours.

listen kid, this is what you need to do

if you
had a wise person in your
life
at an early age,
an elder
who sat you down
to give
you advice,
a teacher, a parent,
a stranger on the street,
would you
have even listened
and took note, 
adjusted the path you
were on?
probably not, but
it would have
been nice
just the same.

Sunday, November 2, 2025

forever young

was she angry,
smiling,
sad,
disappointed, happy?
was she
pleased with me,
uncertain?
it was hard to tell
anymore
where she stood with
anything.
a bi-monthly
injection had
kept her inscrutable,
kept her young.

small problems along the way

it's a pebble
in my shoe,
a piece of lint
on the sweater,
something caught
between
my teeth.
these are things i'll
get to
eventually.
the untied shoe,
the button
come loose,
the door
that won't close,
and you.

as the world burns

we drive
by the scream of sirens
going
in the other direction and talk
about dinner.
we pay
no mind to the traffic
in the other lanes
at a standstill, bumper
to bumper,
the blaring of horns.
the smell of smoke
and ash
in the air.
we roll the windows up
and
we drive on,
we ponder what shall it be
tonight, 
Mexican or Thai,
or just keep
driving home and heat up
what we find.

same as it always was

i find
the broken eggs on my porch
difficult
to wash off.
i boil water,
then pour it on the dried yolks.
i get the broom
out.
the ice scraper.
it's hopeless, so i turn my
attention
to the graffiti
on the brick,
getting the power washer
out.
at last,
i start winding up all the toilet
paper
draped across my
roof and trees.
crazy kids.
you gotta love em.
same as it always was.

Sunday morning payday

around 5 a.m.
i wake up, hearing the rustling
of coins
and keys.
my belt buckle
clicking
against itself.
i look across the bedroom
to see her
bent over in
the dimly lit room,
going through my wallet
and pant pockets.
counting cash.
licking her thumb
with each
bill, mumbling
out the count.
i say nothing, and lie back
down.
maybe it's just a bad dream.

we love everyone, but you

they like
their signs, God Bless this House,
planted
in the front yard.
we like
all people.
black, brown, white
and all the ones in between.
Buddhist?
we don't care,
Catholic, Atheist, come one
come all.
Coexist.
it takes a village.
be kind,
be generous, be inclusive,
peace and love
to all mankind,
but whatever you
do,
don't be conservative
and vote
on the right.

the train awaits

it's all
glitter and glam,
confetti
and champagne at first.
and then
the hangover
sets in.
the wedding dress is saran
wrapped
in the closet.
it's the morning after.
there's bills to pay,
a dog
to walk,
bushes to be trimmed.
is this milk
sour?
what's the expiration date?
how about
we scramble some eggs
before we go
our separate ways?
no.
i have to go,
the train awaits.
i'll be home after
seven or so, no need to wait up,
i'll be
working the late.

Saturday, November 1, 2025

it was Becky who smashed my pumpkin

there's
a smashed pumpkin on my porch,
a few cracked
eggs as well
splattered on the door.
large brown shells
are scattered about.
they look organic,
from free range chickens,
no doubt.
i have my suspicions
as to who
the culprit was
who carried this Halloween
mayhem out.
i think it was Becky, the comptroller
of the condo
board,
and yoga instructor for Antifa,
the eighty-year-old
blue haired
spinster
three houses down.
we've never gotten along,
not since the day i moved in twenty
three years ago
and put
the stars and stripes out.


sleep walking through the early years

strange
to sleepwalk. to get up
in the middle of
the night,
in the middle
of a dream
and stumble around the house.
to open
doors,  go down flights
of stairs
and walk about
as if awake.
it reminds me so much
of what i did
daily
in my early years
from nine
to five
when i punched the clock
for a paycheck.

the rain will eventually stop

i lost
track of time, of days.
the constant
rain
kept me home
for weeks.
i grew a long
white beard,
i ran out of books to read,
and then the sun came out.
i got in my rowboat
with my dog,
my cat,
my parakeet and mouse,
and started rowing
towards the  7-11.
i could see it's saving light
in the distance,
things
will be fine.

the toy trumpet for Christmas

eventually
we had to hide his toy trumpet.
it was a Christmas
mistake,
so were the drums
and the tuba,
the tambourine and kazoo.
eventually we taught
the boy how
to be a mime,
like Marcel Marceau,
then things were fine.

you could see it in her eyes

he was
a wild dog, you could see
it in her eyes
she was a cup
of crazy,
the constant barking,
the gnawing
on furniture
and shoes,
impossible to housetrain,
and yet i loved her.
my usual mistake.

a little Trumper at the door

only
one child knocked on the door
last night
with a plastic
pumpkin
to carry his candy around.
one small
boy
dressed as the president,
with an orange
wig,
blue suit and red tie.
trick or treat, he said,
doing a fine impersonation
for a five
year old.
he held his pumpkin out.
take as much as you want
mr. president, i told him.
we all think
you're doing a wonderful
job.
we're looking forward to
three more years.
love the ballroom idea,
by the way.
you have a way with 
the wrecking ball.
then he did a little dance
as i put the Village People
on.

Costco won't let me in

who
are these people keeping me out of Costco
and Sam's Club,
without
an ID.
without a membership
card.
how evil,
how despicable
the world
has become.
i have rights too, i'm human
and need
to eat. i need to drink,
to put clothes
on my back.
my ancestors came over on
the Mayflower, or a ship
similar to that.
how
dare they
ask me for
identification.
a driver's license, or
a library card,
a place that i bank at.
what has this country come to?
they won't let me into
their big store.
these uniformed
rent a cop fascists.

the blood is everywhere

with luck,
and endurance, after
ten thousand
words
tumble out from this machine.
i might stumble
upon
one good poem, one
structured
and 
thoughtful piece of art.
a single one
worth keeping.
it's rare, but i wait for it,
i wait to pick up
that one
diamond on a highway
of broken glass.
the blood
is everywhere.

Friday, October 31, 2025

only two more months to go

i remember
my mother standing in the kitchen,
at the counter,
sweat
on her brow,
flour on her nose,
her red apron on,
making cookies, Christmas was
only 75 days away.
she'd wipe her
glasses clean
on the curtain of the open
window.
we stood
and waited for one or two samples,
at the most.
still warm from
the oven,
before she froze the rest
in wrapped
batches, carefully
labeled and placed in the ice box.
she used every
spoon, every spatula,
and mixer, every bowl,
every long tray
she had in her arsenal.
nuts of all kinds.
brown
and white sugar. vanilla extract,
chocolate,
candied sprinkles.
all without
a recipe in sight.
so many cookies, so many
children.
none of it would last long.

this one time in band camp

live
long enough, and you'll
accumulate
a lot of ribald stories,
bawdy
tales of youth
and beyond.
many that you've embellished
over the years,
expanded
and changed, honed to a fine
a point.
you've become a modern day,
Red Foxx or
Mark Twain.
you don't even bother
using fake
names anymore,
as you scrawl with your verbal pen,
because most of the characters
in your stories
are long gone.
and they can't correct
a thing.

tinkling issues

on the fourth
visit
to dribble out pee into
the dark
bathroom,
as the night drains on,
but not me,
i figure it's time to google
web md
and investigate
this prostate thing.
to find
a supplement to unclog
the pipes,
so to speak.
google will know what
to do,
or maybe the reliable
ChatGPT.

drill baby drill

this is by all accounts
the dentist's favorite day of the year.
Halloween.
in a month
or so,
he'll reap the reward
of Mary Janes
stuck in
the molars of so many children's
mouths,
the candied apples,
the double bubble gum,
the chocolate bars,
the lollipops.
all disintegrating
those young pearly whites.
what fun.

finding a place for things

so much
of life is spent finding a place
for things.
a place
to live,
a home with
trees
near water, and
where to put the chairs,
the tables,
which wall to hang
a picture on.
should the bed be near the window,
what about the orange vase
your mother
gave us
for Christmas,
in full display on the mantle?
or is there
room for it
still,
in the cellar?

Thursday, October 30, 2025

guaranteed to last a life time

the ad says,
guaranteed to last a lifetime,
but i have
my doubts.
no salesman will visit your home
it proclaims,
buy three
get the fourth one free,
able to get the most
stubborn
of stains out.
we're going out of business,
everything
must go,
no credit check, it's your
last chance
before we close for good.
promises made,
promises kept.
it'll put a spring in your step,
hair on your head,
make your wife
happy.
no sugars added,
no MSG.
everything you see and buy,
is one hundred per cent
guaranteed.
money back
if not satisfied, return
the unused portion
within in thirty days,
without
a receipt.

winter travel

it's cold
and the mice
want in, i see them
gathering
at
the small crevice in the brick,
with their
long coats on,
hats and gloves,
carrying
their luggage.
papers in hand.
the line moves slowly,
but they're patient,
one at a time
the mouse at the turnstile
says.
pointing,
turn left at the vent
and up you go
to the attic.

pj's with long sleeves

after
the cold strikes,
and the rain overnight
has ceased,
the window
is yellow
with trees.
how quickly it all changes.
once you
were young,
rushing out the door
to work,
and now this,
staring out the window
in your
pj's
with long sleeves.

maybe they don't know

maybe they don't know,
i think,
as i sit on the park bench
watching
grown men
and women, children fishing
at the man
made lake.
i watch them sliding worms
onto hooks
and casting out
into the murky water,
sinking their lines
with small lead weights.
maybe they don't know
that Safeway has fish now.

a beautiful field of mushrooms

it was exciting
in a way,
the siren wailing over the elementary
school,
us under our desks,
protected by
paper
and wood, the teacher
trying to keep
us calm
before telling us to run
home to our
homes,
our dad and moms.
we didn't understand, but
we were happy
to have
an early afternoon off.
we wondered
if doing our
homework was even
necessary once the bombs
began to drop,
creating a beautiful
field of mushrooms.

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

tomatoes for the road

when
i see the tomatoes
still on
the vines
at the store, i pick them
up and hold
them to my nose.
there were so many
late summers
when i took
bags of them
home.
he loved his garden, his
little plot
of land
beneath the window,
beside
the concrete patio.
it's rare
to hold one in my hand
these days and
not think
of him,
his tomatoes for the road.

there's a story here

it's a reminder,
this
ring on the wood
of the old
table, once new,
a spot where many
wet cups
were set,
carelessly left,
glasses of wine,
mugs
of beer. cold bottles,
warm
drinks.
it's a tale, a quiet story,
but not forgotten
of who
was here.

sticks and stones

it was easier
when in grade school to insult
your
childhood
colleagues
that you disagreed
with or didn't like.
you called each other names
on the playground,
like fatso,
stupid,
butthead, or skinny minnie,
but truthfully
not much has changed.
now instead of saying
we don't like
you, or that i beg to differ,
we call each other names
like Hitler or
Mussolini,
or Pol Pot, or Hanoi Jane.

this land is your land, etc.

my friend Lucy,
tells me that there should be no borders,
zero.
this land is
everyone's land, like
the song says,
from California to Long Island.
hmmm,
i say.
watching her as she jabs her
arm with a safety pin.
so at night, you don't lock
your doors,
or windows.
it's okay if someone breaks into
your house,
and sleeps in your
bed or couch,
eats your food and takes your
car for a ride?
you're good with that?
paying their doctor bills, putting
their kids in school,
clothing them, tucking
them in at night?
you don't want a fence around
your house, a wall,
a security camera? nothing?
all doors swing open?
well, that's different, she says.
i'm talking about countries,
not houses.

before you order the wedding cake

it's important
to examine someone's medicine
cabinet
before making
a commitment.
peer into a few closets,
look under
the bed,
go down to the cellar,
climb the steps
to the attic,
and when you can,
dive into their phone.
open a few
drawers,
before the ring goes on,
become snoop dog,
Sherlock Holmes,
Columbo.
Angela Lansbury in
Murder
She Wrote.

that's what love is, right?

she knew how
to push
my buttons, rattle my cage,
get under
my skin,
confuse and abuse
my mental
state.
she knew how to gaslight,
to white
lie her
way through the day,
into the night.
but i looked the other way,
because that's
what love is?
right?

taking control of my life

in a desperate
move
for order, for reason and stability,
i make my bed.
i pull the sheets
up tight
around the mattress
after shaking free the crumbs
of chips
and cookies,
then carefully
lay out the blanket,
smoothing out the creases.
i fluff the pillows
as i line them up
against the headboard.
i stand back and admire my
handiwork
after adjusting a lampshade.
i'm in control here.
this could possibly
be the beginning
of a new day.

nearly every breath you take

we see things
we've never seen before.
floods and fires,
volcanoes,
twisters
and earthquakes.
we have close ups
of animals
deep in the woods,
in the ocean,
the moon
and mars,
surgical procedures.
there's someone at the door,
in the car.
we see robberies, crimes
of all sorts,
the cameras are
everywhere.
in your ears,
your mouth.
not second goes by
without 
a moment of our lives
being recorded.
everyone's a star.


nurse on reserve

i find
a piece of broken glass
on the floor
with my
left foot
causing a small but
painful
gash.
i drip blood behind me
as i walk
to the hall closet where
the red cross
box
waits for me,
and my nurse, Jenna,
who sits
me down
and cleans the wound,
wraps it
tight.
will there be anything else,
she asks?
yes, i tell her,
dinner at eight, tonight.

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

the quiet majority

it's less
crowded as you go to vote early.
still
there's a line, but it
moves along
quickly.
people are polite,
both left and right.
they talk
and smile, 
stamp their feet
and rub
their hands in the cold.
there's no rabble rousers
there.
no flag burning nut cakes.
this is what most Americans
are like.
peaceful and able
to agree to disagree
before
casting their
vote, then
going for coffee as they
walk around the lake.

a twist on Halloween

it's a strange twist
for the blue
haired,
septum ring
wearing
crazies on the street protesting.
the costumes
they wear,
of blow up
frogs and dog,
chickens. men in dresses,
girls
in combat boots
will come off.
this Halloween they will
clean themselves
up, take a shower,
brush their hair and go out as
normal people,
republicans.

tit for tat

is everything
a negotiation with you, she asks.
is that how
it's going to be,
tit for tat,
a transactional relationship?
maybe,
i tell her,
and if you stop
talking for one second,
i'll answer that.

the dumbing of America

what is the word?
is it
chutzpah?
is that it, what the next
mayor
of New York has.
free buses,
free housing, frozen rents,
free healthcare.
he will build us a Shangri-La
in the big apple.
he's surrounded
by men
in turbans, and young women
with blue hair,
and soy boys
with soft hands,
chanting cult like,
all of them with low IQ's.
math and economics 101,
not being
their favorite subject.
reality is coming.

good times are coming

i rub my hands
together,
pull on my red wool socks
and go
out into the yard
for wood
to build a fire.
there's snow on the ground.
i should have
put pants on,
it's cold.
i feel like a farmer
in 1929,
though less depressed.
i'm sure good times will
come back
around.

two lips pressed together

she kisses
me with her red lips
and leaves
an imprint
of lipstick on my cheek
and neck.
she's marked me
for the day.
i'm hers,
i'll have no chance
with the rest.
so that's what lipstick
is for,
ah ha.

the new year book edition

the obituaries
scare
you.
these people are younger
than you.
much younger.
why are they dropping like flies.
look at them
in their suits
and dresses,
their fine shirts with
ties.
it's a new yearbook edition
for the next
school
up there in the clouds,
higher learning
in the skies.

Monday, October 27, 2025

lemon chicken, no, come on now

i see on
the news an ex of mine at the Portland
Ice
detention center
in a gas mask.
she's throwing
rocks,
and chanting, spitting,
saying
words i never heard her say
before.
it's the angriest
i've seen her
since
we were married and i told
her i can't eat
this lemon chicken
anymore.

Sugar Town

i wouldn't know
Bad Bunny, the performer
who will be playing at the Superbowl,
if he came hopping
down
the street with an
Easter basket
full of chocolate eggs.
but then again,
i don't know a single song
by Taylor Swift,
or Miley Cyrus,
or Queen Latifa.
or Snoop Dog. i'm so far out
the loop
of music.
what the hell's a Drake?
i'm still putting vinyl records
onto the turn table.
singing to the Zombies
greatest hits,
which were only three songs,
really.
followed by Nancy Sinatra
singing,
Sugar Town.

vacancy, rooms available, free-wifi and a continental breakfast

with each
new
soul mate, i got a tattoo
on my arm,
along with
the painful
process of the laser gun
erasing,
the list of other
names,
the names of girls,
then women
i hooked my wagon to.
finally,
my arm ravaged with scar
tissue,
limp at my side
from love
gone wrong,
i had to go to the other
arm,
which read vacancy.
rooms available,
free wi-fi,
and a continental breakfast.
please apply.

stay off it for awhile

i know
this bister on my foot
will heal,
but
in the middle of it, red,
and sore,
oozing.
it feels as if it might
never end.
almost
everyday there's
something
like that,
a wound that hurts, 
but with time, and care,
mends.

the street opera

there's approximately
eight men,
a few women,
at the crack
of dawn,
all in green vests and white
hard hats,
digging into
the street, a nice tidy
square where one man
climbs down. the trucks are lined
up along the curb.
one person waves
you forward with his sign,
another person,
holds traffic coming the other way.
it's an all-day affair.
an orchestrated
play.
the jack hammers
hammering,
the shovels and tar,
the steam roller
at the end as the sun goes
down, and the world
is almost under
the stars.
the fat lady at last singing.

plumber Mike

he smiles,
knowingly, then pulls
down his welder's mask
and lights
the torch,
bends to the pipe
in the tightest
of corners,
fixing
the smallest of leaks.
a tiny
hole in the copper elbow
where
water springs out.
it could
ruin
everything, but there's
nothing to fret
about.
it's easy
for him, saving the world,
one weld
at a time.
satisfying, as you pay him
whatever
he wants
for five minutes
of time.

Sunday, October 26, 2025

three wads of bubblegum lost in her hair

i was in the eleventh
grade
at the time, slow dancing to
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts club
band,
with Vivian
my new flame,
when i accidentally lost the gum
i was chewing
in her hair.
her long black hair that she
swung around
with youthful exuberance
when doing cheers
next to the football field.
i tried to wiggle the gum out
with my lips, my tongue,
my teeth,
but only buried it deeper.
and then she screamed.
her parents came running down
the stairs,
and the other couples jumped
from the couches
interrupting their make out
sessions.
the lights went on and the music
stopped.
ice didn't work,
her girlfriends gathered around
her as she cried.
i slunk away,
out the door. backpedaling.
the following Monday i saw
her in school, walking down
the hallway,
cold and silent.
her hair cut as short as Mia Farrow's
in Rosemary's baby.

the Macaroni Grill

she arrived
at the bar in her yellow corvette,
circa 1979.
which she parked
diagonally in the lot.
her hair
was of the same era,
stacked
high on her head,
a beehive
if there ever was one.
she wore
a purple dress,
and when
she opened her purse
for a tube of lipstick i spied a pink
handgun.
a small derringer
with her initials
engraved into the handle.
i asked her
about the gun,
and she told me that she
just got off
work at her mother's liquor
store where
she worked behind
the counter,
and plexiglass.
we're robbed almost every week,
she said.
then picked up the menu
and asked,
so what's good here?


where do i put this trash?

the green
scam, the eco-friendly,
the climate
change
activists,
the environmentally
safe
paint
and oil, chemical
additives,
the blue bin
for
tin or paper,
glass
or plastic.
stop the madness
with your five barrels
for a variety
of trash.
relax,
and have a cold one,
the world
is a bar of soap, how
long can
it last.

i don't want the winner

give me
the plain, the simple,
the ordinary.
give me
the vanilla, the same thing
over
and over
again.
spare me the exotic fruit,
the smooth operator,
the special,
the extraordinary,
those who
have personality plus.
i don't want
the four star,
or the blue ribbon,
the winner
of the beauty contest.
don't give me the overreach,
give me
something normal,
someone
i can trust.

house triage

it's a long list,
a myriad
of broken things around the house.
a key
is snapped
in two
stuck in the front door.
wind seeps
through
a crack in the window.
the sink
leaks,
only one burner on the oven
works.
the light in the hall
is burned out,
the ac
is on the fritz.
what get's fixed first,
i ask my
therapist,
which makes her shake
her head
and say,
let's start with you, then
we'll go
down the list.

we need more voters on our side, so let's open the borders

it's a theory
maybe, or maybe it's true
that the
influx
of ten million undocumented
people crossing
the border
are coming over
into the open arms of a certain
political party
for free stuff,
funded credit cards,
food, clothing, 
free room and board in fine
hotels,
medical
care and schools.
plus they get to vote with no
ID, zero identification
at all.
just a guess, but you kind of
know who
that vote will be for.

one spank on a full diaper

i remember
striking
my son once on his bottom.
he was about
to stick a flat head
screwdriver
into a light switch, which
may or may not
have burned the whole
place down.
i sprained my hand on his
thick heavy
diaper
waiting to be changed.
i iced it, wrapped it
with an ace bandage and put
the tool away.
he looked at me
with tears in his eyes,
and frowned.

no wind in my sail

there is no more
wind
in my sail
for argument, for difficult
people,
for trouble
small or large.
enough
is enough, those days
are far
gone.
a handful of loved
ones,
at peace with themselves
and world,
is fine now.

before i rest what's tired

the windows
left
open over night
leaves
the house cold
when coming home.
it feels as
if might snow
in here
at any moment.
the sink
is dripping ice.
i throw another
blanket onto the bed.
another
long onto the fire,
the kettle
whistles,
bread rises in the oven.
more wood
to chop
before the sun goes down,
before
i lie down, before i rest
what's tired.

Saturday, October 25, 2025

look at me, walking without a limp

when my
knee hurts, the left one in particular,
from 50 years
of sports,
bone on bone
according to my
doctor Jimmy, i try
to fake
the pain, and try to stroll
around as if
i'm still of a younger age.
i still got it.
i'm fine,
i'm not melting or disintegrating
before your
eyes.
no crutch, no walker, no
knee replacement
for me.
see, look at me walk,
look at
the spring in my step
as i grip a shopping cart.
i got this
i tell the world as i fill it
up with prunes
and Ensure,
24 in a box.

the golden age of slow motion

the commercial
for
fine dining,
and dancing,
is in slow motion, so is
the one
for whiskey
and a cruise
across the Atlantic,
the senior
home,
elderly sitting by a fire,
laughing,
all in slow motion,
pickle ball,
and fireworks,
even
the waves arriving
on shore
from the ocean.
all of it in slow motion.
they know
what we want,
don't they?
let's slow this world
down,
we have money
and we're not quite ready
to leave.

first job as a fry cook at Bob's Burgers

so where
do you see yourself in five years,
the interviewer
asked me
as i applied for the minimum
wage job
as a fry
cook at Bob's Burgers.
close your eyes
and take your time with
your answer,
the manager told me.
a kid going to
junior college studying
yoga
and bee keeping.
umm, i said.
i see myself in a corner
office
on wall street making the big
bucks,
with a big house,
a sports car
and a hot wife named Amber
who wears
a red bikini all day.
okay, okay.
the manager says.
are you willing to cut your
hair, or wear
a hair net
as you fry the potatoes?
sure, i tell him.
great, you're hired.

the weekend social warrior blues

again
i see my neighbor,
the protest weekend warrior,
on her
porch crying.
what's up, i ask, putting
my hand
on her shoulder.
she smells like
tear gas
and jail, Doritos.
i was in the pokey all night,
she tells me,
rubbing her
eyes.
her face is red as a tomato.
i shouldn't
have punched that cop,
but he wouldn't
talk to me, or answer my
questions
about the constitution.
so i hit him.
i think my ribs are bruised
from
his Billy club pushing against
me when
i joined the crowd
and tried to rush the detention
center.
i don't think i can play
pickleball
today,
or tomorrow, not to mention
go to the shoe
sale at Norstrom's
this weekend.
my left foot is swollen where it
got hit with a pepper
ball.

the secret of a good marriage

to truly
get along, we have to overlook
our differences
and smile.
we have to ignore each
other's short
comings,
faults
and weird habits.
we have to look the other
way,
when something stupid is
said,
or done.
we have to pretend
that words
don't matter,
it's the only
way
to stay together and move on.

i just made a salad, take a look

amazed
by the new phone,
the first
phone,
not the wall phone but the phone
in my
pocket, like
most people i took pictures
of everything
then sent them along
for discussion,
or a like,
or a wow.
i took pictures of sunsets,
sunrises.
cups of coffee,
even salads.
oh look,
there's a bird on a branch,
a snake
on the ground.
don't ask me why i was
such a shutter
bug, but i've changed,
i rarely
take it out now
unless it's something really
really special,
like over there in
that field,
a cow.

Friday, October 24, 2025

don't let it slide

it sends
a chill down your back
when
you realize what's true,
what isn't.
it's a bright light within
you,
and yet
there's darkness everywhere
else.
how long
can you go without saying
a word.
without telling
the world what you know?
maybe
let it slide, let it go.
no.

betting on the games NBA style

you hear
two NBA players whispering to each
other as they
sit on the bench
adjusting their
solid
gold chains
around their necks.
both multi-millionaires.
yo,
i'm going to sit out the fourth
quarter,
i've got a hundred
grand
on this game
saying that we lose.
so it's best i don't participate.
i'm going to fall
down at half time
and pretend my
ankle hurts.
dang,
the other one says, i've got
a bet down
too with Luciano Maggiano,
that i'll get three more dunks
before the game
is over.
but i'll make sure we lose, okay?
deal?
deal, brother.

new job opportunities

there are so many new
job
opportunities these days.
you can go work
for ICE
rounding up
illegal immigrants,
or become a paid protester
on the streets
protesting
the rounding up of illegal
immigrants.
each with a sizable
salary.
it's hard to decide which one
to do.
each has a uniform,
a hat and mask,
some cool boots.
one has a green vest with
a variety of signs and
megaphone to carry,
while
and the other one has
night vision goggles
and unlimited
pepper spray.

we are all know it alls now

it's a blah
blah
blah world. talking heads
blabbering
about what's right or wrong.
what to do
next.
we are all know it alls now.
everyone has an opinion,
and have had
it always.
it's just
that now they're on the street
corner,
or online
with wide open mouths,
day into night
as the sun goes down.

Thursday, October 23, 2025

synthetic oil

it's a rough
tight room at the Jiffy Lube.
the walls
are yellowed, not
from paint,
but from time.
after i agree with the pirate
behind 
the cut-out window
for synthetic oil
i pick up
a magazine
off the table with Liz Taylor
on the front,
getting
divorced again,
but keeping her weight down.
i rub my fist
against the porthole in the wall
to look into
the garage
to see how my car is doing.
the hood is up,
the doors are
open. i can see someone's
arms
sticking up from under it
with a wrench
of some kind.
a man comes in looking sad,
holding
my air filter.
okay, i tell him, then
sit back down.
i see there's a bathroom
with a sign on the door
that says,
Anyone.
but i feel that
i can hold it until i get home.

the leaves can wait

with the rake
leaning against the wall,
the winter
sun
is a good sun to sit out
in.
to have it kiss you
gently
on the face,
to warm you
as the leaves fall.
it's
nice to sit here and do
nothing
letting the low
yellow
sun
wash over you.
the leaves can wait
a little while
longer.

destroying a precious shrine

i take a sledge hammer
to the shed
in the yard,
it's full of cobwebs and mold.
old rusted
tools,
a bike with flat tires,
when the condo board
president comes over
screaming, asking
what are you doing?
do you know what an
historic national shrine
that shed is?
how dare you destroy
what has stood there
since 1968. you have
some nerve, some gall.
and what do you plan to
do once this precious old
shed is gone?
build a nicer one i tell her.
something with a chandelier,
big windows to let
in the light,
a dance floor, room for
everyone that i want to visit me,
excluding you.

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

saving the wildlife and being a good person

i prove to myself
that i'm
a good person by stopping
the car
and carrying a turtle
across the road.
my headlights
catch the dull sheen 
of it's green
thatched shell.
it will be my good deed
for the day.
i talk to it softly, telling it,
common on slow poke,
you have to speed
it up when
crossing the road.
i take a picture of it to share
with others.
unfortunately, it snaps
and bites me
on the hand
as i pick it up from
underneath.
i had no idea that their
necks could stretch out
that far.
angered, i fling the ungrateful
turtle as far as
i can. luckily, i hear
a splash
in a nearby creek.
he didn't hit a tree or a rock,
so he didn't crack.
so i guess i'm a good person
after all.
but now to the clinic
for a tetanus shot.

the passing of Mary Beth

there's a picture
of Mary Beth in the newspaper.
i had a crush on her
in high school.
she was once
queen of the prom,
captain of the cheerleaders,
valedictorian
and voted most likely
to succeed.
she passed away in her sleep
after a long illness,
after forty years
of working at Walmart.
if i had known
she worked there i would have
gone in once
in a while.
i can still see her in that red
bikini.
i have a picture in my wallet.

don't waste your life

i unwrap
the book that comes in the mail
without
a return
address written on it.
i don't recognize the handwriting.
it could be
from anyone.
brother, sister, parent or friend.
the book is
titled 
Don't Waste Your Life.
tips on living
your best life,
being productive and putting
your best
foot forward
in all your endeavors.
it's a step by
step manual on
finding out the reason why 
you're here
on earth.
i flip through the pages,
skim,
then throw it into waste bin.
it's too late in the game
for such nonsense.

the destination wedding

they insisted
on formal wear, on tuxedos,
gowns,
bling,
shiny shoes and done
up hair.
it was a destination wedding
to Bali.
it cost us nearly three thousand
dollars
in air fare
and lodging for the week.
gifts
and luggage,
a car rental.
it was a wonderful wedding
on the beach
with a band and unlimited
food and drinks.
two weeks
later, they got divorced.
we're having our
lawyer look into this for a refund.

shut up

it's interesting
when
someone tells you that you've
had
all the advantages
that others
don't have.
that's why you have a house
and money,
a car.
things, so many things.
the color
of your skin
got you here, your parents
and their
money.
it's hilarious, funny to hear
as i think
back 
and remember the church
leaving
food on our porch,
food stamps
and social workers trying
to split us up,
the electricity 
being cut off because there
was not a penny
to pay the bills.
we had no car.
holes in our shoes.
everything was hand me down.
there was
no air conditioning in a house
with broken
windows,
one bathroom
for eight.
but we somehow survived
and made
due.
then we went to work.
what's your excuse?

even the sky seems bluer

we're not
far from the city, maybe
fifty miles
out,
heading west when we
see cows
and horses.
red barns,
long fields of corn
and grain,
clap board houses with people
on the porch
who wave.
even the sky seems bluer
above
the wind vanes.
it's another world,
another
way.

rarely anything new that's good

it's difficult
to have an original thought
when you're
plugged in
all day,
at work,
on a jog, a walk.
there's someone in your
ear
and eyes
telling you how to think,
how to behave,
teaching you
what to say.
the absence of being silent
is killing
culture.
that's why there's very
little new
music
or books, or poetry.
everything thing is less
than what it was,
or feels
the same.

dough boys

we need
more plumbers,
more electricians, skilled
carpenters
and roofers,
painters and drywall
workers.
we need men to lay tar
on the roads
to build
with wood and brick,
steel.
we need someone
to drive
the trucks,
the cranes, the back hoes.
we need
architects
and planners.
but the young want to take
the easy way out,
sitting behind
a desk
with soft hands
and manicured nails,
turning into dough.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

drug cartel boats go boom

as if in
a video game, the speed boats
and makeshift
drug cartel
submarines are being blown 
to smithereens
on the highs seas.
they appear to be
full
of sacks of cocaine
and whatever
other lethal concoctions
they've made.
some say
about time, while others cry
and say
what about their rights?
shouldn't we catch them
first
and process them to see if
they've actually
committed a crime.
maybe we can talk to them
and ask them
why.
give them safe haven,
with three meals
and a bed,
health care and a psychologist
to see what's
on their mind.
sometimes a hug is all a person
needs to turn
their life around.
meanwhile,
maybe a thousand less people
have overdosed
and died.

i have no idea what anyone was talking about, but it was fun

it's a fine group
of elderly folk, some i know,
some i don't.
the ten of us
meet up
in a Mexican restaurant
located in a building
about to be torn down.
there's a sombrero on the wall.
tin placards
of tacos
and burritos,
margaritas.
photos of old Mexico
with burros
and banditos wearing long
bands
of bandoleros.
looking for trouble
riding under movie like clouds.
i don't hear a word of what anyone
is saying,
everyone talking at the same
time and the music
being so loud.
so i just nod
and smile,
agreeing to whatever the
conversation is about.
occasionally i reach for the bean
dip and stick a chip
in, being
careful not to spill.

in case of emergency dial 911

i notice
in the far realm
of the top shelf of the refrigerator
a can
of whipped cream
left over from
last Thanksgiving
when Betty came over with a pumpkin pie.
the tin bottom
has a little rust on it.
hmmm.
can it possibly still be good.
i give it a good shake,
open my mouth,
and squirt in a large stream
of sugary sweet
cream.
i throw a maraschino
cherry into
the mix,
once i run hot water over
the stuck lid.
so far so good.
but we'll see how the night goes.
i'll keep my phone
nearby.

something has to give

it's a disheartening sign
when you
hear that gun sales
are up.
but so is consumption 
of donuts
and big gulps.
potato chips
and dips.
people are emotionally eating
whiles
packing heat
in their bulging yoga
pants and under
their ponchos
and mohair sweaters,
something has to give.

taking the bait daily

the internet
is now
the National Enquirer
as it was
when growing up.
alien babies
found
on the roof of the pentagon,
Oprah,
exposed,
exclusive photos,
Marilyn Monroe,
did she really have six
toes
on each foot.
is Hillary
really a man?
Obama gay? does his
lover
work for the CIA?
we want to buy the paper
just to find out
what the truth is,
we salivate to know,
and the same goes for now,
we want to click 
on the blurb,
and take the bait,

the first milking of a cow

there must have been
for the first
time in history
when
a man took a bucket over
to a cow,
much to her surprise,
and started pulling on
her, squeezing milk
from her fat belly.
what did his wife think,
standing at the doorway
of the barn?
asking, what in the hell are
you doing now,
Elmer?
what did the cow think?
did the other animals
raise their eyebrows
and run?

mattress on the roof of a Beetle

i'm worried
about the car in front of me
with a king size
mattress
tied to the roof.
it's a small car with
a young couple inside.
just married
is written in soap on
the back window.
tin cans drag
from behind.
a strong wind
blows
the mattress
from side to side,
trying to free itself,
trying to fly.
it's a wobbly start to
this new
life.

ten hours left to go

it's a day
of mismatched socks.
spills,
trips and falls,
flat tires
and fingers caught
in a door.
i should have stayed
in bed,
but there are things
to do
despite the world
falling around me,
just ten hours left to go.

Monday, October 20, 2025

i had her wrong the whole time

i push
the bee off the rim of the cup,
but she returns,
i swat at
it with a magazine
rolled up,
missing
the cyclone of
it's gold and black
body.
it circles around and buzzes
at my ear,
it wants to land
so badly
and sting me.
finally i give up and hold
my hand out,
where
she lands and settles down.
she looks at me,
and smiles,
then flies away. i had her
wrong
the whole time.
she just wanted to give me
honey.

there's a man on the roof

there's a man
on the roof shouting.
his shirt is off as he
throws his
arms
into the air.
he's angry
at so many things,
so many people.
i understand
this man.
i wave to him and give
him the thumbs
up.
two thumbs up.
i totally agree with 
whatever
he's saying, although
i can hardly understand
a word of what
he's screaming.
it feels like the truth,
though.
maybe tomorrow i'll
take a turn up there
if the rain stops.

i'm sick of eating chicken, honey bun

chicken again?
i ask
my wife, as she takes a roaster
out of the oven
with small potatoes,
unpeeled.
yes,
she says.
now sit down and shut up
and eat.
if had actually graduated
from college
and made
more money, maybe then
we could have
a better cut of meat.
it's only Monday, but so it
goes.
the start of another long week.

which generation are we on now?

there are so many generations
after
me
that i can't make heads
or tails
as to what they are,
millennials,
x, y, z.
who knows, who cares.
with each new crop of bodies
rising
up like flowers
or weeds,
they all have to learn what we've
already learned,
and now
know.
it's their turn to struggle
with the truth,
to swim or sink.

the magician

he wasn't a good
magician,
he knew that. his card tricks
were old
and stale,
and he often dropped them
on the floor.
pigeons died
in his coat
pocket.
children laughed.
he never made anything
or anyone
disappear,
pulled nothing out of a hat.
and yet
he had this wonderful
long black
cap,
and high-top
shiny hat.
and that seemed to be enough.

starting over

i try
to remember how many jobs
i've had
over the years.
how many places
have i lived,
girlfriends
that i've had,
counting them on my fingers,
then toes,
then ears, eyes
and nose.
i lose count and have to start
over.
as usual, with most things
in life,
i'm starting over and over
again.

dancing with sunlight in her hair

i almost made
a new
friend the other day.
which is rare,
because usually at this point
in life
you have
enough friends
and don't need another one
to confuse
your daily routines.
but she seemed nice
enough
as she approached my car
at the grocery store.
she was very pretty,
well dressed,
her hair done, make up.
the whole grown up
girl thing going on.
i rolled the window down
and said, hello there.
excuse me, kind sir, she said,
but do you have ten dollars
you could spare?
my car is out of gas and i
had to leave
it on the highway.
my kids are right over there
with my mother,
who is ill
and needs several organ transplants.
hmm, i said, then
noticed that she was holding
a violin in her hand,
which she began to play.
and spin around,
swaying to the music
with the sunlight in her hair.

so now what do you do?

i remember like
it was
yesterday, forty years ago,
researching on how
to start
a business. 
what license do i need,
what insurance,
what about taxes and liability.
should it be
a corporate
enterprise, a partnership,
or a lone
wolf kind of thing.
do i need an office, what
about employees,
what about
a truck and tools and this
and that.
advertising,
and now, as i sit here,
with nothing to do,
i type in how to shut down a business.
or is it too soon?


Sunday, October 19, 2025

crazy in the head, crazy in bed

we were
totally infatuated
with each other
until we started talking politics
one morning after a lusty
session of making love.
it was an unfortunate turn
of events, because i was looking
forward to more happier
times.
but then she said something about
going to a protest march.
defunding the police,
and having no borders,
or jails,
mandatory vaccines,
no voter ID's,
letting boys play
in girl's sports,
and giving free health care
to non-citizens,
not to mention free surgical
care for
transitioning boys and girls
taught by
drag queens.
we need more social workers
and cashless bail, she told me,
then revealed
a tattoo of Bernie Sanders
on her shoulder
next to a hammer and sickle.
i lay there and said nothing.
keeping my mouth shut.
maybe i can fake this for another
week or two, i thought,
before she knows
i'm on the other side.
how about i make us some
breakfast, i proposed,
leaning over to sweetly kiss
her on the cheek.
how would you like your eggs,
honey?
bacon, maybe?
wheat toast?

an old thought approaches

i see an old thought
approaching,
limping,
dragging one leg
behind
the other.
i shake my head and tell
it to go back,
go back
to where it came from.
i thought i was done
with thinking these things,
but no, and now
it's too late
to turn it away, it's
getting comfortable again
in my head
and wants to stay.

usually by noon i'm okay

i'm
not a morning person.
i need
quiet.
i need time alone
to grunt
and stumble about.
i need serenity.
peace,
coffee, a long stare out
the window.
but by noon i'm
okay. at least
most of the time.
you'll see
if you decide to stay.

no need to read a dog's mind

there's no
need
to read a dog's mind.
he'll tell
what he wants with
a bark
or a thousand licks
upon your face,
a scratching at the door,
or his nose
moving his empty dish
around
on the floor.
they tell you plain and clear.
what the deal is.
unlike you
my dear.
with you, i'm always
unsure.

to be left in splendid isolation

we want
to be noticed. to be liked,
to be
admired
and accepted.
we want to be different,
unique,
to be remembered
after we die.
we want a legacy
of some sort
when we leave a room,
a school,
a job.
we want to be cried
for
when we die.
but not all of us feel
that way,
some of us just want to disappear
and hide.
live out
our lives in splendid
isolation.

love helps too

some days,
it feels late in the game.
winter
will do that to you.
the cold
air,
the wind.
the trees going grey
and bare.
sunlight
disappearing.
sleep is welcome at times
like this.
the comfort of home
and a good book.
love helps
too.

frogs vs. kings

i see
my neighbor deflating his green frog
costume that he
wore to the No Kings parade
down main street.
he seems happy,
sweaty and tired, but happy.
good march, i ask him,
as he slips out of the rubbery
green blow up skin.
oh, he says, it was wonderful,
i think we actually changed the world,
made this place
a better place to live in.
his voice is hoarse
from all his screaming and chanting.
carefully he takes off his green
crocs and rubs
the blisters on his feet.
wow, i tell him, that's great.
so what's next on the agenda?
when is the next protest slash parade?
hmmm.
not sure, he says. i have to wait
until i get an e-mail from
the organizers on the dark web.
but i'm having my frog costume ready
to hit streets again,
i just need to wash it down,
i tripped and fell into
a pile of dog doo along the way.
but hey, it's part of the sacrifices
we make.
you should march with us next time,
he says.
ummm.
no thanks,
i actually have a real life and fun
stuff going on.
i prefer not to waste my time
on stupid stuff,
like what you do.

Saturday, October 18, 2025

don't be smart and get rich

do not
become rich,
do not become
an entrepreneur,
or an inventor
of something that will
make the world
better.
do not become a millionaire
or God
forbid
a Billionaire,
if you do,
they're coming to get you.
if you are brilliant
enough
to be a success, run
and hide,
they want half or more
of everything you
have.
how dare you be smart
and hardworking,
how dare you?
to quote Greta,
the doom goblin activist.

Bill and Nancy are disappointed in you

i could see down
the hall,
Olga, the HR officer
marching towards my cubicle.
i immediately stopped
doodling and eating
a bag of chips.
it could mean
only one thing.
i was fired again.
i gathered up my things
in a box,
including the black stapler
which i loved,
and some pens,
removed all of my snacks
from my top
desk drawer and waited.
sorry, she said,
standing in the doorway
blocking out
all light and hope, but
Bill and Nancy 
are very disappointed in you,
and sad
to see you go.
but it seems like you don't
know the first thing
about what you're doing here.
i laughed and handed her
my security badge, my
parking pass,
and told her, yeah, they're
right. i don't.

from a distance we seemed normal

we had
a sugar bowl on the table.
butter
in a porcelain dish,
salt and pepper shakers,
both silver.
we had dishes
and cutlery, though
many bent.
we had a linen tablecloth.
there was a clock on
the wall
that ticked,
a television in the corner.
a couch
some chairs
with which to sit.
there was a glow in the dark
statue of Jesus
on the dresser.
from a distance we seemed
like a normal
family.

everything but common sense

it's sad
in an amusing sort of way
to see
the mob,
the crowds, the chanting
crazies
out and about 
in the street
protesting
a duly elected president,
not a king.
and yet.
delusion has no limits.
blinded
by anger they march
and vent.
would a king
allow
a protest like this?
it's so insane that you can't
wrap
your head around it.
our education system
has failed
us,
everything was learned,
but common sense.

kneeling at the tub

as i kneel
at the new acrylic tub
and shower
with
a box of baking soda
and a bottle
of white
vinegar, preparing to lightly
scrub,
according
to the instructions on
the nine
piece warranty
document
given to me after installation,
i think
about where i am in life,
and what's
next
down the road.

why even vote anymore

you reach
a saturation level with
politics,
the news,
the constant haranguing
and hatred
coming out of the sides
and front
of the mouths
of elected officials.
the world is twisted,
it's upside down,
good is bad,
bad is good.
how in God's name did
we elect
these clowns.

Friday, October 17, 2025

jumping jack flash

it seems
impossible to know so many words
to so many
songs
from the past.
each note registered in
your head,
with your hand and foot
knowing exactly
when to tap.
and for the most part it all
came out
of a transistor radio
that you carried around,
then 8 tracks
in your beat up
car,
vinyl,
cd's.
it takes hearing
just one word,
one musical note, and you're
taken back
into time. part of the band.
singing in
harmony with the fellows,
to jumping jack flash.

the last cookie ever

she slaps an Oreo
cookie out
of my hand and tells me no.
sugar is the devil.
never buy
anything in a box, or a bag,
or wrapped
in plastic.
if it has more
than one ingredient
on the label,
don't put it in your mouth.
stick with
meat
and apples,
lettuce, nuts,
eggs.
can i just finish this one,
i beg. it'll be
the last cookie ever,
i promise.
okay. she says,
shaking her head.

so whatever happened to what's her name

people often
ask
me, so whatever happened to
what's her
name.
ever hear from her?
the crazy
wackadoodle bleached
blonde bimbo
you were with
for half a minute?
the skeleton
who was cheating on you
with that married
Captain Kangaroo
man?
beats me,
i tell them.
God only knows.
she could be with her
married
boyfriend, or her old
husband,
or in a strait jacket
at Belleview
texting on
her phone.
who knows, who cares.
it all seems
like a bad dream now,
a nightmare.
a year gone terribly wrong.

the morning fire


it's cold,
a very cold morning
with wind
blowing through the house.
of course it is, she says.
you left
the windows open again
last night.
it's almost November
not June.
come here,
i tell her, let's 
warm things up
a little before
the day begins.
then the dog jumps on
the bed.
not you
i tell him, down boy,
down,
but you my dear,
instead.

the no kings rally, yawn

i see a mob
of mostly old women
and P whipped men,
tagging
behind,
teens with blue hair
and nose
rings, all heading to the no
kings
rally in town.
the soy boys dressed in
black
to be scary. for them
it's Halloween all year.
i have no idea what they're
talking about.
we have a congress,
a senate,
a judicial system,
the supreme court,
checks and balances.
elections.
the constitution and the bill
of rights.
it's amazing
how dumb the mob has
become.
what a waste of time and energy.
but it's fun
to watch,
very entertaining
as we sit upon
our velvet red couch.

Thursday, October 16, 2025

the endless empty parking lot

i remember
taking
my car to a garage to get the cracked
windshield
fixed.
the flat roofed brick
building was in a nearly
abandoned
strip mall
in Woodbridge.
it was raining, dark, dreary,
the whole
horror
show climate
was at hand.
i parked the car, gave
an old man
with bleary blue eyes
my keys and started walking
for what
seemed like
miles until i found a diner
to eat
breakfast in and drink
coffee.
i don't think i've ever felt
that alone
in my life.
sitting there, staring out
the greasy window
at the ocean of nothing,
nothing but
a concrete parking lot,
vacant,
empty of cars, of people,
of sunlight.

you're his only hope

it's a feeling,
my mother talking to me.
it doesn't come
all the time, but when i need
it the most
when trying
to decide on something
i'm unsure about,
wavering
on a moral issue,
i see her at the kitchen
table,
wiping the lenses
of her glasses, because
she's been cooking
at the stove all morning. i hear
her voice,
saying, it's okay.
it's okay to bail
your brother out of jail,
because if you don't do it,
no one else will.

when all is well

for once
it would be nice
to turn on the news and have
the reporter
throw up his or her
hands and declare that
nothing happened today.
nothing.
so what we're going to do
is show you
a live
feed of the ocean
with gulls in the air
while palm trees sway.
we'll show you seals and dolphins,
waves lapping the long
white sandy shore.
no words, no music.
no boring editorials,
just the quiet of the world
when
all is well.

when the lights go out

when
the power goes out, i feel
my way
to the kitchen
to find
the matches and the candle.
the flashlight
is hopelessly
lost, somewhere in a drawer.
i set the candle
in a plate
and light the wick.
there's enough wobbly brightness
to get around
the room
then up the stairs.
the dog follows, unbothered
by it all.
but it worries me.
what about the ice box
full of food,
the clocks,
the computer, the tv.
what is there left to do?
i can hardly
read a book,
or write,
i could never be a pioneer.

good luck or fate, watch your step

we live
a life of close shaves,
close calls,
lucky
turns, the timing
is just right
to save
us from
some disastrous end.
we didn't eat
the last raw
oyster on the plate,
we didn't board
the doomed plane,
or marry
the girl that you gave
a ring.
call it
luck, or fate or divine
intervention,
but whatever
it is,
watch your step,
my friend.

intuitive snooping

is it
intuition that makes
you
open a closed door,
peek under
a bed,
look at a phone that's
not yours,
sift through
clothes in her bottom drawer?
or is it
weakness,
insecurity raising it's
ugly head.
strangely though,
you're never wrong.

that girl loved to chew gum

whenever
i have
a piece of gum and begin
chewing it
i think of Leslie.
she loved gum
in her mouth.
she snapped it, popped it,
blew enormous
bubbles.
she'd twist it 
with her fingers, pulling
it like taffy.
she couldn't sit still without
a wad
of gum,
the kind you got
from packs of baseball cards
being her favorite.
she didn't care
about the cards,
Mickey Mantle,
Mel Stottlemyer, Reggie Jackson,
Mike Epstein,
but i saved them in a shoe
box.
that girl loved gum.
she even chewed it when we
were making
love.
then stuck the wad
onto the headboard
when we
were done.

the reversable belt

i travel
light, very light.
a toothbrush,
keys
and money.
phone.
i help her with her luggage,
lifting it
into the trunk.
three changes
for each
day,
and one for each night.
she has long
dresses on hangers.
i put her bag
of shoes in the back
seat
along with a thermos
of coffee,
bottles
of water, assorted snacks
for the one-hour drive
out of town.
all my clothes are
reversable,
even the belt,
from brown to black,
so i'm set.

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

give me your head with hair

i use to worry about my
hair,
standing in front
of the mirror
for hours.
i had the blow dryer
going,
the comb
and brush,
the scissors,
the gel for those brief
and unfortunate
punk days.
i sat in salon chairs and had
young girls
carefully coif my hair.
had men
with large hands
in seedy barber shops,
who smelled of garlic
powdering
my neck after a five
minute
cut with the clippers.
i've had it layered 
and styled,
long and short,
Beatlesque
and a marine crew
cut.
parted on the side,
the left
or right
and once down the middle.
hair used
to be my life.

something in the sky

is that
a star in the sky.
or
a plane,
a bright angel
of some sort,
some far away planet,
something
unknown,
something strange.
a balloon perhaps
slipped away
from a child's hand,
or maybe it's nothing,
nothing
but the tears in my eyes
from crying.

maybe i've been wrong

as i water
my petunias in the back yard
i see my
neighbor
sitting on her deck. she looks
despondent.
hey.
hey, she yells back.
you okay?
yes, she says. i'm okay.
a little sad.
why,
what's up?
well the war is over and now
i don't know
what to do with
my Saturdays.
they even got the hostages
back.
i'm not sure what to protest next.
oh, fiddle dee dee, i tell her.
there's a big
no kings protest next weekend.
that should be fun.
yeah, yeah.
i know.
but i'm starting to think things
over.
maybe he's not so bad
after all.
he's trying to stop crime,
secured the border,
he's rounding up murderers
and rapists,
blowing up drug filled boats
from the cartels,
he's ending
wars, he's keeping dudes
out of women's
sports and bathrooms,
gas is cheaper,
he's all over the place trying
to make this
country better.
maybe i've been wrong.

the Camaro at the Hot Shoppes

he loves
his cars, his old cars.
classic
Fords
and Chevys restored
to almost
new,
like they were
in 67 and 69.
shiny red
a silvery blue.
they sit in the well-lit garage.
he won't even take them
out into the rain.
they're spotless.
occasionally he'll go sit
in one
or the other
and start the engine,
rev it up
and turn the radio on.
he's sixteen again
about to go pick up
Peggy Sue
and take her to the drive-in,
then
around the Hot Shoppes
for a slow roll
and spin.