Sunday, November 10, 2024

in one hour, soup

it's forty
degrees so my mind wanders
towards
soup.
the big pot
on the stove
boiling
with potatoes,
celery
and onions,
carrots.
i can smell it now
as i come
through
the door, peeking
into the kitchen
at my
mother at the stove.
she smiles
and says
one hour,
now go wash up,
change your clothes.

the shaving lesson

as a young
boy
you can't wait to shave
like your
father does.
watching as he
lathers his
face in the mirror
with shaving cream.
you mimic
his every move,
dragging
the razor slowly
across
your smooth face,
hoping that one
day
you'll be just like him,
grizzled and old,
which sadly,
comes too soon.

the celebration

it's the blue
air
of November, 
the fresh
oxygen
of autumn filling
your lungs.
it's a joyous day
of celebration
when your
side has won.
common sense at
last
prevails,
though some
are in shock
therapy
and have become
quite glum.

water off a duck

i'm disappointed
in you,
she tells me
on the phone. i thought
you were smarter
than that.
but apparently i was wrong.
i say nothing,
listening,
as i do curls with a bar bell
on the floor.
i set the phone down,
and do some
sit ups.
putting her on speaker
phone.
i can't believe you
sometimes, she says.
you're not the person,
i thought you were.
i knock off a dozen
pushups, then go back
to the phone.
what's wrong with you,
she asks.
you used to be so rational.
you sound like you're
out of breath,
are you okay?
yeah, yeah, fine.
just working out, i tell her.
just exercising.
so are we going out later,
or what?
i begin to do twenty 
jumping jacks
as i wait for her answer.

slicing the bagel in two

i know
the dangers of using this sharp
knife
in cutting
open a bagel,
slicing it in
two for the toaster.
pressing
the blade awkwardly 
into the rounded
thick bread,
but i do it anyway.
the cuts
are usually minor though,
and the blood
stops
flowing after some
cold water,
and the application
of a tissue.

a crisp warm bill in the dryer

it's nice
to find a crisp and warm
twenty
dollar bill in the dryer.
hard
earned money,
lost, but now
found,
it feels like a gift from
above.
a lucky find
that went around
and around.

the demise of saturday night

remember when
this show
was funny we say to each
other,
while cringing
at the bad sketches and lame
jokes.
remember how
on a Saturday night
we all gathered
together on the couch
and watched it.
then walked around
the whole week
quoting what we heard,
or taking on the characters
impersonating
them with delight.
what happened?
it's sad what's become
of Saturday Night.

serenity now for five bucks

there's a new
business in town.
it's where the record
shop used
to be.
it's called the 
Quiet Place.
it's a little room
where you go in
to sit or lie down on
the wooden floor.
the walls are painted
white.
there's no music,
no talking, no sounds
at all being
made.
they offer no coffee,
or bagels,
no affirmations or
advice.
for five dollars a pop
you can go in and lie
on the floor for fifteen
minutes
and get away from
life.
i can't help but think
of the pet rock
when i go inside.
the value of nothing.
a brilliant marketing
device.

why stop with one?

like
cats or dogs,
or children,
it's hard to get just one.
and so it
goes with tattoos
and piercings,
once you
go down that road,
you've become
a pin cushion.
you're covered
in them
from head to toe.
they're on your arms
your legs,
your neck.
there's a bone through
your nose. look,
there's another one
on your bum.

Saturday, November 9, 2024

sure, i'll probably be there

i'm good
at postponing.
at procrastinating
with the rsvp,
at saying, yes, but meaning
no,
delaying
the inevitable apology
for as long
as i can,
saying sorry,
but i can't
make it this time.
rain check?
though it only works
for so long.

burning leaves

i understand
knitting
now,
or gardening. how
my mother
could sit
there for hours lost
in thought,
knitting
with the balls of yarn
at her feet.
or in the garden
on her knees,
a trowel in hand,
tossing dirt.
i understand now,
as i rake the yard
then burn these leaves.

i took a wrong turn in Baltimore

i was late
driving to Baltimore
for the third date.
i took
a wrong turn,
and ended up in a neighborhood
where 
Omar
from the Wire used
to live.
it was before
cell phones.
so i couldn't call and tell
her i was lost.
i pulled over
and took out the Atlas Map
and turned
on the dome light
while a group of young
men in hoodies
were trying to pry open
my trunk with a
screwdriver.
quickly i sped away.
an hour later,
i was there, at last.
she wasn't happy though.
i saw
the dried-out piece of farm
raised salmon
on my plate,
a bowl of limp arugula,
and the bottle of wine
now empty.
it was a one and done
final date.

we love this country

i used to ask
my migrant workers
if they wanted to become citizens
at some point.
take the oath
and salute the flag.
which would make
them laugh
and shake their heads.
citizens?
what are you talking about,
are you loco?
if we become citizens
then
we'd have to pay taxes,
and register our
cars. we'd have to buy
auto and health
insurance.
they'd give us social security
numbers
and they would know
everything about us.
why would we do that when
everything
is free now?
we love this country,
that is why we walked a
thousand
miles to get here.
it is the land of the free.

there's no room at the inn

with purpose
i disposed of the bed in the guest
room
years ago.
there's nothing
for someone
to lie
on and spend the night
except for the floor.
the couch
is too narrow and hard
and slippery
because of
the Corinthian leather,
the one in the basement
is too.
i have no extra
sheets or pillows,
there's no extra towels,
or toothbrushes lying
around.
i've made it as uncomfortable
as possible
for someone
to be an overnight guest.
i keep the thermostat on cold
and there's not
a pretzel bag to be
found.
there is no room
at the inn
anymore.
i can suggest a nice hotel up
the street though.
i'll send you
directions
from my phone.


losing the will to clerk

the translucent
clerk
at the Whole Foods store,
is numb.
the blue
hair
drapes down over
her eyes,
red from crying.
her nose ring
is rusting.
she makes no eye contact
as she rings
up my milk,
and eggs, my salad
and 
bread i take home to bake.
she doesn't even
ask me
if i want paper or plastic
this time.
no chit chat about the weather.
because of the election
she's lost
the will to live,
or at least the will
to be a grocery store clerk.

let's not talk about that right now

in the end
we will warm ourselves
with each
other,
if we're still alive.
the electricity will be gone.
the food
will
be things that you have
to kill
or dig up
from the ground.
the sky will
be red.
there will be fear
and
loathing of an unseen
kind.
everything you once
believed
will be a lie.
there will be gnashing
of teeth.
moaning.
uncontrollable grief.
it will
be the end of times.
but
let's not think about that
right now.
how about we dance,
have more cheese,
more wine.

how to save a marriage

it's a long
conversation into the night.
he tells
me that his wife
hates him.
he hates her.
politics
seems to be the final
dagger
into their once
love bearing
hearts,
but he wants to make it work.
she's told
him to pack his bags
and get out,
he's told
her to settle down, honey
bun,
let's calm down.
how about tonight i sleep
in the other
room, on the couch?
tomorrow, he tells me,
he's going out to buy
flowers
and chocolates for her.
good idea, i tell him.
that always works.

the new sixth stage of grieving

there have always been
five
stages of grief,
denial,
anger, bargaining,
depression
and finally
acceptance, but apparently
a new stage
has been discovered
which is
going on to TikTok
to rant and rave
and scream,
followed by 
an embarrassing meltdown
in tears.
Elizabeth Kubler Ross
never saw
this one coming.

Friday, November 8, 2024

flower girl

a girl
likes flowers.
she is a flower.
pick one,
any one.
she's that one.
a bouquet
in a dress.
take
her in your arms.
but don't
squeeze
too hard,
the stems will
break.

the bees would come in

i miss
my old windows.
the wooden
sashes.
the way they
wobbled
and wouldn't stay up,
or wouldn't
open.
the leaks and broken
glass
letting in the bees and flies.
a few were stuck
for decades.
old windows.
one had a bullet hole in it.
more
than four were cracked,
one pane
was missing,
that i put a piece of cardboard
in with tape.
the hardware
was a mixed bunch
of metal pieces
found in drawers, tool
boxes
from the woman
who died in her sleep
here,
so many years ago.
they were great windows.
they let go
of the cold,
they let go of the heat.
they were
wonderful and cranky,
especially in the morning,
like me.

eyes wide open

it bothered
me
when i opened my eyes
and saw
that she was kissing
me with her
eyes open.
hey,
i said.
your eyes are open.
aren't you
into this early morning
make out session?
i am, yes, but so what.
your eyes are open
too.
so what's the difference?
very weird, i tell her.
very weird.
i was just
thinking about things,
she said.
like what?
well, like what kind of bagel
i'm going
to eat this morning
when we go out
after this is done.

the religion of climate change

i used
to separate the glass
from the tin,
the paper
from the plastic,
placing it all
into
the blue bin.
it meant that you were
a good person
to do such a thing.
but the weather
never changed.
it was still 80 degrees
in December,
50 in July.
there were still
tornadoes
and hurricanes and
wildfires.
snow and ice
to deal with.
it was just the way
it was when i
was a child.
despite the dire warnings
and preaching,
nothing seems to have
changed.

pandering to the circus clowns

politicians
don't listen until they lose.
and then
the light goes on.
they knock their
coconut heads
together and say,
we should
have wrote down
their concerns, we should
have listened
and been
more aware
of the issues
of the working man
and not the circus
clowns.
a billion dollars later,
they've learned
why they've lost
so spectacularly.

it looks different from up here

as a child
you climbed trees and were
amazed
at the view from above.
everything was
clear from that high limb,
the land
and town laid out
the way it was.
a symmetry to it all,
a reason,
with cause.
each year a new tree
needs to be
climbed
to see that what you
thought was large,
was really small.

a woman scorned

i see her in line
at the liquor store,
she's
furious over
the election, she blurts out
that all
men
should be aborted in the womb.
she's shaved
her head in protest
and talks about moving.
Maybe Italy,
or Timbuktu.
i say nothing.
being a man,
i'm well aware
of what a scorned woman
can do.
i gently ask her what if
it's fraternal
twins.
is there a way
to separate and kill one
too.

reciting Shakespeare while raking leaves

i see the actor,
bewildered,
pushing the mower along
the hill.
the rake
leans against the split
level house.
the water hose rests nearby.
he's reciting
Shakespeare
to himself
out in the suburbs.
the dogs are barking.
he waves to window
holding his wife.
he's lost
his way
and settled for domestic
life.

a simple card game

it's a simple
card
game that goes long
into the night.
husband and wife.
she keeps
score,
he pours the drinks,
as they
ponder
life. turning each
card over
with regret,
with spite.
shuffling.
all things get shuffled
in time.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

the night swim

it was both
dangerous and sexy
to swim
in the dark ocean at night,
the curled
lips of waves
gone silver
washing over
our legs,
then waist,
then under we'd go,
before rising
with salt
in our eyes 
to see the silhouettes
of ships
at sea.
we were 
cold and shivering,
but felt
rebellious joy
as we bounced
on our cautious feet.

the cornfield in North Reading

my grandmother
would send
us across the road to the cornfield,
to steal
a dozen or so ears of corn
for dinner.
the leafy stalks were over
our heads
as we reached up
to find the fattest
ones.
she had no qualms about it.
the corn
had been growing there
forever.
she had once made
love to the farmer
when they were young,
but it ended
badly.
so off we went with our
burlap sack,
crossing the road,
her staring out the window,
as the water
boiled furiously
on her stove.

and then we held hands

we'd lie
on the picnic table.
staring
at the stars, pointing out
comets
that flashed
by.
our hands were yet to
touch
each other.
and then it happened.
whether
it was the silky
blackness above us,
with the
the twinkling of diamonds
embedded in, or
the warm
summer air, 
or our youth.
maybe all of it.
but nothing like that
has ever
happened again
quite like that night.

the angry neighbors the day after

i see my neighbors
on the front porch who i've known
for years.
they're
going through a stack
of travel
guides and maps.
books stating where the best
places are
on earth to relocate.
i give them a friendly
wave and say,
howdy neighbors,
top of the morning to you.
they give me the middle finger
and say go away
and don't ever talk to us again.
huh? i say.
hands on my hips. stunned by
this act of aggression
and anger.
does this mean we aren't going
Christmas caroling
together this year?
i guess i can't borrow
your weed Wacker either, right?

the healing has begun

democracy
is slipping through our hands,
she tells me,
weeping
while holding two of her
cats in her lap.
how can i go on?
i'm afraid to go outside.
i don't know
what will happen to me.
they've taken
away my
rights.
we've gone backwards.
if not for my three cats, i might
jump off a bridge.
now, now, i tell her.
how about i order
us a pizza
and we watch some Netflix?
what do you say?
okay, okay, she murmurs.
with extra cheese,
and no anchovies?

learning a second language

it would
be nice to learn a second language.
most of the world
knows two
or three. but we here
don't roll like that.
we cowboy
Americans with our
big belt buckles and
ten-gallon hats.
but then
this woman from France
moves in
next door, i think she said
her name
was Fifi,
a flight attendant from
Paris
who likes to tan herself
in the back yard.
and like a bunny
i'm on Amazon
buying the Rosetta Stone.

the dark eatery

i can't read
the menu because it's so
dark
in this restaurant.
small pictures of the food
they serve
would help a lot.
i hold
the table candle to the thin
paper
menu,
which catches it on
fire.
i douse it quickly with
the glass
of water
that the waiter keeps
refilling after i take
one sip.
i look around at what
other people
are eating.
most of them have figured
out how to turn
the flashlight on
in their phone.
i go online
and bring the menu up.
tiny words
again, but
maybe there's a coupon
i can use.

it's the end of the world oh my

it's the end
of the world, of course,
the media
says so,
with tears and moans.
i tuck myself into bed
thinking that
tomorrow
the world
will be one fire,
the dead
will litter the land.
buildings will have fallen,
the oceans
will have
swept up and taken
the masses
to their grave.
nothing will be the same
again.
it's the end of
everything we've dreamed
life could be.
common
decency and love
will have evaporated
into ash and smoke.
and then i
wake up
and it's sunny and bright.
quite lovely
out.
maybe a walk today, or
a ride
on the bike.
maybe a long sail
on the boat.

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

the house with blue shutters

it's all about
the blue
shutters, the blue door
on the brick
house
at the end of the road,
that makes
you want
to live there, maybe it's the fence
too,
white pickets
going around.
maybe it's
the chimney
with a slender braid
of smoke
coming out, or
the unkempt yard,
growing however it wants
to. or maybe
it's the woman
in the kitchen standing
near the stove.

switching over to martinis

i can eat
chicken
or steak, or pork, with absolutely
no sense
of guilt
or shame.
i'm oblivious to what
the poor
animal had to go through
to arrive
on my plate.
i eat, i summon
the waiter
for butter and bread,
and another
round
of pepper
from the big shaker.
no more beer,
i tell him,
i think i'll have a martini
instead.

the morning meltdown

the newscasters
are crying.
they are upset at the results
of the election.
it's seven in the morning,
they look
beat and weary,
hungover.
we tried
so hard to villainize
the other side,
they say as one.
we bent the news,
we exaggerated
and lied.
all for nought.
we thought we could
turn the tide,
brainwash
their minds. but sadly, no.
they weren't as stupid
as we thought they were.
each broadcaster has a box
of Kleenex
to dry their eyes.
the make-up is running
down their faces.
four racoons sitting in
the studio light.
men and women.
the sobbing is pathetic.
professionals,
so called.
unbiased, professionals,
hardly.
the director breaks
for a commercial,
shaking his head
and sighs.

the one term blues

it's tough
moving out of the white house
after
only one
term.
you've had the rooms painted,
the pictures
hung,
your own portrait
is not quite ready.
the artist
is having trouble with the eyes
because
of squinting.
was that chair mine, or
Abe Lincoln's, i don't remember.
and that cushion,
did Mary Washington sew
that and put
it on the sofa,
saying home sweet home,
with an eagle on the back,
or was that the work
of Jill at Rehoboth Beach
when she took
that cross stitching class?
will
i have to get a new Advantage
plan
to supplement
my Medicare,
what about,
my masseuse, my pool, my
cooks
and maids. my doctor.
you mean i can't take them
with me?
can i at least keep the plane?

they keep popping out

you would
think
that people would stop having babies
what with
all the fear
mongering
the news does.
who would want to bring
a child
into this turmoil,
this dying planet?
but they keep
popping out.
my neighbor has three
so far,
and they all look very
happy.
unfazed.
they're playing hopscotch
and throwing
a ball about.

one day at a time

i hear people
say
that they're living one day
at a time.
i believe
them.
there is no other way
than that
to live.
one foot in front of the other
too.
left
then right.
a hill or narrow path,
an alley,
a street.
a mountain.
then down the other side.
one day
at a time.

so far so good

i open
my window to listen
and to see
if the city
is on fire.
not a waft of tires burning,
no cracking
of glass
on store front windows.
no statues
turned over.
no burning, looting,
or murders.
is it possible
there isn't
a riot
on this cool November
morning
after the election?
is it true 
that people have peacefully
accepted
the turning
of the page, at last?

joy cometh in the morning

it's taking
so long for them to count
the votes,
licking their finger, saying
the next number
than the next,
then being interrupted and having
to start all over again.
pencil
and paper.
frayed notepads.
i can hardly keep my eyes
open
as the count goes on.
do i care.
yes, i do, but my eyes are
half mast
and i'll have to wait until
morning to see
which direction
the free world is going.
red or blue.

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

the long show into the night

they show
a picture of the great
communist dictators
of China
and North Korea,
Russia,
and California,
each sitting back on their couches
watching
the election
results.
making bets while they eat
potato chips
and cookies,
and other assorted munchies.
candy
and Fritos with salsa,
pork sliders and dumplings.
it's a long night.
thank God for Pepto Bismol,
no matter who wins.
left or right.

bring out the Rockettes

with no
news to report
before the polls close,
they keep talking
anyway
about what if,
what was,
what may be in the coming
hours.
they bring up Garfield
and Taft,
how they won Ohio,
or they talk
about how Reagan
made red the map.
but they have
seven more
hours to fill.
and fill it they do with
newspeak
babble.
charts and maps.
how about a song dance
team, to fill the void?
some jugglers,
or magicians, or acrobats,
a few comedians
doing their act.
hell, why not bring out
the Rocketts?
who wouldn't watch
that?

home sour home

the sheets
could be whiter.
bleach?
i don't know. maybe new
ones.
there are days
when i wish
everything was cleaner,
brighter,
fresh and new
again
with that lavender
smell.
every inch of wood
and carpet needs a deep
clean,
and yet when i've
been away from home
for a week,
or more,
i do miss
and like the scent of must
and mold.
home
sour home, when i
come through
the door.

there are no mistakes

sometimes
you know what you're doing
is wrong.
but you
do it anyway.
you can't stop yourself
from making
the mistake.
there's a power that's come
over you,
as if there's a lesson
to be learned
if you do what you're
wrongly about to do.
so you bend to the will
of a higher
power, bite your tongue,
and say, i do.

washing his hands raw

we worked
together for years
and then
i noticed that he washed his hands
a lot,
as if he couldn't get them
clean.
he used soap
and a brush,
a rag,
digging at the nails.
he rubbed them raw
under hot water
from the sink.
i couldn't understand
what it was
all about
until i met his wife and kids,
and visited
the house where
he lived.

a ticket out

live
long enough and you acquire
the skill
of moving on
without too much
drama.
without tears
or cursing,
nothing thrown or broken.
no longer writing
the heartfelt
note.
it's just a matter
of packing clothes
and buying
a ticket to somewhere
different.
somewhere
warm or cold,
somewhere reachable
by plane
or boat.
or walking.

lost in southern maryland

there are box houses
along
the road,
clapboard affairs
painted pink
or blue,
squared onto dirt fields
where
corn used to grow.
wire fences
contain
the livestock.
chickens and goats.
a sickly horse
roams the far edge of a hill.
there's smoke
coming out of one chimney
and there's
a child
staring out the upper window.
a woman
is hanging wet
clothes on a line,
there's an old man
on a tire swing smoking
a pipe.
they turn their heads
as you roll
slowly by.
you feel that
they want you to stop,
or maybe
that they want
you to keep going
and to not look back.

just passing through

as i listen
to the conversations
i'm not a part of,
i take notes.
i'm curious about what's
being said,
and why.
i am a voyeur,
a peeping
tom looking into
their mouths,
their eyes. i watch
their gestures,
how they stand,
how they move about.
i feel as if i'm new to 
this world
at times.
just passing through
observing
lives so different than
mine.

which is it?

you sit
in the cold room
without heat.
you wonder where everyone
has gone.
the furniture is missing
except for the chair
you sit on.
the curtains are off the window.
outside
you see that the trees
are empty
of leaves.
there is snow falling.
it feels like the end
of something,
or maybe the beginning.
but you're not worried.
you've been here
before.
at the start
and at the end.

clarity

you
need silence
to achieve
some semblance
of clarity.
you need to sit somewhere
without
noise.
without a voice
in your ear.
somewhere
in the woods, or by water.
no sound
other than the sound
the earth makes
as it goes
around.

Oprah knows everything

i hear
Oprah on tv telling the crowd
that
if we don't vote
the way
she wants us to
it will be the end
of the world.
democracy will die,
and a fascist regime
will reign for
a thousand years.
every woman will be
chained up
and incarcerated,
their heads will be shaved.
children
will be tossed into the sea,
old folks
will have their plugs
pulled
as they wait to die
anyone with blue hair
will be rounded up
and disinfected
and will no longer be allowed
to read
or watch tv.
she begs the audience, to please
please
vote for the one i've chosen.
if not it's the end of 
the world
as we know it,
just watch and see.

the long and winding road

sometimes
i put
the phone down,
hit the speaker button
then
do the dishes.
fold laundry,
run the vacuum, or take
the dog
out for a walk.
about every ten minutes
or so,
i make a noise
into the phone or say
something like
really? you're kidding, right?
i've gone to the store
at times
to shop and come back,
to have her still talking,
telling me
a story about the time
she had a pet chicken
that laid eggs.
i tell her that i love eggs,
then crack when
in a pan.
she continues, making
a segue into bacon.
i eat and read the paper,
watch tv.

the new rules for 2025

the new
rules for the neighborhood
arrive
in the mail
special D.
it's a forty-page packet
of instructions,
restrictions, laws
and regulations
that we must obey or
be penalized with fines
and liens.
everything
from dogs to birds, to leaves,
to the color
of your door
where you park your
car,
or your Christmas wreathe
is covered.
there's a list of who's on
the board,
the same gaggle of
karens
who have been there
since the new Millenium.
here they come,
with pitchforks
and torches
marching down the street.


Monday, November 4, 2024

it's almost over

i know
i've been watching too much
news on
both fox and cnn
when
i have a dream
about Mark Rubio
and Donald
Trump,
and Pelosi on
her broom.
i may need serious therapy
when this
election ends.
hopefully soon though,
real soon.

catch and release

it's not
fair,
the fish thinks, hook in his
rubbery jaw,
yanked
mercilessly to shore
for the umpteenth time,
then held
up
for a photo.
maybe weighed
and measured
before being tossed
back into the water.
why?
just eat me next time.
i can't keep
going through this.
i'm a nervous
wreck,
look at me,
all bug eyed from
the air
seeping into my gills,
i'm losing my mind.

waiting for the sun to rise

it's over
the candidates say
to themselves,
sleepless
in their hotel beds
eating ice-cream
from the box
and drinking wine.
one eye on the clock,
the other on
the window
waiting
for the sun to rise.
the clamor is over
as they lie
there twitching,
wondering if anyone really
believed any of the
b. s. that they've said,
did they tell
enough lies.

with tears in his eyes he says, we're still here

cautiously,
we
lean into each other
and whisper,
can you believe it?
we're still here.
no,
he says,
finishing his glass
as the lights
go up.
a friend for sixty
years.
i don't believe it either
when i think
of grade school
and beyond,
all that we've been through,
the work,
the women,
life,
but say it quietly,
let's not
jinx our luck.
there's more to do,
more days
to share, more rebellion,
more
fun, more love.
here's to you brother,
cheers.

what does this even mean?

there's no need
to puzzle
over this poem, no need
to dissect
it
or look up words,
or read
books on mythology,
or peruse
the Bible
to figure out what i'm
saying here.
there are no
five syllable words
or complex
metaphors.
no cryptic message between
the lines.
no.
it's pretty much simple
and clear.
easy
to understand.
and thankfully,
the new yorker won't
come near
it.

it's cold in here

everyone
should be poor for a day
or week,
or year.
just to see what it's like
to go hungry,
to not
have shoes,
or gloves.
to at some point
steal
a loaf of bread
and a can of tuna,
then run.
everyone should
see what it's like
checking into
a motel
six
or driving a Pinto
from back
in the day.
using a beer tab
for a ring
to give to your wife.
to stare out a cracked
window
from a bed without sheets.
everyone should feel
the cold
without heat, or feel
the sweat
without ac.
everyone should
be poor just for a short
while.
you won't forget it.

the chameleon candidate

she's a pastor
in a black church one day
making a speech,
throwing
around words
like thee and thou
and cometh
in the morning,
then
speaking
with a Mexican
accent at the border,
while
eating enchiladas
with hot sauce.
the next day.
there's the Jamaican
accent
at the market
when buying a coconut
for her pina coladas.
tomorrow
she's heading to Chinatown
for a rally,
this should be interesting.

she's making her weekend list

she was
a list
maker. i was a list ignorer.
i'd see
her at the table on a 
Saturday morning,
pen in hand,
the white sheet of paper
numbered
down the side
and her pondering
what to write.
good morning, i'd say,
heading
towards the kitchen
for coffee.
making a new list?
yes, she'd say.
but i'm stumped, can
you help me?
all i have right now is
rake leaves.
can you think of anything
else?
no, i tell her
then disappear into
the other room.

maybe they'll tire of throwing rocks

will they
run
out of bombs and bullets
at some
point?
who's making
all these weapons
and ammunition.
maybe
that's part of the problem
too.
not race
and religion.
stop giving both
sides
the means to go on.
let them fight with
rocks
and sticks,
calling each other names
on the other
side of the fence
or wall.
see how long that lasts
before
they go home
and to back to work.

one foot without a shoe

seeing one
shoe
in the road makes me wonder
how and why
it got there.
who loses one shoe
and makes
it home?
so goes the red heel
beneath
my bed.
i have no clue.

it wasn't a friendship afterall

you
remember the next day
what
you should have
said
during the conversation you
had
with someone who
used to be your
friend, but who isn't anymore
because
of politics.
but you resist the call.
you swallow
the words
and move on.
what's the point?
maybe it wasn't a friendship
after all.

Sunday, November 3, 2024

don't tell me who to vote for Hollywood

as the celebrity
stands
there
in the spotlight, 
all shiny and rich,
smiling
with good teeth
and posture,
telling me
and the very poor
and struggling who
to vote for
i want to say two words
to him
or her.
but
i don't say it out loud,
or even whisper
it. but
you can probably figure
it out.

letting go

it's a book
about letting go.
surrendering 
yourself from all the things
that hold you down.
the rocks
you've tied to your heart
and mind.
it's about
cutting the chains
of this world, the attachments.
freeing yourself
from anxiety
and fear.
a good read.
but
when you're not in the mood
for this sort
of thinking,
it all sounds and reads
like mumbo
jumbo.
maybe later i'll dive in
and take another look.
but for
now, i'm letting it go.

pumpkin pie

i see
my first pumpkin pie
of the season
on the store shelf
and now
i can't get it out of my mind.
the brown orange
pastry
with the crumbly crust.
i want it.
i need it.
i want it on a fork
heading
towards my mouth.
please don't wear that
black dress
when you walk by.

throwing stones

before
we can change the world
for the better
we need to clean
up our own
act.
tidy up
our heart
and room.
take the speck from our
own
eyes, stop
throwing
stones.
but it's hard to do,
when
there's so much
wrong in front of you.

get over yourself

you need
a hobby, my therapist tells me,
as i lie
on her couch
staring at my cuticles.
i've told
her that i'm bored
and floundering.
collect something,
she says,
buy a boat,
or play pickleball.
maybe
join a book club,
or a meet up group that
hikes,
or enjoys movies.
take an art class,
or yoga.
get your mind off of yourself.
be a volunteer
down at the soup
kitchen,
or at a hospital.
give back to the community.
i sigh
and crack my knuckles.
i don't know,
i tell her.
do you have something
else?

civil disobedience

the board,
the condo board association,
the omnipresent
gaggle
of brown shirted women
and beta
men
have
posted
notes on all the doors
in bold
black letters,
in caps.
do not
rake your leaves
and toss them into the woods,
back towards
the trees
where they have fallen
from.
we're watching you.
punishment will be swift
and hard
upon you and yours.
bag them
and place them at the curb
for pick up
in the morning.
how can i not
but disobey them.

so quickly

there's a hole
in the elbow,
one below the arm,
the threads
are frayed around the collar,
how is this
possible?
so quickly
it's done.
i just bought it yesterday
ten years
ago.
my favorite sweater.
where
does the time
go?

Saturday, November 2, 2024

after the surgery

she's different
now
somehow.
different in how she moves.
how she talks
and listens.
her eyes are in your
eyes.
she's patient
and more kind than i ever
remember her
to be.
seeing God's light
at deaths
door
will do that to you.

the empty nester

it's an old
bird's nest high in the tree.
i can
see it from my window.
but the birds
are gone,
the blue eggs
hatched.
how i watched
the fluttering of wings.
what was
new birth
is gone now. it's winter,
no longer
spring.
uneasily
i understand though,
and grieve.

early voting discourse

people are 
restless in the hot sun,
waiting for the long line
to move
so that they can vote early,
five days
before the election.
you can
hear people going back and forth
arguing.
there's tension in the air.
well,
he wants to put us all in 
concentration camps.
he's a fascist, a dictator.
no he's not.
she's a stupid idiot,
word salad,
word salad,
the crowd begins to chant.
well,
he wants to kill women
and
electrocute
old people. take away
their food stamps.
yeah, well, she's drunk all the time
and fell out
of a coconut tree.
well, he slept with a porn
star,
big deal,
her husband got his nanny
pregnant
and she slept with a married man
to slither her way
to the top.
he looks like an orange person
and eats
at McDonald's every day.
and what's with the spray tan?
so what,
she cackles
like a hyena over nothing.
and lets in the illegals
who are eating
the dogs and cats.
finally the line moves
and we vote.
i think everyone's mind
is made up.

popcorn and melted junior mints

is it better
to wait,
better to let a week go by
before
seeing the movie?
should we
wait for
it to appear
on the small screen.
or should
we go the theater
and sit
with the murmuring
crowd,
risking
air borne diseases,
or fire?
don't we have
stale popcorn
and melted junior mints
at home?

we've made some changes

my phone
is doing things in the middle
of the night.
updating,
whatever.
i see the lights
flash,
the sound
go on and off.
disconcerting dings
are in my
ears.
it's doing something,
installing,
deleting,
rebooting.
rearranging.
it's up to something.
i know that in the morning
i'll have
to learn
all the new things that
have been
done
without me lifting
a finger.

why do we stay too long?

who hasn't
been the frog
in a pot of cold
water
before
the heat
goes on.
who hasn't stayed too long
in places where
we shouldn't have
gone?
why didn't we hop
out
before the boil?
before it all went
wrong?

we are bookends

we are bookends
holding
the middle together,
keeping
days
aligned,
months into years.
holding
love in place.
we need each other,
it seems
to keep life right.

a suitable photo

i see her
mother's face in the obituary
column
on the last
page
of the metro section
of the Sunday paper.
she's young
in the photo.
she's wearing a white
dress
and holding flowers.
smiling
for whoever took
the shot.
there's not a trace of
bitterness on her face,
no hint
of the heart break
that is yet
to come.

new and improved parts of town

grow
old enough and you'll
see
the new
buildings go up,
new houses,
strip malls,
trees
planted,
sidewalks and roads
paved, the erection
of lights,
billboards
and signs,
but given enough
time,
it will all fade.
be emptied by wear
and time.
impoverished.
what was new is old
now, fallen and
abandoned.
no worries though,
new money
is coming
to revitalize the town.

Friday, November 1, 2024

a single black fly

i don't want
to kill the fly buzzing
around
the light,
then my
head,
my cup of coffee,
my maple
scone.
he's gone to great lengths
in getting
into the house,
arriving from the far
unknown,
finding
the smallest of cracks
in the window
screen.
i admire
his or her ambition.
but it's time.

grocery store flirtations

as i reach for a hot
house
tomato
at the store, a slender hand
reaches
below mine
and snatches it.
i look at her,
and say hey,
that what was mine.
apparently not,
it's in my cart
now.
you snooze, you lose,
buddy.
quickly
i go over to the bananas
on a vine.
she's too slow
this time.

a severe case of the vapors

she's sad.
she's angry.
she's upset about the election.
she's red
in the face.
she's blue.
she's trembling with
fear
about the outcome,
what will
we all do, she sighs,
if he wins,
and she loses?
how can we go on,
where we should
we move?
the world will end.
the sky is falling.
what will we do?

the rap of little knuckles on the door

i completely
forget
that it's Halloween
until i hear
the rap of little knuckles
against the front
door.
i've left the light on.
there's a small
glass pumpkin
on my windowsill.
they think
i'm a part of it.
but i have no candy,
no treats.
but i do have a stack
of one-dollar bills,
that will have to do.
before i know it kids
are coming
out of the woodwork.
it's Lord of the Flies
as they mob
the porch,
screaming,
he's got money. hurry up.
before it's too late.

there must be something i need

there must
be something i need to buy.
a book,
a candle,
a new set of sheets,
maybe food.
but i can't think of anything
at the moment.
does my
car need gas?
what about a new hat
or pair
of shoes.
nope.
nothing to comes to mind.
but the day
is young
and i haven't logged
into Amazon
yet, online.

just a little room

i need
room when i sleep.
at least
a foot or two.
after we've
finished with our monkey love,
after the afterglow.
i need to roll
over and cool
off
and think about things,
but she doesn't understand
that.
she's stuck
to me like glue.
legs entwined,
arms
akimbo,
breathing heavily
into my neck where
her hair
is stuck
to my skin.
it's not that i don't love her,
i just need
a little room.
and then she whispers,
are you ready
to do it again?

why he votes democrat

my father,
at ninety-six,
is a true-blue democrat.
and it's all
because of JFK
being
a war hero
in the navy.
he can relate to that.
the new frontier,
the vigor,
the promise of it all.
he doesn't
see the difference
now,
how times have changed.
his eyes have blurred,
his ears
deafened.
he's hanging on to what
was
when he was young.
hoping
that the party is the same.


selective charity

it's selective
charity,
do i give the large
man
on the corner
a dollar
bill,
he looks fine, he looks
healthy
sitting in his
folding chair
with his
God Bless sign.
or do i wait until
i see a more
bedraggled person,
maybe a woman
or a child
in rags
with no shoes on?
this Catholic guilt is
killing
me,
one corner at a time.

not yet

not yet
we say silently to ourselves,
holding on
to the rails.
not yet.
there is more
to do,
more to say,
to write, more love
to make.
not yet.
maybe sometime
in the far
future, maybe
years from now
when we're
old and grey,
but not yet,
not soon.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

tomorrow things will change

tomorrow
i'll do what i have to do.
i promise
myself i'll get things done.
tomorrow.
just wait until
tomorrow.
it's a word full of hope,
of change,
of possibilities.
tomorrow.
everything will be good
again.
everything
will be wonderful,
unless of course it rains.

the slow evaporation of grief

when she died
i put
her hairbrush in a box.
her perfume,
her rings, a necklace,
a watch.
i stored pictures of her
and me
together
as we rowed across
a lake.
i stuffed in
the red scarf
she used to wear
that reminded her of 
Boston.
a wool hat
and sunglasses.
for months i thought i'd
never
get over her,
the loss.
but now, twenty years
forward,
i wonder where i put
the box.

the lines will be long outside the therapist's door on the 6th

i see a group of therapists
up at the coffee
shop,
about seven of them gathered
around a table
outside sipping drinks
in the shade.
no one seems interested in the DSM-5
on the table.
they are giddy, laughing,
passing around
brochures of vacation cruises
and cars
they might buy.
Rolex watches,
and Gucci wear.
they talk about trips to Paris
and Rome
and Amsterdam.
they can't wait for the election
to be over,
when business will boom
no matter
who wins.
it doesn't matter to them,
where the money comes from
they just don't care.

one last request

any last
requests, the captain says
to the guilty men
lined up
and strapped to a pole
before
the firing squad
fires
their rifles.
cigarette, anyone?
he asks.
how about you let us
go,
says a man at the end
of the line.
i promise i'll be good
from now on.
which makes
everyone laugh,
even the condemned,
knowing it's a lie.

the dopamine fix

it's stress,
trauma whether slight or large,
or ancient
from 
our childhood days
that sends us
to the bottle,
to the drug,
to the cigarette, and yes,
to sex,
and possibly
an early grave.
we need a fix to bandage
our wounds,
an elixir to fool ourselves
that for a few brief
moments
all is well again,
to dance once more
beneath the silvery moon.

what was on the menu

we pretty
much
knew what we weren't having
for dinner.
lobster thermidor,
T-bone steaks,
some fancy French dish,
with wild ducks
and small
potatoes, petite peas.
Julia Childs
never came to our house.
no.
peanut butter
was on the menu.
bologna sandwiches
on wonder bread with a swipe
of yellow mustard.
spaghetti
and hamburger
helper.
tuna casserole
and pea soup with a ham
bone
floating inside.
maybe Cheerios
with a sliced banana
if milk
was around.

a roses neck

one lie
can sink a ship.
end
love
like that.
in the blink of an eye,
like in the moment
you snap
a roses neck.
just like that
a lie
will take it all away
there's no
going back.

the red rooster behind him

i pull over
to stare at the burned
out house next
to a chicken farm
in southern
Maryland,
i feel as if there's a story there.
something to write
about.
i take a few pictures
when i get out of the car
and walk around.
on the ground, behind
the chain link fence,
is a plastic doll,
face down
in the mud,
still clothed, the wired
hair sticking up and out.
perhaps dropped
from a child's hand
when running.
i can smell
the smoke, and wet embers
in the rubble
i can taste it on my tongue,
then
the farmer next door
comes out
with a shotgun in hand
he tells me to move on.
which i do
as a red rooster crows.
behind him.

the empty circles

it's a quick
five
minutes in the voting booth.
closing
in each empty circle
with black ink.
i vote
without falter
for common sense
while
the line moves outside
in the odd
hot sun
on this late October
day.
and then we're done
we go home
to pray.


what will we line our birdcages with now?

sadly
the newspapers are dying.
the thud
of them landing
on the porch
is waning.
they've
leaned
too far to the left.
becoming puppets on a string
no longer
unbiased
but bought and sold
down the river
by the woke
and elite.
i'll miss them, but not
as much
as i thought i would.

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

the brand-new Chevrolet on the block

the men,
home from work
and now
in their
t-shirts
and madras shorts
would lean their heads out
the doors
and windows
when
a new car arrived
on the block.
brand new off the showroom
floor.
some shiny blue
Chevrolet,
or Ford.
maybe red. 
how dare
they buy a red car
and live here.

the years are getting longer

she leaves notes,
yellow sticky notes all over
the place
on the fridge,
the table,
the bed post.
reminders
of things for me
to do before
the day is over.
i'm so busy now that i'm
retired.
i think she's trying
to get me
out of the house.
she's not used to me being
around.
i get it though,
i don't like being home
with her
either.
the years seem to be getting
longer.

oh those high school memories

we
had things in shop class
that could
maim
or kill
in a heartbeat.
drills and saws,
soldering
irons
and hammers.
and in
biology
we had Bunson burners
with gas
lit
beakers,
scalpels to carve
out the heart
of a frog.
we toyed with mercury
in chemistry,
spilling it out onto the counters,
we shook
the muriatic acid
in the air.
in gym class we
played
a game called murder
ball,
where you slammed
a rubber
ball
into another kid's head.
we climbed
a rope to the top of the
gymnasium ceiling,
40 feet up, with no one
below
to catch us if we fell.
we
jumped over dangerous
obstructions
like the pommel horse,
endangering
our virginial precious jewels.
we ran outside in our
little blue shorts
in the rain
and snow
until we turned blue.
high school
was mayhem.
and then you had to take
a shower
with all your strange
and naked friends.
and after that there were only
four more classes to go.


More of Moore

i fall
in love with her words.
her
voice,
how she puts her thoughts
onto paper.
i'll never
meet her, never hold
her hand,
or kiss her on the lips
as we passionately
embrace
our love
of literature,
but as long as she
keeps writing, i'll
find her
books, her essays,
her poetry.
i'll keep turning each
clever page,
i'll keep dining
on her turn
of every phrase.

there's no hesitation with her vote

she has a difficult
time
making decisions.
what shoes
to wear,
what dress, what purse
to carry,
how to wear her hair.
and then
when you arrive,
she can't decide on what
to order
off the menu, what to
drink,
where to sit,
does she want bread first
or a salad
and then
which dressing.
she's a squirrel in the middle
of the road
on nearly everything,
except when it comes
to her vote.
she's red all the way.
ten seconds and she's
out of the booth.

a hint of mint

i'm not good
at names,
or faces, but i am good
at smells.
like a hound dog
i remember
people better that way.
the perfume,
the cologne,
the garlic,
the damp clothes
taken
out of the dryer too soon.
the mint gum,
the hair
dye
or spray starch,
the red wine,
or booze.
the cigarette breath.
cigar smoker, oh yeah,
i remember you.

my new talking scale

i'm about
to step onto my new
digital talking scale,
to check my weight,
when it
asks me in a robotic voice
to stop, are you sure you
want to do this?
how many
cookies
did you eat last night
while watching
Netflix?
yesterday,
you ate at McDonald's
and then
topped it off with a slice
of pie.
i see potato chip crumbs
on your double large
t-shirt.
do you really want me to
tell you how
fat you're becoming?
i see you're wearing stretch
pants today too.
they used to call them
pajamas.
now go drink
a glass of water, run around
the block,
and eat some grapefruit.
come back in a week or so
and we'll talk again.
i'm telling you this
for your own good.
now go.

i was raised a middle-class girl and my mother had a yellow Formica table

i drop
to my knees and pray.
i pray
that the next week will go by
quickly
so that i don't have to listen
to another
speech
at another rally,
another interview
or another ad on television
or on my phone.
enough already.
this has to stop.
how many word
salads
and exaggerated lies
can we let into
our ears?
we're exhausted by
the hogwash.
let's count the votes
and be done with this madness.

the bouncing loaf of olive bread

i told the clerk
behind
the counter that i wanted
a loaf
of olive bread with rosemary.
one loaf
please.
he grabbed it off the shelf
but as he
was about to put it
in the bag
he dropped it to the floor
and kicked it
beneath
the counter.
he got on his hands and knees
and with a broom
retrieved
the crusty loaf of bread
wedged
in the murky shadows.
as he bagged it,
i asked him if he was
still giving it to me,
to which he said,
why not? you don't want it?
he shrugged and put it back
on the shelf
and bagged a different loaf.

the last place celebration

they lost
every game, they were
a lazy team
of boys
with a bad coach
who drank.
but at the end of the year
after losing
every game
they each received a
golden
trophy,
engraved with their names.
they went
out of pizza later
and received
a standing ovation
from their happy parents,
high praise.
a light went on in each
of their little heads,
losing isn't so bad,
in fact
it's great.

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

a second chance in the afterlife

in my dream,
he's tall and lanky,
but healthy, he's shaved
off his beard.
his hair is cut
and parted on the side.
he no longer
looks like the gangster
he was
when he roamed
the streets
causing mayhem
and destroying lives.
he's wearing turquoise
pants and a white
shirt.
reflective blue sunglasses.
i avoided him
all my life when he was
alive,
but now in the dream,
we're friends
and i tell him he looks good,
he looks fine
i shake his hand.
then i ask him if his
glasses are polarized.

a toy in every box

they used
to put toys into boxes
of cereal
and candy,
caramel corn
and nuts.
a prize in every box
or bag.
something for the kiddies
to find.
encouraging them
to finish it up
and get another.
i remember swallowing
a miniature
magnifying glass
once.
i try to stay away
from the sun.

we've lost our way

we've hiked too far
into the woods,
gone too deep into this valley.
and now
we have
no phone reception.
what kind
of world is this?
we've lost our way.
no one will ever find us.
we should have
bought the map too when
we bought
drinks and ChapStick.

someone i won't forget

only two
hundred more pages to go,
and then
the end.
but i don't want
it to end.
i want the slow go.
the careful
page turned,
taking it all in .
i want the book to last
and last.
i want it to become
my friend.
someone that i'll never
forget,
someone i can
visit again.

what we want to hear

we hear
what we want to hear
and dispose
of the rest
as noise
garbage,
noise lint, brushing
it away,
kicking that
can
down the road.
taking
it to the curb,
the nonsense,
forever unabsorbed.

Monday, October 28, 2024

when the bath water goes cold

as i sit
in the hot bath, soaking
after a long
hard day at work,
getting the soreness
out of my
bones and muscles,
i reminisce about
Betty's legs when she
wears high heels.
i lie back,
my head on a sponge,
in the suds and bubbles,
until the water
goes cold,
and then i start to think
about how
nice it would be to have
handles
sticking
out of the tile that i can
pull onto
when getting out.

something i said?

i'm always
suspicious when i
hear women say that they have
to go to the bathroom
to powder,
their nose,
then scurrying off
with their
purse and phone,
coat in tow.
sometimes, 
they don't come back.
leaving
me with the check
after a large meal
and three glasses of wine.
there's
nothing left on their plate
but a few measly
shards of kale and
garlic
croutons.
once more i've been
taken 
and left alone.

we are nothing but ants

i'm driving,
and driving and driving,
and driving.
there is so much traffic,
so much
construction,
so many accidents
and detours.
orange
barriers and cones,
men in green
jackets
waving us along.
from high above
we are mere ants
crawling our way to work
then back home.
education doesn't matter,
the color of our
skin,
our faith,
our DNA, who we know
or where
we've been.
none of it matters,
we're nothing but ants
dying slowly
until it all ends.

Crispy beef and you

i wake
up thinking about Chinese food.
i haven't had
it in ages.
crispy beef,
fried
rice and dumplings.
eggs rolls,
the works.
with duck sauce
and soy,
a big mai tai to wash it
all down.
but my body won't tolerate
the grease
anymore,
or the MSG they pile on.
then i think about
you.
maybe a quick
rendezvous, but
it's a similar feeling.
the aftereffects would kill me
if we do.

those blue suede shoes

i go through
my drawers, my closet,
my laundry
basket.
i search under the bed,
on
the floor
behind dressers,
i find things hanging
on hooks,
on hangers.
one by one i gather
all these clothes
that i rarely wear
anymore,
some still with tags
on them
and bag them for the garbage
man.
what was i thinking
with that green
shirt,
that orange vest,
those blue suede shoes,
that
feathered hat?

late for my own wedding again

after a quick
hour
has passed scrolling through
my phone
i realize
that i'm late
for my wedding.
she's going to kill me.
i'm still in
my underwear,
still haven't
showered
or shaved or put my
tuxedo on.
but just one more,
one final
scroll.
and then i'm out the door.
but i still 
haven't decided on
who to vote for.

my new best friend

the neighbor puts
up a political
sign on his door, now no one
talks to him.
he's not invited
to parties
or picnics anymore.
he's shunned
and ostracized.
they've voted him
off the board. he's a paraiah,
an outcast,
he's been voted
off the island
of the cul de sac.
he's my best friend
now.
welcome aboard.

people on boats waving

people
on boats like to wave
to people.
whether they are on a boat
too,
or on land.
it's a thing.
waving
as you go sailing by.
it's in the handbook
of sailing.
wave
to everyone,
look happy,
ahoy matey, look at us,
living our
best lives
in the bright sunshine.

Sunday, October 27, 2024

the big game is on today

i see my
neighbor with his bright red
jersey on.
there's a number
on the front
and back and the name
of a football
player from
back in the day.
he's painted his face
with yellow
and red paint.
he nods to me as
he's carries in a case
of beer
and a bucket
of chicken.
he asks me if i'm watching
the game
today.
i want to say what game,
but instead,
i give him the thumbs
up, and tell
him of course, i wouldn't
miss it for
the life of me.
i can hardly wait.
he let's out a war cry,
then goes inside.
i feel deeply depressed
suddenly and
there's a big part of me
that wants
to get on a plane and fly
far far away.


indecisive napping

it's too early
for a nap, but i try one just
the same.
i get the pillow
for the couch,
the blanket.
i turn the phone off
and lie down.
but i got nothing. 
i just lie there and toss
about.
left then right,
i stare at the ceiling
for a while.
i flip through the pages
of a book,
still not sleepy, so then
i reminisce about my
life which takes me down
a road i don't want
to think about.
i give up
and go for a walk.
maybe later
if you're around.

what's the name of that movie he was in?

i read
the child star's autobiography,
about how he
struggled in the early
years between
three and ten,
always
type cast as the cute
kid
with a funny laugh
and grin
and how
his tyrannical
parents
and manager
controlled his money,
gave him
a paltry allowance.
it's a cautionary
tale for
young thespians.
the therapy that he's gone
through,
from
the roles he's been in.
he promises
that now,
at the ripe old age
of eleven
to turn over a new leaf
and be
bolder with his choice
of movies,
tv shows, and commercials.
no one will force me
to do anything,
ever again, he says,
as someone helps him
with the seat belt in the back seat
of the limo,
strapping him in.

American Thespians

why is that
the foreign actors,
British, French or Indian,
or Asian,
don't seem
to be acting.
they are the part,
engrossed and lost
in the role
they are playing,
while American actors
are atrociously bad.
you can
see right through their
thin thespian skins.
there's no one there,
just a guy or a gal
reading lines
they've not quite memorized.
acting is just a job before
the adulation
and talk shows
begin.

they almost seem human at times

people
like to brag about how smart
their dogs
are.
how they know so many words,
they can
sing
and speak
in a dog like language.
they have
expressions
on their furry faces,
almost human
in fact.
they are
exactly like teenagers,
but lacking in social
skills, English
and math.

Saturday, October 26, 2024

the enormous tree has fallen

it was a good
tree. now fallen.
the big oak in the middle
of the cul-de-sac.
swings
were attached,
ropes
and hammocks.
children
climbed its trunk
to the highest
branch.
lovers met beneath
its summer
shade.
hearts were carved
into the side.
promises
were made.
it was a lovely tree
in all seasons.
we'll miss it, and with it
the children
that have come and gone.
we'll remember it though
from our window,
its beauty,
as we approach our
own
last age.

Cruella plays the long game

the maid
tells me about her ex-husband,
the one
she's living with now
to get
the house
and money.
the will has been
rewritten
a half dozen times
as she comes and goes
in and out of his life.
tired of revision, he
writes the last one in pencil.
betrayal, forgiveness,
rinse and repeat
again and again.
the maid
whispers to me,
he has the big C, it not
good.
she his nurse now.
i nod.
it's a shame, it really is.
but i admire her
her patience and tenacity.
it's to be admired
with a big payday
up ahead.

the lone bottle of hot sauce

i stare at the lone
bottle
of Texas Pete hot sauce
on the fridge door
and try to remember
when i bought it.
how long
have i had that half
empty bottle?
how many wives ago
did i buy that?
how many decades ago
did i make
that purchase.
how many tacos ago?
i try to read the label
but it's worn off.
i can see a few numbers,
but nothing
conclusively.
the cap is stuck too,
so i run
it under hot water
and tap it against the
counter.
there we go.
back in business.
back to the shelf it goes.
more hot sauce to come.

the most respectful divorce ever

he told
me it was going to be the most
civil
and respectful divorce in
the history
of mankind.
wishful thinking,
after
the lawyers got involved,
and she
drained
the bank account
of cash,
the war was on.
i saw him yestereday
putting a flat
screen tv into his car,
and a Dyson vacuum
cleaner,
her favortie,
saying with fury,
she's not getting that.

where should we move after retirement?

planning where
to move
after retirement is not easy.
now you
have to figure out
which state
has the lowest tax rate,
the best
health care system,
the most affordable homes,
where there are
no floods
and hurricanes,
with no tornadoes,
or wildfires.
which state
has no earthquakes
or Tsunamis?
what city makes the best
hot pastrami
sandwiches,
apple martinis, or milk shakes.
and are they located 
in walking distance,
or by electric scooter
with accessible
ramps.

the slow crawl home

i knew
my mother was losing it
when
she began
the next part
of the conversation with
what she just
finished saying.
at first
it was annoying, and i'd
tell her
that she just
told me that.
but as the days and weeks
went by,
i got it.
i let her ramble and ramble
happy just
to hear her voice,
asking
if Sunay at five was good
for dinner.
and me saying
yes, of course it is
for the second or third time.

round table discussion in hell

the dead
tyrants, all burning in hell
for crimes
against humanity
are depressed
and
upset over all the attention one
maniacal
psychopath
with a little mustache
is getting.
what about us,
they scream and yell
at the round
table
discussion
in the pit of fire.
what about me, says Mussolini,
or me
chimes in Pol Pot,
or me,
says Idi Amin.
what are we chopped liver?
can't they throw our name
into the mix
with one of their campaign speeches?
why does that guy get all press?
hey,
yells Charles Manson,
shut up
before
i get angry, and could someone
please open
a window in here,
my hair is a mess.
there are no windows
says
Chairman Mao, now zip up
your dumpling mouth
before i stab
you with my spork.


done working for the man

i ask the thirty-five year old
kid
on the street,
with his hat on backwards
protesting
a variety of things,
from war
to gas and oil,
to the middle east
and trans rights,
not to mention capitalism.
i ask him what he's going
to be when
he grows up.
he laughs and shakes his
head as
he dodges a tear gas
cannister.
i'm thinking of doing my own
podcast,
he says.
i really don't want to waste
my English Lit degree
from Columbia.
and i think this might be
a good way
for me to educate
people.
show them who i really am.
do you know that some podcasters
make
a couple of hundred
thousands per year?
i'm done working for the man.

Friday, October 25, 2024

the drive-thru Liquor Store

as a kid
standing at the bus stop
for school,
dreading the day,
i'd watch
the cars line up
at the drive-thru liquor store.
teachers
and parents, construction
workers
and lawyers.
hookers and priests.
Mead's Liquor the bright
yellow sign
read
in bold fluorescent lights.
it was seven a.m.
and 
people were drinking on
the way
to work.
i tried to ignore what
all of this meant.

after the election is over

after the election
is finally
over,
i see the losing candidate
on late night tv
selling salad
dressings and croutons.
lettuce
and kale,
cucumbers and
cheese.
black olives,
and green.
she's found her way,
at last.
stirring up a big bowl
of salad,
with blue cheese and
thousand islands dressing,
pepper corn, and
oily vinaigrette,
mixing it all up 
with a big fork and spoon,
all with a cackling laugh.

low hanging fruit

i've done
my share of picking
the low
hanging fruit.
sometimes
i've even picked it up off
the ground.
so easier
than climbing,
than getting the ladder
out,
taking chances,
and risking
falling down.

the calming effect of you screaming

your anger
makes
me calm and reasonable
for some
strange reason,
the more you shout
and carry on
hysterically,
the more i lean back
in my chair
and relax.
my heart slows down,
my breathing
is easy.
i completely understand
now,
what do to next,
which is leaving.

the starter home

it's a starter home,
to go
with the starter
job,
the starter wife.
it's the practice round
before
real life
begins.
a year at most before
we move on
to bigger
and better things.

Thursday, October 24, 2024

the Verizon man

the Verizon
man
is straight out of a Shakespearean
play.
a Falstaff
fellow with
a red
beard.
he's huge, and lumbering,
red faced
and full
of mirth.
there's a tool belt wrapped
around his
ample waist,
a bag of tools
in his enormous fist,
a box
of what's about to be
replaced
beneath his arm.
which are arms
not unlike legs.
i feel the necessity to feed him,
but i have
no turkey, no venison,
no beef on a femur bone,
no mince meat pies.
i have no ale,
this bottle of spring water
and bowl of nuts will
have to do.

i know better, but i do it anyway

i know better,
of course i do, but i
i do it anyway,
i eat
the last cold slice
of pizza
from the box
before bed.
i drink a cup of coffee.
have
dessert,
the remnants of a wedding
cake.
i make my way
up the stairs
then crawl between the sheets.
it's a long
night.
i hear
everything going on
outside
the window,
from the fox screaming
making violent
love,
the dogs
howling,
the tow truck taking away
cars
improperly parked. it's a long
night.
but the pizza
was divine,
as was the cake.

the two syllable rule of eating

if the label
has words on it that you've
never heard
of, or that you
can't pronounce,
it's probably a good
idea to not
eat it and
put it into your body.
which eliminates
nearly everything
in the grocery store
except meat and fruit,
milk, fish,
eggs and vegetables.
one or two syllables
seems
to be the way to go.

the suggestion box

the local
paint store has a wooden
box
on the counter
with a sign saying suggestions.
there's a pad
of paper
and pencil
with a string attached
to the box.
i write my suggestion.
donuts,
then
on another piece
of paper,
dancing girls
and happy hour.
a week goes by,
but they haven't listened.

fighting the law

tomorrow
i'll take the rake out
and 
sweep
the leaves
to the gate, then in armfuls
toss them
over the fence
into the woods.
it's against
the condo covenant
rules
to do such
a thing.
but i enjoy it
and hope they say
something.

turning heads

a pretty young
woman in a yellow dress
prances by
in the park.
every man,
young or very old,
looks, and turns their
head
to watch her
legs
and hips sway by.
no,
it's not over yet.

a train passing through

the train
blows a whistle
as it crosses
the trestle deep into the woods
over the dam.
it's a poignant 
sound,
a sweet reminder
that it might be time
to get out
of this town.

a cacophony of sound

it's an oil
change,
then a filter, then the tires,
then
the exhaust,
then
the wipers, then the engine
light that
won't go off.
it's a long day
at the dealership
waiting
in the lounge with two
tv's on,
and music raining down.
i miss
my horse.

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

banjo music down the street

when i hear
banjo
music
coming from down
the street,
i stop what i'm
doing,
squint my eyes
and look off into the distance
where the music
is coming from,
i say out loud
to no one,
is that banjo
music?
i don't start tapping
my foot,
or drumming
the counter.
i go to the window
and look
out.
i have a look of bewilderment
in my eyes,
like a dog does,
when
you tell them it's Tuesday
again.

we need to sit down and talk

we have
to talk are words that send
shivers
down my spine.
the boss,
the wife,
the girlfriend, the doctor.
the principal
at my son's school.
the woman
who does my taxes.
it's never
good news.
it's never you won
the lottery,
or we think
you're a fine person.
all is well.
it always goes 
the other way.

spare change to get around

a phone
call cost a dime
in
the booth.
ten too
for a coke in the machine.
a burger and a bag
of fries,
thirty-five.
a ticket to a matinee
a mere
half dollar.
gas cost 29 per gallon,
milk
and bread,
diapers.
i have no clue,
that was up to my
mother.

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

do you like pets?

i can hardly
understand the telemarketer
on the phone
selling windows,
she has a heavy Indian accent,
but i listen
just the same.
it's her job, so i give her
some time
to practice
her skills.
she asks me if i like pets,
which i hear as 
do i like sex.
i tell her yes. of course i do.
oh, that's nice,
she says, what kind?
i tell her, you know, just
the regular
kind, nothing crazy with
ropes and chains,
or whips. i'm pretty vanilla.
oh, you
chain your pussycat up to a tree
and hit her with
a whip?
what?
oh no, no, never.
although i had this,
girlfriend once,
a crazy flight attendant
from LA,
who probably would have liked
that.
so, she says, clearing her throat,
so how many windows and doors
do you have?
maybe you need a new roof, right?
ummm.
what?
what does this have to do 
with sex?

with her hand on a large carving knife

she keeps
telling me that she wants to carve
the turkey
this year
for the holiday.
huh?
i say. why? what are you even
talking about?
no.
i tell her. it's a man's job.
and plus
i don't trust you with
a knife.
how about you taking
charge of
the gravy?
maybe a pie?

let's pretend everything is okay

don't tell me about you.
let me
stop you before you get started.
say less.
let me
make it all
up in my mind.
let me pretend that you are
free from
trouble,
from drama.
that you've had
a good life.
don't tell me about the pain
and sorrow
you've suffered.
and i'll do the same.
mums the word.
let's pretend that we both
fell to earth,
once
angels, just
dropping by from heaven

the tipsy candidate

she seems to be
drunk
on stage, what is it, which
wine
is making her
scream and yell,
her eyes bulging
out with each new accent
she displays.
tossing up another word
salad.
pinot grigio,
or cabernet?
someone please help
her off stage,
and call quickly
double A.

another morning

days
seem to fly the older
you get.
it's
a book in a hard wind
turning
pages
faster than you can read
them.
before you know it,
it's
another morning
again.

lost in translation once more

it's a misunderstanding,
as texts
often are.
the smile, the smirk, the sarcasm
is lost
in translation.
ahhh, but
what could have been
if we had
actually talked
in person, face to face,
like they used
to do before
technology began.

home waiting for you

away for a few
days
is nice, but nicer still is to
return home
to the house waiting
for you.
everything left as it was
when you
closed the door
and the took the train
north.
there is the couch
with the pillows just so,
the vase
on the mantle.
the book on
the nightstand, earmarked
where you left off.
the window cracked to let
the fall air in.
the bed
made
and waiting, your
slippers 
resting near the door.

and now i don't care

it used to be the Cadillac
that made
a statement
about who
you were in life,
or the Mercedes,
they were statement cars.
you've arrived
they said,
gleaming in the sun
with a brilliant shine.
the Porsche
or the Lamborghini,
the Corvette Stingray.
one day, i used to say,
driving by in my rusting
Cheverolet,
choking blue smoke
out of the exhaust,
one day,
i'll make it mine.
but now, strangely,
this Honda is fine.