Thursday, October 9, 2025

Adam and Eve

i'm not
sure why i started thinking
about it.
but was
Adam and Eve
created fully formed, or were
they babies,
maybe nine
or ten years old?
teens
with teen issues, or middle
aged
men and women
worried
about laundry, and bills
to pay,
clothes to make
to cover their freshly made
bones
and skin?
i call up father Smith over
at St. Joe's
to ask him
his opinion,
but he's baffled too.

the buzz cut at ten

to save
a few bucks my father
invested
in electric clippers,
the kind he used
on sheep
in Nova Scotia.
he'd line us all up
in the basement,
one by one
clipping our locks.
from the youngest
brother
to the oldest
while the sisters ran
screaming to hide
in a closet.

one red balloon

you
see a red balloon in the sky,
floating
safely
away.
somewhere a child is crying.
but there
will be more
balloons,
more birthdays,
more things to cry about
than this
in each and every day.

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

life going on as usual

strange
to hear the whistle of a train
crossing
the trestle
through the woods, this late
at night.
people traveling north,
or south,
perhaps asleep
as
the hard
roll of steel caroms
against the tracks
reaching my window,
but strange in a good way.
it's good to know
that for so many of us
life is going on as usual.

the bad reviewer

every yelp
review no matter how many
five or four
stars
a restaurant gets,
has one
or two
one-star reviews
by some disgruntled patron.
the waitress was rude,
the soup
was cold,
the meat too tough to 
even cut
let alone chew.
you see this same person on
the next
review for
an Oscar winning
movie.
it didn't work for me, the plot
was confusing,
the actors phoned it in,
and the popcorn
was stale,
too buttery, and
there was gum on my seat too.

remembering Coney Island

as we
walk along the cold beach
of Coney Island,
the sea a violent wash in
all directions,
we remember
how we met
on the sun-bleached sand,
the boardwalk,
but that was then,
this is
now.
we're still holding hands,
still in
love.
but the world has changed
around us,
the rides
have rusted
and broken down.
nearly everyone has aged
or died.
there's nothing left here to
romanticize.
we don't stay long.

before the first hard snow

my
body says fatten up,
shivering
in the first
cool
breeze of fall. eat and eat
some more.
get heavy
before the storm, before
the ice,
before the first
hard snow.
i obey,
peeling the potatoes,
dicing the carrots,
grilling
the meat for a pot of stew.
my hands
kneeding
the dough on the floured
board.

finding old loves again

as i reached out
the window,
while my car idled beneath
the overhang
of the highway,
a toll booth, on 95,
in the lane for inexact
change,
i handed my twenty dollar
bill to a woman
in uniform.
she had rosy cheeks
and curly
red hair, now dyed,
freckles. a gap between
her teeth.
i looked at her and she
looked at me.
i remembered her from the schoolyard
at St. Thomas More.
when we kissed once
near the stairway to the parish door,
just once,
under the harsh
blue sky,
in the wind of March.
i moved on
before she said a word.

finding heaven at the Rexall Drug Store

a double
scoop of ice-cream was living
large
back then.
sprinkles,
chocolate poured onto
the cone,
oh my God,
so decadent.
but a banana split while
sitting
at the Rexall's Drug
Store counter
was the bomb.
was heaven.
you floated
on air
while sitting and spinning
on the red leather
stool,
especially with five or six
new comic books
in front of you,
yet to be read.

we gotta get out of this place

the B actress,
the failed
comedian, the once beautiful
queen
of the silver
screen,
the talk show
host
with bad
ratings
all announce that they
are leaving
the country for good,
moving away to be far
from
what made
them
rich and famous to some
degree.
good luck
in Ireland, in England,
in France
and Spain.
but never do they go to Africa,
or Gaza
or Pakistan.

find one thing

to do
one thing, and to do it well
will
save your life.
whether
at the drill,
standing in a factory,
painting
a wall, driving a taxi,
making bread long
into the night.
find one
thing
with purpose and it
will save
your life.

yes, it was better

was it
better back then.
did
food taste better, was there
less
crime,
less pills to take
to curb
your anxiety?
was the sky bluer,
the sea
cleaner,
was it clear to you
the path
you should take?
were there
less
crazy people taking
to the street.
yes.

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

the Portland Donut Shoppe

i made
the accidental,
but brilliant move
a few months back
in opening up a donut
shop
across the street
from the ICE
detention center in Portland.
there have been riots
and demonstrations
going on there for over a hundred days.
non-stop.
i can't make these donuts
fast enough,
and it's not just cops who
love donuts,
it's anarchists too.
who doesn't love a good hot
donut right out
of the oven?
the left, the right, the sane
and deranged?
everyone loves a good donut.
i had to hire family and friends
to help out
with all the donuts we need to make
for the brave patrons
who arrive,
tired and battered, some
bleeding,
some limping, pouring
water
into their red eyeballs.
they line up in droves at the door
and at the drive-thru
hungry as hell.
(we may add breakfast burritos at some point)
if you watch tv,
well certain channels only,
you can see all my customers
with icing and glaze
all over their faces
and gas masks, chocolate, maple,
vanilla,
Boston creme
filling
on their chins and shields,
and for a limited time only,
there are seasonal
pumpkin spice lattes
dripping
off the Billy clubs.
if you zoom in close enough
you can see
between the pepper balls
the donut holes rolling
around on the ground
under all the leather boots.
my sister made those.
we have plans to expand to Chicago
and LA, soon,
and perhaps to a city
near you. stay tuned.


the unregistered nurse

it was our first date,
i met her on
last chance dot com.
a dating site for seniors who
are still
able to walk around.
we met her
on the boulevard,
at the Sunset Grille
for happy
hour,
half price on calamari
and 
pina coladas. 
unlimited pink shrimp
from the gulf of America.
i was in-between jobs,
in-between
wives,
houses,
dogs, knee deep in student loans
from the night
school i was attending, trying
to get a certificate
in auto-mechanics,
but i had my best shirt on.
she was an unregistered
nurse
from Omaha.
somehow the conversation
turned
towards getting
a colonoscopy
at a certain age and flu shots.
she asked me if i had mine
yet.
i told her no.
she said, do you want one?
i have syringes
in my purse,
the extra boost kind,
it covers pneumonia too.
so we went into a stall
in the bathroom
and she gave
me a flu shot on the side of
my bum.
next week i'm going to her house
for raviolis
and x-rays.

happiness is a dog that pees right away

was
i happier when i had a dog?
at times
i was, i guess,
but there
were other times
when it was
raining
or very cold outside
that i resented him.
i held a grudge,
annoyed
as i carried him outside
to a bush
for him to do his business,
telling him,
please, go, just go,
that's a perfect spot
lift your
leg
and go.
he never found a dead
anything
that he
didn't want to eat and swallow.
which would
result in an overnight
stay at the Mayo Clinic
for dogs.
a thousand dollars later
he'd be
back home,
snug as a bug in a rug
hogging
the pillow.
was i happier when i had a dog?
not really.


season of the witch

this song
reminds me of Betty,
i tell my love
as we drive
down the highway
heading to 
the beach
for a three-day getaway.
i'm sick and tired of hearing about
Betty, she tells me,
slamming 
her hand against
the dashboard.
what's up with you and Betty?
aren't you over
her yet?
i turn the radio up
and sing along,
it's Donovan singing
Season of the Witch, one
of my
favorite songs.
look, a Dairy Queen
up ahead,
how about we stop for ice-cream,
i tell her,
which calms her down.

finding your hat

there's something
about
a hat
that defines a person.
the captain's
hat for the boat owner,
the railroad
hat
for the train
fanatic,
the horse lover and his
cowboy hat.
there's the baseball cap
for the sport
minded,
the feather
in a cap for the artist.
then there's the pointed
multicolored dunce
hat
for the protestors
marching to the annoying
drumbeat
of pots and pans.

have i lied to you, yet?

she looked
at me
with all the seriousness of a child
with chocolate
on his mouth and crumbs
on his shirt,
and says to me,
staring into my eyes,
are you asking me
if i'm lying to you?
is that what you're asking?
yes, i say.
well, are you?
hmm, she says. let me think
for a minute.
have i lied to you yet?
of course i have,
yes.

the yoga routine

as i stretch
my
leg, the right one first,
then the
left one with
my hands on the kitchen
sink
for balance.
i wait for water
to boil
to make my first
cup of coffee.
it's my morning yoga
routine.
i turn my head
to the side,
up down back getting
the cricks out,
then shake my arms
around
like a bird
trying to take flight.
the bell
dings.
it's coffee time.

everything is fine and dandy in Portland

on one
channel, the news anchor
says, there's
no problem here.
no riots, no issues, no
crime,
no violence,
no bullets being fired,
or chaos
on the ground,
it's a peaceful demonstration,
while the other channel,
runs the live update
showing
the exact opposite,
showing what's really
going on.
the screen blurred by clouds
of gas.

a penny saved

he had money.
that wasn't a problem.
and yet,
he cut coupons out from the paper,
drove
ten miles out of the way
for the cheapest
gas in town.
he was a clipper
and a saver,
three for the price of one.
he did things
like his mother did back
in North Reading
when he was a child.
vinegar
and a newspaper to clean
the windows.
making the most
out of plastic bags,
stale bread, duct
tape for things broken
and worn.
pennies were saved
in the big
blue jar.
who knew about the million
tucked away
for a rainy day
that he kept safe and sound
in the cellar,
buried
below ground.

Monday, October 6, 2025

i'm on hold, i'm getting old

i'm on
hold, i'm waiting patiently
for the next
available
agent to speak,
but not a robot,
please.
i'm
filing my
nails,
painting a picture
of Leonardo
Da Vinci, i'm
doodling,
sketching ala Picasso,
Don Quixote,
i'm
looking up recipes for cakes.
i'm looking
at frayed
photos in my wallet,
trying to smooth out
a crease
across an ancient face.
i'm perusing
Amazon,
i'm lifting
weights, folding
clothes,
throwing a ball
down the hall
to the dog who refuses
to chase.
i'm on hold.
i'm getting old.

one more Christmas

it's time
to downsize, the old man
tells
his wife.
why have this yard,
this house.
it's too much
now.
he stares at pool.
the trees,
the leaves on the ground.
the garden
full of weeds.
it's time,
he says.
the kids are grown,
we're old.
we're tired.
not yet, she says,
not yet,
one more season, just
one more
Christmas, please.

free speech

i slip,
i let out words i shouldn't
say.
but it's almost
like they
can't stay
in mouth, they want out.
i say
what i really feel,
what i really
mean.
and now
there's a price to pay.

things to be done

a portion
of the morning is spent in bed.
the long
wide
bed.
why get up
and start another day?
it's raining.
it's cold.
but there are things to be done.
so i'm
told.

Sunday, October 5, 2025

pumpkin head

i buy a pumpkin,
they're everywhere you look.
orange,
yellow,
multi-colored pumpkins.
big, small,
cute little mini ones.
i feel
obligated somehow
to buy one,
to take one home
and dig
the guts out, carve
a face onto it
and then set it on
the porch
with a lit candle inside.
i pick up
a pumpkin pie too,
then a pumpkin
spice
latte from Starbucks
with pumpkin whipped
cream on top.
i'm chewing pumpkin
flavored gum.
my wife calls me pumpkin head,
i call her
pumpkin back.
As we lie upon the couch
we bite into pumpkin
flavored
cupcakes warm
off the rack.
we are pumpkin people,
without a doubt.

averting the sting

with the swat
of a
rolled up magazine,
we push
the bee
away,
again and again,
but he keeps coming
back.
he needs
desperately the sting
to be
made.
some folks we used 
to know
were exactly like that.

saying bye bye

so much
is about letting go.
of cutting
strings
and ties,
ribbons and bows
of friends
that aren't friends,
in removing
straps and chains.
so much is
about freeing yourself
from others
that are unkind,
from unlearning
what you
thought was right.
so much is snipping
those vines,
and letting
go of
the weight that's holding
you down.
so much is getting up,
and saying. farewell,
so long,
bye bye.

Ethel, the weekend social warrior

i find
her crying on the side of the road,
my social warrior friend,
Ethel. she's
sitting on
a curb.
she looks tired and beaten.
the blue dye
in her hair
is running down her face.
she's holding an upside down American
flag that's
still smoldering.
i hand her a paper
towel
and tell her to dab
her nose,
those nose rings are going to rust
if you don't
dry your face.
can you pour a water bottle
into my eyes,
she asks.
that bear mace
is lethal, i should have brought
my gas mask
i bought at Costco the other day.
i pour some water on the flag too,
dousing the embers.
so how did it go today?
i ask her.
make any progress with whatever
it is you're doing?
yes,
she says, sniffling.
i think we're breaking them.
we're going to win
this war.
can you help me up, i think
i peed my pants.

the hotel review

carefully, i take my time
to fill
out the review
for the hotel.
food, excellent, i mark
a ten.
service,
a ten too.
the bed,
ten.
the dining room, ten
again.
cleanliness, ten.
would you come back again,
ten.
and then,
lighting?
hmm. i give it a five.
the lighting could be better,
i could hardly
read
the book i brought
in the dim light.
what's with the tiny little
fancy modern
lights
at bedside?

the enormous cardboard box

i remember
my mother giving us
a giant cardboard
box
and telling us to go outside
to the yard
and play
for a while.
so we did.
seven hours later, she
called us
in for dinner.
we were exhausted
by the fun
we had.

New York has fallen

why work,
why
struggle, why get up
early
and fight traffic,
grind out
another day at a
thankless job?
why bother
with such things
when
the government can help
us with
everything.
big brother can feed us,
clothe us,
give us healthcare.
why should smart rich
people
have so much money
and nice houses?
let's take it from them.
why have the
police to reign us in?
why have
borders, or rules
and regulations, laws.
jails,
who needs them?
welcome to New York City.
show me where
the bread line
begins.

Ice Ice baby

the Pope
takes a few hours out of his day
to go
bless
a giant ice cube
brought in by some climate
activists
from Helsinki.
there's a blue light under
the melting rock
to add
to the ceremony.
he says a few words
in Latin,
then English, then Italian
with
his hands over
the melting chunk of ice,
then they take
it away.
chipping it up for mocktails
on the veranda.
someone pops
on a Vanilla Ice song,
which gets this party started,
the Pope jumps up,
and all the nuns
begin to sway.

following little Billy Bob on Instagram

after years
and years of loving his son,
my neighbor is
now estranged from little Billy Bob.
he read to him
when he was young,
taught him
how to read
and throw a ball.
showed him how to catch a wave
along the ocean.
he prayed with him.
loved him.
attended all his games
and plays in school.
paid for his tuition.
bought him cars,
and things
to help him get started in life.
shared so much
in conversations. 
he kept his room for when
he came to visit.
there was nothing he wouldn't
do for his son.
but that was then,
he tells me,
not now, we're estranged
for reasons
beyond me.
he doesn't write, never
calls.
never a word or card
in the mail.
i follow him on Instagram,
beats me, what went wrong.
maybe one day
he'll come back around.

more breaking news

i guess
we should worry.
they're telling us to worry
every hour
of every day.
breaking news
breaking news.
the sky is falling, we're
all doomed,
it's the end of the world
as we know it.
democracy
has fallen,
tomorrow we'll all be
in concentration
camps,
chained to our beds,
backs
against a fence.
it's the end of civilization.
oh my. i better run to 
the store
now,
for chips and drinks.
the game
starts at one p.m.

Saturday, October 4, 2025

how things used to be

we like
how things used to be.
we say
to each other, remember
when
there wasn't a six lane
highway
across the road
and there were woods
and deer,
we used to take walks
there,
go bird watching.
remember that?
remember the general store,
the old man
who worked there
with his wife,
their five hooligan kids who used
to swing
on the tire all night
setting off fire works.
remember that?
yes, she says.
i do remember that, i never
liked them.

when Billy comes home

there are sirens
blaring
all night, the whirr of copters
in the sky,
searchlights
spreading
in wide swoop
across the rooftops
and yards.
it could be the end of
the world,
or just
my neighbor Billy just escaped
from jail
again
in Portland
and has come home.

spoiled rotten

the trouble
with
going away for a few days
to a nice
resort
in the country, where it's nothing
but peace
and quiet,
good food and greetings
of polite
good mornings,
goodnight,
is that you have to go home again.
after days
of deciding,
shall we have
the lamb chops tonight dear,
with mint jelly,
or the filet mignon?
crepes or eggs Benedict?
you become
spoiled with the
exemplary service 
and French pressed coffee,
delightful drinks and long
walks in the placid
countryside.
but eventually you do have
to go home again
and do laundry,
cut the grass, pay
the bills, reach up
into the cupboard
for a jar of peanut butter
to make dinner.

Friday, October 3, 2025

we can't find the llama

we sign
a waiver saying that we are totally
responsible
if an
animal bites us
while we
visit the farm.
but we can't find any animals.
supposedly
there's a llama
on the property, donkeys,
cows
and bulls,
horses.
we walk for miles though
and see nothing
on the path
through the woods, down
to the stream,
across the field.
we're disappointed,
we were
prepared for the danger
of being bitten,
with our leather gloves on,
but no such luck.
so we eat the carrots and apples
that we brought
with us
then head back to the hotel
room.


a puddle of mail

the mail,
after a week of being gone,
is a puddle
on the floor, nothing.
just
paper,
not a single bill.
not a single notification
of importance,
coupons
and brochures.
notices
of no interest.
you wonder why you
don't just
put a trashcan up
against
the slot in the door.

the Bluestone Wedding

it's the day
before the wedding when we see
the groom
and bride
to be
in their shorts
and sweatshirts,
out for a run, now
at the breakfast table,
nervously drinking coffee.
they look
young.
tired, bewildered by it all.
they look
out window
at the stage, the food arriving,
the guests,
the band,
the rising tents.
the mother, with a wand,
the maestro of it
all
in command.
her voice echoing across
the blue
Virginia hills.
the father sitting on a stone
wall,
writing
another check.
tomorrow it begins.

and not go home

it's an hour away
and two
hundred
years.
the roads are narrow,
pushing
clouds of civil war dust up
as you ride by.
the fields
are wide
and endless, the rolling
hills
and grass, 
a sea of green, fences
of lumber,
trees,
stone houses,
forgotten wells,
abandoned shacks.
it's bliss,
the quiet, the rustling
of leaves,
of birds
on wing.
the bulls,
horses
on the distant
hills.
shadows
in the blue sky of sun.
let's close our
eyes
on this hammock as it sways,
and not go home.

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

boxers or briefs?

men give
little thought to their underwear.
it's pretty
much boxers
or briefs,
white, grey, black.
or maybe if you live in Europe
some sort
of sling shot
scenario
in red.
whereas women
have drawers of all kinds,
colors, styles,
fabrics.
they have underwear
for special occasions.
underwear they
wear to the doctors,
or to go to the gym in.
undies to dance in.
grandma type underwear.
big white
drawers
like parachutes
that they wear when they
don't feel well.
sexy underwear,
silky and see through,
cotton and polyester,
underwear with days of the week
embroidered
on them.
some have fancy stitching
with intricate designs.
every occasion calls for a certain
type of underwear
with women.

persona non grata

it's hard
to let go of the righteous grudge
that makes
you ghost someone.
you have valid
reasons
with tons
of evidence
to dismiss this person
from your life,
making
them persona non grata,
no longer
fit to be friends.
but then
suddenly you wake up
one morning
and the sun is shining,
and miss them,
you wonder how they are,
so you 
dial them up.
all being forgiven.

never buy monogrammed anything

it's not
easy breaking up with someone
after
years of marriage.
one or the other has to move,
or get the locks
changed.
lawyers are involved.
money spent.
who gets what?
furniture and books,
friends.
bowls and dishes
in the kitchen.
we install
a ring camera on the door.
do we split time with the dog
as well
as the kids?
what about the cars.
what about all these monogrammed
towels and wash cloths?
but there are
pleasant things too, like
no more
holidays with
mother in laws.

hitting the snooze alarm

i look
at the dog lying in his soft
round bed
in the corner.
let's go, i tell him.
up and at em.
time for a walk.
he opens one eye
and sighs.
i know that look
as he 
curls into a tighter
ball of fur.
he's telling me, just
ten more
minutes.
please.
go make yourself a
cup
of coffee,
i was just in the middle
of a dream.

what are you going to wear when we cross the Delaware?

it sounds
strange to even hear the words,
men can
no longer
wear dresses
in the military or
pretend
to be women.
the government will
no longer
pay for
breast implants,
or penis
removals
to soldiers on or
off the field.
Jim cannot become Jen.
what crazy times we
live in now.
how did we get here?
i doubt George Washington
had these
problems with
his men when crossing
the Delaware.

let's see how this day goes

rested
you feel better as you rise
from
bed,
slipping into your
day
clothes,
which are now perpetually
Saturday
clothes.
but it so it goes,
good days
and bad,
life being not a straight
line,
but circles
and zig zags,
unimaginable turns in
the road.
will today be like tomorrow,
we will see
how it goes.

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

the DEI post office

we talk about
how the mail service is horrible
these days.
mail gets lost,
undelivered,
bills are late, checks
never arrive,
i blurt out, that's what
we get because off
DEI,
lesser competent
people
were hired.
which makes her laugh.
really? she says,
she then tells me we
can no longer be friends
after handing
me the letter that was
for me, but dropped
off in her box
by mistake
by someone with purple
hair.

the cookie jars

it's tempting
to click
on the link,
to take the bait and see
what's on
the other
side of this page,
this
text or email.
a simple push of
the finger,
and there
we are.
stale or sweet, or
bug
filled,
who knows
until we take a bite.
we're like little children
staring
at the cookie jar
when mommy's
not around.

filing jointly again

i call up
my tax lady, Betty, in old
Manassas
Virginia,
and tell her,
i have some bad news, Betty.
i've known
her for 35 years now.
she does my taxes in a little
Cape Cod house
on the side of the road.
oh no,
what? she says. what's the bad news?
i got married again. 
i tell her.
i was smitten
by some financially bankrupt woman
and bit the bullet again.
third time's
the charm, right?
i'll be filing jointly again
this year.
oh no, she screams over the phone.
please, please tell me,
that you didn't do
something that stupid again.
ha ha,
i tell her,
just kidding, a little dark humor
for the Halloween season.
whew, she says,
readjusting the wig that
nearly fell 
off her head.
don't scare me like that anymore.

the evidence in black and white

i have
a black and white photo of my
father's
second family.
they look
fat and happy in the sun,
out in the back
yard of the house
they lived in for ten years.
the kids sort
of look like us,
the seven from the first marriage
to my mom.
and then
that train went off the track too.
and in the end
he said,
none of it ever happened.
they weren't his
children.
but here is the photo.
i have proof.
they look exactly like him.

no one is that crazy

i've never
heard anyone say,
you know what?
i'm dying for some carrots,
or kale,
what i'd like right
now is
a big fat tomato,
or some celery.
would someone
ever say,
i just can't get the thought
of some
chickpeas
out of my mind?
i need some before this
day is done.
i think it's safe to say
that no one
has ever said anything
crazy like that.

when the tubes smolder

we used
to tell my sister,
the smallest
and weakest of us all,
to stand
near
the tv
and hold the aluminum
covered
antenna
just so.
then kick the side to get
the horizontal
roll
to hold.
sometimes the big
wooden
box
would have a tendency
to smoke,
which would make us
go outside
to play
in the rain.

the night clerk

the clerk
had seen it all.
all manner of guests who
appeared
after driving
on the long road.
the young
and old. tired and beaten.
the lost and lonely.
the excited
heading to a Disneyland
in their minds,
the two
hour stays
with no luggage
and curtains pulled tight.
he knew what
life was.
the clerk with one eye,
he knew that life
was
a temporary visit with
a Bible in the drawer
to help with
forgiveness.

Monday, September 29, 2025

waiting for the sun to come out

so much
is in the shadows.
a cat
going
through the trash,
a lost key, a letter,
a box
with a man
asleep inside.
a diamond
ring thrown
aside.
hope and love.
things yet to be found.
there's
so much we don't see.
yet it's all there
waiting
for the sun to come out.

Dostoevsky blues

it was
hard to plow through
the Russian
novel, 
every character had a strange
name.
not a Steve
or Sally in the whole book.
though a Dimitri and
Anton did appear.
i had to take
notes
and make a flow chart
to try and make
sense
of the meandering
and complicated plot.
i carried the book
everywhere i went that summer,
on buses,
to the beach,
to bathroom to the park.
i wore the cover
off before i reached the middle.
i never finished it.
one day perhaps, but
maybe
i'm just not that smart.

champagne love

it was a champagne
love
affair,
a fling if you must.
all fun
and bubbly,
sparkling and sweet
the night
of,
but by six o'clock
the next morning,
the bottle
was nearly
empty and flat,
spilled onto the floor.
i removed
her cat
from my chest then
reached
for my shoes,
my keys
and wallet and wondered
where my car
was parked.
are you leaving already?
she said,
from
the jumble
of clothes and sheets
on the bed.
i nodded, ummm, 
eventually,
yes.

ten years straight of pregnancy

my father
used to give my mother the silent
treatment
for days on
end.
he'd sulk
in the easy chair
with a beer
and the tv on.
we were warned to stay
clear of him
until
he came back around.
i think it involved
sex, or the lack
of with
my mother being continually
pregnant like
a cat for
ten years,
telling him,
for once,
no.
which nearly brought
him to tears.

do i miss Milagro?

do i miss
the old housekeeper, Milagro?
sometimes
i do.
when the dust builds up,
or i haven't
made the bed
in a while.
but for the most part no.
i think
of the time she broke
the mirror in
the hall,
hit the Verizon box
on the floor
with her wild vacuuming
style
leaving me without
television
for a week.
i could never find my shoes
or my
checkbook,
the milk was all gone.
there was the time she left
the back
door open
and the squirrels came in
to nest
and eat.
the water was left running
overflowing
down three floors.
i  found a vase in a twenty
pieces, 
and all my clever magnets
rearranged
on the refrigerator
door.
was it worth the two thousand
bucks a year
i was giving her.
i'm not so sure.

judgement day

i remember
the fat vultures at the end 
of the route 5 
corridor heading east
to the eastern shore.
how they would
line up
like supreme court judges
in their oily
cloaks,
waiting for the next roadkill.
patient
on the side of the road,
wings clutched
to their sides,
talking to one
another
licking their chops
as a possum hesitates
coming out of the woods
and stops
between the dotted lines.
it's judgement
day all day along this stretch
of highway.

we're lucky living here

we're lucky
living here in the DMV,
rare is the tornado
or hurricane
that blows through
lifting trailer
courts away, there's
no wildfires to speak of,
no trembling
earthquake,
or typhon rolling across
the sea
engulfing boats
and sailors.
we're lucky here.
maybe a strong wind once
in a while,
some minor
flooding,
but for the most part, our
biggest problem
is listening
to too much news.
and now even crime is
down.

Sunday, September 28, 2025

why are people doing stupid things like lying in the road?

when i see
people lying on the street blocking
traffic,
joining arms,
preventing
police from doing their job,
or keeping people
from going to work.
i wonder what's wrong with them.
what mental illness
do they have?
does this really
help their cause?
do they think this is some heroic
gesture.
that will change the world,
or one single
mind that sees it on tv?
will they recount the votes
because of this
and put someone else in power?
i don't think so.
don't they have families,
loved ones,
jobs of their own.
dogs to walk, groceries
to shop for,
why are they doing this?
why don't they come to their
senses,
and go home?

what has gone wrong?

i take note
of the green faced clock
upon the wall
over the silent printer
and phone.
why don't people call anymore?
i watch
the secondhand circle
the plate
of hours.
i'm in the moment as they
say,
perhaps too deep
into the moment.
what has gone wrong?

i've lost you

have i
lost too much weight?
why
are these trousers so loose,
they no
longer fit.
and this shirt i have on,
it hangs on me
like a tent.
i'm swimming in my
wardrobe.
is it loneliness
and worry
that has caused this melting
or you?
i look in the mirror
and see that i look like
a prisoner
of war.
i'm in a camp
hanging on the wire.
what has happened to me
in a few short
years?
how long before i'm reduced
to nothing,
just dust
upon the floor.

whatever you do, don't buy a boat

she told
me that whatever you do when
you finally retire
is to not buy a boat.
i don't care how much
you love
the water and fishing.
don't do it.
you'll regret it the moment
you set sail
and your bank account dwindles
down to nothing.
do you know
what gas costs these days?
do you know
about rust
and mildew, mold,
sewage,
and electricity?
do you know aft from stern?
do you know
how to read a map,
or navigate by the stars,
or how to tie a knot?
do you realize that Safeway
sells fish now
and you don't have to spend
all day out
on the Chesapeake Bay
trying to catch one?

blown out to sea

i visited him
on Christmas eve. touched
his foot
that stretched beneath the clean
white sheets.
he didn't budge.
there were no drinks nearby,
no cigarettes,
no angry
children, disgruntled wives.
no police
knocking at his door.
he was alone
at last. the hurricane
of him
had blown out to sea.
i said a few
words of prayer.
his eyes were closed.
i told him
not to worry, you'll be out
of here soon.
then it's back to work.
there was a calmness
in the room
i never felt
when he was alive.
for once he wasn't fighting
the world.
at last he got the respect
he longed for,
by strangers, by those
unknown.


all county center fielder

with three
degrees from three different
colleges,
i see him
behind the counter at 
Starbuck's
pouring coffee, 
grinding beans.
his face is completely 
tattooed now,
and there's
pins and needles, hooks
and rings
sticking out
of his ears and nose,
his eyebrows.
he's wearing
a pink dress
and heels.
he was the kid next door.
tanned with floppy hair.
i remember
how i used to play
catch with him
in the yard. all county
on his baseball
team in high school.
i say hello
and reach over to shake his hand.
how's it going?
i ask.
he tells me that no one
will hire him.
no one returns his calls.
he's stuck here
in this store.

everyone is still here

no one lives here anymore
the pink house
abandoned in the woods,
so we go through a broken
window
in the cellar,
our gang
of boys, exploring what's
left behind.
there's the couch against
the wall,
a tv on the floor.
a child's doll.
toothbrushes in the bathroom.
beds with the sheets
still on.
we dodge the racoon
that has made this place
his home.
a bat circles before it finds
the window.
i stop at the kitchen
and see
on the wall
the markings of children
as they grew
year after year.
the lines and dates
where their heads once rested
as a mother
made the marks.
who were these children,
where are they now?
there's even a Christmas wreathe
still hanging
on the door.
everyone is still here,
everyone is gone.

it's just a passing fancy

the blush
of sun on this 
morning ocean arouses
a strange
sense
of hope in you.
maybe the world isn't crazy
after all.
it's just
a mirage,
this violence, this hatred,
these killings
are a passing
fancy.
it will all fade
in another decade
or two.

Saturday, September 27, 2025

the stolen purse

i remember
the cave of my mother's purse,
the big one
that she strapped
around her shoulder
when she went
anywhere.
it was a treasure trove of candy and gum,
cigarettes,
jewelry,
a small photo album
of family
and friends.
matches
and crackers.
bills to be paid.
pens, and a notebook.
rosary beads from her first
communion.
tissues and rubber bands.
her wedding rings.
i remember how she cried
as she sat
on the bench after
the thief ripped it away
from her,
dragging her across the ground
as she screamed
for help.
as a boy of ten,
i remember her face, sad
and pale,
frightened.
she never in her life
hurt anyone.

the pink light coming into the room

what is it,
she asks me, as we sit
without talking
in the living room.
the tv
off, our phones 
no longer clenched
in our hands.
just me and her.
what is it, she says again,
what's on your
mind.
speak.
tell me if something is wrong.
don't leave
me in the dark,
alone.
spit it out. 
i can take it.
nothing is wrong, i tell
her.
everything is fine.
look how pink the light
is as
it comes
into the room.

the bullet train

you
hardly wake up
when
it's time for bed again.
the speed
of time
seems to be increasing
with each
new day
each month and week.
wasn't it just
yesterday
you stood 
in front of a mirror
without a line on your face,
how you bounded
up staircases,
three steps at a time.
you drank
whatever you wanted to drink,
ate everything
on every plate.
the world was in slow
motion
back then.
and now it's a bullet
train.
it's getting late.

we got to get out of this place

as i sit on the front porch
sipping coffee
and listening to music, perusing
a new poetry book
i see
my neighbor Lulabelle packing up,
there's a U-Haul trailer
hooked up to her Prius
out front.
hey, i say. you guys moving
already?
yes, she says,
we can't take it any longer,
between
that radical right Maga
and Trump.
all of our rights are being
taken away.
oh really,
like what?
well, for instance, umm,
well....
i can't think of anything
exactly right now.
but we're both
afraid to go to beach and get
a tan,
ICE might pick us up,
because of our skin color.
huh?
but you were born in Baltimore
and your
dad is a cop.
your skin is almost pink.
well, i know, i know, but
they're coming
for us, you'll see. my cousin
is sort of gay
and hides under his bed all day
in his furry costume.
anyone with brown eyes
and a foreign accent,
and likes Bette Midler
or QVC is next.
i mean, my God they banned poor
Jimmy Kimmel
for almost four nights.
the suffering his family must have
gone through.
every time i see a helicopter
in the sky
i pee my pants with fear
that they're coming for us.
you'll see, you're next.
i'd put that poetry book away
if i was you.
hold on,
i need to get these 2028 Kamala and Jasmine
for president signs
into the truck.
so where to? i ask her.
we're thinking Ireland
or California.
we're not sure yet.
maybe Gaza or the West Bank.
okay, i tell her. well, best of luck.
do you need some help with
all of those
Palestinian flags rolled up?

can you keep it down out here

i go out
into the back yard
to see what all the commotion
is about.
birds on the fence,
chirping,
bullfrogs
sounding off
in their hoarse voices.
there's a snake
slithering
beneath a rock.
squirrels are dancing with
acorns in
their mouth.
a raccoon is yanking
the lid
off a trash can.
i open the door and they
all stop
to take a look
at me,
shrug and continue
on as if i don't exist.

women and birthdays

we men
almost forget our own birthday,
the day
arrives
and you see the number
on the calendar
and sigh.
so what.
you're still here,
still alive,
maybe you'll celebrate
later by having a donut
and a second
cup of coffee.
but women are different
creatures.
the whole world
seems to know that their
special
day has arrived.
they get their hair done,
their nails,
a new dress is bought.
they go to the spa.
it's a month-long event,
with dinners out,
dinners in,
parties and balloons.
dancing and drinking.
birthday cards
arriving in the mail.
gifts by the dozen,
bottles of wine.
it's Christmas,
it's New Years Eve,
it's the fourth of July.

no surrender

the threat
of clouds is far off.
the spear
of lightning, the cannon
of thunder,
but
so is tragedy and death.
there
is little one
can do about
such thoughts,
do you close the windows
bring
in the dog,
hunker down
and wait it out.
or embrace the wind
and rain
when it arrives.
Un surrendered
once again
as you rock upon the porch.

Friday, September 26, 2025

the last dog

my last dog
loved
to bark, to gnaw on shoes,
to tear
things up,
unravel
and chew on just about
anything.
a full time beggar
for a crumb
of food.
hats and gloves,
wires
were shredded between his teeth.
i still see the traces
of his mayhem
when
i look around the room.
the legs of chairs
and tables
half eaten,
bones buried in the living
room.
part of me
misses him dearly,
and yet another part sighs
with relief,
and says whew.

she's gone sailing off the cape

i call up
my broker at Morgan Stanley.
i haven't
talked to her in ages.
i know she likes
to go to Cape Cod this time
of year
and sail on her
boat, and i hate to bother
her while
she's eating lobster
and filet mignon,
but i want to ask her a question
about this RMD thing
that is coming up.
the line
is busy of course, but i leave
a message.
when she calls back, she says,
well hello dear,
long time no hear,
how are you,
the market has done marvelously
well this year,
don't you think?
you must come up to the cape
this time of year.
pack a bag and hop on a plane,
come on up 
so that we can talk.
Biff and Betty say hello,
by the way,
they're opening up another
bottle of
champagne.

how to become a paid protester

i go online to do some research
on how
to become a paid protester.
maybe i can make a few extra bucks
for Christmas this year.
i see them
in their lime green vests
on the news all the time
TikTok,
YouTube.
they attend countless protests
around the country.
the Po Po know them by name.
to hell with nine to five,
the ad says.
you can be your own boss,
set your own hours.
work outside in the fresh air until
the tear gas arrives.
it's an excellent cardio workout.
tired of being a loner with
no friends, we'll here's your chance
to meet a fun group of lost
and deranged people
like yourself.
no experience necessary.
do you have a megaphone
and lots of negative
energy, angry all the time,
do you hate your
country, know how to set
fires and make exploding
devices, that's great.
a loud screeching voice is 
a must and we
prefer non-religious workers
with no
conscience or morality.
being estranged from your family
and having
no real friends is okay with us.
an empty heartless soul
that lives on the dark web
in your mother's basement fits
in perfectly with
our mission statement
that demands that we destroy the world
and take it
back from the Man.
the big spooky Orange man
in particular.
our motto is be angry at everyone
that doesn't
believe exactly like we do.
transgenders are welcome
with open arms,
as well as college professors
and baby boomers without a life. 
we value your
past experiences
made in the 60's. please bring
your canes and walkers,
wheelchairs, rescue inhalers
and plenty of Ensure,
and be safe.
try to keep to the right side
of the road.
defibrillators will be stationed
nearby next to park benches.
we do not discriminate by age
or race,
and
we don't care if you're a he, she,
him, them,
they or a furry.
we welcome anyone in an
animal costume.
come on down and bark your lungs out.
if hired,
welcome aboard
to three or four
exciting hours of looting 
and harassing
police on the streets.
if you can travel to Chicago or
New York, that's
a plus.
we will provide a gas mask,
helmet and
bullet proof vest.
just tell us your size, height
weight, etc.
and we'll do the rest.
sorry but we only provide clothing
in jet black.
also everyone will get a starter bag
full of broken bricks
and rocks.
we pay in untraceable cash at the end
of each protest,
and will provide a student lawyer
from Columbia
if needed when you get
arrested and carted off to the pokey.
come one
come all, join our enthusiastic
and growing team.
together we can make this
world a more
horrible place
and earn good money while doing it.
no ID's or background checks are
required.

Thursday, September 25, 2025

the HOA

red
is a nice color for the front door.
but
black is fine
too.
yellow or
green would be fine
as well,
but we have
rules here.
so it has to be blue.

finding a grocery list

as i enter
the grocery store i find
a folded grocery list on the floor.
it's written in black ink.
the handwriting is very nice,
i suspect that the writer
of the note
went to Catholic School
or was taught at home.
the letters are very clean
and clear
with hardly any flourish,
all of it between the lines.
bread, milk, eggs,
grapes,
toilet paper,
paper towels.
Tide and Dial Soap.
at the bottom is the word
Oreos, which may have
been written by a child,
but crossed out.
i decide to use this list
to do my own shopping,
i circle the word Oreos,
which i put into
my shopping cart first.

the martyr Jimmy Kimmel

there's
a man, a homeless man
that i
talk to once in a while
on the street.
he's been there for years.
sometimes
he's sitting in the alley
with a can
of soup.
or a bag of fast food.
we talk
after i give him
a ten-dollar bill.
he tells me it's a crying shame
about Jimmy Kimmel
off the air
for four days.
man, he says. what's the world
coming to.
poor guy.
how's he gonna feed his
family
if they kick him
off the air?
i thought this country was built
on free speech.
he's a martyr now, that's what
he is.
don't be surprised if a statue goes
up for him.
but he lied,
i tell him. he flat out told a bold
face lie
to millions of people
and never apologized.
he shrugged.
yeah, who doesn't lie? the whole
world is one
big lie.
we need to forgive and forget.
you know he
makes 15 million dollars a year,
i tell him.
yeah, but it's a hard job
coming up with new jokes
every week.
i couldn't do it. could you?
he's under a lot of stress, i saw
him crying last night
on tv when
i went to the shelter, i feel bad
for the man, really bad.
it's a hard world i tell you.
a hard hard world.

the delusion of men

i used
to think that i could make her happy.
i truly
believed
i had the power, the intelligence,
the desire
to find a way
to make her smile
and be happy.
trinkets,
flowers, 
attention
and affection, 
something had
to ring
the bell of joy in her,
but each
year
showed me how delusional
i was.
she was happiest when
she was
unhappy, a lesson,
hard earned.

the boy with blonde hair

i often wondered
what
happened to the boy who
wrapped
his arm
with a band,
then
tapped his vein and shot
heroin
into himself
as we sat around Dana's
basement
listening to the White Album.
his beautiful blue
eyes rolled
back into his head
as he lay down,
while
a wide smile stretched
across his face.
i think his name
was Henry,
the boy up the street
with blonde hair
who showed
me how to throw a curve
ball
at the age of ten.

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

throwing dishes across the room

at last
i know where you stand.
your anger
tells me
exactly what i need
to know
about how you feel
about me.
there is no
confusion now,
no ambiguity.
thank you for at last
telling me
where you are with
where we're at.
the plate that just missed
my head,
has told me that.



three steps down on I street

there was
solace at one time in the dark
cave
of bars,
in the music
you knew every word to,
in the swampy
haze of smoke and drink,
there was promise in
the prospect
of girls
at the front end of their lives,
unafraid
yet by men.
there
was something like
hope
in the air, in your
heart,
that this night might
change
everything. like a random
lightning strike,
maybe.
it's what brought you
there night
after night, into mornings
when the sun
was wearily rising.

making the heart sign with your hands

i knew
that eventually i'd get sick of her
when
she started doing
that popular thing
with her hands, making
a heart sign
with her thumb
and fingers.
holding it up with a big smile
for me to see.
for some reason her doing
that made
me queasy. i felt an enormous
sense of cringe, not
to mention when
she would say Ciao all
the time
when leaving,
like she was Audrey Hepburn
or someone.
i don't know why
exactly that bothered me,
but it did.

circling Rhonda and Popeyes Chicken

i circle
the fried chicken establishment
like a pining
lover
wondering
how the old girlfriend
is. i miss it so much.
should i go in.
should i get the four piece
chicken dinner,
spicy with dark meat,
with fries
and slaw,
a large drink?
or should i drive on
and spare
myself
the pain and regret later
for
trying once again.

the democratic Mayors, We Got This

the mayor
is proud,
she's beaming
from cheek to cheek
wearing her new t-shirt 
emblazoned with the logo
We Got This.
she stands at the podium
with her charts
and graphs,
and pointer.
look at this, she says proudly,
crime is down this year
by three percent.
only 578 murders
have been committed,
only
173 carjackings,
678 robberies and 
1201 assaults. not to mention,
only seventy-eight rapes.
and may i add that
of the two thousand people
shot with illegal
handguns this year,
nearly one fourth of them have lived,
though severely wounded.
i also want to announce
that
drug overdoses have fallen
to a ten-year low
since i took office.
only nine hundred and sixteen
deaths have
occurred from
fentanyl this year.
let's give ourselves a huge round
of applause.
the city is safe again.
let me repeat that loud and clear.
the city is safe once again, so
don't forget to vote
for me once more
in November
and oh, by the way
pick up your free butterball
turkey and canned cranberry sauce
on the way out.
our goal is to keep you safe.
so stay off the streets
and subway
at night and
please remember to carry
with you at all times
your pepper spray and mace
and if you have
one a rescue whistle.
remember as you cast your ballot
for me
this year, that like i said.
we got this.

Betty loves buttered popcorn

i pour
too many popcorn seeds
into the popper,
and now
the kitchen
floor is
a foot deep in popcorn.
there's not
enough
salt and butter
to go around, but i do
what i can,
sprinkling
it about.
i bring
the tv into the room
and sit down,
then call my friend
Betty
who loves popcorn.
by midnight, it will be
gone.

ode to Prufrock

yes,
the women did come and go
in
the room,
but they weren't talking
about
Michelangelo, no.
they were talking
about the yearly shoe
sale
at Nordstroms
and where to
go for lunch.

we need you ASAP

there's desperation
in his voice,
as the man tells me he needs
this work done
ASAP.
i'll pay you double
for whatever you make.
i'll even pay
for your parking tickets,
he says.
we need it done
by midnight
tonight.
can you get down here
right away
with your truck, your
tools and tall ladders.
i'll even buy you lunch.
i stare at the pictures
he's sent to me on my phone.
bare drywall.
columns,
back splashes,
ceilings with wires 
hanging down. ten rolls
of godforsaken
wallpaper
bought at a yard sale
in Timonium.
the area is 
a cave of an unlit store
in Georgetown.
i turn the phone off and go
back to sleep.
i think i'm done.

what exactly does the United Nations do?

what exactly
does the United Nations do, you ask,
other than
write letters
and complain
about the weather
and wars,
food supply and disease,
but are they actually involved
in any of this,
doing something
about it,
or just sitting around
at their desks
jabbering
with their headphones on
and then
having lunch at
Sardi's.
love the baby blue helmets though.
it's like a book club
that gathers
where no one has read the book.
they really
need to get that escalator fixed,
what are we
a third world
country?

these are not good people

you
can tell who people are,
by the condiments they
put on
their food.
ketchup
on hot dogs,
mustard
on hamburgers.
tabasco sauce on eggs.
mayonnaise on
pastrami.
these are not
good people.
you must cut your ties
with them
as soon
as breakfast
or lunch is over.

watching home movies together

it's still a scary
movie
no matter how many times
you've seen it
or how
many years have gone by,
but as Halloween approaches
it's on tv
all the time.
The Exorcist.
we make a big bowl of popcorn
and settle
into the couch,
turning the lights off,
throwing
the throw blanket
over our legs.
she opens up her package of
Twizzlers
and nibbles at the long red
squiggly
piece of candy.
i'm getting chills already,
i say out loud. 
it's like a home movie
we used to take with our VHS
camera.
the possessed girl 
reminds me so much of....
don't say it, she says.
i know what you're going
to say.
it reminds you of your
ex-wife, right?
right.
especially when her
head spins around and she
upchucks
all that green stuff.
oh brother, she says,
holding out the Twizzlers,
i take one
and begin to nervously gnaw
on it
as the tinkling of spooky music
plays on.

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

leaving Nova Scotia

his hands curled
and curved, scarred from
childhood
farm
work in
the great fields
which stifled
his imagination, toiling
under
the blue harvest
of a cold sky.
could he see the ocean
from
the hill
he played on?
see the ancient faces
of rocks
ragged against the shore,
could he
smell the salt and fish
on the air?
could he reason with himself
that one
day
he'd set sail
and never
come to port again,
not here?

manual transmission

it's a phantom
stick
shift in the new car now.
i don't like this push
button world.
the ease of it all.
no sweat, no feel for the road.
my hand still floats
out to the right
to pull and push
trying to shift into the next
gear.
down shifting
at the light.
my left foot searches
for the clutch
as we pull onto the highway,
faster and faster,
spinning tires,
at last finding
the sixth gear,
notching it tight.

i was that guy in the office

it wasn't that i was
lazy
back when i worked in an office.
it was
just that i really
didn't know what the hell
i was doing half
the time.
sure i knew
where the coffee machine
was,
the water cooler,
the lunchroom,
and the way to happy hour
on a late Friday
afternoon,
but office work
was something i wasn't
cut out for.
i had minimal education in
the art of
computer science.
all those numbers
and letters on the keyboard.
the meetings
and schematics on
the white boards,
the puzzling languages
of Cobol and Fortran were something
i barely learned in school.
i was the guy
they called when there was
a heavy
box on the top shelf of the storage
room, or if
the boss needed someone
to help him move into his
new house.
i lifted the new jug of water
onto
the water cooler, gave
jump starts to dead batteries
out in the parking lot.
i was that guy.

the guy in the blue shirt

i prefer
a movie with few flashbacks.
my mind
can't handle
the confusion, i want the plot
to move forward,
i don't like
the interruptions of what was
three days ago,
three hours ago,
three years ago.
let's just proceed with the story
at hand.
which brings me to you.
i don't need to know
about
the handsome guy in the blue shirt anymore
who gave you
his seat on the train
this afternoon.

the early morning tragedy

i feel
a tinge of sadness as i go down
to the kitchen
and realize that
there's no
coffee beans to grind.
the bag is empty.
no fresh pot of coffee this morning?
how can this
be?
how will i survive?
how can i scroll my phone
with no coffee,
how can
i watch tv, or read?
luckily i find an ancient
bottle of Folger's Instant
Coffee
in the cupboard,
tucked behind
a box of Uncle Ben's Rice,
left here years ago by someone
i used to know.
it'll have to do until i
remedy this tragedy.

the starter home on Pleasure Cove Court

i remember
the real estate agent saying
with pride
that this would be a great
starter home
for us kids
as we began
our journey as newlyweds.
it was a narrow
town house
with blue vinyl siding,
each house like the other
and the other,
in courts and rows
with names like Pleasure Cove.
he showed
us where the baby would
sleep once born,
and the next child.
how tall the ceilings were
for bunk beds.
he pulled up the blinds
to show us
the view from the window
revealing the playground
with swings
and a slide,
and in the distance
the middle school.
almost walking distance.
he showed us the yard
where we could put
a grill and have
cook outs,
big enough for a little doghouse,
telling us that he loved
dogs too.
he displayed with open hands
the unfinished basement
that we could turn into an
exercise room.
we signed on the dotted line
on the wobbly
card table
in the dining room.
that was forty years ago.
i'm on my third dog now
and second wife, though that too
is on shaky ground.
the kids are all grown
and living
in Seattle,
but i'm sitll here living in
the starter home,
though
minus the orange shag carpet,
which immediately
had to go, day one.

Monday, September 22, 2025

who voted for these people?

you wonder sometimes
how these people got elected.
who voted
for these
crumb bums?
who put them into office
to rule
over us?
dumb as rocks,
unkind,
uncouth.  prancing around
like peacocks
with no common sense.
how has it happened
that we ended up
with so many
dopes
in congress,
in the senate?
they can't seem to agree
on anything,
nothing profound
ever comes out of their mouths,
no wisdom,
few truths,
just a bunch of babble
and nonsense.

too nice of a day

there
were no clouds that day.
just
the blue
of sky,
and the yellow warmth of sun,
not a whiff
of grey
or white,
nothing but the grand
view
of what heaven
might be like.
so you expected bad things
to happen
before long,
you paced
nervously,
biting your nails, 
expecting
them to occur
at any given time.

the indigo sweatshirt

i couldn't wear
it anymore,
my favorite blue jersey
that i bought
in 1975.
once indigo blue,
now
faded and torn,
frayed, full of holes.
once big and thick,
how many winters did
it keep me warm?
how many
runs along the beach did i
wear it
on summer mornings,
how many nights
did i sleep in it
when the heat wouldn't
go on?
but i couldn't wear it anymore,
the collar gone,
the sleeves
ripped apart,
so i folded what was
left of it and stuck it in
the dresser,
top drawer.

the whole ugly town was covered in snow

we had
snow back then.
we loved
snow.
we loved the roads
being covered,
the houses,
the chain linked fences,
the garbage
cans
all in a row,
the telephone lines
laced
with snow,
the old bowling alley
with the caved
in roof
covered
in it.
the dump
surrounded by barbed
wire,
the whole ugly town
from
the grocery
store
to the liquor store,
to the schools,
to the shelters and soup
kitchens,
all of it covered and gone
disappeared
under the thick cold
curtain
of snow.
it was wonderful.

all with a grain of salt

some of this
is true.
some is, some isn't,
it's up to you
to weed
out the lies,
to sift through
the embellishments
to discern what is 
or isn't true, 
believe what you want,
i'll leave that
up to you.

her white feet dangling out the window

the first
thing i noticed about her was
her white
feet
that dangled out of
the truck
window
as she waited for me at
Hunan West.
she was nice enough though
to put her
sandals
on as we went in to eat.
she told me she was in AA,
trying to kick
the habit of too many drinks.
i asked her if it was okay
if i ordered a Mai Tai, she said fine,
then two became three,
by the end of the night
after General Tao's chicken
and rice
she was sucking on the orange
slices, eating chunks
of pineapple
from my glass.
after she stuck the tiny purple
umbrella
behind her ear,
i drove her to a meeting,
where they had
my Achille's heel,
chocolate cake.

visiting the pet store

there's a pet
store
in the strip mall next to the nail
salon
and the coffee
shop.
there's a bowl
of gold
fish
in the window, a glass
box
full of turtles
next to a parrot.
in the back
there's a chimpanzee
swinging
on a bar
making monkey noises.
we put our faces to the window
to peer in.
dogs are barking
in cages, while a black cat,
sitting free
on the sill
washes herself with a paw,
oblivious
to it all.

investing in tear gas cannisters and masks

i invest
in a company that makes tear gas
cannisters.
the stock
has been rising
exponentially
for the last year or so.
and gas
masks.
not to mention bull horns,
and magic
markers to make
signs.
as well as blue hair dye
and nose rings.
my broker at Morgan
Stanely
says that there is no end in sight
to the riots
and chaos
around the world.
invest
heavily she says.
next summer will be
a gold mine.

are we talking about muffins here?

she asked
me
what my favorite muffin was.
i pondered
the question.
anything warm
from the oven, i told her.
sweet
and iced.
something that puts a smile
on my face
when i take a bite
after removing the little apron.
she laughed and said,
i know your kind,
i know what you're looking for.
you want
a one-night stand,
don't you?
shame on you,
you old man.
no, i told her, just a muffin.
just a warm
muffin
from the oven, 
and coffee, that will do.

when Moe's burned down

we used
to go to Moe's Diner
for
breakfast.
the four of us.
aging
buddies, all single now,
happily
divorced.
Betty was on the grille.
fat Al was
somewhere in the back
room
with the door closed
giving instructions
to a new
waitress. it was
greasy
food,
the ceiling was greasy,
the vinyl
seats
were slick with the grease
of ten thousand
strips
of bacon,
a million scrambled eggs.
the coffee was strong, and stale,
yesterdays,
but
how could we stop going.
this was home
away from home.
finally we
did
when at last it burned down.

coming of age

when
at last of age,
to drink
to go into a seedy nightclub
where
women
danced in less clothes
than you'd
ever seen.
the smoke filled room
was confusing.
is this
what it's all about?
is this
what being a grown up
is?
and the old men
sipping
weak
drinks, in trances, elbows
on the table
holding stacks
of one-dollar bills.
still
looking for an answer,
as Ginger
leaned
in with her long legs and
gruesome
smile
to wink.

Sunday, September 21, 2025

the apple tree

she talks
longingly about the apple tree
that was
in her yard.
years ago,
decades ago,
before her hair turned white.
she tells
me how red they were,
how sweet
and juicy.
how easy it was to reach up,
or to climb upon
the branches
and pick
one off.
there were so many apples
on the ground,
we made so many
pies
those days, she says.
so much cider.
and for Halloween we made
candy apples.
it was so much
fun
when i was young climbing
that
that apple tree, i can almost
see it now,
feel the scrape of the trunk
against my knees.

keep it to yourself, i can't be trusted

don't burden
me
with your secrets, don't
fill up
my promise drawer
with more
of what
i can't tell anyone.
i'm a leaky
faucet
when it comes to secrets,
a broken hinge,
a cracked window,
an open door.
i'm bound
to eek out
anything you tell me,
so don't tell me anything
anymore.

just lunch

the fat
bear on the edge of the wild
river,
sets his
feet
on the rocks, his mouth
open,
and magically,
a large
salmon jumps
and goes in,
which he bites down upon
before it falls out.
there's no work
to be done,
no shopping,
no stove
or plates on a table,
no forks
and knives,
just lunch.

unlearning

not everyday
is
a day
of learning, sometimes,
you
unlearn,
you
go backwards, erasing
the lesson
bought hard
in the past.
one step
forward,
two back. tomorrow
you'll
do better though,
you cross your heart,
you promise
yourself
to do that.

Saturday, September 20, 2025

just one more game

i miss
the bumps and bruises,
the muscle 
aches,
the sprains.
the sound
the balls makes
going through a basket
or swirling
through
the air to open hands.
i miss the rough housing
of sports
played
on the field
or black top courts.
the crack of a bat,
the thud
of a ball in the mud,
the rain,
the new fallen snow.
the sprint
on freshly cut lawns.
the jostling for an inch,
the joy,
the despair of it all.
i miss
the bloody nose,
even the broken bones,
the comradery of men.
oh, to be young again
once more,
for just one more game.

the best conversations

some of the best
conversations i've ever had
were
with myself.
sometimes
while taking a long
walk through the woods,
or while
lying in bed,
listening to a fly
buzz
against the screen,
or
in the quiet of a Sunday
morning
when the door has been
shut
after someone leaves,
or during the night at
3 a.m.
i get a lot of clear thinking
done.
saying out loud,
yup,
there it is.
what's done is done.
don't look back, among
other wise
and insightful
things.

a box of linguini

i notice
when opening the top
door
of the tall cupboard
that
the box of linguini
has been
knocked over
and tunneled through.
the box
is empty.
mice
have found their
way in
from the air vent, i guess.
i see no
sign of them, no squeaks,
no note
saying thank you.
i wonder how
they got back out, fattened
by the carbs.
i add
linguini
to the grocery list.

late night tv

i think
the last late night television show
i watched
was Letterman,
but his early years,
i loved seeing
watermelons
thrown off of buildings,
and before that was Carson
with Rickles and 
Dangerfield,
Lola Falana, 
Dean and Frank, etc.
i've never saw
a night of Leno,
or any of the others.
whoever they are.
young whipper snappers
making a pile
of dough.
i don't know what channel
they're on,
what time?
what exactly is the fuss about.
lying?
who cares. it's expected in
these times.

in his ninth decade

the reviews
are unkind to Zimmy.
he turns his back
to the audience,
he doesn't greet
them,
or introduce the band, he's
in the shadows,
dressed darkly,
hands on the keyboard of a
piano.
you can't see his face,
you don't recognize
his music,
or the words coming out
of his mouth.no one sings
along.
it's a garbled mess,
but the band
plays on.
it's another sold out crowd.


how dare you be rich

as the cities
burn,
in chaos, people dressed
in black,
scurrying
everywhere
like a mob of sewer rats,
rioters
looting and attacking
the police in
Paris
and Nepal, London
and New York,
you
wonder
if it will be safe enough
to do some
shopping
and then go to the park
for a picnic,
probably not,
but
there's a sale
on bullet proof vests
and gas masks
at Target.
i'll get a cart.

Friday, September 19, 2025

the ac on, the ac off

it's one
of those weeks
of fluctuating temperatures.
neither
fall or summer.
80 one day,
60 the next.
the ac on, the ac off.
it's a battle
of wills
between me and the woman
crying
in the other room.
i sneak
the button off,
she sneaks it back on.
i pull
the windows open,
she pushes
them down.
but off course in the end
she wins.
after all,
she's crying.
at least for now.

a man or woman in uniform

growing up
in the neighborhood, whoever
had a
uniform on,
was given a certain amount
of respect,
whether the badge
on a cop,
the clerk in a store
with his tag,
the doctor
or nurse in white,
the soldier
coming home from war,
the janitor sweeping up
the school floor.
the toll both woman
in her green
shirt
and cap,
the workers on the road
in their lime
green vests
waving you forward.
the uniform was noticed.
these were people
in charge,
people of some importance.
you gave them
respect.

get a job

when
you hit a certain age,
someone
told you to
get a job, go to school
and get
a job,
do both.
work part time,
summers,
school breaks.
bring in some money,
learn
to save,
learn how to spend.
get a job,
don't be a bum,
don't be so dependent
on your parents,
your grandparents, 
your friends,
the government. get a
freaking job.
you're not a baby in
the crib anymore.
get a job.
so you did.

when the officiant does your wedding in the basement (true story)

i think
his name was Herman
Goldman,
who came
to the house to be the officiant
for our
wedding.
Cruella found him on the Thumbtack
site an hour ago.
he was wearing a short
sleeved
button down
checkered shirt,
and 
a pair of oversized American
Eagle jeans
with a big green belt.
the shirt was tucked in
close to his
pocket protector
full of pens.
he sat down with his folder
of vows,
and ceremonial procedures,
each laminated
and marked
with colored tabs.
i had set out some bottles
of war
and mixed nuts
for him to snack on while
we discussed our wedding.
may i, he asked
dipping his
hand into the nuts.
i have to be careful of the almonds,
those little slivers
get stuck in the back of my throat.
so, what are we doing here?
he asked,
crunching on some cashews.
Protestant, Baptist, Catholic?
or no God at all?
we can adjust the vows as we go
along.
we can also do the express,
or the long versions if you want
to film it.
i brought my equipment in
the car. of course that will bump
up the fee.
i can get my daughter over here to be
the flower girl,
she's working
at Taco Bell, but can get free for
an hour or so.
i looked at my bride to be,
who scrunched up her nose
in that cute way she used to do,
like a kitty cat.
she said no.
no pictures, or cameras please.
i'm not having a good
hair day,
and i haven't worked on my face
yet, and also,
i don't want the vows
to say, till death do us part, or
in sickness and in health, or
anything about me obeying him.
gothca, he said, licking
his fingers,
turning the pages of his notebook,
mumbling to himself.
i think i have the exact thing
right here for you.
it's very close to the Pagan and Wicka
rituals,
but you want God to be
involved, right? i think i saw
a set a rosary beads hanging
from your mirror when i came in. right?
we both nod yes to the idea
of God being involved.
let's see, let's see, hmmm. i thing page
one hundred and ninety-three
is the right one for you. yup.
and how about you sir, any requests
or changes that you can think of right now?
umm,
do you take Visa?
of course, of course,
cash, PayPal, Zelle, check, visa,
i take all forms
of legal tender.
excuse me, i have a question, my future
bride said.
once we're officially married, does
that mean
i have complete access to his bank
account and retirement accounts,
and is half the house
mine?
his cars and all the furniture
in the house?
of course, my dear, of course, he
said dipping his hand in
for another scoop
of nuts.
that's what love and marriage is all
about.
what's his is yours.
mi casa es tu casa.
sorry i was in Mexico last week
doing a divorce
in Cancun,
two days after the wedding,
crazy kids,
but you two
are going to make it. i feel it.
i see nothing but a long and happy
future with you two.
at this point, he looked at his watch,
and said okay, let's get this
show on the road,
the basement? right?
don't mean to rush, but i have another
wedding, then
a funeral,
and then a baptism coming
up today. by the way,
these nuts are making me thirsty,
okay if i take
a bottle of water down with me?