—wait, what?

     

(Oh—sorry, I didn't hear you come in..)

Monday, December 29, 2014

"Things go where they can be"

Running downstream –
making sure I am always
stepping down hard on the
same river at least twice.

The water just races away,
forgets itself, able to change
churning rapids into sleepy
seas’ tidewater pools,

icy ponds, curling lazy eddies;
water seems to find the means
to go where it becomes the things
it knows it can be.

–My own circumstances distend;
extenuate; unmake my amends,
ride me down ’til I’m too
worn to still be myself.

Though might-could be I have it wrong
and have done for so long
I can’t see the good things
that might yet find me.

–Long before meaning took, a
bottled old man told me, “Sonny,
hard work ain’t enough, got to just let
things go where they can be.”

…Maybe a big sunset’s what we need,
a safe starfall that sets us free,
to ride into, just like they do
on the big screen.

So when the odd nighttime comes,
hides where we go, where we’re from,
I try to relent and just let things go
where they can be…

Sunday, December 28, 2014

"He is well"

Feathers in his hair,
tobacco in his teeth,
a smile on his face;
he’s a strong breed.

Ancient Harvester pickup
– the International kind –
pedals could pierce the floor,
gotta pay them mind.

The flapping tarp in back
hides the what-it-is – it don’t 
make any waves with him 
or who he knows.

And the dog next to him,
panting out into the wind,
smells of bad-things-ate
and what-got-rolled-in.

He doesn’t often dance,
or dress up like a princess,
but there’s a tea party
soiree he can’t miss.

His little girl’s turning eight;
the lights and piñata he has
foretell a night any family’d 
cherish having –

he is well; he is good; he is well, it’s enough.
he is well, it is good – it’s enough.

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Story excerpt: "The Best Day (Alia and Marck's Olive Juice)" [1 & 2; of 3]

Some lives don’t actually have a best day, that particular kind of day that sets a heart’s compass to true, forever.  But I guess in a way I’ve been lucky, and I know mine exactly: it was the day I was finally all but forced to marry my brother.
 It seemed like we’d been waiting absolutely forever.  And while the setting might’ve been far from anyone’s first choice, the decorations were perfect, the music we’d settled on seemed to please everybody, and the room felt packed full – everyone was so genuine, so real – despite the modest number of guests.  
–And okay, there was an open bar, too, but who wouldn’t want to be a little naughty when you had the legal permit to basically shoot the moon anywhere in City Hall.  (Jail included!  Ahem..)
We have a wedding video, of course, but I never end up watching it unless I’m showing it to someone else.  I just remember it so much better from where I was … all of the dimension – the scents, the quality of the lighting, all the laughing and dancing, the sympathetic judge actually setting off small fireworks indoors (his bailiff laughing alongside), it was amazing.  It wouldn’t – couldn’t! – have been as wonderful if it hadn’t been so weird.  I knew I was living the best time of my life, and that’s enough.
My name is Alia, and I’ll try to tell it like it was.  —I miss you so much, baby.  Shit, I’m already crying.

My part of our story starts in early high school, though of course it actually began long before then – but it took us ages to sort it all out, like a family working on a jigsaw puzzle where no one person could see all of the pieces.  It felt like Marck and I had finally finished putting it all together that day we were married… but I guess no real story ever ends when it should, or how.
During my first year of high school I was too shy for sports, and it felt like the kids in band and orchestra had already been playing together for so long that it was too late to start – but choir seemed doable.  I vividly remember that first day, when the choir conductor went student-by-student, having each of us sing a few notes back to him, then telling us to move here or there.  With over sixty kids in the room, it took nearly the entire hour for him to parcel us into sections of sopranos, altos, tenors, basses.  Individually and on the spot like that, some of us were just awful, wretched; it really seemed like I had made a terrible mistake – I’d wanted to hide in the choir, but everyone had already heard my solo voice quaver and shake.
With about five minutes of class left, the conductor jumped over to the piano and gave each section four notes to sing; some kids in each voicing were good enough to remember their part, so the rest of us were able to follow along if we went sharp or flat.
With two minutes left on the clock, the conductor centered himself before us, gestured with his little baton, and then holyshit music came out, a simple little major chord progression, but it was music and I was helping make it.  Everyone in the room liked it too, the whole hour worth that little bit; so the conductor had us sing it again, everyone happy that we were all on our way together now.  There was gusto all around.
It felt good to sing, really good, and I couldn’t stop smiling.  So I remember very clearly looking across the curving auditorium at the dark-haired, dark-eyed tenor smiling his big warm smile back at me, and I could feel I was blushing but didn’t care.  We just traded gazes and dimpled grins until the bell rang a few moments later.  I can remember thinking that it was going to be nice to be able to look at the boy as the year went on, and when he was later revoiced from a second tenor down to a baritone, his new seat gave me an even better view, mm-mmm.
Choir was always easy for Marck, a fun but unchallenging way to spend first period each day.  It was different for me – I had such terrible anxiety and couldn’t play any instruments, but along with the other altos I felt safe enough to sing clearly and accurately, and that became a really important part of my life; I still sing to myself every day.
I finally learned Marck’s name a couple weeks after that first day, when he decided that we’d traded grins and shy smiles for long enough.  My heart fluttered when he walked right up to me after class and told me his name, holding out his hand for shaking.  I replied in turn, nervously, but felt better when he looked down as he held his hand out – like for business or something – and blushed and then instead just touched my elbow and said, “It’s nice to meet you, finally, er, you know.. um, okayseeyoutomorrowbye!”  I was glad we were both a little nervous, and I was sure I liked him.
Over the course of that first semester we made all kinds of eyes at each other during choir, as there was a fair bit of downtime when the other sections were rehearsing individually with the conductor.  We started a game where we’d mouth words at each other from across the room and basically try to lip-read what the other was saying, and we both sucked at it, which made it really funny when we’d talk after class and compare notes on what we thought the other had said.
One day, Marck came up to me before class and asked if I liked olives; I grimaced and said nope, not even on salads or pizza.  He grinned a bit devilishly, but I didn’t make anything of it at the time.
Then, later, when we were mouthing words at each other from across the room, he told me he loved me.  I nearly fainted.  I couldn’t sing for crap that day, and I ran out of the room before he could find me and say anything.  I came in late the next day to avoid giving him an opportunity to speak to me, and he didn’t press.  
Later that week, though, once we’d again traded silent goofs and showed off our dimples, he again mouthed that he loved me, and again I nearly fell off my ass.  I got sooo nervous, making sure we wouldn’t meet in the halls before class, or after, or during the day.  I was so fluttery that the idea of finding words to respond seemed laughable, a total joke; what did he expect??  I wasn’t turned off, I was just overwhelmed and unable to sort anything out.  I could barely pay attention in my classes or do any homework.
Finally, he trapped me at the end of choir one day, all but pinning me in the narrow hallway so that I had no escape against the press of all the other students exiting and the next hour of choir entering.  My mind blanked in panic, I had no idea what to say or expect.  He walked up so close that I could smell his shampoo, kick at his toes if I’d wanted.
“Olive juice,” he said.
I’m pretty sure my confused reply consisted of the dumbest non-words ever falteringly uttered on the planet, a total mouth-fart.
“Olive juice,” he said again, over-emphasizing the facial motions as he spoke, and my heart hit the floor.  Hard.  I wanted to die, right then and there, please God, kill me.  Mouthing the words “olive juice” looks exactly like mouthing the words “I love you.”  Saying more with my response than any words ever could have, I ran away before he could see me start to cry.
I didn’t look at him during choir for days, then a week.  I avoided him like he was diseased, fled from his sight whenever I could.  He didn’t chase after me.  I hated his stupid guts, hated myself and my stupidity.
Then one day he was waiting for my bus after school, despite that he normally rode a bus going to the other side of town.  I didn’t say anything when he sat down beside me, and that was when he apologized for seeming like he was teasing me – he really wasn’t, he said – and he told me the next part of our shared puzzle.  Given that he was on the wrong bus and he’d have to call for a ride home – and no way was he getting to use my phone – or walk five miles to get there, I decided to hear him out.  Still, my slow forgiveness came later.

“We know each other,” he said to me.
“Duh.”  I refused to look at him.
“No, really – like, we’ve met before, when we were little kids.  I remember you.”  He clearly wanted me to, as well.
My inner snark blossomed.  “You must’ve been a jerk then too, and I, like, blacked it out or something.”
“No, look I’m really sorry, but listen a sec – we used to play together when we were like seven or eight, and we both went to that stupid Sunday school where we glued together popsicle sticks to make churches and steeples and fences and stuff,” he said.  And then I started to remember some things – yeah, okay, I’d been sent to a local church’s Sunday school for a little while, despite that my parents never went to church; it had been an utterly bewildering experience.  
“Fine, then, so BFD.”
“Don’t you remember how we were, like, little besties then?  You were, like, the only girl who was fun.  You kinda still are,” he said.  But I didn’t recall all that much, just little vignettes, and I was not inclined to forgive.
“So you thought you’d humiliate me and then stalk me on my bus?”  Good line; stay strong, girl.
“No no no, really, seriously, it didn’t mean anything, honest.”  It didn’t mean anything?  Christ, what an asshole.  What was he thinking?  I didn’t respond.
“Alia, really, honest – you’re the coolest girl I’ve ever met, like, then and now.  I didn’t realize it was you until a little while ago, and when I did I thought it was awesome, like luck or fate or whatever the right word is.”
“Kismet,” I said, glad to be able to correct him.
“Um.. okay sure, yeah, that.  Look, come to the football game with me on Friday” – I hated football – “and we’ll get a slice of pizza afterward and make up, okay?”  I made him wait almost an entire minute, then grudgingly said okay.
He ended up buying a whole pizza with the toppings I liked – spinach and mushrooms – which I’m pretty sure he hated, but he did it anyway.  As he talked about our shared childhood, the memories began to come back to me.  He looked so different now, almost like a man instead of the little boy he used to be; it seemed like two totally different people.  
Back then, his family had lived just three houses down from mine.  We used to do dumb shit – try to set things on fire with sparklers, chase each other outside when it was raining and jump in puddles and get really muddy, caterwaul along with our parents’ music that we didn’t like in order to force them to change it – all kinds of stuff.  We were maybe a little rotten then, which was fun.  I remembered that he made the pornographic “Land O’ Lakes lady” (an older boy’s influence) out of that brand of butter’s cardboard packaging and then put her in his popsicle-stick church during Sunday school crafts; that was actually why we both got kicked out.  It was pretty awesome being bad there, then getting out of Sunday school altogether.
But not too long thereafter his family suddenly moved away, and neither of us could really remember why.  One day he just never showed up at our after-school babysitter’s house anymore, and he was gone.

So, after that pizza, we started dating.  At first he would just come over to my house so we could study together.  We weren’t even in the same pre-calculus or American history classes, but our homework mostly overlapped and our parents were none the wiser, at least for a while.  My parents liked Marck – my mom would smile and fold her hands and say that he “comported himself like a perfect young gentleman.”  
He’d stay for dinner maybe once a week, sometimes watch TV with my family.  (It was all pretty great – teenage hormones, yay!)  But we didn’t really do anything, at least at first.  Every once in a while he and I would sing a choir song for my parents – when one of our parts carried the melody, anyway – which helped to affirm their trust in him.  
Suckers.  We started to make out in my room while “studying” (mmmmm..) , and he never once made fun of my pink lacy curtains or girly stuff or anything.
Then, at some point a while later, we went over to his house for dinner and I met his mother for the first time – but when she saw me and I introduced myself she went all chilly and unfriendly, almost like she was mad at me or something.  She let me stay for the meal, but I could barely eat anything and I called my mom to come pick me up right afterward.  I guess, once I left, Marck’s mother went ballistic on him and forbade him to come to my house anymore, for any reason, and grounded him for a month – yeah, like that wasn’t going to raise any questions.  
So it definitely seemed like something weird was going on when, not long thereafter, Marck sneaked over to my house after school and my dad suddenly got really upset and told me that Marck was bad news, that I didn’t know what I was doing, and that Marck wasn’t welcome any more.  I told my dad he was full of crap and why was he doing this to me??  He didn’t explain, but he set strict curfews for me and was suspicious, for weeks, of just about everything I did and where I went – I remember that even my mother was kind of confused. 
It was a while before Marck and I learned the next piece of our shared puzzle.

Sunday, November 23, 2014

"La vie bourgeoise moderne"

the saddest truth in the world is that
there’s not enough kindness to go around;
the rest of folks just must make-do —
mais c’est la vie bourgeoise moderne.

amuse ourselves, forgive ourselves, let the
material comforts amassed keep at-bay
the eagerly denied recognition that we all become
the garbage of ourselves someday.

think not, think not, don’t think at all:
paypal-donate and drink lattes;
forget who made what's
overflowing the shopping bags.

give up, give up, get out, let down;
these many things are powdered glass in our lungs –
breathe them in deep, then redly froth our way outward,
gasping for meaning before we’re gone –

et c’est la vie bourgeoise moderne!

"Always or never this"

One of the worst of times in Heaven
was when two angels fell in love
the quietest of tragedies they 
couldn’t make any sense of:

“…Someone Else gets to decide 
when we need rules for these things –
but suddenly this nearby beauty beamed
and somehow let freedom ring…

Help us, oh please, it’s new –
we’ve never had to help ourselves.
I know it’s true, what I feel, but
we were made for something else…

oh shit oh shit oh shit – come on, just
What. Is. This. Thing???
I’m bright inside, like soon to be dead, 
and not sad for misbehaving…?

Punishment and erasure loom –
so how can I still be glad for this?
Whatever we’ve found’s miraculous,
or maybe it’s just a cruel disease…

Help us, renew us, or forgive –
or just let us be ourselves.
What’s happened here is something new,
we can’t take credit for our love.

I’ve never needed a heart before or
hated the distance between two of us –
oh please, Father, just
give us… always
– or never – 
this.”

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

"Monofilamazing!"

Science has just proved there’s only one hair at all,
it’s just very long and quite complex –
it weaves itself in and out of space and time
to become the strands on all of our heads!

The colors and textures and all that shit changes but
it doesn’t matter to physics, just: wow!
We’ve learned the true secrets of this giant –
fuck string theory and the Standard Model!

Everything depends on barrettes and headbands –
we’re partly kidding (but maybe we’re not).
Though we’re pretty sure that global warming is caused
by the great rise in cheap hair extensions.

We must bow before – and condition more –
the hair that is no longer plural.
In all honesty, we’ve lost faith in most
everything else in the entire world.

It may sound strange but the secrets range from
the quotidian to the entirely profound:
somehow this can explain just about everything
from garbage collection, child-rearing, and love,

to petroleum and plastics and what we’re afraid of,
to inequality that’s been baked into law.
Amazingly – no shit, trust me –
this is the stuff that we’ve been waiting for!

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

"Somehow I never heard her name"

I had a dream that first she
just held smooth hands with me –
gave us time to smile and seem
and see what the seemings’d mean.

We played games without pieces or a board,
we fulfilled the promise of the Lord
when we’d smile and touch, lightly, and again,
and let ourselves be seen by our friends.

The rush upon us came in slow,
and then fast, then low, then something more –
but we were still in front of everyone,
breathless, become unexpectant of whatever-to-come.

The first moments lasted so long,
and then just never ended at all –
completely impossible and unknown to us both.
When the night came down, it took us each in full;

neither had known a moment like this,
dilating naturally, lasting for hours.
Neither mattered: strength or weakness –
the context began and ended with the warming between us.

And we never touched other than slow,
and soon enough we both began to know
that while there might be some limit to fun
neither of us could bring too much to the other one.

Smiling, she even hinted what to get her come Christmastime,
but somehow I never heard her name.
I can only hope and pray to see her again,
since, in the dream, somehow I never heard her name.

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Pretties and such

I've begun posting some of my quirky and seasonal photography – links to little collections are on the right-hand column of the blog.  (I especially like the pouncy troutlog and the grizzled snake dude :)

Thanks for stopping by!

Monday, September 15, 2014

Story excerpt: "The Best Day (Alia and Marck's Olive Juice)"

Some lives don’t actually have a best day, that particular kind of day that sets a heart’s compass to true, forever.  But I’ve been lucky, and know mine exactly: it was the day I was finally forced to marry my brother.
 It seemed like we’d been waiting absolutely forever.  And while the setting might’ve been far from anyone’s first choice, the decorations were perfect, the music we’d settled on seemed to please everybody, and the room seemed packed full – everyone was so genuine, so real – despite the modest number of attendees.  
–Okay, and there was an open bar, too, but who wouldn’t want to be a little naughty when you had the legal permit to basically shoot the moon anywhere in City Hall.  (Jail included!  Ahem..)
We have a wedding video, of course, but I never end up watching it unless I’m showing it to someone else.  I just remember it so much better from where I was, … all of the dimension – the scents, the quality of the lighting, all the laughing and dancing, the sympathetic judge actually setting off small fireworks indoors (his bailiff laughing alongside), it was amazing.  It wouldn’t – couldn’t! – have been as wonderful if it hadn’t been so weird.  I knew I was living the best time of my life, and that’s enough.
My name is Alia, and I’ll try tell it like it was.  —I miss you so much, baby.  Shit, I’m already crying.

Story excerpt: "For Love, And Also Peanuts."

Jelka glanced down from her place on the couch, sighed, and nudged her father aside with a toe.  
At first he seemed confused to be facing in a new direction, but his halting, tentative steps eventually built into a somewhat-lopsided scuttle to the other side of the room.  Something over by the radiator seemed worth revisiting.
Cheerfully clomping down the stairs, Talena flounced into the living room and stopped short, blinking as she took stock of things.  Her little sister – two years mattered a lot, she was sure – was frowning, arms crossed.  Their mother looked glassily earnest, doubtless trying to impart a wooly platitude and meeting with utterly predictable but somehow unexpected resistance.  And their father was licking at the floor, or maybe along the seam where it met the baseboard.  
Talena was So Not Interested; she spun around and marched to the door, snagging a jacket as she disappeared without a word, leaving Jelka to deal with the familiar dreary nonsense by herself.  
Jelka sighed and brushed some loose hair behind her ear.  She regretted it immediately because it had been hiding part of her face, had allowed her gaze to wander in obscurity.  She’d already missed her chance to find a reason to leave with Talena – she might’ve gotten lucky; hadn’t been quick enough.  
“Jelka, honey – are you even listening to me?”  Her mother was frowning.
Jelka stalled by picking a few salted groundnuts out of the end table’s ever-present dish, eating a couple as cover.  The dish was kept stocked in the hopes that someday a guest’s hand might ever again stray towards it, but since nobody drank beer or watched the Premier League in the room any longer – or came by the house at all, really – the nuts mostly languished.  However, since they were good Dad-bait (as she thought of them), they could also be… useful.
She tossed one to the floor.  
The promising sound it made against the wood drew her father’s snuffling attention almost immediately, his nails clicking lightly against the repetitive laminate as he waddled over to repel the incursion.  Floor-level groundnuts were a singular affront to his sensibilities.

Bunch of fixes and polish

Cheers – I've been accumulating changes to nearly all of the material published here, and have finally gotten around to posting them (no net access out in the boonies!).  They're basically living documents, and my friend Mike Gatny will be rewriting things and setting some to music.

I really wish I'd found a poetry/writing blog-ring or something, to get things out more.  Some of my best work has only been read a very few times.  A bummer, really – things got tough here and so many photos and stories and music never got online.  It's hard for me to ask for attention.

I have some short stories, from which I'll publish excerpts (after William Gibson's online example).

Be well, take care, and thank you.

Thursday, June 26, 2014

"Think of England"

I had a nightmare that there was a forest
with no shade, just all built of light —
holy as it was, blinking didn’t help
so everyone would cry, every night.

There was a disease that made people take back
every kiss that they’d given to you;
the worst part was that, during it all,
you could feel them coming out again.

You lost a tooth for every white-lie told –
but you’d lose two if your words made someone cry.
Nobody grew laugh-lines anymore, unused 
tongues sunburned fast in open sky;

and the water hurt your lips – so you’d gulp it fast,
blink back tears, and try to think of England.
Everyone’s hands were so cold, so you warmed them 
on the fireflies that’d just burst into flame..

Duty flaked off like dry old dead skin
because everything just led to something worse –
the better choices felt like inaction and the 
safely-fruitless bounty of sullen silence.

–So you ended up a prosthetic of yourself,
trying to calmly emulate self-mastery;
blindly wide-eyed, nerves scraped raw, 
praying to keep the well-lit predators at bay.

Monday, June 23, 2014

"Funeral moth"

You became a funeral moth,
natural and unwholesome,
drawn by will against wisdom to wool
seeing its last day in the sun.

(You rebecame a tyrant child,
riveted to an endless now –
everything handled like a toy,
ever-more sugar in the cereal;

while he filled his sails being bored,
sucked through life by things that suck,
blowing backwards against intent –
distracted, unimpassioned, dust.)

—Just then the darkness unfolds
like it might in the nighttime,
but hmm.. the space feels so small,
and no stars are shining…

And there’s an endless feast
of exactly what you ordered,
and there’s nothing else,
at all, forevermore…

"Rain like a cloud"

She doesn’t rain like a cloud…
She isn’t fair like the sun.
More under-handed than even-,
she’s already unbegun.

She won’t make like a tree.
She doesn’t break like a heart.
She’s never not been indulged –
she makes paint run in hung art.

She won’t get out of the way.
She has her own set of plans.
Mountains jump up in the sky, 
she’s got a canyon on the run.

She doesn’t sweet like a peach.
She doesn’t brake for a curve.
Not easy on the world,
she fights its every turn.

She deserves less than what she has.
She doesn’t ever invest.
She doesn’t keep souvenirs, just a 
flare gun on her desk –

she says it’s a bad way to go,
a smirk there, wry, on her lips.
Her satisfaction is all,
don’t be tempted by her kiss.

She doesn’t bother with things.
She doesn’t twinkle at all.
She doesn’t care where you’ve been, and
just forget eye-to-eye or heart-to-heart.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

"Freak flag upside-down"

Pepto’s not a foodie fave – sometimes wish 
I could just eat sun and sound.
But I bungee jump from my petard-hoists,
and I fly my freak flag upside-down.

I’m having broken windows installed on Monday –
will beat this torn rice paper, for sure.
But at least the dogs’ve got their own couch –
prerogatives of the freak flag unfurled.

After dark, the rivers all run with ramen –
  go fly your freak flag upside-down!
Cats and mice cutting a rug all tonight –
  go fly your freak flag upside-down!

–the tree is same from the leaf.
–the knife is different as the gun. 
All the pants are on fire, but nobody’s crying, 
so I fly my freak flag upside-down.

Eating eyelash salad has yet to help 
anywhere outside of Japan –
and oh the things in their vending machines,
but it keeps their freak flags flying.

Tepid times like these, wish I were more like Bowie: 
hey, go ahead, just be brave and strange.
It’s okay that we’re all adrift and at-sea,
just leave your freak flag out in the wind.

You got more colors than a clown – shine on
and fly your freak flag upside-down!

Saturday, June 7, 2014

"Bananas & golf"

The ancient lightning strikes presaged & created life, 
but since seem only to’ve just snuffed it out –
though now we know, as football taught us: 
it’s always crucial to establish your run..

(& it’s crazy!) 
Tasmanian devils’ cloned contagious face-jumping cancer 
could have the species near death;
strangeness & mortality twine with reality — they go 
together like bananas & golf.

Though, why would everything just be intuitive?
—sometimes more inflation’s needed & good;
and when they brought wild wolves back to Yellowstone
the shape of land and rivers changed back how they were(!).

Got a Korean War U.S.Army manual,
quite clearly tells us not to eat yellow snow.
And who was it first thought up the plan to
put powdered bones in my JELL-O..?

Still it’s a beautiful world, where it even
snowed 
in Cairo
when Nelson Mandela died.
—And plus, on the outskirts up in Ireland, you can get a
license to drive drunk at night…

       Mandela's snowy Cairo


"Ten first these days"

An old woman hands it off to a little girl,
the countings-down to the ends of all things.
Once was a precious, careful business but 
anymore the numbers ain’t all that big.

The bulbs can hardly wait to burn out –
the sun seems so alive as it goes down.
A rotten old fence, more lovely each spring;
folks enthralled as a ship runs aground.

An untalented pervert fumbles back to mainstream –
critics are everywhere, and so indiscreet.
We all need things we don’t know how to find;
ceilings come down afterward & watch us asleep.

Nighttime wet leaves blow through a broken church.
Birds only fly to me when I’m not outside.
And since the cure’s pretty drastic, treason
really should at least be sublime.

Banners of plastic bags caught in razor wire.
300 bucks to sign books I didn’t write.
A match made afield of heaven (Connecticut)
as a troubled screw barely kills its first tire. 

It’s not great that I dream of better things at night,
since shouting-distance is for things you can’t help.
The tasteful-plaid man needs more rye, neat – counting 
to ten first these days is not enough.

Thursday, May 22, 2014

"The stonefield's harvest"

Left-handed milk-drinking gangsters shining
cheap shoes with stolen pomade.
No one tells them what they should do around
here, anymore…

We learned how to wound from a distance, I’m told 
was mankind’s next big step forward —
but it’s faster to hug the haystack hard if it’s the
sharp pointy things that you’re looking for.

The stonefield’s harvest comes in, cold and gray
–we’re riding low and we’re clear on approach.
A mantis shrimp can’t think a single thought,
forced to see millions of colors.

A hail-stormed walnut tree’s in no mood, left there 
until the earth moves itself.
The bad guy’s exit plan leads to the roof, regret 
curdles about halfway up.

–Well, just because you get the banana out
doesn’t mean you’re not doing it wrong.
Can only time-travel in Findlay, Ohio – because a heart 
needs to beat to change at all. 

"Free-flowing ceilings"

Damasked, dishwashed kitchen knives;
lovely ladles, idle – of mokume.
You never did call me on the phone, so I’ve 
been stuck here in GMT minus four.

Free-flowing ceilings soothe inconstantly – the
central coastal upstate lowlands abide.
Then Boca Burgers and morning deadlines, maybe 
some knife-hits (surely most ill-advised).

The heartfelt signatures forged by a 
part-time phone-sex troubleshooter;
the southward-outbound trout, taking well to a
bit and bridle there after a while.

Soured buttermilk cat paw-prints, vinyl tile.
—Uproar: rib sandwich month is no more.
Overfed, under strain, chipping for more ice.. 
silence is the best news that we’ve never heard.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

"Just on fire"

Look, sometimes the carpet is just on fire –
though hey at least not yet the cat..
some good advice from TV was 
be careful what you get good at..

& it’s mostly-not-wrong to miss a clam bake,
but still you really should try to make it..  
..and passing that kidney stone
-bang- gave the victim a heart attack..

..better never do give up on your own dyin’,
and never say never until it is a need..
¡Be cautious with exposed intersections
leading to the red squirt guns in Aisle 13..

..And I might be risking street cred saying I’m
wondering “so, what if a buttress is a guy?”..
–No it’s not time to make poopies, dad,
they’re already done, I just deliver them alright?

Wait what is this??? am I stuck in reverse?
this prolly shouldn’t all be coming back to me…
oh hell.. maybe breathed too.. much smoke
..or some.. wuh-goobah duhhmm... mebs..

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

"Altered peach"

The hot dog’s wrapper is also eaten
by the newly-outposted alien,
while a real gnome sobs openly on
an ornamented lawn.

How many people is it get buried in, 
you know, a flying Superman pose?
And does Coors really kill a werewolf?  
—there are some things here we just need to know.

Microwave-unsafe things admit their
weakness and then move on.
The new underground baby-fighting ring
almost always ends in a draw.

The poor synesthete’s sense of smell
went deaf about four years ago –
the ensuing confusion was something
strange, not seen before.

A test frog just got eaten by an altered 
peach bred for aggression.
Afghanistan’s tiny leap forward, smuggling intel
on the space program out of Suriname.

Secrets survive to keep the peace
that they kill when they die.
Still, when the sins on earth change, turns out hell’s gotta free
the poor bastards who were paying the price.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

"Marooned in realtime"

Today I planned out a ground-level hide –
banking on homelessness that's to come –
that the DNR, State Po-lice & the oil guys won't find:
'cause bad luck puts its pants on 2 or 3 legs at a time.

I just had to turn into the skid, 
but then the skid turned into me and mine.
You'll want the poison in your mouth –
it's just so much worse in the eyes.

I’m marooned, I'm marooned in realtime.

The TV from the future 
tells everyone the next things to get scared about.
..So we're not quite sure
how much it is we all want the then to be now.

Because the what & the how’s not the why,
and the seed is just not the root; 
and Grandma only taught me manners & Manhattans,
and that most folks' hair needs cut.

I'm marooned, I'm marooned in realtime.

—Anything can be bruised so
don't say "sorry" if you just mean "no".
Guess I've found myself some days where
time's gonna take longer than usual...

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Nobody needs poetry.

Works better with music, not necessarily as a song, but as something indicative of intended mood.  Plus, music.  I'm working on it.

—Maybe someday Dave Berman will dig my writing, but I'd settle for him not hating my poor emulation of his style.

Go outside in the sun today.

Friday, April 18, 2014

"Thoughts aren't actions"

Yeah I pecked a rooster’s eye out
couldn’t anymore stand the shit he was sayin;
I'm really not so proud of myself,
but that’s why thoughts aren’t actions.

There’s a hilly field that needs me,
I just don’t know where it is;
I can feel the long grasses sing and call to me
most nights, sometime after six.

The midshipman’s hitch is not in his stride;
up north, walking on water’s a matter of degrees.
Around here they orangely post the word “POSTED”
because the because takes too long, it seems.

There’s a difference between being mortal and being able to die:
ain’t just up-and-over the hill, need some side-to-side;
and don’t wait ’til summertime to go out with a kite,
and just let things be things and hope it’s alright.

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

"What doesn't kill you"

I won’t make a promise I’d be ashamed to keep
but I’ll still try anything twice: because 
when you wish on the stars outside, up there,
they won’t hear you for a million years.

You shake the good man’s dirty hand
because it’s just the right thing to do.
Still, I guess in the end what doesn’t kill you
is usually backed-up by what will.

–So is it a better world we all live in now?
At least nothing’s ”white of” anyone anymore.
–And it was during my birthday party when those
punks kicked the shit outta that Berlin Wall…

But then, out in the township spare pallet piles
are making every backyard bonfire go;
and Merit’s CF-194 pumps some days, 
but some others seems that it don’t…

And now I’m renting a room in my own town
because the empty house needs its time alone.
–And the light at the end is only a bulb,
and life ain’t proof of anything more…

Monday, April 14, 2014

"Grapeshot champagne"

I’m deafened by grapeshot champagne corks,
and tonight’s rented tux just can’t commit;
my martini needs a AA battery and three pennies in
– from before ’oh-two if you can swing it...

I drove over a buried bathtub filled with packed snow –
the landscape’s features just aren’t its own anymore.
Was surprised and, so, froze that-then here-and-now,
but it’s still a sad weird world where a picture isn’t even itself.

I've heard that every bullet feels like a bird
'til it tries to pull up – and despairs, and then wants to hurt.
Science lets us make maple syrup from saplings, though
milking sweetness from babies isn’t something folks much want to do.

We must be more gentle – even language gets broken in half:
convictions’re sometimes the very best or worst thing you can have.
We think waterfalls are beautiful from above and below,
but halfway down are often much less-so.

The lately-regretful brain-in-a-vat dries out on the floor
having reached the Libertarian ideal – tipping over its jar.
Folks are like stock off-feed; but on the other hand, my man, okay – now,
let’s not get perfect – because then there’s no sound.

Bartender, I guess I’ll have another…

Friday, April 11, 2014

"Things, how and when"

Hello, old tree – my truest friend 
of this best hour of the day;
hello, old tree – you might recall me,
and might-not is also okay.

A washboard road can’t get you if you weave;
but the police couldn't care less, emphatically —
the machine of problems and solutions
aches for the nearest soft things.

A bit windward of the label “44”
there’s a smiling man’s face down in the road, low,
greeting folks he can’t much hope to see
–they don’t stop, none do, and why would who?

Things are forgotten, lost, and sworn about;
choking to death on applesauce froth —
the scariest things aren’t at all to other things,
but are anyways still scary enough.

Everyone in the world stomps hard at once
and the world breaks apart in-place —
the test scores don’t matter any more and
everything’s just worth as long as it takes.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

"Cooking for murderers"

Cooking for murderers and their friends,
but none of the lives they’ve touched; 
I’m living my life upside-down
serving lunch.

I’m away, we won’t see each other again.
I’m sad right now but know come to-morrow
I’ll find myself more and more elsewhere
and later cleared and clean, too.

   Blooded veins and dollar bills —
   they can both burn with fire;
   at least everyone gets nothing
   when they die.

Don’t gnash your teeth on a bumpy road,
gotta take care, little things still show;
black-hat woodpeckers keep coming back,
soon you don’t even have a door.

In another room there’s laughing
but that’s not where you're at..
Bitterness finds you when it wants,
and you’re the inside man, oh

   Blooded veins…

The hawks are giving hell to field mice,
my fuckin fan-belt just won’t shut up
and I’m breathing in splinters –
oh save us, save us.. oh

   Blooded veins…

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

"Looking past"

    I stopped a wallclock with my heart today –
    a neat trick I
    cannot recommend.

    The “looking past” at what lies beyond
    comes natural,
    but only at the end.

    Makes no difference to the insurgents
    that the government
    makes in my name,

    still I try to make a new friend for each one of them;
    though, of course, I can’t
    but I’m improved all the same.

    I’m sure my team won’t come out ahead in the end,
    but then war’s not
    the way that I like to win –

    you can’t add up losses to find what anything cost when
    you can’t measure
    how much things were meaning…

Saturday, March 29, 2014

"Paper takes Rock"

Sometimes Paper takes Rock,
but Rock loves her,
so he is glad to see her win —

plus, she’s sensitive
and listens to him,
and she understands a wound is a thing.

Magic to him they're still
each other’s best adventure,
even just playing the same old game.

It’s not the have, it’s not the want —
it’s just the thank-god-at-last feeling
each time they can finally touch again.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

"Telling, untold"

I’ve eaten rope – it helped me get by..
but you can only take so much at a time.
It’s not how you’d have it be,
no, but it helped me keep both feet.

I know that I’m someone who could kill someone,
but I’m less certain I could again..
–well, unless the guy needed me to,
or he surely had it coming.

My beard’s changed color and –
straight – there’s a bull's-eye under my chin;
it probably won’t come as a surprise when
what befalls does for me, done.

You’ll get killed or you’ll die,
the only two ways to run out of time.
–No shining here, it’s private property,
but 300 feet over there'll do fine.

One day entropy will tear up things, and sense, too,
but it’s not angry, it’s gentle.
Until then, flowers and gingers and Ruth’s Chris-es,
or at least the brief cool breezes of thoughts of..

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

"The rusty staple"

There’s a lone telephone pole in America
that always stands in full sunlight,
but those who know never speak of it –
just another stray unknown miracle.

Deadfall ain’t done by a longshot, 
and a poisoned well’s still good for some things;
there ain’t a spare part been made yet –
everything can’t help but be in the final will-was.

   How often is the seeming what the meaning is?
   When is the whereat just near enough?
   Watch out, we might get what we want.

No gift forgives a theft,
nothing known can untrespass;
nobody can feel when their last chance
to be forgiven slips, falls, and breaks its back.

   How often is the seeming what the meaning is?
   How often were the reasons when we needed them?
   Watch out when we get what we want.

If it's coming, it’s never too-late –
and it’s on you if you’re in the middle-of.
Some things shouldn’t go unspoken;
even if, back then, you had to do it

Sunday, March 23, 2014

"The monster on the left"

There’s a uniquely beautiful tree
in northeast central Ohio I want to see
again before I die..
He’s a champion,
a vegetative dragon
surrounded by misplanned communities,
endless faux-farm white plastic fences
of bland ignominy.
But the johnny-come-latelies
don’t matter so much to him —
they will end;
he stretches in the sun

Thursday, March 20, 2014

"There is no enemy"

A grilled reuben cures many ills,
and I like it better if the locals built where I’m at.
Since the trusty Chevy truck got old, now his
lettering says we can just call him Chet.

Guess I could use a little more nothing,
got too much cluttering built into life —
busy representing ourselves with things that we keep,
tipping scales, keeping now off-balance.

Stripped books get judged by their covers
and come to be kind and say hi to each other and
sound-off like the mirthful sarcastic brilliant loving windbag Jews
my rented flat was under, but over here we learn slow.

Guess the opposite of something ain’t nothing, it’s something-else,
and don’t you dare try to change that again;
even if I wasn’t much scared of anything bad
until someone told me I could be.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

"Advices"

Don’t need to own a pickup truck yourself but
best that you have a friend who do, & you
should know accidents leaving the strip club
tend to involve a bigger tip with the tow.

The word ‘widdershins’ still means something
if you know the right nerd to ask;
and out of all of them, glaucoma sure is
a better kind of coma to have.

A 2-litre of soda-pop chilled down to 10 degrees
will freeze solid just when you open it:
like us humans, when the pressure’s released 
it becomes what it really is – and then makes a mess.

There’re so many lists you don’t want to be on,
from no-fly to alien grocery;
so out of respect I keep my shitlist blank 
using shinkicks immediately.

(sigh) Remember, the money isn’t the work you did —
it’s ship’s scrip for the crashing starship Earth:
there’s an outside to each and every thing, and
mistaking means for ends soon enough’s evil itself.

—Aw shucks now, gone done’n got windy, son, 
y’all take care now and tip well for your Miller-time Bud…

"Tricky wisdom"

Some bits of wisdom are hard to come by,
I mean they’re whizzing past us all the time:
plastic bananas help spread Lyme disease,
eat chocolate only from its starboard side.

Clark Kent needs his fiber because if he pushes too hard
his boom-boom puts a hole through toilet and floor.
There is a best way to milk a cat,
but that nugget’s not a thing to be told.

Baby telephone poles only grow in salty soil;
and here’s the straight dope: I’m afraid a jar never is the door.
Real old-fashioned homestyle meals are
traditionally cooked in diabetes shoes.

If you don’t have a jesus in your heart
you might-should wanna keep one in your shoe —
he’s small and’ll fit for sure, in case you need him
when things get tight and go to Where-They-Go-To.

The teacher’s an ass and keeps all the points
the students miss on their tests and homework,
but one day he’ll get his – and at least he taught them
that, fuck yeah, sorghum is the camel of crops.

—So to everyone out there in Radioland:
Don’t touch that dial, it’s very sensitive
Maybe start with the treble and bass, and then
work your way over to fader and balance…

Saturday, March 15, 2014

"Census"

...Like many before me, I’ll pass the day,
     we have a long tradition...
many do for this or that, but here for me
     it would be children —

Be polite and civic responsibly
     best as you can contain your conditions
babysit for some friends at the stray brood-having urge
     (which we, fiercely listless, slow abandon...)

Friday, March 14, 2014

"The magnificent sorrow"

you mustn’t yearn
–it won’t help you here or keep you good or warm

you mustn’t yearn
–lose it within the wind like the any-words of a coward

you mustn’t yearn
–perish it parched in their dry endless disregard

you mustn’t yearn
or rage or bellow, you mustn’t make a sound

you must relent that lurid rainbow gleam 
— the yearning for — and
come-still the draw
far and well
down so 
under
ground

Sunday, January 5, 2014

"Job Satisfaction"

Well I've been living out in rural Wyoming
doing part-time buggy whip repair and odd-jobs –
sometimes they just need you to shave and paint and milk
every last turkey that they got on the farm.

Though of course my first love will always be
the way I hope to make a name for myself:
selling high-deductible dishwasher insurance
door-to-door all up and down the Gulf Coast..

And I've had a hard time getting my message out,
playing quietly at the Orangutans' School for the Deaf.
I'm just not like Trey Anastasio – my anti-anti-stagefright
can choke me damn down near death.

You think I'm crazy, but your necktie's a weapon for
every enemy that you make and find;
and in these pants I can easily move and survive
at least a day or two, left outside.

One last thing – every asshole that calls me
or some girl a "free spirit" is damned:
the direct implication of your tone is that you're not, 
and when you speak those words your brain hears them.

So if it is all the same to you, or not
(like I care), I think I'll be on my way –
there's an arguably alcoholic old racehorse
named Stewball up for auction today…

—I just love these odd jobs, that's how I do.