Monthly Archives: November 2004

AGING SUCKS

I went to the eye doctor at lunch.

I need bifocals.

The next stop was the Piercing Pagoda.

I compensated.


Fuck this.

I’m re-upping my Prozac level, and getting back on Seroquel.

I surrender.


I just trimmed my friends’ list. Mostly folks I don’t hear from that often; a couple whose LJs don’t seem to mesh with my interests. (Sorry, folks. Nothing personal.)

Check it out; if you’re off and want back on, please, just let me know.


Don’t mind me

Heard the one about the LJer who is accused of killing her mother?

Relevant links:

http://www.livejournal.com/users/smchyrocky/
http://ap.alaskajournal.com/stories/state/ak/20041123/2605949.shtml

Let’s move beyond the tragedy itself for a second.

Somehow, seeing all those comments on her LJ from people spewing vitriol…hmm.

What do they gain by that?

I swear, there are days when I dream of world annihilation by fire, by ice, by God’s hand. I know these people see pain incarnate here, and I want to let them go.

I don’t want to be here anymore, in that space of anger. I don’t want to change the world. Let’s let it rot and die.

I’ll know better about all this tomorrow, but this is where I am tonight.


“A rewrite already??” Yes. Get over it.

Under No Moon

Tonight I like hearing you
better even than seeing you.
Having heard you speak,
I won’t even bother
to open my eyes.

When you spoke, I dropped my knife to the ground.
It stuck blade end down, hilt deep.
A stream bubbled up from around it.
I can’t see that either but it sounds like you,
a cool bend in the wind.

Sinking this nude and this deep into midnight
while the poplars shake in spite of
greedy silence, I think I could take root and grow,
watered and well fed, lying in some bed, any bed,
listening to you say something, anything, under no moon.

…thanks, by the way, to dead_kitty for thoughts and critique…


Update…

Hi, y’all. How was your Thanksgiving?

We got home from our yearly friendly debauch in CT today. Our holiday consists of two dinners seventy miles apart, followed by consumption of large quantities of alcohol (one of the few times I do drink more than sparingly — and it involved Cabernet, single-malt Scotch, and my latest indulgence, good older tawny ports — by the way, any recommendations would be excellent) and crashing in a 300 year old restored farmhouse. Fun. I didn’t think about the computer at all, read some Rumi, played with a handsome Labrador Retriever pup, and generally enjoyed myself.

I overindulged a wee bit on the carbohydrate side of things (surprise), so my stomach has been a bit upset and it’s also clearly affecting the way my various meds work — so I’m being strict about the diet for a bit to get back on track.

Just posted the column at Gotpoetry — perhaps influenced by my mood, a melancholy meditation on the place of blank books in my life, and on what they represent to me. Love to hear your thoughts.

Only three columns left…wow. One on God and me and the poems, and then two to wrap it up.

I don’t know what I’ll do with myself.


Back from CT…column in progess…full update later…

thought this was interesting…

           
resistance is love
brought to you by the isLove Generator

while we’re thankful…

I know I mention Cryptome, a website on intelligence and privacy matters, an awful lot here.

I’ve used it for years because with very few bells and whistles, it provides source documents on a wide range of issues related to secrecy and government oversight of our lives.

It also tries to fight that secrecy by publishing little-seen documents from a lot of sources– things that many folks would prefer be left unseen.

Right now, they’re running a series of photographs they’re calling “the Fallujah/Iraqi Kill zone.” Some are battlefield photos, but the more recent ones — and the ones you really ought to see — are the photos of the funerals of the soldiers, and of wounded service people at hospitals, getting Purple Hearts, etc.

For all our rhetoric, we forget, sometimes, what the human face of war looks like. It looks like these photos of young men and women in their dress uniforms, coupled with photos of their bereft families and friends touching their coffins. It looks like the corpses of Iraqis in the streets of Fallujah, and the look of fear — and yeah, some elation too, now and again — on soldiers’ faces in the battle zone.

I don’t want to be a bummer on Thanksgiving Eve…but you might want to take a look at these pictures when you can, and think long and hard about what you’ve got to be thankful for. It brings the shortness of life home; it puts into perspective some of what’s being done, ostensibly in our name, by kids who may not ever make it home. Some of them are there because they believe it’s the right thing to do; others got there because the military seemed to be the only choice for them…

I don’t know. I’m not even sure what I’m trying to say here.

It just seems to me that wherever you stand on our country’s overseas actions, there’s something human to be recalled here that is best served by making these dilemmas real. Look at some of those faces, and think about what you would say to them, if you could.


David Beauchamp

This guy named David Beauchamp
used to host one or two ghosts at
every meal.

I watched him, sometimes, serving food
to an empty table.
I couldn’t tell exactly what
happened to the meal,
but it always
disappeared.

He drank
beer on Friday nights
with a poltergeist
at a local dive called Rosie’s.

He said once
of the spectres all around him that
they were lonely, he was lonely,
it worked out — and
what did it matter anyway
where you put your trust — in the dead
or living? Suppose, he said,
they’ve lied about being dead, the way
so many people do — suppose I’m already
dead? Would I even know?

Better, he said, to just give up
this fantasy of life
and move along. We don’t have a clue,
anyway, he said,
about what it means to be here, or there. Better to make peace:
come down on a Friday night and have
a beer or two or three,
and some small talk
in Rosie’s back room.

He put his head down on the table then.
He never saw me. I put my hand on his neck,
and held him, gently, until
we faded away.


Fnord!

I am staggered, nay, astonished — no, FUCKING astonished — that no one here has commented on my referring to a SubGenius text a few posts back.

Granted, it was a gift and all, and I’ve never actually read it; but I thought that was the point of slack, anyway?

I did read the first book, years ago, and chortled mightily throughout.

C’mon. Is this a forum full of PINKS?

The SubGenius must have SLACK!!!

(We now return to actual, original, non pop subculture related blog content.)

PS: does it disturb anyone else that the LJ spellchecker doesn’t recognize “blog?”


Feature/Book release/Now it can be told

Went great. (Even I think so.)

Set list:

Cante Jondo for the Left Side
In America
Getting Ahead
The Last Word (aka “Let’s Fuck”)
Punk
Seafoam Green
The Kathy Bag
Chrysler
Mission Statement
DIY

As promised, a real old school set, with the exception of “The Last Word” and, comparatively, “Cante Jondo.” A good 70% off page, which is rare for me nowadays.

I feel like this stage of my poetic life is really over. The poems aren’t being retired, but I’m letting them go.

One more volume to this go-round, maybe in February, and then it’s no more chapbooks…and onto more magazine submissions and eventually the manuscript.

Sold about half the print run of the new book. (Time to make some more before DC, I think.)

I’ll start mailing them to you blurbers when you let me know your addresses…hint, hint…

Thanks to all in attendance; you made me very happy. I hope I did the same for you.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

The big secret I mentioned earlier is that I’m going back to school. I’m entering the Bachelor’s in American Studies program at Lesley University in January — a low-residency intensive program that gives me my long-delayed BA in twenty-two months.

After years of foot dragging, abortive attempts at re-entering broken by breakdowns and job responsibilities, I think I’m well enough and generally pissed enough at my inertia to do this.

Let the games begin.


Slamlist

A while back, I signed off of the slamlist.

Tonight, I signed back on, temporarily, to help push the CD project at iWPS. Figured it was my duty.

I discovered I’d never completely disconnected myself, just had set myself to web-only. Huh.

Think of all the fun I missed.

At any rate, I just wanted to say that I feel…dirty. Oooooh..


imminent announcment

…I’m working on my biggest project in ten years right now.

More when I know more.

I’m deeply, deeply excited.


The column’s up.

And it features reviews of two CDs —

“Live at Beyond Baroque 2” from EM Press, featuring Patricia Smith, Saul Williams, Regie Gibson, johnnyappledog, Viggo Mortenson, et al;

“Macaca Fuscata Autodidact” by RC Weslowski ( monkeypudding). (Love that butterfly sex!)

It also contains a short rant about how I generally dislike poetry on CD. I contradict myself, I embrace multitudes.

Please, visit here to read these nuggets of wisdom.

************

Picked up the new book tonight…it looks hot. Thank you, thisrabbit, as always.

pinata, your blurb graces the back cover. Thank you again.

I’ll be getting addresses from the blurbers shortly to send along your copies. If you wanna hit me backchannel, it’s chrysler.poet@verizon.net.

Thank you again…

************

Other good news: They’ve lowered my Prozac dosage to 20 mg every three days now.

And, most important, I’m off Seroquel entirely. YAY!!!!

I hated that drug.

************

Will check in before the feature on sunday. Come if you can.


BY THE WAY…

I’ll be featuring at the Java Hut, the Poets’ Asylum, home of the Worcester Slam, my second home, Worcester’s very own, on Sunday night.

I’ll be releasing my new (old) book, poet., Vol.1 of a two volume set of greatest hits from the last twenty years, thanks to Doublebunny Press.

Tell you what — it’s gonna be a night of old school. I’m putting the slam stuff to bed — maybe not permanently, but somewhat finally and with bittersweet regrets and cheer.

Come play.