Monthly Archives: August 2009

The Madman, The Artist, The Discrete Separations

Thinking hard
about how best to remove
my memory of my face.

Is there a miracle cream?
A scalpel?  Chip at it
with a mason’s hammer?

No.

Find a camera, preferably
an old Polaroid
and an endless stack of film.

Take shot after shot, from all angles,
of myself,
by myself in an empty room.

Or, if possible,
find someone who loves me
to do it for me —

then ask them to leave.
Hang the pictures up
in neat rows on the blank walls
and study them

until the “self” disappears.
Only see then the bones, the pores,
the tiny blemishes, the leftward bend to the nose.
Drowning in reflection, I’ll soon forget

that this is a “man”
I know, and become lost in the flow
of errors and mistakes, of the ugliness
once so easily subsumed in a glib blur
I have called “my self.”  Thus

compartmentalized,
the wear and tear
will be all I see when I look in the mirror.

Just another batch of ruins in the crowd.
Another answer to my ego:

look, look, at the failure of coherence!
Imagine the freedom that will come
once I see only the pieces
and stop believing I am any one thing.

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Apology

I close the book now
thinking of pages unmarked
by words, bearing only fingerprints

to be found by others, brushing
dust over the surface,
trying to recreate what happened here.

It has not ever been enough
to write and read.  It was always
the only way I ever had

to try and make a stand
against the storm inside.
The evidence of the life I led

is not in the words:
you will need to see the blank pages
I fingered while thinking

of what I should have said
versus what I did say.
That’s where the truth sits.

I lied more than I wanted to.
I said the wrong things the right way.
I did as little as I could to survive.

To learn me
learn this: the work
was all a cloud of red.

The blue behind the cloud
was where I lived.  I close the book now
after sunset and sit back

praying that someone will see
the black dust on my oily traces and say:
here, here he was, and he was so much less than we knew.

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At The Party Before The Crash

people talked about

health care
the zombie apocalypse
the difference between Irish whiskey
and Scotch whisky

someone drunk dialed a friend
to tell her she had a great ass

a monkey was mentioned

two guys expressed admiration
for the closeness they shared
one time in a rainstorm
no physical contact happened, y’know
but they understood each other
as co-combatants in a struggle

great wings beating
against the kitchen window
went virtually unnoticed for a time

but eventually someone asked

who heard that?

is that an angel or a bat?
or perhaps a flying monkey?

someone cued up
the Wizard of Oz
to try and settle the argument

then it was back to the zombies
and their dead eyes
someone said they’d starve here
everyone laughed

leaving the question of what was hovering
above the house
unanswered

till the next morning
the shocked phone calls
the denial
the newspaper article
the radio report
the burst heads cradled
in unbelieving hands

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fragment: room at night

in a darkened room
the landscape of familiar things
shifts:
skyline of bottles, antenna
of the router, snowglobes
(ironic in the light now taking on
luminescence of eyes staring back)

the room full of the day’s voices
captured in these shadows

so little was said
so little to be heard

abandoned city
more real than daylight allows

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