Monthly Archives: July 2010

Coping Mechanism

Having wasted the bulk of his day
watching for scary things from behind the shattered blinds,
he eventually fell asleep
and his dreams were not at all scary.
He did not dream at all, in fact.

Back at the blinds the next morning
he felt uncommonly rested at first
but began to feel the boil of unease
within an hour of waking, thinking of every pain
that lurked out there, every potential death

by postal carrier and cable bill,
stray bullet and laughing, mayhem-fed child.
Another whole day of this is hard to imagine
but this was how he was — a rabbit
in a coyote field, a snail before a paving machine —

all the time.  And he told himself
it was right to feel this way considering the world
he had known till now, and that he’d be just fine
as long as he could always depend on being
completely devoid of dreams.

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The Last Talk

It was around seven at night when I finally got out of my mother.

I started talking at once.  The family was astounded.
“Keep it up,” they urged, and I started to think of things to say.

There was a time when I considered
myself
the best talker in a family of talkers.
Whatever.  It was a means to an end.
That end was that I talked
myself
out of everything.

Myself.

I used that word a lot.
It was a ratchet handle, could be switched
from install to extract with one motion.
Slap any socket, any word on it, and I’d make it work.
Myself,
I don’t care for legumes.
Myself,
I’m indifferent to rockets.
Myself,
I’m a big fan of radicchio dipped in sea salt.

One evening, at seven again,
I made a mistake and stopped talking for a moment.
It didn’t bother me but a lot of the family thought I was nuts
and I ended up in a bare room with a cheese grater wall to lean on
and a pleasant sense of dislocation without my usual tools
at hand.  There was sand under my tongue.
My breath smelled of comic books and colorfield theory
and it was so nice, for once, to not speak
unless I was spoken to.

I got out and found a living that made the talking
not so much a tool but a brace.  The ratchet handle
slipped in my hand as easily as ever, and I could talk about
myself
endlessly, even when I used borrowed sockets
to make
myself
seem like a different chokehold.  The family soon fell asleep —
why listen to things that didn’t concern a fact at all?
I found new families to bore.  I found new nuts to turn
and kept using
myself
to gain leverage.

Over time, I lost the urgent sense of sand and blood in my palm.
Over time there was
too much wolf,
not enough sea snake.
Too much noose,
not enough bowtie.
Too much pistol,
not enough summer squash.
Too much fuck,
not enough no touch at all.
Too much rain of monkeys,
not enough snow of shillings;
it was so easy.

The alley girls, the backstage boys,
those who called
from the shadows for the opportunity
to hear my disturbances,
they all wanted to eat the same things
every night, and I let them,
it was so easy.

What I said was
myself
was theirs to think on
and misinterpret,
and I let them,
it was so easy.

Who was I to say I was not what they thought?

I though I could talk my way back to
myself.
I tried, but now the power’s off at seven at night
and I’m sitting in the hot darkness of a small room
built from smooth, sweating walls.  There’s no money
to speak of.  Every dollar is a laugh giggling good bye
and the cat is barely moving without the AC.  I’m barely moving.

The wrench called
myself
is splintering, the receiver for the socket
worn, the switch that changes direction
finally swinging free and no longer engaging
and I talk more and more, trying to gain purchase,
work the bolts in what I need to construct or destruct,
in one slippery increment at a time.

On the desktop of this old computer
is a document named “Everything I’ve Learned.”
It’s empty, save for the names of the lessons.
The lessons themselves are scattered around a lot of places
that exist in public and only in public.
I didn’t have a private thing to put in there.
This is what I get for a career in talking
The family would get a chuckle out of this if they could see me,
but I keep
myself
a little far from them these days.  They don’t want to see
or hear me like this, the wrench rattling useless and repetitive
on steel.  I get it, so I respect it.  I sit here at seven every night
and strip my threads trying to make
myself
so useless
it’ll be understood and even appreciated
when at last I choose silence
and throw myself away.

Seven at night,
still light for now.
But not for long:
the U-turn that has loomed from the beginning,
that has been implied in every turn of every screw,
waits there in the bitter, salty summer night.

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This Mercy

Thick as
unleavened bread
on the dry tongue,
this mercy
requires you to chew
and chew,
this mercy
you want to show
yourself.

If a seed catches in your teeth
work it into your gum
until you bleed.
and it softens
how you taste yourself.

Let your teeth fall
and rattle a song.

Swallow what you have chewed,
and tear off more.  Work your wounded mouth
upon it.  There’s no such thing
as too much of this mercy,

not for you.

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Everywhere There Is A Growing Season

The tiny, spotless house:
a solid though worn white shell.

Arms of the raccoon eyed farmer:
thick stems ending in brown spore-pocked fingers.

The enduring matriarch:
moon phases calculated out for three thousand years.

The face of their universal toddlers:
roused walnuts not yet shattered.

The plow courses the soil:
tidal rip in gray, stony sea.

Harvest is drawn from the work:
embraces that cut and sting their skins.

This living happens
one dawn to dark run at a time.

How it has always happened:
one dawn to dark run at a time.

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You’re The Bomb: BOOM!

The woman
you prize

a former target
from a shooting game
at the state fair

sets her head to bobbing
quickly up and down
back and forth
whenever you look
directly at her
these days

As soon as you’re awake
you run from her

to flit from place to place
fuming and sputtering

Upon arrival at each
begin to fret
that you should have stayed
wherever you just were

Back home
your dogs
sit near the door
their noses flicking and flaring
waiting for you

They hide
when you turn the knob
to come in

but a few minutes
after seeing to
your unloaded menace
everyone licks your face

even the woman who ducked you this morning

As soon as you’re not alone
you break into a full
wetface aria

“Who am I that they can love me
all of them knowing
I’m the gun
and the bomb
and the kicker”

They tell you to wait till you are alone
to pity yourself
because

you also cannot sing

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She Is A City (Revised)

(Revised, with thanks to Edgar Gabriel Silex for his comments.)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I love her when she is Washington D.C.,
tangled as a budget bill
wrapped in backroom deals;

love her when she is Seattle
full of homeless and
resigned wet;

love her when she’s New York City,
beating me hard,
keeping me up all night.

On the days when she is Boston
I can’t decide: which part of her
do I like best, which do I fear most?

One day I hope to find she has become
Redemptia, that no one has founded yet;
I want to walk its streets at a loss

to understand
its neighborhoods,
how it was built, how it grew.

I fear one day I will learn that
she is and has always been Angkor Wat
or Babylon, swallowed, abandoned

to jungle or sand, streets only memories,
walls nubs of remainder and lost glamour,
and no way at all to rebuild her.

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Cities

Some days she was Washington D.C.
as tangled as a budget bill
and wrapped in backroom deals.

Some days she was Seattle
full of the homeless and
resigned wet.

Some days, like New York City,
she beat me hard
and kept me up all night.

And on the days she was Boston
I couldn’t decide which part of her
I liked best and which I feared most.

I hope one day to find she has become
a city I call Redemptia that no one has founded yet.
I want to walk its streets and be completely at a loss

to understand its map, its neighborhoods,
how it was built and how it grew. I want to discover it
as if I was its only inhabitant, now and forever.

I fear one day I will learn that in fact
she is and has always been Angkor Wat
or Babylon, swallowed and abandoned

to jungle or sand, her streets only memories,
her walls nubs of remainder and lost glamour,
and no reason at all to rebuild her.

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Triangle

A poem of mine from WAY before I posted everything online.  Close to thirty years old, in fact…working on a series of ultra-short poems for a project; thought I’d resurrect this one…

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Her eyes put a slap
on your nerves.
There’s been another hand
in hers —

not yours,
but at once you know
you know it
as you know your own.

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On Virginity

The Bible mentions
Jesus having siblings,

which suggests
that sometime after that first Christmas
Mary may have taken Joseph
by surprise one night
with a whispered,

“Let’s see what all
the fuss is about…”

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The Clown

If you see me
in clown makeup
waving a dagger,

please don’t panic; believe the smile
that I’ve painted on
and ignore the edge.

Would a clown
bearing gifts
lie to you?

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Eats

Cold water
tastes of black;

warm tea,
redolent with spice-red brown;

all cheeses
contain a trace of green,

and meats of all varieties
are purple as they go down.

Landscape art
on the teeth and tongue,

a portrait within me later.
There’s a golden tinge

in the bourbon that follows;
there was shell gesso

in my former hunger, orange bile
in my gluttony’s later gut.

I live like this, in agony,
stunned and overwhelmed by every meal.

I can’t stop the pictures.
I can’t eat enough to get to

the absence of light
I so long for.  And

I have tried, Lord,
I have tried.

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Artistic Endeavors

Withdraw
into your beautiful lives
for as long as they will last;

see the Grand Canyon
or Macchu Picchu
for the first time, or again;

sit and read a book of lovely poems
that excite in you the longing
for creation or at least experience.

Forget, for a moment,
that there are those who long
for the violent sting of hurt

that lets them know they are alive;
who steal their moments
of beauty from others, who create

the fear that puts peace
into perspective.  Forget them
because to recall them too closely

or too often may lead you to consider
a truth or two that you have forgotten
about invention and art: that some

of the greatest art ever made
is laid into the backs of swords
and guns, that there are suits of armor

that are etched as delicately
as any gemstone’s setting, and that
men recreated the Sun here on Earth

strictly to keep from getting too close
to the others
they desperately wanted to kill.

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Unity

Ain’t it grand
to have a brain,
abrasive and sharp
yet guided by a pair of eyes
that steady it as it grows
impatient with unreasonable
living; with the contradictory demands
of people upon themselves and their stubborn
insistence that they are not the agents
of their being, that they are completely
at the mercy of events and others’ judgments
and actions.  Ain’t it grand

to recognize yourself
in their pleading, to sit back and reflect
with your brilliant brain upon what you’ve seen,
and see how you have done the same
and continue to do so.

Ain’t it the perfect touch
when you reflect on the worst fallacy of all —
that you claim to stand separate from yourself at times,
that you are not only not in charge but on occasion
are completely independent of the mess around you,
you stand watching yourself act, you claim
not to believe you are that person
doing such horrible things, such stupid things,
that your fiery, fence-leaping mind
is in abeyance at those times and,
much as you watch and marvel at the others
as they flounder, you try to insist
that you were not in control of those moments.

Ain’t it a joke and a half.

Ain’t it sweet when you fall at last
into unity, and realize that all those times
you were an idiot and an asshole
you were totally an asshole and idiot
and you begin to own your cruelty and idiocy
as expressions of your whole being,
that you are not split and cavernous within
built of rooms that do not connect
but are instead just another man
with sharp brain and sharp eyes
who could use them ever after
to hold yourself steady in place,
complete as you always have been,
not a demon box full of actors
but humbly, thoroughly whole
in the midst of the worst of your actions.
In the moment of that utter shame
you will sow and reap at once
the peace you’ve always insisted
was forever out of reach.

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In A City Where The Night Can Only Do What Must Be Done

this mad jerking
of my lip
is the projection
of my anxious mind
just before the just-past-prompt arrival
of expected guests

it reflects the white dirt flavor
that is coating my tongue
the chest pains I feel daily
and my forever aching knees

which I am certain
all presage something final
or at the least devastating
that is coming soon

when the friends were late
I was sure something wicked had happened

when they arrived it was as if
a bullet had whizzed by my ear
meant for them
and for me

it took a long time
to relax
and enjoy their visit

and I worried about them
when they left
could not sleep
or even lie still

then a gun or firecracker
went off somewhere
in the yards down the hill
suddenly
at the height of my panic
and I knew
however much I fretted
I would not know the moment
when it came
and I did stop worrying
and settled in to wait
calmly for any of whatever
was destined to happen

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Funeral Rites

Escort the dead
past their former homes,
stall the weeping
from inside those walls,
set the fallen at peace
with their new plane,
lay them into their holes
and then release all the pain
that has been pent up
to fly and cling to the stones
you set above the dead.

A monument needs those traces
to wrap it
for a monument stripped of memory
is nothing, just another rock
on a pool of earth
that holds something
now quite different from before
and not to be cherished
as anything worth consideration;

the stone and the memory
are where they have left themselves
for you.  What lies below
is returning to the greater whole,
is of no consequence, and in fact

what clings to the stone
will fly off eventually too,
to drift on wind and seep into streams
where it will be taken in by breath and sip
and so infiltrate
the living that still weep
now and then, a little less
now than before, until
what remains in the living

is less than a memory, more a belief
in the past as prelude
to the present, a small token
of the control and presence
that once walked and now flies
away from the pitiful leavings
we will revere for such a thankfully short time:

corpses
that will not hold us for long
as they are.

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