Monthly Archives: April 2011

The Promise Of Risotto

On a sick whim, I lean in
to suck the hissing gas
instead of firing the burner,
just to see what that’s like. 
However, I stop quickly.
I’ve got good food to cook,
good enough for a last meal
in fact.  And if I get past that,
there’s decent dessert too.  So
I will stop.
I will not place my face so close
to death just yet.

It’s the little things that always,
always do the trick.  The cat
hovering nearby with sacred fur,
the promise of risotto, 
the desire not to leave a mess
for loved ones.  I take what I can get
from the bag of small miracles,
treat them as talismans.  Anticipation of dark chocolate,
pear cider, cool night air on open skin;

I try always to fill my hand with whatever makes it hard
to grip a razor.

 


You’re Right, That Party Wasn’t Any Good

Step up, 
don’t pout, don’t
fret.  You are, I assure you,
worthy of remark.

All that kissing,
and nothing to show?
Not much to say about that,
true.  But as for you —

head down and tripping home
doesn’t cut it, but it
sees you through to the stairs, 
so go ahead and indulge that

gloom.  Once you’re home, though,
banish it.  Stick it outside 
the door where you keep 
the shoes that still need to dry,

the ones you won’t wear inside
for fear they’ll muddy and mark
the whole house.  Why would you bring
similar gunk into your spirit?  Exactly —

you wouldn’t.  So give up
melancholy.  Put on
a little music — puff a little Parliament,
a small taste of bubblegum, settle on

rocking out or whatsoever else
works.  No prescription
except one: party you up.
You are always worth that.

You may not notice, always,
but you’re always noticeable.
Put up a banner
that says just that.

That party really wasn’t any good. 
All that kissing? A total waste.
No grooving going on there.
Not without you.

 


Drunk Tale

On the road for work and drinking on an unexpected dime tonight
in the luxury hotel, having come into solid cash courtesy of

a lucky roll of the dice, I call a friend to come and join me, sharing
wealth I didn’t plan to have; it seems just and right.

“Come and drink with me,”
I say to him.  “Tonight we will consume

in quantity, drink like rich white men:
without regard as to cost, on money that came to us

unearned, and with a cavalier disregard
as to damage we may cause or aggravate.”

So to the hotel comes my ragged friend Joe the painter,
decked out in a Lakers jersey and a scrappy beard.

We burn good cigars out on the deck,
fill our hands and hearts with top-shelf booze;

laugh loud and pay no mind to the stares
of those seated all around:  him in the oversized purple and gold

and me in a too-tight Misfits T
that had seen far better days, by which I mean

it is just perfect.  We drink like any old drunks tonight:
swearing we won’t have more to drink and then drinking more,

not knowing how hammered we are until we stand up
from the sticky, squeaky leather seats and almost fall over.

I pour Joe into a cab and pray I’ve got the address right,
then head upstairs to sit in a cold shower for an hour

before crawling to the bed and trying to sleep enough
to make the morning flight ahead less onerous;

it’s a failure, and while I’m strong enough to hold my puke in
until I’m safely on the ground back home,

there’s not a question in the world that I’m not strong enough
to hold it past the baggage claim curb.  I let it go

in the trash can, then straighten up and get to my car
and drive home to collapse in my own bed,

dead to the phone and the mail and the daylight.
When I rise that evening, I say it out loud to my empty room

the thing I have wanted to say for hours:
we really drank like poets last night —

with a full if disguised awareness of what torture we’d soon endure
as a certain and necessary consequence

of holding such windfall gold
in our too often empty hands.


Platitudes

Darlings, I’ve swallowed
too many platitudes from you all.

If positivity was a drug,
I’d be River Phoenix by now.

They’d have investigated you,
tossed a book of Gibran at your smile.

If so, would you remember me today
as fondly as we do him? Or

would you have blocked me out,
thinking me stupid

for dying from sugar poisoning?
Would you ask yourself

how it could be that a man died
from an overdose of light?

If you were me,
you’d understand.

I was born to be the praise
for what crawls from under the rock.

I was born to be sullen art.
I was made for contrast.

Know I didn’t choose this.
I’d have rather been sunlit,

blind from the glare of day.
I do appreciate your cheer.

But sometimes your words
are doubled by a voice

saying, “Not that.  Not that.”
Neglected darkness speaking?

I don’t know. I just know
how I am when it sounds off:

I’m most comfortable
with that in my ear.

Call me a downspout
for psychic rain.

Call me a slipped noose
or a damaged launch. Not that —

I am the brother of those.
The diary of a charm

against what we won’t name.
Keep your affirmations —

I can’t learn that tongue;
the one I know, I know too cold.


After The Industrial Revolution

A short vacation,
hiatus, rest break,
sabbatical

until the day after 
everything
blows over.  Will be

back after a few words
from our sponsor

who expected us
to work harder
and longer
for his dollar.  

He doesn’t seem pleased
or inclined to re-up
the contract as

it seems everything went to Hell
while we were sitting back
and enjoying the inattention
to detail.

No idea
what we’ll be doing now
that the gig’s fallen through; 

sit very still
watching the dark horizon,
I suspect,
at least until night
closes in. 


Sandbar

rocking like a sand bar
in current, particles flowing off
with every wave, there goes
what I loved, here comes
what I’ll love now, shape
shifting, now crescent, now
straight line, now blockage
to tides, now broken barrier,
perhaps husks will wash up
and bulk me up, perhaps
I’ll be an island, perhaps
a continent

or maybe I’ll
wash away, get into
the seabed, become a beach, 
grit in someone’s shoes, dragged
or carried inland, washed off
in a cold shower, down a drain, 
end up at rest far from home,

a memory of past nautical history,
found in a crime scene, mystery of
forensics, evidence of change,
cryptozoological marker,
here was a mermaid passing
at some point, a kraken, a dead sailor,
pirate gold, something, anything to spark
an imagination,

the mundane nature
of what I’d been lost, no record 
of what loves I’d lost and gained, 
my mere physical trace all that remains
and that much of me made to tell a story
I’m not a part of,

as the ocean
takes me in without making me a part,
as the drain carries me away
without calling me to itself to stay.


Tools Of The Trade

All along the walls of watchtowers
that keep inner sanctum sacred
the hymns of longing
rise, supplicating for bread
and access.  With a raised eyebrow,
those inside intone spells
and make ritual gestures —

delicacy,
the tool of the upperclass
when there’s a need
to put someone back
in place;

etiquette,
a menu for delicacy,
a ghostly menace
behind it. Dig deep and see
how door holding and fork placement
condescend to some, set tiger traps
for others.

Fashion,
a uniform for separatism;
accent, a marker for acceptance or rejection;
grammar, a two-edged sword
guarding the gates of Paradise;

all so beautiful that soon enough
we aspire to our own prisons,
to acquire
our own sets of keys,
our shackles,
our marching orders.

Are we not handsome now
with our hybrid vigor
draped in such vicious elegance?


Ragged Lamb

A ragged lamb
on a high rock.  False
thunder in the distance,
perhaps guns far off, perhaps
a tin roof falling in close by,
somewhere I can’t see.  That lamb,

matted and filthy, bleating
in fear and pain, scared perhaps
by the thunder in a blue sky.
I scramble to catch her
before she falls off the edge 
into the ravine below,

but I fail and she falls.
But she doesn’t.  Instead she hovers
in mid-tumble beyond my reach,  
as if held up on a thermal,
as if she is no lamb
but a falcon.  She is a falcon, in fact,

transformed without my seeing
the event; her claws extended
toward me now, as if to keep me
from attempting the rescue
now that it’s no longer needed.

To hell with finding the music
to speak of this.  To hell with
perfect rhyme and set meter
in my telling; I’m no singer
of mystery.  

That ragged lamb
fell, and did not die; the lamb
became a falcon and is threatening
to tear me up.  There is thunder
that is not thunder; there is violence
or tragedy filling the air.  Here was
a miracle that feels foul to me,
feels unbelievable — 
but it was a real lamb, is a real falcon,
a real cliff, a moment that feels real.
Why else am I still sitting here
on the edge,
wondering what I should risk?

 


Research

Once upon a time
I stole a tooth
from the skull of a virgin saint.
When planted, the tooth
bloomed a library.
I read deeply for months.

The virgin’s story,
captured on parchment,
reeked of flowers and sand.
A soldier met her, thought to take her,
then thought again; those words
were scented with iron and spikenard.

When I put down those books
I understood the nature of restraint,
but the distance between understanding
and practicing is wide.  So I returned to the relics,
stole another tooth, and swallowed it.

No secret worth keeping exists 
without a little pain.  No knowledge
blooms to being unless fed by blood.
That tooth bit deep.  It filled me 
not only with my own blood —
but I must hold my tongue about what it gave me
as I tasted sand, ground its grit 
between my own once-ignorant teeth.

I sit now in an impotent library.
Every book read, every page turned —
I’m no better a man than I was before the thefts
and the plantings, though at least I know now
how short I’ve fallen. How deeply I am flawed
when I compare myself to that soldier
who turned from the virgin, took nothing from her
though he had the chance,
and lived happily ever after. 

 


Pig Roast

man o man
we are getting to the point
of needing to know how
a throat is slit —  

the piglet is struggling and we know
it’s got to be strung up by
its hind legs and
the blood’s got to be drained

but 
we also know
you’re not the kind of guy
to do that
and as the host
you could save face

by delegating the
honor or the chore to a trusted friend

and we’re all drunk
and hoping and fearing
that you’ll choose us

but never mind — you say you’ll do it

and when it’s time
we envy you
your chance at sanctioned mayhem
and your willingness to do it
your not-quite eagerness to do it

so when you are ready
we gather
and watch your face
not your hands

and man o man
it’s
something to see 

 

 

 


Practical Tips For Apnea Management

Woke up thrashing,
throat on full choke,
hands throwing war shapes.
I ask the night,

if breathing were simpler
who would I be?  If nights
were easier and uninterrupted
who would I be?

Comes a voice:

Don’t blame
the blocked back of your throat
or the subsequent storm
in your enzymes

for the look on the front of your head:
that’s no mask.
There’s no other hiding
inside your illnesses.  By all the signs,

you’re a bastard.  
By your age
almost everyone who’s left
is.  All this sound and rage

is real, is impotent,
is yours.  Own it
and stop moaning for your other self:
there’s no one to be comforted there,

and you know it.  
You’re a complete bastard.
Embrace it, hold it tenderly to your
lard-gray chest — and if you are going to be up,

fold some clothes,
do some dishes, because
that warrior-sickbed persona of yours
won’t get the house clean.

 


Blurry But Happy

wearing spare glasses —
slight adjustment to my sight
gives me a headache

wearing old glasses —
slight revision to my sight
gives me nostalgia

wearing bad glasses —
violets are up — even
the blind know it’s spring

blurry but happy
is how the world seems right now —
clarity can wait

 


The Varieties Of Religious Experience

no music will save you, fool,

they told me.  no rock, no hip-hop,
no country or chamber.  you ought to know
there’s no Savior Composer, no Blessed Singer
to reach down and pull the likes of you up. I did not listen

to them.  there was too much
to naysay that.  moments when a joystring
of Afropop tugged me to my feet,
or when a tossed off bluerock 
tore me out of a dark bed to dance.

not everything feels like salvation
but enough does to let me know
how little they knew of it.  my feet
are consistenly drawn free of the ground
by simply switching on the radio.  some crunk beat
roils me, a trumpet foils my despair,
a singer turns one note — one note! — 
perfectly to one side and I rise.

it is no Personal Savior, I admit.  many
are lifted this way.  I’ve watched them
all around me, eyes closed, hovering
in clubs, thrashing against the ceilings
of their cars, air drums crashing;
my brothers, my sisters.  all of us
in the midair of song.  if we open
our eyes long enough and see each other,
we smile — those who call us fools
will never understand.
those who called us fools
are far beneath us now.

 


Theology II

This lie of ours
that holds us fast
is remarkable enough
to be admired on its own merits
even if it is a lie.  It’s
architectural, foundational;
it made a home for us inside.
It is grand and cozy as we need it to be
and even when we don’t believe,
it nags us into acting as if we do,
just in case.  Perhaps it was true once
and now it’s not?  In that case,
let’s give it its due and move on.
Let’s just say that Hell is dead,
and move out of its shadow
into the fields, away from
the crumbling walls.  Out there,
in the sunlight and the cool rain,
we can live publicly and openly,
thinking anew of sin and redemption —

and when the time is right,
we can talk then of the death
of Heaven, too.


Explaining Genesis

A ratmaking God
made us all.  A roach crafting God,
stone breaking God, flashlight God,
dropping a word
on the face of the deep.

God fessed up to his staff
that it was time
to get cracking
on a simulacrum of divinity.

Manmaker God he became.

There’s a book about all this that says
he did both sexes at once,
but then recants  and devolves
into some mumble
about ribs and subservience.
Later there’s calumny
about tempters and women
and swords and fire.  Naked
shame, exile, then fertility,
then kids and
fratricide.  Hell of a good read —

storymaker God, mythspitter God,
Babel-tonguing God,
floodleaker, oh-never-mind
rainbow setter
Deity.  All you can eat
from the bounty buffet.

Explains a lot, doesn’t it?
all that talk
of filling and refilling
a dish full of sticky sweet
that tastes like sucking
on our own bones.