Monthly Archives: September 2012

Missing Nothing

Did I miss something?  Woke
to a mouth filmed in blood
and a rude stomach.  Woke
to swift stumbling to the bathroom
and pain, first dull then sharp.

Did I miss a mystery?  Some doctoring
seems in order, but I wonder
where the body went wrong
down some dark alley of nutrition or
worse, metastasizing into this material dread.

I suspect it’s always one molecule that does it
for each of us, entering us, changing us within
and starting to kill us. It may take years to finish.
We may miss that mystery’s beginning
but are always there at the end

with clues like iron blood
on the tongue as fatal secrets
begin to rail
against us
elsewhere inside.  There will be

more mornings like this,
and fewer mornings to come
than have come already.  It’s cold
in here, though it’s still summer
on the calendar and early on the clock.
 
 


Another Thought On The Whole, You Know, Atheist Thing

When the local god
found his existence questioned
yet again by the atheist,
he swallowed him up
with a sweep of his
avalanche tongue.

The atheist was shocked
that the god had not disappeared
upon learning of the atheist’s 
disbelief.  “But
there is no God!”  

Calmly,
while licking him away,
the local god said, “Ah, yes,
that old monotheism thing…

that IS a crock of holy shit.”  And
he ate the little man whole,

saving nothing
for when the neighbor god
stopped by later.

 


Mistakes

Long years of mistakes
have led me to this one correct moment.
It may be proof of something I don’t understand
which I will not call either
God or luck; all I will gratefully call

is your name, and say that
the road to this moment was crude
and raw and rough but your eyes
and hands are a blessing and 
a prize, and this life I’ve led
has had in fact
no mistakes at all.

 


A Little Something

A little something:
I am neither Italian nor Apache,
and also both.  
A little something:
no one wants to hear it. 

A little something:
this big paleface?  Isn’t.
A little something:
I have no card to show you to give you government-level proof.
A little something:
you can gut yourself bending over backward
to prove stuff to people you could care less about.

A little something:
the family was divided, but that doesn’t show.
A little something:  
it came up every time
I looked at my father and knew he would say
I was one thing one day,
the other on the next.
A little something:  my mother never spoke of it.
A little something:  my grandmother
called my dad a thief
every day.

A little something:  I am a lot of poison.
A little something:  I don’t trust. 

A little something:  on the rez I’m another eyeroll, another shrug.
A little something:  to my Italian family, I’m not quite there.
A little something:  to supposed allies, I’m easily forgotten.

A little something:  I have had White friends
openly reassure me
that it’s ok with them
and being Indian does not matter,
it’s not the same, it’s not the same as if I had…

A little something in my clenched hand.
A little something on my shoulder.

A little something:  you don’t have a clue 
what’s behind the eyes of anyone, what they recall,
what they went through, what they go through.

A little something:  sometimes I don’t mention it
for months to new aquaintances
just to listen to them talk without knowing.
A little something:  sometimes I mention it at once
to new aquaintances 
so I can get the stupid out in the open.
Sometimes I am surprised.
Sometimes I wish I was surprised.

A little something in my eye.
A little something behind me, whispering.

A little something:  I can tell you are bored with this.
A little something:  I can tell you think it’s overblown.
A little something:  I can tell you think it’s not the same as your pain.
A little something:  I know it’s not…never said it was,
but you can’t hear that
over your own damn noise.

Don’t deny it.
I can hear you. 
You all say it,
you all say it
straight or slant,
and still  
you wonder why I keep 
a certain distance, keep 
a little something 
back. 


Radioactive Artist: Finale

I just must stop myself before I am stopped.
That explains it better than saying

a life of yarn after yarn
got old.

I am tired of paying
attention and cost;  comes a point

you ought to stop messing yourself up. 
That’s all I’m saying.

I know, I know
a few things are going to be around

a long time after me, but will they be
understood as I desire?  I guess

that’s not my problem, I guess
I ought to stop worrying and loving

and suchlike.  Stop myself, then,
as I should.  As is desired.  As is 

going to happen anyway by dint
of my doing, probably, no matter

how safely I proceeded — you can’t do that
and remain safe, really.  I stop pretending

here, now.  Anyway
you’ve got the work to look at.

I’m tangential to it.  Always have been.
Enough to say:  don’t waste time.

I stop here because it’s a waste of time.
Never, though, the work.  The work stands.

Don’t waste time thinking otherwise;
I’m good to go now.  It’s been enough.

— for James Acord

 


LOUD FAST RULES

it is too late for me to become
angus young
but I will make some noise
because noise is no respecter of the limits of age
when a half assed old player
has unlmited rage
available to take up the slack
between skill and desire

it’s too late to fall in love with jim carroll
(directly)
but I’ll kiss what I can of him
and hope the taste rubs off

it is too late to rock and roll all night
(every night at least)
and party every day
(at least the way I used to party)
but never too late to move
from consumer to producer

what I need is an amp
and a neck to strangle
what I need is a microphone
and a problem to solve

what I need is feedback

what I need is to make something
everyone’s already made
but do it louder and faster and harder
than I could have done it
back when I was too young
and too concerned about who might be listening

no one’s going to listen to me now

perfect

maybe I’ll become
me
for a moment

 


Ruins

Look into these woods and see
how old wheels creased a road
into the yielding earth.
Follow it
to where it peters out
in a clearing and 
a cellar hole.

New England’s
full of these — gray stones
stacked into the cold ground.
Memoirs of lost families, 
homesteads.  

The new woods
around them conceal failed orchards
where deer rejoice, a little drunk
on fermented, fallen fruit.  

Sit here a while
on the ruins and think of seeing
Nipmuc or Passamaquoddy ghosts,
though they are gone.  These woods
aren’t even the ones from their past.

Pretend it’s all still happening here
because it’s all still happening here —

seen the foreclosure rate lately?


In The Good Old US Of A

When the phrase
“I want to hurt him”
comes into your mouth or brain
about a variety of men
as often as it has lately,

it must mean you’ve been spending time
on the Web,
on the TV,

in the good old US of A.

Some will deplore this, but 

man up — surely,
someone’s got to do it and
you’re the obvious choice.  You’re so
calm, usually,  So level headed.  You
can be trusted with such wet work — 
you’re no hot head.  

I’ll bet the eagle 
on the Great Seal that given
a sheaf of arrows and an olive branch,
you’ll choose to beat the offender
with the olive branch.  

When your picture comes up after the fact
on the Web,
on TV,

in the good old US of A,

please try and have the grace
not to be shocked 
at what they say about you.

 


Acknowledgment

If given one
I’d lick a gun
some nights.  
Other days
might see me
rub a knife sharp.
I’m no liar — weapons
please me, steel my
blood.  I’m not alone in this,
I know why:
there’s a tangible
thrill in my sack
thinking of craft put
in service to
a dark reflex, 
the second oldest urge
after the obvious.  
Is there shame in feeling it?
Yes.  Is there an action pending
from it?  No. But lie about it?
No, nay, never.  That
would embody it so swiftly
that I’d stop thinking
indeed.

 


The Radical

the radical self
loves itself into
distraction from what
it needs to hate

the radical self
loves itself into
comfort with ideas
it needs to spit out

the radical self
puts itself into
positions from which
it needs to escape

the radical self
leaves itself no room
to pull away and twist
when it needs to change

I have been a radical self
who put himself into
a cage with his animated
need for validation

I have been radical
and eaten at myself over
the contradictions I embraced
when I needed to just stop

this once radical self
loves nothing completely
and is safer now
I like what I am well enough to know

when to hate myself


Trying Not To Be A Man

Some mythology was made to order
for me, some was not.  I won’t hold myself back
when I come to the border

between these; instead, I cross.
I’m an ignorant bastard mostly
so it’s not a graceful passage. I toss

my baggage over the wall
so I have everything, then drag
my privileged carcass over. At once, I feel small.

Short of that, though, I’m game to see
what’s what though I don’t yet know where this is
or how it gets along without me.

 


Toward An Explanation Of Discontents

Working in black and white
is easier than doing
anything else, even
considering the shadows.

No need to try and name  
a color never before seen,
for instance, or a blend of two
or more, no need to explain
how they mixed by accident or
design. No need to learn 
how to treat them when they show up,
no need to even see them;

seeing only in black and white
is in fact more difficult
but can be mastered
if one has a early enough start
on the process.  

To be able to see
infinite, velvet grays
between the black and white
in place of color 
is not
entirely admirable
in a world
where red
exists, but it’s more parsable
and eventually (if shouted often enough)
may become the default.

Of course, red and all the other colors,
all hues and shades,
are not just forms of gray,
and you are going to fail somehow
if you live that way.
But no matter…just find enough of you who only see
the black and the white.  Shout them down.
Drown ’em

right the fuck out.


Behind Me, Since Birth, A Bear

A friend of mine once said,
“All my experiences of Russia have been sad.”

I stare down the chainsaw-carved bear
in the courtyard of this Russian restaurant.

It actually looks like the little I pretend I imagine I know
about Russia.

I have but one experience of Russia,
but it’s a sad bear indeed: I was conceived in Russia.

I’ve done the math.
I was born in New Jersey

five months after my parents got back from the USSR
where my dad was a guard at a consulate,

and I don’t know what
my mother was.  It feels sometimes as though

there was no womb between me and that country.
It was the Cold War back then,  Eagle and Bear

engaged in frosty standoff.  I could sense it then
in my preborn bones, and I still can, though I’m much harder.

Every time you see a political bear, it’s Russian.
Every time I see any bear, it’s Russian.

Even this bear-figure before me in this cheesy theme restaurant,
this pine log barely rendered as Bear with dead glass eyes

and splintered coat, makes me wish I’d been born
in Leningrad and not Fort Dix.

I have to turn away.  I’ve lost my appetite
for thin borscht and frozen blintzes and such tourist fare.

Goddammit, before birth I should have pleaded with the angels of distribution,
the ones in charge of where the souls go:

I should have demanded a Soviet nuclear-fired hospital
that looked like hell

and not a warm suburban facade
of heaven on earth,  asked for

a birthright that would have growled inside me
instead of one that keens and screeches.  You can

keep the eagle, all sharp nose and ripper hands and
condescending, supererogatory flight.

Gimme that bear, called in Russia medved, honestly predatory,
reeking of fish, berries, looking to add me to the menu —

Medved. Predator, symbol, totem
of mine, stuck always stinking in the back of my mind.

Medved, predator, grizzly, brown, black,
that honey eater’s taken all the sweet out of me.

Here’s something
true and real, something I know about all bears:

they can outrun, outswim, outclimb
any human — unless you run downhill,

as their center of gravity screws them up.
Then you can barely get away.

So that’s it.  That’s the story of how I came to be — this.
There was Mom, the Italian girl, fresh out of the Ivy League,

out in the big bad world.
And there was Dad, the dashing, hard drinking Apache, fresh out

of reservation, government school, frozen Chosen, POW camp,
Army brig, finally last stand diplomatic cage.  They ended up in Russia

where a bear looking over their shoulders shoved them together,
the usual something happened, and I was sparked.

All my parents’ experience of Russia was sad.
I am my parents’ experience of Russia.

Behind me, since birth, a bear.
It’s been downhill ever since.


In The Great Empty

To step outside of my own 
into others’ or no one’s —

to be in the great empty
of no possessions.  To be

conscious only of that which
no one owns, or at the very least

is oblivious to our claims of possession: 
lawn, garden, backyard.  To be present

where that is meaningless.  To look at it,
and be with it, and be of it until

what looks back is conscious in a way
we haven’t recognized, but which

is now obvious and familiar from a past
we did not remember at all till now.

To be present in the world that treats us
as another consciousness, not the only one,

is the one true honor we can afford to seek
on this planet of medals and titles.

 


A Brass Quartet Plays Albert Ayler In The Park

These horns,
my God,
these horns.  

Almost as if the air itself
was hooked up to a distortion pedal,
but that’s not possible.  It’s 
the players themselves
who must be bending the air itself
into such rough shapes, scraping it and
abrading it until there are surfaces
grit can stick to.  

Warning: our ears
will fill with sand to the rims
if we listen.  Our ears will get filthy
with that if we don’t move
from this spot where you appear to be rooted

under the fat leafed maple,
listening to this scabby racket
as if it were a gospel congregation.
My God, man, they’re bending the very air!
How you can still be breathing it
without warping, without changing,
I do not know.  

Come away from here with me —
don’t just stand there
while music is being torn up like that.
I wouldn’t call it a sin,
but I wouldn’t call it harmless either.