Monthly Archives: January 2013

Face On Repeat

I have one of those faces
that is stuck on repeat —
goatee, jowls, stubble, longish
wild grey and white hair.

Millions of people look like me, enough
that I’m a stereotype of crazy —
artist, counterfeiter, etc.

I’m not exctly dark skinned but
I’m not pale enough for some
to not take me for a suspect ethnicity
when my repeater face
shows up.  It’s kind of
a hard face to carry.

So, you know,

the fact that someone
loves this face
is hard, sometimes,
to believe,

although when she does
it breaks open
the smile usually hidden
in my facial hair
and when that happens,

I guess I look at last
like myself.


How To Be Their “Indian, I Mean Native American” Colleague

1.
Accessorize!
Hang a dreamcatcher
near your monitor.

2.
Tell them your uncle
is an avowed shaman
at plumbing.

3.
Never show them pictures of your parents;
stoically hint at a “plight”
when you mention them at all.

4.
Squint, shade your eyes, and nod a lot
to support the notion, when it comes up,
that it’s “all in the past.”

5.
Smile wryly, often,
especially when choking down
bile.

6.
When faced with any outdoor situation
admit to knowing a few tricks “from back when.”
Cross your fingers that it keeps them quiet.

7.
Pat their shoulders, firmly but gently,
when they cringe mightily before you
about rooting for the Redskins.

8.
Always dress as a ghost might dress,
or how you think a ghost might dress
when trapped between worlds.

9.
Never, ever scream when you hear them begin,
“Y’know, they say in the family
that our great-great-great grandmother…”

10.
Just be yourself for a minute in your car
with your head down when they aren’t looking.
It won’t be enough, but it will be something.


Rice

These days I live among pretty children
who own a small part of the world
and confidently call it Universe.

I was a happy chef here once. Now I mostly cook
small bowls of rice for myself and a few people
in Universe who like my rice, or say they do.

I’m still happy. I have always made
good, good rice but the pretty children
call me out looking for my former meals.  

Where are all the old flavors,
they say?  Why
just the rice?  We like the rice

but we like other things and you
ought to make those things.  Failure, has been —
what kind of cook are you?

Pretty children of the Universe,
I’m a man who likes his rice —
sometimes with olive oil, sometimes

with chili paste, sometimes 
with butter and cheese,
or with beans and a lot of spice.

Maybe it’s not as 
banquet worthy as you might like, but 
it satisfies, it sustains, it pleases

those who like things kept simple,
aromatic, focused,
thick with life and taste. 

I’m going to have a bowl now
and I’m going to think about you
missing out.  I’m going to remember

how you used
to come running
for the fancy stuff.

I’m going to make extra rice
tonight, pretty children, rulers
of the Universe — do you want to share?

If you don’t, no matter.
It’s a big world out there.  Bigger
than your Universe, and always hungry.


Squat Seduction

On a physical search for God or angel
or Satan or devil or some other entity
good or bad or indifferent to us.  

Looking
for transcendence
in an abandoned liquor store
behind the wasp-ruled chest cooler.  

Sitting
behind it, not caring for stings one bit, sucking
a pipe full of our last kind bud.  

Searching for God or angel
devil Satan Green Man
or just Not-A-Narc today, someone
just as smooth stony as the pipeful.  

Seek
and ye shall find — was that the Bible or was that
our school librarian who said that?

Spark it up, at any rate.
Looking for something deep,
for certain, in these ruins.

If the TV alien hunters are remotely
not crazy or greedhead hucksters
when they do the same
among mounds and pyramids,

who would say there might not be
extraordinary beings
here in Sully’s Wreck And Carry.  

Maybe the wasps are little
demigods.  

Maybe there’s a snake in the cracked walk-in,
the way there was in Eden, the way there was in the vacant house
on Gutter Road, the way there was

when sex was the way we were seeking the Beyond
before we got this weed.  

Maybe we ought to try that again.  Fuck our way
past the wasps and the crap on the floor
because God’s a squatter too, I bet.

I bet God and the Devil prefer ruins to churches
and sticky floors to clean holy beds.

I’m telling you, God’s got a pipe in his mouth, baby;
whatchoo got for mine so we can pray?


I Will Soon Begin Reading Borges Again

I will soon begin reading Borges again
and when I do I will wear dark clothes
and glasses, eat pork on rough bread,
smoke an unending series of bowls
of cheap tobacco from a cheap pipe.

I will soon resume reading Joyce 
but only in the spring and only upon
completion of the works of Borges.  
I shall wear a cloak, if I can locate
a store that sells cloaks.  A cloak and

a whiskeyflask cane.  A cloak and
thick soled shoes and a whiskeyflask
cane.  Yes.  I will soon resume reading
Borges, then Joyce.  And after that,
Djuna Barnes; then, Wallace Stevens,

and for Barnes and Stevens I will change
to a suit of seersucker, and I will not iron it
ever, even the shirt, even the hems; I will feed
on rumcakes and seedcakes and cupcakes
in public cafes, with my books tucked under my chair.

So: I will be done with reading
Borges and Joyce and Barnes and Stevens
soon enough. Then I will buy a home
and lie around naked and not read anything
I don’t want to read.  All those trappings

I affected while reading will be lost on me — I’ll admit
that I must have looked ridiculous. What the hell
were such books about, anyway?  If need be,
I will cleanse by dressing in sweats and reading John Grisham in French
while downing supermarket croissants till I pop. I won’t care who sees

my wide ass in the library when I am checking out
books on getting ahead in real estate and 
Stephen King and Patricia Cornwell — not their works, mind you;
books about their clothing and diet.  Clothes, it is said,
make the man, you are what you eat, and maybe

you are what you read.  Well, I don’t want to be anything anymore.
Want to be dumb, anonymous, devoid
of a reading list or its worsening symptoms.  Give up
the insistence on culture.  Gimme a burger, a roll in the hay,
a dead sleep on a dirty mattress.  Gimme an easy way to vanish.


NOTE: break in posting

A good friend and magnificient poet, Jack McCarthy, passed away yesterday after a long struggle with cancer.  I’m taking a couple of days off from posting to reflect.  Back soon.  

Thanks, all for understanding.


The Light Through The Pillars

I’m eating a bowl of good cereal
in the kitchen of a house with a model
of Stonehenge on the coffee table
in the living room.

In the back bedroom,
a tired but tender woman feeds a fawn
whose mother was killed by an 18-wheeler
this morning before dawn.

Outside and for miles around
the frozen ground assumes the role
of moat for this sanctuary.  Inside,
the air feels old, and careful.

If any were to appear here now
from Stonehenge’s stock, I think
they would recognize this light
as something they’d once seen through the pillars.


The Plan

TO BUY:

noose
gun + bullet(s)
pills/booze
knife
razor blade
plastic bag + duct tape
hose for exhaust  (too complicated/no garage)

don’t get worried
not doing anything dumb
just wanna arrange them all
in a semicircle
stand in the middle of it
point a finger at them
each of them for a long time
and laugh the whole time
and laugh 
and laugh
and laugh
and 
that’s how I walk
the edge 


Quantum Metaphysics, or, Should I Start Getting Dressed Now?

Until I look out the window,
it has not snowed, says
TV 9 meteorologist
Hal Schroedinger.

Or it has,
chirps up Hank “The Cat”
Stelling from the sports desk.

The wave form of the moment
collapses into a silver box which contains
your annoyance or lack thereof
as to whether or not you should
leave early for work based on
the weather.

Practical magic, you say, beats this
Doppler crap every time, as you pull back
the curtain over the window
above the driveway.

For the one moment
before you draw it away and reveal
what’s true

you wistfully consider
how much power
Hal’s cosmos offers
a schmuck like you.


Forever Away

This planet of ours
rolls so consistently
through its appointed rounds
we can easily forget
it is not itself
immortal
but will have an end date
long after our own.

When we realize
how little will likely be left
to remember us
on that day
we set upon it
tooth and nail, desperate
to make a permanent mark
of some sort.

Heh,
and really,
and oh please,
the earth responds.

By the time I’m old enough
to welcome my end
I will have smoothed you 
forever away.

 


You Have Three Minutes To Answer (revised)

Actual question from a test designed to assess creativity:  “Just suppose we had the power to transport ourselves anywhere in the world in the blink of an eye.  What would some benefits, problems, etc. of this power be?  You have three minutes to answer.”

first,

I would move
six inches away from here
and rewrite all my poems
as if I had always been
six inches away from here.

next,

I would move back to where I had been
and rewrite them again.
but they’d be so unlike
the originals
that it would be like starting over.

they’d likely all become haiku
and again I’d move
six inches away
to see how they looked after all that.

I’d think I’d end up
just moving swiftly
around the house.  desk to bed
to kitchen to shitter
to shower to desk to bed.
in every spare minute
I’d  be rewriting poems.

I think I’d end up crying a lot,
flashing to the bathroom for tissue
to weep into, then back to the desk.

I might burn the damn poems
then go buy some expensive paper in venice
and write them all again
even shorter.
one word
per pricey page.

six inches away from the desk.
back at the desk.
six inches away from the desk.
back at the desk.

not really sure how different it would be.

________________

note:  poem originally posted in July of 2010.  heavily revised here. 


Fairy Story

once upon a time

there lived a great brooding rock of a man
who cracked when he rolled down a slope
to reach the valley of water below his desert origin 

there lived a horseboy named skull
who drank and leaked through his open bones
all the way round his course

there lived a sheepgirl on fire
grateful to be warm
even as she bubbled and screamed 

we felt better about ourselves
because they were self-sacrificial
or something mythical like that

we asked them carefully
if they understood the words
happily ever after

that’s the wrong language for me
each of them said in turn
they all lived a bit more then hollered and died

we use stories about them
to be happy
now and then and ever after


Atmosphere

a descending series of chords
a chorus shouting “hoo”
a man speaking in rhythm
rhyming a bit
a touch of sing song

a target
hit repeatedly

it’s working
early in the morning
for me as a listener

this atmosphere where

all your secrets stay safe
all your liars will lay
all your stories are stains
on that mattress

I’m crying
in bed

how much do I like that guitar
I ask myself
I like it fine

how much do I want it to be
guitar and rhyme and not meaning
that’s getting to me

I like distance

I like a target
hit repeatedly
from a distance

this is working
I declare it
a good song
a target struck again and again

I swear I’m not listening to the words

— italicized lyrics from “Mattress,” by Atmosphere; from the album “Sad Clown, Bad Summer”
(listen to it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRcLFA0wW80)


American Corruptions

too much respect
for inside voice 
in places where
the outside voice
should be required
too much tolerance
of outside voice 
where inside voice
would work better

the swollen tissue
we call
money

entirely too much
unearned
self-esteem

the inability to see
complexity
patiently

the notion that 
any “_____ism”
isn’t holding steady

a lack of real eagles
married to 
a preference for symbolic ones

armored intensities
squared off

an insistence upon
picture perfection

laughter wrung
from the deadly misfortune
of others being other

its standing in red-soaked earth
kept wet through clumsy inattention
and skillful market research

its clowned remarkability
and
its durable packaging

 


What’s Next

the red hot dash down the library steps

the furtive skirting of the street —
back driveways
alleys
the railroad tracks

the slipping into the woods
the meeting by the old foundation
the mossbed

the shirt lifted over her head and put aside
the mutual enveloping
the mutual shedding of all else

the moment
and then the moment
after the moment

the wondering if and when 
the moment will come again

and then the last moment 
weeks later —

what’s next

except the start of
the repetiton of this sequence
more public and more cynical
for years to come

until the moment itself

is corrupted as a source
of pure hope and joy — 

so then in monogamy we say
what’s next
and in polyamory we say
what’s next
and in celibacy we say
what’s next

missing the newness and raw fear
that lived in the center of joy
that drove us to bed down on moss
under the afternoon sun
after school
praying for no one to see