Monthly Archives: June 2015

Meet The New Boss

I know neither song nor band
on the radio right now —
thank you, Universal Mind,
for New Boss.

This book, this building,
this line of argument, this
theme under review — thanks be
for the New Boss, for pushing

classic rock and kid cartoons
hard away from the tenuous hold of my
weakening brain cells. Thank you
for my hatred of nostalgia 

as a way of life, for never believing
the old days were better when they were
clearly just more days of bad and good, as
at least within my memory things

are both better and worse
and exactly the same as ever,
and much of what my peers hold sacred
seems now as dumb 

as all the old stuff we once sneered at.
Nothing’s original, really.  Not even
this thought’s original.  Especially not 
this thought, perhaps; there’s someone

out there in an office who counts on that
to grease the palms of all those they serve;
they count on the spiral turning back
upon itself and the Old becoming New again,

all the better to sell the Old
as better than New to some
and the New to Others as so much better
than the Old, when in fact it’s all

the Same — it’s all the Same:
the sales pitch, the hook set, the smile
behind the salesforce veil.  Knowing that,
I still thank you for the New Boss, Universe, the New

that isn’t New.  At least I’ve got Hope,
as false as it is, that I’m not Old myself
as long as I think for a second that things
might change. I’ll take whatever Hope I can get — 

but you knew that, of course.


How To Survive A Poetry Slam

Originally posted 8/13/2011.

How can you deal with it
being so loud?

Recall all the times
you went unheard.

It seems, sometimes,
that the words form
a powerful flood.
What is there to do

when you’re drowning in it?

Recall how the air
you pull into your chest
when you break surface
is cleaner and fresher
for having been riled.

But they use so many words!
How are you supposed to hear them all?

Recall your toys,
how they each got time
from you in turns.
Move yourself among the words
in the same loving way.

It seems, sometimes,
that the passion overpowers
the poetry.  How then
do you worship the craft?

Recall the difference
between rock and roll
and jazz, how each
trips a different trigger,
how one moves hips,
stomps, rags on the moment;
how the other snaps toes and 
fingers, lifts the head
and arcs the back.  
One does not do
what the other does
and each suits its time.

But it seems sometimes
that it’s been said before,
sometimes right before.
How do you 
tell the difference?

Recall that hearing
the story of Cain and Abel
once
has not stopped fratricide.

Are you saying it’s all
a matter of memory?

It is all a matter of memory.

Recall the campfires,
the hunt and the chase,
the grief and joy

of how new we were once.
How thankful we became
upon simply teaching our tongues
to speak of this —

every time it is new to a new listener;
every time, long memory lodges in one ear
as it goes out another.

But even after all that,
it seems so 
overwhelming, so unnecessary…

Remember the first thing
I told you,
that you should recall
what it was to be
unheard?
What part of being human
is so lost to you
that you should feel
so uncomfortable
in the presence
of a need
such as this?