Monthly Archives: July 2025

The Words

Here are the words to the poem.

They don’t sound like words, though.
They are sounds that sound like words,
but they do not share their meanings easily.
So how can one call them words?

A bird makes sounds like this.
A sword carries meaning on its edge
like those birds carry their sound.
Neither sounds like a word,
but they are understood.

These are the words, the sounds.

Have understanding
without the words.
The sword has a meaning,
as do the birds.

They don’t need the words.

~~~~~~~~~~~

T


Apparently So

Cat is asleep in the spare room.
Today is perfect, hot,
bright, and boring as hell.
I am tired still, five hours
awake, fed lightly, no drinks,
tired — did I say that? Yes,
I said that —

do I repeat myself? Yes,
apparently so.

Cat stretches
and spins, goes back to sleep
in the same spot she has been in
all morning, spins around to be
exactly the same as she has been

and the day is hot, bright, boring
as hell, hotter than hell too;

I am ready to sleep in the same place
I was in before I rose — did I do that?
Yes, apparently so. I can’t help
where I sleep, where I slept.

Cat keeps on sleeping as she has been
since before I got up five hours ago

and this day feels like all the others
except I’m aware of it and of my blood
on the pillow — just a small spot,
minute even, from the smaller wound
on my face where I scratched it
unconsciously in sleep. Cat

is still asleep ten minutes later
and this day is still hot and bright
and I’m aware of my bleeding
now being over, until the next time,
the next time I bleed apparently,

with the cat sound asleep and the day
not hotter — cooler even.

I’m not sure how I will ever
get to sleep again.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
T


Threes

Wind, gale force
but tiny, lasting
less than a minute,

three seconds at most,
raising alarm for
just that long.

Three people
— a poet, a television star,
a rock star enfeebled

by age and illness —
die and make the news
unlike thousands,

ten thousand others,
who die unnoticed
except for the people

who know them.
It always comes
in threes —

three seconds of wind,
three seconds of notable dying,
three seconds of seeing and feeling

what is happening,
at least for me. It always
comes in threes:

things I notice.
I hold my breath waiting
for more, every time.

They happen, of course.
Thousands
of things happen.

I shake myself free
of wind, of deaths,
of counting.

In three seconds
there will be more.
Four, five…many more;

I fall into it,
close my eyes,
wait.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
T



Wet

All day long
the wind still blows
all over the sky,
and I am powerless
to change things like that —

try to change the sky,
I say; I dare you. Try to make
the rain shift

and you and I will both
get wet, both of us
ending up soaked
to the skin under our
clothes.

The rain doesn’t care,
so why should I? Let it

fall, let it pour like
cold coffee,
let it drop its astringent
mercy on the impatient
folly of the folks below

like me, like you;
let it wash away any hope
left to us to think about.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
T


Idle Speculation

A poem or a footprint —
ground beneath either one
shakes and forms around its edge,
its rim of influence.

What if it’s
a bad poem? What if it is
a toxic print, made by someone
who had evil intent?

No matter — a bad poem
will erase itself, lifting itself
as if it had been made
on one of those magic erase boards —

raise the clear skin,
it vanishes.

No matter — a poisoned print
will wear down, become
one with clean earth —
any trace of it will disappear.

As will I,
one day. Perhaps soon.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
T


A note

My thanks to those who have commented here lately. You boosted my spirits during a rough time regarding my involvement with poetry in particular and life in general.

Again, many thanks. If I don’t see you, just know I heard you.

T


Strawberries In The Fridge

I ate the last of the strawberries
from a red bowl in the refrigerator.

Couldn’t have been more than
four teaspoons; unsweetened,

lumpy from improper processing
but still perfectly good, even without sugar.

I don’t remember doing this. I know
I did it — the evidence is there,

or rather is not there; it’s hard to recall this
action or string of actions. I don’t recall

the taste, just the record of tasting.
I don’t recall the washing of the bowl,

but it is back in the cupboard and clean
so I must have done so, though I have

no memory, not even a fragment.
It is like this now:

a moment is taken before an act;
blank time fills in the spaces;

I recall none of it, just
the clouds before the time,

and even that is uneven, irregular,
full of nothing. All I know

is that I ate the strawberries from the bowl
and washed the bowl after I was done

and it happened sometime in the morning
after something horrendous happened elsewhere

and I was part of neither occurrence,
was just present here and my memory

has let them both go. I’ll have to read
the news for the latter, if I choose to;

I will never recall the former even if
I try. I do try and try. And then I let it go.

But the bowl was red, I think.
The berries were red as well.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
T


Snapshot Sunday Morning

Two women talk
about sustainable climate change
and the like on the radio
and never tell a story
about what it might be like
in that world
with details or facts

The house next door to mine
is tidy and blue with
a chain link fence and signs for
private property and stay off
while the kids play
now and then
briefly
in the clean edged yard

Out in front of my place
there is a pair of huge bushes
with white and lavender flowers
running riot and bees and
a sparrow deep inside
now and then

I sit inside
the house next door
with failing feet and
a fucked up arm and
uncontrollable sorrow

If I had my way
I would tear this building down
with not a solitary nod
to fearful tidiness
or even a concrete story
about holding it close
and warm
till the flowers fell off
and another season came in
again

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
T


Last chapbook

Well…my chapbook, “Mercy And Bullets,” is out. Free to take — either PDF or eBook. Or both, if you like. There won’t be another one. So, there you go.

Don’t foresee writing new poems much. It’s time to give that up.

My last effort will be to try and find someone to publish my volume of past poetry, “In A High Wind.” As if someone wants to read it as poetry, as if it’s not just a curiosity for someone to buy and then pat me on the head, saying: “Aw, nice job…” and then put it back on the shelf to admire till it gathers dust.

Do I sound bitter? I don’t mean to, and I am sorry if I come off that way. But I’ve changed a lot in the past year and a quarter since the strokes, which profoundly altered the way I see myself and the Work. It’s enough that I did it, and if it is read, then I am grateful; if it is not and I fade from memory, that’s OK as well. Really.

At any rate…enjoy the time you have left. I will.

onward,
T

PS: fuck Trump.


Blue Haze

Blue haze: smoke
veiling a wall of trees.

It makes no difference
to most people. To most
it’s just part of the fabric.
The message is,

pay it no mind, we’ve got
things to do. We’ve got
places to go, people
to see, to speak to
.

An eagle — rather, a large bird
of some mystery — scours
from a height.

People don’t see it —

with their places to go,
their people to speak to;
they are already taken up
on wings of metal, of fiberglass,
and each one waits to fall
into a blue haze
that will take them in
and render the worry useless.

All the time
blue smoke hangs
motionless, and
an eagle hangs still
in this final morning
of a world.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
T
7/8/2025


Sitting

Sitting very quietly at home
with reams of paper, with
insurance policies and
retirement requirements,
examining and judging
all the cheery pictures
of older folks looking happy
and serene with their choices.

I am also sitting
very quietly at home
in pain but not in pain, sad but
not sad, confused beyond it all
with a jumble of thought
in my surfeit of damaged brain.

All the time
the bushes out front
sit not as quietly
brushing against the windows
while a mockingbird across the road
tells her story over and over
like a mystery I need
to solve on this stunning day.

My eyes close, stroke-shuttered
and weary as the country,
demanding more from this land
than I have borne.

I am finally old and
realize
there’s something
in the voice of a bird
that I must listen to
from my own silence.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
onward,
T


Wringing Out My Head

At home I wring out
my hands, my head.

I wring them out flat and
dry them crispy afterward.

My hands you may understand
but why my head, you ask?

I have to dry my head
to keep the tears from being seen.

I have to dry my head
to keep the flies off the pools of sweat.

Little must anyone know
of what my head has become.

I need to keep the maggots off.
My hands don’t matter so much, of course.

Everyone’s got maggots on their hands
these days, what with all the casual death.

With all the casual need to pick up
the bodies from the street.

With all the nonchalance
with which we try to keep things tidy.

The people choose how they want things to look.
I know it doesn’t matter that much.

But my head they have to look at.
My eyes are on fire and focused.

My head needs to be seen for one brief shot.
They need to be shaken up, out of the stupor.

Out of the chill of the still damp hands.
Into the fever of the freedom-knowing brain.

So I wring my head out until it’s paper dry
and ready to be set ablaze.

I will be gone then.
Maybe they will follow me in flames.

Flames of red, white, blue.
Flames that burn down this — this thing.

I won’t be here to see it.
But someone will. Someone certainly will.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
onward,
T


Morning Beckons Farm

The President is
an asshole, his staff
clueless or evil, the Congress
is about the same, most
of my neighbors are either
complacent or cheering or
frightened of the sneering
cops —

all I’ve got
is this soft chair, these
major aches and profound
memory issues –can’t think
more than a few minutes
into the past or future —

don’t get old, kids,
don’t age or have strokes
or just find yourself waiting
to die — think of the years
you’ve got left and surprise
yourself that you might have
more like this full of fog —

except you may have
one memory like mine
to hold on to, one
remainder of a past.

I think of alpacas,
alpacas en masse
gently swarming me
and snuffling my open hand
for pellets of feed, their lips
working assiduously, their teeth
never touching me, then serenely
(as if nothing had happened)
moving away, the occasional
young one still following for
a few steps as I move away
as the bulk of the flock does;

does this feel like home to them
as it does not to me?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
onward,
T