Category Archives: poetry

Boy Obvious

I’m going to sleep now
having been called the Antichrist
by a man in the street

who pointed at me
in front of everyone
saying I had to be that

for the Antichrist
when he does wrong is feared
and when he does right

is assumed to be the Deceiver
and that’s you he said
that’s you boy oh Boy Obvious

I think of how often
I’ve done wrong or right
and how often I’ve been feared

and then blamed
Maybe it’s no more
than anyone else

but I think I feel it more
so I’m going to sleep off
the weight of my evil

Boy oh Boy Obvious
I’m the Antichrist to a crazy man
and to some guy in the street


Prayer For An Activist

Riding herd on the culture
gets old. You can’t keep up, that’s
rule one.  It’s not yours to
manage — physics runs a stampede,
there’s always one just getting started
or in full progress
or just ended and there’s always
blood in the dust after it’s done.
All you can do is ride alongside.
Nudge it a bit, spot
where it’s starting to turn,
join others
in pushing it that way, and hope,
always hope.

Fighting the good fight
gets old. You can’t keep up,
that’s rule one.  Biology
being the soft wet target it is,
your body will fail you at some point
and you’ll sink to the canvas
puzzled and convinced you can
still win.  You can’t win.  All you can do
is slow that demon across from you,
wreck him a bit, wait for time
to wear him out before you fall, and hope,
always hope.

Hope, always hope –
your own inner voice will tell you to ignore
every bit of advice and keep at it.
Mount up, square off, ride like crazy,
or keep swinging.  That’s what you do
even when all the tells suggest
there’s no hope to be had.

Hope, always hope.
It’s what the idiot saint inside you
promises each time you stretch out a hand
to comfort or guard or admonish or point out
a different way.  Hope, always,
is a dumb banner you’ll wave
no matter what you’re told,
won’t you —  because you are
that, of course, you
blessed, necessary fool.


Enough Of This

There’s no need
for me to be doing this
as others are already,
and there are a lot of them,
and they are proud of doing it,
and will tell you they do it,
and call themselves doers of it,
almost at the drop of a — beret?
baseball cap?  See how strong

the instinct is, the one that makes us
find the right word
and then crow about finding
the right words? There are a lot of us.
In fact I don’t know a soul
who has never written a poem.
There’s no need for me to be doing it

other than the selfish one within
that says I’m supposed to be doing this
and insists upon doing it even when
no one’s listening, reading, caring.
Even when every kid with a pen
has stopped listening, reading and caring;
even when every geezer is stubborn
and hung up on the Roberts,
Frost and Penn Warren;
even when I myself think this game
has lost its hustle and lustre —

still, though poetry has no need of me,
just like all these others
I am superficially convinced
of the general need for it,

even as
inside,
I am deeply afraid
of my need for it.


Under The Pear Tree

Remember?

The pear tree.
The fallen fruit.
The July sun.
The sweet heavy smell.
The yellowjackets
drunk on the ferment.

Their sound as you bent
close to observe.
The need to touch.
The reaching down in trance —

then the sudden snap up and
the running, the crying.
You are six years old
and stung —

remember?

Remember how, long after that,
you could not be drunk again
like you were at six, drunk
on simply being with the world,
on seeing and hearing the world?


No Better

It gets
no better
than this.

We’re toasty warm!  Lovely
furnishings, good food
and drink,

all justified by 
how awful the outside world
appears to be — how dare

they!  When we raise our 
pinkies, they raise theirs;
they laugh whenever we do.

We are so not like them, 
just outside, doing what we do
as we do it — not like them —

mocking us,
imitating us 
so badly, anyone can see

how utterly unlike
each other we are.
Why, they are even saying

the same things about us
out there, but of course,
the accent is all wrong

and see, the light strikes
their skin differently — such
sad imitations — wait, at last

I’ve come up with
a way this world 
could be better:

empty their hollow
information out.  
They are nothing

like us.  They are nothing
like us.  Nothing.  Don’t listen
as they try to insist otherwise.


Evangelical Spanish

Before dawn,
the room’s flooded
with evangelical Spanish
from the radio.

No music.  Pure preaching.
The only words I catch
in his rapid flow are
“contigo” and “alleluia.”

Rise, fall,
whitewater ecstasies
and imprecations
soak the morning

in splashes from
a torrent
rinsing away
my unholy dreams.


Senses

She says
her vision trumps
her hearing.
She would rather be
deaf than blind.

I don’t wish either fate
for you, I respond.
Why would you
want to discuss this?
Why start
our relationship
here?

Isn’t every relationship
a case of constantly deciding
which senses to trust,
and which to disregard,
she asks?

Why not
just start
by admitting it
and going
into that void
together?

Hard to argue
with someone
who smells like
silence, darkness,
and roses.


Comparative Religion

In my Good Book
a lot is left to imagination.

You attach a tag called “faith”
to every stone and garbage can.

For you, belief is as percussive
as a bowling ball fired through those trashcans.

Is that racket what you call your Creator?
I’ve heard worse, smaller names.

I cannot imagine the depth
of such bomb crater hymns.

It’s not up to me to police
the rituals you choose.

It’s not up to me to pretend
I believe in everything at once.

A deity as certain and as loud as yours
demands you frame your devotion in steel.

I’m more of a water man
enslaved to a God with little rigidity.

Who gets to say which is the right one?
Each of us.  Each deluded one of us.


Bear Weather

In frog weather,
leap and splash.
In crow weather,
flock and caw.
In squirrel weather,
hurtle along bare wood;
in bear weather,
sleep long, sleep well.

That’s all.
All you need to know
to live around here
and fit in.

You could resist,
try each spirit on
out of turn
to prove you
are not subject to
the tried and true…
bah! As if we haven’t
already spent millenia
incorrectly.

It’s a deep cold day —
bear weather.
If you find you still need
the frog,

dream of it.


Before Abstraction

Your hand
on a mug
of morning tea
brewed to be
as strong as coffee.

Pins and needles
up your arm.

You want to speak
of aging, of decay,
of survival
against decay, or even 
of late growth?  
Start here

with the importance
of the tea,
the jolt you sought
upon waking.  
Continue with how
the pains
in your arm
don’t alarm you
this morning,
how the pain
in your face
is at last invisible.

You don’t even know
why you get up
in the morning 
most days,
but you always do,
and you always
drink something
to start the day:
a mug of strong tea.

A strong cup of tea,
two bags, minimal milk,
a touch of sweetener.
The bitter edge
from nearly oversteeping it,
the tiny triumph
of knowing how close
you came,
the first sip that confirms
you can live with it.

You can live with it.
You have and you will.
The only way to live:
touch something,
feel something, trust 
the weight of it
in your hand, and
don’t speak of it
or its lessons
too soon.


Resolve

Coronary, my constant friend,
stay over there — as much as I know
you’d like to give me 
what I’ve said for years
I most desired,
I need to do that for myself
in my own time.

Diabetes, new comrade,
stay at arm’s length — 
while you’ve been hiding for a while now,
only just introduced yourself,
I am determined
not to get to know you well
as you intend to rob me of
what I stubbornly prefer
to discard on my own.

And you, seesaw brain,
tipping point mood –as much as I 
have gained from our grappling,
I am weary of it and 
you need to back off.  What I’ve said
of you for years has turned out to be
too true — you’ll let me win a day or a week
in order to slam me for a month,
and I’ve lost all respect.
I’m nothing to be toyed with,
can crush myself better and more solidly
than you can.

Just you watch.  
I am the master of
my fate, the whatever of my whatever;
when I’m on, I’m on;
when I decide to be off,
I will be off
and there’s not an ill friend in the world
who can do better for me
than I can do for myself.


Teacup Blaze

You’re such a 
compact little bonfire,

I want to put you
in the cup of my hands

and hold you
though I’ll be burned.

Hold you out of 
the rain and snow.

Hold you from sunset
to sunset again.

Even a little heat 
is welcome,

and yours
is no little heat.

Even the charring
is a cleansing thing,

and the healing that follows
is all your doing too.

You’re such a 
teacup blaze,

I want to drink from you
and stay warm for years and years.


Ahead Of The Storm

Waiting for the storm to begin
out there in the dark,
the cat charges around and around,
knocking things over, 
breaking my sleep.

I get up and ask her what’s wrong.
I never learn the answer,

but she drops to the ground,
rolls over and takes a belly scratch
without attempting
to tear my hand apart for once.

We’re in this together,
she seems to say.  What’s coming
is going to be long and difficult.
Take time with me, I’ll offer
some time of my own to you.

She got up on the fridge to sleep.
I’m still awake an hour later,
chasing something around and around,
something I can’t seem to catch.

I turn to the cat  for advice — damn,

where’d she go?
Can’t hear her in the house anywhere,
not above the noise of the storm
rising outside.

Only one thing to do now — wait.
Lie down, try to get back to sleep.
Maybe she’ll be here on the bed
in the morning.


Person Of The Year

A story of a God-man
who washed the feet of 
disciples tangled with

a story of a man of God
who then washes the blood
from the hands of perpetrators.

A story of millions falling
for a humble face, then
onto stakes in a pit at the bottom.

A story…yes.  A story.
A cover story
about shift and progress.

Person of the year,
welcome to the rest
of the story: once upon a time

there were whispers,
and if there is
happily ever after,

it will likely
not include
you.


This Packing Crate, Also A Home, Cradles A Vision

I’m a something, a something elsewhere
extraterrestrial thought with alien hair
and left-behind giggle, with cigarette jump
pulse back digger religion,
forgiven game pack smoke rider
on a warp plane to the back door.

If I understood a whiskey scented minute
of the identity I’ve lifted from the cookie truck,
if I were enough of a problem to organize
a solution for, if I had a wallet
thicker than a hippo tongue, thyroid lover
bankroll, meaning infested puppy guy —

it would be easier being me, not the wet sand
of the sidewalk, the knife wheel gyroscope
on some fascinating spin journey, musical daybed,
artist bathroom flush with potential mates,
crystal mythology partner, priest of the hole
in the pocket, small dirty lord of the problematic;

if I were something somewhere elsewhere,
something, not a me, not a him or her,
an I with an I with star eyes.  If I were that,
would be geared up and mechanical, queenery,
kingmaker wigmaker, trying to stay alive as I do,
as I will…or I would if I were elsewhere.