Tag Archives: meditations

State Of The Union

If all the fattened cats curled upon
all the worn coverlets
in all the overheated apartments
of all the slight and slighted folks
in this rundown town
were to be asked what they thought
of how bountifully 
they were living,

most would speak of it with approval;

those who did not
would admit only to a mild unease
about it ending suddenly someday
with the passing of 
the old folks who stroke them pensively
while staring out the window
at the cold.

What will happen then,
they would ask,
suspending their purring
for a few seconds of soft blinking
into the questioner’s eyes

before falling back into sleep.


The Rider

Originally posted 9/9/2014.

Crashing a motorcycle through a window twenty stories up,
plummeting to the ground below — that’s the way to go; 
so much implied backstory, so much obvious preparation.

Strangers unable to mourn such a whacked-out demise
would nonetheless be talking about it for days, 
and those who loved the Rider

would wonder in their sorrow if indeed this was the best way
to go, if this was indeed the obvious final arc
for someone following their bliss to its logical conclusion.

Every death by diving from on high
makes at least one person wonder:
what if they had landed on someone?

Someone else always wonders,
what if they had found themselves able to fly?
Would they have changed their mind?

Imagine putting in all that work toward dying
only to learn that you won’t die that way.
Imagine watching the bike fall away from under you 

as you rise, hover, begin to consider your options,
begin to imagine what those options
could possibly be.


Synergistic Strategies For The Workspace Of The Future

It’s been said
there are no boring moments
Only boring people

That’s a good way to shut up those
who find their moments
impoverished by dull palaver
droning on
and on

It’s said that
if you enjoy what you do
you’ll never work a day in your life

That’s a good way to shut up those
who only shovel shit for others
in order to pay for 
what they need
to live

It’s said that work
should be a game
A time to play

That’s a good way to shut up those
who won’t play the game
as they know
how well
it’s been rigged

It’s said that groups
brainstorm better 
than individuals

That’s a good way to shut up those
whose genius
at standing apart and listening 
makes them suspect
to those who chatter

It’s been said and said
and said again
that work’s about bliss

That’s a good way
to make you feel guilty
about hating the job
that makes you feel
smaller and smaller

with every buzzword
laid upon you like a hammer
until you shut up and die
nodding your assent 
to your own slow execution


Broken Sparrows

A trail of broken sparrows
across a clearing

What small expression
of horror is this

string of soft bodies strewn
like tender remarks

that mean nothing and
in retrospect are fearsome

Heap of fresh broken sparrows
at trail’s end — so fresh

flies haven’t found them
yet

Must be some
rationale for it

Not your fault
for finding it but

as it is no longer
unknown it is possible

you will now carry that contagion
(if contagion was cause) or 

that madness (if madness
instead created that path of

tiny corpses) out of these woods
When you speak of it to others

(and you will for it is too much
to contain with silence)

it will spread and soon
your fellows will be 

a similar heap
of broken sparrows

if they aren’t already
halfway there without your help

Soon you’ll be alone
surrounded by those piles

You’ll wander among them
Pluck small brown plumes from them

Make a cloak of them
Try to fly

Succeed and with regret
Declare yourself Sparrow God

Weep for lost masses even as you
exalt in sunlight soaring

above trees and clearings
Above it all having cobbled together

a divinity from tragic mystery
still unsolved and you say

So shall it be in this 
Paradise Legacy Of 

Heaps Of Broken Sparrows
Who Died So There Might Be Flight

Who Must Have Died 
Strictly For That


The Pathology

The pathology is not
that they’ve taken to
listening to the earth and
taking what it says
into consideration; 

the pathology is in those
who stopped listening long ago
and now 
cannot hear.

The pathology is not
in what he calls himself,
is not in what she says 
you should call her,
or in how they ask you
to hold your tongue
for one minute
while they’re telling you 
these things;

the pathology is in
how you don’t listen,
or don’t care, or suggest
they’re wrong about
those names.

The pathology is not
in the ones hearing a call,
waking up,
and starting to move.

The pathology is in
the ones sleeping through
all of this — is in

thinking that’s just
a clock
sounding off
when in fact
it’s a fire alarm.


Quiet

Let’s be very quiet
this year — no words.

If there’s an answer called for,
let our askers wait for it.

If they insist,
we should walk away.

If we cannot walk away,
let’s stare back without a sound

and watch them wriggle
in their seats,

trying to figure out 
how they’ll get by

without us engaged
in answering only

the questions 
they choose.

So many questions
and answers

remain unheard,
including our own;

let’s be very quiet.
Let’s listen to those.

Let’s be quiet.
There have been

enough words from us;
anything we need to say is

already out there
on the wind.  In the air.

On the sidewalks.
In the streets. In the spaces

between their questions
and their desired answers.


2016

Here’s to you,
obvious minefield.

Here’s to you, dark clouds
and silver 
lightning. 

Here’s to your reputation,
established before you begin —

but also to your falling in love again
with possibility.  

Here’s to where you stand on today
today, here’s to stepping up

to a stand you’ll take tomorrow
for tomorrow.

Here’s to your yesterday. 
May it be yesterday. May it stay yesterday;

may it remind and inform but never,
ever repeat.


Questions

Is there something else
I should do?

Is there someone else inside me
whose shadow I glimpse now and then?
Someone so different
from who I think I am that in fact
it’s a new person or an old one,
and I do not know a thing about them,
someone utterly not what I am?

Is there something else
I should do?

What work is there to do
that is not being done better
by others, work I cannot do
because I would only be in the way
of those doing it?

Is there something else
I should do?

Should I be turning the Work
over to the person inside
who is not me, or to a person
outside who is not me?

Is there something else
I should do?

Will there ever be a poem
from my pen 
that does not include 
a question?  Will there ever be
a day that does not include
the nagging sense of there being
a question I haven’t asked
that I should ask, its answer
notwithstanding;

is there something else
I should do?

Is there a question
I should be asking, one
that I can’t answer ever,
one where
the pursuit of the answer
is all there is?

If anyone thinks this poem
is about writing poetry — should I 
disabuse them of the notion?
Should I strike them or laugh
as I flee from them, or

is there something else
I should do?


Praise Song For The End

Praise today for the pancreas 
that’s killing me, for the blood
unbalanced, for the ache
in my right knee that thwarts
me, for the hairs that won’t stay
in my head, leaping out like rats 
who know the score;
praise them all for doing
exactly what they should be doing
in my disrepair; there’s nothing wrong here
that a good old grave won’t cure;
really, there’s no other cure
for what drives it all; I can manage
and maintain and stave off and 
fleetingly deny, but in the end 
there is only the End, so praises
for the End, here’s to settling in for it,
here’s to how I am now slowed
to think and feel differently
as this body slows and shifts; 
praise for the acceptance of this age,
praise for the acceptance of this fight
as ultimately futile
yet worth every stroke and blow I land
as a tribute to how much I have loved
and fiercely pursued love and life
in all the years
of damage I’ve done to myself;
praise to that wounded, bloated game-piece
I call my body, with its hitman organs,
its fatal surges of desire and satisfaction;
praise to how this all is closing down
over a long time, giving me so much
to consider, to savor,
to curse, to praise.


Thanks Joe

There he is again: Local
Joe, Can And Bottle Picker,
wound up in scarves and
old parka with patches, gray
shapeless hat like a pudding
on his head, fingerless gloves,
his fingers dark with labor, coming
gingerly down the icy street from
recycle bin to recycle bin seeking
his livelihood as he does each
Wednesday, Thursday if the week
contains a Monday holiday.
I say hello if our paths cross
as I’m taking my stuff to the curb,
let him know if there’s anything in my bins
worth his time, ask if he’s been beaten
to the spoils this week by the Maxima Couple,
so-called because of the late-model Maxima
they drive from bin to bin, the man getting out
at each stop to pick the bin as she waits for him
staring straight ahead and neither
ever talks back when I say hello — not like
Local Joe who’s friendly and non-defensive,
matter of fact, after all this is business, this
industry of walk and pick, walk and pick,
and he never has a bad word to say about 
the Maxima Couple who get me riled up
over what looks like their unwillingness
to defer to those who provide for them,
their choice not to provide me
with the kind words and 
warm feelings I get from Joe
who appears appropriately grateful
at all times; thanks, Joe,
you make my trash day complete,
see you next week.


Gawking At Ruins

When gawking at ruins
in far off lands, when taking

photos of them and of 
the picturesque locals

for your collections,
please remember

that each person you see
is in their own way also a ruin:

beautiful, vital and worthy
of attention and respect

from you, still here and surviving
right where they were placed,

yet still a ruin
in terms of not being today

what they might have become if,
too often, armies and generations

of people like your own had not come
and swept all before them 

into collections
of their own.


Transcendentalism

Margaret Fuller
Transcendentalist
once said
“I accept the Universe”
to which 
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Transcendentalist
replied
“Gad! She’d better!”
I would have made
a lousy Transcendentalist
under such a
thought regime
When it comes to the Universe
I accept that it’s here
and that I’m in it but I suspect
acceptance of this is part
of an elaborate trap
to keep me blissed out
You can tell me otherwise
but right now I’m thinking
of other names for it
and other ways it should be
and how it might be best blown up
and refashioned
I don’t accept it as is
and Fuller and Emerson
(who for all their talk of justice
and suchlike seem to have done
more talking about than fighting for
the best possible Universe)
can do what they do best and
go take a hike

in the Utopian woods
out on the edge of this city
that is a part of the Universe
that is a part of my Universe
that is a wobbling wheel
of broken spokes and worn hub
and tread that can’t catch a grip
on the filthy blood and toxic sludge
that’s rising everywhere

that gets on everything
that is impossible and immoral
for me
to willingly transcend
without making an effort
to actively reject it 
and expel it from 
this Universe


Husk

When I was a whale
I met many other whales,
so many other whales;
I traveled and fed
and spoke and sang
with so many other whales.

Then the rebirth wheel turned
and we are all humans,
somehow; perhaps human is
a required level
where all whales go 
when they die;
all I know is that
I’ve dried out into this husk 
of my once immersed self,

trapped in thoughts
of swimming
as we all once did
through dark and light, through
polar cold and tropical warmth,
submerged for long hours,
emerging to breach now and then
and singing, always singing.

I’ve tried to keep some of that alive 
in this shrunken afterlife,
seeking out those who still sang,
those who still found moments
to breach and dive
where and when they could,
but it has not been easy;

perhaps the lesson
of this level is that 
it is not natural
to have to work so hard
to find a song
in the day to day
and then to sing it,
and we should
never have taken it
for granted.


In Bear Moment

Clarity’s a Bear
walking
on dark soil,

paws
clearly
finding their way,

sure footed,
slow,
direct

in spite of
twists and 
dips in the Path.

Now then: you may follow 
the Bear safely
from a distance

using only its tracks
in the Earth,
or

get closer to it
and be less certain
of yourself, 

your safety, 
how far you have to go.
You will be

in Bear moment,
where Clarity has its 
dangers — but

what rewards,
what rewards from 
being there.


First The Dustpan

“Don’t be afraid of breaking.
Remember, a broken window doesn’t
need to be opened.”

This is how I am greeted
by the daily mail —
with a well-meant and empty platitude

that makes me laugh and rage
about how much else is true 
of a broken window.

I put my head down in my covers
and start a list in response:
remember,

a broken window is not
to be trusted — you can get cut that 
way, you could put an eye out

with a shard from a broken window. A broken
window lets in all manner of pests
and danger.  A broken

window is an excuse for cops to 
enter your life.  A broken window
is the natural track of a brick,

a bullet, a flash-bang, a grenade,
a Molotov cocktail.  A broken window
is a thief of heat and safety.

A broken window makes a sound 
once — it cries out upon being born
and then all you hear after that

is a voice poured through it, a voice
not its own, function of wind
or rain or distress.

A broken window may never
have been meant to be opened.
It may have been a poor church’s

lone glory, or the last line of defense 
for a shivering soul. A broken window
is evidence of a violent change

and you don’t know
what led to it;
maybe you could try helping out

with a dustpan and broom
before offering a philosophy
lesson? Help clean it up. Help.