The guns. I want
the guns.
First the knives and then
the guns.
All the guns.
All of them,
and then the bombs.
The ships after that,
maybe the planes, and that
might be enough.
Knives for the close-by,
guns for the intermediate, bombs
for the absentee moments,
missiles and planes
and gunboats to project
what I cannot
do with my own hands.
And thinking now
of what one can do
with computers
and with banks, I need
some of those too.
Knives, guns, bombs,
missiles, planes, ships,
computers, banks,
markets, stocks,
lies, half-truths,
statistics,
money, money, money,
myths of social constructs
and colorblind generations,
flags, elections,
eclectics, stories, art, music,
schools that bind hands
to the will of other hands.
I want all the guns
because the tears
haven’t helped, the words
and songs haven’t helped,
the simple reach of saying
this is wrong has never helped.
I want guns
to weight the lifelines
I need to throw
because that flood
of everything else that’s arrayed against me
is rising
and though I understand
what a gun does
far better than you do,
I want them anyway because
there seems to be
so little else
I do understand
about what it takes these days
to win and not lose,
to not starve or despair,
to not drown,
not burn,
not die.
Tag Archives: poems
Power Tools
Family
families eat together
and they may starve together
if there’s nothing to eat
but they will not starve alone
if you’re starving alone
come sit down and be
part of
my family
we don’t have much
but we can’t afford
to be stingy with
generosity
families need
more than just food
to be healthy
they must be open to allowing
what they hold among themselves
to flow away
trusting that one day
it will flow back
therefore son or daughter
brother, sister, cousin
in spite of any other blood you carry
I declare that you are my family
so sit and eat and drink
rest and weep
or laugh in relief knowing
you’re home now
The Right Answers
Whenever Universe asks me,
after I’ve stubbornly
resisted its direction,
“Did I stutter?”
the right answer for me
always is
“Yes,” because I find
it always does stutter
and shade its suggestions
before getting straight on making
a clear demand of me,
possibly (I’d like to think) because
it hopes it doesn’t have to
make a clear demand of me
and hopes that this time
I’ll get it in spite of the subtlety —
and sometimes I do
but sometimes I don’t,
which leads to Universe
leaning into me
and asking,
“DID I STUTTER?”
and here we are again,
here we both are,
back at the beginning.
I always speak the truth
to Universe
while praying it does not
smite me
for my honesty,
though it smites me
for my honesty
more often than not.
That’s the right answer too,
as it was
back at the beginning
of the beginning, as it likely
always shall be.
A Failure
A failure picks up
a few scraps from his wreckage
and puts them into his bag.
When he gets home
he tosses them onto
the kitchen table.
Tries to explain
where they once fit,
how they once
meant something, but
“you had to be there.”
There was nobody there
then, of course. There’s
nobody there now either.
He’s talking to nobody
about a disaster nobody
cares about. He’s become
the mainstream media —
in the story, he bleeds
so he leads and no one
even notices because his blood’s
as thin as water. As thin
as excuses and histrionics,
as thin as the wind that’s
gone out of him. He stops talking.
Puts the pieces back in the bag.
Goes to bed. Doesn’t dream a thing.
Going To Wait
A gun, a mouth,
a hot farewell.
A moment on the lips
and then,
the long missing begins.
After it’s done — in
less than a split
of a second of noting
the start of the roar of
the gun —
after it’s done
is there anything? Regret,
joy? Release, terror, a welcome
blankness?
Insatiable curiosity
is not enough to take me
there and fear is barely enough
to keep me here. I tug
and am tugged but I am
going to wait.
In This Way Is Disco A Form Of Blues
Originally posted 10/5/2012.
Sylvester on the radio sings,
“…YOU MAKE ME FEEL MIGHTY REAL…”
Sylvester is dead. For real.
God only knows how real he now feels.
I am not dead
but I will be sooner rather
than later,
for real. Getting comfortable with that
is my number one job these days;
I wish I was mighty ready
to be alone in the night with it.
When people danced to this
back in Old School
they often danced hand in hand
with Mighty Real Death;
it is in this way
that disco
is a form of blues.
Wish I was ready to dance naked and alone
in the kitchen RIGHT NOW,
but I am neither mighty enough
nor real enough yet,
so back to bed I go to write about realness,
like a damn fool —
because this is not
how one should die,
flat on a fat ass,
on a bed,
banging a laptop.
“…YOU MAKE ME FEEL MIGHTY REAL…”
This will have to do
until the day when
I finally find myself
dancing into a mirror,
pointing at the sad sack
I’m dancing with, the dance partner
I’ve had all my life, the one
pointing back at me from the mirror,
each of us laughing this song
out of our terrified mouths
as loudly as we can:
“…YOU MAKE ME FEEL…MIIIIGHTY REAL…”
and not stopping
until we fall.
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?
Millworker
Tall brick halls echo
every small sound, longing
for how loud it used to be.
Oily floors full of holes,
the spaces where bolts
that held looms
once fitted.
That’s all done now.
The mills are hollow;
some go condo, some
become business centers
full of small hopes, some
crumble away or burn down.
I grew up in a town
full of these,
a New England town
haunted by ghosts
from its woolen mills.
Remembering the scent
of the dirt and oil
and the rattlebang nature
of every shift; remembering
long wool-laden walks
pushing through the boiling air
in the card rooms
and dye rooms; the dark docks
where the raw wool came in
and the blankets went out.
The sub-basements full of rats
and stink and stories of men
who went in as children and
came out only rarely. Upstairs
their wives and girlfriends, their daughters
and widows, spun the carded wool,
filled the bobbins, built the warps
the looms would then eat
and shit out as fabric.
I was there for a while —
a floor worker, a near-useless
utility boy,
getting through
by getting coked out
and smoked up
and usually drunk enough
that no one should have trusted me
with knives to cut away scrap wool and cranes
to hoist huge spools wound with wool
to the racks to wait for the looms
to suck them in
and turn them all
to someone else’s profit,
but they did. Who else
was there to do it
except drunks and kids
on their way to being drunks?
I was a drunk.
I joined the union, drunk.
Got blow jobs drunk
from other drunks
in the back of the shop
or in vans at bars
where I’d dance
to Southern rock drunk
because that is the only way
to dance to it;
I was drunk the first time
I took a line up my nose,
drunk every time
I took a fist to my nose,
and drunk the last time
they laid me off
along with all the other drunks
on a Friday night
not long after Christmas.
We took our penultimate paychecks
to the bars
where we always cashed them
and laid into drunkenness
and bad sex
and a last eightball of blow
before we turned
to the business
of haunting this town, stepping
outside for a cigarette,
making drunk money where we can,
catching the scent of ghost wool
on a dead February wind from 1981
that cuts deep
no matter the year or season
where it finds us.
Cycle
In my twelve year old hand is a length of pipe
that I took from a corner of my dank cellar
that I’m swinging like a sword in my backyard
that whistles as it flies
I wish it was connecting with someone’s head
I wish it was cracking someone’s skull
I wish it was making a sick impact
I wish it was hurting Him
who needs His head cracked
who needs pain returned to Him
who dealt me some pain
who passed on too much of His own
Be glad I am twelve in this vision
Be glad I never took that pipe to His head
Be glad I’m old and held that murder inside me
Be glad I kept the fractures to myself
as I am glad that I am the last broken one
as I am glad that I did not become a breaker
as I am glad that I am alone in these later years
as I am glad to be without an heir
10% Inspiration
Remember:
there’s no elevator
to success,
so you’ll have to
throw yourself
down the stairs.
Lead, follow,
or get your ass
out of the way
is the motto here,
not that you
have any choice:
remember,
success is
10% inspiration and
90% flop sweat
while you’re waiting
to be revealed
as a fraud
and you’re obviously
soaked through.
Remember
that there’s no “I”
in “team” but
there is one
at the beginning
of “isolation,”
another one buried
in the heart of
“exile,” one close
to the end of
“rejection.” Remember
that the longest
journey begins
with a single half-aware
solo stumble. Take it.
Take that step
and only stop
when you realize
that you are suddenly
up to your ass in
alligators.
Remember then that this
is success since
your objective
was to get so deep
in the swamp
that they would never
find your body.
Walpurgisnacht
Originally posted 4/30/2012.
If this is the last poem I will ever write
I cannot let myself fall back on The Usual List Of Me
for inspiration, hanging all I am now on any of
my usual hooks. Not for a last poem.
A last poem ought to break into
new fire as the poet is raised up
in the heat of it. A flame
cracking a red consuming song.
If this is the last poem I will ever write
I should set all my weary categories
ablaze in it, and as I cannot,
this cannot be the last poem.
If this had been the last poem
I was destined to write,
the poem would be burning
and I would already have jumped through it.
When I Look At You I See
music.
rhythm, mobile and fluid.
a human of no race, color, creed, sex, gender, class, ability, age.
a human void of humanity.
a luminous ball of possibility.
kindness and limitless potential.
untapped resources.
compassion.
sorrow.
symbol of right and wrong.
this century’s shame.
this country’s bane.
my worst nightmare.
how I got over.
things falling apart.
a beloved.
an extraordinary rendition.
mistakes.
great ideas.
a savior.
a rescue mission.
baby, baby, baby.
a face.
a dark expression.
mystery.
solution.
clues.
an hibiscus.
a daisy, daisy…
a fruit.
a runner coming up from behind.
a siren.
a bullet.
a problem.
a shackle.
a germ blanket.
a rope.
a burned tree.
a lack of breath.
a surfeit of flooding.
a poverty of casinos.
a murder of Crows.
a paso doble interrupted.
an interpretation.
a huge misunderstanding.
a question.
a blame, excuse, rationalization.
an invisibility.
a myth.
a Minotaur.
a myth.
a Vampire.
a myth.
a Unicorn.
a colorblind mythology.
a lie.
a mirror.
a broken mirror.
a mirror with a news clipping tucked in the frame.
a mirror with a long snaggled tear in its silver backing.
a liar
in a mirror
in a void
filling in a blank.
What I Want From My People
I want my people
to look at me and say
there is something different
about me they can’t
put a name on. Want to have
a new face that somehow
already fits with my old name,
a face that seems strange and
exhilarating yet
utterly comfortable
and familiar at the same time,
as if I’d died and been reborn
as my own better replica,
my soft corners sharp enough once again
to startle a friend
into renewed affection, lift
a lover back into passion, prod
myself into waking refreshed
from what had seemed a near-dead sleep.
A Treatise On The Effects Of Casual And Unconscious Racism In Words Of One Syllable
Originally posted 12/9/2013.
I stop in shock,
stand like stone.
Here, now,
in this speck of time,
stop in this bad place
to ask:
Did he just say what I think he said?
Did she just do what I think she did?
Would have thought
each of them
was smart,
had learned,
had heart.
Just found out
I was wrong.
Now I must go back
and think of how much
I in fact do know,
how much I in fact
am sure of,
think of what I have heard,
what I have seen;
then I have to
build a wall,
fill a moat,
keep a watch
I hope will end
some day.
