Tag Archives: poems

Snow On The Ocean

Snow falls to the ocean
and vanishes,
like the line between
sky and sea.

Division, an illusion;
all is water.

I’m on the beach
and that seems a hard line,
but then I see water oozing
from around my shoes.

When the mountains rose,
they were sea-floor. 
When a fault
splits with a dark rumble,
ground water fills the gap.

I’m the guest here,
full of water.  I’ll melt
eventually and release it all.
When I am part of the sea,
the great water,
it will be unremembered
that I ever was separate,
that I ever participated
in the illusion.

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America For Dummies

Shut up you finger pointing bastards
who try to to teach us who we are
and how stupid we are to be who we are
We know ourselves pretty well
This is the USA after all
A whole culture based in constant apology
“Sorry we don’t live up to what we claim to be”
It’s the most human thing we are
except that we work it harder than most
and don’t buy that it can’t be different

You think of us
as unaware of our dangerous contradictions
How we’ve got love for the kiss of gangsta hand
And sleep uneasy thinking of it against our cheeks
We’ve got mad love for the wrong side of town
Uneasily planted within a quick stroll to safety
We’re uneasy with our loves
We just want to live without thinking sometimes
We’re big block dummies who love a straight road
and rowdy pipes in full cry
from underneath the ride and out of its crank windows
Black exhaust we leave behind its own explanation
Dumb pop reveling and refusing to explain
Cock rock blaring and explaining
Country music simplifying and explaining
Hip hop flashing gold and guns to explain
and Las Vegas winning for the best explanation of all

You finger pointing bastards
You agenda manacled studs of opinion
You scolds and scourges and professional sobbing consciences
You don’t understand us at all
From the left we’ve got smug
From the right we’ve got stern
We’re in the middle with the TV on
Plugged up ears and screwed up muddled hearts
Do you think we don’t know how screwed we are

We’re doing the best we can do right now
With this chatter and smoke obscuring the exits
The chains have been set on the doors
We’ve still got the windows high in the walls to entice us
into believing the sun is still out there
though that light might just be
another fire

Give us some credit

We know the powerful hold on to power
because that’s what we would do
We know the money makes life easier
because we don’t have enough ourselves
We know the earth is dying from a case of us
because we live here and can hear it cough
We know that wealth can be either poison or manna
because we plan to be rich one day and choose

Right now we’ve got sick hearts
sick kids sick houses and cars
Not enough work and we’re numb from it
The wrong kind of work and we’re dumb from it
Give us liberty or give us convenience
Either way we’ll likely be here still
Give us social degradation or give us peace
We’ll likely be here still
Our moral fiber’s just fine
if it makes us ferocious in looking for the exit
and if you point left to the one you think we should take
or if you point right to the one you think we should take
we know in our guts that the only way out
is to break the wall down that holds both your doors
and we’re scared for the kids
the house
the car
who will be standing there when it goes

If we find a way out
it won’t be easy
and the only thing we can hope for
is that you’ll shut up once we’re out of here

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Monday Night Football

The American football players
are carefully folding a head into a tight cube
as they rock up and down the field.

The head is so compact
that thoughts have a hard time moving in there.
The American football players

move the head instead.  The thoughts
end up on one yard marker, then another.
There’s no need for them to struggle free.

An American lifts the head and throws it
fifty-two yards for a touchdown.  The receiver
hands the head to a boy in the stands.

The boy takes the head home and puts it
on a high shelf in his room where it collects dust.
He thinks, sometimes, that he can hear voices

coming out of the head.  But it’s just a football
to him, a souvenir of a great moment.
The American football player gave it to him

and it will not do to have it speaking
without being spoken to.  So he eventually locks it
in a box in his closet where it can mumble to itself

of how it used to have enough space to think
and speak and curse those folders of heads
who trap expression in such minute cubes.

There was an expression it knew once: bread
and something, some entertainment.  It recalls
just that much; says,  I used to be a head, a brain,

I knew things and could figure things out.
I never thought I’d end this way: stuck in a boy’s box,
all square and silenced. To think I used to like football.

The head falls asleep.  It doesn’t dream anymore.
The American football players knocked that crap
right out of it.  The boy, on the other hand,

has exactly the right kind of dreams now:
football, folding, trophies, silence,
lock the accompanying disturbances away.

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Still Life With Bees

Out of control
from the bees who’ve nested
in your glove

Fling it off then reach
with a bloated hand for the doorknob
to get out of there

Bypass
the kitchen sink
the cold water and antiseptic

Run to the easel
Try to paint the flinging
and the urge to do it

Call it
“Art by accident and misadventure”
It’s crude and fascinating

Makes a splash
Go buy some more gloves
and try to replicate it

Stick your hand in a hive
over and over again
React in paint

The word “pain”
makes up the greater part
of the word “paint”

Some days
it’s the whole word
and the whole world

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Drug Interaction

The chase, he says, the chase is
what’s most exhilarating. 

Try it,
if only for the weediness of it —

how it leads you
from the trimmed lawns
and edged paths
out to the cattails
left neglected by the waterside,

out into the weeds and mushy ground
where you’ve always wanted to seek things out.

Try it, like you would
a rollercoaster.
It’s the loveliest fear by far
that you might lose yourself
in the wonder of what might happen
if a bolt comes loose or a memory
breaks rogue-free
while you’re out there.

Try it,
I’ve opened my hand to you, he says.
Take it,
or don’t;

the moment of choice,
of knowing there is a choice
and agreeing to choose,

will be more important than what you actually choose.

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Running Downhill

You’re running downhill.

You’re twelve again, the age
on the cusp of caring
where you end up,
but right now
you’re willing
to let the slope carry you
though you move a little stumbly,
a little floppy,
faster and faster.

You thought this was over
and here you are
getting knocked around again
by the old perpetual motion urge.

Running downhill
as fast and dumb as you can:
that’s glory to the kid you were,
terror to the old man you are,
and right now you’re both and that’s
wholeness, something you’re willing
to run to. 

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Between Us

pretended indifference
to what the tree sheds on my car.
in truth, rage as comprehensive

as any felt toward evil
or avoidable tragedy, which
is the same.  no filter

for fault.  it’s all my fault —
parking the car there, my fault
because I can’t afford a garage.

my fault the weather that kills
and floods and refuses to quench thirst.
my fault darfur.  something will pay

and it’ll likely be me.  my fault too,
that: self-destruction a sin, an incurred cost
of doing my business.  those maple wings

aren’t going anywhere except
between me and my hairshirt.  same with
words regretted, actions untaken that led

to trouble — between itch and rash
they go and when i keep quiet in spite of
the insane sensation i know it shows

on my face and my fingers
and the twitching of my cheek. pretended
indifference fooling only me. everyone else

knows i’m bugging and all because
nature and i are at war because
i can’t tell the difference between us.

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Windows Open

Charging the phone,
keeping the windows open.

The cold air, the light snow.
First coverage of the season,
and it won’t last long into tomorrow.

The phone not ringing this late:
both a bad and a good thing. It’s waiting,

and I’m waiting for the snow to fall and then melt.
I keep the windows open a crack.  Might
hear a person calling

from out in the snow, where sound gets crisp
and carries far.  Phone’s on, windows are open:

it’s cold, snowing, and the night
is breathless.  I’m huddled here waiting
for something, someone.  A good thing.

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Ghost Hunter

Lock me down for the night
in the ghost’s house.  I’ll come out
in the morning and tell you everything.
I’ll explain the halting voice
that reaches peak whisper-rasp
in the ears of the scoffing father.
I’ll explain the knocking doors
that stick rock chopsticks
in the mother’s head. 
I’ll tell you all about
what the youngest child stares at
through the slats in his hell-closet.

Lock me down for the night
in the ghost’s house
and I’ll come out and tell you
how easy it is to raise the dead.
The unfinished business of rickety attachment
is what keeps them jerky and repetitive here,
monotonous and bored within these walls.
Nothing in there’s got an ounce of harm
in any ectoplasmic bone it shakes
as it strolls partway down the halls
and back again.  

Lock me in with them
and I’ll come out and tell you: 
I lived through worse
a long time ago when I was a kid like yours,
the one who lives here now, and what he fears most
isn’t the dumb ghost who’s hung on so long here,
but the one he might become if he doesn’t figure out
how to get past your fright and fear and learn to live.

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Boat-Floaters

Come get me
off my shoal.  I’ll do the same
for you sometime.  We both need
water under our keels.

We both need more flavor
in the diet.  Salt in the milk,
blood in the fresh cheese.
We both like the faces we make

when we taste things that seem
raw and wrong.  Always go back
for a second try.  Make the same faces
again, try again, declare it not so bad.

Back on our boats, quick to declare
we know nothing of the sea
but love the way it feels. Love to rock
and grind against what’s under the surface,

sticking on it occasionally but that’s
what the other is for.  Gimme a shout
sometime when you’re stuck out there
afraid of foundering; I’m waiting.  Got the salt

and the milk and the blood for your cheese
waiting when we get to the dock.  Got a rock
for the pillow and a chain for the feet.  I’m
your boat-floater, you’re my boat-floater, let’s see

where the tide take us when the rudder breaks
and we’ve got no compass, nothing but ourselves
as weird as meat and old potatoes doused in acid and the wind
to drive us ahead.  Boat-floaters! Extreme eaters

with appetites we don’t dare define
for fear of losing them; sailors who are never seasick,
never cold, always in danger of drowning,
but never too far out of earshot to miss each other in the fog.

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Counsel Of The Neck

listen to the counsel
of your neck

hairs at full salute
chill rolling up from the shoulders

how it twists
stiffens

it says
mortality is a sense

centered in the line
between head and body

which comes alive
at moments of great need (such as this one

when he speaks of love —
listen to the counsel of your neck)

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The Long Way Home

What ripple in the ether
made me ignore the map
and turn left instead of right,
I don’t know.  I had somewhere to be
but still I took the left instead of the right

and ended up crossing a narrow bridge
over a cold, fast river
with the gas running low
and not a station in sight;

still, I kept driving with the insane thought
that somewhere over here there had to be fuel
and I would be able to continue the detour
for a while yet, even though the woods
had closed around the road and the dark of winter
had settled into threat.

As I turned a corner, green eyes lit up ahead of me
and with no time or place to turn,
I flinched and drove straight on
praying that whatever it was —
fox or cat, dog or skunk —
would get out of the way: but
no such luck, not for the creature
I felt under my wheels
as I swerved left, and then right, after
the sickening squish and crunch.

When I looked up, there was an Exxon sign
not fifty yards ahead.  I drove there,
turned left into the pumps
and then right onto the road
after I refilled my tank
while refusing to look at my tires or bumper

and there was the on-ramp for my road home.

Sometimes, we don’t make a turn for our own reasons,
or we make a turn for no reasons we can name.
If we’re smart, we don’t look back at where we were
and we choose to believe in luck, or fate,
or the Shadow that tricks our green-lit eyes
into thinking we’re so in control of the way home.
into thinking we control what

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The Walls

I think there’s a problem
in my walls: clicking, voices,
the flavor of flowers.
I hear Italian radio, dubbed popular
songs in the other room.

The violet walls shake like a speaker membrane.
The clicking of tuning knobs, switches, antennas
scraping the studs.  It sounds like
cursing and goes on all the time.  The house
broadcasts bad memories.

I think there’s a problem in me, too, now.
I hear myself speaking with an accent,
call the pain in my ankles
“my grandmother’s
disease,” can’t keep my hands

off switches and knobs.
Turn them
incessantly.  Try to communicate
with others.  Try to keep
from crawling in there with them.

To try and break the spell, I’ll go outside
undressed, nude as a buttonmaker protesting
the trend toward zippers and elastic waistbands.
It will be dramatic.
It will be seen as having a subtext by some,

but I’m just trying to find a place
where I can’t hear whatever’s in the walls.
I’m not that crazy.  I’ll leave my clothes behind
because I don’t dare open the closet,
and haven’t done so in weeks.

Once out here, I’m relieved to find
that out here the only voices are in plain English
and I understand them at once.  That clicking
out here is clearly just handcuffs.
That pain in my ankles is because the cop tripped me

to make me go down.  I don’t care, and I’m only crying
because things are making sense again,
and I didn’t even need a radio to tell me that.
Between my sobs I’m making up a song.  It’s for the cops —
the refrain:  “Don’t go in there, and block your ears if you do.”

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Old Slang

Do me a solid —
flip me
what used to be a word
we all knew.

Then let’s dig that word,
that daddy-o word,
that makes it all copasetic
when we hear it.

Dig that right-on word
that grooved in and delivered
back in the day, that Kilroy word
that was everywhere once;

caught the vibe and held it,
nifty and neat and tight,
like a wicked cool spell
making it all happen.

I’m going with the radical
word, used to be the word
we said was Word, boss word
holding court, groovy word;

word sharp as scissors, cut slack with it,
slang it like David’s stone against
old Goliath rules, then didn’t bother to pick it up
because something smoother came along.

Gotta love the word, the far out word,
old word sure but it’s still all aces.
Sometimes reaching back gives you
all the solid you need to make it new.

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Love is

Three were asked
to stop and speak of love,

and the first said,
ah, the hunt and the capture,
endlessly repeated.

The second said,
there, the trophy —
always on another’s shelf.

And the third:

it’s the blueberry bush
happened upon a week too early
for harvest,

then a single berry plucked
that is sweet, the next three sour;

waiting, then, for the ripeness

to come.

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