Tag Archives: poems

Middle Age

I’m almost old enough
to know the difference
between feeling my age
and acting it,

speaking freely
and not knowing what to say,
breathing easy and taking time
to breathe when things get rough.

A song on the radio
still can tell me what I need to hear right now,
though I may no longer know the name
of every band and half of them

sound like something I’ve heard before;
but the beat still bounces me
and I’m still a sucker for the right
sharp lead in the right place.

But when it comes down to it,
who cares who’s playing?  Some knowledge
is unimportant, and I’ve learned
a lot of that kind of thing

at the expense of a lot of other things.
I’m old enough to know
I’ve missed out on a lot,
still young enough to hope for more —

more chances to learn,
more time to stop caring so much
for the scope of loss.  More time
to be glad I’m stupid enough

to be perpetually surprised
by something old in a new wrapper,
more time to say
I’m a foolish man, and glad of that.

So break out a new song,
let me stumble through the steps
of a dance I should know by now…
I’m old enough not to care,

young enough to believe
I’m still young enough to make it work,
old enough to know
that the end is always sure, 

young enough to forget long enough to try anyway.

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Salt And Sugar

The fast over,

he supped on honey
and hard bread,

the sweetness colliding
with the blood from his gums
where the sharp crust
had cut him,

and he smiled
redly,

the full moon in his mouth
losing its grandeur to his wet eyes.

This is the happiness
I have missed, and it hurts
like swords, like a song stretched
to the limits of my voice,

he thought,

as he let old pain
fall from him
in long streams of silver
to the icy soil
of the winter garden
where he knelt. 

But oh,
how I love to sing
in the moonlight,
naked, even if
the moonlight and the winter
are within me,
at least I am no longer
hungry, and
this salt and sugar

are all I need.

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Ostrakon (formerly “Clones”)

A tap on your shoulder
brings you face to face
with your clone.

He sits down across from you
at the worn coffeehouse table
and begins.  “Ok, this will sound crazy, I know,

and we don’t have much time, so listen…here’s the short version:
cloning’s been around longer than anyone
knows.  You and I, we’re two of a privileged kind.

I can’t explain more than this right now,
but all of us who’ve been cloned
must choose at some point…You’ve got

five minutes to decide if you want to trade places
with me.”  You see his tailored clothes,
his air of health, his face

exuding the spiritual centering
you wish you had…Sputtering
your demands for an explanation, you stare

at the missing finger, the horrible
scar from the wound running up the back
of his hand and into his sleeve.

“Yes, that’s important, and how I got it
is a part of who you’ll be, part of how I’ve lived,
it’ll be part of how you live

if you choose to be me…but
I can’t explain any more of any of this
until after you choose,

and if you choose to remain in your life,
you will never learn it at all.  So hurry…we’re down
to seconds now…”

You stare at his face,
your face, so perfect, glowing
with what you’ve always wanted:

peace, and security, and joy
contained in every pore.
Your ten fingers tap the table,

your face looks into his,
or his into yours…is this really how
this has to happen? Do you

have to pay a cost
that can be reckoned fully
only after spending it?

You ask yourself, how can you choose
such a thing?  Remain this self or become a better self —
the greatest mystery of all time is here to be solved,

and there are only
seconds to think.
What to decide?

The cleaver is on the table now between you,
his eyes are gentle and clear, and steady on yours.
Who’s going to return to your family tonight?

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Brand new track up on Reverbnation…

It’s the first song in the playlist, titled “Ostrakon.”  For a change of pace, that’s me on guitar.

Please go check it out by clicking on the “Show Schedule” tab above, then clicking through to the Reverbnation page.

Thanks!

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Goya’s Rabbit

A rabbit
drawn by Goya
is digging through the walls
of a house of sand.

Those incisors suggest
the rabbit longs for blood —
an unnatural diet compelled,
perhaps, by the depiction.

Art comes alive,
and what comes
from that goes to new places,
ravenous for the unexpected.

It is coming for you.
Don’t assume
you’ll offer it a carrot
and it will then revert

to its original nature.
A rabbit can be a carnivore
when allowed to be.  Creation
didn’t stop at the end of a week.

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Terraforming Mars

Watching a show
on terraforming Mars
and wondering

what Crazy Horse would think.

An astrobiologist says,
“To me, it’s about Mars being like
the vacant lot next door.  It’s about bringing life
to where there is no life,
and that’s inherently good.  If the lot
is vacant,
why not plant a garden?”

I’m going to drop
the resurrection plant
I bought in the Phoenix airport
into a glass of water
and think about this
while it unfolds.

Crazy Horse,
if you’re listening,
please accept my apologies
for bringing it here, and
for the moment when I become bored
and take the plant out of the bowl
to watch it dry up again
until the next whim.

I see how it goes with us,
how we scheme for order
while the earth makes us scramble
for it. 

All that blank red dust…
a beacon for something inside…

all the things we’ve learned
about the way we are,
yet we still think we know best.

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New Year’s Eve

They’re working on race cars
in Charlotte, baseball bats in Louisville,
beer in breweries coast to coast
and logo T-shirts in Singapore.
It’s snowing in Massachusetts,
icefishers set their tilts on far lakes.
Couples are planning to screw
tonight.  It’s the day of New Year’s Eve
and the strange and typical rituals of hope
abound among people. 

Dead cold in the north,
high summer down south, the tropics bake
and rain as always, the planet
holds its events without thinking
as it always does…no calendar required
to bring life through death and back again.

We seem to think we matter to the planet
and that we wrote the music
time plays for its parade…someday a hibernating bear
is going to wake up, we’ll be gone,
and it won’t notice anything different except
an increased freedom to be itself.
No engines will roar, no baseballs will soar,
and the only drunkenness will come
when wasps suck the fermented sap from fallen pears.

We’ll be regretted, if at all,
only as much
as any other extinction.

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The Chicken Speaks

I crossed the road,
punk,
because it was there.

You bought it
when someone said it
in reference to a mountain,

you bought it when
that Frenchman
walked between the Towers,

so I can only conclude
that it’s because I’m a chicken
and you’re prejudiced that you keep cracking wise

about why I did it.  Lemme
tell you something: I
can’t fly, and I enjoy

risk as much as the next bird —
more in fact: I wasn’t waiting around
to become soup or Sunday dinner.

I’ll go on my own terms,
and that road
looked as good as anything I could think of…

I made it, but the attempt,
that’s what counts.
I took a chance.  I wlll again…

so listen, punk,
think of that next time
you gnaw on a drumstick:

you are what you eat.
Laugh all you want,
but you’ll never get me.

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Whiz Kid Announces Comeback Tour

Gimme a wig and a mask
and something to write on
I’ll be your poodle
yelping for your pleasure

Gimme a gun and a facial
Lovely revolutionary
Stunner in the grass
with a good target in sight

Gimme the lonely charring
of a clean fire on an old life
I’ll plaster the ashes into a wall
and hang a good photo there

Gimme your answer do
o daisy o flower of passion o weed
Lumber into my forebrain
and hand me a reason to lie

Gimme some tumbledown
some relic some ancestry to defend
I’ll open a window and shove a stick in the sash
All for you and your temporary needs

Gimme a reason and a flimsy premise
I’ll be gone before my voice is thin
Ragged as childbirth in a hospital gown
I’m a dog for the training and I’m all yours

Then gimme a bed and a nightfall or two
Get me up when I can be myself
Get me a bus ticket for a long long ride
I’ll be there before morning and do it again

What I remember is that I was always the gimme
the go to the response the left behind genius
I was young once and thought I could be myself
So gimme a face and I’ll try to make it my own

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Way Station

Over there, behind the gas station,
something is ending. Nothing uplifting
about it: a man older than his age
falls asleep and freezes sitting up
on a flat rock, all his possessions around him.

In front of the station
a family fuels up, cleans out the car,
heads out to fun and frolic.  They’ll collect presents
and memories, turn around, head home
when it’s over.

The station remains.
Journeys are its business,
endings and beginnings
and transitory stops.  The attendants
barely notice the ambulance in the field

until it’s pulling out and they wonder
what happened.  One goes out back, shrugs,
collects the apparent trash, tosses it in the barrel.
It covers the diapers and the juice packs.
When it’s full, someone on another shift

will put in a dumpster and it will be carted
to a barge, sent elsewhere to rest.  In a thousand years
an archaeologist will pull it out of the earth
and demand it answer him when he asks
who these people were who left so much behind.

Nothing is going to answer him honestly.

No one’s going to understand the significance
of these tinfoil bags entombed
with a laminated, fragmentary photo of a young man
with his arm around a Vietnamese girl
and his helmet perched devilishly on his head.

They will make up stories then
of a culture full of warrior honor,
long-term family ties and care for tradition.  The infants
in the arms of the elders. The relics
were preserved together as a map of where these people had been.

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Fun

The mind
blanks in the presence
of fun…

who’s that there,
smiling and laughing?

It’s not you.  You
stay here as the other proceeds
willy nilly into the Big Empty.

You hold yourself apart
to dominate the explanation

you decide will justify
the abdication of identity.
Just a kid, you tell yourself,

I was just a kid coming out
to play.  Back in the box now, Junior.

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Snapshot

Desperately seeking
sexiness, she
had done cumulative damage
to her animal heart
by lunging after acceptance
from unworthy men.
Donned imaginary
lures and fished.  There was
something baitlike
about her, a hook hidden
within that was not
well-disguised, was easily avoided,
and those who bit
took at least
a little piece of her, some
a big piece of her, with them,
and what was left wriggled
with volition that
did not seem
to be her own.

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UFOs

Many have said they’ve seen
a delta shaped object
lined with lights
over their suburban heads

I think
it was
a grand and terrible ghost
embodied as the Mississippi Delta
come to haunt them

Witch pyres as steady as planets
rimmed the shores
and the unknown flowed down from within

They say

“I don’t know what it was”

They lie
to themselves

for deep within they know that neither the future
nor the extraterrestrial world
brought these triangles of dread
to the space above their heads

Instead
memories
of dead history
forgotten languages
rapes and suppression
negation and killing

came back to remind everyone
that all the slaving
and pillage
of many generations
do not simply disappear

but rise into the common ether
and hover
most often unseen
but always there

legacies
in the night

making selected random
viewers
think of genocide
and send their children inside
to hide
while they shiver in the air
outside their handsome
stolen homes
and living standards
wondering at the beings
who have stolen their surety

a true reparation
for history’s extravagant misuse
of darker beings:

the replication
of fear in the bellies
of those who have not paid it
enough heed

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Critter

a man
became a critter

creeping
over land

he sat on rocks
turned em over for moral guidance

he’s a cemetery
of thinking —

left over
animal

reptile brained
chunk of reaction

fight and bite
sleep where it’s warm at night

stay out of the cold
of opinion

screw a little
when needed

no need for a lot of breath
to tell this story

it’s so common
you might be forgiven

for pretending it’s not true
just another legend

until you cross paths with him
while trying to fall in love

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God Answers Prayer (or: The Butterfly Effect, Revisited)

I have heard you
whining about your fate lately,
and let me just say this:

the only thing
worth knowing
about that butterfly
who ruined your life
from 10,000 miles away

is that butterfly wings
are frequently lovely
and your life
has not been so far,
despite my considerable help…
so,
if I had swatted the butterfly,
how exactly
would we be better off?
What would you have done
differently
with your improved atmosphere?

When you can answer that
with something more than
a stammered metaphor,

then we can talk.

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