Monday, December 30, 2019

Oh God, Another New Year?



I came up with a High School yearbook
slogan for the coming new year.
“2020: Coming into Focus”

You know, like 20/20 vision.
Coming into visual clarity.
Seeing with clearness.

Yeah, I’m sure it’ll be plastered all over
yearbooks across the Country because
frankly, it’s not that great of a slogan.

I’m not sure how apt the slogan will
be for those of us long removed from
the High School days.

I initially applauded my own cleverness
at the development of this slogan, but as
time went by I recognized its ultimate cheesiness.

It is not exactly how I want to enter this New Year,
this new decade actually. Although the impetus was
pure and authentic, as I do hope things come into focus for me.

It’s just not all that good as sayings go.
And who am I to make up a new saying?
Do I carry enough weight to make up such a thing?

I imagine it on tee-shirts, perhaps with a
a bespectacled illustrated character with its fist in the air
in defiance of the prior blurry years of the past.  

Standing atop some giant 2020, fireworks going off
all around the background. Across the chests of some
young people excited about their potential.

Or maybe the character sitting in a laser surgery chair
giving a thumbs up as his beady eyes are made new through
science.  I don’t really know, there’s a lot of directions.

It is, however, just a weird phrase I came up with at
my employer’s Christmas party after hearing the boss’s
speech about what 2020 is sure to bring.

I’ve tried it out a few times on my friends,
but it hasn’t exactly been received with
the adulation I’d hoped.

I suppose that’s what makes a new year
so good then. A chance to leave the nonsense
of the past year behind and start something new.

I’d prefer I didn’t sound like a terrible TV sitcom
writer, hammering a point home about change and
the future and all that tepid, formulaic tripe.

Even the review of the cheesy slogan appears to
be cheesy. I think I’ll leave my slogan here in
2019.

I’m not sure I want to take it with me.  
I’ll put it by the door, with all of last year’s stuff
I’ve been meaning to toss.


Monday, December 23, 2019

I Imagine Santa Claus




I imagine Santa Claus as a
race car driver, dressed in a red and
white slick racing suit.
Checkered Flags whipping in the wind
as he poses on the racetrack on top
of his nitro powered funny-sleigh.

I imagine Santa Claus in a three piece
red business suit, typing away at
the offices of Claus, Nicholas and Nick,
making sure to get that last lawsuit
finished.

I imagine Santa Claus sitting next to
a hospital bed, green mitten hands clasped
around those of a very old man, gasping
at his last few Christmas breaths and
hoping for the endless afterlife cheer that awaits.

I imagine Santa Claus on the set of a
pornographic movie, he’s not involved but
he’s not there to judge anyone either,
he jokes that everyone is naughty,
but they’re usually nice.

I imagine Santa Claus sitting on a beach,
watching the surf roll up the sand, he’s
a little sunburned but he’s got the elves
to spray more lotion on. He’s ready
to hang-10 and get gnarly.

I imagine Santa Claus lost
at the empty mall, there used to be a
good Cinnabon here but it seems to be gone.
It was right next to the arcade and the
Tee-Shirt & Sunglasses shack. 

I imagine Santa Claus in a semi-truck,
rolling like Mad Max through the wastelands,
being chased by the Humongous and his band
of post-apocalyptic Neo-humans who don’t
know who he is.

I Imagine Santa Claus in the Matrix,
because he’s the one, disconnecting us all
from the cyber nightmare reality. And maybe
giving us a candy-cane for all our electro
trouble.

I imagine Santa Claus imagining me,
and the smiles on my face as I open up
each thoughtful gift and thank my family
for their generosity and constant patience
with my shenanigans.

I imagine Santa Claus, all tuckered out
from his Christmas escapades, dozing
off in his big red chair by the fireplace
at the North Pole as Mrs. Claus signs the
divorce papers in the next room.

I imagine Santa Claus a bit too much I think,
it’s probably not healthy imagining Old St. Nick,
in so many places and so many scenes,
I’m confused on what it all means,
although, it doesn’t amount to a hill of beans.

It’s all fancy and fun,
no real harm done.

So Merry Christmas Mr. Santa Claus,
Merry Christmas to everyone.


                 

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

The Consequence of Breath



I once read that life is
merely a series of consequences
from events that started long
before any of us existed.
We only have the illusion of
control over our own life.

Millions of years ago, a fish jumped
up onto a primitive beach and took a
long, deep breath, and life
since then has been as a
consequence of that breath.

Setting in motion a series of machinations and
Rube Goldberg-esque contraptions,
all tipping and bobbling and whizzing
forward until one day it produced
you and your set of problems.

Every happy birthday,
every tragic death,
every paper-cut or trip to
the Moon, has been as a result
of that consequential breath.

We have no control over the stitching
together of these threads of life, woven
in a haphazard, luck of the draw,
sort of way. We abide this situation
and accept it as living.

The trick, I suppose, is to find
meaning within the consequences of
that breath. To treasure the joyful
accidents of friends, family and the
general goodwill we should share.

To learn from the mistakes of those
consequences and try to forget how
angry and unfair they were. How brutal
and fantastically tragic they might have been,
and to accept our inconsequential role in it all.  

It is our duty to take the next breath,
to exhale into the mists of consequence and
face the potentials, the problems, the price
with dignity, responsibility, and a crap ton of
self-deprecating humor.

Friday, December 6, 2019

It's Gross, I'm Sure



The sickness of writing is
how polluted you feel when
you can’t actually put words on the
page.

The words build up like bile in your word duct,
corrupting your moods
and jumbling your thoughts into
incoherent ramblings.   

It’s a serious condition that can’t
always be remedied through conventional
means, nothing makes sense and everything
is so terribly banal.

There’s a steady drip of words leaking
from my brain, yet they don’t always
get as far as the page. They get muddled
in a cocktail of insecurity and anxiety.

It’s perverse that the only true cure
is to vomit up the collection of unused
words in a speckled puddle, swish it around
and see which words are the salve.

It’s also gross.
Like, ick, why would you use the imagery
of vomit to describe that?
Word Duct back up, that’s why.

There are so many levels to the sickness of
writing, it’s difficult to quantify them all.
The condition is dreadful and can’t be easily
soothed with some balm.

It’s only added to by the general frustrations
of living. I haven’t had a passionate kiss in
nearly a year. I haven’t felt the gaze of a lover or
the joy of expressing that intimacy in so long.

And it backs up the word duct something awful,
like you gotta get in there with a plumbing snake and
really root around to shake the words loose and
get something on the page.

Even if it’s nonsense, like most of this,
at least it is something plastering the page.
I vomited it up,
Now kiss me.


Picture from: https://www.hennkim.com/ 

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

All Around the Table



I stared at the ravaged carcass
of the turkey as I rubbed my full belly
and wiped the cranberry sauce from the
corner of my mouth.
“Poor bird”, I thought, “to be cursed with
deliciousness.”

Bred to be the centerpiece at a table
surrounded by wandering opinions,
self-importance and unchecked egotism,
along with the other holiday fare, like
corn and mashed potatoes.
Maybe some pie later.

In some parts, this table will be jovial
and consumed in the loving laughter of those
surrounding this peculiar fowl.
In other parts; anger, resentments and
choice, long stifled words might overflow
and drown the celebration in regret.

Gravy might be spilled as your Aunt
finally admits to her misgivings about, “those people”,
or your brother finally admits he never liked your
wife, or that money you loaned your nephew for
his “investments” was used to buy strippers
and blow.

The white tablecloth, smeared in mashed
potatoes and yams as your Uncle and Father
finally wrestle and come to terms with their mutual
abandonment of their mother, in that home,
with red-faced rage, protruding veins
of their stiff necks.

Perhaps your funny cousin, will say something
pithy, and brag about their true liberalism in
the face of all the phonies. You’ll call him
Holden and he won’t get the reference.
You’ll hide in the palm of your hand as you cup
your forehead.

Someone will tell you how they really feel,
someone will say something stupid,
someone will brag about something they shouldn’t brag about,
Someone will confess, someone will lie, someone will
suddenly be asleep on the sofa,
perhaps that someone is me.

“Poor bird,” I think again.
Belching quietly into my mouth.
So much to be Thankful for and
so little time to do it all in.
A Turkey’s time is so short.
Eaten to the bone.  

Friday, November 22, 2019

Hot Damn Soup



So then, there’s November.
A curious month steeped in
the roiling juices of history;
churning and bubbling up to
remind us of what we’re to
be Thankful for and tug at
the veil of memory.

November is both cruel and
comforting, like a nice hot
bowl of soup you accidentally
spill on your crotch.
It was so good, now it’s a
scalding mess.
And your good pants are ruined.
And you badly wanted that soup too.

There’s mix of nostalgia for, “the old days”,
and being thankful for the days we have now.
There are remembrances of things long past that
still touch us, and a willful ignorance of
the things we wish to forget.
Clashing together in the crock pot of
life, with stuffing and cranberry sauce on the side.

My November, Novembers, are tinged with
a moment in time I wasn’t even alive for;
The assassination of JFK on November 22, 1963.
I’ve even made a pilgrimage to Dallas in 2013
to honor a President I never lived under, yet,
whose future (had he lived) might have deeply
affected me, us all.

The optimism JFK is portrayed to have, has
always nagged at me and I have often wondered,
“what if…?” How would life in the United States be
different, would we be where we are now,
embroiled in a scandal of such profound lunacy?
I don’t know and the not knowing is so very annoying.
More hot soup on my lap and good slacks.

Then there’s the Pilgrims themselves,
those hearty souls who stepped foot off the Mayflower
at Plymouth Rock, fleeing religious persecution from England,
to build a new life in the New World for themselves and
posterity. Which is the fantasy we’d instructed to believe
as we’re coloring in the hand traced turkeys at our
grammar school desks.

The breaking of bread with Native Americans,
to signify how much the Native Americans
helped the Pilgrims survive their first
few years of colonization,
while secretly plotting to take what land they
could. A weird disingenuous holiday
celebration. (Founded during the Civil War, FYI)

The myths of history told to children
as facts, has also nagged at me for
a very long time. Why the untruths?
“Who made so much hot soup and why do they
keep spilling it on my good pants?!”
Hot, hot, hot, hot, aww, cold.
My childish sensibilities thankfully protected.

November. A month known widely for
Guy Fawkes attempt to blow up the British
Parliament. You know, the 5th of November.
You know it.
If not from history, then from that movie.
Yes, you know.
Sigh.

What’s with you November?
Why are you so weird?
What’s with your complexities and
strange historical interference?
Where did you get that hat with a buckle on it?
And for real, who made all this
damn hot soup?



Wednesday, November 13, 2019

Arabesque




The art of dancing around a point,
a point of view,
a view point,
pointedly viewed by dancing.

Shuck and jive,
step, ball, change,
juke and dive,
shimmy and shake.

I see your seeing of what
I saw but that’s not what I
have seen at all.
Tappity-tap, tap.

Leg flip, 1st position,
arabesque, lithe,
twirl and dip,
shuffle, two hops this time.

Not that it happened when it
happened, or was I aware of
the happening, before it had the
chance to happen, all happenstance.

Limbo right, limbo left,
mashed potato,
shake a tail-feather,
pony. Ride the pony.

I do not recall,
I half-remember,
what was to be remembered
was a matter of opinion.

Shake, shake, shake,
body roll, body roll,
with roller skates now,
smooth.


Thursday, November 7, 2019

Eating Your Own Face



They stare at me with astonished
horror in their eyes. The rooms
hush and murmur as I enter,
the jukebox skips,
the building shudders.

“Is he eating his own face,” asked
one of the lookie-loos.
“It’s so gnarled and raw,
missing in the wrong places and
too much in the right ones.”

The truck stop eunuch even
stops to stare as I get my mug
of coffee. I fill it to the brim,
drop in a straw and start the long
walk back to my rig.

“Does it even have eyelids,” says
a whisper.
“How does it sleep,” asks another.
“Why are there teeth growing from
it’s nose,” questions a less subtle voice.  

I grip my coffee mug tighter in my
crab claw hand, rushing a bit now
to escape the judgmental stares and
whispered accusations of my mother
spawning with the Devil.

My bravery and confidence I so boldly
approached the doors with, is fading fast
as I hurry through the long truck stop
oasis hallway.  I just want to get out,
back on the verdict less roads.

I get to the glass doors as tears sting
my eye. I catch my reflection in the glass.
There’s nothing wrong with me.
Nothing at all. I’m not all chewed up.
I don’t have a claw hand.

I look back behind me at the
small morning truck stop oasis
crowd, the truck stop eunuch has
his head down. No one is staring,
no one can see.

There are no hushed whispers or
terrified tones. The murmurs are all
corn and coffee rumors.
The TV hums with news of the day,
traffic reports and snow on the way.

I touch my scruffy chin and my reflection
does the same. No new scars, no holes,
no disfiguring marks, no crocodile skin
or teeth out of place.
I think it was all a dream.

I open the door and step outside,
it is cold and I can see my breath,
I shrug my collar up a little higher and
walk toward my rig.
“What’s with the eunuch,” I wonder aloud.

Friday, October 25, 2019

Nine Year Anniversary!!!!



                It’s an anniversary! It’s been nine years of A Minute with Michael on Blogspot.com, or Blogger, as it's known now. In that time, I have written (including this) 1,204 posts, I’ve written two books, Never Said Enough, and the follow-up Saying Too Much: A Second Volume of Poetry and have hopefully touched some part of my readers lives in a small way. I’m really awestruck that if you read one post a day, every day, it would take 3.3 years to finish. That’s an astounding trivial fact!

                I’m proud of the work I’ve put into this blog site, even if “blogging” isn’t exactly as popular as it once was. And if I think about it, I might have been a little late to that party as it was.  I am thankful that an old friend showed me how to even start up a blog page nine years ago and even though time has essentially erased the connection I had with that friend; I am still appreciative of her help. Without her assistance, I don’t know what I would have done to express myself creatively and artistically.

                I know that with each follow, re-post, share, like and re-tweet, I’ve been allowed to become a small part of your lives and your thoughts. My wish is that this curious form of telepathy has meant as much to you as it means to me and I am sincerely grateful for all the support, likes, re-tweets, shares, and comments I’ve received over the years.  I’m always appreciative of any words of encouragement, support or share; as well as any constructive criticism. So don’t be shy!

                I know not everyone has the time to read much these hectic days and I do try to keep my posts to the minimum of a quick read. I do aspire to try and adhere to the “Minute” part of the title. (Although I am a pretty fast reader so that method of timing might be a little skewed.) I deeply recognize the effort my readers put in to make time for my little pieces about life, love, sadness, joy and occasional lunacy. I’m proud to identify as a writer and as a poet and welcome the gracious encouragement I have received.

                I will continue to post and write and create to express not only my internal struggles, woes, happiness’s; but be a relatable platform for all those that might feel the same things stirring inside themselves but just don’t have the words to express it. And to make sure use of the semi-colon doesn’t vanish.  

                I am looking forward to the Ten-year anniversary next year and I hope before then to have a collection of my short stories in print. So keep a lookout for that sometime in the coming year.

                Thank you again for the Nine years of support and love!


                 


Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Gallows Tree Hill



On a lonely hill jutting above
the desolate fields stands a
single tree; The Gallows Tree.
It grows there, waiting for me.

My love, she mourns at the foot of the
Gallows Tree, handkerchief clutched
in both her shaking hands as she
weeps for me.

The cold Autumn wind blows
the leaves from the Gallows Tree,
as they march me up towards its
bony and spindly branches.

The bare branches are the image of
a hand clenched in a fist, trying
to punch the sky, and hit unmerciful
God in the nose, get his blood on things.

The October sunrise peeks over the heads
of the crowd, assembled to watch me
visit with the Gallows Tree.
I see her, my love, crying for me.

The leg irons jingle with each trudging step
I make up the hill to the executioner,
a noose swaying in the cold morning wind,
as a raven croaks unceremoniously in the tree.

My love, she weeps, as I pass her by,
I see her tears reflecting the rising orange sun,
and I know that this miscarriage would be set right,
this affront to justice would be revenged.

I face the Gallows Tree, knowing what I did was
done for love. All the spectators know. They
want me to swing nonetheless. They want my
blood to sweeten the ground of Gallows Tree hill.

A rooster crowing in the distance, the judge
nods, and the rope is placed around my neck,
a flimsy wooden box placed beneath my feet,
I decline the black hood over my head.
My love, she wails, at the foot of
the judge but he is un-swayed, he nudges
her aside and reads the Sentence to the
waiting, blood-thirsty crowd.

For murder, for arson, for theft,
for robbery, for assault, for bearing
false witness, this man is sentenced
to be hung until his death.

I can hear the Gallows Tree branches creak
in hungry anticipation of the soul about to
be delivered to it. Its greed leaking like
sap from its weathered bark. 

My love screams as the judge leans towards
my ear and asks if I have any final words
to impart or forgiveness I wish to plead.
The wind whips up as I say I do.

“I am innocent. I have done you no
wrong in this life.” The silent crowd scoffs.
“However, I cannot claim such innocence in death, as
I will have my revenge. My vengeance will be unimaginable.”

I look to the weeping eyes of my love,
sitting in a heap upon the dusty hill,
“My love, so loyal and true; my revenge will
be swift and no harm will come to you.”

The judge nodded to the executioner,
and out he kicked the flimsy wooden box,
the rope tightened, the branched creaked,
the ravens flew from the upper Gallows Tree branches.

Revenge boils in my dying eyes and I stare at
the faces of who wrongfully convicted me.
As the breath escapes me, I let my spirit go,
to bring in a reign of havoc upon these judgmental souls.

I swear and curse that every October
in the orange sun of morning, I will haunt them all
I will scare them all. I will make them beg for mercy
but provide them with none. Forever.

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

The Corn Maze of Doom



                The haunted trail through the cornfields was supposed to be the be all and end all of terrifying Halloween experiences. At least according to the extremely loud radio commercials that seemed to air every ten minutes. Instead it was long lines, crowded groups of annoying teenagers perfumed heavily with booze and pot and extreme dampness. The only horrors to be found were in the ticket prices and the amount of mud we’d have to wash off of our clothes. It just wasn’t scary. Nothing seemed scary anymore. The real world had proven to be a more terrifying place than any cheaply concocted corn maze.
               
                We made our way back toward the area where our car was parked. It was another muddy field to walk through. There were no lights overhead so finding the car amid the rows of hastily parked vehicles was to be a challenge. Jennifer and I weaved through row after row of dark colored cars trying to find ours. She was pressing the key fob on and off so the alarm would beep on and off as a way to essentially echo-locate it. She was not pleased. She was irritated. She was cold. She was wet and it seemed like she wanted to murder me.

                She had mentioned a week or so prior to our cornfield excursion that she wanted to do something scary for Halloween. She wanted a little fright to spice up our usual tradition of going to a friend’s costume party and then just going home. She couldn’t stay awake for a horror movie usually and she always felt like the whole day was sort of a waste. It just wasn’t like her childhood Halloween’s so she asked me to come up with something scary.

                I do not much care for Halloween. I don’t like costumes and I don’t really like the pomp of it all. I have an aversion to the smell of Halloween make-up. I hate the crowds of costume parties. I despise the one couple, the one that every couple knows, that really goes all out on their costume putting everyone’s cheaply/homemade costume to shame. It bugs me that they’ll spend $300 on a costume but only bring a six-pack of beer to the party. So, I was actually sort of pleased to come up with something different to do.

                The evening started pleasant enough. A small candlelit dinner between Jennifer and I at a nice fall themed restaurant. We could talk to each other normally over the gentle background music, instead of yelling at full volume at some party or in a bar. We held hands and professed our love for each other and how much we enjoyed spending this kind of quality time together. We both had hectic schedules and lives so having these few moments to just be with each other was nice. She was excited about the prospect of the Haunted Corn Maze of Doom too. Which made me feel like I had actually done something that makes her happy. Instead of just mildly not annoyed with everything I do. She seemed genuinely happy.

                Her mood started to darken as we pulled into the parking lot for the Maize Maze of Doom. It was just dusk and the air smelled slightly of pig manure and rotting leaves. There were a lot of other people it seemed who had a similar idea of a haunted trail and it was already crowded. They walked in front of the car like we weren’t even there, milling about like zombies, as we tried to find a place to park. We finally pulled next to a row of cars and reminded each other to remember where we parked. Jennifer put on a brave face when I asked her if she was ready to go in and if she was prepared for the horrors of corn that awaited. I was similarly enthused.  

                Our tickets were scanned by a young woman woefully under-dressed for the tepid Autumn temperatures. Jennifer and she exchanged a strange look in the language that only women speak to each other while also being extremely overly polite. I asked her what that was all about but Jennifer said it was nothing. I know better than to pry too much into those deep evolutionary inner-workings.

                We made our way to the line and began our hour long wait. The Haunted corn maze was a sprawling complex of trails and fields in which there were various stations of horror set up. You were to wind your way along the paths, unguided, and have your fears realized by the denizens of this cursed field.  Jennifer said she wished I had told her to wear different shoes. I said that I told her we were going to be outside so I assumed she would wear outside shoes. She was wearing thin sort of tennis shoes without socks. Her smile had completely faded now, replaced with tight while lines where her lips usually are.

The line to go to these various stations of horror was backed-up with families, strollers, small children that shouldn’t be going to a haunted trail, teenagers with nothing better to do, high teenagers wherein this was the best they could do, and adults in various stages of inebriation.  There was so much chatter that I couldn’t tell one conversation from the next. As the sun was setting the chill in the air thickened as did the dragons breath wafting up from the cold crowds. I rubbed Jennifer on her shoulders to keep her warm and assured her that as soon as we got moving, she’d feel better.

                At last our time came, along with a group of 12 other people, to enter the Corn Maze of Doom. I felt relieved that we would finally get started and maybe build some solid Halloween memories. Something different than the routine. An adventure of sorts to reminisce about absently on Halloween’s when we are old people. We tromped through some underbrush and emerged with the group in front of a large plywood vampire, painted with various rules, regulations and health warnings. A person in a hillbilly costume, or an actual hillbilly as it was hard to tell, informed us of the path we were to take and to have a Spooktacular time in the Corn Maze of Doom. He pointed towards a dirt path and off we went.

                A woman in our group immediately sprained her ankle as we took our first few steps onto the dirt path. She screamed louder and more terrifyingly than anything we had seen to date. She fell into the arms of the man she was with. I turned to Jennifer and shrugged and encouraged her to just move forward. That lady shouldn’t have been wearing sandals anyway I said to Jennifer.

                We wound our way with our smaller group through the rather short maze. By short I mean that the corn wasn’t very high, considering there had been a drought all summer it was no surprise that we could easily navigate the corn maze of doom.  The doom within the corn maze was mostly teenagers stopping to make out with each other and poorly designed horror stations, one guy with a chainsaw, one guy with an ax, one guy in a police uniform, who might have been an actual cop. Jennifer never screamed, jumped or seemed at all scared by any of the lame attractions. She pulled me along as I stopped to laugh at the shoddy and unbelievably cheap decoration and set ups. The shocks and scares were pale in comparison to all the real-world events we were trying to escape from; no amount of Hannibal Lector’s or Jason Voorhees, could clear actual life from our minds.

                We reached the end of the maze in under 20 minutes and Jennifer was done. Her feet were wet and she was probably never going to want to hang out on Halloween with me ever again. She hit the car key fob again and to our delight, our car was finally located just a few feet away.  We hustled over to it and jumped in. I started the car and immediately turned the heat on.

                “I’m sorry this was such a disaster,” I said, “I’d hoped this would be a fun thing to do. You know, something different. I get the feeling you were pretty miserable so I’m sorry. If it’s any consolation, I hated it too.”

                Jennifer was quietly rubbing her cold feet. Her hair just poking out from under the hood of her sweatshirt.

                “I’m glad we did this together. I’m glad we both hated this,” she said, “I wouldn’t have wanted to hate this with anyone other than you.”

                She leaned over and kissed me. A sweet warm kiss despite us both being cold. It was a marvelous kiss, the sort you replay over and over in your memory until you die.

                She leaned back into her seat, still rubbing her feet.

                “Happy Halloween,” she said, “Now let’s get the hell out of here.”

                I smiled, thinking; sure, perhaps the world is a really terrifying place, but no amount of fear and the horrors of our times could ever be bigger than the love between two people; who hated stupid Halloween activities together.  

Monday, October 7, 2019

Sort of Silly Really, After All



My fingers cannot find any
purchase on the slick shaft
of this cell.
The greasy walls of nightmares
have kept me down here.

Dark and cold in the forgotten
place. Damp, dank and dingy,
in the shadowed hole I sit.
Looking up for a peek of the moon,
shining overhead.

The sliver of silver, each midnight,
casting a blade of lunar lumens,
down the slippery walls of this
prison, slashing across my light
blinded eyes.

A nocturnal being, tossing and
slipping in the throes of terror,
squishing between barefoot toes,
the refuse of dreams; fuel for the
horrors of long nights.

Thick foggy breath, panting upwards
in clouds, circling above my head,
disappearing into the darkness of
the deepening chills and fear gripping
at the hair of my neck.

Shouts unheard, voice long gone,
a muffled whimper as ceaseless night
bares down keeping pleasantries far
from mind and hopes dashed, smoldering
ashes of wishes.

October, you say? Ah… that.
No wonder. What I relief!
I was worried I was going mad.
It’s just October. Nothing to worry about then.
Just the typical October stuff to endure. Whew!

(whistles)


Wednesday, October 2, 2019

The Broken Things



I tend to keep broken things,
even though I know I should
throw them away.

I feel bad for the broken things,
even though their usefulness is
gone. 

I like the broken things,
even when no one can see
what they mean to me.

Friday, September 27, 2019

The Wild Flowers



Late blooms of wildflowers
creep up toward the edges
of the highway exit ramp.
Delicate purples and yellows
on green long stems, reaching up
in tiny winks of nature colliding
with the asphalt shoulder of
the roadway.

I’m sitting in my car, waiting my turn
to turn onto the main thoroughfare,
exasperated with the traffic,
the slow-pokes and tailgaters,
the Sunday driver’s out on a Tuesday
morning. I’m irritated and out of
patience. My lips are tightly pressed
together in thin aggravation.

The flowers catch my eye as they
rustle in the car exhaust breezes,
their vibrancy enhanced by the
rising sun, the purple and yellow
florae, in the border lands between the
harshness of another work day and
the heartiness of nature.
Growing in spite of the curses around them.

The flowers delicate beauty, swaying
with steadfast resistance against the
brutal world around them. They just grow.
Never knowing or caring about the hard
and rocky ground they took root.
Never acknowledging the rush of cars
constantly zooming or idling next to them.
They just do what they do and are beautiful for it.  

I wonder how many other motorists have
noticed these small flowers blooming so wild,
how many other motorists have wondered about
the simple magnificence of these roadside jewels
unintentionally putting life into perspective.
These wildflowers, putting up with all the rough edges
of the world to bloom and teach me, us, something
about resilience. The traffic light changes. I smile.  

Monday, September 23, 2019

Summer Leaves



The flirtations of Summer have
drifted away, her disinterest in
anything serious, now widely
apparent. She’s got things she
wants to do and she’s already left.

Autumn is here now and
she’s planning on sticking
around for a while. She’s got
plans for you and she’ll stick
to them like pumpkin spice on rice.

Autumn, she doesn’t flirt like Summer.
Autumn goes in for the kiss like she
means it and she is enthusiastic about
a kiss back. She will look you in the
eyes and make you forget lazy Summer.

She’ll hold your hand tight as you both
stroll through the park over the crunchy leaves
she’s left like a multicolored carpet towards
a gala in her honor. She’ll tuck in closer if her cool
winds stir, her dark hair gently whipping in her breeze.

Summer didn’t care about walking in the park,
she just wanted to go to the beach, lay out in her
Sun and get a nice golden color to her skin. She
pretended not to notice the ogling stares and continued
to pretend she was just innocent in her intent.

Summer would talk to the life guard as you struggled
to load the hot car with all the stuff she brought to the
beach but never used. Drenched in sweat you suffer
as she would playfully tease all the volleyball players
and pet every dog that she came upon, cooing baby talk.

Autumn, she doesn’t do any of that. She sits in
the bookstore, sipping a hot cup of tea, adjusting
her scarf and wondering if it should rain today.
She looks forward to a night at home in front of
the fireplace, soup to eat and cuddles under a big blanket.

Autumn doesn’t flirt with you. She’s a realist and
knows that she’ll have to leave you. And she’ll leave you cold.
She’ll leave you dry.
She makes no phony promises about how
she wishes she could stay.

Her Sun will get lower.
Her nights get longer.
Her chills creep in.
She’ll get you to love her.
But leave you ready to face the cold.