i’ve been digging like lucas with the frigid grip.
or andy dufresne.
but I’m not being obtuse,
just relentless
with a spade and a some old sneaks
that i forsook like
those drunken college years.
unkempt exposed stomach soon to be crème brulee.
soufflé becoming syn co pat ed from countless crust punctures.
such is soil toil.
There isn't a mission. There isn't a goal. It's just words on fake paper, sliding and tripping and flowing all over the place, because we're all full up on words in here and there is no way we can keep them inside. Like Tony says, "Nothing in here is true."
Thursday, May 04, 2006
Monday, April 24, 2006
always there
the silhouette of a grandfather,
painted on an april afternooned window,
gameshow reruns suspended in time,
tic-tac-dough or joker’s wild,
something with tweed sportscoats
and microphones that look like martian antennae.
coffee that’s cold in a styrofoam cup
sitting there all day,
adjacent to a remote
with buttons the size of boggle cubes,
resting on a christmas-themed tv table,
always there, while I come and go.
painted on an april afternooned window,
gameshow reruns suspended in time,
tic-tac-dough or joker’s wild,
something with tweed sportscoats
and microphones that look like martian antennae.
coffee that’s cold in a styrofoam cup
sitting there all day,
adjacent to a remote
with buttons the size of boggle cubes,
resting on a christmas-themed tv table,
always there, while I come and go.
Thursday, April 13, 2006
shots and her
he came out of her,
he’s back to her.
instead of giving him the tit,
she’ll be making macaroni with meat sauce,
and asking what his plans are now.
he’s back to brushing his teeth
in her kitchen sink while she’s asking
what his plans are now.
of course she’s talking macro picture.
he’s not.
he’s capping the toothpaste,
he’s opening the screen-door,
pending divorce, living at mom’s,
pretending to be proud, he walks to the bar,
thinking about shots and last words.
he’s back to her.
instead of giving him the tit,
she’ll be making macaroni with meat sauce,
and asking what his plans are now.
he’s back to brushing his teeth
in her kitchen sink while she’s asking
what his plans are now.
of course she’s talking macro picture.
he’s not.
he’s capping the toothpaste,
he’s opening the screen-door,
pending divorce, living at mom’s,
pretending to be proud, he walks to the bar,
thinking about shots and last words.
Monday, April 10, 2006
Argument
"You son of a bitch."
Randall didn't really yell it as much as growl it as he came through the door of the bar heading straight for my drinking companion, Howard.
Old Howard didn't have much of a step left after our fairly robust celebration of opening day, or Easter, or whatever excuse we had cited earlier for drinking heavily and immediately after work. Randall's first punch was more like a bear's huge claw, swatting at Howard's head and neck without discretion.
Howard went down from his stool with some general arm-flailing that didn't impress Randall or me. People got quiet as Randall stood there about three feet from Howard breathing heavy. The bartender quipped the perfect bartender statement: "I think his foot was stuck on the stool," and began to move away from the action without looking like he was going anywhere.
Howard and I weren't friends, mind you, and my obligation to defend him from the much larger Randall was close to zero. We had been drinking on a pay-as-you-go basis, so I wasn't owed anything. For all I knew Howard had killed Randall's dog or slept with his wife. In my head, I believe the 'barrier for entry' into this particular conflict was something like Howard's imminent demise. That wasn't in the cards just yet.
That said, I'm not a fellow to give up my barstool and make room for a thorough beating. I remained in my spot at the bar. Randall continued to breathe heavily. The air pumping out of his lungs was sickly-sweet, and I couldn't determine the flavor. Gross.
On the floor, Howard assumed the standard position of a four foot eleven bald man with weak muscle tone and glasses who has been thrown to the ground by a larger opponent: armadillo-ball. There was whimpering coming from his general direction, and it seemed pretty clear this wasn't Howard's first time down there. The bartender's voice floated across the bar saying something about 'squeaking like a mouse,' and I decided his role as a commentator was annoying me.
Randall wiped the back of his hand across his mouth and inhaled noisily at the same time, as if his salivary glands were working doubletime. He was not, however, drooling. Thank goodness. He said, "Get up" twice, once quiet enough only Howard and I could hear him and once again loud enough for the entire bar to take notice. Howard's hands fell away from his face and he stood up very fast. Presumably, the standard high-school bully routine didn't go much further than the swat-kick-spit-disappear four-step tango Howard had been rehearsing all his life. This whole 'get up' business caught him by surprise.
I was expecting a sitcom-perfect second swat, and I was right. Howard didn't go down, but instead skidded with some comic value from the bar to a trivia-terminal mounted on the wall. His elbow -- and possibly his funny bone -- hit the keyboard and he pursed his lips and started sucking air to make the hissing sound that indicates quiet pain. Randall stepped to him and I decided that not enough backstory had been provided for me to make a judgement. But I was interested in preserving the trivia terminal, so I quick-legged alongside Randall and stopped him with a hand to the chest.
"What's, uh, your big problem with this little fella?" I asked Randall. Howard rested a flat, glistening hand against his forehead as if he was taking his own temperature. He rolled his eyes slightly and left his hand just sitting there.
Before Randall could answer, there was an explosion outside, and people screamed like something important was happening. I looked back over and Randall wasn't there. Howard hadn't changed a bit.
After the sirens died down, we all went back to drinking. Nobody had seen Randall before, so it wasn't like we were all wondering where he went. Howard, who I had seen around and thought was mildly amusing, was gone the next day as well.
Two weeks later, someone at the bank let it slip that the safe in the basement had been blown through in the back, and nobody even noticed because the racks inside had hidden the damage. By 'let it slip,' I mean they were fired and came over and told everyone in a disgruntled fashion. It was one of those new-wave banks with long hours and matching t-shirts and weekend promotions. I didn't like using their ATMs because it reminded me of a video game at South of the Border. The story eventually got to the press, and the Virginia B.I. let it be known that they were keeping the heist hush hush until they smoked out some potential insiders involved in the scheme. They showed two headshots on the news.
You'll never guess who.
Randall didn't really yell it as much as growl it as he came through the door of the bar heading straight for my drinking companion, Howard.
Old Howard didn't have much of a step left after our fairly robust celebration of opening day, or Easter, or whatever excuse we had cited earlier for drinking heavily and immediately after work. Randall's first punch was more like a bear's huge claw, swatting at Howard's head and neck without discretion.
Howard went down from his stool with some general arm-flailing that didn't impress Randall or me. People got quiet as Randall stood there about three feet from Howard breathing heavy. The bartender quipped the perfect bartender statement: "I think his foot was stuck on the stool," and began to move away from the action without looking like he was going anywhere.
Howard and I weren't friends, mind you, and my obligation to defend him from the much larger Randall was close to zero. We had been drinking on a pay-as-you-go basis, so I wasn't owed anything. For all I knew Howard had killed Randall's dog or slept with his wife. In my head, I believe the 'barrier for entry' into this particular conflict was something like Howard's imminent demise. That wasn't in the cards just yet.
That said, I'm not a fellow to give up my barstool and make room for a thorough beating. I remained in my spot at the bar. Randall continued to breathe heavily. The air pumping out of his lungs was sickly-sweet, and I couldn't determine the flavor. Gross.
On the floor, Howard assumed the standard position of a four foot eleven bald man with weak muscle tone and glasses who has been thrown to the ground by a larger opponent: armadillo-ball. There was whimpering coming from his general direction, and it seemed pretty clear this wasn't Howard's first time down there. The bartender's voice floated across the bar saying something about 'squeaking like a mouse,' and I decided his role as a commentator was annoying me.
Randall wiped the back of his hand across his mouth and inhaled noisily at the same time, as if his salivary glands were working doubletime. He was not, however, drooling. Thank goodness. He said, "Get up" twice, once quiet enough only Howard and I could hear him and once again loud enough for the entire bar to take notice. Howard's hands fell away from his face and he stood up very fast. Presumably, the standard high-school bully routine didn't go much further than the swat-kick-spit-disappear four-step tango Howard had been rehearsing all his life. This whole 'get up' business caught him by surprise.
I was expecting a sitcom-perfect second swat, and I was right. Howard didn't go down, but instead skidded with some comic value from the bar to a trivia-terminal mounted on the wall. His elbow -- and possibly his funny bone -- hit the keyboard and he pursed his lips and started sucking air to make the hissing sound that indicates quiet pain. Randall stepped to him and I decided that not enough backstory had been provided for me to make a judgement. But I was interested in preserving the trivia terminal, so I quick-legged alongside Randall and stopped him with a hand to the chest.
"What's, uh, your big problem with this little fella?" I asked Randall. Howard rested a flat, glistening hand against his forehead as if he was taking his own temperature. He rolled his eyes slightly and left his hand just sitting there.
Before Randall could answer, there was an explosion outside, and people screamed like something important was happening. I looked back over and Randall wasn't there. Howard hadn't changed a bit.
After the sirens died down, we all went back to drinking. Nobody had seen Randall before, so it wasn't like we were all wondering where he went. Howard, who I had seen around and thought was mildly amusing, was gone the next day as well.
Two weeks later, someone at the bank let it slip that the safe in the basement had been blown through in the back, and nobody even noticed because the racks inside had hidden the damage. By 'let it slip,' I mean they were fired and came over and told everyone in a disgruntled fashion. It was one of those new-wave banks with long hours and matching t-shirts and weekend promotions. I didn't like using their ATMs because it reminded me of a video game at South of the Border. The story eventually got to the press, and the Virginia B.I. let it be known that they were keeping the heist hush hush until they smoked out some potential insiders involved in the scheme. They showed two headshots on the news.
You'll never guess who.
Wednesday, April 05, 2006
crumbs
you’re different daily
like bread.
flat and freckled staple
of countries that boast the minaret
one minute,
bloated and glossy loaf of the Ukraine
the next,
toast when you pick up the drink.
unrelenting manna,
contrived like sliced white,
dark drawers keep you from you,
I sometimes happen upon your raucous crumbs.
like bread.
flat and freckled staple
of countries that boast the minaret
one minute,
bloated and glossy loaf of the Ukraine
the next,
toast when you pick up the drink.
unrelenting manna,
contrived like sliced white,
dark drawers keep you from you,
I sometimes happen upon your raucous crumbs.
Monday, March 27, 2006
mondaiku
haikus are the things
that come to mind on monday
the day that ends fun.
i be westerner
friday is the orient
far and alluring.
that come to mind on monday
the day that ends fun.
i be westerner
friday is the orient
far and alluring.
Monday, March 20, 2006
that star and you
i hope that you tear all of your important tendons,
and that you get what’s coming to you--
million dollar baby.
you’re not worth the milk dandruff
that falls to the floor,
when I pop the cap for some utter-juice
pasteur made safe to swallow.
that star and you are a sight.
if I had my druthers, you’d be the figures
in marty mcfly’s photo,
when his mom was hot for him.
but I don’t. and you won’t.
you’ll set records and get a ring.
because I’m from a once mighty town,
now only famous for sandwiches and a fake boxer.
and that you get what’s coming to you--
million dollar baby.
you’re not worth the milk dandruff
that falls to the floor,
when I pop the cap for some utter-juice
pasteur made safe to swallow.
that star and you are a sight.
if I had my druthers, you’d be the figures
in marty mcfly’s photo,
when his mom was hot for him.
but I don’t. and you won’t.
you’ll set records and get a ring.
because I’m from a once mighty town,
now only famous for sandwiches and a fake boxer.
Thursday, March 16, 2006
ignoring the sounds
If hitler were to return today,
my scarred face wouldn’t be to his liking,
and he definitely wouldn’t fancy you—
what, with the melanin and all—
i’m sure he’d return to driving his machine
of war, cleansing the earth of races obscene.
stamping countries like envelopes with the swastika,
his fun-sized-snicker mustache chortling at the myriad thwarted.
we'd get it like the rest of them...
while we waited for our imminent demise,
my foot would be saying hello to yours,
unwrapping you from a package of sleep.
you’re not awake enough for me to ask
if you want potatoes for breakfast, but I ask anyway,
our bedroom air filled with diner idiom,
ignoring the sounds outside our windows,
of innocents getting yanked and plugged like chords.
our neighborhood becoming a ghetto,
bricks and mortar making it so.
my scarred face wouldn’t be to his liking,
and he definitely wouldn’t fancy you—
what, with the melanin and all—
i’m sure he’d return to driving his machine
of war, cleansing the earth of races obscene.
stamping countries like envelopes with the swastika,
his fun-sized-snicker mustache chortling at the myriad thwarted.
we'd get it like the rest of them...
while we waited for our imminent demise,
my foot would be saying hello to yours,
unwrapping you from a package of sleep.
you’re not awake enough for me to ask
if you want potatoes for breakfast, but I ask anyway,
our bedroom air filled with diner idiom,
ignoring the sounds outside our windows,
of innocents getting yanked and plugged like chords.
our neighborhood becoming a ghetto,
bricks and mortar making it so.
Tuesday, March 14, 2006
Behind the Wheel of a Large Automobile
We have two cars, and I enjoy driving them both for different reasons. 'The big car' isn't really that big, but it's a Japanese wagon that feels and drives like a family car. It balances a safe blend of zippiness with obvious size. I drive it like a dad, ostentatiously checking my mirrors, propping my hands in the 10-2 position, quick-spying my kid in the back-seat like I'm in an American car commercial.
It's probably important to note that this unconscious play-acting doesn't actually affect my driving speed, for instance. It would appear to be all pantomime.
Our other car is an older Japanese sedan that doesn't travel faster than any other stock Honda Civic or Toyota Corolla in my neighborhood. But compared with the big car, it enfolds me like a space capsule. The seat is devastatingly low to the ground if I hop in directly from the wagon. When I first get behind the wheel after my wife drives the car, I'm a pilot in a cockpit, wonkishly making small modifications in the seat position, tilt steering wheel and mirrors. During this pre-flight I'll often twiddle knobs on the stereo, slot in a new cd, meaninglessly pop open the glove box or close the slow-release door on the central cup-holder.
When I drive the little car, it is an extension of me in the way the big car can't be. I'm sitting astride the big car like a rider on a horse. In the smaller car, I'm the horse's brain. I think I'm probably more confident in the little car, which might be a dangerous illusion. But I know what it can do, I know exactly how far behind me and to the right the furthest point on the car is. And while I know this information about the bigger car, I never enter situations where those memorized parameters really get re-checked. I don't slingshot the wide outer lane of one of D.C.'s notorious traffic circles to beat stopping at red lights. I do that in the little car. In the big car, I decellerate like a tugboat captain. In the little car, I power-merge and drop speed aping the engine control I had in my old five-speed Toyota, then grip the handle above the passenger-side door and take a tight turn at a safe but daring speed.
When I take the little car into downtown D.C. is when the style really comes out. I jockey for position, light up taxis and tour-buses as enemies in the chess-game of road management, and perform smug calculations in my head about beating an asleep-at-the-wheel driver out of an intersection and getting into his lane before the row of parked cars makes mine disappear. I simultaneously pay more and less attention to the road as I meld with the car in these moments. The music is playing, a breeze happens through the slightly-lowered windows, a small engine rattle catches my attention for a moment. I juggle these sensations without ever taking my mind off the critical task at hand.
At these moments, I realize -- if I stop to think about it -- that part of this driving style comes from that of my Uncle J______. He drove a manual transmission Japanese automobile with an unsuitable stereo system, even though music was his life. He remains the only person I know to be cited for wearing headphones while driving his car. If you sat in the passenger seat, you would be hard-pressed to determine the exact moments when he was actually driving the car. He was fiddling with the portable CD player and the pair of external speakers he used when not driving alone. The little speakers -- a pre-cursor to computer speakers, I guess, but battery-powered -- would roll around on the dash while the first-generation and extremely skip-prone CD player was securely planted on a washcloth pilfered from my mom's house. J______ would be tracking through songs, drinking a soda, shifting into fifth, singing along, and changing lanes on the turnpike with the windows down. Driving was barely part of this ballet. He had more than his share of automotive mishaps.
When I started driving, I took up many of J______'s habits. One of my cars had a tape deck which no longer rotated the wheels in tapes but still technically still functioned in that the sensor would read music and send it to the speakers. I stole an elementary school-type tape player and connected it to the car's (extremely weak) sound system through a five-dollar tape adapter. I frequently handled large beverages while driving, and my cockamamie tape-player-to-tape-player was a downright dangerous distraction. I added smoking to the act in an attempt to one-up Uncle J______. I memorably drove my first car into a ditch severing a natural gas line and leaving three families without hot water for a week.
Another of my driving influences was a cousin named K______. He was legendarily irresponsible though I don't recall if any of his cars actually perished because of his negligence. Mostly, they rusted into oblivion before our very eyes. (Not by choice, I copied this in some ways as well: After a concert on the other side of Pittsburgh, Tracy Chapman if you'll believe it, I was driving home with a friend when he looked down to find a four-inch geyser erupting through the floor panel on the passenger side of the car.) The car I remember K______ driving was a grey Chevette. I believe it had a manual choke and was possibly only a four-speed. K______ drove the car like a worker-drone on a Russian submarine. He was constantly adjusting cranks and seemed to be operating pedals I didn't know existed in cars. As his feet worked furiously across the gas, brake, clutch, choke and who knows what else, at times he would release a pedal (clutch?) that would pop dramatically and send the car surging forward or lurching backward. His behind-the-wheel performance reminded me of the Wizard of Oz behind his curtain. Unlike my cultivated grownup combination of these two driving styles, K_____'s endless gyrations in the driver's seat frequently distracted him from the actual variables on the road. Driving with him was reliably risky. Accidental 360s and inadvertent contact with curbs and railroad tracks were not uncommon.
Driving is like life sometimes, I guess. The big car is my adult car, and it is the car in which I abandon the childish habits of driving like it's fun. It's a task, to be undertaken efficiently (and I genuinely enjoy the efficiency of performing the task in the big car). In the trunk of a Honda Civic I keep the harmlessly irresponsible youth, tucked away under abandoned blankets and a mismatched set of tools that don't correspond to the car in any way. The big car came with a sleek little toolkit. And that's really the difference.
It's probably important to note that this unconscious play-acting doesn't actually affect my driving speed, for instance. It would appear to be all pantomime.
Our other car is an older Japanese sedan that doesn't travel faster than any other stock Honda Civic or Toyota Corolla in my neighborhood. But compared with the big car, it enfolds me like a space capsule. The seat is devastatingly low to the ground if I hop in directly from the wagon. When I first get behind the wheel after my wife drives the car, I'm a pilot in a cockpit, wonkishly making small modifications in the seat position, tilt steering wheel and mirrors. During this pre-flight I'll often twiddle knobs on the stereo, slot in a new cd, meaninglessly pop open the glove box or close the slow-release door on the central cup-holder.
When I drive the little car, it is an extension of me in the way the big car can't be. I'm sitting astride the big car like a rider on a horse. In the smaller car, I'm the horse's brain. I think I'm probably more confident in the little car, which might be a dangerous illusion. But I know what it can do, I know exactly how far behind me and to the right the furthest point on the car is. And while I know this information about the bigger car, I never enter situations where those memorized parameters really get re-checked. I don't slingshot the wide outer lane of one of D.C.'s notorious traffic circles to beat stopping at red lights. I do that in the little car. In the big car, I decellerate like a tugboat captain. In the little car, I power-merge and drop speed aping the engine control I had in my old five-speed Toyota, then grip the handle above the passenger-side door and take a tight turn at a safe but daring speed.
When I take the little car into downtown D.C. is when the style really comes out. I jockey for position, light up taxis and tour-buses as enemies in the chess-game of road management, and perform smug calculations in my head about beating an asleep-at-the-wheel driver out of an intersection and getting into his lane before the row of parked cars makes mine disappear. I simultaneously pay more and less attention to the road as I meld with the car in these moments. The music is playing, a breeze happens through the slightly-lowered windows, a small engine rattle catches my attention for a moment. I juggle these sensations without ever taking my mind off the critical task at hand.
At these moments, I realize -- if I stop to think about it -- that part of this driving style comes from that of my Uncle J______. He drove a manual transmission Japanese automobile with an unsuitable stereo system, even though music was his life. He remains the only person I know to be cited for wearing headphones while driving his car. If you sat in the passenger seat, you would be hard-pressed to determine the exact moments when he was actually driving the car. He was fiddling with the portable CD player and the pair of external speakers he used when not driving alone. The little speakers -- a pre-cursor to computer speakers, I guess, but battery-powered -- would roll around on the dash while the first-generation and extremely skip-prone CD player was securely planted on a washcloth pilfered from my mom's house. J______ would be tracking through songs, drinking a soda, shifting into fifth, singing along, and changing lanes on the turnpike with the windows down. Driving was barely part of this ballet. He had more than his share of automotive mishaps.
When I started driving, I took up many of J______'s habits. One of my cars had a tape deck which no longer rotated the wheels in tapes but still technically still functioned in that the sensor would read music and send it to the speakers. I stole an elementary school-type tape player and connected it to the car's (extremely weak) sound system through a five-dollar tape adapter. I frequently handled large beverages while driving, and my cockamamie tape-player-to-tape-player was a downright dangerous distraction. I added smoking to the act in an attempt to one-up Uncle J______. I memorably drove my first car into a ditch severing a natural gas line and leaving three families without hot water for a week.
Another of my driving influences was a cousin named K______. He was legendarily irresponsible though I don't recall if any of his cars actually perished because of his negligence. Mostly, they rusted into oblivion before our very eyes. (Not by choice, I copied this in some ways as well: After a concert on the other side of Pittsburgh, Tracy Chapman if you'll believe it, I was driving home with a friend when he looked down to find a four-inch geyser erupting through the floor panel on the passenger side of the car.) The car I remember K______ driving was a grey Chevette. I believe it had a manual choke and was possibly only a four-speed. K______ drove the car like a worker-drone on a Russian submarine. He was constantly adjusting cranks and seemed to be operating pedals I didn't know existed in cars. As his feet worked furiously across the gas, brake, clutch, choke and who knows what else, at times he would release a pedal (clutch?) that would pop dramatically and send the car surging forward or lurching backward. His behind-the-wheel performance reminded me of the Wizard of Oz behind his curtain. Unlike my cultivated grownup combination of these two driving styles, K_____'s endless gyrations in the driver's seat frequently distracted him from the actual variables on the road. Driving with him was reliably risky. Accidental 360s and inadvertent contact with curbs and railroad tracks were not uncommon.
Driving is like life sometimes, I guess. The big car is my adult car, and it is the car in which I abandon the childish habits of driving like it's fun. It's a task, to be undertaken efficiently (and I genuinely enjoy the efficiency of performing the task in the big car). In the trunk of a Honda Civic I keep the harmlessly irresponsible youth, tucked away under abandoned blankets and a mismatched set of tools that don't correspond to the car in any way. The big car came with a sleek little toolkit. And that's really the difference.
Friday, March 03, 2006
wingspan
that fat white nerd at the company picnic
wearing a miles davis t-shirt:
you own stryper albums.
or that relentless we gotta hang out sometime guy
i barely talked to back in the day:
keep your card. i’m glad you consult.
how about the mayo-globbed mouth-corner of some prick
that just keeps talking. oblivious to situations me and he:
i’m not hungry anymore.
and there’s the barely employed guy on my block
it snows. his wife shovels:
quit the belligerent neighbor banter.
racist grandfathers.
the self-important noon time aid at my kid’s school.
the person that always wants to talk about brilliant oscar efforts.
the big guy on the train that thinks he can eyeball my girl.
ungrateful eastern-block defectors bellyaching about taxes, etc.
pegasus wings should painfully take root from me,
so I can shun you all, bloody and glorious—
wingspan in my periphery.
wearing a miles davis t-shirt:
you own stryper albums.
or that relentless we gotta hang out sometime guy
i barely talked to back in the day:
keep your card. i’m glad you consult.
how about the mayo-globbed mouth-corner of some prick
that just keeps talking. oblivious to situations me and he:
i’m not hungry anymore.
and there’s the barely employed guy on my block
it snows. his wife shovels:
quit the belligerent neighbor banter.
racist grandfathers.
the self-important noon time aid at my kid’s school.
the person that always wants to talk about brilliant oscar efforts.
the big guy on the train that thinks he can eyeball my girl.
ungrateful eastern-block defectors bellyaching about taxes, etc.
pegasus wings should painfully take root from me,
so I can shun you all, bloody and glorious—
wingspan in my periphery.
Tuesday, February 28, 2006
ode to knots
i wonder if don knots and jim nabors
used to go fishing together,
off camera--
knocking a few back under a familiar dusk sky,
baiting their hooks,
asking each other:
people don’t really think that’s us, do they?
used to go fishing together,
off camera--
knocking a few back under a familiar dusk sky,
baiting their hooks,
asking each other:
people don’t really think that’s us, do they?
Saturday, February 25, 2006
go get pop.
we’d be up catching flies in the kitchen.
late nights when my brother wasn’t michelobing.
i can feel it in the air tonight, o lord.
he was older, so he had the technique down.
he’d sneak up on one, take it, shake it like craps dice,
then slam it off the ripped linoleum.
laughing like harlem folks in the apollo,
we’d wait for another one to come down from the drop ceiling,
panels stained, looking like rorschach tests,
as if some bum lived above,
passing out, spilling his wild i.
anyway…
we’d wait for one to come down,
catch it, wing it,
all night long. all night, all night, all night long.
we goin’ to mambo, carumba, keep the
back door open like u.s. borders that create tejanos,
flies check in, but they don’t…
we had those oscar the grouch trashcans
on the back porch. They were clanging about.
step onto the miniature-golf turf that cloaked the porch floor.
dude, what was that?
lids were off. a ‘possum eating stereotypical trashcan trash—
coffee grinds, eggshells, plantain peels, the like.
turns out the fucker had a skull like jaws from moonraker.
convulsing in the corner, hissing.
i pinned his neck down with the spade my brother produced
inspector gadget style
whilst he pumped pellets into marsupial melon.
15 or so spit from a co2 gun he got for christmas;
mr. opossum was o'possible to off.
all alliteration aside,
we were getting a little nervous with rasputin here.
my brother took over the spade-pinning detail,
go get pop!
i ran up the steps and woke him like revere.
excited ‘possum talk filled his thick ears,
he didn’t say a word, put his soles to that awful red carpet,
walked down deliberately in sagging fruit of the looms,
grabbed the spade from my brother,
beat that ‘possum to stillness with a shovel in his undies,
half asleep, his back hairs like armor.
late nights when my brother wasn’t michelobing.
i can feel it in the air tonight, o lord.
he was older, so he had the technique down.
he’d sneak up on one, take it, shake it like craps dice,
then slam it off the ripped linoleum.
laughing like harlem folks in the apollo,
we’d wait for another one to come down from the drop ceiling,
panels stained, looking like rorschach tests,
as if some bum lived above,
passing out, spilling his wild i.
anyway…
we’d wait for one to come down,
catch it, wing it,
all night long. all night, all night, all night long.
we goin’ to mambo, carumba, keep the
back door open like u.s. borders that create tejanos,
flies check in, but they don’t…
we had those oscar the grouch trashcans
on the back porch. They were clanging about.
step onto the miniature-golf turf that cloaked the porch floor.
dude, what was that?
lids were off. a ‘possum eating stereotypical trashcan trash—
coffee grinds, eggshells, plantain peels, the like.
turns out the fucker had a skull like jaws from moonraker.
convulsing in the corner, hissing.
i pinned his neck down with the spade my brother produced
inspector gadget style
whilst he pumped pellets into marsupial melon.
15 or so spit from a co2 gun he got for christmas;
mr. opossum was o'possible to off.
all alliteration aside,
we were getting a little nervous with rasputin here.
my brother took over the spade-pinning detail,
go get pop!
i ran up the steps and woke him like revere.
excited ‘possum talk filled his thick ears,
he didn’t say a word, put his soles to that awful red carpet,
walked down deliberately in sagging fruit of the looms,
grabbed the spade from my brother,
beat that ‘possum to stillness with a shovel in his undies,
half asleep, his back hairs like armor.
Monday, February 13, 2006
like this
Sedans compressed like a and b buttons,
uneaten pork chunks lavished with overdone rice,
waiting to be of some use again.
everywhere
there is white rooftop,
winter wonderland, glazed power line,
snot noses run toboggan time tests,
like engineers from deutchland.
more charles schulz than charles schulz.
it looked like this when we
formed to become a voltron spider.
your casket being the thorax.
i was the right, front leg.
uneaten pork chunks lavished with overdone rice,
waiting to be of some use again.
everywhere
there is white rooftop,
winter wonderland, glazed power line,
snot noses run toboggan time tests,
like engineers from deutchland.
more charles schulz than charles schulz.
it looked like this when we
formed to become a voltron spider.
your casket being the thorax.
i was the right, front leg.
Friday, February 10, 2006
Sunday Outside the Newsroom: Brantacide
Smoke II
At this point in my life, I was sneaking smokes. Life was full of promise, and I had made a bunch of promises, to myself and to my girlfriend and my mom and everybody else in my life who didn't smoke. It was time to quit, I was a grownup, there was that time I caught my shirt on fire driving in the mid-summer swelter, blah-de-blah.
I wasn't buying it. I snuck smokes as often as I breathed air. All these people, the targets of my promising behavior, they knew it, but we agreed to keep up the charade, as a team effort, throughout the first couple years after I left college. It wasn't that hard.
I headed into the newspaper on a weekend to dig into some work -- and to slip into the socially welcoming milieu of fellow-smokers. It was a Sunday, when a team of drones sat at a sad batch of Frankenstein-monster Macs and assembled tiny ads in ancient Pagemaker like Buddhist monks. The ad-building folks had ministrations that seemed precise and appealing even though they depressed me. They took a plastic sleeve with the information about the ad, usually dug up an older version from some far-away file-server, altered it slightly, saved and moved on. Their peaceful movements were calming, but it was the endless re-jiggering of the same dozen words and the same dull images in the same tiny box that put me on the edge of weeping. One column by four inches. Two columns by five. Half page. Forever.
I was at one of my desks sniffing through some old files to see if there was any way I could avoid doing reporting that week when I heard a fracas outside. I had come to work to get something done, surely, and to absent-mindedly think about unspooling my current setup over perpetual lies and fear of life getting a proper start sometime in the near future, and to stare at the tiny sliver of alabaster skin above the waistline of an art student who did paste-up on weekends, but I wasn't above an additional distraction.
The newsroom was wedged in a slight grade; on one side you ascended stairs to go out while on the other you walked straight into to the parking lot. I took the stairs two at a time and heard a reporter named Elkins who was a good guy and gave the impression -- false as it turned out -- that he took his job too seriously. He wore cowboy boots before Washington was taken over by Texans. He was yelling at Dean, a gigantic man who drove a Lincoln which made sounds like a dozen empties were rolling in the trunk. There was no way of knowing whether the sounds were anything other than exactly that, because the trunk didn't open anymore.
"...ducks!" Dean was shouting when I arrived.
"They're Canada geese, Dean-man, and they're harmless." Elkins was angular in a country star from the forties way, and had a concave body on which clothes hung like drying laundry. It's possible that he was thin and strong and wiry, but he sometimes conjured the image of a scarecrow with a notebook. I nodded to Elkins and lit a cigarette with an amused grin. He was sitting on a rusty-looking desk chair and I sat on the ground. Dean was next to his car, red-faced and possibly drunk. The decorum which doubtlessly rules most workplaces was absent in this particular bankrupt newsroom, and reporters, especially on weekends, would drink on the job without giving it much thought.
"They're filthy scavengers and they're shitting all over my car." Dean had a point here. The Canada geese who used the nearby man-made pond as some sort of way-station were pretty gross. They walked around eating grass and defecating pretty much wherever they pleased. I hadn't seen anything like this on my car, but I wasn't in the habit of inspecting my vehicle closely. Dean, however, was.
"They're just birds, Dean-man. Give it a break."
"They're too dumb for their own good," Dean continued. He got into his car and said through the open window, "It's time for some natural selection." Elkins momentarily looked at me with wide eyes and then made for the car in a clatter of boots on concrete. Dean had the Lincoln in gear and was moving by the time Elkins reached him. Elkins smacked the trunk of the car and it was gone across the mostly-empty lot toward a batch of geese not doing much of anything.
Dean was right about the geese not being that smart. Elk and I stood there as Dean tore through the geese hitting a half-dozen while a few others looked on. They had no mechanism for responding to this. Nature's thousands of years of selection had perhaps programmed responses in the tiny geese brains to oncoming bobcats and coyotes but the flight-codes had nothing prepared for an onrushing '79 Lincoln. The birds seemed more disturbed by the damaged remains of their former gaggle-mates than the instrument of their destruction. I have to say I was, too.
Life in the newsroom unfolded in ways that surprised you. I was still relatively post-collegiate, and didn't have much experience with relating to actual grownups who had something like lives. Dean was probably the first example of palpable, irritatingly obvious failure I had experienced at that point outside of a few dispiriting professors over the years. Late on a Tuesday night not long before the geese incident, I had experienced some catastrophe or another which would lead to hours more at the paper long past midnight. I sent home the paste-up people and went to get a Coke from a machine in a poorly-lit alcove. Dean surprised me, sitting on the steps in the half-dark. He was still except for shaking hands. He shocked me when he asked if I had any siblings. He told me a story about racing his brother on 29 down to Manassas when they were kids, when Virginia's DC suburbs were an untamed countryside. He looked away and made a snuffling sound, his hands still shaking and red-white. I started to recede from the alcove as I realized that he wasn't really telling me the story as much as repeating it to himself.
At this point in my life, I was sneaking smokes. Life was full of promise, and I had made a bunch of promises, to myself and to my girlfriend and my mom and everybody else in my life who didn't smoke. It was time to quit, I was a grownup, there was that time I caught my shirt on fire driving in the mid-summer swelter, blah-de-blah.
I wasn't buying it. I snuck smokes as often as I breathed air. All these people, the targets of my promising behavior, they knew it, but we agreed to keep up the charade, as a team effort, throughout the first couple years after I left college. It wasn't that hard.
I headed into the newspaper on a weekend to dig into some work -- and to slip into the socially welcoming milieu of fellow-smokers. It was a Sunday, when a team of drones sat at a sad batch of Frankenstein-monster Macs and assembled tiny ads in ancient Pagemaker like Buddhist monks. The ad-building folks had ministrations that seemed precise and appealing even though they depressed me. They took a plastic sleeve with the information about the ad, usually dug up an older version from some far-away file-server, altered it slightly, saved and moved on. Their peaceful movements were calming, but it was the endless re-jiggering of the same dozen words and the same dull images in the same tiny box that put me on the edge of weeping. One column by four inches. Two columns by five. Half page. Forever.
I was at one of my desks sniffing through some old files to see if there was any way I could avoid doing reporting that week when I heard a fracas outside. I had come to work to get something done, surely, and to absent-mindedly think about unspooling my current setup over perpetual lies and fear of life getting a proper start sometime in the near future, and to stare at the tiny sliver of alabaster skin above the waistline of an art student who did paste-up on weekends, but I wasn't above an additional distraction.
The newsroom was wedged in a slight grade; on one side you ascended stairs to go out while on the other you walked straight into to the parking lot. I took the stairs two at a time and heard a reporter named Elkins who was a good guy and gave the impression -- false as it turned out -- that he took his job too seriously. He wore cowboy boots before Washington was taken over by Texans. He was yelling at Dean, a gigantic man who drove a Lincoln which made sounds like a dozen empties were rolling in the trunk. There was no way of knowing whether the sounds were anything other than exactly that, because the trunk didn't open anymore.
"...ducks!" Dean was shouting when I arrived.
"They're Canada geese, Dean-man, and they're harmless." Elkins was angular in a country star from the forties way, and had a concave body on which clothes hung like drying laundry. It's possible that he was thin and strong and wiry, but he sometimes conjured the image of a scarecrow with a notebook. I nodded to Elkins and lit a cigarette with an amused grin. He was sitting on a rusty-looking desk chair and I sat on the ground. Dean was next to his car, red-faced and possibly drunk. The decorum which doubtlessly rules most workplaces was absent in this particular bankrupt newsroom, and reporters, especially on weekends, would drink on the job without giving it much thought.
"They're filthy scavengers and they're shitting all over my car." Dean had a point here. The Canada geese who used the nearby man-made pond as some sort of way-station were pretty gross. They walked around eating grass and defecating pretty much wherever they pleased. I hadn't seen anything like this on my car, but I wasn't in the habit of inspecting my vehicle closely. Dean, however, was.
"They're just birds, Dean-man. Give it a break."
"They're too dumb for their own good," Dean continued. He got into his car and said through the open window, "It's time for some natural selection." Elkins momentarily looked at me with wide eyes and then made for the car in a clatter of boots on concrete. Dean had the Lincoln in gear and was moving by the time Elkins reached him. Elkins smacked the trunk of the car and it was gone across the mostly-empty lot toward a batch of geese not doing much of anything.
Dean was right about the geese not being that smart. Elk and I stood there as Dean tore through the geese hitting a half-dozen while a few others looked on. They had no mechanism for responding to this. Nature's thousands of years of selection had perhaps programmed responses in the tiny geese brains to oncoming bobcats and coyotes but the flight-codes had nothing prepared for an onrushing '79 Lincoln. The birds seemed more disturbed by the damaged remains of their former gaggle-mates than the instrument of their destruction. I have to say I was, too.
Life in the newsroom unfolded in ways that surprised you. I was still relatively post-collegiate, and didn't have much experience with relating to actual grownups who had something like lives. Dean was probably the first example of palpable, irritatingly obvious failure I had experienced at that point outside of a few dispiriting professors over the years. Late on a Tuesday night not long before the geese incident, I had experienced some catastrophe or another which would lead to hours more at the paper long past midnight. I sent home the paste-up people and went to get a Coke from a machine in a poorly-lit alcove. Dean surprised me, sitting on the steps in the half-dark. He was still except for shaking hands. He shocked me when he asked if I had any siblings. He told me a story about racing his brother on 29 down to Manassas when they were kids, when Virginia's DC suburbs were an untamed countryside. He looked away and made a snuffling sound, his hands still shaking and red-white. I started to recede from the alcove as I realized that he wasn't really telling me the story as much as repeating it to himself.
Tuesday, January 31, 2006
loot apsev
my old lady hates the word body,
i want your body; your body is the most;
let me hear your body talk.
it’s bad.
but it aint as bad as french dressing.
or some waist of skin,
open-faced helmet on his yale head,
riding a vespa,
overzealously obeying traffic laws,
heading to the salon for a manicure and some highlights.
i want your body; your body is the most;
let me hear your body talk.
it’s bad.
but it aint as bad as french dressing.
or some waist of skin,
open-faced helmet on his yale head,
riding a vespa,
overzealously obeying traffic laws,
heading to the salon for a manicure and some highlights.
Monday, January 30, 2006
small happiness
In that country where everything is made,
boys are valued
like ring-pops to second graders.
girls, seen as a small happiness,
are fed to the earth
like seeds. they don’t grow
like yams in melanesia,
ten feet tall and celebrated.
they choke on apathetic soil
and the small bones of other unwanteds.
while above, a strapping son takes a
yoked beast across his father’s field,
shooting gallery duck style.
boys are valued
like ring-pops to second graders.
girls, seen as a small happiness,
are fed to the earth
like seeds. they don’t grow
like yams in melanesia,
ten feet tall and celebrated.
they choke on apathetic soil
and the small bones of other unwanteds.
while above, a strapping son takes a
yoked beast across his father’s field,
shooting gallery duck style.
Friday, January 27, 2006
Part II Setting the Scene
In this office where I worked in the mid-nineties, we were like the folks below-decks on a sinking ship. Until the water rushed down the stairs, we just kept working away, waging little battles, acting like things mattered, engaging in playfully twenty-something destructive behavior, even the forty-somethings.
We put out weekly newspapers, toiling away in a squat low-rent office park in the shadow of a half-dozen trillion-dollar telecom companies that stud the rich side of Tyson's Corner in Virginia like the hairs on the back of your hand. Standing in line at the (now departed) Chik-Fil-a at a nearby upscale mall, my friends and I in cheap flannel shirts and jeans stinking of cigarettes and stained carpet past its prime looked radically out of place among the suits and ties of sales reps and account executives. We didn't care. We worked 40 hours in three days to put out newspapers of extraordinarily low quality. But it seemed really important at the time.
On the top floor of the office park, the various executive functions of the newspaper unfolded in mostly secret. The elite sales people cheated on their spouses and possibly did coke up here, while the president and publisher shifted money from one defunct ledger line to another. He drove a Jag while asking the rest of us to take a deferment on our paychecks for a couple weeks a year. By the time I quit, I kept getting paid this deferred salary for three months. Thinking I was a bad-ass (1996, I believe) I kept the office pager required to keep me on a short editorial leash until the arrears were paid in full.
The upstairs was mysterious to me and the other Doc Martens and jeans guys downstairs. The sartorial selections of the older folks who ran things veered from overly serious to jarringly casual. Unfortunately, both made us feel like teenagers because even the casual outfits were old: matching track suits with sweatbands, dark blue jeans with an ironed crease and loafers without socks, pink Brooks Brothers polos with the collars flipped up.
The accounting people -- sassy-talking frumpy black ladies with unattractive hosiery and (as it turned out) no heads for numbers -- similarly disdained the management team, and the strong scent of racial divide was heavy upstairs, another reason for us younger folks to avoid it. We functioned as if we were in constant battle with the short-sighted managers and their failure-prone decisions, but to the black folks in accounting, we were golden-boys just because we were subordinates who looked the execs in the eyes without shame. They didn't know we were too stupid to know otherwise. And those managers were getting twice what they were paying for from the lot of us. We paid them back in insolence, but they were more than happy to accept the terms; insolence didn't cost them a thing.
There wasn't nearly enough corporate functions to fill the upstairs area, and one sign of the various failures of the publications was that there were perilously few elite sales reps to bring up from the cubicle-sea below. Mostly there were rooms stacked haphazardly with lots of out-dated and archaic newspaper-making furniture and equipment. We still assembled the paper with wax and rollers, but most of the individual page creation happened on computers. We just printed these gigantic pieces of paper out and then pasted them up on huge tables on the other side of the floor. The discarded furniture upstairs included previous generations of paste-up tables, disgusting green metal machines clogged with paraffin wax and rubber-topped tables with millions of tiny lines from x-acto knives.
I worked a slightly-longer than normal day on Mondays, probably from 8 to 7, writing and editing stories and then putting together some of the first paper I would send to the printer that week. Tuesday was the longest day, because that paper would be going out first thing Wednesday morning. The first paper was completely electronically assembled, photographs were scaled and developed in the dark room (pre-digital photography, at least for this marginal operation), then the entire thing was waxed to stiff paper for delivery. The day normally began at 8 or so and ended at 2 am. Despite the fact that dozens of person deadlines ending my smoking habit had come and gone, I would routinely smoke most of a pack during this 18 hours of work. The first one would blaze to life before I was two blocks from my apartment, and the last one would light my way as I cut through a bird sanctuary and a darkened crossing over the Potomac river with nothing but cops and boozehounds on the road.
Wednesday morning I would arrive at the building just in time to see last night's deliriously completed newspaper leave the building, ensuring I would have regrets aplenty by five when the papers came back. I would beat back these concerns with two or three bottles of Coca-Cola and another half-pack of cigarettes as I set to work on the second, much larger newspaper of the two I served. This paper had an independent history and had resisted the assimilation that formed the multi-title office where I worked. (The newspaper I had sent to the printer that morning was for a wealthy neighborhood across the Potomac in Montgomery County, Maryland.)
This independent-minded newspaper was unique because they assembled the entire publication to length using pen and ink estimates of how many inches of text each story and photo would be permitted. With the first paper, I worked with (or was, briefly) the managing editor, and we would take a bunch of finished stories and photos and jigger them together in a layout until everything fit. Not exactly rocket science, but it's the way newspapers work.
The second paper had a sheaf of pages like storyboards for the entire week's newspaper. Each showed the photo hole and the news hole, and their writers and editors worked to this script like it was from the Lord himself. They transmitted the stories over to me using (sweat to god) some kind of dial-up-based non-network FTP connection which I never fully understood. They would just appear in a folder after I received a telephone call, and I would start building pages. I worked at a different desk for the second paper, one on the edge of the office, near a window where I could breath in fresh air when I wasn't outside breathing in the exhaust of burning tobacco.
We put out weekly newspapers, toiling away in a squat low-rent office park in the shadow of a half-dozen trillion-dollar telecom companies that stud the rich side of Tyson's Corner in Virginia like the hairs on the back of your hand. Standing in line at the (now departed) Chik-Fil-a at a nearby upscale mall, my friends and I in cheap flannel shirts and jeans stinking of cigarettes and stained carpet past its prime looked radically out of place among the suits and ties of sales reps and account executives. We didn't care. We worked 40 hours in three days to put out newspapers of extraordinarily low quality. But it seemed really important at the time.
On the top floor of the office park, the various executive functions of the newspaper unfolded in mostly secret. The elite sales people cheated on their spouses and possibly did coke up here, while the president and publisher shifted money from one defunct ledger line to another. He drove a Jag while asking the rest of us to take a deferment on our paychecks for a couple weeks a year. By the time I quit, I kept getting paid this deferred salary for three months. Thinking I was a bad-ass (1996, I believe) I kept the office pager required to keep me on a short editorial leash until the arrears were paid in full.
The upstairs was mysterious to me and the other Doc Martens and jeans guys downstairs. The sartorial selections of the older folks who ran things veered from overly serious to jarringly casual. Unfortunately, both made us feel like teenagers because even the casual outfits were old: matching track suits with sweatbands, dark blue jeans with an ironed crease and loafers without socks, pink Brooks Brothers polos with the collars flipped up.
The accounting people -- sassy-talking frumpy black ladies with unattractive hosiery and (as it turned out) no heads for numbers -- similarly disdained the management team, and the strong scent of racial divide was heavy upstairs, another reason for us younger folks to avoid it. We functioned as if we were in constant battle with the short-sighted managers and their failure-prone decisions, but to the black folks in accounting, we were golden-boys just because we were subordinates who looked the execs in the eyes without shame. They didn't know we were too stupid to know otherwise. And those managers were getting twice what they were paying for from the lot of us. We paid them back in insolence, but they were more than happy to accept the terms; insolence didn't cost them a thing.
There wasn't nearly enough corporate functions to fill the upstairs area, and one sign of the various failures of the publications was that there were perilously few elite sales reps to bring up from the cubicle-sea below. Mostly there were rooms stacked haphazardly with lots of out-dated and archaic newspaper-making furniture and equipment. We still assembled the paper with wax and rollers, but most of the individual page creation happened on computers. We just printed these gigantic pieces of paper out and then pasted them up on huge tables on the other side of the floor. The discarded furniture upstairs included previous generations of paste-up tables, disgusting green metal machines clogged with paraffin wax and rubber-topped tables with millions of tiny lines from x-acto knives.
I worked a slightly-longer than normal day on Mondays, probably from 8 to 7, writing and editing stories and then putting together some of the first paper I would send to the printer that week. Tuesday was the longest day, because that paper would be going out first thing Wednesday morning. The first paper was completely electronically assembled, photographs were scaled and developed in the dark room (pre-digital photography, at least for this marginal operation), then the entire thing was waxed to stiff paper for delivery. The day normally began at 8 or so and ended at 2 am. Despite the fact that dozens of person deadlines ending my smoking habit had come and gone, I would routinely smoke most of a pack during this 18 hours of work. The first one would blaze to life before I was two blocks from my apartment, and the last one would light my way as I cut through a bird sanctuary and a darkened crossing over the Potomac river with nothing but cops and boozehounds on the road.
Wednesday morning I would arrive at the building just in time to see last night's deliriously completed newspaper leave the building, ensuring I would have regrets aplenty by five when the papers came back. I would beat back these concerns with two or three bottles of Coca-Cola and another half-pack of cigarettes as I set to work on the second, much larger newspaper of the two I served. This paper had an independent history and had resisted the assimilation that formed the multi-title office where I worked. (The newspaper I had sent to the printer that morning was for a wealthy neighborhood across the Potomac in Montgomery County, Maryland.)
This independent-minded newspaper was unique because they assembled the entire publication to length using pen and ink estimates of how many inches of text each story and photo would be permitted. With the first paper, I worked with (or was, briefly) the managing editor, and we would take a bunch of finished stories and photos and jigger them together in a layout until everything fit. Not exactly rocket science, but it's the way newspapers work.
The second paper had a sheaf of pages like storyboards for the entire week's newspaper. Each showed the photo hole and the news hole, and their writers and editors worked to this script like it was from the Lord himself. They transmitted the stories over to me using (sweat to god) some kind of dial-up-based non-network FTP connection which I never fully understood. They would just appear in a folder after I received a telephone call, and I would start building pages. I worked at a different desk for the second paper, one on the edge of the office, near a window where I could breath in fresh air when I wasn't outside breathing in the exhaust of burning tobacco.
Wednesday, January 25, 2006
i've had butter thoughts
butter tastes good to me now.
raw.
i lick the knife after
slathering 12 grain fantastic.
nullifying any nutritious value
it may have once had. monosaturated
or poly, I care not.
it carries the flavor like grunts
lugging pinot grapes to and fro.
It used to bother me how timmy
And his clan shaved the stick
Of land ‘o calories-ian
Any which way but methodical:
From the top horizontal, diagonal,
They would even fork it.
Leaving the once perfect
Golden harmonica case,
A molested assemblage of lard parts.
But if he was around now,
I’d tell him eureka.
They just wanted butter;
I applaud your ravenous efforts
To procure the salted sludge.
I begrudge your methods no more.
raw.
i lick the knife after
slathering 12 grain fantastic.
nullifying any nutritious value
it may have once had. monosaturated
or poly, I care not.
it carries the flavor like grunts
lugging pinot grapes to and fro.
It used to bother me how timmy
And his clan shaved the stick
Of land ‘o calories-ian
Any which way but methodical:
From the top horizontal, diagonal,
They would even fork it.
Leaving the once perfect
Golden harmonica case,
A molested assemblage of lard parts.
But if he was around now,
I’d tell him eureka.
They just wanted butter;
I applaud your ravenous efforts
To procure the salted sludge.
I begrudge your methods no more.
Tuesday, January 24, 2006
all the same
belly up to some hole in the wall,
obligatory pub o’ the new world potato eater,
dim lamps, flags of erin three inches tall,
stuffed in pints and cylindrical aluminum memorabilia,
on shelves like various plants gregormendelia.
…a stretch,
of mahogany to my left and right, brass rail for steppers,
housewife celebrating newborn reprieve asking for flaming dr. peppers.
it’s been a while, but I’m a piranha smelling blood in the amazon.
i guess I add depth to Hibernian alcoholic pigeonholing,
guinness any day over a night of bridge and bowling.
the first one is sahara oasis water, downed with the tempo
knievel and his son were accustomed.
after the second, I’m defenseless against its bewitching kempo,
i should’ve gone home, ‘cause the third and it’s successors are all the same,
just like white rappers.
obligatory pub o’ the new world potato eater,
dim lamps, flags of erin three inches tall,
stuffed in pints and cylindrical aluminum memorabilia,
on shelves like various plants gregormendelia.
…a stretch,
of mahogany to my left and right, brass rail for steppers,
housewife celebrating newborn reprieve asking for flaming dr. peppers.
it’s been a while, but I’m a piranha smelling blood in the amazon.
i guess I add depth to Hibernian alcoholic pigeonholing,
guinness any day over a night of bridge and bowling.
the first one is sahara oasis water, downed with the tempo
knievel and his son were accustomed.
after the second, I’m defenseless against its bewitching kempo,
i should’ve gone home, ‘cause the third and it’s successors are all the same,
just like white rappers.
Monday, January 23, 2006
swoop down
you couldn’t wait to witness her cross the threshold
of your terrible apartment. kitchen floor
begging for a wrung-out mop to take away
the beer filth underage sin water.
you thought about her all day.
was she going to wear that scent and white eye shadow?,
floating into your gristly viking kegger like some Norse snow
goddess stopping you in your swollen livered tracks.
valhalla valkyrie swoop down,
take you to see odin, thor, and the rest.
put down the beer and stick out your chest.
wanted to ask her for a sober grownup night on the town,
just earlier that day mom care-package delivered snacks,
far from home and uncomfortable like a virgin nose full of blow,
your charm with the ladies of academia developed a tad slow,
but you thought about her all day.
tell her that she’s caught your heart like webster slaughter,
but you won’t ‘cause you know the dragon’s not ready for the slay,
sit and watch him take her out the door,
drunk, wanting to give her a cuneiform poem Gilgamesh told.
of your terrible apartment. kitchen floor
begging for a wrung-out mop to take away
the beer filth underage sin water.
you thought about her all day.
was she going to wear that scent and white eye shadow?,
floating into your gristly viking kegger like some Norse snow
goddess stopping you in your swollen livered tracks.
valhalla valkyrie swoop down,
take you to see odin, thor, and the rest.
put down the beer and stick out your chest.
wanted to ask her for a sober grownup night on the town,
just earlier that day mom care-package delivered snacks,
far from home and uncomfortable like a virgin nose full of blow,
your charm with the ladies of academia developed a tad slow,
but you thought about her all day.
tell her that she’s caught your heart like webster slaughter,
but you won’t ‘cause you know the dragon’s not ready for the slay,
sit and watch him take her out the door,
drunk, wanting to give her a cuneiform poem Gilgamesh told.
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