Posts for June 8, 2020 (page 6)

Category
Poem

Passing by

Normally, we would stop
to talk, but we know
your slipstream is the plague
my laughter and a cough
are the same
And so, like Superman we squeeze
          How are you? How’s your family?
          and all the awful details
          of the past few months
          that it would take to answer
like coal in our fists

until we must inhale
open our fingers
pluck from our palms
the one thing left  

You raise your hand to offer
            Rachel
and I wave
            Hey
to accept and offer back


Category
Poem

I thought I’d removed my fitbit during sleep & find

the band is broken

Is this a portent or have 

I reached fitbit nir

vana?


Category
Poem

Backyard Arcana

The Hermit is not the only way in—

today, I followed the impulse
to go out, cross thresholds & liminal space;
shape a thing with my hands.

What I found were the narratives
sewn in the fabric of living things,
mythologies in the intricacies

of every single inhabitant
of a back yard—pattern recognition
even while digits dug the earth:

The way the river birch endeavored
to slough its own skin; you can’t
grow or be born, again, before

stripped clean; & you can’t
strip him of what no longer serves
without blackening his trunk;

the paving stone, so artificial
& rough, lifted–lifting–to the sky
by yet unseen roots searching

 unseeable light–knowing–trusting,
that tomorrow, or something, will give
space to breathe; 

or the rock—all forty pounds of that rock—
sleeping beneath roots, old fabric, clay,
tucked deep inside the heart

of the spot meant to shelter
new buds, once planted, like a spite,
like an anger, a poverty consciousness

you forgot, or never knew, still existed inside.
Today, I followed the impulse to go out
but found myself, instead, going in.

The Hermit may hold wisdom like a lantern,
but only wisdom, only light, til his feet find return

to the road.


Category
Poem

Dry Drowning

Breath is Life. 

And I took mine for granted. 
Effortless songs
and shouts
and oxygen transfer so my body could 
Leap

climb   

Push 

Until the day it couldn’t 
3 weeks of fever and sickness 
Shallow breaths and weakness

Poorly timed and unnamed 
Coughing

and coughing 

Spitting up fluid like the drowning in my dreams
left half an ocean in my lungs. 

After that passed, I thought I was fine. 

Until I gasped for air doing the smallest things 

Getting my mail 
23 steps  
Walking up stairs  
14 steps  
Taking a shower 
9 steps  
Taking out the trash 
28 steps 

28 years old and 28 steps
left my chest heaving

Did you know the lungs of birds 
Are structured like a billow 
Both inhale and exhale push
fresh air through respiration.
 An endless breath.

I remembered being an athlete 
Running and
jumping
for hours  
I tried to build my strength back,
 tried to jog for
2 minutes and
21 seconds.

I discovered how it felt to 
Suffocate 
Choke
Strangle
on clean air and sunshine
As my chest inflated, 
coughed out, 
clawed again for more 
With no relief 

Now each morning I wake to birdsong.
To instructions on 
How to inhale 
How to exhale 
How to feel where that tide has crept.
How to taste that featherlight foam that divides
    Breathing 
And 
     drowning 


Category
Poem

Wrong Side

there’s something about
the heavy way 
I woke up today
soaked to the bone
with our scent intermingled
those long legs of hers
tangled
with mine
and her skin an array of 
summer evening color

there’s a frayed edge
about things
where I’m not 
happy
with a single
goddamn 
thing
one of those moods
where the sky is
too cheerful
and people 
are a little too much


Category
Poem

biscuits and gravy

Sunday was a day for comfort food
preparing biscuits and gravy
we need comforting
memories watching my grandmother doing the same
a child too short to reach, but her words remain

Her father went to war
war to end all wars
never to return home
believed lost and dead
and then the late 50s

contacted by the city upon his death
her name the only thing in his wallet
he lived 5 miles away
his shame overwhelming
           shell shocked

Sundays are a day for comfort food
we need comforting sometimes


Category
Poem

Father Jerry on Vacation

His legs, bare and white,
formerly secluded behind black robes,
broadcast their nakedness.
But he shines with a scrubbed wholesomeness
fresh from the shower, new clothes
from a just-opened box, crisp blue shirt,
creased khaki shorts.

His face shines with an Irish- priest
glow, his smile beatific.
A perpetual shimmer surrounds
him.  He bestows on all he meets,
praise, enchantment and his full attention.

He’s always someone’s guest
and forever in glamour spots
at peak season.  Everyone
yearns to bathe in his glow.

He speaks the words humans
want to hear. 
He could charm the skin off a snake.


Category
Poem

Changing Sheets

I need the change the sheets
Residing on my bed
Problem is, I must weed out
The stuff I use as a spread

Most people find it simple
I’d rather dance a jig
Even finding the sheets at all
Is an archaeological dig

I think it would be cheaper
At least inside my head
Just to throw the bed away
Buy everything new instead


Category
Poem

The Unknown

Dreams are glints in the sun;
In the eyes of the imaginary.
Pupils pulsating,
Growing and shrinking.
The only spasms happening;
That shake loose reality.
A sane man is content with his reasoning;
Sure in his character.
Behind the eyes, they still exist wholly;
There are tears there, scratching the glassy eyes.
Corroding the marble skin;
And leaving trails where humanity flows.
The unsure man, is deemed insane;
By seemingly his normal brain.
Finger rap upon his soul;
And disconnect it from the whole.
He retreats back, behind the pulsing pupils;
Down until he is no longer affecting them.
And they can appear normal;
Searching for reason in this insane world.
Sure in his mind,
That has made it so.
As much as the sane do not fear the dark;
Because it simply hides the unknown.
The man is thrown out;
And he becomes this unknown.


Category
Poem

Love

The line is thin. 

Like that of an endangered species—
no one knew existed.