What I’m Good at (and for)
Giving, maybe.
Maybe forgiving.
Neither cheating teachers
nor teaching cheaters,
and not much else, according to good authorities.
Authorities on goodness.
Letting other people’s poetry wreck me.
Like last night at the reading.
Like today in a book
in a coffee shop
half-drowned in rain.
Loving my wife and everyone else
who lets me in. Even you,
who tried to ruin me.
Who tried to destroy me.
I can’t help thinking of you fondly.
People like us don’t belong in the “real world”
or in the Godforsaking simulacrum of it
that Academia has become, but out of spite
I drag my broken-down body and soul
through the burning sands of both.
Maybe I’m good at forgiving.
I want to be good at giving.
Listening to music until I think
the notes of the song are my own thoughts.
Watching a movie so many times
I enter it and can’t find the exit.
I hope, many years from now, to die
in my office or in the classroom,
and I hope the stench is horrid.
To tell you the truth, I’m good at telling the truth,
good at enduring the cost, and there’s always a cost.
24 thoughts on "What I’m Good at (and for)"
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I love your perspective so much !!
Thanks Arabella!
The listening to music until I think the notes are mine… (paraphrased) is genius. Rock on, weary teacher.
Those are probably my favorite lines here.
The word play with “giving/forgiving” and the way the title “What I’m Good at (and for)
Giving, maybe.
Maybe forgiving.
Brilliant drop into the first line.
Thanks Shelda.
Love the vulnerability revealed in this Poem.
Thanks!
“I’m good at telling the truth,
good at enduring the cost, and there’s always a cost.”
This.
I wanted to elaborate on that, with an image or example, but couldn’t find it.
Wow, Tom! You really get in the pro wrestling ring in your poems, sweaty and grappling. This godforsaken simulacrum of academia—I’d love to hear more about that, even though I suspect it would be depressing.
Thanks Kevin. But it’s “godforsaking” — a jab at what I perceive as godlessness in academe.
I agree that this is a very vulnerable poem. I reread it a few times. The fact you let people to who’ve tried destroy you off fondly and tell it convincingly is so touching.
Thanks Linda.
You walk that sharp edge of the teaching profession. How the good intentions are soon dragged down to something unrecognizable. Your honesty and vulnerability shine and elevate. Damn, you’re good!
Thanks for the encouragement, Sylvia. That means a lot.
This was vulnerable and lovely, and the stench line made me laugh. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you!
Those last two lines. Really.
Thanjs for reading, Melva.
I enjoyed the clever wordplay within this poem.
Thank you.
Forgive me: this is great poetry…
You’re too kind.