The Strange Business of No Business, a Dreamed Poem
She sees me standing hands-free
in the early morning fog of waking up
not minding anybody’s business
not awake enough to mind my own.
She’s a skinny rich girl and a good person.
She describes precious things she buys
at boutiques in little towns with odd names
in hidden folded corners of Kentucky.
She takes a shine to me, says I need fixing.
She shows me ads for two different types
of glasses I could wear while playing tennis
that would make me look like John Lennon.
I think they’d just make me look goofy,
but it’s nice, the way she fusses over me.
She says we’re on a mission. Walk behind me. I
follow, as she steers her souped-up golf cart
across the quadrangle, motoring toward
a man who looks like Milburn Pennybags.
He sees her coming, flees because he thinks
she’s trying to run him down
but she only wants to ask him a question.
She’s unaware she comes across as pushy.
Turns out we’re at a Naval Base,
the part that keeps the ice cream.
Even though we’re civilians,
they lift the freezer lid for us to look.
I see the Navy buys ice cream in bulk
shaped like Neapolitan mastodon ribs.
I’m just standing hands-free under sun
that burns off morning fog.
I’m not minding someone’s business
and don’t see any business of my own.
5 thoughts on "The Strange Business of No Business, a Dreamed Poem"
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Cool dream Mike!
From the Monopoly man to Mastadon confections. What a journey! Fun.
love:
not minding anybody’s business
not awake enough to mind my own.
You do have an active dream life, Mike! You make good use of it.
Thank you all for your kind comments! Don’t know if it’s a poem, but I decided to share it.