Category Archives: Poetry

Nostalgic Mountains

I miss the old mountains of childhood. 
Those rocky slopes so high and individual
You could set your way because of where they were.
Solid and stark and lifting to the sky
With their dark rock littered by rags of snow at summer’s end.

In winter, I used to imagine myself
At the mountain’s top on some snowy ridge line
And looking down the side before skeeting down,
Down some sharp couloir, hugged between
The cold arms of the narrowing crevasse before exiting
Out the base and arriving at some parking lot.

It’s weird, I know.

Where am I going with this — this something
Along nostalgic terrain, but magical...

I’d like to think I wish I knew, but I truly don’t.

...

Made up memories are good sometimes.
Deferential toward hope.
Like closing your eyes in favor of those entoptic hallucinations
On the off chance you’ll see something meaningful in the phosphenes.
And maybe, in the lines, you’ll see the street lamp.
Or other structures inviting you to see their color
Before the dream takes you.
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COVID-19

It’s late; it’s closer to sunrise than sunset. The birds will be chirping before the alarm, and the guinea pigs will be nibbling on the hay beneath the bed.

It’s weird going outside during any part of the day now. I have yet to explore the world before dawn since there is no reason to ride my bicycle to work anymore, though, I somehow suspect the world is almost as quiet during the early morning as it is right now — just a few more cars, maybe.

There is a part of me that likes the world better now — not so active, entropic, frenetic — not so anything anymore, as if the population were cut in half only in that they are stationary for a while for as long as their reserves will nourish them.

I sat outside the other day and looked at the buildings with their units all honeycombed together and their satellite dishes stuck to the sky — their azimuth and altitude set like a stuck sunflower gazing at the same spot while the sun courses overhead and down, and down as if there is some opposite to the heliotropic nod of the flowers — an unnaturalness in being set at one station… an unnaturalness, for there is not much else to call it.

Yet here we are with a soft quarantine. And things feel how they are supposed to feel, in some regard, with our faces like those satellites not moving so wild anymore.

But i’ve always been one to find comfort with my eyes drawn to a certain spot. And I am now more in my element than not.

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A New Pain Scale

Physical pain is sobering;

It limits your focus to the essentials.

Without the extraneous,

You can only see tomorrow

With its death mask blooming

In celebration to the immediate

And no more.

There is no future beyond my eyes

Unless I labor myself to open the door

Or ascend the stairs or exhaust myself

For as far as these crutches can take me.

But it’s tiring, and shortens my gaze.

And though I’ve never been able to see the future,

Right now, I can’t even try.

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Escape is Greener…

When you escape your demons,

Is there a pneumatic release,

As if suddenly unlatched or unleashed —

You are suddenly lighter and can run.

Or is it like moving to a new city or town

And having to reacquaint yourself

With new analogs to the past.

Where will you work, and what route will slip by as you live in automatic?

What restaurants are there and will you prefer Indian now for comfort food on those cold days?

Who will your drug dealer be and can you trust him?

And, at this age, who has time for friends?

And as you escape your demons, what changed?

Do you see the shadows or the flame,

Or the sun outside the cave.

Or maybe it is more of the same.

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Out of Sync

I imagine a man walking up those concrete steps and through the glass door into the main lobby of a local museum. He hands over double the suggested donation to view the works that ultimately leave him uninspired. What’s worse is a major section of the gallery is cordoned off while they prepare for the next exhibit making its way around the country. And he thinks to himself, “a day too early, or maybe a day too late.” The money is of little concern in spite of the expectation in getting what he paid for that hangs about his mind. Still, he decides to leave.

About eight blocks east on second south is an artists’ residence set up innocuously enough from the outside as a regular brick building except for the grand mural that covers the eastern wall. The brick is old and time stained with drilling holes from long gone signs filled with foam or caulk or backer rod. The smooth brushed joints worn away such that sediments of white aggregate show like bits of teeth within the mortar beds. The brass push plate on the main door polished bright from sixty years of use, and used again this day as he enters.

What hooks him first is the smell. Solvents and the faintness of creosote. And beneath that first impression is the old building smell. A dampness in the wood and brick, of earth wafting up from beneath the stuffy crawl spaces in the way of old buildings. A bouquet like a whiskey that tastes better while inebriated.

Next is the sound of the door snugging in to place with a squeak and click from the bolt against the misaligned strike plate. Then the squeak of the floorboards beneath his feet as he makes his way up the stairs that amplify the sounds of his steps no matter how conscientious he is of rocking his feet from heel to toe, and heel to toe.

He looks around from floor to floor, from studio to studio, and gets his view of the artist in the raw, of unrefined ideas, of creativity so schizophrenic it comes about like wild gashes no matter the medium; as if the works were so lit with meaning that he was blinded to their very nature. And, of all the creation myths that persist in the world, it seems that all before him is of another kind of clay.

Yet with all these works, there was one that stood out among the others, and it started with a side-glance that stirred the feelings in the depths before realization catches up some four strides after. And so he turned. And he stepped back to peer through the doorway into the meager studio of paint splattered on the walls and a sink seemingly covered in fordite from layer after layer after layer of paint washed from the brushes.

In this tiny studio were canvasses leaned up against the walls with their backs turned or stacked from left to right like a library of books. But there was one still easeled. A landscape about four feet high and six feet wide. It was dark in value except for the scrapes of titanium white like phosphenes skittering past the dark light when you close your eyes, and then other colors alternating between hues of grey and blue and violet. Simply brutal in its composition of straight lines knifed on. And haunting in that it was understood beneath the surface of an unstirred mind — understood only through the lens of a deep sleep, where somehow, the next morning arrives and the world is different.

I imagine this man, walking home, yet completely oblivious to the intensity of the undercurrent stirring. The only inclination in his mind that something happened is that the particular painting lingers. And it lingers into the next day, and the next. After a while, he is so aware of the lively opinions in the world that he can see nothing else except the limits of acceptability. So he goes to a bookstore, a major retailer traded on the New York Stock Exchange. But he finds much the same as he imagines the books here are similar to the books on the south end of town as are the books on the west side.

They’re the classics — there’s no denying that — so their profit margin is almost guaranteed. And these others are popular and along the trend. And still others sell better than what they would not carry. And as he wanders, he sees an empty author’s booth, either to be filled up or taken down until the next time a new artist hustles their work.

“A day too early, or maybe a day too late,” he says to himself before leaving.

Not more than an hour later, he is at a cafe and drinking coffee and staring blankly at his surroundings when a bookcase in the corner caught his mind. It was a secondhand antique of Art Nouveau: the simple curve of the valanced skirt upon slippered feet leading to the rounded mid-molding and to the uppercase where on the top shelf sat a spiral bound notebook among board games and magazines and the occasional schlock. But it was that notebook that stuck out most of all, as if within that bookcase was a portmanteau emerging from the mismatched ideas, but it was the notebook that struggled its way through as the best fit for its place.

And who knows why he found significance in what he saw; the meaning was arbitrary in much the same way a schizophrenic obsesses over a specific leaf in a tree via some preternatural awareness, as if to intuit another rank in the taxonomy of life where this blade of grass comes from the other side of the river. Sometimes, things just work out in the daily meanderings, where there is no reason other than faith or some stubborn belief or delusion or inspiration. But still, significance remains, albeit, beneath the trappings, and it was significance that lead him to this — a notebook written by a teenager. At least, that’s what he surmised from the class list on the inside cover.

At first were the studious notes as nothing more than a mirror to the voice of education and structured like a simplistic religion. Soon, however, the thoughts wandered off into a blooming adolescence faced with the death of a mother in poetic form:

Today, today — a summer’s day —

Seems cold and gray

With your departure,

But forced to grow up this day.

And I fill the space

Into your absence.

What will I do without the grace

Of a mother’s embrace

When life is hard?

Of all the things there is to say,

While in the fray:

“Not today. Not today.”

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Rain taps the windows

Rain taps the window
while the dryer tumbles
clothing with a low softness

I hear water stream off the roof
into one of the many ephemeral puddles
cornering the house, but it’s that window
tap and tapping that comes
to the foreground of my imagination

Will it be sunny tomorrow
I think
but the thought falls away
to the moment with the even tap
against the window, as if
tapping me on the head
“Here! It’s right here,” it says.

And I close my eyes and
listen to the water’s timbre,
like the crackle of a fire
that pops coals to ash.

And I drift before I forget
it’s a cold note foretelling winter’s silence.

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He Awoke

He awoke
to a body like debris
tossed by the wave
and awkwardly placed
by the absence of fury.
He straightened a rag-doll arm,
worked a leg past the mid-bend catch
to stand and take in the surroundings
through headache and eye blur.

A ramshackle wreck of
bookcases tipped.
Curios smashed into kindling.
Cabinets thrown open
with brass leaves bent,
some unhinged by the force.
There were overdrawn drawers
with their contents pulled out,
and searched through or
scattered on the floor.
Boxes of artwork and portfolios,
the albums of photos,
and sketches and notes;
all the adventures and experiences
organized and stowed, now
lay disarranged
like memories on the floor
seemingly ready for the burning.

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Old love letters…

40 minutes a day, the sun’s altitude lends itself to the trees and the stone, and carves deeper shadows, and mixes richer colors. 20 minutes at dawn and 20 at dusk, the sun does this. And at that time, there is this mystical union with something that, by all accounts, should not exist. 40 minutes out of 1440. Somehow, your presence and existence in my life extends that 40 minutes into the 1400.

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Untitled Poem

And out there is a world
a child will inherit.

No longer the grass
against a vanilla sky,
the house on a street
and manicured trees,
nor twilight lamps
softening the night.

Nothing as picturesque as a painting.

And every day
with eyes into the world
to see what was coming:
the beauties
that belied the threats,
like a rolling wave
fringed with red.

And though there are signs,
the world is slow
as it turns;
and it turns normal
until it’s not.

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On Poetry

A silver wire frayed
From my hair as
I washed my hands
With my reflection
Today.

Time is coming and
Time is going.
But somehow I stay here
Waiting
For my time.

Such is the undertaking of
A project in years.

I tell them that
I am two-thirds done
After two years of work.
It seems that way,
I think.

Then the followup question:
What is it about?
As if it’s some tattoo,
And then the answer

Then there is the true answer:
The plot is secondary.

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Old Poetry… Because why not…

Reconciliation

To the west
Her stone face
queried the clouds
roaming and roving
“Look at me!
Will you not tremble?”

And
He answered
with the rattle of thunder
a trickle turned
torrent that seeped
into the cracks
and spalled

Jagged rocks tumbled
smooth returned to Earth

Now
rivers and lakes even
the once pocked mountain
and the green
of old growth trees
saddle the streams

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