Providence Dissonance

Driving to Providence sounds too mundane,
evoking clipped-winged angels feeding tickets through turnstiles.

I philosophize as I fill my tank.
I wonder which of these words will be the first to be forgotten.

At the gas station register waits Saint Peter;
he frowns at my Red Bull, marks his ledger.
declares,

“here is the punishment humanity deserves
for intimating hints of heaven on Earth:
disappointment in dissonance
when cities fail to embody their namesakes.”

Walking through Providence (better, better),
the late winter wind reddens my skin.
I swear I was promised I’d need no jacket,
yet cannot recall the prophet — perhaps I imagined.

I duck into a cafe for temporary salvation.
Clipped-winged angels serve me coffee and doughnuts;
the lemon-matcha old-fashioned is a revelation.
All, forever, for now, is forgiven.

The Editor has made an error regarding my Valentine’s Day submission.

It does not take a poet to explain — especially,
on this the day of flowers and chocolates —
love is momentous.

(The world groans its agreement
and carries on.)

What this poet wrote and meant, emphatically:
love is momentum.
Thoughtless indifference
until a gentle slope gives speed
to what internal fixtures we forgot may move.

If the magazine could please republish this less-trite truism,
I am sure your readers would rejoice in its novelty.
Nod over their coffees
at their loves, growing, even now, in force
or slowing,
equally
imperceptibly,
until we are alone
in the resultant stillness
of erstwhile impetus.

The Ineluctable Pathos of Technophilia

My great-uncle Mario was a technophile until the day he died,
and he did die somewhat young — somewhat tragic how men become
only names to ignorant children, resurrected by seance of family and photograph
on Christian holidays, when such miracles are commonplace.

I have no memory of meeting him, though we did meet, and I’m sure
he doted and delighted in the precociousness of his young great-nephew.

I have vivid memories, thereafter, of visiting my great-aunt Frances
in their cramped, second-story apartment, narrow stairs leading
into a cluttered — though not untidy — living room, a homely hoard
resplendent with the humble treasures that a life of living affords.

My parents and Frances would reminisce in the kitchen
while us layabout children watched old comedies on video cassette.
Forgive us — it is difficult to reminisce at 6 or 8 or even 10,
before we can properly shoulder and stoop beneath the burden of absence.

Video cassette!
It must have been cutting-edge the day Mario lugged the VHS player
up the narrow stairs. He likely kissed his wife in celebration, and toasted
to the many years that remained to them together on this planet.

I don’t know why I feel the need to employ ham-fisted tragic irony.
You need no reminder we all die. Some wives are left draped in magnetic tape
when their husbands pass; some husbands are left with the paintings
that drew Frances’s grieving great-nephew’s eye.

It depicts a woman playing a small, stringed instrument — perhaps a lute.
My mother objected to inheriting the large and likely tacky portrait,
but to me it felt appropriate. In lieu of Mario, it was the musician waiting
over Fran’s shoulder, greeting my family from atop the narrow stairs.

Months ago, I was visiting my father in my childhood home, in the basement
retrieving laundry, when I saw the woman with her lute leant against a concrete wall,
her face downcast and doubly shrouded in brushed and subterranean shadow.

“Hmm,” I observed, and climbed the cluttered, basement stairs.

the warm embrace of atmosphere traversed too quickly

This coffee table is exactly what i needed
to vacate my mind of items not this coffee table.
Henceforth, I will consider only what to rest
upon it, what to stow beneath it, how to extricate
the Roomba from the prison of its undercarriage.

The possibilities are endless. The possibilities —
ok — are not endless. I may someday grow bored
with this fake wood, already peeling, with its espresso
finish, different in color, somehow, than my other
espresso furniture. Is there a goddamn governing

body that could please coordinate the shades
and sheen of stain applied to this cheap fucking
particle board? My god. I didn’t need this. I was fine
resting my feet on the pleather ottoman. I was fine
resting coffees on the ugly square I purchased

from Amazon for twenty dollars during the Mesozoic
era of my adulthood — a lie. I was already ancient
watching the arc of the cold comet — happy, in fact,
for the cold comet, feeling for the first and only time
the warm embrace of atmosphere traversed too quickly.

Stage Directions

Do not remain center stage.
Any teacher returning to the auditorium
to recover a misplaced 3-ring binder
will see you. I know this may seem evident,
but I’ve witnessed overeager friends
spotlighted in mortifying states of undress —
which should come as no surprise to you lovers
of thespian pursuits.
Drama thrives on such pathetic incident.

Instead, exit stage left,
to the pretense of seclusion
of the chain link prop room,
where you sometimes-sympathetic villains,
torrents of hormones,
unfortunate haircuts painstakingly styled
over fledgling synapses firing like starbursts,
escape
for a blissful thirty-nine minutes
from the Charlie Brown drone of academic prison.

Sigh relief.
Kiss your girlfriend,
finally.

Caress her small breasts through her favorite striped shirt.
Jest you’ll be back soon
and for her to not miss you
too much.
Descend your contrary being
perpendicular to jailbird green
stripes. Cross each
with the tip of your nose (by a mile,
most meaningful of vain rebellions).

Take off your girlfriend’s jeans,
then her panties —
separately.
Just because you’re lying
in precariously secluded wings
of intermitted stages
doesn’t mean you can skip the pleasantries,
doesn’t mean she shouldn’t feel your fingers
trace the bones of her hips, your breath dance
playful whirls along inner thighs.
“How was your day?” ask her softest flesh
and, unconcerned with the answer, promise,
“about
to be
better.”

Kiss your girlfriend
everywhere she begs
for kisses.

Catch and hold each other’s breath.

Wait silently for the vice principal
to escort chastened friends from center stage.
Stare into wanting eyes and smile.
Nuzzle from temple to cheek
to temple. Whisper a truth so secret
none present comprehend its meaning.
Nibble on her earlobe
like an iron-spined god of mischief.

Don’t dare slip back into pants.
The wriggling would draw attention,
and besides, after the principal leaves,
your haven will be restored for a while,
so stare, and smile, and hope,
and hope,
and hope…

On the drive home, cry.
Not out of happiness, nor sadness, nor any emotion
your shoddily-wired, adolescent brain could dream
of parsing. Cry
because you are no longer proximate,
and where you long to be with her does not exist,
not now or ever,
not even in fantasy.

Chapter 1 – Edward and Bella Talk on the Phone

Bella was a beautiful wishful girl who lived in a small town somewhere. She was in her bedroom and she was calling Edward on the phone who was a nice boy she met a little while ago at a party and was also a vampire. She liked him a little bit for both of these reasons. He had messy golden hair that was nearly the perfect opposite of her dark locks.

“Hello” said Edward after three rings.

“Edward!” said Bella. She did not know Edward that well yet and was nervous but tried to hide it by talking a lot and excitedly. “How are you I’m glad you called.” She did not mean to say that but she was so excited she was mixing up her words. Bella hoped she did not sound overeager or desperate.

“I am fine Bella thank you.” The vampire replied. “It is good to hear you’re voice.”

Bella’s heart leapt at this confession. It was good to hear her voice! She tried to remain calm but was just so very excited. “It is good to hear you’re voice too Edward. It would be even better to see you’re face in person.”

“In vampire you mean.”

“Haha oh Edward.”

“Haha I’m just kidding I would like to see you too.”

“My parents are gone this evening if you would like to come over later.” Bella could not believe how forward she was being. She was usually much more reserved but there was something about Edward that made her act daring.

“Is that an invitation?” Edward asked slyly. “I would like that very much.”

“Consider that an invitation,” said Bella. “I will see you tonight.”

Edward left as soon as he could but by the time he got to Bella’s room there was already a werewolf in her bed!!!1@!

in worn white collars

Scientists are just now understanding
the importance of gut fauna
to us bumbling behemoths –
the world needs symbiotes
dressed in the worn white collars of parasites
to sit silent and consume
while the bar patrons conversate
beautiful stories about provincial retreats
along the coasts of Maine –
the world needs ironists
to transcribe and demure –
and sip
and demure –
actually,
the world needs consumers –
actually,
depending on our definition
(huzzah, harrumph, etc.),
the world needs all
or none of these.

A few words about my mother

She developed a taste for gin martinis late in life.
The odds were against it.
She drank some wine, no beer, little liquor
(her favorite mixed drink was a mudslide),
but then, one day, practically straight up goddamn gin
was her relaxation cocktail.
Unfurl the blanket, recline the recliner,
sip and doze off during procedural dramas,
stirring alert during commercial breaks and requesting
a synopsis of missed interrogations or trials.

It seems simple, but that is the tableau I recall,
night after night,
each scene with slight changes to procedural or pajamas.
I would stand in the hallway watching the shows
or watching the watchers,
but idly,
expecting the heat death of the universe
before the end of network television.

Towards the end, I remember one show
about a modern-day cop who woke up in 1970.
It was cancelled a few episodes in. Just like that.

Tonight, I am drinking a gin martini and attempting to time travel.
Sometimes it works.
Sometimes it works when I wish it wouldn’t.

even murdered mummies

I’d rather lose at love than calcify.
I am murdered; I am mummified,
but even murdered mummies walk.
Locked limbs belie hopeful momentum.

I lumber.
Oh how I ever only lumber.
New Yorkers stride; Parisians promenade.
I have been both and felt out and under-paced.

But you, exuberant dancing
in heels percussing offbeats of organs bound and bandaged
are bound to pin frayed edges of bandage to the ground.

Our errant steps are prelude to unfamiliar candor.
Our facades take long to fabricate but little to unravel.

Murdered by Mary-Louise Parker

i heard buzzing from over my shoulder,
put down my pen and stared
at the light fixture
feeling territorial, feeling feline.
i jumped to test my lazy legs,
touched the ceiling once, twice.

i waited, both silent now.
too late for the smaller silence.

i crushed it with a magazine
(a beetle, an Esquire),
the yellow stain of entrails bylining
a short story by Mary-Louise Parker
(the cover bylined prior by a prior beetle).

i hit it once more on the floor.
mercy, or,
“and stay out.”

i tore the page and read
her beautiful vignette.
her entrails intermingled with the insect’s.

i returned to my deskchair,
legs spry for murder now unsure.
i doubt the creature would have endorsed this end,
but it has the loveliest epitaph of a coffin.

wax poetical

dim lights. loosen garments.
posture poorly.
recline.
recline more.
supine?
recline less.
reject sleep like we used to when stakes were low.
stakes are still low.
they are so low!
you are walking on train tracks
(you are not a train).
they will tell us we are trains
(we are not trains).
they will issue us headlamps and magnet shoes.
relax.
obtuse angles.
hang headlamps from rafters,
spotlight sofas and sprawl
like Tennessee Williams players.
swill gins. sip tonics.
believe wholly in notions requiring no allegiance,
convictions quiet and internal,
secrets atria whisper to ventricles
between beats.
listen:
hushes
content, but eager.
emulate the apotheosis of our constituent parts.
our best selves are skeletons aspiring to skin.

the nature of moments

you don’t need me to lecture you about the nature of moments,
but I am drunk, so still, I will.

eyelash width: insubstantial;
eyelash grip: affixed, then adrift–
ok, eyelash.
full metaphor.
full stop.
there on your fingertip for a breath,
then discard haphazardly,
whisper wishes.

later,
you cannot regard the thing any longer.
you can barely recall the thing.
you can only with wist and wine evoke
the memory of the wish of the thing,
but now, it is fixed
in space and time,
and you are falling.

Lolita’s Market

I have forgotten
(or never knew)
everything these inscrutable creatures
could think or feel,

can only observe the young boy
wave from the market window
and smile at the young girl
strolling along the sidewalk,
hand-in-hand with her mother.

the girl’s head turns toward him
as she passes, neck craned
for a few short strides.
her free arm remains at her side.
her expression does not change
(or is anyways illegible), but still
some dull facet of myself glints
with their unfamiliar light.

I remain seated at a table in the shade
unsure of what to write,
conflating birdsong with internal combustion,
my breakfast finished hours ago.

Our Good Italian Mothers

Meadow Soprano taught the world how to pronounce gabagool,
just like the Olive Garden taught me how to pronounce manicotti.
I didn’t know the word capicola until I was twenty,
and my great-grandmother made manigot,
so did my grandmother,
so did my mother.

Preparing tomato sauce on Mother’s Day seems an insufficient act,
except that it’s not sauce, it’s gravy.
The smell of it permeates this small apartment and recalls
countless memories: languid Sundays, holidays with family,
perfunctory reprimands for dipping bread too soon into the pot
followed by, “how is it?”
“It’s good. It’s ready.”

We are never quite ready to make our own sauce,
even the most accomplished chefs among us.
For one, there is no recipe:
pinched amounts of Italian seasoning and basil,
enough water to clean the cans of crushed tomatoes,
garlic, more garlic, always more garlic,
simmer until the children grow unruly,
and serve them to hear the day’s first staccato silence,
peaceful pandemonium.
There are only so many permutations
of who can pass the ricotta and parmesan to whom,
but for a while it seemed endless
even though it is the fundamental fact of life
that permutations dwindle, then grow,
involve us, then don’t.

There is no difference in preparation now
(pinched amounts of Italian seasoning and basil)
except that each minced clove of garlic has become a quiet tribute
(it is our small traditions that can slip unnoticed through time).
We cannot help but prepare tomato sauce
with the ghosts of our matriarchs
and call it gravy
like our good Italian mothers did.

In Defense of Reality Television Romance

In Defense of Reality Television Romance

or:

Heather Averey and Dustin Johnny Forever A While

I used to watch reality television for the romance. I understand this may sound absurd since much of it is alcohol-fueled pairing of convenience, but to a fifteen-year-old idealist, there seemed no greater aspiration than to share a crucible with a fellow traveler and fall in love. Six vagabonds in a Winnebago, seven strangers in a house and wouldn’t you know that two of them are soulmates? Bunim/Murray Productions defies the odds again. Play the lottery, producers, because you can pick ‘em.

But that’s bullshit, obviously. Even the young idealist knew that the concept of soulmates was Don Draper’s greatest and easiest sell. We were waiting for a man in a well-cut suit to convince us our omnipresent myth was true, and he came to us as Kate Hudson, bless her bright-eyed optimism. We put our faith in fairytales of perfect matches, paragons to keep us believing, but the truth is far more romantic than perfection, more perfect than fate. The truth is if you put seven strangers in a house, two of them will likely fall in love for a while.

What could be a more flattering representation of humanity than the capacity to love so freely? Attraction becoming the desire to know and be known, to possess and protect. In these moments, it doesn’t feel convenient or arbitrary. It feels like it always feels: lassos ensnaring, draining our tender hearts temporarily of indifference and cynicism. Consistent as clockwork, yet somehow we never expect for these interlopers to transform our manic or staid lives into manic then staid lives: keystones rolling in and out of archways.

And it goes wrong, of course, reliably. Consistent as counter-clockwork, it becomes insular or toxic or desperate, or maybe it never made sense to begin with. Maybe in hindsight our one and only was one of four who resembled our favorite Barbie. Maybe two proximate people liked each other’s smiles and ached for their upturned/open lips, but he doesn’t read books and she can’t stand Coldplay. Our incongruities outpace us, but that doesn’t eliminate good intentions, the truth of our predisposition that anyone can love practically anyone for a while and mean the hell out of it. Later our friends can reflexively utter “no wonder” and argue who is least surprised about the collapse, but that won’t diminish the intensity of our unlikely connections. If we accept facts instead of well-dressed myth, we can understand that everything fails, and this should not leave us jaded. We are mercurial people seeking volatile refuge in mercurial people – perhaps it was a mistake to entrust love to Venus: right neighborhood, wrong Goddess. Anyway, from a distance, it’s difficult to personify barely-distinguishable rocks and flares, until we find ourselves in low orbit, slow spirals through atmosphere, then plunging to the surface, inescapably near, now nearer, now nearer, now…

structure

Beholden to autumn, leaves fall.
Storms chase storm chasers along interstates,
thank Eisenhower
for foundation.
“He did not invent direction, but he provided structure,”
state their pamphlets, slipped beneath apartment doors, extolling:
“Praise be to the founding father of the structured storm.”

* * *
I am comforted completely and exclusively
by symmetrical divisions;
I do not leave the middle lane
under threat of collision, legal retribution;
I will fly past my exit ramp and the next
to be surrounded just ever so longer
by dashed lines, shoulders,
swathes of close-cropped grass, wild flowers,
assorted foliage. I write
my representatives once weekly to propose, humbly,
the expansion of these close-cropped swathes
to infinity in all directions. Turn aside
askance glances;
this is no stranger than most
local politics.

* * *
“Veer slowly, now, via county roads
to ancient Tuscaloosa, timeless,
to the cobbled streets of New Orleans;
genuflect at the city lines
then proceed gravely, hands folded,
as befit these hallowed grounds of men.”
Storms curse, disparage the careless leaves
and their haphazard descent to
Eisenhower-knows-where
beneath barren trees.

us, open

Author’s Note of Almost Apology (September 2015)

I question along with the rest of you the point of publishing a poem written six years ago about a then-contemporaneous tennis tournament, but old man Federer is back in the men’s final as if to helpfully illustrate that the more things change, the more they stay the same. Some things are timeless. Like tennis metaphors. Are timeless.

us, open (September 2009)

The US Open reminds me of what I’ve lost and gained and lost in a year,
and I wouldn’t so much care
if the gains didn’t feel so temporary,
losses so permanent.

She’s hesitant, and I don’t blame her;
she hasn’t talked tennis since Wimbledon,
and my praise of Oudin or Isner sparks no discussion.
She is deaf to feel-good stories and blind to new contenders
even though
we are the feel-good story of September.
We have risen from lows to claim crowns, trophies,
but who hasn’t recently?
Everyone is lonely.
Like-minded individuals will continue to collide
in unlikely places
with all the usual parts.

Last year’s cast of characters was the same,
their seedings more straightforward.
Uncertainty prevailed, but benignly,
diagnosed incorrectly; conceal dismay
behind forced smiles, and pray
for relief to infuse
our meticulously arranged expressions.
But try as we might,
we have been rendered incapable of deception.

We have risen from lows and have ground left to cover.
Losing lovers is basic arithmetic.
Regaining faith in a notion is a vague and nebulous problem
with a vague and nebulous solution…
…probably.
Hopefully.
I am ever the aw-shucks optimist.
I demonstrate my understanding of the game by my willful ignorance to its rules and history.

Last year’s story of redemption was this year’s defending champion;
we change our clothes and play the roles that best match our hats or dresses –
silk hugs her slender form;
uncertainty is bliss.
The sure thing has never been sure and has taken me nowhere.
I will play the long odds with you, the low-percentage shots.
I will take no second serves.
We will win big or…we will not discuss alternatives. In tennis,
it is no coincidence that “love” and “nothing” are synonymous,
or maybe it is.
I make no claims at precognition, sagacity,
did not predict a Del Potro victory,
but also
did not reject, outright, the possibility.

from altitude

The lighted streets look like letters —
I want to make words with them.
I want to transmute sprawling patterns
to simple sentences
to sprawling patterns.

I rarely know why —
I suspect it doesn’t matter,
but still I spend a minute staring
at neighborhoods’ looping drives,
tying knots with neurons.

We pass over Washington, Baltimore, New York.
Each city scrawls its esoteric message
to sleepless symbologists.
Each symbologist transcribes
in their own lost language.

the long odds of frog-princes

The bulk of reinvention is time spent alone in crowds
transcribing inane wonderings
like the long odds of frog-princes ever being found
once transmogrified – there are too many frogs,
too few believing lips…

Reinvention may be a misnomer for this phase
of caffeinated scrawling
without discernable change in behavior or worldview.
Who has coined a term for these acts
of non-transformative, voluntary exile?

Counterpoint:
transformation is often subtler than transmogrification.

Corollary:
self-consciousness is a compounding problem.

Inanity:
what if some frogs are transmogrified princes
who would rather be frogs?
Who could blame our newly amphibious friends?
Who among us is never tempted
to exchange moments of existential crisis
for existential threat?

I gotta get out of this city.

She whispers into her melting ice and soda water,
and I wonder how often slow-crumbling walls ignore
this simple, desperate sentiment.

A place is not for you or against you.
Indifference is this world’s gift to us
to savor or scorn or squander.

I acquiesced for the sake of dual-preservation,
but she was right, in the end. Even the outskirts collapsed
not long after.

I duck in near midnight
after two drinks with old friends.
The cafe is crowded
(they brew a good house blend).
The old men talk football
while I transcribe their conversation
and restore my senses
(with a sprinkle of cinnamon).
“The best offense is a good defense.”
The best coffees are balanced.
“I’d love to find a woman I can fall in love with.”
You and every army, man.
Caffeine cheers. Not for thirty years
but maybe this weekend.

Editor’s Note:

It used to be my inclination
to write poems containing promises
to soon write better poems.

This is a poem to admit
I will not be writing better poems;
I will be writing precisely this quality

of poem biweekly until
I am crushed by an errant bus or decide
the world is inundated enough

with mediocre writing (lousy
with lousy poetry — ha! still got it!)…
almost certainly the former.

But I did try to write better;
this was not an act of bluster or bravado;
it was a thoughtful young man

sewing promises into the liners
of warm winter jackets I thought for sure we’d need.
But maybe that’s the most dangerous

manifestation of bravado:
the presumption that someone needs
something from someone when they don’t.

RE-TITLED

I was born under the amorphous constellation
of the Roman God of half-measures,
of unrealized failures,
of absolute conviction
in hopeless pursuits.

I pay him tribute
with wavering speech,
with unfinished poetry.

I curse and thank him
even though
he is an imaginary Roman
who stole his attributes
from an imaginary Greek.

the apex of the arc of us

There is a photo of her that used to be
my favorite photo of anyone
and is still my favorite photo of her,
captured in London after an afternoon downpour – unexpected,
the force of that particular torrent.

It was a week before we knew for sure;
this was so long ago that pictures weren’t yet digital —
I don’t have time to explain disposable cameras to you children —
so we muddled and laughed our way through England
suspecting I had captured our perfect moment,
and as history has verified,
I did.

crosswords to cross words

November quickens paces
this time of night in Manhattan.
This time of year is for us this year
and none other.

Pull my jacket tighter:
smug James Dean with his leather collar
with a jubilant scream
from his oil platform,

“it’s better to burn out than to fade away,”
but most fires burn out then fade away
while shivering augers search for omens in embers
that they missed in dry twigs and –

pass me the crossword –
four letters down for solar flare
doomed to succumb to chill Autumn air.

How I know this couple at the sushi bar’s relationship is doomed (w/ audio)

It’s her birthday, but she’s wearing a drab, striped dress,
two shades of gray,
and when she speaks she sounds as somber
as her outfit projects.

He commands minutiae,
possesses a mundane worldliness
that enables him to identify brands of unfiltered sake
but not transform a night with them.

He seems oblivious that her praise of this latest bottle
was a stark statement of fact,
joyless.

She will leave him soon for a dynamic man,
outgrow her willingness to gamble
and marry an architect.

If the poet claims (w/ audio)

If the poet claims to genuflect
at the feet of the infinite and unknowable,
forgive him his dramatic flourish,
and validate our collective feeling of smallness
beneath the stars.

If the poet claims to channel
the spirit or influence of any manifestation of God,
tell him to go to any manifestation of hell;
he is delusional.
The muses were long since buried
by metropolis, blanketed by lichens, or sunk into the sea.

self-titled

Greg returned to my dorm room around 2am,
and ordered two pizzas from my phone with my money,
and pizza drew the others, reliably, those crisp, tomato-ey beacons.

Ryan sat cross-legged on the rug near the boxes
eating while I explained which album contained the three
saddest, consecutive songs ever recorded – which may, admittedly,

have been slight hyperbole from a drunk,
musically-illiterate collegiate, but then again,
three songs don’t have to be the saddest songs to be sad songs.

We listened and drifted to our own cotton-swathed
trials and traumas, and we each intoned over and echoed
the artist when lyrics hit closest to home.

Ryan left with tears in his eyes, rum and saline, but still,
few of us can compete with mass graves or miscarried justice;
a man doesn’t need to be the saddest man to be a sad man.

We laughed, a little, to trivialize the outpouring of emotion,
and played video games while the others gradually departed,
then Greg left too, characteristically buoyant, but from my window I saw him

taking the long way home.

Persephone

To be honest, Persephone is a
bit relieved to have the difficult things
decided. Sick to death of small talk and
vodka tonics. She’ll take Hell any day
over the din of Broadway, tall grey suits
losing luster talking at young girls getting
younger. It was only a matter of time
until resolve collapsed and she said
yes again to the wrong man – or right man —
why wonder? Abduction is straightforward,
plus in Hell you never have to worry
what message the hem of your skirt is sending.

Entitled

I would like a memorial plaque, please,
or a polite round of applause; a footnote
in a poorly received work of fiction;
for rain to ruin your birthday and then mine,
a reminder that maledictions
free no one from the weight of soggy shoes.

A nod from the president would be nice –
no words, just a fleeting glance through the
gallery for the astute stenographers
to capture and read back later what the
record shows. I would like for this to be
acknowledged, then stricken, then forgotten.

Gauze

Every man’s God wraps purple-gray gauze
around the ever-wounded world and whispers,
“heal now during these tranquil hours, then
unravel your blossomed-red bandage from
smooth, scarred skin.”

Neighbors and strangers trace our flaws
with their fingers, tattoo facsimiles
on prior-scarred limbs to offer
some worthless, priceless solace
where lines intersect.

Morning refuses to acknowledge
distant stares and gouged flesh,
empathy and sacrifice, merely
awakens us to the futility and necessity
of this struggle, tactlessly suggests

we are too little to be so different
from each other.

Impromptu Coffee House Interlude in Greenville, SC

About This Negativity

let’s contemplate the worth of recounting the things they’ve done wrong
like thrashing racquetballs off the walled confines of a rigid mind
like primal screams losing steam
like fading echoes whose absence leaves absence of all emptier.

About This Coffee House
or
In Secular Praise of Chai

Spill the Beans =
respite from the cold wind +
the best chai latte i’ve had +
light scrawl on embossed checkerboard tables
(to avoid punctures in consignment shop flyers).

bless the impartial, environmental stimuli
nudging me toward and drawing me gently away
from these simple pleasures/graceful reprieves.

About What More or Less Remains

there is still space for one more stubborn scrawl,
still time before they close the doors on the shivering
Main Street wanderers, expelled from Starbucks
with genuine apologies, with the delicate finesse of catapults.

In Secular Praise of Chai II

i’m not sure i stressed that this chai tea latte has restored my faith in humanity
with its sweet and smooth, its hot and spice, its twelve ounces and no more,
and then return, renewed, to waking life.

About What More or Less Remains II

only three lines left to resonate, but
what do I know about space that you don’t know
about time?

What I Wouldn’t Give to Receive a Valentine from Kendra, Kid

Overheard between high schoolers in a department store parking lot: “I got a valentine from Kendra. You know her? Sophomore, blonde.” The height of incredulity, like what business does this bitch have wishing happy any holidays, let alone the chocolate and roses, the red and pink ones. All affected dismissal and can-you-believes to his virgin friends, as if sieves sift hormonal, teenage, impending-armageddon love to be bottled, stoppered and dispersed at leisure to future incarnations of ungrateful children.

No matter how frustrated you become, do not shake the high schoolers, even though Kendra sounds lovely, and don’t you realize this, you clueless fucking child? You are shaking, old man. Climb into your Lincoln, and count ten deep breaths, and drive away.

But my heart pulls strongly outward in all directions and rends itself to raw, red pieces to return to a time of sentimental poems slipped discreetly into lockers by dirty blondes, and wide smiles, and this same heart-rending, and hallway whispers of the love I’ll show you later. Discreet. Always discreet. Never caught in the locker rooms or behind the bleachers and almost caught in the auditorium, but never caught! Invisibility cloaked somehow, impossibly by sun’s surface, the world wants us barred and chained but will never take us alive, entwined love.

But we must scoff at Kendra to save face from friends and hide her notes beneath winter sweaters in the clothes chest only opened for secrets and illicitness, never for clothes, and drift to sleep some night dreaming that we’ll masturbate simultaneously to our poorly concealed/revealed affection for each other, so it will be almost like being together.

Sharapova in Straight Sets

She walks with the grace of a nervous angel
on probation for gifting fire
or forgiving Satan his eccentricities:

yellow dress and plain white visor
evoke and dismiss sunlight with effortless
contradiction, and chiding words

to her instrument elevate seraphim
to victory; she walks more surely to net,
absolves her challenger of unforced

errors, promises new torment tomorrow,
so embrace each opportunity
to honor Prometheus through emulation.