Thursday, March 24, 2022

 Published in Flora Fiction Literary Magazine Volume 3, Issue I, Spring 2022

A New Year Flood

There is a hole in this wall of feldspar and quartz.
There is a hole in the rain.
 
Gopherwood hardly holds us all
in the dawn of this new era of sun-leaking days.
 
Yet like seeks like only on whims of last resort.
Order twists reason in the newly wild winds.
 
In the seed vault rain-green tendrils pledge to climb
a stem from the root of time.
 
In the library of catastrophic gaffs
hangs an icon of the image of melancholy, just for laughs.
 
After cubits of chaos comes a paltry branch
in an arc of light.  A promise of gravity to salvage time.
 
We, perhaps, did not destroy the plenty of our garden home.
Our birdbrain negligence is given another chance.
 
The myths of progress and the chronographic bones
are tossed into the air with simian glee and freedom chimes.
Clean and unclean eyes without beasts, our divining stones,
 
are throwbacks, vestigial purification, three knocks on a raintree.
Let’s, you and I, construct a celebration.  We’re free.
Let’s clear-cut some old-growth shame,
 
let’s dynamite through a received, impassable mountain
of cinematic range.  Let’s have forty days of not thinking about it.
It is time for my sons to see me drunk and naked.
 
For birds to return from the archipelago of scorched earth. 
It’s time at last for life without covenants or grievance.
Let’s recover from our addiction to grievance.
 

Thursday, March 10, 2022

 Published in High Shelf issue XVIII, December, 2021

Archness as a Mode of Confession

scours the days, confusing ridicule for teasing
 
the sharpened tongue pries off the barnacles of the Received…
just as my purged personality inventories the past,
logs the time-stamps of pesky Canonical Hours,
molds Golden Calves ready for breaking,
delivers half- baked Culture, DNA and Biography
in the electrodes attached to my shame. 
the old eats the new. What was slaughter
is remembered as mere play,
and Loki plays hooky from Phenomenology
with the usual adult sleep.  Loki
waking up.  Anima
nudging Kundalini and both,
not exactly keeping Chaos at bay,
rather loving the rising Tide from today.
 
lifting nature’s pandemonium
up high enough to put up
sails
and sail away,
with the raging            wind of tricks,
no longer playing the game of looking for increments
in the colonized internal logics du temps perdu 
sealed from a jaunty world too large for jokes.
the past is stand-up comedy.  Today is a battery.
 
that old world of symbols, where tiresome repetition
is the signature symptom of the need to sing new songs.
a new world without symbols, where hunger just sings.
where wit no longer erodes with snappy comebacks
and venality drifts off into grey areas.
another night awake,
numbering my mistakes?
no style in forgiveness, n'est-ce pas? I almost waited too long.
 

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

 Published in The Angel Rust magazine, issue VII, January, 2022

Are the Rockies that Far Away?


When the call came to tell me mom died
my hand put the phone down and reached for the glass pipe.
I wanted the familiar fog that failed to numb,
but did hide the world.
 
I had seen her the night before, and carefully cleaned
the putrescence draining from her bedsores. I’d looked down to see her face
smashed into the chrome guardrails; she’d made no sound.
 
I rolled her on her burning back, sought her eyes,
“do you know your whole family loves you?”
She stared back from some mysterious space,
eyes once brown and powerful dried with gray pain now,
baffled that I’d said anything denying the mystery she saw.
Did I expect an answer?
 
Months before tumors the size of grapefruits
had cleaved her brain away and left her sputtering.
Then I, having read of the mindful role of loved ones
meeting at the edge, asked, so to give her permission to go,
“mom, do you want to die?”
She turned those knowing eyes to focus
on her youngest son,
“are you crazy?”, she asked.
She didn’t expect an answer.
 
A week later, a bright blue winter day,
I found her in her room slumped in a wheelchair,
the sun, through Venetian blinds, throwing horizontal bands
on her hands, pricked and swollen.
I rolled her out to the tarmac and the air outside where
the rocky San Gabriels were white with rare snow.
She looked up to those mountains and she, haphazardly
capable of any word at all with less than
half her brain left in her skull, sang out loud and strong
“When it’s Springtime in the Rockies…” 
We stopped rolling, I stopped pushing her, to focus
on this artifact of who she was. Or even more, a clue,
emerging now at the end, of someone she was
I didn’t know.  She looked back at me from the mountains, blasé
almost surprised herself at these parts of her still left,
and she sang a robust second verse
 
And though I long to be back in the Rockies
I'll wait until the springtime comes…
 
The Trickster, though terminal, still had a pretty voice.
 
Another day at the City of Hope,
before she came home to live with dad and die,
(she’d been housed in a bungalow
like a vintage SoCal hot springs spa -
starched white sheets, TB recovery, and healing mineral water - 
or a Raymond Chandler mystery’s illicit autocourt,
or the old rehab cottage at Los Robles hospital
where W.C. Fields died and where I’d spent time too)
I walked in and she was on her back, looking up at the ceiling,
 
her hands lightly poised in the air above her chest,
fingertips touching, left and right hands
lightly bouncing against each other,
the scholar’s gesture.
She was ruminating, considering,
pondering, not unpleasantly, some deeper meaning
only she knew.
She turned her head when she heard me.
She smiled softly, politely greeting a familiar face,
“here’s my little girl-boy,
I wish I knew your story.”
 
Then the shadow passed over her face,
with half a brain left, she still traced
a certain line that perhaps she’d crossed.
Although, too, maybe just a reflection from my unset face.
We both pulled back. Again. She, back in the body ending life.
Me, hiding from too much light.
 
“Mildred, I wish you knew my story.”
 
Are the mountains far away?
I don’t expect an answer right now.
Not yet.
 

 Published in the digital and print magazine, 34th PARAllel MAG issue 89, August, 2021

Body Paint, No Tattoos 

I listen to a band of kids in a room with no windows. I am perpetuated with the adolescent eternity in their skin (painted in second-thought colors). They sound like Napalm Death, with a drum machine. As always, holding the place in some equation revealing it’s all a toy. Substitution is the medicine.

Toy brains, toy kids, toy music. Generic eyes. Toy lens to see the Great Destruction this music once prophesied. Artificially intelligent toys, a powder of the old regime, toy prophecy, sharing restricts the air, and the room that’s also lost its doors. Doll doors.  Trinket escape.  Boxes shipped. Slapdash designs, easy to wash off, to burnish the pigment. Basal cell removal of what’s counterintuitive. Temporal nativities of form lost in commerce and digital enhancements. Accessibility waters down, flattens, all the hints.

Before you send your applications to Cornell you light the matches of re-gifted revelations.

With my trousers rolled, I scratch in your sound with a stylus of distant horns and angry doors. There is no world to leave you, the “fire next time” already burned what our bloated hearts never earned. We colonized with the reach of our appetites before you were born. We entered the playhouse and didn’t give a shit that there was no exit.  Great, huh?  We leave you our heritage, you inherit no exits. The planet will be fine.  You won’t.

 Published in the Winter, 2021 issue of The Vital Sparks

A Crack at Dawn

Je songe à une Guerre de droit ou de force, de logique bien imprévue.- Rimbaud

1

Perhaps it is the Warrior’s Dilemma or an addiction

to the lack of patterns. The lost lodestar of what’s created.

Let’s listen to reveille at soleil rouge,
and the beats of the warning drum on an accidental sky.
The rhythm counts cold hands
and marks time for the heart thumping under tow.

Let’s say what’s hungry calls it off with a list of long distances.
Let’s march on the fields watered with blood.

Because there is a war. The signs drip with broken hot water.
The criminal is exalted. The power of submerging.
The fragmentary reticence and the French circumlocution.
Surely you noticed.

Soap, the reign of the signified. The journey out of luck,
marching from the shoreline. The gulls circle a pillar of cloud,
a manifesto glows for maneuvers at night. We rush to bury
the sand. The swords and spoons measure both fixity and flux.

Surely you noticed.
I’ve moved away from the detritus.
I broke out the coffee pot, dug through another layer of day,
and so marked another threshold in
another series of series.

A battle of moments strung in simple rhythm.
Your bloodsport denial digs in.
My confession crawls forward with white flags.

Maybe the hero is id’s saboteur, hunched, waiting.
A game of spies and moles. Praising
you who are left to maintain the supply lines.

2

What if there were a limit to second chances?
Obviously there are more than two.

Last night I dreamt of an old woman, akin to the witch
in Hansel and Gretel, reaching in the pocket of skin
for reparations.

I had asked for guidance from my higher self in the dream state
as I had gone to bed.

Each morning is the first and last.
That’s two.

3

The slight passage to open air
changes all.
(I’ve lost the hunger for concrete things,
for instance).

There is no rain nor storm to pass, the war
is suffered and won, only the rotation matters
in our garden home, our dungeon, our workshop.

Each circadian episode addicts.
I am addicted to enough.
Frantic for the absence. Myopic, singed and declaiming.

This god not even a bit tired on his throne. Helios relentless.
Untidy plans forestalled in the obvious
unerring arc
of progress
through our sky.

Suffering arouses the god inside,
announces terms of surrender
with the simplest music
under cover of day.

Martialed breath? I admit it.
Thy (thy) name only rests my lips.


(Three poems with an interview by the publisher Jen Knox  published in February, 2024 issue of  Unleash Lit )  Escape from Belle Isle in t...