Saturday, September 26, 2015

Amputation


Spinning around like a dog sitting down,
circling, waiting for just the right moment to take me
so I can drop and fold into myself.

Talking like the trained ape that I am,
jaws moving up and down, making sounds that are assigned meaning,
so I can seem to be like 'them'.

Feeling things in the center of my chest,
not physical things at first, but there is a tightening
and I miss her like a limb lopped off.

Walking, like a flesh robot, long forgotten,
left to wander, trying to remember to keep going,
(it's important)
so we can have a reason to come home.

Crying for her, the limb lost, the love now an ache, ghost nerves,
the pain that isn't felt on the flesh, but within every organ.
This, so that we can remember the whole of them.

Tracing names in wet cement, we defied the curse of failure,
circling, waiting for just the right moment to take us,
so we can drop and fold into ourselves.





Train Poem tentatively titled, Train Poem


When I'm on a train
my mind searches to find a metaphor
for itself
somewhere among the images flitting by,
broad glass squares of light streaming,
of life streaming,
by.

Next to me
she sits with hands folded,
eyes closed,
doesn't see the seagulls perched on logs
in ponds
there within the wet landscape
(with robotic tics of their heads, they watch us pass).

'Maybe it's out there,' my mind says, 'the picture of what I am. I am the pond...Or am I the seagull?'
'Be quiet,' I plead, ' I'm trying to write a poem.'

The conductor is young,
his goatee fresh, he is
trying a new look.
Hours in the mirror, posing in his flat-topped cap.

When he speaks to us on the microphone,
it feeds back, echoes.
He sounds as if he is closed into a metal room.
I suppose he is, in a way,
closed within long, metal, rolling rooms
that will hold him for years, his goatee graying...

All train memories arise, connect,
pass each other.
'There's a metaphor there,' says my mind, excitedly, 'something about trains passing...the tracks...'
'Hush,' I say.

I am flawed, it's true
but the train doesn't know this,
pulls me along, moving fast now.
Automobiles on the road appear to be stopped
like time is frozen. We slice through it
on metal strips,
it passes just a bit more slowly for us.

Maybe I will spend the rest of my life on trains,
so I can become a bit younger, day by day,
until I am a child again,
touching the glass.

Dream Alchemy


The song was wrong.

If you dream of me

don’t ‘dream a little dream’,

fill the sky.



If life is indeed a dream,

it is up to you and me.

We shape clouds into thoughts,

then into things that can be touched.



We are alchemists

dreaming sky.

A Walk (in the park)


Chalk drawings on sidewalks stamped “1912”.
Piano lessons vibrate
through old window panes in a white house.
At the park I walk across the crab grass population
that has arisen in the baseball diamond.
A little league football team is far out on the grass sea
sitting in a circle
like sprouted mushrooms in their round, white helmets.

The trees are afire with the dying light of day; God's slow fireworks, evidence of the end.
The bathroom beckons, a lonely shed for waste, waiting.
Its iron door creaks as I open it.
Soon I stand pissing, having done so only five minutes before at my apartment.
I curse God for my small bladder,
then apologize in case he or she is real.

In the corner of the field
is a pile of wood chips.
The trees tremble at it.

Friday, September 25, 2015

She Dreamed Us

(for Chelsea, with love)

Boxes growing, killing sky.
Friends walled in,
time bubble babies,
watching wireless tower trees split the green.

Among the boxes of people, I see turn of the century houses (grand old ladies) and '20s era apartment buildings (dapper male queens),
like where a dear friend lives. I was just with her there, we
sat in the courtyard in a swirl of cats on a picnic bench
that was giving up its split wood ghost, slowly.

She sits in this courtyard often, and writes, shaping the molecular and subatomic structures of novels and poems, whispering her words to herself, and sipping her tea.
Later, she told me, “I dreamed about a pile of mewing cats covering my feet.”
This is her landscape.

The bald apes who build boxes were born to steal the sky.
Boxes fucking, corners groping corners,
buttressed tectonic plates below slipping against each other, teeth grinding.

Earth sleeps, oh tired Ol’ Mother.
She dreamed us. And it's almost morning.