Tuesday, December 08, 2015

A New Normal

What doesn’t work is fear.
Crouched and ground into the corner
like so many boxes of broken trash
left for the taking.
The silent tears
running down dark checks.
The weighing of terror
in faces and unforgiving eyes.
What doesn’t work is passivity.
Allowing
the wrongs,
the war,
the stupidity
that permeates the thoughts and words of others
to become our new normal.
History repeating itself without awareness.
The breaking of bones
and spirits
and innocence.
The evil lurking on both sides of the street.
Ours and theirs.
Neighbor after neighbor,
turning against the other.
A new spy
born out of paranoia and blonde-eyed-media
sold to us as vigilance
and duty.
What doesn’t work is hopelessness.
Curling up in a ball and waiting to die
because the injuries have become just too severe to bear.
To no longer reach
for the sun,
the bird,
the flower,
the red balloon,
because hands can not open freely.
What doesn’t work
is to resolve to
live in the dark,
believing
it is this way,
and will always be so.





Thursday, December 03, 2015

The Purpose of Thorns

The restless weed
there in the grass
begs for me to pluck it.
It eggs me on
as if to say,
“I dare you.”
I am not so easily led
to violence
without thought.
If I were to look closer,
I might see
the stillness,
the shyness,
the purpose,
of so many thorns.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Amnesia

It’s as if I can’t remember,
can’t keep it in my head
how horrible they were (are)
to me.
Some weird sort of amnesia
in my brain prevails,
driving me back
over and over again,
as if somehow by going back
some part of me thinks
I can
change it,
transform it into what I want it to be,
what it never was.
It’s insanity.
Nothing but insanity.
They are content to sit
and watch
T.V.
to waste their minutes
in front of the T.V. fighting
over the nut container,
and who screwed it on wrong,
and what’s in the box,
and why neither of them knows how to shut the window
or turn on the microwave.
They,
the ones who were supposed to protect me,
were too busy arguing to notice
I was floating face down in the swimming pool.
And when they finally did notice,
they didn’t jump in,
they just yanked me up by my hair.
They,
the ones who were supposed to love me
wrecked birthday parties and Christmases
with complete abandon
year after year.
Nothing mattered but them.
Nothing ever did.
I was there to wait on her
and placate him.
There was never a me.
There wasn’t room.
I just wish I could remember that
the next time I even think about hopping on a plane and coming out for Thanksgiving.

Sunday, May 10, 2015

My Mother's Womb


The dark hole
I crept from
breath by breath.
Out into the sun,
out into the light.
The doctor’s hand
upon my throat.
The smell of nitrous
and alcohol.
The long tunnel.
The black.
The endless black.
One cord
cut,
but never severed,
pumping
me full
of blood
and fear.
Your breathing.
deep inside mine.
One,
but not one.
Always out of sync.
A dysfunctional rhythm
I could never right.

Sunday, April 12, 2015

Dark Blood

Let me taste your blood,
Dark blood.
Let me hold the sweet salty
Liquid
In my hands.
We have walked
Side by side
For too long now.
You breathing out
Me breathing in
A black motorcade with no end,
Let me taste your blood,
Dark blood.
The kind that waits 
Ready to fall
Drop by perfect drop
On to white sheets
Into my mouth
On to my tongue
Better than wine
And stockings.
Let me taste your blood
Dark blood.
Not the kind wasted on menses
And paper cuts,
Or scraped knees
Found at the park.
No, I want the good stuff,
the deep stuff,
the stuff that lives inside,
the stuff that can’t be seen
without a little
effort.
Let me taste your blood,
Dark blood.
That’s what I want.
That’s what everybody wants.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

The Cat 'Neath The Shack

The cat
who lives underneath the shack,
creeps out.
Gingerly.
Looking for birds
and mice
and anything he can eat.
At first,
it isn’t clear
what he will find
as he slips through the tall grass.
The birds
see him first
and immediately begin squawking
at his approach.
They alert one another
and swoop down at him,
giving him fair warning.
The cat doesn’t seem to care.
He continues creeping.
He has his eyes on something else.
A little grey mouse.
A small,
shaky creature,
trapped by a blue flower pot.
The cat moves in.
The mouse freezes,
hoping against hope.
A scream.
Then,
silence.
The cat goes back to she shack.
Content.
For now.

Friday, March 20, 2015

Pat

Today was her last day.
Pat.
I couldn’t believe it.
I came in ready to be stuck.
Ready for it all to be painless
as usual,
but it wasn’t.
It hurt this time.
She told me she was leaving.
Moving to Florida.
West Palm Beach,
to be with her husband
who had been offered a great job.
They were going to live in a camper
and pay off their debt.
Save up
and buy a house.
And she was going to go back to doing administrative work,
wasn’t even going to tell anyone she could take blood.
I had been coming to her for over three years.
She’d gotten me through the quarterly
blood tests.
She was the first one who had success,
when four others had tried and failed.
I’ll never forget the first time they put me in her chair,
trembling and crying,
and scared.
So scared.
But she wasn’t scared.
I heard her say, “I got it.  I got it.”
And the blood came.
After a few months,
I went from shaking every time I saw her,
to laughing.
We’d talk about Christmas,
and Summer,
and how hot it was,
and everything but the needle in my arm.
She was my “go to girl”.
Her gray speckled hair.
So no nonsense.
She’d always count “one, two, three.”
Usually, I barely felt it
and every time when it was over with
I would say to her,
“Pat, you’re the best.”
And I would mean it.
Why couldn’t anyone else
take my blood
the way she could?
Why couldn’t anyone else understand
my veins,
my small veins?
The others were so ham-fisted,
determined to dig into me
with forks
making me more frightened.
Now she is leaving,
and I am starting over again,
trying to find another Pat.
Maybe it is just one more sign
that it’s time for me to leave Nashville too.
Nothing stays the same.
Not even Pat’s blood test.
This afternoon, I pulled off the pink arm band where she stuck the cotton.
And for the first time ever,
there was a faint purplish bruise 
beneath the insanely small red
pin prick.
She left me
something to remember her by.

Friday, March 06, 2015

Paper Moon


There is a paper moon shining on me.
White and small
and glossy.
The kind that smiles when it would rather
cry.
The kind that bends down low in the summer
and lets its bottom hang
out
on to the fields,
and streams
and squirrels
and bees.
The kind that sizzles in the water,
but never makes a sound.
A brave moon.
A warrior of sorts,
casting light
where there never was light before.
A moon that says, “fear not”
for there is always hope,
even if it is as thin as paper
and could blow away
in an instant.

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Miss Clarke

I am a hurdler,
jumping
over the mundane.
The infractions of the mindless.
The gesture of the hostile.
The unkind word.
The unmapped plan.
All threaten to leave me spinning
in a circle,
endlessly. 
Have I spent time,
where I shouldn’t?
In front of the t.v.
and the computer,
“googling” my life away about trifles?
How many times have I checked the weather
in places where I am not,
nor am I going to be
any time in the near future?
My virtual reality.
Why am I pursuing that which I do not want?
Information about people I do not care about,
nor will I ever know.
It is as if I have turned myself into a large trash dumpster
tossing meaningless data into my brain
over and over,
forcing it to work,
forcing it to sort,
forcing it to recycle,
and spew,
and make sense of,
when it is overworked already.
Any thought that comes in,
I indulge.
Any question,
I explore.
If I took in food,
like I take in information,
I would surely weigh five hundred pounds
by now.
And yet, I do not bother censoring what I put in to my brain.
Why?
Perhaps,
if I keep myself busy enough,
distracted enough,
exhausted enough,
I won’t have to face
Myself.
My art.
My life.