Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Red Matty on Ice

"To know oneself is to study oneself in action with another." - Bruce Lee

The nice blue dice rolls paradise,
Atlantis Braves dispatched
through some trap door to nothingness
with their guilt trip of death as oblivion war paint
like our lives need so much that shocking change,
a road never taken before.

Fibonacci Mordecai unstrands his spiral green absinthe
cotton candy, and banks like a flamingo an impossible shot
on Minnesota Fats’ magic-trick tablecloth royal blue felt.

But the only one who wins at this schtick
walks alone in the clouds
lacking the wisdom
of the lowest, sorest loss:
that we want it this way.

The allure of the losers:
Atlantis in half-light
still rules a toxic stretch of black hole tar
where ruck-sacked hitchers rue their power
in gasp-for-air bar chairs for victims
where the thought of being immortal
is too much to bear.

The ball goes in play—the heart’s leap of faith—
Time falls away, and the game is too long to keep score.
Eyes study moves like they’re holy book clues
to do unto others what you don’t want done to you,
with a full of love handshake and hug afterwards
for all the respect invested in a brother’s defeat.

Loser, that impasto graffiti
sprayed perpetually over vast boundaries
of stone by the young. The death never ends,
expression can never be emptied,
the puzzle is pulled out of chaos again
to dissolve afresh in the spiral
like flesh shells, expended, decay in the soil
that re-uses all to reshape life so malleable
—the spiral moves on, its dense clouds of mind
like seething grey downpours in the distance,
the fields being watered some unknown plane
far enough away the eye can't, mercifully, see
save transcendent sky that smothers with mystery
but never once gives the candy of its secrets out
for the heart must be empty to receive.

Today the rain drips from sundrenched eaves,
pigeons and people collect with each other,
share something in silence that cannot be known,
only work to be done, beyond the East River,
new gods to be tried, combinations applied,
alliances plied and untied
with the ease of the current to a half-imagined sea,
a destination irrelevant because it does not exist,
despite what the flow we surrender to suggests.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

The Light at the End of the Book

All the miserable young poets
don't seem to know
love is a weapon
against every ill
that makes the world cry...

The unknown can seem like the known at times.

Mere fear can seem like the truth
                                      disguised.

Nothing is clear
                 no one is heard
                                problems are never resolvable
 but the heart doesn't care about any of that
        for what other truth is out there in fact
                   but love in the universe?

And what doesn't feed on our fear
        but faith
        in whatever it is we
                     believe in?

The dream of a better and larger world
shows the world of death as a dead world
        that has no hold
                on immortal
                        hope
for in our dreams we are Gods
         and it is only in our dramas
                  we are not.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Helen and the Giant

They could not be more perverse,
These readings that she forces
Down all her students’ throats.

When common sense
Forces them to balk
She fails them.

So it is the Great Ones
Stay unknown
Yet remain in the service
Of the hypnosis machine
Where minds are trained
To do anything
For fear of being shamed.

It is not enough
To say that she is wrong.
It is not enough
To say there is a reason
For her always-undersold
Influence.
It is not even enough
To say when humans find
Their natural genius
It’s always snuffed
Like it’s not even immortal
In some diabolical way.

But it is enough
To simply say
That this waste of time
And violence towards the soul
Is there to serve our mastery.
It is the gift waiting
When we wake up,
Like cut flowers in the sunshine
Or brand new words in a book.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

The Bristow

The chipmunks cheep in shaggy underbrush
as cricket-throb in auras hugs the grove.
The hissing stream’s the same as leaves above
while crows and wigeons tell the woods to hush.
September’s fresh cathedrals of the sun
glow on goldenrod and ripe crabapples.
The first dead leaves are honey lacquer dappled
and new white flowers run where there were none.
The Bristow's now familiar as a friend,
still alien, but touching who I am.
The water darter skirts across the pond
just like a spider drawing on a hem.
Fuzzed cattails geese still scavenge silhouette
the pastel incandescence - this - sunset.

Monday, September 30, 2013

An Unexpected Moment of Freedom

Fractured by obligation, the diaspora of SUVs
          bears to uncertain destinations
                   to tend unknowable brains
                            while the sun maintains transparence.

 The maddest of poets lives in the squarest of houses,
           presides like some rooftop vagabond
                   as the children squeal "Malatesta"
                              in long shadows of the lawn.

"Summertime" by Abbey Lincoln plays
            at the neighborhood hot dog stand.
                    Birds above the trees are crying.
                               Life is for me, and me alone.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Autumn Drive

The first yellow trees; what do they mean?
It grows more elusive with each passing year.
It has something to do with the past,
how memories must be banished gently,
summer let out of one's system,
letting go of the need to sigh.

The first yellow rivers, when the trees finally cry,
like poets sharing the beautiful with the beautiful.
There is a line of green, crickets sing on one side,
on the other the stillness comes alive. In the last
sunset of September over the Quinnipiac River,
golden mountains answer a golden sky.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

The Annual Perambulation Tour (After Chang Chi)

Marblehead, MA

The house of Doliber the Cordwainer on Brimblecomb Hill
         is black now with pewterpurple doors.
The seagulls are white as sailcloth and make sounds
         like the creaking dock.
The smell of blue striper and fried clams is as faint as a memory.
The sun peers down the carved-rock cat walks etched
         through the hills of Old Town.
All of it reminds me of my childhood home at the edge of the sea.

Friday, September 27, 2013

Epiphany at Wolf Harbor

Victory only vindicates,
the sting of defeat
holds its glow—
the dissonant chord
so much richer than
the drop
to resolve.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Addiction

So much that I can control:
the weather, the way that people look at me...
yet I fritter away all my time
because I can't get that bird to fly
in the direction of the sun.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

No Trains Today, Buses to White Plains

White apartments for the elderly,
a touch of red in the trees,
their empty chairs arranged around
the rusted cannon mounted in the town square.

It turns out there’s a history here,
you've been inside me all along;
I can see the sleeves of the glee club,
hear the Swedes' long talks in the park.

The people are all on the platform now
impatient to leave this new city,
Reunion Coffee is served on the way out.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Outside

The beauties of Manhattan weave their goddess resemblances
         through the vapor of a still afternoon
while the plaid September suits deal to try to earn their ardor
         with conjured reassurances and smiling words.
It’s the kind of a day a cat stays in the window for,
         where even the men in blue look on benignly, beatifically
as they collect by the thousands at the Waldorf Astoria
         war-zone fortified for the heads of state visiting.

Blondes beam at me behind black sunglasses
         while men try to pin their words to my lapel
but still I don’t exist, amid the chandeliers of crystal and amethyst,
         the river of mirrors, the golden gleam of pretzels in the sun,
the feeling that we’re walking through a painting in a museum as one,
        but then an Asian woman, without speaking, presses a piece of paper
to my hand: “Organ Harvest of the Falun Gong for China’s tourist trade”
         and I realize I have been alive the whole time.

Monday, September 23, 2013

Sappho Fragment

Reconstruction of Lobel-Page 96

O Atthis, she lives in Sardis,
our loved Mnasidica goddess,
but often she sends her thoughts to us,
of the ways we used to love once
when she loved your song the best.

Now she shines among Lydian women
like a rosy-fingered moon among stars
spreading her light over saline seas
and flowering fields equally.

As the dew flows to roses
and clover and sweet honey-locust
her thoughts turn to Atthis,
and tender remembering
burdens her whole heart with yearning.

. . . .
 . . . . ἀπὺ Σαρδίων . . .
  . . . . πόλλακι τυῖδε νῶν ἔχοισα

ὤς ποτ’ ἐζώομεν· . . . .
 σε θέᾳ σ’ ἰκέλαν, Ἀρι-
   γνώτα σᾷ δἐ μάλιστ’ ἔχαιρε μόλπᾳ·

νῦν δἐ Λύδαισιν ἐμπρέπεται γυναί-
 κεσσιν ὤς ποτ’ ἀελίω
  δύντος ἀ βροδοδάκτυλος σελάννα;

πάντα παρρέχοισ’ ἄστρα φάος δ’ ἐπί-
 σχει θάλασσαν ἐπ’ ἀλμύραν
  ἴσως καὶ πολυανθέμοις ἀρούραις·

ἀ δ’ ἐέρσα κάλα κέχυται, τεθά-
 λαισι δὲ βρόδα κἄπαλ’ ἄν-
  θρυσκα καὶ μελίλωτος ἀνθεμώδης·

πόλλα δὲ ζαφοίταισ’ ἀγάνας ἐπι-
 μνάσθεισ’  Ἄθτιδος ἰμέρῳ
  λέπταν ποι φρένα κῆρ δ’ ἄσα βόρηται·


κῆθι δ’ ἔλθην ἄμμ’ . . . .

Sunday, September 22, 2013

A Couple in the Woods

It's the trees—not the wind—that's speaking
And what it's saying—is only—what we hear
What I hear—in fantasies of sharing—in dreams of knowing something
                                                             
It might be a reply—a gurgling yes or no
To teach me what I know already—in my confined world...
There's something there—I know there is—although it's not

Yet touched—a voice not heard—still beckons
All my love—although it dies—without a sound                        
I hum its gentle murmur

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Feathers

The widow who came in my room
placed such a soft voice on my wounds
I thought it was my own pain that I felt
that wouldn't heal.

The tale seemed so familiar
I never thought it strange
the story-line did not resolve
except as I gave in.

Her webs went so unnoticed
I thought it was my fault
I hadn't brushed them all aside
before, my fuel consumed,
love came to blame’s rescue,
assumed responsibility
for what it couldn't know,
the echo of old auto-plays,
so victims once again could gloat
as if they have no souls.

It was only a ghost who appeared that day
—some memory of compassion—
how real I became in what I gave
to what dared not exist.

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Trampoline

Golden late Sunday afternoon light
Gleeful noise of boys on a trampoline
So easy to think that the world is perfect
But it's only a moment

The terror of getting along begins again.

The Chicken at the End of the Street

The chicken at the end of the street
Tries and fails, tries and fails
And cries, taking over the air,
How the good man is never wrong

Outside the Pyramid, Impatient for Forever

1.
LA knows a little about dreams
And how you put yourself aside
To make them real
It takes everything
To be nothing at all
It's rainbows or bust
For those who can trust
Heaven's gold surrounding the dust
2.
The nighttime landscape is alive with light
Except where the Hopi live -
Where she glows in my violet shirt
And pulls me in to the center of the earth
The old man remembers
How I came here alone
And he knows I'm not one
Without her
3.
I greeted the young as my equals
Honored their new words and ways
But my tales of sweet golden autumn
Holding on to the fading of dreams
Made their springtime wine taste bitter
We didn't say goodbye
But they'll remember me

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Haitus

Big summer night
No words because the crickets
                          are still alive
New moon, leftover tofu
A month on, my song
                          will be different,
I will be different—
The birth canal says all is forgiven,
Old lessons will all be forgotten

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Rain for the Sunday Painter

And if my life to this point falls apart ‘cos it’s not real
I learned from firm sand walls of my creation
how boundaries are all for the lost.

Knee deep in ambrosia I yearned others could believe in
my private miracles, to peer heel-high like a girl for a kiss
at the black-eyed susan glow beyond the bush,

to see the fireflies on the highway tonight, the universe of
unseen raspberries, the clots of pond moss pull away the sluggish
green from the jungle’s weary summer of no sleep.

The bus to Utopia passes Parsons Street at each lapse
of the clock, while couples lope in white cloths and shoulderbags,
rarely talk, sing notes occasionally in Chinese keys

as time goes dripping by, July waiting for some word from the coast,
the barest of frictious breezes, and I eat my sangfroid sanguishes
wrecktified and rectitudinal before the all-seeing blind eye

saying don’t believe the hope, the righteous pettifoggery
all it ever does is kill you the hard, slow, painful way
in pennyante petitbourgeoisie-ary catching on your petticoat wad.

Nobody came when I locked myself in the closet, three years old,
the darkness total, like the shame I felt in liking it, the rent of escape
others' need for me to become them (and, if not, stand in judgment),

and when the neighbor girl let in the light, and I saw my mother’s face
still absorbed in her dried flower reveries, I knew that I’d felt guilty
for nothing, I’d been cheated like some orphan sold the snake oil

of propriety toward the whole, that brand you’ll never understand
but must let control you, your impulses, your instincts, your desires,
the monolithic presence that does not even exist: the world of others.

Barbarian sophisticates with fright wigs de rigeur
will sleep on blotter sheets with fishes. I only scrivened, I said,
the ledgers, I didn’t game the deals, 
 
but an antiquarian of greatness
is no less on his own
than one who is without any other.

My blue harmonica home, still the heart stays sick;
I don’t want to be alone
any longer.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

The Longest Wait

While they perfect their buddhahood mere towns away
the bananas wait in the freezer,
roses blue in the fridge,
avocados lay next to the stove.

I put away the witch hazel, geranium, eucalyptus
and collect 26 hibiscus flowers.

I have become less than human, and more
than a God, as the veil between imagining
and knowing turns dangerous, any thought
can turn to pure light, my body at any moment
may no longer be my own.

                                              The brand new country
music station accompanies the ticking clock,
reminds me how deeply I need to change.

Friday, July 12, 2013

My Resistance to the Veil

No more crystal
that holds
vibrations' form
in some
blurred keeping.

The heart is endless,
and you are a river
to take me to my own
private shore.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Haunted Anniversary

It took so little:
a cat, a house, some words
that weren't "ours"
to fantasize this atrocity
of doubt

because love was
far too difficult
to believe.

It takes the simplest twist
to throw oneself in a fire
and flames are always calling
for any occasion of desire.

I pick myself up
when I never even fell,
dust off the nothing on me,
walk through the terror
that I haven't changed already

and mourn a past
I can't remember,
some voices in adjacent rooms:
no words, but tones of love.

Monday, July 8, 2013

Loneliness Is Other People

We used to go financing
                nearly every Friday night
and I’d get to hear
                everything about you
and sometimes you would let me
                                touch

But turns out there
                wasn’t ever a you and I

                                only an us

So now I go financing
                every Friday night
                                with us:

                                                me, myself and I

But turns out that
                                there is no I

                except through you:

                                there is an us
                                                in trust

Friday, July 5, 2013

Overgrown Path Through the Forest

New purple in the sun
peels from the primordial skin
the last ash of time and space away
- they're optional now, as faith is
prerequisite. Black streams surrender
to the moment - forget what they know.
Green dragonflies guard the flow.
The pond's solar systems simply show
that somewhere, beyond the living mud,
intelligent toads and tragical wasps,
the Swedish girl waits and you must
treat her like a queen, always.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Fourth of July with the Town Band



This is so amateurish it makes the rest of my stuff look professional, from the microphone next to the bad alto sax player (me, who picked up the sax for the first time in 30 years a month ago) to the camera that had no business trying to take pictures of fireworks. Still, like Free Bird and Skipper Ireson's Ride this captures something of what we call Independence Day, or at least the part of it that allows me the freedom to post such things on my blog.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Cabo Incommunicado

The Continually Embarrassing Thing They Call Reality
All the apple trees come with memories,
They’re storytellers,
Like divers and baristas;
Because there’s so little left of us here
We need the dog from the pound
To be a rescue animal,
The couch on the roadside
To be somebody’s home,
Or a mother, we need her to tell us the plot
Of her infant’s “progressive cry-it-out”
To its “baby-directed parenting” climax,
And how urgently he needs to learn sign language
To express his needs, without sunscreen,
Unboiled water, a ring for teething,
A rubber duckie, spoon feeding
Or purees (except for some heavily gar-
Licked humus to be sucked off a carrot
That only he can be permitted to hold).
- A carrot, which was purple once, til the Dutch
With their gene paints treated it orange
- Storytellers.

A Conversation Between Two Ex-Lovers That Can't Take Place
The way the waitresses’ beehive shines
when she says “hon,”
ambrosia stolen from the bees
hoving to her comb
while she drones like a queen
on her drone phone,
giving you the beeswax
how it’s all so funny now har 
with no cash money in the jar 
and she’s up shirk’s creek
without a dipper
from the land of cigars and honey.
And you want her to say
“Do try these qumquats
they’re quite succulent”
so you can say “I’m not paid
to suck on qumquats,
but then again I don’t imagine
you are, either, are you?”
To which she replies “I’m glad to see you 
back in Pasadena fighting shape,
shaking the talcum powder loose
from the deadweight,
phoning in your bets
on three-year-olds
over a steaming plate
of frosted twinkie sandwees.”
“Trouble is my monkey, Ruby.”
“Your money - if that’s what it is –
has a habit of disappearing
like a rabbit through the hands
of some rather nebulous
and it turns out often very late
fellows, a fact that I could take
or throw to the crows
without so much as a snap
of my bra-strap
but you see our friends in blue
can afford to be parsimonious
about such baubles, er, trifles
as what is true.”
“Some people don’t talk
unless a few teeth are loosened.”
“It’s an ugly city to hear some tell it.”
“Say working here must be very much like running
the alligator island at the San Diego Zoo.”
“Somewhere the dog I lost
when I ate my relatives for breakfast
howls in gratitude at the sad desperation
of your new-found compassion.”
“Hey, I’ve taken my ventriloquist act
on the road, and came in only
so’s my dummy can take a pee
but he gets recruited as a last-minute jockey
to replace one who’s been permanently scratched 
so I have to watch helplessly
the slow Del Mar third descend
on Tiny Dancer in a parade of oaty pathos
running rails around a stretch
that is a stretch
in name only.”
“It’s hard not to be phlegmatic
when expecting to see Noah
float by my window.”
“The influenza rain in my case
has turned to sweet-smelling flowers,
and washed away the old scent
of cowpies and the doomed from the urinals,
and except for some smuggled pianos
I no longer turn so quickly down
the Venetian alley blinds
in the behind-the-barkeep green room
at that certain spot of morning light
to catch a glimpse, done up like diorama,
of the honeycombed piñata tomb
of Generalissimo Santa Ana
skewered like pork swords
by miniature candied unicorns
mocking his legendary defeats
like the boulder mocking Sisyphus,
for in Xanadu a pleasure dome
of Pico de Guaco is decreed.”
“Dat were zen dish iz tao.”
“Yeah, but still my scented nights are secreted
on horse-drawn hearses by old thoughts
of how, while you and Ragtime Annie drank
Orange Cosmopolitans with shots of Grand Guignol
looking for Monsters Diogenes and Imonhotep
at Chez Remonstrance (an elongated community),
he buddah’ed the farm for real, din’ he,
with the burn still on the table, I see,
one Dunlop tire iron poor blood kidney
knocking on a lead pipe lock at dawn
in Erewhon with a cricket alarm.”
“Are you eating crab looey
or is it crab rangoober?”
“I’m having Blackened Mock Sisyphus
and a side of Creamed Cornucopia,
subverted for my protection, of course,
like the ancient gods and last week’s sea bass haul,
for you can see the best cowboys all
have elderly fisherman’s eyes.”
“The windows are open but notfurlong
and are taking bets sticky, prickly and unwise
until the pies underneath the fingerprints
are gone from the Clocker’s Corner Sip n Bet display glass.”
“Mead me in Saint Doobie, Ruby,
that’s about as imaginary
as the legendary cigar smoke
you’re blowing surrepfictitiously up my arse,
or the dreams of those poor mare denizens
fingers charcoaled with moustache-pencil grit
and sunken eyes like stripclub regulars.”
“Those stagehands are a step up from carny folk,
you know, they keep it real with a studied look
of utter alienation, from everything that is socially
acceptable and clean. That’s their charm…
They’re storytellers.”

Some Incidental Dialogue
“My Betty got the skinny from your Wilma”
“Totally”
“Epic meme creation brah”
“So new it’s old”
“Some stellar gnar gnar brosef”
“Three bagger got dursted”
“Whatevs”
“I’m not apple blocking your Betty brah”
“So I barneyed over the foamies brah? “
“Don’t be buggin brohah”
“You duding me?”
“I dude you not.”
“I should be duding you right now.”
“Chillax.”
“Consider yourself properly duded.”
“Dude.”
“Dude.”

Meanwhile in Sports News
The Toronto Raptors are thinking of changing their name. It’s such a bad name nobody ever really could be sure they even existed. Maybe it’s time for the Toronto Sasquatches.  Squatches lock it with seconds on the clock. Squatches called for tripping, kicking the ball, banging their limbs together to rally the team. They say the point guard’s superior eyesight is from a diet of inner city wino livers. No squatchflopping rule in effect. Careful with the Croatian caveman slurs and the Basque Neanderthal slurs. Due to the shockingly high number of opposing player deaths since the Squatchers came into the league, the Commissioner has agreed to consider a Commission to recommend changes (or not). He has to be sensitive to charges of speciesism. Chicken wire across the backboards in all away cities. No more night games. No flash photography. A three-day suspension for dismembering limbs. This isn’t an aquatic exposition, the Commissioner says, to have primordial forest cred you have to break a few dinosaur eggs. While opposing teams quietly arm themselves with guns, Sting wearing a Hornets jacket does an Amazonian rain forest theme song (sponsored by Exxon) as the new anthem of the league. The Primordial Forest Division will be the most exciting development in professional sports since the disco strobe light and florescent puck experiment of the NHL. Cornrows and full body tattoos give way to semi-automatic pistols stitched into foreheads, full-body phosphorescent rug fur rigs, steel-toed sneakers and toad (the wet squatchit) venom dreadlock activators. Skins vs. Furs. Cages will be introduced. Dr. Naismith will spin again like a Smith and Wesson in his peach basket grave. At the end of home games with Toronto protecting a lead fans will chant “squatch it squatch it” in an insistent deafening tribal manner. The Commissioner will be outraged there’s any controversy at all. Marv Alpert will start dating primates again. The Commissioner will finally relent and allow stoppage of play for pooling of blood on the floor, and from that point it’s only a short distance til the whole thing is exposed as too craven and nakedly corrupt for even the NBA and the Toronto franchise will be quietly renamed the Biogeneticists, with no record it ever happened except for Sting’s odious theme song. The Squatches will wind up like the Harlem Globetrotters playing exhibition games at circus venues. Against teams like the Iron City Oafs, Duluth Leprechauns and Casper Friendly Ghosts. And of course the poor hapless Washington Generals. Who will have the world’s last bearded lady as their power forward. At halftime there will be a mock (?) wedding ceremony between her and Nez Piercings, the charismatic two guard of the Squatches at center court. Officiated by Key Rock the Unfrozen Cave Man Lawyer (“…Your modern game frightens and confuses me: I don’t know of any Lakes in Los Angeles, or Jazz in Utah, or Grizzlies in Memphis and believe me I would know, there were no Grizzlies in Memphis long before I froze and your scientists thawed me out. I’m a caveman. I don’t know the difference between charging and traveling violations, I can’t even enter the paint without child supervision, but I do know this, that this manbeast and womanbeast should be legitimately married by the state of reciprocation for as long as the icefloes hold back..."). As the crowd sprinkles them with talcum powder, the groom says “I’m not an anomaly I’m a humanoid being.” Player-coach ape-man Dennis Rodman looks on in his wedding dress, beaming (It’s okay to say that, you know, we’re on the “we hunt, you gather” fur but balanced network so everything’s dank). Hey which way’s the main stem cell? Our chemtrail weatherman Hugh Jennix will tell that story but first cue cavemen with tennis sweaters…

Spontaneous Haiku
A book at the nursing home:
Bob Hope: My Lifelong Love Affair with Golf
Where’s my book? My Lifelong Love Affair
With the Dangerous and Criminal Insanity of Bob Hope

Play the Blues
There are no storytellers
Sadder than Muddy Waters.
It’s so wrong he even has to talk.
There’s no show, just weary disillusionment
That no one understands the blues,
Though everyone can see in him
The world of trouble on his heart.
There’s no formula just the art of falling apart
For it always always must be must be real.
You literally can’t touch him.
He points like a king
And barely dances, barely moves,
Perspires without breaking a sweat,
He can’t sing better than any other licorice twister,
Can’t play guitar like no straight church’s business.
The good man is at the wheel
Soothing and provoking, saying only
That nothing is ever really there, just him
 – And you. You want to make him laugh,
This tragic, mud-bedappled titan,
And he seems almost pleased you would do that for him
But the thought doesn’t last, as the emperor
Of ice cream has to say “turn your lamp down low”
One more time way too many, the cold and bright
Diamond who shows the night’s dark
Without ever getting in the way.
And it’s somehow reassuring that he’s got enough pain
For everyone, he’s got nothing to prove
And nothing to say – he makes it triumphant
And we look at him with awe, at how he turns just so
The joint at the end of each perfectly delivered line,
With no ash, no soggy pants, just the seriousness
That you need to know how it is – on the muddy
Waters of oblivion sinking without jettisoning
His pride to the reverb of the reivers.

Hove on, big river, hove on.

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Dual Coast Dawn

Things have changed so quickly
— people waking up to find
the food they eat is poisoned,
the words they use a wounding of themselves,
their life support a glitterbox of lies
containing all the facts they call the world
illusion save the love that two can share
out of its frozen words, infallible measures.

The nixie naiads swim like coy
around the rose-infested cub scout house
as one more Portuguese water dog
with gooey eyes that shine a love
that only can be given out of many lives together
is clipped into her school bus seat again.

The strawberry moon bends
like any curvature of light,
a jewel hanging in the gaudy night;
it is we who do all the moving.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Ennui After a Shift

The rose it opens
the light not seen,
its total bliss
was always waiting there
for the self to dissolve
in the purity of love

but the thread that
carries with it all I feel
catches on the vagaries
of the blues
in pain and yearning
comforted
for what has long denied
my striving kindness

what is there as
mere perfection now
except inside the mind,
the heart locked
on a phantom
larger than itself,
a small thing lost
in an infinite embrace
from which there's
no returning

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

A Kiss

Inextinguishable light
Meets inextinguishable light
- One light no longer two -
The universal nothingness
Beckons from all sides
And we melt in all our gratitude

Monday, June 10, 2013

On White Oak Street

Four Yorba Linda llamas
                Walk by the avenue
On the way to Poway
                On the way to Poway
Something different’s come to town
                Something different that’s brand new
Hear the tealids ring today
                Hear the tealids ring today

The girl will hit the lower notes
                The boy will want flute played
On the way to Poway
                On the way to Poway
A heart as large now as a house
                At watch from far away
Hear the tealids ring today
                Hear the tealids ring today

Soon the fairy garden
                Will burst out into bloom
On the way to Poway
                On the way to Poway
Soon the violin
                Will sing a happy tune
Hear the tealids ring today
                Hear the tealids ring today

The hens will lay new eggs of love
                The bunnies thump with glee
On the way to Poway
                On the way to Poway
The dolphins will go dancing
                At the entrance to the sea
Hear the tealids ring today
                Hear the tealids ring today

The sun and moon will each take turns
                Shining down with love
On the way to Poway
                On the way to Poway
At laughter never ending
                That warms the sky above
Hear the tealids ring today
                Hear the tealids ring today

Soon the crows will meet again
                When the nectarines turn red
On the way to Poway
                On the way to Poway
Pure heart faith has won its dream
                For the May Faire wove its thread
Hear the tealids ring today
                Hear the tealids ring today

The gnomes can rest their feet at last
                The guardians rejoice
On the way to Poway
                On the way to Poway
The crystals hum in perfect love
                With one earthheaven voice
Hear the tealids ring today
                Hear the tealids ring today

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Some Clews at the Dog Fair

I'm nothing but a pretty face, a sense of place,
a taste whose trace can base from wayward glance
a possibility - and then I see a woman
so at one with he - I'll water ski
in South Bay with no other.

Monday, June 3, 2013

Review of Elephant Rocks by Kay Ryan

Some poets give you nothing and it’s everything. Other poets give you everything and it’s nothing. Kay Ryan is one of those latter poets. Zany and nonsensical metaphors build and build in a pleasing but predictable rhythm, cloyingly rhymed and flat as a pancake, until they seem to whip up into something strange, and signify something deep about humanity, the earth, even, gasp, God, but since they risk nothing and aren’t really about anything other than perhaps the metaphors themselves and the way they attack the mind’s pleasure centers, they leave the reader with nothing but the feeling they are safe in whatever illusions they came in with.

This is not to say these miniatures aren’t enjoyable – they are, like easily solved algebra equations, which is something in this day of intentionally disconnected circuitry masquerading as poems because they cannot be called anything else but poems. But it all falls apart in the reader’s hand – oh, I think she was talking about that, but maybe it was this, but anyway, life is strange, people are funny, let me read another one like it is lightly salted popcorn. That’s fine for some people, but I get highly annoyed at such a waste of what appears to be genuine poetic talent. There’s no sense in this entire book that there is actually pain and wisdom in human relationships, or that it’s a struggle to find some temporary respite of truth in the strict school marm of the universe, and no possibility that turning ones perceptions inward will bring one closer to God. At least Mary Oliver gives you that. She is really writing about something besides the act of writing, or more precisely, the act of thinking of something to write about.

Still, the overwhelming sense of vacuous preciousness is not what bothers me, nor is it that insidious manner of how carefully for the eye of the common man she has pilfered the public library for philological and historical arcana to sprinkle carefully on top of the poems like so much vitamin-fortified confectionary sugar. No, her art for me is like that card-shuffling trick before the poker game, a show of virtuositic force that almost distracts you from the all-important fact that the game hasn’t even begun. It’s done before the bets are made that can make or break souls, where nothing is certain, clues can deceive but are your only hope, as you boil the water and roll up your sleeves and turn up the lamp to examine the entrails on the table, and instinct will carry you over the abyss every time. To see Kay Ryan in her Emily Dickinson stripped of the tragic tone of witty wonder bring us her musings on intention, measures, chemistry, connections, age, silence, loss, relief, distance, heat and poetry in translation (to randomly cite various titles/themes in this collection) – it’s so thrilling to think we know such things, how clever that these abstractions can be compared to zoo animals, how sharp that the mind can connect all the dots like a born pattern-maker.

But then the bottom drops out. There's nothing even remotely there because even the smallest break through the illusion is too painful to bear. You were suckered again by the need to not have anything to believe in, to be arch and ironic instead of real, and to not ask too much of your mind when it is barely able to hold it together in a world where nothing is as it was only yesterday.

Ryan’s is a trip through the garden of a neat and orderly Victorian gentlewoman, full of good cheer and good manners, but there are no flowers to take with you on your journey home.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Invitation to a Wedding

We were married on the street by some homeless dude
because he could recruit two sober witnesses
but she wants a legit hippie wedding this time,
so we got a real Man of God to do the hitching
though he does have "fuck the world" tattooed on his arm
and my best man is crazy, always wears a helmet,
thinks the fire chief is giving him orders,
says "moo cow" after everything you say,
but we'll have shrimp'n'grits and lots of moon pies
and hell ya of course you're invited.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

The 47 Days in a Mexican Jail Diet Plan

Six days on the road with Russell, Blaine, Jesse and Robert

The cloud chakra on the outskirts
of everywhere
tests how cool you can be
when facing the Antelope Valley
reality:
Diamond Jim’s Casino again,
morning gamblers, no cash
advance ATMs, chewing tobacco
prohibited in the urinals, and a
calming desert pink after you lose all
your Lancaster cash, grass so gray
it’s alien blue.
I don’t even want to step on the cracks
of clay with dirty-ass Jesus feet.
Each shard of trash is perfection.
You can ignore the rickshaws
‘til you get out of town
but the concertina wire
and armed guard towers
seem odd in a casino parking lot.
Officer UPS asks about me and my boy –
“They are strange but harmless.”
“Are you lost?”
Already by this time we’d become a song
played on our car by the unmarked Musical Road:
a clever set of grooves waxed in the warm cement
or part of an elaborating plot to plug us all back in?
It seems there’s only so far we can go into the desert
before we notice something we’re not allowed to see.
The first of the military-alien complex: Edwards Air Force
Base, and the first attempt at a band name:
Savage Messiah.

Then it’s “Welcome to Mohave, Home of Spaceship One,”
which is apparently an Amphicar with a broken window.
We find in Red Rocks Canyon, though, an entrance
to the Portal. How do we break through the holographic
stucco that covers the passage to inner earth?
There’s a temple of stone stacked over the hole,
a carved heart, a smiling face. Rather than run through it
fearless but unprepared, we go up the dripping rocks
in sabertoothed dress shoes instead.
A silence of ears sucking sand. We talk of women
and the rusted soda can we found that had turned
to a friendly face by years-old bullet holes. We break one
Frisbee, and try to follow a crow.

Back on Neuralia Road (“dips next 90 miles”)
the mountains are lighter than clouds
and desert woman suchness emerges like a mirage or an oasis.
Then a bathtub crank town Randsburg comes
“Hopen for Business.” We stop at the General Store
for hand-mixed Sarsaparilla and a picture of Sacajawea.
Burlap was over the window. The proprietress shook her
tresses, holding back more than she revealed, as she gave
as sassafras the secret ingredient, only available (unlike wintergreen)
to pharmacists. As she spoke the sign above her glowed:
“cows may come, cows may go, but the bull in this place goes on forever.”
Outside, the Surcease Mining Company has set up a ghost town toilet,
“hern” and “hisn” (caked with chisom jizm), and for all your tonsorial
needs, a barber shop: “hot baths, fine cigars.” And Slim’s Place,
with its haunted ceiling, antique beer cans, staring dolls,
a Happy Holidays doormat with a gray Santa Claus, a “yes we have
used dentures” sign, and outside a bone-dry wishful thinking well.

It’s creosote weather. We’re growing food in our car as we travel.
There’s a rainbow-colored Petting Zoo by the desolate highway side.
As we pass Shambhalla China White Dry Weapons Lake
there’s an ordinary mining operation running 24/7,
pay no attention to the boarded quonset huts or the swamp gas pipes
from the green trapezoidal building, or the advanced radar tower
turning in a fenced-in field of no cows. By the raspberry road of Trona,
the Pinnacle Inn is at one end of town,the Nadir Inn at the other.
And nothing living is in between, just the sadness of cactus
growing through the cracks of an old high school basketball court
and a football field without grass, and a dude in full zombie makeup
lurching along the side of the road like a method acting class
gone tragically wrong. It’s hot and cold at the same time,
extreme micro-climates that shift in nanoseconds,
lifeless mountains of straw
then a redonkulous oasis with date palms and elephant ears
and birds like warnings crying.

Nearing Death Valley you can smell the geology,
feel the alluvial fans,
remember the aeons locked in rock
when Papa was a Metaphysical Geologist,
sense the quicksand underneath the salt table
and the elusive Chocolate River
Manson attached gas tanks on his car
('cos Charlie don’t stop for gas)
to find. It’s easy to see
why so much weirdness passes this way;
even aliens, who have no problem
converting sunshine to water, have the same
problems we do when it comes to finding
places free of dune buggies and Winnebagos,
they need a vacation without people too.
We can see their landing strips
and runway lights made of unnaturally angled stone,
the cliffside triangles (the alien yield sign).

In the late afternoon sun you live for, it’s movie time.
We got served with raindrops, and the rainy desert smell.
Skulls along the side of the road
remind us we are going to a place beyond death,
beyond love and mercy.
The rain on the plain falls mainly on 2 Skidoo.
At the first official campsite some nervous campers eye us
like mules, some mobile government meth labs
disguised as “Goldtimers” retreat RVs roll by
the last pay phone on earth. The smell of mkultra bath salts.
We freestyle it, decide to go wildcatting,
head down the washboard road that
leads to Heebee Jeebee Crater.
The raindrops are gentler
than the touch of any finger.
No chairs, propane or ladles
for these intrepid squatting fools,
just a panhandling guitar played on the side of the highway,
a 12-string trained at the Waldorf School,
some Apache drums, a Yaqui rattle, a Navajo flute,
and a recorder of course to attract a Sasquatch.
We had to leave the piano at home
- such brutal choices test one's will to survive.
We practiced the art of mishearing:
Savage Massage and Clown Chakras
became poetries bequeathed to the Gods
as we uncorked the resin of our souls
in an air without ghosts
(just the hovering lights of a nearby alien base).
We all felt our fear but we walked in the dark
to a visualization spot we named reality
we tried to claim if ever so briefly.
The desert gave us a fire in the morning,
sprouts grown in a jar, and the rain
as a blessing. No insects
or jackrabbits for hundreds of miles
 - no way to even pay.

In the dim morning grandeur
we decided to head towards
the center of our fears:
the infamous Scottie's Castle.
I could see the blood dripping
down its bell tower spiral staircase.
We couldn't find the underworld slaves
to free them but we could tear it open
by pulling its sick bell cord
 - veritas vos liberabit.
"Let's follow the road to Scotty's grave," someone said.
"We can put the body on top of the car."
We could smell the ghastly horror by now,
nearly hear the agonized howls,
every inquisition, every torture chamber, every dungeon
compressed into this bizarre but innocuous-seeming complex.
The perfect front to process kidnapped children,
turn them into the ruling class as sex slaves. To the side,
past the Spanish gates and Arabian arches,
thousands of thickly stacked railroad ties,
with no train or road in sight, just a locked entrance
at an endless and inexplicable hypermodern security fence,
with a sign on the gate that from afar seems to read "warm slaves."
It's for the crates they ship the children in, we thought,
but the truth is always murky, it's always so much more
hideous in reality than you can possibly believe,
for that's how they get away with something so big,
so diabolical, so obvious, this rule over all we see and hear
through chaos to destroy people's minds and spirits,
through alchemic creation of impossible conflicts,
hopelessness and addiction to methodically infect
the entire population. We saw a strange pile of wood
nearly fossilized in the middle of this, that looks like
the corpses of Auschwitz. The bells went off, in a sick
out-of-tune tone like no religious song I've ever heard.
The sign on the bell tower said "private residence."
We went up the hill to "Scotti's Grave", to see his
warlock statue, his Satanic credo "don't say nothing"
instead of "don't say anything," "don't explain"
and next to his formal memorial, a kindergarten grave
of fossilized turds like unnatural skulls,
and one word, "Windy,"
for all the sacrificed children. 
There's a cross, of course, at the top.
A crow whirred overhead, directly over me,
so I stayed behind when the others escaped
before the winged monkeys were alerted.
She landed on the cross like a guardian of the undead,
then, making sure I'm watching, swooped
magnificently down to the palm grove below
and disappeared, to show me
they are only fooling themselves
more than they are fooling us, that
even in this most damaged and desperate of
places life can hide, it can't be stopped,
love is the only protection.
The bells infected the air again, the last note sounds
long afterwards like a HAARP wave;
even the birds furiously screamed to blot it out,
and so shifted the energy, even here,
from manifesting its total desire.
I returned to the group as they're conferring with
a blind park ranger and a lady from NASA.
"Don't touch the rocks at La Playa," she said,
"there are transponders on them so we can 
catch them moving." Meaning of course
that they were there to catch us.
When we asked if NASA had put them there
the blind ranger gave us the crazy eye,
asked what kind of car we were driving,
and where did we get it, and said we should expect
to lose at least two tires on the way.
The crow returned as we revved up the engine
to remind me of our lifetimes together, and
that she was keeping watch, as I was watching,
her black iridescent on the parking lot.

We left before we got the glitch chip in our brains.
Despite the desert finches, hummingbirds, butterflies,
the mechanical goat on the hillside, it was
Racetrack Playa dust or bust, we had to
get away from the rat race of Stovepipe Wells.
Even one car passing us was like being in Walmart.
"We won't rescue you from La Playa"
echoed in our ears, as we eyed drone seagulls
and heard the alarm go off in the distance
to put air defense on high alert for us
because we weren't driving a Ford Sabotage.
We saw the rock the crescent moon launches from
and bravely strategized
over frosted cheese loaf sandwiches
("leave nothing behind but footprints and teakettles,"
"no placing bets when we get to the Racetrack")
as we bounced to desert mixes the 571 miles
riding dirty on a Big Chief Runningboard keel haul,
staying strong as they turned on the weather machines,
sending a tropical storm through the Joshua Trees
then, getting desperate, turning on the hail.
The place, when we reached it, had an
absurd inexplicable flatness,
a luminous glow from within.
The sun was only over the Playa,
making it superreal, Kubrickian,
so white it was pink, a creme
brulee of salt, with smoke at its frays
from white dust griffins like wild horse vapor trails,
silver rocks the size of mountains at its edges.
In ecstatic tranquility the original island
(what they now call The Grandstand)
lay in the center, with supercharged rocks
and primordial beach. We had entered
the womb, the earth mother's pussy,
it was here in endless linoleum tiles
the akashic records are kept,
and there was no judgment
for all the suffering and loss, so beautifully
felt on the dry slate. Soft rain caused the seeps
to connect, in the brainscape of the cosmos.
The wonder was not the perfect paths of the rocks
as they move just when no one is looking,
the wonder was that in that maelstrom of wind
the rocks didn't move at all. They were
the male, aligning with female energy,
magnetically, in concentric scrapings
against a truth impossible to bear,
the hieroglyphs of life itself
captured in the salt. Some of us slept,
some of us walked, none of us could say
the thing we felt. We were at
the center of the earth, the pure place
even mkultra couldn't touch.
We were sailing on a sea breeze
through the emptiness of everything
and thinking of only one thing.
"Why do five guys go out all this way
for a woman?"
"That's what we do."
And, again, in her soft soft voice
she then said "you must stop this pandering
and do things for yourselves,
for suchness. That's all we ever want."

Crazy Charlie might have had
a Nazi swastika tattooed on his third eye
and all that but he had a good band
and great visions of the Chocolate River
of which there was still no trace
along the Panta-Breath-Mint ridge,
the strawberry hillsides,
confectionary clouds,
the seven-levels frosted bundt cake mountains,
as we drove gaping chasms
in the crevasses of the earth
to try to veer in even closer
to the sweetest desert,
by the 700-foot tall Mammoth Dunes
made of disappearing dust
in the perfect curvature
of a woman's body. Sand
for five guys roughing it,
and hobo shoe print floor-mats
at its base.We went up
the slow dune lava
to the top, our tracks
reshaping what it was
but no longer is (ah, woman is the wind).
We rolled like whirling dervi down,
and ran backwards like a lost Beatles
"run for your life" film, and by the time
we made it back to camp
we looked like Lawrence of Arabia
asking for lemonade as he emerged from the Rub Al Khali.
As we had our tea and breakfast
of Motherground peanut butter
and Bilderberger Berry Jam
from out of nowhere came an F-16
that stood on its side in mid-air less than 10 feet from us
before sweeping away to some hidden base
in a Jack de Ripper yee-haw cowboy hat roar.
"At last I see my tax dollars at work" I said
to this gentle reminder we were not where we were
supposed to be. The park ranger who stopped by
almost immediately was almost apologetic, almost friendly.
And again there was no way to pay.

We'd been living on medicinal chocolate and Death Valley sprouts.
There were diners and hot springs up ahead we knew,
somewhere beyond the Bristlecone Pines,
the mountains glass-stained holy white,
the river that once was a sea where we measured
and recorded a sasquatch poop.
We found a tectonic blue plate special hot food
in the Giggle Springs Mini-Mart,
near the "mule capital of the world."
Sacajawea served us strawberry and rhubarb pie.
I wanted to ask to touch her.
Then the throbbing metropolis of Bishop
with its rodeo stadium, Vagabond Inn,
Choo Choo Swap Meet at the Railroad Museum,
Paiute Palace Gas and Casino,
of dark plush wierdness, real Indian croupiers
and customers counting Indians on the machines.

Blaine whistled "Paint It Black" as high lonesome
theremin dune blues. Robert said "Rare Brare Rarebit"
in Baltimorese on English as second-language headphones.
Russell regaled us with squatching stories
of how they sometimes dive in bear-proofed dumpsters
but they mostly eat deer liver because it's good for the eyes.
Jesse talked about his only pair of socks, one dress
and the other cookie monster - "I even took them to jail."
As for me I just did what I do,
melding my mind with a passing Airstream.
It was clear as we passed Convict Lake Resort
(3 1/2 star facility with turnkey service according to prisoner reviews)
and the Prison Outlet Store
that we'd left Desert Woman
and were nearing Mountain Man.

We found a place we'd need a rental dog for,
with a self-loathing Scandanavian dark sauna,
where we talked about stealing the keys to our wildman cages
when the Mother was so far away,
and played love songs to caterpillar greasewood 
on digiradoo kazoos, manifesting
the Kalamazoo New Kazoo Canoe Revue.

In the Death Valley Daze Ronnie and Snoop had become fast friends
and on the long lonesome road to Rodee-Bodie-O
had disappeared in a blunt skunk haze into Mexico:
"Whell, you talk to Nancy Snoop and say we'll be late for lunch"
"Put yo trippin' bitch in check, niggah."
We contemplated swimming in Battery Acid Lake
where you might lose your leg and all,
but the kids are now cutting off their legs
'cos it's cool to be a hookfoot,
it's like a tattoo as a weapon.
The lake was pewter blue, with a strange crystaline stillness,
calcium spires that grew and breathed and were
for all intents living, even human, and below
an eco-system of incredible importance:
alkaline bacteria eaten by alkaline algae
eaten by alkaline shrimp eaten by alkaline flies
(or as they said in Baltimore, "Al Kaline flies!")
eaten by normal horned larks and sage thrashers
in rust where the flies dance in suchness.
Just then a snooty Prius came along
with picture-taking zombies inside
to condemn Mono Lake as an anamoly
instead of floating in the saline salve of the mother.

Then Dream Mountain Drive, where we felt,
as Nero said "at long last I can live like a human being!"
And Silver Lake beyond the veil, in cold tar mud,
with dreamcatcher visions amid visionboard scenes,
and the name "Cal Ripken" carved on a tree.
And Rainbow Street where the late sun made it clear:
nature offers nothing more, nothing less,
still we judge ourselves for what we have.
And, as if to turn that incandescent afternoon into physical fact
we turn into an obsidian mountain, the black loving mother
from deep in the earth shining like the sun
in smooth compassion, glossy unrelenting love.

And then we went back, just like that
at the Ranch House Cafe in Olancha,
the scene of the water stolen by LA crime,
for Indian fry bread and a sign on the door:
"Wanted: Saw Dust Charlie, the Pockmarked Kid,
the expense of said capture to be borne
by one hundred substantial citizens,"
and the waitress from Texas was told us
as we left: "drive safely and take care
of your women."

Despite roadside dignitaries
like Hot Creek Hatchery and the Lava Girls
the only tree for miles was a rusted fake
by a lone Southern Pacific railroad car
in the sand outside of Inyokern,
where we picked up K-MKUltra's transmission
like a long-extinct star still shining its sun upon us
"coming at all you Death Valley alters
'My Guitar's Gonna Kill Ya Momma'
by Frank Zappa for Mother's Day before we
count ALL the way down to our all-time top-five hits:
'American Pie,' 'All Along the Watchtower,' 'Hotel California,'
'Every Breath You Take,' and, at number one with a Manchurian
bullet, 'Whiter Shade of Pale.'"
Then, like a bomb, Johanesburg,
its "knife shop and casino," "Guns4us", "Jberg Junque,"
dead gas station lots, flashing glass in the sand,
"homes for sale," a blank billboard for rent
(we wanted to put "MORE COWBELL" on it),
a "senior pot luck supper" in a teal Route 66 camper;
everything dissolves here like a boiled peanut
in a bottle of sweet Coca-Cola. Snoop is slumped
way down in the seat, amid imagined billows
of cannibis cloud eating twizzlers.
There's no time-bender button in our Chevy Vortex
just more road by stone-hard sand;
the Black Hole Sun Solar Collector Facility,
the battery for the Matrix, and a "Cactus Shop"
by the transistor circuitry. Then the Joshua Trees
began: the shiva brush trees, ti chi windmill trees,
stretching gymnast trees, pom-pom cheerleader trees,
edward scissorhand trees, universal restroom symbol
trees, Musso and Frank's hatrack trees, Leonardo
di Vinci man on fire trees, praise Jesus trees,
dancing children trees, flying Nike trees, shrieking fencepost
trees, crouching monkey funhouse chickens trees,
laughing squirrel porqupine quill condenser coil trees,
then Adelanto, "the city with unlimited possibilities,"
like, I guess, the Big Rig Tire Shop, the Federal Penitentiary
and Garbage Smelting Center, the look on everyone's face
for an alternative to the governing reality of hopelessness
on this stretch between long kitty litter highways,
but then, on Mother's Day, in the middle of the desert,
we saw a 20-foot statue of our patron saint Quan Yin,
the Goddess of Compassion, "be kind to your women."
Then Victorville, another parking lot, another crow,
as we cleaned out the "all-natural" GMO imitation snacks
only to encounter on the way out a Coyote Dog
that drank goat's blood and licked Jesse's hand,
who saw that was living his dream: a pick-up truck,
coyote dog, and a gun, with the Mexican jumping bikes
derby nearby, every weekend.

Down the bad hills of San Berdu
there was crystaline suchness
but it was 98 degrees in Rivertucky -
we went to Death Valley to get away
from the heat (that's how we roll),
team Savage Messiah, secret
artist heart, learning how
we are the change.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Off the Grid

To whoever it concerns, I will be wild-catting at the Racetrack Playa and other remote Inyo County locations for the next three weeks. I will return your call with new transmissions when I return.

Return with a Purple Heart

The bewitchment begins
Instantaneously,
With turquoise sand,
Those mountains without trees,
Those glassy lakes
Without water,
The quarries uncut
And the rivers of stones,
The patterns beyond any form
Of plant, animal, man -
A logic less simple
That needs nothing.

Nothing I can share
- Everything was left in the sky.

Friday, April 26, 2013

At The Stillpoint Between Earth and Heaven

The breathing eye
tries to get me to feel
with beautiful flowers
the work of being worthy
of no boundaries.

So you come.

You love the way your hair sweeps
in the density of air
as I love seeing plants
become vibrations,
yet nothing done alone's
not done together.

We are the glaze we see
upon the pond.
There is no limit
to how light I can become,
how deep you feel
the darkness of the earth.

The churches are but
unimportant spires
that cross the ruined brick
of sunlit towns,
the men and women
chasing other realms.

Your kiss becomes a river
filled with all the scents
I've given you
and every move I make
becomes, in you, a ritual,
an opening of doors
to step away.

I must give nothing up
except my will.

I thought it was some trick
to stop my music
but now I know how rocks
broke in my hand
for other reasons
—the music already existed
it was my heart that needed
to be created
behind Las Vegas curtains
inside heaven,
where I tried to feel
what I am feeling now
but how could I know
the cowgirl on the wall
was really you?
Like I see you now
with your own eyes
on a Melrose fire escape.
"Iglesia?" you say
as if my answer
came before,
as if I've yet to lay
down in that
dark hotel room.

The symbols
are now you,
keys that only turn
when doors were opened,
when watching something else
besides the knob.

And now the cops
have waved us through
'cos we're together
the speed traps and the time
and space continuums,
the things love never needed
but I held on to,
to catch that glint that
brought that scent
that sent that taste
that burned that touch
that now is all of me.

I won't go back to feeling without you.

I might not like how
honors
trail behind me
but without them
there is only
eternity...

Sometimes God's light
upon His dream
is so frivolous,
so full of desire,
we stand there gaping
at the houses and yards
as if they are
no longer real.
We become the
purple
that overcomes
the green.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Tears for Sereta

It's only the word of God if you believe it to be
but because your heart is endless that part is easy.

It's how nothing can come in between you has you beat.

Earth Day East of the Hudson

So the tulip blossoms fall to their death by St. Aloysius
glowing for a moment
                                     before bright mid-April sunshine
makes the slightest hints of green a portal to heaven,
the purple on the floor like Easter mourners
                                                               outside the void
of the hollow, blackened-out cathedral.

And spring won't even laugh,
its endless flowing like some rope in children's hands,
turning all that we remembered
                                                      leaf by leaf
            to something new,
                                           the emptiness of music.

So much that we do, as humans, is indigestable:
our thoughts of predators
                                           are in our water,
our wasted nervous energy
                                              blows through our air,
but somehow, we cannot believe
the earth that always comforts us
                                     cannot release what's stuck.

The fish are coming back
                                           to Antarctica,
the whales are going home because they do not need
                                to feel our pain any more.
New alphabets are forming,
                as always with our hearts to pick out words
from an apple tree that keeps on growing.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

My Mother Earth News

The stars are arranged on the lawns.
Heaven is inside my blood.

I no longer need to be carried on celebrity's shoulder.