Monday, December 30, 2013

MODERN MONK

I'm a monk with
a television and
a brand new iPhone.

My mantras are slogans.
My chakras have sponsors.

Meditation comes between
commercials for dish soap
and pick-up trucks.

I text as much as I chant.

Is it hard, people ask,
to find enlightenment
in today's world?

You'd already know my answer,
I answer, if you had stopped
to read my latest
facebook status
update.

JAWBREAKER IN JANUARY

After the suns sets
the whole moon rises

over the last hill
like a white jawbreaker.

it reminds me of
my childhood,

of the days when even
a single piece of candy

was as heavenly as the
new Winter moon. 

As heavenly that one,
right there.

DON'T TOUCH THAT DIAL

Like static on a car radio,
your signal is intermittent.

The airwaves are gluttons
for interference, so i only

get part of the patter,
a meaningless message,

a snippet of song.


Sunday, December 29, 2013

THE LONG BAR (1984)

ten at night.
six or eight of us
piled into a cab
at the san diego
border and headed
to T.J.
the cab was out 
of space, so 
I splayed myself
across the laps
of my posse
as some Culture Club song
played on the shitty
FM radio. we broke
Mexican traffic laws 
all the way to
Revolucion Avenue.

Near eleven, we
walked
the crowded streets
smelled the meat
cooking on the grills
of the taco carts
drank and laughed
in the shithole
bars along the main drag

Just after midnight, as we ventured
back to our own world,
I hooted at the five dollar 
ceramic frogs that sat
like bloated guards 
by the border fence 
and I stared half-drunk 
at the five year olds
who sold the tourists Chiclets
in the exhaust clouds of
the taxi lines.

Moments later, back in
the states,
I remember that
one blonde's arms
around my waist
as we walked to our cars
and as the black
shadows below us
inched
their way across
the darkened arroyo.

DOING IT ONE MORE TIME

it's sweet to get
the word down
while soft jazz
emanates from
the boombox
a cool drink
on the desk
as you put down
what it was like
in the old days
a memory or two
from decades ago
or maybe one small
portrait from the
present
a few words 
from just the
other night
when you were
in the kitchen
and heard a coyote
cry in the open
space just beyond
the backyard.

Friday, December 27, 2013

SOME CHANGE

I am quiet
and still
and receptive
in this peaceful room
boz scaggs'
some change
plays at a
low volume
in the corner
just a touch of
electric guitar
slicing through
the transparent
pane of a lazy
afternoon




Sunday, December 22, 2013

EXISTENTIALIST

Everybody sits down
at the chair to do the work
in his own way.
Everybody takes a shower
in water of a varying degrees,
brushes his teeth in a singular rhythm.
Everybody makes his coffee
a little bit different--maybe
no sugar or extra cream.
Everybody hauls the coal
to the mouth of the mine
using particular tools, some
prefer the wheelbarrow,
some the sack. Everybody
stops for a break at a different
time, and welcomes in winter
by looking at the skinny,
naked apple trees
or the narrow frosted fields
as he breathes his visible clouds.
Everybody dreams of not going back.
Except the ones who never
take the break in the first place.
They're the saddest of all.
Everybody dies individually,
unable to reach across 
the chasm and share even
the most infinitesimal part
of the entire isolated feat.

Saturday, December 21, 2013

MT. PLEASANT

A storm rages
in the middle of
Michigan, a little more
than two hours from
where she lives. It's
just after midnight,
and they sit at the table
playing Euchre, all of her
relatives stealing glances
at the window and
imagining their own kind
of Spring. I think of how
strong she is and make
her promise to be safe,
not heroic. From two
thousand miles away,
I feel her hesitate, but then
breathe more easily 
when she tells me 
she will not know
if traveling is safe
until the next day's
traffic report.




Friday, December 20, 2013

FOR A MENTOR

if you recognized
even a fraction of
your own gifts, allowed
for even a scrap of their 
magnititude and 
chose to shroud
yourself in these gifts
like a cloak, every-
thing about your place
in history would be
revision, every last
movement and gesture,
from the fingertips on
the shoulder to the
tender, erotic crimes
of your youth and
even those just after
would be allowed
to change and open
like a flower that while
wilted from lack of use, 
is not yet dead.

LESSONS

Sometimes the young girls
stare at my ear, focusing
on the right lobe, the one
I had pierced in the mall
during a break from my job
at the local theater in 1985. 
They gape in utter disbelief,
genuinely amazed that this
geriatric man before them, the 
one who teaches them grammar,
red pencils their essays,
and admonishes them not to 
eat in the classroom could ever 
have committed an action
as edgy as piercing an ear.   
What they fail to realize is that
there were other actions, far
edgier, that they will never know
about, that are not nearly as visible
as the decades-closed hole
that, much like the memories of
these other transgressions,
is now nothing more than
a shadowed indentation
in my rapidly aging flesh.

WATER FLOWERS

the other day
the rain came down
like little water
flowers and it hovered
in the air, suspended,
and then fell hard,
splashing against
the cold, gray
concrete
of the sidewalk,
murdering autumn
in the process

Thursday, December 19, 2013

ENCINO (1989)

once at the
end of 
ventura blvd.
near tower records
and the trendy
restaurants in
the place they
called little melrose
a few of us 
walked along 
the sidewalk
in the evening
just to see the
sunset crash into 
the valley 
just to watch 
the death
of the decade
living just a little
bit north
of everything
that was so
los angeles

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

SAN DIEGO SUMMER

Cruising down
the street at dusk
with my arm
hanging from the
open window,
I crank up Social
Distortion’s “Ball
and Chain” and
before long,
Mike Ness’ pounding
guitar makes it not
so much a song
as a prayer.

FIRE PRAYER

Outside, the air
smells of fire and the sky
is a gray, hazy mist. As the horns
rise in the melody of a song
playing in this otherwise
quiet room, where the
intermittent silence is both
salvation and torture,
I ask God to think of me
in his calmer moments
and, with one more sniff,
understand how the flames
are probably only moments
from here and moving closer
with each exhalation of the wind.

RESPIRATION

being alive
is effortless
the breath is
sucked into
and out of
the lungs
w/o a thought
and so it seems
we often 
use our 
remaining
energy
to create so
many
problems
that take 
away 
the natural,
organic breath
and leave us
suffocating
with what's
left after
the wreck 

STUDIO CITY

And then there was the place
that sat next to the freeway
where the smooth whir of the cars
at rush hour sounded like the ocean.
it was a good place
where my days were free and open,
full of close friends, cheap food,
and endless possibility. The nights 
were calm and there was little do 
before sleeping, though sometimes 
I would lie awake listening 
to the couples making love
in the Jacuzzi outside my
bedroom window.  I was alone
and lonely, but never unhappy.
This was a place before the winning
And then the losing, where life scrolled out
before me like an unending ribbon,
where mistakes could be rewritten,
where regrets were few.   It was also 
a place, it must be said, where more
than a handful of my dreams went to die.

DUSK

I believe in
the origin of
lavender smoke 
that rises in
the twilight,
the rich blue velvet
of an evening
when no one speaks
the unutterable need
that creeps in uninvited
and consumes you
as the terrified
moon rises
above a garden
that is now
too dark
for blooming

MY MUSE

my muse
wants to wear 
a red dress
and drink
chilled wine
on a night
when she can
see the round
full moon
in the clear
empty sky

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

OBSTINATE WINTER

She is anticipating
yet another storm,
another blinding
white sky that
eclipses the
round, full moon
in one of the
most beautiful
parts of the Midwest
keeping her at arm’s
length of her dreams.
This time, she
thinks, winter
means it.

MOUTH BREATHER


I have no patience
for mouth breathers
who gasp and wheeze
as I'm trying to think
and who chortle as they
misconstrue their
pristine inanity
for wisdom.

Monday, December 16, 2013

WHERE MONEY DOESN'T TALK

the rich
also have
their scrapes,
their cuts, 
their sacrifices 
that draw blood.
The only
difference
is that the wounds
of the rich
are rarely seen,
hidden
as they are
behind
the tall trees
enormous hedges
and profound
and exceptionally
eerie silence
found in the
gated communities
of affluence

BLADE


pulling our pants
on in the dark

sometimes we are alone
or sometimes

we are alone, even if
we're not.

Some days the skies
are dark as seeds

and some days
the cars and trucks

honk their
way into oblivion

And some days 
the words are nothing

but small factories
that belch the smog

and soot of their ideas
into the thick night.

The razor’s edge
is a sign. 

Some days
It’s closer than others.

DEATH SONG #2


the clouds
are heavy
with snow,
the flowers
frozen on
their stems,
and the
silent, ancient
glaciers
no longer thaw.
This might
be the harshest
winter in
memory.
or possibly 
death.


SEEING STARS (OR, WHY I DECIDED NOT TO BE FAMOUS)


maybe it was Jimi or 
Janis when I was only
seven, sacrificing their
magic in a halluncinatory
dream of alcohol and drugs.

maybe it was Freddie Prinze
when I was fourteen
with a gun in his hand
Quaaludes and bullets
spread on the table 
in front of him like 
deadly M&Ms.

Maybe it was Rebecca Schaffer
when I was twenty-seven
who died, not by her own hand
Or bad choices,
but by a dream
machine that murdered her
with its bottomless need.

Maybe it was River Phoenix
when I was thirty. I watched
the news about him
at a comedian friend’s condo
as he lay dead on the street
In front of The Viper Club. 

Maybe it was Kurt Cobain
Who pulled the trigger
The following year, when I was thirty one
And starting my actual career, waiting
for my family to begin,
who taught me the final lesson

About what is necessary 
for The Art.

BILLY JACK


what I liked
best about
billy jack
was that he
could kick
your ass
twenty times
to Sunday
but tried
really hard
not to because
it was better
to be peaceful.

LAVENDER SKY



Last night the moon
was full and sat in
a pink and lavender sky.
I stared at it from a strip mall
Parking lot, even took
Pictures of it on the camera
On my phone. 
I watched as the night
changed from lavender to purple
To black. I stood there
As the throng of shoppers
buzzed around me
painfully oblivious
to the god-given art
thrumming above their heads.

LIFE WASTERS


To my left are people
I cannot move around,
Imbeciles who, because
they laugh at nothingness,
cannot hear the screams 
of the needy.

To my right, there are people
who block my way,
speak but say nothing,
and ultimately gamble 
their last sweet minutes
on nothing but soulless junk.

I cannot breathe tonight.

Everywhere I turn
each room is full
of the worst kind
of people. 

Saturday, December 14, 2013

CLEANING HOUSE

The cleaning lady
cancels and I have
to scramble to find
a replacement. Talk
about first world problems.
but it creates division
in the household,
increases the already
dysfunctional tension
among people barely
speaking to each other.
But this new lady
comes through and
the house is clean
once again. There is
still tension but it's
not the kind that will
land us on the evening
news, more of a low
thrumming pulse that
makes us vaguely unhappy
and takes years off our life.
The bottom line, though,
is that, for now,
I've put out one more
fire. As Bukowski
once said, all gifts
need to be earned
and re-earned.

8:50 A.M.

I sip coffee
by the kitchen
window as the light
pours in, the blinds
slicing the sun
into single rays.

URBAN RENEWAL

the marriage collapses
around me like
an imploding building,
dynamited from
inside to control
the damage,
to make room for
some other structure.

EIGHT BALL

I miss shooting
pool in that quiet
back room in my
parent's house.
sometimes my
best friend
would come over
and we would say
if I sink this shot then
<insert girl's name here>
will have something
to do with me.
It never worked.

NEW POET

I taught my students
how to write poetry
this past week. First,
I shared some of my philosophy
and then we read
a few modern poems
because I knew the old ones
would put them to sleep.
Next, I made them
write some little word
pictures, some portraits
of what they saw
outside of the classroom.
They were gone for maybe
twenty minutes, wandering
around the campus like
little neophyte Ginsbergs and
Kerouacs, observing
and cataloging images.
When they came back
they had a handful
of little word pictures.
As they turned them in
one girl read a few
as they came up her row
and then she looked at me
and said I didn't think
these were going to mean
much but I just read
some and there were
a few that were
so powerful and intense.
Now she knows why
I always say that
poetry has saved my life.