Brand recognition is your best ass, or so I hear, and can put your assets indelibly in the minds of all of those who glare upon it. I’m no dangerous
liaison, I do this for a living. To liaise is to engage and can make for strange bedfellows. The light in the attic is the last one that goes off in my building. I
live and work there. But I stay clean and can cut my own hair. Everybody’s a penny- pincher in this day and age: the age letting go of all of the pennies. The channel that is
still on when the light in the attic dims. How much are you willing to spend on the lederhosen?
from grabbing some snacks and nearly walking into a gal on the sidewalk, the spitting image of Leah. It stopped me cold. I
thought for a moment, I might shed a tear, but I don’t believe in ghosts, really, and while sad to be reminded she’d been gone
how long now? And way too soon, so young. I wouldn’t have shed a tear, probably shouldn’t have said that, but I was stunned. And more
than appreciated the triggered reminiscence. The era she was one of the folks with whom I’d enjoy the fortune of her presence
were good ones, although dwelling a bit long on those days the happiness gets entangled with bittersweet residue, simply because there were people, and
a good number, with whose presence I had the good fortune to experience back
then. But I do try, am working to build
a new coalition of cohorts. It’s ard to
think I’ll ever have a new chosen family like I did; and that’d certainly be for the best, given how it turned out. I suppose that, try as one might, one
shouldn’t cling too earnestly on those with whom we might feel tightly and convincingly connected. It has always taken me quite a while to warm up to
individuals, even when there used to be plenty who worked hard at getting close. But despite my longstanding attempt to build a bond that I might
call my own, my home, my cherished, and watching each and all vanish in nearly an instant, seemingly, and me in the depths I hope never to sink at
any point ever again, I know I will keep trying, keep believing it’s possible. Oh, woe is me, you might think I’m thinking. I am not. It was
lovely to see her again, my old friend. Happy memories warm the soul. And provide the motivation to make more. In the meantime, it’s good to be aware
I’m yet here, am no ghost, much as, at times, it might appear that I am. I’d like to keep it that way for as long as I will, remembering to remember
mostly with peace and with joy, even when sitting in solitude, resting up for tomorrow, when perhaps I’ll look you in the eye, say hello, and then,
Spilt most of the chunks of honeydew all over my thin blank et, the one upon which I sit, the one upon which I sleep, right before bed. That it’d absolutely not be me to deduce this ex perience into a lesson not to eat so late might surprise you,
might even exasperate me. Am I really that stubborn? I am. So what?! So. What, then, is the lesson I’ve learned today? Because it is very much me to gather lessons incrementally. From, say, a 24-hour period. Or a given year. During a class.
During a late-night discussion in which you and I disagree on something we both find incredibly important. Can you not, then— might I call you Stranger?—begin to estimate how many lessons I fail to learn during any given fragment of this life? And might
you desire, as I do so intensely, taking as much time as you want researching the accuracy of your estimate? Starting right now?
The way you look tonight is perishable, unphotographable, laughable. —John Ashbery
“Excuse me, officer,” said the driver’s license to the trophy wife, “but might you have time for a quick selfie?” The police officer seemed
to puff up a bit at the query, and with an Aw,
shucks! stance meekly came out with “Oh,
now, well, you know, I appreciate the offer
and all, but I’m just not feeling myself today, no, I’ll have to turn you down there, maybe some other time.” The license was carefully placed back into the appropriate pocket of the wallet of the sweet man behind the station wagon’s steering wheel without even a Thank you, ma’am! The driver seemed a bit embarrassed as he shifted into gear and eased back on to the highway as the officer stepped back to allow him to do so. Then she went about sifting through her pockets, careful not to disturb the holster, eventually taking out a stick of Chapstick, which she then uncapped, and with two swift slashes applied a waxy layer to the top and then her bottom lip in that practiced, not the least bit awkward, verging on violent manner that folks from the east side of the city were known to often do. And then she pocketed the stick of balm,
Whenever Brenda was in there, boy what a mess. And the noise! It wasn’t just the electronic music that had the cinderblock walls in
flate with each boom of the beat, but there was the conglomerate of the whirring and banging and plip-
plopping of all of her tools. It seemed
there were always multiple ones being used at at any given moment. It could be the jigsaw slicing a two by four in two while she was simultaneously
banging a nail into something with a hammer and hacksawing pipe or some
such as if she had a third arm or tele
kinesis. And she’d be in there for hours.
Then, at a moment when one would swear it was going to go on all weekend, out she’d come, saying “I’m rett to go!” And what a beauty she was in that new
outfit, materials soft and billowy that looked light as fresh white rose petals falling from the bloom, highlighting the chiffons and the cottons and whatever
else made up her fancy dress du jour. “I said I’m rett to go!” “Oh, there’s no need to ask twice!” And off the couple were to the danceclub, the belle of the
ball and her awkward sidekick, out for another night that would not be forgotten.
it must be working, whatever I’m doing. Because what’s more embarrassing than having your diary found, opened, and read aloud, in public, when you’re, say, thirteen years old? I can’t recall such a thing ever happen ing to me. Is that what I’m going for, then? Really? That feeling?
Little wonder that home is a bright place to be if living’s your thing. —John Ashbery
This only makes sense in a place wherein there are walruses crowing. Fantasy worlds unite!! And it won’t be here, in this place, my new home, much as I love it, am almost in love
with it. Because any living that transpires doesn’t take place sitting solitarily inside a box of one’s own. I say this from experience, he said inappropriately. But the truth can be inappropriate sometimes. And
also simple, even as confusingly elaborate as some whodunnits can be. If the mystery of having one’s crossed legs half covered by the comfort of personal bed linens, a torso in some semblance of upright
while catching the latest episode of Murder, She Wrote intrigues you then how about we Freaky Friday ourselves out of here to check out some fresh new looks we lock into, meet with a few
fancy words or a tissue? Now that I’ve made my point, I suppose I’ll hit resume and watch the rest of the episode. Even though I’ve seen this about a dozen times and know
a hundred yards from my home what home you haven’t got a home I do so have a home —John Ashbery
I can’t do Ozempic. Long story, and not a very fun one, I might add. And I’m not on a diet (an old-fashioned word, that one, right?). But I’ve lost a few pounds over the
past couple of months. I have a few theories why, and each have me imagining myself healthy. Healthier, in fact, than I’ve been in years. But the news! Even as I type this
to you, I’m listening to political talking heads by way of YouTube. So I’ve turned that off. Just now. And am going to close my eyes for a few moments. Bear with me, please. Damn,
it’s too bright. And my new fifty something inch television is on pause in the middle of a laundry detergent ad. Picture a hand in the middle of the screen with all fingers forward, toward me, holding
a square swirled with three colors: green, blue and purple. Imaginative. It’s almost a miniature abstract piece the likes of which one might see casually strolling through a museum of modern art. Oh, now I remember,
I was in the middle of the latest episode of Strange New Worlds, which I suppose I’ll get back to now. With so much focus, so much concentration, there just isn’t any time for the imagination, it seems. Is that really so bad?
to a hippie convention. Oh, evening! thinks John Ashbery, who doesn’t hold to convention like I do. Then the world sets about trying to discover the identity
of the narrator. The poor thing! Must have been drunk out of his mind. Or worse! Most everyone was quickly distracted by about a million different
things. Some had to tend to their gardens. Others to meals already in progress. As for me, I just kept directing traffic and confusing the pedestrians.
At night we saw the stars and the moon, annoyed the neighbors by reading aloud until about four a.m. Then we made a bunch of recordings of boiled eggs