The Sun Aims for Sunny
Like a dandy. But the fog lingers.
I finger my invisible drink, imagining
I’m testing the temperature of a pool
before diving in, or perhaps it is a bit
more like slowly dipping a toe into fresh
bathwater. I’m aiming more for funny
than raucous (I think?) as I lift a wet
finger and clear my throat. “Waiter,
there’s a fly over here that’s come un
done.” The poor guy, somebody’s son,
does quite well at his attempt to roll with
the punches without coming across the
least bit flirtatious. “Too bad, so sad!” I
think, pouring out my imaginary drink.
anachronizms
over two decades in the making. a timeshifting autobiographical poetry collage w/photography. a diaristic, nearly "daily writing" (ad)venture. new pieces are posted most days.. **new and in progress** -- recordings of each poem are being added. these are read by the author & posted to each poem's page. --Del Ray Cross (contact delraycross at gmail)
Friday, September 13, 2024
mmmmcdlix
A couple walks by, 3pm. I
follow them a moment with
my eyes and, unable to resist
as they play at bickering, with
my neck, so, okay, I’m staring,
rolling my eyes a bit as they
disappear over the hill. I’m
thinking couples, hmph! It is
a feeble attempt at being a
little bitter and it doesn’t last
long, comes across to me as
fake. Later, though, in bed by
around 8:30, not sleeping yet,
of course, my mind does its
thing. Surely it’s my neck that
is the culprit, the rememberer,
craning as it did earlier in the
afternoon, but I’m filled for a
few—I could say tortured, but
I’d be kidding—minutes or so
with a discerning nostalgia,
greedy memories, mostly of
the succulent tactility of spoon
ing, how tangible, as the sec
ond hand ticks (the memory
mixed with the sounds of some
one’s wristwatch, but whose?).
How each tick from the timepiece
moves the titillating connect
ivity of the surfaces of skin
that have found themselves
smushed onto the surfaces
of someone else’s heats
inevitably into an uncom
fortable sweat until that
couple, one of them you,
sleeps, perhaps soundly,
snoring at the edges of the
bed, that oblong stretch of
space, a vacuum, between.
follow them a moment with
my eyes and, unable to resist
as they play at bickering, with
my neck, so, okay, I’m staring,
rolling my eyes a bit as they
disappear over the hill. I’m
thinking couples, hmph! It is
a feeble attempt at being a
little bitter and it doesn’t last
long, comes across to me as
fake. Later, though, in bed by
around 8:30, not sleeping yet,
of course, my mind does its
thing. Surely it’s my neck that
is the culprit, the rememberer,
craning as it did earlier in the
afternoon, but I’m filled for a
few—I could say tortured, but
I’d be kidding—minutes or so
with a discerning nostalgia,
greedy memories, mostly of
the succulent tactility of spoon
ing, how tangible, as the sec
ond hand ticks (the memory
mixed with the sounds of some
one’s wristwatch, but whose?).
How each tick from the timepiece
moves the titillating connect
ivity of the surfaces of skin
that have found themselves
smushed onto the surfaces
of someone else’s heats
inevitably into an uncom
fortable sweat until that
couple, one of them you,
sleeps, perhaps soundly,
snoring at the edges of the
bed, that oblong stretch of
space, a vacuum, between.
mmmmcdlviii
Domesticated & Roasted
I couldn’t laugh then. For
months afterwards, anyone
who believed they had known
me in the slightest would catch
my eye for long enough to con
vey disbelief and disdain before
moving on to wherever they
thought they were going. I’m
no Cassandra, but who nom
inated me to be the one person
in the room who could see the
future. Little did I know that
they had all one-upped me,
each having dispensed with
their sobriety weeks or even
months earlier, they had all
peered into the same future
that only now I could glimpse.
I couldn’t laugh then. For
months afterwards, anyone
who believed they had known
me in the slightest would catch
my eye for long enough to con
vey disbelief and disdain before
moving on to wherever they
thought they were going. I’m
no Cassandra, but who nom
inated me to be the one person
in the room who could see the
future. Little did I know that
they had all one-upped me,
each having dispensed with
their sobriety weeks or even
months earlier, they had all
peered into the same future
that only now I could glimpse.
mmmmcdlvii
The End of an Era
Back then, wanting to live long enough
was so easy-peasy; so rosy-dozie. But
when it was proclaimed resolutely on
today’s teevee that it was the end of
an era, and this was furthermore done
in a giddy fashion seemed to have the
studio audience just as giddy in return,
I sure didn’t believe it. I had known an
era or two. And they had ended. And
I’d been in denial afterwards for years.
When the scientists who measured
such things committed suicide, we
had absolutely no way of knowing
what an era even was. Or is. We
just knew from our own experiences
that it was not a pretty thing, this
era ending. So, despite all of the
proclamations, those confident
announcements, I didn’t believe
a word of it. “This era will end
with the apocalypse,” I told my
pal Farrah, who, despite her name
was very 21st Century. “Lighten up,
Dude!” she said. It seemed like her
favorite thing to say to me. And it
was obvious that she was annoyed.
She was already on that end of an
era bandwagon. I felt a sudden
twinge of nostalgia and, truth be
told, a rather extreme desire, more
than just a resigned readiness, to
welcome that apocalypse with the
widest grin I could muster, which
would be a small representation of
my likewise overly outstretched
arms, held in such a way that
revealed how craven they were
for the tightest embrace they’d
ever known. “That’s just way
too much,” thought a willing
yet sorely disappointed Farrah.
Back then, wanting to live long enough
was so easy-peasy; so rosy-dozie. But
when it was proclaimed resolutely on
today’s teevee that it was the end of
an era, and this was furthermore done
in a giddy fashion seemed to have the
studio audience just as giddy in return,
I sure didn’t believe it. I had known an
era or two. And they had ended. And
I’d been in denial afterwards for years.
When the scientists who measured
such things committed suicide, we
had absolutely no way of knowing
what an era even was. Or is. We
just knew from our own experiences
that it was not a pretty thing, this
era ending. So, despite all of the
proclamations, those confident
announcements, I didn’t believe
a word of it. “This era will end
with the apocalypse,” I told my
pal Farrah, who, despite her name
was very 21st Century. “Lighten up,
Dude!” she said. It seemed like her
favorite thing to say to me. And it
was obvious that she was annoyed.
She was already on that end of an
era bandwagon. I felt a sudden
twinge of nostalgia and, truth be
told, a rather extreme desire, more
than just a resigned readiness, to
welcome that apocalypse with the
widest grin I could muster, which
would be a small representation of
my likewise overly outstretched
arms, held in such a way that
revealed how craven they were
for the tightest embrace they’d
ever known. “That’s just way
too much,” thought a willing
yet sorely disappointed Farrah.
Monday, September 09, 2024
mmmmcdlvi
Ponderings & Educated Guesses
(yet another interlude)
Back then I wanted to live long enough
to tell the stories of what I had no way
to put into words, because it was also
impossible to float somewhere outside
of myself in order to see what people
like to call the “big picture” of what
is going on, of how sick I’d become.
How emotionally—how mentally—ill.
It was a pre-pandemic deterioration
the worst of which I can now say
occurred before I was literally kicked
out on my ass. Kicked to the curb then
wait what turns out to be this extraordinarily
long duration and then kicked out into the
(yet another interlude)
Back then I wanted to live long enough
to tell the stories of what I had no way
to put into words, because it was also
impossible to float somewhere outside
of myself in order to see what people
like to call the “big picture” of what
is going on, of how sick I’d become.
How emotionally—how mentally—ill.
It was a pre-pandemic deterioration
the worst of which I can now say
occurred before I was literally kicked
out on my ass. Kicked to the curb then
wait what turns out to be this extraordinarily
long duration and then kicked out into the
elements. The worst had already happened
by the time I got to the second part, being
literally removed from my home, and the
trauma (I would like it to be understood
that I do not take that word lightly) that
would accompany it, until I realized (even
considerably after this less harrowing set of
events began to occur) my memory, that
dried up orange wedge that had always already
made retrospection something so unlike, that
seemed so seductively distinct, that I had taken
to saying I write to remember...and...that’s why I
take photographs, too, had begun to malfunction,
just as it does for those whose memories are normal.
And I had already been weaving these facsimiles
together for a decade, into what has evolved into
this particular project, which, since that time which
I call the worst of it, years before the pandemic,
dozens of months before losing my home of
nearly thirteen years, I’ve spent yet another
near decade building this quilt made of me,
all slapdash, wherein I can dive into at what
ever point, if for no other reason than the
fundamental one of understanding illness
as I never had, of the incredibly long process
of healing, and the physical deterioration of
simply living that can go on in simultaneity.
One comes of age. One experiences tragedy,
one gets sick and (at least in this case) even
tually heals, slowly, is always healing. And at
the same time, one —usually completely un
aware of the pace, much less that ALL OF THIS
is ever happening, it is all so significant, it is always,
yet, indefinitely, meaning, also, infinitely for you,
me, the one who is involved, the victim(?), albeit
finitely, in the whole grand scheme of things,
perhaps, or, in theory, because one can
Sunday, September 08, 2024
mmmmcdlv
The Politics of Memory
Woe to those homeless who are out on this night.
—John Wieners
When did acts of youth
become so geriatric? In
the beginning. The tricks
the decades play. If only
we could have them all back
but for a singular solitary day.
Woe to those homeless who are out on this night.
—John Wieners
When did acts of youth
become so geriatric? In
the beginning. The tricks
the decades play. If only
we could have them all back
but for a singular solitary day.
Saturday, September 07, 2024
mmmmcdliv
Oil of Dew
Are there going to be summer suckers?
—John Ashbery
It’s been ten years
and the sun ain’t.
You know how when
you get sand in your
shoes? Didn’t pack
right. Need shop
ping but can’t in
this blistering sun,
the waves going
lap, the waves
going lap. but I
told you so. X
that out, maybe
it was you that
told me. This
sweltering. The
waves that don’t
go lap lap. The
toes (the sand
between them)
that don’t go
tap tap. This
rolling over.
This beach.
This beach
ain’t nude
and the sun
is rude to you.
So you roll.
You try to
just roll
with it.
roll over
until you
are up
and your
eyes to the
sun at two
in the after
noon. Too
many years
of the same
heat pressing,
the castles of
sand melting
and you burn,
unable as you
are to bronze.
Skin sense
tive to the
lap to the
lap until
you are
dry, dried
up, all
tapped.
If only
you’d an
ounce
more
sap. To
roll like
the body
within, that
burnt-out
lust, your
skin a crisp
and gritty
crust. But
your eyes
from the
hole in the
beach as
you lift
with your
all. Alone
as you are.
Just you
here. No
thing but
old dust.
The castles.
Not even
a moat,
its re
tract
able
bridge.
Every
thing’s
gone
but
the
dried-up
desert hyp
notic land
scaped the
wind-razed
castles of
dust the
dust.
Are there going to be summer suckers?
—John Ashbery
It’s been ten years
and the sun ain’t.
You know how when
you get sand in your
shoes? Didn’t pack
right. Need shop
ping but can’t in
this blistering sun,
the waves going
lap, the waves
going lap. but I
told you so. X
that out, maybe
it was you that
told me. This
sweltering. The
waves that don’t
go lap lap. The
toes (the sand
between them)
that don’t go
tap tap. This
rolling over.
This beach.
This beach
ain’t nude
and the sun
is rude to you.
So you roll.
You try to
just roll
with it.
roll over
until you
are up
and your
eyes to the
sun at two
in the after
noon. Too
many years
of the same
heat pressing,
the castles of
sand melting
and you burn,
unable as you
are to bronze.
Skin sense
tive to the
lap to the
lap until
you are
dry, dried
up, all
tapped.
If only
you’d an
ounce
more
sap. To
roll like
the body
within, that
burnt-out
lust, your
skin a crisp
and gritty
crust. But
your eyes
from the
hole in the
beach as
you lift
with your
all. Alone
as you are.
Just you
here. No
thing but
old dust.
The castles.
Not even
a moat,
its re
tract
able
bridge.
Every
thing’s
gone
but
the
dried-up
desert hyp
notic land
scaped the
wind-razed
castles of
dust the
dust.
Friday, September 06, 2024
mmmmcdliii
The Lava Story
It’s Friday, ya know?
I wake up real slow.
Look around, no mouse.
Look some more, no
spouse. If I were there
and he were here, what
would I call the ocean,
dear? Since this is just
asking myself, I answer.
It’s not lava, I suspect.
And me being me,
having just woken up,
do as I do no matter
who’d be here (with
the only invariable:
that I’d have to be)—
and that’s the same
damned thing I’ve
surely done some
three or four times
since slipping away
from yesterday for a
few scattered, conked-
out, snore-laden fever-
like dreams—which is,
I excuse myself and
I hobble slowly over
to the lavatory for
that momentary
relief. Then I
shake it off.
But before
heading all
the way back
I pause for a
moment at
the sink,
look my
self into the
mirror and
mutter aloud:
Welcome back.
Happy Friday.
And then back
to the bed I go.
It’s Friday, ya know?
I wake up real slow.
Look around, no mouse.
Look some more, no
spouse. If I were there
and he were here, what
would I call the ocean,
dear? Since this is just
asking myself, I answer.
It’s not lava, I suspect.
And me being me,
having just woken up,
do as I do no matter
who’d be here (with
the only invariable:
that I’d have to be)—
and that’s the same
damned thing I’ve
surely done some
three or four times
since slipping away
from yesterday for a
few scattered, conked-
out, snore-laden fever-
like dreams—which is,
I excuse myself and
I hobble slowly over
to the lavatory for
that momentary
relief. Then I
shake it off.
But before
heading all
the way back
I pause for a
moment at
the sink,
look my
self into the
mirror and
mutter aloud:
Welcome back.
Happy Friday.
And then back
to the bed I go.
Thursday, September 05, 2024
mmmmcdlii
When I’m Close to You
What did I miss? Holding your
hand as we walk down the avenue.
Your fingers, cold as heavy metal,
sort of melt within the grasp of mine,
like they’re slathered with butter. We
don’t even notice as the streetlamps
start to pop at dusk, dark settling
over the fog. Do you think we’ll
make it to the dunes by midnight?
We get there, it must be ten o’clock,
the water like ice, the bonfire built
but unlit. Where has everyone gone
off to? Nothing phases you. “I have a
lighter in my pocket.” With his oil-cooled
fingers, he leads my hand right to it.
What did I miss? Holding your
hand as we walk down the avenue.
Your fingers, cold as heavy metal,
sort of melt within the grasp of mine,
like they’re slathered with butter. We
don’t even notice as the streetlamps
start to pop at dusk, dark settling
over the fog. Do you think we’ll
make it to the dunes by midnight?
We get there, it must be ten o’clock,
the water like ice, the bonfire built
but unlit. Where has everyone gone
off to? Nothing phases you. “I have a
lighter in my pocket.” With his oil-cooled
fingers, he leads my hand right to it.
mmmmcdli
A Smug, Hard-Working Sonnet
Hard work is my professional brand.
—paraphrasing Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson
I have considerable experience with
post hole diggers; fence building.
Also with putting nubbins of cheese
into mousetraps. I get distracted
quite easily. A mouse and a roach
walk into a tiny coffin-sized hotbox
of a bar and refuse to order drinks,
terrorize the employees and clientele.
Hard work is my professional brand.
—paraphrasing Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson
I have considerable experience with
post hole diggers; fence building.
Also with putting nubbins of cheese
into mousetraps. I get distracted
quite easily. A mouse and a roach
walk into a tiny coffin-sized hotbox
of a bar and refuse to order drinks,
terrorize the employees and clientele.
When business is at its calmest you
might see me running around like a
chicken with my head cut off. I’ve never
axed a head off of anything, nor wrung
Tuesday, September 03, 2024
mmmmcdl
When I’m Far from You
Feel this. You know how
people say he’s right here
in my heart? It’s bogus.
There’s so much distance.
Traditionally the bride and
the groom do not see each
other on their wedding day.
All the loved ones take a
seat. You know how when
you go bowling the next day
your fingers all feel so bruised
from having them in each of
those holes, carrying that
heaviness? I don’t believe
in distance. I also don’t
think there’s such a thing
as astral projection. Never
underestimate the power
of touch, of course, but
when I say I feel you here
even though you are clearly
there...aren’t you? If there’s
a ghost of love then you tell
it that I’m not haunted. I am.
Feel this. You know how
people say he’s right here
in my heart? It’s bogus.
There’s so much distance.
Traditionally the bride and
the groom do not see each
other on their wedding day.
All the loved ones take a
seat. You know how when
you go bowling the next day
your fingers all feel so bruised
from having them in each of
those holes, carrying that
heaviness? I don’t believe
in distance. I also don’t
think there’s such a thing
as astral projection. Never
underestimate the power
of touch, of course, but
when I say I feel you here
even though you are clearly
there...aren’t you? If there’s
a ghost of love then you tell
it that I’m not haunted. I am.
Monday, September 02, 2024
mmmmcdxlix
Stan’s Overused Volume of Amy Vanderbilt’s
May I remind you that every sentence, everywhere,
ends with a period?
—John Ashbery
“These are the rules. It’s
in the book, see? Have
you memorized every
page of it? Very good,
very good.” He pet his
pal like a dog for a mo
ment, then did a one
eighty, which happened
to have him point in the
exact direction of the
kitchen wastebasket.
Do you say wastebasket
or trashcan? What then
do you say? With book
in hand he marched
forward like a sweaty
band camp adolescent.
Until of course he reached
the aforementioned recept
acle. Into it the book went,
and rather viciously. Stan
watched his sweaty, red-
faced man as his hand came
up empty from the trashcan.
In awe of this Freudian scene,
Stan stood there for a while
filled with a frenzy of contra
dictory emotions like pride,
envy and an ever-expanding,
ball-burning love.
May I remind you that every sentence, everywhere,
ends with a period?
—John Ashbery
“These are the rules. It’s
in the book, see? Have
you memorized every
page of it? Very good,
very good.” He pet his
pal like a dog for a mo
ment, then did a one
eighty, which happened
to have him point in the
exact direction of the
kitchen wastebasket.
Do you say wastebasket
or trashcan? What then
do you say? With book
in hand he marched
forward like a sweaty
band camp adolescent.
Until of course he reached
the aforementioned recept
acle. Into it the book went,
and rather viciously. Stan
watched his sweaty, red-
faced man as his hand came
up empty from the trashcan.
In awe of this Freudian scene,
Stan stood there for a while
filled with a frenzy of contra
dictory emotions like pride,
envy and an ever-expanding,
ball-burning love.
Sunday, September 01, 2024
mmmmcdxlviii
They Say It Is Whatever You Make of It
What I am doing is easy to relay.
Who I am is not.
I’m sitting atop my bed, leaning
back against the back wall of my
tiny coffin-sized apartment. Only
it’s not a hot-box today. It’s cool,
lovely, and with my door open just
a bit, I feel the breeze against my
back. It whooshes over and under
the back flap of my left ear and surely
wends its way out the door, across the
hall and into my neighbor’s tiny room.
He’s playing a video game. It’s always
loud. I think he’s moved on from the
one in which he is racing cross-country
in a semi. No rumbling. No rough talk.
Instead I hear occasional instructions
(vague, indecipherable, but nevertheless
loud) of a spritely girl voice. She sounds
like Sakura from Naruto. Anyway, what
I’m doing. Is reading a book a purchased
(I do this when I can, which for a while
was a mournfully rare occurrence) on eBay.
It is by a friend. It’s the second time I
purchased it. (It wasn’t one I already
owned, one of the many lost when I
was 50, that old story, but) I bought a
copy from Amazon, one of those rare
occurrences because I was able to do so.
Apparently, shortly after it arrived, it was
either misplaced or stolen, something
that happens often down at the front
desk, where the mail comes in and
waits for me. Anyway, it is a book
from a friend, the second purchase of
said book. It is inscribed to someone
that isn’t me, this book written by a
friend, purchased twice. And I am
leaning back against the cool back
wall of my apartment reading it.
And it is good. Page after page of it,
I read, thinking of my friend, reveling
in its humor, the poignance of each piece.
What I am doing is easy to relay.
Who I am is not.
I’m sitting atop my bed, leaning
back against the back wall of my
tiny coffin-sized apartment. Only
it’s not a hot-box today. It’s cool,
lovely, and with my door open just
a bit, I feel the breeze against my
back. It whooshes over and under
the back flap of my left ear and surely
wends its way out the door, across the
hall and into my neighbor’s tiny room.
He’s playing a video game. It’s always
loud. I think he’s moved on from the
one in which he is racing cross-country
in a semi. No rumbling. No rough talk.
Instead I hear occasional instructions
(vague, indecipherable, but nevertheless
loud) of a spritely girl voice. She sounds
like Sakura from Naruto. Anyway, what
I’m doing. Is reading a book a purchased
(I do this when I can, which for a while
was a mournfully rare occurrence) on eBay.
It is by a friend. It’s the second time I
purchased it. (It wasn’t one I already
owned, one of the many lost when I
was 50, that old story, but) I bought a
copy from Amazon, one of those rare
occurrences because I was able to do so.
Apparently, shortly after it arrived, it was
either misplaced or stolen, something
that happens often down at the front
desk, where the mail comes in and
waits for me. Anyway, it is a book
from a friend, the second purchase of
said book. It is inscribed to someone
that isn’t me, this book written by a
friend, purchased twice. And I am
leaning back against the cool back
wall of my apartment reading it.
And it is good. Page after page of it,
I read, thinking of my friend, reveling
in its humor, the poignance of each piece.
Saturday, August 31, 2024
mmmmcdxlvii
Mom & Her Big Colorful Hat
My mother has never lost
her faith. See how she wears
her new striped hat courtesy of
an ex, who is, step by step
in the background, painfully
downing glasses of wine.
What color are the stripes?
Is the hat actually colorful?
Not like the rest of her out
fit, upon which there seems
to be a ‘painted’ Italian vista,
which, from my perspective
looks to be just outside of Firenze.
Two tall walls go breast to sleeve,
leaving an admirer, if one is able
to lower their gaze from that
very loud hat, the ability to
peer through what would be,
without the artistic license
of the shirt’s designer, more
brick wall as seen from inside,
or out, a very tall wall, the color
of brick so particular to this part
of Italy. What can be viewed instead,
‘through’ what would be Mom’s
neck down via her sternum to her
navel is a terrain-slanted Italian
countryside with a few tables replete
with umbrellas splayed indicscriminately
but no doubt next to some unseen
trattoria, and in the distance a church
with an extremely high belfry. Today, one
might just imagine those bells ringing. But
here in California, we have barrels of wine,
instead. With which, me, my elegant mom
and my motley crew are more than okay.
My mother has never lost
her faith. See how she wears
her new striped hat courtesy of
an ex, who is, step by step
in the background, painfully
downing glasses of wine.
What color are the stripes?
Is the hat actually colorful?
Not like the rest of her out
fit, upon which there seems
to be a ‘painted’ Italian vista,
which, from my perspective
looks to be just outside of Firenze.
Two tall walls go breast to sleeve,
leaving an admirer, if one is able
to lower their gaze from that
very loud hat, the ability to
peer through what would be,
without the artistic license
of the shirt’s designer, more
brick wall as seen from inside,
or out, a very tall wall, the color
of brick so particular to this part
of Italy. What can be viewed instead,
‘through’ what would be Mom’s
neck down via her sternum to her
navel is a terrain-slanted Italian
countryside with a few tables replete
with umbrellas splayed indicscriminately
but no doubt next to some unseen
trattoria, and in the distance a church
with an extremely high belfry. Today, one
might just imagine those bells ringing. But
here in California, we have barrels of wine,
instead. With which, me, my elegant mom
and my motley crew are more than okay.
mmmmcdxlvi
Ageism
I don’t have the
time of day. At
first, when living
alone, one could
not ask anyone
for the time.
Suppose no
phones, no lap
tops, no internet,
no Alexa. Alexa,
what time is it?
She’s unplugged.
I changed her
name to Ziggy
a few days ago
and had no way
to ask a question
for a fortnight (nor
any way to ask her
how long a fortnight
is) because I kept
calling her Iggy.
I’m very forgetful.
Just day before
yesterday...oh,
that was just
work. Does it
count? Does it
ever, says my
supervisor, all
those miles a
way. When
push comes
to shove, I’m
a pacifist, al
ways have
been. Frankly,
the problem is
I just get distr
acted. I would
not tell you my
problems, anyway.
I used to wake up
awake. Now I wake
up to spend hours
awakening. Can
anyone please
tell me something
positive that can
come from this?
I can’t. I’d ask
Alexa, but I for
got her name.
I don’t have the
time of day. At
first, when living
alone, one could
not ask anyone
for the time.
Suppose no
phones, no lap
tops, no internet,
no Alexa. Alexa,
what time is it?
She’s unplugged.
I changed her
name to Ziggy
a few days ago
and had no way
to ask a question
for a fortnight (nor
any way to ask her
how long a fortnight
is) because I kept
calling her Iggy.
I’m very forgetful.
Just day before
yesterday...oh,
that was just
work. Does it
count? Does it
ever, says my
supervisor, all
those miles a
way. When
push comes
to shove, I’m
a pacifist, al
ways have
been. Frankly,
the problem is
I just get distr
acted. I would
not tell you my
problems, anyway.
I used to wake up
awake. Now I wake
up to spend hours
awakening. Can
anyone please
tell me something
positive that can
come from this?
I can’t. I’d ask
Alexa, but I for
got her name.
mmmmcdxlv
The Truthers
went about the day
exposing themselves.
Sincering, one of the
revelers would soon
say to a masked person
he believed to be his best
friend Albert. Albert had
unwaveringly maintained
that he knew his
friend inside and
out, when in reality,
there was that
massive threadbare
canvas woven arduously
with science and non-
fiction and values that
hovered over the
entire party that
night which, after
a few strained
years appeared
as if on the
verge of
disintigration.
Beneath it were
the innumerable
whispered secrets
that zipped electrically
through the room,
blown hot into every
other ear at the
masquerade, as if
such delicate intimacies
were vaporous proof
that each blower of
gossip could map
the very soul of each
blowee, and thoroughly.
After the lights went
unexpectedly dark
and the horrendous
tragedy ensued,
each stranger
that remained,
each individual that
had survived the
momentously surreal
ordeal, believed that
the event had
brought them all
even closer together,
had made them kindred,
built a community.
And no mere lack of
transparency would
ever take that
away from them.
went about the day
exposing themselves.
Sincering, one of the
revelers would soon
say to a masked person
he believed to be his best
friend Albert. Albert had
unwaveringly maintained
that he knew his
friend inside and
out, when in reality,
there was that
massive threadbare
canvas woven arduously
with science and non-
fiction and values that
hovered over the
entire party that
night which, after
a few strained
years appeared
as if on the
verge of
disintigration.
Beneath it were
the innumerable
whispered secrets
that zipped electrically
through the room,
blown hot into every
other ear at the
masquerade, as if
such delicate intimacies
were vaporous proof
that each blower of
gossip could map
the very soul of each
blowee, and thoroughly.
After the lights went
unexpectedly dark
and the horrendous
tragedy ensued,
each stranger
that remained,
each individual that
had survived the
momentously surreal
ordeal, believed that
the event had
brought them all
even closer together,
had made them kindred,
built a community.
And no mere lack of
transparency would
ever take that
away from them.
Thursday, August 29, 2024
mmmmcdxliv
Names of Some of the Artists
on My Spotify New Release
Playlist This Week
Nnancy, Tender Misfit,
lolbubblegum, Kayps,
Ayesha Erotica, Mo Beats,
Zahraa, Tobre, Space Candy,
RAEGAN, Seb Torgus, MISS
LUXURY, Amira Unplugged,
Lucky Dog, Tom Nethersole
[performing a piece called “Twink”],
Benjamin Elgar, IDER, Jane Remover,
Tills, Lay Bankz, bug brain, Emei,
Saleka, Baku, Transviolet,
ELLUM, Chloe Florence,
Kye, Ayesha Madon
on My Spotify New Release
Playlist This Week
Nnancy, Tender Misfit,
lolbubblegum, Kayps,
Ayesha Erotica, Mo Beats,
Zahraa, Tobre, Space Candy,
RAEGAN, Seb Torgus, MISS
LUXURY, Amira Unplugged,
Lucky Dog, Tom Nethersole
[performing a piece called “Twink”],
Benjamin Elgar, IDER, Jane Remover,
Tills, Lay Bankz, bug brain, Emei,
Saleka, Baku, Transviolet,
ELLUM, Chloe Florence,
Kye, Ayesha Madon
mmmmcdxliii
A Snappy Entry into a Tuesday with Lovett or Leave it
A guest on today’s show is
wearing a sweatshirt that
advertises an “Abortion
Yacht Club” – and she’s just
participated in a comedy
special entitled L’abortion
Variety Hour, subtitled A
Cavalcade of Cooch.
Of which, she, one
of the hosts of said
cavalcade, proclaims:
Lizz is wearing gold-colored
slacks in large square print
plaid with purple stripes.
It’s a minute and a half
into the show during this
morning’s hour and a
half or so of me waking
up before heading to work,
and already (big surprise)
I love it, and am happy
for the rest of the day,
given that there’ll be
plenty more of these
snippets with which
to intersperse it,
livening and happying
each hour as the
A guest on today’s show is
wearing a sweatshirt that
advertises an “Abortion
Yacht Club” – and she’s just
participated in a comedy
special entitled L’abortion
Variety Hour, subtitled A
Cavalcade of Cooch.
Of which, she, one
of the hosts of said
cavalcade, proclaims:
“It did not disappoint!”
And in such a tone
that not a soul would
have disbelieved her.
“People are woefully
ignorant about how
it all works, so in
order to educate
people we created
giant inflatable
dancing abortion
pills,” she offers,
And in such a tone
that not a soul would
have disbelieved her.
“People are woefully
ignorant about how
it all works, so in
order to educate
people we created
giant inflatable
dancing abortion
pills,” she offers,
as if further proof
were needed.
This is Lizz Winstead
speaking with the host
of Lovett or Leave It,
Jon Lovett (of course),
This is Lizz Winstead
speaking with the host
of Lovett or Leave It,
Jon Lovett (of course),
who is by now my
favorite new obsession
of the year (as in I can’t
miss anything he’s in,
which is hours of stuff
favorite new obsession
of the year (as in I can’t
miss anything he’s in,
which is hours of stuff
most any week).
Lizz is wearing gold-colored
slacks in large square print
plaid with purple stripes.
It’s a minute and a half
into the show during this
morning’s hour and a
half or so of me waking
up before heading to work,
and already (big surprise)
I love it, and am happy
for the rest of the day,
given that there’ll be
plenty more of these
snippets with which
to intersperse it,
livening and happying
each hour as the
workday sideswipes me
a few times until off it goes
disappearing into the distance.
Monday, August 26, 2024
mmmmcdxlii
I Will Not Be Silent
I know my place. Deep
within the crevasses of
the very large bed that
takes up most of the space
in this very small apartment.
Notice how I say apartment
rather than room. My place.
Irradiated. Before they suck
the filthy air clean out. Until
I am all that is left. Me.
Floating in this tepid chasm,
lips readying, as if for the
mouthpiece of a tuba, con
torted into a muscular O.
I know my place. Deep
within the crevasses of
the very large bed that
takes up most of the space
in this very small apartment.
Notice how I say apartment
rather than room. My place.
Irradiated. Before they suck
the filthy air clean out. Until
I am all that is left. Me.
Floating in this tepid chasm,
lips readying, as if for the
mouthpiece of a tuba, con
torted into a muscular O.
Sunday, August 25, 2024
mmmmcdxli
Post Deniability
Yesterday, I went through
all of my unopened mail,
a couple of months’ worth.
With my back turned, I can
feel the hot, pinprick-sized
beams of your glare, which
so dazzlingly sting that I
imagine this must be what
it feels like to get a tattoo.
I’ve had none, nor pierces,
those rites of passage borne
from that adolescent-to-twenty-
something pain built into the
collective consciousness of
decades, if not centuries.
Go back long enough and
that’s all you’d get, I trust,
bullet-biting battles in the
achy trenches of both the
haves and the have-nots.
Anyway, there weren’t any
bills. Nothing like that. No
thing so overdue anyway
that because left undone
has me unravel here right
before your searing eyes.
I do all of that online now. It
is the 21st century, after all,
the first quarter or so built up
on lies, sure, but soft ones like
I tell the nice lady at the post
office three or four times a
year when I bring the mid-
sized tote filled with time-
stamped envelopes under
which I’ve personally
handwritten (yes, it’s
practically indecipherable,
you don’t have to remind):
“NOT AT THIS ADDRESS.”
Yesterday, I went through
all of my unopened mail,
a couple of months’ worth.
With my back turned, I can
feel the hot, pinprick-sized
beams of your glare, which
so dazzlingly sting that I
imagine this must be what
it feels like to get a tattoo.
I’ve had none, nor pierces,
those rites of passage borne
from that adolescent-to-twenty-
something pain built into the
collective consciousness of
decades, if not centuries.
Go back long enough and
that’s all you’d get, I trust,
bullet-biting battles in the
achy trenches of both the
haves and the have-nots.
Anyway, there weren’t any
bills. Nothing like that. No
thing so overdue anyway
that because left undone
has me unravel here right
before your searing eyes.
I do all of that online now. It
is the 21st century, after all,
the first quarter or so built up
on lies, sure, but soft ones like
I tell the nice lady at the post
office three or four times a
year when I bring the mid-
sized tote filled with time-
stamped envelopes under
which I’ve personally
handwritten (yes, it’s
practically indecipherable,
you don’t have to remind):
“NOT AT THIS ADDRESS.”
mmmmcdxl
Hard Copy
I have trouble with Mass Media
—John Wieners
Kissing the young man
with the tongue ring,
he remembered an
article he’d read in
the newspaper that
morning. Or was it
afternoon? The
swizzle of the ball
atop the rod that
clung to his tongue
by a pin at the bottom.
Along the smooth, faux
entryway into an imaginary
throat. Into which he pushed
his own tongue, as much of its
entirety as he could manage,
into that slick cul-de-sac,
and then further still.
I have trouble with Mass Media
—John Wieners
Kissing the young man
with the tongue ring,
he remembered an
article he’d read in
the newspaper that
morning. Or was it
afternoon? The
swizzle of the ball
atop the rod that
clung to his tongue
by a pin at the bottom.
Along the smooth, faux
entryway into an imaginary
throat. Into which he pushed
his own tongue, as much of its
entirety as he could manage,
into that slick cul-de-sac,
and then further still.
Saturday, August 24, 2024
mmmmcdxxxix
Dancing Until Sunrise
Embracing my history
without being a part
of it, a party to it.
Enraged by history.
Doing nothing about
it. Without it where
would I be but nowhere?
Studying history, mine,
yours. Sitting in imagin
ary zazen, a mind full of
vivid sexual fantasies un
waveringly clear, the yes
terday of yesterday’s last
year. Its grandfather and
its grandfather’s great-
grandfather, to whom you
ask for the definitions of
freedom, of bountiful and
opulence. Dispensing with
history to reveal the nothing
ness of the present, of pres
ence. Really look around
without wondering outside
of now, each shallow diorama
a geometry of lust. The
removal of all narrative.
Then. Snapping out of it
the trajectories come alive.
This electric aiming toward,
a leaning forward. Am I
making history dance back
wards or shuffle its feet? If
so, I will step out of the way,
Embracing my history
without being a part
of it, a party to it.
Enraged by history.
Doing nothing about
it. Without it where
would I be but nowhere?
Studying history, mine,
yours. Sitting in imagin
ary zazen, a mind full of
vivid sexual fantasies un
waveringly clear, the yes
terday of yesterday’s last
year. Its grandfather and
its grandfather’s great-
grandfather, to whom you
ask for the definitions of
freedom, of bountiful and
opulence. Dispensing with
history to reveal the nothing
ness of the present, of pres
ence. Really look around
without wondering outside
of now, each shallow diorama
a geometry of lust. The
removal of all narrative.
Then. Snapping out of it
the trajectories come alive.
This electric aiming toward,
a leaning forward. Am I
making history dance back
wards or shuffle its feet? If
so, I will step out of the way,
not be a means to an end.
Else gather myself, get
my bearings. And propel.
Thursday, August 22, 2024
mmmmcdxxxviii
A Wink Back at a Bad Dream
We ride them
and Tingel-Tangel
in the afternoon.
—John Wieners
Rather than decompose.
Rather than let things
shift in the direction of
a quickening atrophy. I
woke up this morning,
caught a few blips of
news, of late night
talk show conversation.
Allowing my mind to
awaken. Wake up,
brain! (This takes
longer now.) How
am I doing? What
can I tell you?
We ride them
and Tingel-Tangel
in the afternoon.
—John Wieners
Rather than decompose.
Rather than let things
shift in the direction of
a quickening atrophy. I
woke up this morning,
caught a few blips of
news, of late night
talk show conversation.
Allowing my mind to
awaken. Wake up,
brain! (This takes
longer now.) How
am I doing? What
can I tell you?
mmmmcdxxxvii
Reprogramming Your Processor
How to keep a stiff upper lip
while I wrangle with how to
say things I’ve been unable
to for years? Not only to you
but to myself. When the only
reason I’ve been avoiding it
is because I must keep living
it. That there has been no
intention to avoid taking a
good hard look at the big
picture of myself in relation
to everything which I must
interact is, like (he pauses
with a wide smile for just
a few seconds), what it is
to be human. Composing
Transparency
How to keep a stiff upper lip
while I wrangle with how to
say things I’ve been unable
to for years? Not only to you
but to myself. When the only
reason I’ve been avoiding it
is because I must keep living
it. That there has been no
intention to avoid taking a
good hard look at the big
picture of myself in relation
to everything which I must
interact is, like (he pauses
with a wide smile for just
a few seconds), what it is
to be human. Composing
Transparency
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
mmmmcdxxxvi
Now the season of
the furnished room.
—John Wieners
He goes on to say his bed is
only big enough for one,
it looks like a/casket.
Spend a little time with me
and you’ll recognize the
familiar glance, the
needy nod of I can so relate
and we are such kindred
spirits. Spirited?
But I am no ghost.
Not yet, anyway.
And I have lived here
as long, longer, than
I’ve lived any place
but one in my
grown-up life.
Maturity has nothing
on me. And this place
is home. For now. For
longer than just a little
life. So it bears no
small significance
to this little life.
Even as many
times as I have
somewhat spitefully
called my home
a coffin, I still live.
Not wholly
within
this space.
And although this
small cube of dancing
air is mine. Inasmuch
as this steaming
hotbox has me
gasping for it,
air. Oh, it’s not
overwrought
like I am
sometimes.
I want to say
I have my pride.
Believing in the
warmth of
home, as I
still do here
in mine.
the furnished room.
—John Wieners
He goes on to say his bed is
only big enough for one,
it looks like a/casket.
Spend a little time with me
and you’ll recognize the
familiar glance, the
needy nod of I can so relate
and we are such kindred
spirits. Spirited?
But I am no ghost.
Not yet, anyway.
And I have lived here
as long, longer, than
I’ve lived any place
but one in my
grown-up life.
Maturity has nothing
on me. And this place
is home. For now. For
longer than just a little
life. So it bears no
small significance
to this little life.
Even as many
times as I have
somewhat spitefully
called my home
a coffin, I still live.
Not wholly
within
this space.
And although this
small cube of dancing
air is mine. Inasmuch
as this steaming
hotbox has me
gasping for it,
air. Oh, it’s not
overwrought
like I am
sometimes.
I want to say
I have my pride.
Believing in the
warmth of
home, as I
still do here
in mine.
Monday, August 19, 2024
mmmmcdxxxv
Passings
One of the things that help
me pass the time are clichés.
If you’ve got a subsidized
housing situation and you
read in your local newspaper
that someone died in the
bathroom one night while
shooting up and yet wasn’t
found for nearly two weeks
you might wonder on what
floor of the building in which
exists the tiny box you call
home did this transpire? And
what about the fake candle
they place on the makeshift
memorial each time someone
from your building passes?
Where’d that memorial go?
One of the things that help
me pass the time are clichés.
If you’ve got a subsidized
housing situation and you
read in your local newspaper
that someone died in the
bathroom one night while
shooting up and yet wasn’t
found for nearly two weeks
you might wonder on what
floor of the building in which
exists the tiny box you call
home did this transpire? And
what about the fake candle
they place on the makeshift
memorial each time someone
from your building passes?
Where’d that memorial go?
Sunday, August 18, 2024
mmmmcdxxxiv
Romantic Villain of Doom
The gods are atheist.
They may join hands.
—Robert Glück
To invoke the stuff
you once wished
would rattle reality.
If given a choice
between holding
your hand for a
minute or soaring
through space at
anything akin to
the same pace
as today’s and
yesterday’s, etc.,
I’d find you as
quick as an in
stant, grab your
gorgeously blue
long and lithe set
of surreal fingers,
soak in that warmth,
The gods are atheist.
They may join hands.
—Robert Glück
To invoke the stuff
you once wished
would rattle reality.
If given a choice
between holding
your hand for a
minute or soaring
through space at
anything akin to
the same pace
as today’s and
yesterday’s, etc.,
I’d find you as
quick as an in
stant, grab your
gorgeously blue
long and lithe set
of surreal fingers,
soak in that warmth,
Saturday, August 17, 2024
mmmmcdxxxiii
Pink. Beau, Indiana. Shlips.
I’m in a gang
that goes for
the gusto.
Genital
practitioner,
you said dissonance
means something.
—Robert Glück
I said something
about the clock
rounding the bend.
Big Ben’s booms breaking
boys’ bowel bombs,
their brawl booboos.
Vinnie
Video
Vito
Bonnie meets Clyde
at the bank on First
and Main, asks the
fifty female pigs,
fifty male deer joke.
A hundred sows & bucks!
I’m in a gang
that goes for
the gusto.
Genital
practitioner,
you said dissonance
means something.
—Robert Glück
I said something
about the clock
rounding the bend.
Big Ben’s booms breaking
boys’ bowel bombs,
their brawl booboos.
Vinnie
Video
Vito
Bonnie meets Clyde
at the bank on First
and Main, asks the
fifty female pigs,
fifty male deer joke.
A hundred sows & bucks!
Friday, August 16, 2024
mmmmcdxxxii
The Shrieking Sheikh
The sheikh was so loud my
ears were bleeding. Exact
ly what he was saying I’ll
never know. Just that it
was something about how
I’d been shirking my resp
onsibilities. And since that
is a punch from which I can
never duck quite fast enough,
there was a resignation in me
that would come to me, meta
phorically, in that PTSD way, a
nagging wave that would sweep
through my body that would start
at the soles of my feet and rise
slowly to my scalp, as if a sweat
were being released from my
senses, until I’d be flooded with
that familiar anxiety-riddled sen
sation that would render me inert,
immobile, until I could finally
come to terms with each defeat.
The sheikh was so loud my
ears were bleeding. Exact
ly what he was saying I’ll
never know. Just that it
was something about how
I’d been shirking my resp
onsibilities. And since that
is a punch from which I can
never duck quite fast enough,
there was a resignation in me
that would come to me, meta
phorically, in that PTSD way, a
nagging wave that would sweep
through my body that would start
at the soles of my feet and rise
slowly to my scalp, as if a sweat
were being released from my
senses, until I’d be flooded with
that familiar anxiety-riddled sen
sation that would render me inert,
immobile, until I could finally
come to terms with each defeat.
Thursday, August 15, 2024
mmmmcdxxxi
Working w/Bagels & Bananas
Blown up nearly
tight enough to
burst, just to the
left of that tragic
explosion. Futzing
with photographs
after 5pm (the
school bell turned
into the cow-bell
turned into the
punch clock). “I’d
like to punch that
clock,” I say at noon,
the smaller half of the
workday finally done.
Blown up nearly
tight enough to
burst, just to the
left of that tragic
explosion. Futzing
with photographs
after 5pm (the
school bell turned
into the cow-bell
turned into the
punch clock). “I’d
like to punch that
clock,” I say at noon,
the smaller half of the
workday finally done.
Wednesday, August 14, 2024
mmmmcdxxx
Pour Em Forth a Breeze
If in my pair of fans
there were 10 fans apiece,
would the fair breeze tickle
the face of my other’s ego
if I let each lie here upon
my peach-colored duvet
as the day rolled religiously
into another dog day afternoon?
If in my pair of fans
there were 10 fans apiece,
would the fair breeze tickle
the face of my other’s ego
if I let each lie here upon
my peach-colored duvet
as the day rolled religiously
into another dog day afternoon?
Tuesday, August 13, 2024
mmmmcdxxix
A Fresh Start (Every Morning)
For me now the new:
—John Wieners
I’m telling you today
right this moment I’m
telling you that I have
no idea what to say.
Is this a problem I
often have? You’d
never believe, I
think, almost never.
Oh. You’re laughing.
So I talk a lot. But
about what? That’s
a serious question,
knowing, as I do,
so very little.
For me now the new:
—John Wieners
I’m telling you today
right this moment I’m
telling you that I have
no idea what to say.
Is this a problem I
often have? You’d
never believe, I
think, almost never.
Oh. You’re laughing.
So I talk a lot. But
about what? That’s
a serious question,
knowing, as I do,
so very little.
Monday, August 12, 2024
mmmmcdxxviii
A Ham Sandwich
...it came to pass there were no more attentive gestures.
—John Ashbery
I figured out the moment you can
no longer call yourself middle aged.
Peeling off the label to see the face
whole with no obstructions, I wonder
if what he actually said when giving
me the instructions: face hole.
Door muscles, an unholy fragrance borders the faces on the tree.
—John Ashbery
...it came to pass there were no more attentive gestures.
—John Ashbery
I figured out the moment you can
no longer call yourself middle aged.
Peeling off the label to see the face
whole with no obstructions, I wonder
if what he actually said when giving
me the instructions: face hole.
Door muscles, an unholy fragrance borders the faces on the tree.
—John Ashbery
Sunday, August 11, 2024
mmmmcdxxvii
A Pair of Lemon Towelettes
We pulled up. We got out of
the car. We walked in and
sat down, all smiles. We
were happy as clams
at high water, or else
we contemplated clams’
general happiness, won
dering, as always. We liked
to wonder. We very much
appreciated wonder. And
here, after we finished our
proud and grease-infused
meals, we ripped the heads
off the containers of our
moist napkins and cleaned
each of our fingers with glee.
We pulled up. We got out of
the car. We walked in and
sat down, all smiles. We
were happy as clams
at high water, or else
we contemplated clams’
general happiness, won
dering, as always. We liked
to wonder. We very much
appreciated wonder. And
here, after we finished our
proud and grease-infused
meals, we ripped the heads
off the containers of our
moist napkins and cleaned
each of our fingers with glee.
mmmmcdxxvi
“Is this your political handbook?”
A man in mourning asks a
dead chap, perhaps an old
friend, a one-time lover or
long-term partner, pounding
the book at the dead man’s
chest. No answer is clearly
not good enough. The
chest-pumps grow in
intensity, thud! Thud!
THUD!! Eventually, the
one left living lets go,
releases the book onto
the dead man’s midriff.
Its pages will riffle a bit in
the undercurrents of the
afternoon breeze before
the earth that had been re
moved the day before gets
replaced, leaving it open to
a certain pair of pages that
might act as a sliding window
out through which a natural
scene could be witnessed
or a soul might escape.
A man in mourning asks a
dead chap, perhaps an old
friend, a one-time lover or
long-term partner, pounding
the book at the dead man’s
chest. No answer is clearly
not good enough. The
chest-pumps grow in
intensity, thud! Thud!
THUD!! Eventually, the
one left living lets go,
releases the book onto
the dead man’s midriff.
Its pages will riffle a bit in
the undercurrents of the
afternoon breeze before
the earth that had been re
moved the day before gets
replaced, leaving it open to
a certain pair of pages that
might act as a sliding window
out through which a natural
scene could be witnessed
or a soul might escape.
Saturday, August 10, 2024
mmmmcdxxv
A Day of Going Nowhere
Can I be a medicine
—John Ashbery
What calls us each to service?
For me, it’s not an absolutely
aggressive zilch. It’s, rather,
an inert, lazy, hedonistic zero.
Me? Service? Okay, I’m in
charge of this. But I have no
real wherewithal for appropriate
directions. There are experts at
this; there are experts at that.
Of what am I a master? It would
take time for me to come up with
even a possibility, and would it put
me in the position of doing anything?
Perhaps there is a greater good. I
see some of it common sense until
I realize how uncommon it is. And
I choose not to be a part of it. I am
able to weigh the idea, which might
be pure fantasy, that I choose to be
good. Mostly? But even there I find
myself restricted with limitations so
confounding. Still. I move in that
direction. Sometimes stubbornly.
But what’s good? So much just
for one step.
Can I be a medicine
—John Ashbery
What calls us each to service?
For me, it’s not an absolutely
aggressive zilch. It’s, rather,
an inert, lazy, hedonistic zero.
Me? Service? Okay, I’m in
charge of this. But I have no
real wherewithal for appropriate
directions. There are experts at
this; there are experts at that.
Of what am I a master? It would
take time for me to come up with
even a possibility, and would it put
me in the position of doing anything?
Perhaps there is a greater good. I
see some of it common sense until
I realize how uncommon it is. And
I choose not to be a part of it. I am
able to weigh the idea, which might
be pure fantasy, that I choose to be
good. Mostly? But even there I find
myself restricted with limitations so
confounding. Still. I move in that
direction. Sometimes stubbornly.
But what’s good? So much just
for one step.
Thursday, August 08, 2024
mmmmcdxxiv
But I Digress
Yes, the great residential palaces...
—John Ashbery
I brought up the tents.
Which are coming down
all over town. My city.
Whatever precisely these
tents were a symptom of,
the side effects of their
removal tonight is snobvious.
Upon the sidewalk blocks
of Market between 6th (my
street) and 8th are hordes
of jangled humans contorted
this way and that, some in
groups, a few in pairs, many
flying solo to music so profound...
Yes, the great residential palaces...
—John Ashbery
I brought up the tents.
Which are coming down
all over town. My city.
Whatever precisely these
tents were a symptom of,
the side effects of their
removal tonight is snobvious.
Upon the sidewalk blocks
of Market between 6th (my
street) and 8th are hordes
of jangled humans contorted
this way and that, some in
groups, a few in pairs, many
flying solo to music so profound...
mmmmcdxxiii
Her Royal Highness
What happens next is anybody’s mess.
And, I might add, a real treat knowing you.
—John Ashbery
The tents are coming down.
I wore one in ’18 like a hoop
skirt that kept falling down.
A glittery princess knelt at
the rim of it, dark as it was,
even on the outside, I’m
certain Her Royal Highness
could tell it was brilliantly
sheer and the color of a wet
pumpkin. She left a tiny cake of
mostly sugar, and quickly departed
in sparkly whirl of glitter, saying
something heartwarmingly charming
as she flew away into the icy wind.
What happens next is anybody’s mess.
And, I might add, a real treat knowing you.
—John Ashbery
The tents are coming down.
I wore one in ’18 like a hoop
skirt that kept falling down.
A glittery princess knelt at
the rim of it, dark as it was,
even on the outside, I’m
certain Her Royal Highness
could tell it was brilliantly
sheer and the color of a wet
pumpkin. She left a tiny cake of
mostly sugar, and quickly departed
in sparkly whirl of glitter, saying
something heartwarmingly charming
as she flew away into the icy wind.
Tuesday, August 06, 2024
mmmmcdxxii
The Wrong Pharmacy
In my notes I had three or four things I wanted
to draw to your attention, but it no longer seems
important.
—John Ashbery
I went to the wrong pharmacy.
Well. I went to no pharmacy.
I had misread my Google search.
This happens often, lately – I need
a new prescription. I mean of course
I do, but I meant glasses this time.
Where was I? Oh, the wrong place,
In my notes I had three or four things I wanted
to draw to your attention, but it no longer seems
important.
—John Ashbery
I went to the wrong pharmacy.
Well. I went to no pharmacy.
I had misread my Google search.
This happens often, lately – I need
a new prescription. I mean of course
I do, but I meant glasses this time.
Where was I? Oh, the wrong place,
and no pharmacy, it was just a regular
Safeway. Which isn’t entirely true.
There was a deli. There was a little
place where one could buy cigarettes
and/or get money orders. It was just
a Safeway at which I wound up trying
to refill a stupid prescription I don’t need.
But I want it anyway. All is not lost, either.
There’s another Safeway down the street
and if I’m reading this Google search correctly,
there is a pharmacy there and it’s open until 8pm.
But now I’m tired and need to weigh my options.
Or else sleep. Which is what I want anyway.
Safeway. Which isn’t entirely true.
There was a deli. There was a little
place where one could buy cigarettes
and/or get money orders. It was just
a Safeway at which I wound up trying
to refill a stupid prescription I don’t need.
But I want it anyway. All is not lost, either.
There’s another Safeway down the street
and if I’m reading this Google search correctly,
there is a pharmacy there and it’s open until 8pm.
But now I’m tired and need to weigh my options.
Or else sleep. Which is what I want anyway.
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