Friday, December 08, 2006

0  Osmosis


Alexander slept
    with the Iliad;
Senator Byrd
    with the Constitution;
I between the white sheets
    of blank pages.




Next:  Poet/Writer


1  Poet/Writer


I am a poet slash writer.
This is not a memoir.
This is me breathing under
the weight of forty epic poems,
never written. The epics break
open and slash about in the tide
pool of slashed wrists. No, never
mine. This is a happy book. This
is the only time I say anything
dark like a child’s thunder. You
have my word. You have my
resumé. You have my soul.



Next:  But


9  But


I don’t say anything macabre
but sometimes I do get depressed,
like when I can’t find a job.  
Even the thought of a
jobs posting website
depresses me.  
That and a cold cup of coffee.



Next:  The Cynic's Assessment of the American Dream


22  The Cynic's Assessment of the American Dream


—How do you live forever?
—Tell people you wanna die when you grow up.




Next:  Two Halves


21  Two Halves


My better half says, “It’s right there in front of you—why don’t you just change?”

I say, “Because I fucking can’t you fucking asshole. Don’t you get it?”



Next:  Across the Wall


3  Across the Wall


The top drawer of the bureau is open.
In it, a watch aches with a ticking itch
to share time with the beautiful
woman rustling covers in a bed downtown.



Next:  Maybe My Brain Can Turn A Profit


45  Maybe My Brain Can Turn A Profit


Who are the men
growing pot plants in my brain?  
I’d like to see if maybe I could
buy some leaf off of them.  
It’s good stuff, I’d bet.  
“Home grown and totally organic!”
I’d call the brand New England Pot.  
It would grow out of my ears
and I’d pull off a little bud
and sell it retail to some guy
on the street for $20/eighth or so.  
I don’t know if it would
get me high, though. Could I
get high off of grass
that grew from my own synapses?
Sure as the killer bees come north
from Central America,
I can’t make my bed
while I’m on it.




Next:  Thunderstorm Watch 295


15  Thunderstorm Watch 295


Turned down for another
job today, some public
interest outfit.  Didn’t want
it anyway maybe they
were disappointed when I
said I was a fiscal conservative,
that this latest supplemental
is fulla pork.  They can smell
it on me—th’aversion to lobbies,
the disdain for raising funds—blown
from key to key in this economic
archipelago.

I’ve had too much to eat and
too much to drink.  Unfulfilled on a full
stomach means you’re not
makin good use of what you’ve got.  How
many Tombstone pizzas, how many Schlitz?
How many years of schooling, how many
gallons of gas?  Somethin ain’t right here, folks.
My power bill’s too high, I can’t wake
up early in the morning.  I crave
thunderstorms, lightning, and hail.




Next:  Potential


73  Potential


Why can’t you just talk to other people?
Why can’t you just be friends with your friends?
Why can’t you just be yourself?
Why can’t you just live up to your potential?

You have so much potential—
          That’s what everyone says.
No, look—no, I’m not even going to...
          Except, I don’t know what that means.




Next:  Jobs Postings


2  Job Postings


•  Send résumés to:
   
Northern State University, writer/editor   (e-mail)*
    AG Medical Publishing, managing editor  (e-mail)
    Poets of the World United  (mail)

  * Problem with attachment!

•  NSU Phone Number
  (314) 470-0862


•  Or, apply in person:

    3545 Almond, 13th Floor
    St. Jackson, NO 63333
     —Just ask for La Rev—



Next:  What We Call Ourselves


16  What We Call Ourselves


Poets can’t even call
themselves poets anymore.
There always has to be something else,
some other business.

Lines can’t be straight anymore,
they must succumb to curve
like the snake’s back,
bending repeatedly
from one dune of
desert to another.

There is no almost straight.  

Almost straight is the
embankment, marking
the cliff, over which
our poems run,
tumbling drunk
with the final drops of faith



Next:  Interview


4  Interview


He arrived on time and helped himself to a half a cup of coffee from a pot that was staying warm near the receptionist’s desk.  After ten minutes of sipping, a young woman came out from behind the receptionist’s desk and introduced herself.  They exchanged “Nice to Meet You” and he followed her to her office.

“It’s good to be here,” he said, sitting down.  “Thanks for having me down here and taking the time to interview me.”

“No problem, no problem,” she said.  “That’s just part of my job.”

“Ah, just so I got this straight.  I’m actually not sure I have your name right.  It is Rev?”

“La Rev,” she said, looking him in the eyes.  She had these gray blue eyes that sort of locked him in a dazy gaze.  “People who know me call me Rev.  But my whole name is La Rev.”

“So is La your first name?”

“I don’t really think of it that way.  I don’t have a first name and last name like everyone else.”

“So it’s all one name like Madonna, or Homer?”

“You like Madonna?”

“I don’t know.  She’s alright.  Some of her stuff.  I don’t keep up.  I saw that she was trying to adopt a baby....”

“Oh, yeah, I heard about that....”

His throat was getting a little dry, kind of scratchy in one spot.  He had only a little bit of coffee left in his mug.  But it was cold and he didn’t want to drink it.  He was swallowing but that wasn’t helping.

“Is there any more coffee, or some water or something?”

“Yeah,” she said, and left the room briefly, returning with a bottle of water.  He couldn’t help but notice that she was wearing a skirt, no hose, and flip-flops.  She had smooth, white legs.  She handed him the bottle.

“Thanks,” he said.

She was smiling a bit.

“Is something funny?” he asked.

“Oh, no,” she said.  “I just thought it was funny that we were talking about Madonna.”

“Yeah, I guess so,” he said.  “I guess I wouldn’t think that that would be something I’d talk about at an interview.”

“You said you didn’t like her stuff that much, though?”

“Ah, well—can I ask: where is this interview going?” he said.  “This doesn’t seem like the typical questions I would get at an interview.  Is this normal?”

La Rev scratched with her pen against a notepad.  It wasn’t clear whether she was actually writing something or just making a scribble.  She looked up and he could see that she was biting part of her lip, the lower right side.

“I have a confession to make,” she said.

“OK....”

“You’re not going to get this job.”

“I’m not?”

“No.”

“Then why am I down here?”

“Well, I thought that since you applied I might as well go ahead and interview you.”

“But there is no job?”

“Right.”

“Well, why are you still interviewing people if you already have someone for the job?”

“You’re the last person I’m interviewing.”

“Then this is kind of a big waste of my time, isn’t it?”

“I’m sorry,” she said.  “My boss just decided yesterday to hire from within.  I had your resume in front of me yesterday and I was gonna call you and tell you not to come in, but something on your resume sort of caught my eye, and my boss isn’t in the office today, so I figured what they hey, I’d have you come in.  Don’t take this the wrong way.  You’re qualified enough.”

“Something on my resume?”

“Yeah.  It said you were a poet?”

“Yeah, ahh, I’ve only gotten a couple of things published so far.”

“That’s more than me,” she said.

“You write?”

She nodded.




Next:  Rev Likes the Cubs


60  Rev Likes the Cubs


There’s a girl dancing
    in a Cubs shirt
in the tenth inning.
    She’s not on anything.
No booze, no codeine, nothin.
    She’s drunk on the night air.
Like I used to be sometimes.
    Maybe she can refresh
my memory, relearn me the steps.



Next:  Bottom of the 14th


10  Bottom of the 14th


People are chanting,
“Let’s go home!  Let’s go home!”  
I summoned my courage
and went down to where
she was sitting and asked her if
she wanted to go get a drink.  
She said, “Yes, as soon as the game’s over.”




Next:  Rev At a Bar


68  Rev At a Bar


She likes to sing a song,

and then she likes to sing along,

and then she’s daaaaancing....




Next:  The Deck


25  The Deck


She had organic toothpaste, recycled toilet paper, a cache of gel pens, and an “I Voted” sticker on her computer (it helps with identifying your laptop at the airport).  The place was pretty sparse.  

“This place has a deck with an awesome view of the city,” she said.

To the deck we took mineral water, and that proved a good idea.  I talked a bit about John Ashcroft—just to settle my curiosity—and it sounded like she was not ever interested in the subject, though her parents might have been.

What a view from up there!  (But worth the price of admission?)  The Knight Building loomed like the ultimate monolith, trumping the bright big buildings beneath it: the Cosmopolitan Tower, the Epoch, the Big Z, the Civil Courts Building.  We looked for the building she works in.  It had to have been the rectangular one with all the lights on, didn’t it?  A spectacular night weatherwise, very clear and very quiet.  Sitting out there over half an hour, we didn’t see another soul.  But we did hear a bird chirping, I thought a robin.  I told her I wasn’t too mad about going through the sham interview.  Maybe I’ll run for office, I said.  County judge or something.  

“I’d make a good judge,” I said, something I had never considered before and was surprised to be saying.

“Why?”

“Because I am good at being objective.”  

Back downstairs, sitting at the small corner table in her apartment, me with my shoes off, just beat.  As the minutes receded, she recalled how I said I was objective.

“Then can I ask you something? …  How do you view this situation … I mean, the fact that you’re here at 3:45 in the morning?”  

But I didn’t answer objectively, did I?  

She said, “Were you planning on staying here?”  

And what difference did it make—for the night was done.  I contemplated a wily answer, something that wouldn’t commit me either way, like: “Given the time, and how late it is, and the cost of a cab ride….”  

But I said, “Yeah,” nodding my head slowly.  

And I was heading out shortly thereafter, down to Broadway so I could get a cab.  She walked me down, though I told her there wasn’t any need.  I don’t remember anything about the cabbie, but we took the parkway.  My window was open, and the crisp air took me home.



Next:  Word Association


Wednesday, December 06, 2006

31  Word Association


La Rev—imagination
Ah, Rev—reality
La Rev—port
Ah, Rev—The Poetry of Love



Next:  Morning After


36  Morning After


Water and coffee
help me through the morning
as I sketch last night.  
I have her e-mail
but no other way to reach her,
other than at her work.  
I’m wondering if we’re ever
gonna get together again.  
Maybe we’ll go dancing.  
How can I know.  
In the meantime
we’ll be just two people,
in the meantime.



Next:  Cool Love


18  Cool Love


I knew, like, what it was.
And, I knew, like, the symptoms.
My heart beat was off.
It was beating in another time zone.
I canceled all my magazine subscriptions.
The door was open.
I hacked my AC to pieces.
Can’t you feel the breeze?



Next:  Dancing


54  Dancing


It was getting close to midnight, but it was Friday.  I said I was up for anything.  She suggested dancing. We didn’t really have dancing clothes on but I figured what the hell, I’m not gonna let that stop me.  By cab, she took us to a place not far from downtown called Amsterdam.  I had never been there before, only heard of it.  There was a lot of red light inside.  Some men there weren’t wearing any shirts.  At the time, I didn’t realize that Amsterdam is technically a gay bar, but it didn’t matter.  The music was hard, the strobes were flashing, and we had room enough to move.  It had been a while since I’d danced like that. I told her I’d danced in Paris and she said, “I knew it had to come from somewhere.”

I had on a long-sleeved shirt, but took it off eventually.  Dancing is a good way to work the alcohol through your system, to digest it & sweat it out.  I wrapped the shirt around my waist, knotted at the belly.  We ordered a couple drinks and somehow ended up with a Long Island iced tea and a vodka tonic.  We took a few sips but soon put the drinks down and left them to drown in their own ice.

I like to think my dance moves were somewhat varied.  Some hopping, a lot of arm movement, sometimes dancing with my arms above my head.  She danced with a black purse in the crook of her elbow.  There were close moments, where my hands were on her waist.  It couldn’t feel bad to have your hands on someone’s waist, could it?

We left Amsterdam about an hour later, whether because it was hot, or late, or because we were worn out I don’t remember.  I had no idea where we were going.  We walked along the streets: Wall, Jefferson, Minnesota, Manitowoc.  She seemed to think I minded that we were walking.  It’s just a little further, she said.  We went in a back door and up to her second floor apartment, for the second time in as many weeks.



Next:  Statue


35  Statue


You stand in your slip
a statue of jade
I wish I had carved myself.



Next:  Ledge


58  Ledge


I’m lying in bed with my legs open.
You perch your hand
inside my thigh.
Nothing sexual about it.
It’s just a good place to put your hand.



Next:  Train Car


51  Train Car


My libido charges harder
than a train car
piled high with the
thick rich coal
of the Illinois hills.  
When I get a whiff
of your perfume
I growl like a jackal.  
When I see you
in a sports bra
I run a mile in four minutes.



Next:  The Next Best Thing To Being On the Inside


12  The Next Best Thing To Being On the Inside


Love, like investing, is an art and not a science.  What is a stop-loss order?  What is a protective put?  I ask, “How do you manage risk?”  You say, “Take what the market is giving you.”  I say, “But how do I do that.”  You say, “Purchase what is selling below its real value and sell what is trading above its real value.”

“But how do I know value?” I say.

You say, “It is only charlatans who are certain.  Doubt is not a very agreeable state, but certainty is a ridiculous one.”

I have learned and know only this.  Never tell anyone what you are doing in the market because later it can force you to do things you might not want to do.



Next:  Twenty


38  Twenty


You’re crisper than a twenty-dollar bill that’s never been folded, one that I just got fresh from the bank, totally clean and staring back at me with eyes full of potential.  Where can you take me?  Use me any way you want.  God!  I don’t even need to take showers anymore.  I don’t even need to sleep.  I can just look over at you, fast asleep, and I can lie there feeling ready for the next day.  I move my tongue around in my mouth and my teeth feel cleaner than at the dentist’s hand.  I don’t even chew my food anymore.  My digestive track has switched careers and is concentrating on fermenting better versions of my love for you.  Kiss me and try a sample.



Next:  As A New Resident, Rev Makes A Request


63  As A New Resident, Rev Makes A Request


She’s spent just about
every night here for a month.  
She can take the Metro
downtown to work.
She’s been buying us some groceries,
doin some cooking.  
I’ve been on a real even keel.  
Not smoking hardly any at all,
not messing with any kinds of pills.  
Rev doesn’t like that stuff much.  
She’s asked me to stop.  
I told her no problem.



Next:  Rev Is On Vacation


75  Rev Is On Vacation


I’m finding that I miss Rev quite a great deal. I hadn’t really permitted myself to think much about the time when she would be gone because we’ve only been dating for about a month. And that’s not really a long time. But it was a very comfortable month—we spent a lot of time together, ah, especially the past two weeks. And it was great. I mean, it was absolutely great. We, ah, enjoyed teasing one another, ah, got some inside jokes going, watches some movies, went to a movie, went out to eat, ah, at a couple of nice restaurants. We’ve done a lot of talking, really. I think that’s why I like her so much, you know, cause there aren’t really that many people that, you know, I have real conversations with. Even when I went out drinking with Larco and Jackson, I mean, I can’t say I had a real conversation with any of them. I had a good conversation with Jackson about taking German. So, I don’t know if it’s the booze or what, I need a fall guy. A fall girl, maybe. I’m sort of bored. I can read, I can get a job, I can go home for awhile, I could go for a fuckin walk. I could write, listen to music, play Nintendo. But damn, I mean, there’s nothing I really want to do. Ah! And I think if I have anything to drink I’m just gonna miss her more. Just ‘cause I have a tendency to acutinize. There is an acuteness about it, you know.



Next:  La Rev


27  La Rev


Ah, Rev. La Rev. She allows me to be who I am and I don’t have to put on a false front for her. All other e-mail is irrelevant. She is my only username and password. When I drink her I don’t need ice. I don’t even need a glass. She’s a cloudless rain. She tans my skin. She’s a spotty leopard. We make love in the trees. Ah, Rev. La Rev. You are my dream, you are my scheme. Let’s conspire a new tree to climb.



Next:  Hungry


72  Hungry


Really, though, I need to get a job.
And I will, it’s just a matter of time.
Rev’s got some headhunter
I’m supposed to call,
name Willie or Billy or something.
I don’t even wanna know.
I don’t know if I can take
many more days like today: 8a-4p in
front of the computer. All this searching, writing,
sending has to lead to something.

So now I’m sitting in my La-z-Boy recliner,
writing and drinking; the fan is blowing on me—
all I’ll read anymore is declared fiction; the
rest is just bullshit and subjective propaganda—
I’m in the denim-colored boxes that Rev
bought for me (though I reimbursed her) and
also I’m wearing sky blue sox from the Gap
and reading glasses and I’m a little warm and
I could use a shave and I’m g-d dehydrated—
after just one stiff drink / I’m pathetic about that—
so I’ll go out and see if I can’t scrounge up
some water /

Actually, truth be told,
I kind of feel like smoking...
But that would be dumb/
at least I’m not hungry.



Next:  Self


74  Self


To my prevailing self: Let me Out!
Sometimes with drugs I touch it, feel it—
me—yes, there you are, slippery little bastard of brain.
You are buried so deep. How did you get so deep,
where no one else has been, not anyone else,
not even you? People think you’re going nuts
but dammit you just wanna be yourself and—
isn’t that what sanity is all about? Let me be!



Next:  Weakness Shrine


29  Weakness Shrine


Come into my weakness shrine,
where I’m breaking rules all the time.
Have a drink of something cold,
ignore your body getting old.
Sit back in that lazy chair; have a smoke.  
Think back to your innocence, as a joke.
Bring your camera, strike a pose.
The conscience is optional, as are clothes.



Next:  Pots and Pans


46  Pots and Pans


I love

    what is it she loves

a thing a wing

    a cheese a shoe a tree

a me a me a me

    a me reflected a can

opener a sideblind a hind

    a rind a compost a hill

a two-dollar bill

    a yard a bard a shared

archaeology requirement

    a time a time a sign



Next:  The Green Line


14  The Green Line


I thought I saw a green line

         on my leg, just as I was

breaking into a yawn.  When I

         looked again, it was gone.



Next:  I Messed Up


53  I Messed Up


I can’t do anything to help
except never do it again—
of which I am not capable
at this instant.

All I can do
is abstain during
this second
and this one
and this one,
on end.




Next:  Iced Coffee, Part One


26  Iced Coffee, Part One


“You’re acting funny,” she said that day when she returned from vacation.

“No I’m not.”

“Are you stoned?”

“No.”

“Really?”

“Yes, really.  I don’t even have any stuff.  If I had some maybe I’d be smoking it.  But since I don’t have any, scientifically speaking, I can’t be stoned.”

“OK.  Then, why don’t you have any pants on?”

“These are pants.”

“White boxers?”

“Boxers are pants.”

“I still think you’re acting funny.  You seem sort of edgy but, yet, you have this funny look in your eye.”

“Rev, everything is fine.  It’s hot in here so I’m drinking iced coffee.  I think that’s what’s throwing you off.  You’ve never seen me drink coffee so late in the afternoon.  I’m in a coffee mood is all.  If it were six in the morning and not six at night nothing would be unusual.”

“Alright.  If you say so.”

She leaned in to kiss him but stopped short after catching a whiff of something.

“Did you have a cigarette?” she asked.

J sometimes smoked, but he had not had a cigarette in several days.

“No,” he said, not lying.  

He had not had a cigarette, at least not the traditional kind.

“I’m going back to my place,” she said.  “It’s hot over here and things just got weird all of a sudden.”

“Rev—”

“Maybe next time I come over you’ll have some pants on.”

“Rev, I’ll change—I just did some laundry—”

It was true about the laundry.  But she was halfway down the stairs and by the time he reached for his iced coffee it had become a tasteless morass of mushy ice and brown water.




Next:  Willie


57  Willie


Rev calls later that night.
There’s a lot of commotion
and junk in the background.
Where are you calling from, I say.
I’m at a bar—a pub.
Oh yeah, I say.
Yeah, I’m here by myself.
Why don’t you come back then?
Not tonight, she says.  Not tonight.
Alright.
If you don’t want to talk
because I’m at a bar, then forget it.
I didn’t say that.  What bar?
The place near my work.
Oh, yeah.
I was calling to ask if you’d
spoken to Willie yet—I meant
to ask you earlier.
No not yet, I said.
I would I told her,
when she came back.



Next:  Photons Having Coffee


39  Photons Having Coffee


Remember
when we were
just photons
this morning?

Before we
were loaded into
photon torpedoes
and blew up
the world?




Next:  Harrar


59  Harrar


The next morning,
at a corner café, quality beans
sit quietly in clear plastic drawers,
aging in limited air and inking
the glass with foreign oils.

I asked the beat-down barista
for three pounds of unground,
single origin, fair trade, organic beans.  
As he printed the source in permanent marker,
I imagined how sumptuous
the bursting brown package
would look when I
swung open the freezer to reveal it at home.

That night after dinner, the coffeepot
steamed and lurched
with the taste of another continent.
Over our second evening cup I asked,
“Would you prefer not to be hurt,
or would you accept being hurt
if I went way over the top in making it up to you?”

“Coffee is a complex substance,” she said.  
“Not just chemically, but something
about the way it makes you feel.  
You know?”  

Then she asked to be alone
so she could finish the dishes.
I didn’t sleep that night.
Not just because of caffeine—
and not just because Rev
said she needed a breather—
but because of something else,
tucked away beneath all our bitterness.




Next:  Staticky


40  Staticky


“Hello.”
...

“Yes.”
...

“Yeah, I’ll call him.”
...

“What’s that?”
...

“Whenever things settle down.”
...

“I know.  I messed up.”
...

“Well, I never said I didn’t have some problems.”
...

“You’re breaking up.”
...

“I said, You’re breaking up.”
...

“What?  No, of course not.”
...

“Can you hear me at all?”
...

“Listen: If you can hear me, I can’t hear you.”
...

“What’s that?”
...

“It would help if you came back, yes.  Of course it would help.”
...

“I know I need to change some things.  I know this.  You know I know this.”
...

“Yeah.”
...

“Right.”
...

“What’s that?”
...

“I should take some risks?”
...

“Well, what the hell does that mean?”
...

“What’s that?”
...

“Fucking Willie is not gonna help me.  Who the fuck is Willie anyway?”
...

“Why don’t you fuckin ask Willie for help if you’re such damn good friends.”
...

“Did you hear me?  Hello?”

...

“Hello?”




Next:  Her You Can


50  Her You Can


He was at the eye of the next
    great depression;
he was out in the white-capped ocean
    without any sense of land.
And so no one else knew
    what he knew, no one
received a text portending the storm.
    Even he, at its brooding heart, did
not realize what he was into—
   a great howling turbine
of thought and lingering debris.
    Part of him said, Odd,
but he folded this instinct
    into the folds of the sea
thinking, This is how life is.
    Palms bending ashore
and the cackle of estranged shingles
    argued otherwise.




Next:  She Said, "Take A Risk"


41  She Said, "Take A Risk"


Well I’ll take
a Fucking Risk
I’ll walk to Fucking
LA
Fuck Her!




Next:  Fuck Water


20  Fuck Water


Water is death
I eat ten-thousand hot dogs
at a baseball game
I’d walk from here to LA
if it wouldn’t look so bad
Just when I’d come to the
surface of sanity they’d say,
“God—— he’s fucked up!”




Next:  LA It Is


42  LA It Is


Really, though:
what the hell else is there to do?
Get a back pack,
a wallet with a credit card,
comfortable shoes?
Fuck maps.
I’d miss Rev but it’d
teach her!
I’d make the fucking news but
even then no one’d hire me.  They’d say,
“That fucking guy’s really nuts!”





Next:  You Ruined Our Wedding Day


30  You Ruined Our Wedding Day


Let me just tell you one thing you fucking nut you bastard you ain’t half as crazy as you think you are. I take drugs so give me more drugs. I take one to erase another. A lie for a lie an eye for an eye. I won’t chase you there, brother. I won’t do it. I call upon the power of my brain blockers you lazy fuck this ain’t no free mind ride call it off canal that shows the center of the Universe is the sun not you, dude. I feel it. I feel it, too, don’t think I don’t feel it—the tee-hee, the ha-ha, the ho-ho-ho. Life is easier if it’s all one big fucking circus clown joke with size 47 shoes. Ain’t that right, Jack? Are you just a little bit confused?  Fuck Pink Floyd Fuck Acid fuck all that shit, dude you ain’t as crazy as you wanna be so you let it all slip through, the crack: goddam that’s a lot of noise, you know? You’re one smart motherfucker but a prognosis ain’t a goddam asshole license, motherfucker, it ain’t give you the right to deny people the respect we all deserve turn out the lights dude the party’s over strawberry fields no more the mushrooms ain’t growin anymore stop inhibiting selectively that serotonin uptake because goddamit the answer lies in you and not more chemicals ahem THC alcohol caffeine and trazodone fuck you for what you did to me you son of a bitch and straighten up for pete’s sake. You ruined our goddam wedding day.  Love, Rev




Next:  Hello Again


55  Hello Again


A thunderous applause in my head
as a hundred thousand minions
get what they want.
“Speech!” they say.  
“Speech!”

But I don’t give speeches.




Next:  Trick Candles


64  Trick Candles


          Everything was shifting,
          like an octagon on wheels…



The butt is where
my head is at,
rummaging for sleep
in that soft
caramel foam,
that sticky cantina
of brown tar
and pale-ale haze.

Sleep, sleep,
poor head, (I say,)
The cigarette
burned out long ago, No—

The nicotine still
waves its orange baton,
the smoke still rises,
its rings yet round,
resting like haloes
on the hurt of night.




Next:  Love Song


49  Love Song


I’ll love you anyway
I’ll love you anyway
I’ll love you any way
that I want.

Ohh, that I want...




Next:  No Windows


33  No Windows


No windows, man.
That’s what I love
about this room.



Next:  My Head Is A House


34  My Head Is A House


The ants are everywhere,
    in every crevace of my mind.
I forget one thing—leave it behind?—
    and they circle it like a pack of synapsian wolves.
I don’t know where they come from.
    Door, window, floor boards, ceiling?
I’ve shaved my head looking for them;
    bleached my eyebrows;
bruised a thumb and broke a hammer.
    They climb stairs, slip between
conscious and subconscious, permeate
    my dreams and pitch me on their queen.
In time, they flood my skull, drowning
    me out like tiny, black drops of water.
The ants are everywhere,
    in every crevace of my mind.






Next:  I Hate Myself


24  I Hate Myself


All of my boxers are from the same place.


             The fuckin Gap.





Next:  Be Aggressive


7  Be Aggressive


It’s like, I know how I wish I could be.
But I just can’t be that way.
I can’t be aggressive; speak up.
To myself I say what I want to say,
communicated in a complete
absence of body language.
It’s right there, so obvious,

the universe of me doing that—
speaking up, being myself, getting aggressive—
it exists somewhere. But not here and that’s when—
that’s when you start to think
that suicide might be a viable option.

Next:  Runway Account


37  Runway Account


Sadly, desire is poor—

    leaking tears

        like money amongst friends;


    paving the way

        to half-broken, half-cooked dreams;

    taking off

        from the too-short runway;

    never breaking

        the silver-cloud bank.



Next:  Cough


23 Cough


You have a bad cough but the only time you feel good is
when you are coughing really hard; you feel really bad
but the only time you feel good is when you are feeling
really bad.





Next: Note


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