Sunday, May 31, 2009

Wine and Conversation


Lime, is this enough wine?

my gears are turning



The morning is calm, the wind late for work, the leaves of my many trees hanging, smooth and still as a painting. Even those damn pine trees, arms loaded with homemade grenades, are holding their fire, a temporary truce, I suspect. But under these blue skies, my steed beckons, the open rivers of the road glimmering, as sand before the ocean, as a boy about to ride his bike.

landscaping


Been doing some landscaping in the backyard. Not finished, evident the two bags of mulch resting peacefully by the wooden fence and in the far corner a solitary bag of decorative rocks, still as heavy in my mind as they were to my back. We are making progress, the thought itching like some ancient ethic unscratched, as I survey the rake and the hoe, leaning against the garage door as if on break; and I wonder what they are whispering as I sit in my robe, coffee in hand, thinking how lonely, even churchyard cold this yard is going to seem when the mulch is gone and the rocks laid to peace and the rake and hoe move on to other jobs. And I wonder too, why I love the youth of a project and fear the sententious song of completion, why I love the messiness of construction yet dread the stillness, the museum like deadness, of a goal reached.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

swords and shields


The clash of swords
on wooden shields

make two noises

the noise of life
still living

and

the noise of life
still fighting

Pensée: a poem by Billy Collins

"Pensée"

All of Paris must have been away on holiday
when Pascal said that men are not happy
because they are incapable of staying in their rooms.

It is the kind of thought that belongs in a room,
sealed off from the vanities of the world,
polished roadsters, breasts, hunting lodges,
all letdowns in the end.

But imagine Columbus examining the wallpaper,
Magellan straightening up the dresser,
Lindbergh rearranging some magazines on a table.

Not to mention the need for everday explorations,
the wandering we do, randomly as ants,
when we rove through woods without direction
or allow the diagram of a foreign city to lead us
through long afternoons of unpronounceable streets.

Then we are like children in playgrounds
who are discovering the art of running in circles
as if they were scribbling on the earth with their bodies.

We die only when we run out of footprints.
Then the biographers move in to retrace our paths,
enclosing them in tall mazes of lumber
to make our lives seem more complex, more arduous,
to make our leaving the room seem heroic.

of whispering dandelions

I heard them scream
mothers all
that much I knew

screams silent
to most
but I heard them

my lord
the shrieking
the wailing

whores
they were
I swore

a careful lie
a kiss
goodbye

before my blade
of children
sent

sent into
the wind
thousands

upon thousands
the battle
lost

on this day
the war
won

on the
eternal love
of whispering dandelions

Thursday, May 28, 2009

before the dance of fire


When the darkness came
and our guests left
you cleaned the dishes
brought me a glass of wine
and held my hand

but what I appreciate the most
is you said not a word
kissing my forehead
nestling my torso
one leg over the other
my chest your pillow
before the dance of fire

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

riding the same rails

I've developed a cough
not a sick cough
but the clearing throat cough

Reminds me of my father
the cough
and that scares the hell

out of me
as if we are riding
the same rails

which I know we are
but I just don't want
to admit

to admit where those
rails end
and the life

the life not lived
as he lived not
the years

he had

blood walkiing

You know you can stay I said
I know he said back
As long as you want, whenever you want
I know. Can I plug my iPod in?
Yeah.

We drove north without another word
He in his world
Me in mine
The console, a canyon
so it seemed
so it might as well been

You sound pitiful she said
Yeah.
I love you.
I know.
I'm here.
I know. What I don't know,
is why

A check should come today
I'll take it to the bank
and the teller won't say a word
except for the conversation
I see
behind her eyes
in her casted eyes
I hate those words
not said
those words that come
from soft eyes
I can't even f*ing explain them
but they see the check
see where it is from
look at me
and in that look
daggers
and so it is
every week
I die a little more
but I'm used to that
been used to it for fifteen years
on those solitary journeys north
where two become one
not one as together one
but one as in one here
and one there
that is where the dying occurs
on the field of concrete
my steel stallion
in a field of blood
watching
quietly watching
my blood
walk away

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

not real

Been sitting in my kitchen
listening to episode
after episode
of House

Not watching
just listening

and after hours
upon hours
of listening
sometimes attentively
sometimes not

I knew
I knew the yelling
was phony
was acting
was lacking
an edge
an edge I know

from that point
the magic of
of listening to House
was gone

it seemed false
not real
as not real
as it was not
real

Monday, May 25, 2009

with a father's smile

He came down for dinner
about the only time I see him
anymore

I read him some Carver
He didn't see the point,
in Carver's poetry

I read him some Bukowski
thinking he might like that more
He didn't

So I made some brownies
a subtle lure
to drown the distance

between upstairs and down
between father and son
between 45 and 15

Sixty minutes later
I had another opportunity
one more reading

I put away Carver
and Bukowski too
and took a chance

on another poem
fresh off the page
fresh from my pen

he liked it
liked it best of all he said
bounding upstairs

I ate my brownie
alone
with a father's smile

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Calvin

I remember the hardwood floors
in my grandmother's small and narrow
and often dark home.

The windows were always curtained
and the light I remember
came by way of lamps.

And I remember too, a very small hallway
with a small wooden table and
a petite wooden chair, one male
the other female, they way they fit
one into the other.

On that small table, in that dark hallway
sat a black phone, the kind you dialed
with your index finger, turning circles
delighting at the rotational heft
and the sound of mechanical friction
a hypnotizing exercise

dialing in circles
like a dance of the finger
on a party line
with those, to a small boy,
gigantic ear cups
like an army walkie-talkie.

And I remember holding that phone
alone. The house empty. My uncle
in Nam. My uncle that laughed and smiled
and wrestled with me on the hardwood floor,
locking me in his legs with his crew-cut
hair and khaki pants. That was before.

He looked like a movie star and moved with an energy
and joy for life that I never saw in my own father.
He told stories and jokes, and like a river,
was always moving, living, in love with life
in the contagious way that smiles are contagious.

I remember the energy, the smiles, paging through
his old army yearbooks, of young men in boot camp
pounding each other with these strange pillow-ended
poles, looking all the same with lithe bodies and
stylish buzzed hair.

I remember sitting in that wooden chair
in that dark hallway
holding that heavy receiver
wishing he were here
and not there
and sometimes, as young boys do,
wishing I was there
not knowing what there meant
or would mean.

Calvin returned from his first tour.
Told stories into the night on the back porch
to the men, my grandfather, father and me.
He seemed a little older. A little different.
And in days, he left again for a second tour.
Said he had to go, which I thought meant
he had no choice.

He never came back, not the uncle I knew
at least. The days of wrestling on the floor
were to remain memories and the days of joy
I remember so clearly were replaced with
days at bars and nights in jail. He still laughed,
although his laughter had an edge like a knife
that only whiskey could dull.

Some gave all in sacrifice to our freedom
to the call of country right or wrong. Calvin
did too. Not with his name in the paper, which
I think would have been easier to take.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

sipping coffee

Those men have jobs he said
as he did each morning
drinking coffee without sugar
as men climbed roofs at dawn
and hammered till dusk

that they spoke not a word
of english mattered not
they had jobs
raining hammers
glimmers of lightning
in a blue sky
and getting tans too
working on a crew
where a nod and a look
told one where to stand
what to do

they had jobs he thought
the words as bricks
as bricks thrown
his world a window
one gigantic window
sipping coffee
without
sugar

pebbles in my mind (or how my morning started . . .)

I bust my ass
to buss your cheek
then I wake up
and realize
the only thing busting
is my head
and the dreams
that fade
in the harsh morning sun

moving slow
not sure if it's
the pizza I gorged
from last night
or the tequila
I raised
and lowered
like a frailing
swiss watchmaker
but I am amazed
at my endless ability
to bullshite myself

thirty minutes later

All I want is quiet;
when I ask for it
I get the silent treatment

so I drive faster
which only increases
the icy cold

silence,
which no longer seems
quite so quiet


Dropped my dogs off for grooming this late May morning. A short drive into the countryside, accompanied by the customary wails and howls of four dogs as if they were on the way to the gallows instead of to Ms Anne's, who grooms the dogs of country stars and calls all dogs "babies," a nomenclature stuck in my head because someone else in the car keeps calling them that in Anne's baby-talk diction. On the drive home I noticed the fields ablaze with green growth, just damn blooming leaves thick as my head before 7am. I'll be forty-six in a few weeks and I ask myself,

are my fields spring
or autumn?

thirty minutes later . . .

I don't ask the question
too loudly
just in case
some part of my mind
thinks I want an answer

and I suppose some part
of my monkey mind does
because when I look
as I just looked

at photos of an old friend
both old and old
and I see her husband
balding and gray

probably pushing seventy
I'm surprised by how good
he looks
and surprised

I don't think
he looks
that
old

because
damn
it's almost
noon
and
all
I
want
is
a
little
quiet

Thursday, May 21, 2009

the mists of my mind

When I ride my bike
on familiar routes
where grade is noticed
in the burn of thigh
the gasping of lung
the pounding heart of ear

and hills are rendered
in the blurry sweat
of salt released
frailing
precious
drops
escaping
from my bowed chin

I'm not riding the road
as much
as the memory
of the road,
is riding me

if you understand this
then you know
my fear
my reluctance
to saddle up
mount my steed
and ride among the eidolons
of corners not cut
and downhill gambits lost

lost as the lycra shredded
and asphalt embedded
tattooed scars
on hips and elbows
a little less
of body
a little more
in mind
these heavy
memories
these stained
neurons
paths woven, my
knots of remembrance

of those moments
when control surrendered
and the second
from air to ground
defies proper accounting

but most of all,
perhaps the memory
most haunting,
forever the shadow
on my wheel,
of the rider
who rides now,
only in the
mists
of
my
mind

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

her heavenly hours


I can no more stop my darkness
than I can slip my fingers under the horizon
and prevent the sun slipping away

I envy the night her precision
her reliable, predictable timetable
but even more

I envy her stars
and the pale sojourner
that arcs her heavenly hours

affaire de coeur

My dog beside me
sleeping
and breathing hard
pulling air like rope
into her lungs
arms thrown back
eyes closed
lips parted
chest bowed
resisting
succumbing
surrendering
to the cycle
the exchange
the metamorphosis
of air
and dog
of dog
and air
an affair
of a lifetime
the liaison
of life

and

known too
by absence;
of nostrils pulling
no longer,
her final spoor
sweet in
the wetness of life
now dry
as the gentle
waves of my sighs
cover her hair
in the blanket
of sleep
as memory takes
its rightful place
in the albums
of my mind

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

in the sweet clouds

I am the beach
before your warm waves

my legs spread in
the wet sand

feeling your warm fingers
caress my shells

lost as you recede
a dry heat

life slipping
without your salty lips

seagulls as my witness
I gather my shells

come join me
in the sweet clouds

two bovines and a goat

I'm huddled upstairs in my study
weak, but unwilling to admit it,
which is bullshite since it's the reason
I'm upstairs in the first place

Below me, on my heat cracked driveway
sit two sun-faded cars and one
dusty red lawnmower
like two indifferent bovines
and one ornery goat,
surveying my balding yard;

and my balding yard,
burned by autumn leaves not raked,
damning me its leprosy
stares back with eyes of rogue
dandelions,
fornicating
with the wind,
like I didn't know

I want no more to slay
what little grass remains
than what little grass remains
wants of me
nor do I want
another dust bowl
to piss my neighbors off
who just washed their new
sparkling metallic blue ride
that sits due west
before a taunting carpet of
green tight lush manicured grass

that I'm two days into a hangover
doesn't help matters

post script:

getting a new roof today
watching old shingles
drop like bombs on my weeds
as hired hammers pound the roof like hail
a sound soothing as desert rain

left and right

When one has nothing left to do
what does one do?

perhaps the wrong question

When one has a life to give,
what does one give?

this question tolls
relentlessly
in the bell of my head
banging left
then right
left and right
left, right
and I feel as a child
before the hammer of God

"my father"

I was reading a poem
by a son
talking about his father
and he used the exact phrase:

"my father"

I smiled as he held this imaginary
conversation with "my father"
one very similar to my own
imaginary conversations

in which I am always the son
and he is always "my father'
until today, until this moment
reading this poem;

and it occurred to me
as if for the first time
and perhaps it was for the
first time

fifteen years hence
that in this narrative
of father and son
I felt crowded

almost embarrassed
claustrophobic even
and somewhat ashamed
and resentful

that a poem had to tell me
there was another son
who had a "my father"
and what I thought was mine

a unique duet
stories strung together
like the fish
we never caught
of the many games
played but
never watched
of the times I
tucked myself in
because bedtime
was not
2:30am

of what was clear
seemed not simple;
his anger, voiced
yet unknown
my pain, silent
and growing

was just my hubris
and self-centered nature
revolving
around

the ghost of a child
fifteen years a father
with a son who probably
thinks of me
as his

"my father"

Monday, May 18, 2009

Aung San Suu Kyi

If I were in peril
or prison
or the pearl of prison
a martyr to be
in a land unjust
as humidity

behind bars
dank and sweaty
that speak in the clang
of locks locking
holding innocent eyes
as the night holds
distant stars

would someone
far away
think
of me

I wonder
as I click
past the plight
of Aung San Suu Kyi

on bended knee
before the church
of my illuminated screen
I pray
there are souls
greater than mine

and I ponder
tonight
where she might be
and on what she
might say

as I type my simple words
before I slip between my warm sheets
and dream my sweet dreams
in a quiet room
made hammock peaceful
with a belly
full of food

maple bacon

I was standing in the kitchen
frying maple bacon
me and four dogs
standing in the kitchen
noses up, eyes urgent
unblinking
quiet
tails wagging
watching my every move
and as I looked at them
and they looked at me
I knew
I knew I'd better fry enough bacon
for the five of us

Sunday, May 17, 2009

the oxygen of you

When you speak
the room warms,
my supple lungs expanding
with the oxygen of you

When I exhale
you inhale, slowly;
as children on a seesaw
our aged cheeks rise
with helium smiles

When you leave--
as the sun leaves the day
as leaves leave the tree
and winter calves autumn

a crisp cold arrives
cracking lips
and turning knuckles calloused
without the gloves of your
hands

as if
you took the air
as if I'm drowning
without lungs

or
perhaps
what was taken
was the oneness
of dance
of play
of love

ask any child
standing alone
before a seesaw
what one plus one
equals

I'm willing to bet
it ain't two

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Saturday Mornings

Saturday morning
and the fields are alive
as flags wave
and soccer balls kicked

I miss those times
those memories
of early mornings
and marbled hair
eyes half open
and lips quiet

Our soccer days
are over
but the flags still wave
and the orgy of color
still swims
as I feel
a little older
a little sadder
that everything looks
brighter
driving east
and looking
west

Friday, May 15, 2009

the seconds of tea


Two minutes to heat water in my microwave
to brew a pint of tea for five minutes
to savor the fruit of a foreign land
and ponder those two minutes
waiting for the water to heat
watching a tiny digital clock
click away the seconds
and as I stand there
watching slippery seconds
it occurs to me
that those are
my seconds
my life
ticking
away

beyond


The wind can be endured
it won't last

The sun too
for night will take care of matters

and the same for winter
as spring smiles its welcome

but words
last, live

beyond the breeze of tongue
beyond the heat of anger
beyond the cold of indifference

water, with lemon

We were talking, over dinner
about the upcoming marriage
of our daughter
when I ordered water, with lemon
as did my wife
as did the couple in front of us
as did the couple behind us
the orders as natural
as chimes in the wind
and I wondered,
about this marriage

of lemon and water
and I wondered when this happened
because when I was growing up
you ordered water
just water
no lemon

and for the life of me
I cannot remember
when this changed
apparently not invited
to this union

and then I thought,
was this a shotgun wedding
something that happened
out of sight
Pop lemon grower
holding the shotgun
on Ma Water's daughter

because for the life of me
I swear I do not remember
but it seems
from the couple in front
and the couple behind

that
somebody
got word
probably from
those damn grapes
working
the
vine

only this
was no rumor
as I looked around
at glass after glass
and little Ms Lemon
was,
well,
made me blush
the
hussy

Thursday, May 14, 2009

eyes like arms

Like a solitary flower by the sidewalk
watching a thousand feet pass by
in the busyness of plans and goals
whipping flesh and bone forward
forever forward

I hold a poem in my eye, sitting quietly,
content as the flower to sit and be
among all the comings and goings
among all the feet moving with purpose
to masters that whisper should and would

and I wonder if the flower wants to scream
its lush scent, to toss its hues as a child
might toss a can of paint, to dance in the wind
as line laundry before an ocean breeze
or a pauper with a bell

until among the herding of shoes
a couple little feet take the path
of prayer soughing through the grass
and notice the momentary gift
of soil, sun and rain

and I wonder if in that moment
there is not a sigh
if in that moment
there is not a mutual recognition
of life twirling life

in the wonder of discovery
in the wonder of smiles
in the wonder of eyes
that hug
like arms

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Grandma


Around five o'clock I heard the sound of steel on wood, of my grandmother carefully chopping onion and celery and perhaps bell pepper too on a wooden cutting board several times older than myself. The sound meant dinner not out of a box, but dinner made by hand from recipes earned in the daily labor of kitchen kept clean, measured not by spoon or cup, but by eye and tongue, more accurate instruments I came to learn. She stood next to the sink, wearing a small apron over a mid-calf length dress, the de-facto uniform that changed only color and pattern from day to day. Like rain on the roof, the steady chop chop chop of wrinkled hands was as close to the sound of love as I knew as a child. I miss that sound as much as I miss the woman. She is all but gone, as gone as the traditions of home cooked meals, prepared as masterpieces without a gallery, tribute paid in empty plates and scrambles for seconds, if seconds were to be had. Those pages of my memory have yellowed in the decades, but the sound of steady chopping, of metal on wood wielded by hands that love, has remained as clear to me as the rain that came this morning.

sketches: two poems

Each morning I pour a cup of coffee
and escort my robe to the small table
that overlooks my Japanese magnolia
a treehouse for my birds

Each morning I am greeted
by mr and mrs salt and pepper shaker
ever faithful, never late
always the same smile

always ready to serve

and it occurs to me
I spend more time with these
two servants than I do with
my own son

I would explain to them
the tear that runs down
my cheek
if I thought

they'd understand

But each morning
I hold my tongue
and sip my coffee
and wonder where

I went wrong

__________


If all I bring is my smile
will that be enough

I need to know
where you stand

The conductor of time
is asking

Stop or Go

so I ask
do you need more?

should I
stay or go

been riding
a long time

I'm hungry
and tired

is this my port
are those arms

for me
if all I bring is my smile

will that be enough
I need to know

The conductor of time
is asking

Vermont Memories

I once sold books in Vermont, the green hills
as (beautiful) entrancing as a fairy tale.

I would rise at 6:00am, take a cold shower
and be on my way to breakfast

a short drive of twenty minutes
up, over and around the verdant hills.

On the morning I am remembering
and have remembered all my life

I woke to gunsmoke overcast skies
and I thought of the long day ahead

going door-to-door in the in the cold light
and light rain of a dreary day.

Out the door by 6:30
listening to Frankie Goes to Hollywood

and smiling at or perhaps with
On the Way to San Jose

I felt the familiar pop of ears
from this flatlander

as I was called with a wry smile
on more than one occasion

rising through the old man mist
about three quarters up a hill

I emerged into daylight as if on wings
and as far as I could see

were eddies of green tops
like candy drops

sitting on a blanket of white
like candy drops in a box

full of cotton.
And above those green candy top

hills, sitting on their fluffy billow
was nothing but glorious blue sky

and a reigning sun
beaming golden life.

Within minutes
I was heading back down

into the murky soup of shades
but the image, the metaphor

perhaps the lesson
has always remained

although I think I've forgotten
where I left those notes.