Archive for April 2012

Multiple Choice – Science/Religion/You Poem

April 12, 2012

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Multiple Choice 


1.    The cup you are drinking from is already broken because of

(a)   one of those noble Buddhist truths about life and suffering;
(b)   the Book of Revelation;
(c)   the laws of probability;
(d)   it is one of my cups.

2.   What goes around comes around because of:

(a)   the law of Karma:
(b)   some intersect between the Old and New Testaments (as in, ask for an eye and a tooth shall be given you); 
(c)   the rubber-sheeted nature of the Universe;
(d)   the way that pounds glom on even from what I breathe.

3.    The evening air feels so sweet upon my cheek because of:

(a)   some combination of particle, temperature, synapse;
(b)   God’s grandeur
(c)   (any form of God):
(d)   how it reminds me of you.

4.    At the end of the day (that is, right now,) I do not know very much about:

(a)   the properties of particles;
(b)   what’s behind God’s grandeur;
(c)   the laws of Karma, or
(d)   momentum.

5.   But I do know how your hand cups my cheek and how that sweet cup is: 

(a)  smooth,
(b)  cool,
(c)  warm,
(d)  unbroken.  

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The above draft poem, my 12th for the 12th day of National Poetry Month, was inspired by Charles Miller’s wonderful prompt at dVerse Poetry Pub concerning the interaction between science and religion and poetry.  Charles has written a wonderfully informative article on this theme, as well as a prompt. 

If your mood runs towards a more escapist (silly) bend, I urge you to also check out NOSE DIVE, my comic novel about high school musicals, phone sex, eco terrorism (maybe), and self-image (definitely.)  Available on Kindle for just 99 cents, and in paper for a bit more. 

Hep Cats On New York City Morning – 11th day of National Poetry Month

April 11, 2012

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New York City Morning

It was grey that day
on Broadway and Dey,
greyer still beneath the scaffolding,
where a guy stood not even half-holding
a cat, that sat
upon his head.

It was not a Seussian feline,
(you know, the Cat-in-the-Hat kind),
but a cat worn as a hat, rather like
a stovepipe (without
the Lincoln hype) and
with fur, of course,
and purr (I assume)
and a tail instead
of a brim.

Honestly,
the guy didn’t hold on to it at all–
though the cat was two feet tall,
when seated–which he was
because
there was really no room
for him to stand
on the guy’s head.

The guy did stead-
y the cat, shifting shoulders and weight
in a levered stand-still  gait,
a no-step dance of balancing.

But it looked precarious–
hidden claws nefarious–
also heavy–given the
size of the cat hat.

I looked, but kept moving up Broadway,
heading, as I do that time of day
to my subway stop,
not stopping to talk to the guy,
or to his cat either, this being,
after all, New York City.

This is my poem for the 11th day of National Poetry Month.  (It was inspired  by all the New York City poems posted lately by Claudia Schoenfeld and Brian Miller of dVerse Poets Pub. And also by the guy on Broadway with the cat on his head.  Unfortunately, my battery was dead so I did not get a photo.) 

Between Parent and Child and Dog – 10th Day of National Poetry Month

April 10, 2012

Drawing of Dog Before Stomach Wakes Her Up

At dawn, dog clicks across wood floor, claws like indeterminate tap shoes.

I can just about sleep on. These are neither Kelly’s straight-edged snaps nor the elegant slides of Astaire.  Near-blindness has muffled her paws, cloaking them with hesitancy.  (Sometimes, I think that she feels her way with her fur; its slightly matted, but still puffed, halo sensing oncoming walls. )

I turn over on the pretext of recalibrating her stomach’s inner clock; the truth is that I want to go back to my parents.

It is Easter weekend, but my father was the only son of a man named Robert.  Hence, returning from the dead takes an awfully lot out of him.  I’m not even sure how he has done it.

In fact, he has managed several times: once in the surf by my parents’ house (though the sea has always unnerved him); once in a passageway leading from their bedroom; now here, in their kitchen, just to the side of the stove.

My mother has yet to notice.  She was preoccupied even when younger, even when not deaf, her inner gaze fixed upon the Iowa landscape where she and the tall corn grew, just outside a cunningly small-minded town.

And, right this minute, stacked on top of that inherent obliviousness are dirty dishes.  She bends over the sink to wash each item thoroughly before placing it into the dishwasher.

Mom, I say, turning her from the sink.  Mom, pointing at him.

At last, she sees; but now, upset that it’s taken so long, he turns away, his lower lip stuck out in an ashen pout.

Dad, I say, almost touching the frozen plaid of his shirt.  Dad, I whisper,she’s listening now.  Really. Don’t do this to her, dad.  She loves you; she loves you best of all.

When I initially say those words, I picture my mother’s family–parents, siblings, forefathers–all those characters she has charted, defended, justified.

But as I repeat them–she loves you best of all.  You love her too, Dad,  best of all–I realize that they also apply to me; that even as I stand between my parents, negotiating, directing, I stand apart, outside that interlock of best love, a visitor to that realm.

A part of me knows that this is exactly as it should be.  But still I begin to breathe heavily.  Even in half sleep, I pant, as if I had been running up a steep hill, as if there were no possible level ground.

The dog clicks right up to the bed now, back and forth she clicks, back and forth.

Okay, sweetie, I say, pulling back the covers.  Okay, I say, stretching down my hand.

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(The above is, I know, a rather odd piece.  I’m calling it a prose poem in honor of the 10th day of National Poetry Month.  I am also linking to the poetry site Imaginary Gardens With Real Toads and to Imperfect Prose.  Check them out! )

Rant Conceived When Passing Old Sugar Refinery – “An(us) Domino”

April 9, 2012
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Picture Taken A Few Miles Above Domino Sugar Refinery On the Hudson River

An(us) Domino – Rant Conceived when Riding By Sugar Refinery

Who would have thought
we would get to the day
when sugar
is
the healthy alternative?

Or, when those who assail abortion,
especially, if male,
would fight tooth and nail
against any measure taken
to avoid getting pregnant
in the first place; or

when salivating-at-the-pockets protectors
of private property
would allow the police to investigate
your privates, properly;

not finding a speck
of governmental overreach

as long as the state is only allowed to reach
up your rectum or vagina. 

Perhaps they are not thinking of the police
reaching up their rectums or vaginas.

(Or maybe they are.)

All I can say is that what goes around comes around.

In the meantime, pass me the sugar, sweetie.


I hesitate to post the above poem for this the 9th day of National Poetry Month and also for dVerse Poets Pub Open Link Night, since it is a bit of a stretch from my typical more lyrical format.  However, for those who haven’t heard, the U.S. Supreme Court has recently ruled in Florence v. Board of Chosen Freeholders of the County of Burlington that a person arrested for even a minor offense (or, as in the Florence case, arrested wrongfully) can be strip searched without reasonable suspicion if they are to be detained with the common jail population.  It seems to me a troubling decision that has not raised a significant public response (which is ironic given the huge uproar over clothed pat-downs done by the TSA.)

A discussion of the case may be read on Scotusblog.  (Disclaimer, Scotusblog has a very thorough discussion but is a blog written, at least in part, by an attorney  whose firm, Goldstein v. Russell, P.C., was counsel to the petitioner.)  

Male Ego/Coddled Egg – The Mag 112

April 8, 2012

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Male Ego

Her mother used to tell her, when she was young,
about the male ego.

The girl imagined it, from her mother’s words–
fragile,delicate–as a diaphanous coddled egg
that shimmered just above
men’s foreheads.

Her mother admitted that she herself
was not good with male egos.
This, she would sometimes sigh,
was a reason she had had to work
so hard in her life.

But the girl was different from her, the mother said–
her nose was small, and she had, 
what the mother called,
”little doll legs,” and, instead of a certain defensive
orneriness (the defect of the mom), she exhibited,
consistently, an intense desire to please.  

The girl liked her nose well enough, but every time
her mother spoke of her little doll legs,
something cracked.

She did not really want a coddled egg hovering
over her head, and yet she would not have
minded, she thought, some edge of delicate
shimmer.


Agh!  (I really have edited it some more now since first posting.)

The above is my poem (somewhat tortured and edited again since first posting) for Tess Kincaid’s The Mag (112) and also my 8th poem in eight days for the 8th day of National Poetry Month.   The picture is my take on the pic by Djajakarta, posted by Tess as a prompt.

If you are interested in a comic analysis of noses, check out my very silly, but I think fun, novel called Nose Dive.

One Way of Looking At Thirteen Blackbirds? (“Homage To Wallace Et Al.”)

April 7, 2012

Photo by Tracy Grumach

Homage to Wallace Stevens and His Thirteen-Sided Bird

I.

One problem with the way I sometimes live in
this small-cubicled, cylindrical-chuted,
left-brained world is that
instead of finding thirteen ways
of looking at a blackbird, I get stuck
in one way of looking at thirteen blackbirds.

II.

Other times, like the thin men of Haddam, I look for golden
birds, and fail to enjoy the ebon sheen
of present wings, or worse, mistake them for the shadow
of my own equipage.

III.

O Wallace, Sage of Hartford–Connect(itcut) me
with nothing that is not there, and also
the nothing that is;
the path flown by the
blackbird, hard to miss, harder
still to trace.

IV.

I often revisit
regrets.
Blackbirds circle
the chaff-strewn field, cawing
when they land.

V.

“Should” is a word to which
no blackbird
pays much mind.

VI.

My mind, when sad,
ia like a tree in which
there are no
blackbirds.

VII.

Sometimes the heart takes flight, sighting, hawk-like,
the bright eye of an idea.
Other times the heart takes flight
simply because it has seen
a blackbird.

VIII.

A man and a woman are one.
A man, a woman and a blackbird
are a man, a woman and a blackbird.

IX.

No blackbird will ever
be baked into one
of my pies.

X.

Blackbird singing in the dead of night,
thank you.

XI.

When I want to see a blackbird, I just shut
my eyes.  It helps if there’s bright
sun.

XII.

In city rains, each droplet carries one small speck
of
blackbird.

XIII.

The tree trunks stretch limbs of jet black wing;
my heart expands and constricts at once;
in this, it is like
the blackbird.

The blackbird, wings beating, labors,
then soars; in this, it is like
my heart.

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The above is a poem (or draft poem) inspired by the the beautiful photograph of  Tracy Grumbach, above, a dVerse Poets Pub Poetics prompt, and also, of course, “Thirteen Ways of Looking At A Blackbird” by the incomparable Wallace Stevens.  I am not sure if Tracy’s photograph is really of blackbirds–they look more like raptors to me–but the Stevens came to mind, so I used a bit of poetic and ornithologic license.

This is  also my draft poem written for the 7th day of National Poetry Month. 

Have a lovely holiday–Easter or Passover.  And thanks much for all your kind support.  

Flash Fiction 55 – “Getting Out the Vote” – 6th day of National Poetry Month

April 6, 2012

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Getting Out the Vote

 

Squinting into our list (registered voters), we wander
squeezed checkerboard (row-house, alley).
Big belly (in somehow-suspended shorts) answers
our next knock,
holding a machete amidst curls
at the cleve of his navel, also
a mango.

Wrong address, he says.  We’re all
felons in this house.

We apologize profusely
for taking up
his time. 

The above is my (draft) poem for the 6th day of National Poetry Month!  The poem itself (excluding title) is also exactly 55 words.  So, please tell it to the G-Man!  Also, try the game yourself!

Also, also…. have a Good Friday.

“On Commuter” (The Rubaiyat, It Is Not!)

April 5, 2012

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On Commuter

The leaf buds veil, like a thin chemise,
a window of near naked trees
while the train I ride both clacks and squeaks
as I think of ways to earn my fees.

It’s not that I am truly venal
(though these urges aren’t exactly vernal)–
it’s just that I must make my keep
with day job–no, make that diurnal.

Of course, I’d rather live by rhyming.
My vocab’s good and so’s my timing.
But, alas most poets don’t get paid;
must spend their lives in nickel-diming.

So, here I stew and here I scheme,
as brain wheels spin and train wheels scream,
while just outside Spring springs pristine,
its force consumed in purer green.

Ha!  Here’s my poem for the fifth day of National Poetry Month and also for dVerse Poet Pub’s “Form for All” challenge, hosted by Sam Peralta, a/k/a Semaphore.  (The form is a Rubiyat Quatrain.)   I am also linking this post to the Purple Treehouse.

Happy Holidays All!

AND PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE, IF YOU ARE IN THE MOOD FOR FUN, CHECK OUT “NOSE DIVE,” my very silly comic novel, only 99 cents on Kindle and about ten times that in print!

“Heart of Stone” – Thinking About the Stone (4th day of National Poetry Month)

April 4, 2012

Heart of Stone

One of the miracles of Easter, it increasingly
seems to me, is that the stone
at the tomb was moved.
Stones
are heavy; they tend,
in stories of great import,
to be obstinate.
(Think of the re-roller of Sisyphus, the innumerable boulders
that hound Wiley Coyote, the uncaring pyramid of Aida.) 

But this stone
was moved–
not with grunts and conniptions, chains tied
to a flatbed, crushed toes or blistering hands
(shaken in thin air to take away the
sting)– 

I am not particularly devout.  I am sometimes even
suspicious of religion (especially when
capitalized).  But I’ve also been closed out
by death, my loves shut down, and know that if I were
a stone, the sorrow of each loss would crack me right
to the crystal, squeeze out sanded tears that would wash
the feet of any who came near, break
the heart of heart in me, turn shale to dust, till we
together, my loves and I, could mingle one more time.

No wonder the stone was moved, and yet,
yes, wonder. 

 

The above, which I first called “Heart of Heart”, is my draft poem for the 4th day of National Poetry Month.  (I am writing a draft poem a day this April, but refuse to call the exercise “Napowrimo”, as I just can’t stand the sound of that name.)  It’s been a bit hard to come up with inspiration, especially since I am very busy with my “day job” right now, so what I’ve found useful is to look at draft poems done in prior year.   This was based on an absolutely different draft poem written two years on the 4th day of April–it  is pretty rough but, if you are interested, it can be found here.  
Also, if you are interested, check out my first published book of poetry GOING ON SOMEWHERE.   Thanks much!

“Sparrow Dreams” (Revisited) – Third Day of National Poetry Month

April 3, 2012

Sparrow Dreams

My child is a sparrow.

The other women hold their babes in arms; I cup mine in my palms, gently, for she is a sparrow, so fragile that I am afraid that I will crush her if I hug, though sometimes I run my forefinger over her small brown head, feeling the soft downiness above brittle skull.

We sit on a bench at Rockefeller Center; it is a grey day, the air only a few shades lighter than the buildings.  Our concrete bench is also grey, speckled with black grains, like crumbs of tar, sand, black hole, mixed with the cement; the sculpted box hedge at my back has, at its hollow depths, silvery branches.

She is not even a baby bird.  As I hold her in my palm, she tilts her head, her eyes bead bright, while the babies of the women around me goggle fleshily; their mothers cooing over them with full-echo cheeks.

I try not to feel less significant.  So, my child is a sparrow.

Then, suddenly, for some reason I cannot  place, I put her down, there, at my side, on the grey stone bench.  I stand, brush my hair back from my face, breath in a space of grey white air.  When I turn about again, she is gone; her soft keel of breast and wing nowhere to be seen.

I search the bench, the bushes; I tug the arms of the women who mill about me.

I cry, I weep, I despair.   The fact that she is a bird means nothing to me now, only that she is gone, my child, my only, my dear.

I wake up weeping. My hands, in the velvet grey of night-morn sheets, trace the soft hard curve of my belly, which is still there, still pregnant.

But all is changed, all is forever different, and I weep on, for I know now that what I am being given is something which may be lost, and that it is a loss that, unlike the child itself, I will not ever be able to bear.

And how, I wonder, will I be able to hold her when she comes–for I know that I must not grip tightly, though she can take flight–

So hard my heart is beating, so fast–

National Poetry Month!  Open Link Night at DVerse Poets Pub!  (Check it out!)  The above which I’m calling a prose poem for these purposes is actually based on a draft poem that I wrote the third day of LAST YEAR’s National Poetry Month.  To view the original, click here!