Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Dwelling on the Negative

 Dwelling on the Negative


I prefer to dwell

On the negative,

At least these days.

 

What is has to tell

Is not prescriptive:

Just describes the haze.

 

What is positive

Is still alive and well…

But not in my gaze:

 

A hidden image,

Or light shining through,

Not a centerpiece.

 

Cause much more damage

Is all it would do:

Water on burning grease.

 

Positive, prescribes,

And brings out our hopes,

And brightens our eyes.

 

In this opening…

 

A flood of dark tropes

On our minds inscribes

Disappointment and lies.

 

So, I prefer to dwell

On the negative,

At least these days.

Monday, December 28, 2020

Unite For…

 Unite For…

 

All you workers, unite!

Demand equality!

There is some truth in it,

But it is quite trite.

 

The workers aren’t in chains.

To one so entertained,

Nothing could seem more strange

Then a need for chains.

 

How far can you take it?

How far will you push it?

What expense to get it?

In to what deep pit?

 

To rise up or just sit

Requires a struggle,

If not an outright fight:

To rise from the muddle,

To make some sort of gains…

 

And now we come back,

We come back to chains.

Or entertainment…

To put it simply:

A sort of enslavement.

 

It is vi-o-lence:

Center of attention,

Loss of innocence,

Needing intervention.

 

But without orders,

Violence increases.

Without set borders

Chaos just increases.

And with chaos, fight…

Or at least more struggle.

 

Yes, you should unite:           

Not for equality;

Not for a muddle;

But for some worthwhile gains.

Thursday, December 17, 2020

Worth Finding, Worth Searching

 Worth Finding, Worth Searching

It is where we went everyday—every time we went someplace that wasn’t a home, or our school. Our habits and plans were anything but regular, when we weren’t in some season or scheme. Team practices, midterms, finals and other things, of our own devising, took time and regularly planned work. But even in the midst of those seasons and schemes, we would end up right here. Just killing time and waiting for something to happen. Still young and restless; even when we wanted to rest, we didn’t want it to be predictable... or very restful. At least that was what we thought in our wide-eyed young minds.


This little cookie cutter dinner (not made of ticky-tacky, but all still the same) was just off the interstate and just close enough to home to walk if we didn’t have a car to use. It had an unusually large parking lot. We guessed it was for trucks from the four-lane, and every once and a while there was one. I always figured they were lost. It was an interstate, but who needed to pass by here to get anywhere? And even if you had to pass by, why stop here? And rarely could we figure out who inside the dinner was from behind the steering wheel of the 16 wheels parked outside. Only by process of elimination really.


We knew all the locals, and all the regular passer-throughs. Some times there were new faces, and sometimes they were interesting, even pretty. Rarely were those faces receptive. There was the staff too. None of them were from around here. Many of them didn’t sick around long. The interesting ones came in just for short stints from other cookies, other ticky-tacky shacks, most of them with smaller parking lots.


The college girls were the most interesting, and usually the prettiest. Of course, we were a bunch of high school boys. Boys. Even when the girls from school hung out with us there, they were just one of the boys. Some of the college girls were waitresses, some were customers. The waitresses would flirt with us, especially if they were just passing through. We would always scrounge up enough to tip them a bit extra, thinking that it would make them like us more; thinking that they were flirting because they liked us. In reality, they flirted knowing we would do just that, and for no other reason. How did that not occur to us? Willful ignorance, or wishful thinking? Neither, but a strange combination of both. It did develop what seems to be a lifelong habit of tipping well. In part based on those memories, and part on the fact that so many friends in college worked at places just like this. Now I tend to tip the flirty ones less. Still, I think I learned more about college life by flirting with and trying to get a date with college girls when I was in high school than I did actually going to college. And for quite a while now, the waitresses have been younger than me. I don’t need to learn about younger women at this point.


The college customers never paid us much mind. There were exceptions, even an anomaly. I ended up tutoring a girl on literature and practically wrote a few papers for her: Camus, Hemingway, Beckett, Joyce....


We were being loud and sarcastic, talking about a literature assignment from our high school class. She was in the booth next to us with her laptop. She asked us to ‘shut the hell up’ because she was trying to concentrate. It was actually one of the politest ‘shut the hell ups’ we ever got from a college kid there. We, with equal sarcasm, asked her what she was trying to concentrate on that was so important. It just so happens it was the same writer we had just been talking about: Hemingway. She was working on a paper on the same thing we had just finished a unit on. Of course, she told us to shut up to get our attention, I think. At least in hind sight, that is what I think. She of course despised having a high school kid tell her anything, but she wanted to go to grad school, so she needed the grade and so needed the help.


We had a spectacular literature teacher in our school. I somehow managed to get all of my classes with her. That was not something anyone wanted at that point. She was difficult, and got more so the more classes you took from her. I was oblivious to that because I loved the literature and the challenge. The college girl was a biology student. She was a research biologist really, she just needed the degrees so they would let her do what she was hell bent on doing, and what she was probably made to do. She never got literature, and she never really cared or cared to. I helped her get the grades she needed to keep her GPA high, which she insisted was essential for an Ivy League grad school. I got some sweet dreams, some new confidence in my literature skills and a new understanding of biology from her. No, not of her biology or of mine. A new understanding of evolution. And I am not talking about her not selecting me for breeding.


She impressed on me the fact that evolution was not a plan. Evolution was random and humans were not the pinnacle of some story of progress, not the ultimate goal of the system or plan. We were just as random as any other living thing and only better than others because we survived. Well, maybe better because we were surviving better for now. She was an atheist, and a rather militant one. It was about the only thing she understood from Camus, and maybe she thought he was too soft on the point. It was probably why she never got Joyce. Just the fact that he was educated by Jesuits and referenced religion at all distracted her from anything useful he might have to say. And Godot was obviously God, and as a result of no interest.


She was also sure that the way we were surviving was too heavy handed and going to result in our rather rapid extinction. That still hasn’t come yet, but I am more and more convinced she was right with every season that passes. I often wonder where she is now. A few years back I found her on the internet. Well, I found an obituary. She had killed herself. No idea why she did it, but I still think maybe literature could have helped… If I had known it better at the time.

Now I think I know it too well: the literature. I used to puzzle over it, wanting to know it completely and definitively. Know it like I used to think biologists knew DNA, evolution and all that stuff. Their stuff. I would read stories and poems, read the commentaries, the diaries, the letters… everything. Then I would listen to the lectures, expecting the key: the Urim and the Thummim to decode it—if it had to be magical and couldn’t be logical.


I never thought I knew, but I figured I was close. I was closer than others. And it was at that point I started to argue. I would tell professors, colleagues and definitely students what it all meant. If they could counter-argue, I would learn and listen. It was like how we used to argue politics in my family: always cocksure, but always willing to learn from a fight. Still, I always figured I was further along than anyone else, closer to the truth of any work I bothered to argue about. I didn’t have a firm grasp of the works, I knew that. I did, however, have it in may hand more fully than anyone else. What ever it was, it was on my hand; I just had to firm up my grip. Just a bit tighter, and I would have it completely.


Then, one by one, they slipped out all together: the stories, the poems, the answers and the people around me. When the last one fell to the ground, it took me a while, but I realized I could pick them right back up. (Well, not the people. That was more difficult.) Each time, each one, when I picked it back up, I gripped it differently. I felt it differently—in my hand, my mind… even my heart. After a while, I would drop them again: on purpose. Pick them up again and again: always differently and new. Always just as good. Always the same in some way: the words on the page were always the same. The same literal words, but everything else could be different.


It was no longer about the answer; it was about answers. It wasn’t about resolution, or being done; it was about the conflict, and how it never ended. This was exciting. The idea that it would never end was suddenly more exciting and fulfilling than the idea that I would someday find the end. It was about the process as much and the answers.


My grip on people changed at that point. Students and friends, colleagues, were held with a lighter touch on my part. But they stayed in my hand much better and, except for the ambitious ones, they enjoyed in much more. We found answers in the text, and to the texts, and they were answers for us as well—for our times and lives. Answers for my questions or their questions and both. And not answers to merely academic questions. Well, that is with the students and friends.


The colleagues were different. (I won’t even talk about the administration and publications.) Was everything relative all of the sudden? Was it all a free for all? If there were no answers (read: academic answers), what were out years of education for? (And the mountains of debt.) What of our authority as teachers, as experts? How could we make, indeed force, the world to be a better place with this kind of approach? Was literature then really just entertainment and escapism? The way I was approaching it, it had no singular and stable truth, and therefore could effect no change, no progress. Well, at least not any more so than pop culture: TV, popular music and movies. This approach wasn’t disciplined at all because it wasn’t scientific. (But was science really what we understood it to be?)


The way I learned to use my grip was not easy to stick to. It was rewarding—especially for my students. None of them went on to study or teach literature. In that respect I was seen as a failure. But who can make a living teaching literature these days? More importantly, I know it made their lives better.


But mine? At some point it wears you down. Santiago, Vladimir, Sisyphus: they all lived that life. Most people just read it. Some learn from it, grow a bit and move on. Pain is nothing to a man; born astride a grave we are; perpetually forging in the smithy; we must imagine him smiling. But it does get old, as I get older. It is still exciting and fulfilling. It is more and more exhausting. Is it worth it? Still?


I understand the biologist more than ever now. If I knew the stories better and could lead better back then, maybe she would still be someplace I could find her. But would she be worth finding? And if I found her at this point, would I be welcome as I am?

 


Saturday, November 28, 2020

Rage to Resignation

Rage to Resignation
I can rage
And I do
But against what
And what for

What will change
If I do
Slash, burn and cut
And then more

Rage against?
The darkness?
And for the light?
Which is which?

All so tensed
All a mess
Nothing seems right
But this twitch…

Over takes
All I am
A foundation
Of a sort

And it makes
All I am
Pure frustration
Resignation

Is my only resort
My only retort
My only peace
My salvation

Not rage
But resignation

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Cultivating the Future

Cultivating the Future

Talk not of meaning.

            Talk just of living,

            Of the every day.

Talk still of doing:

            Actions and not talk,

            Of what is, not ought.

Do something! Be seen!

            Just be a bully.

            Be stupid and mean.

Do something fully.

            Don’t try to hold back.

            Not a second thought.

So say those who are:

            Lacking in patience;

            Lacking in clear thought.

So say those who can’t:

            Keep themselves in check;

            Hold back their train wreck.

But those that cannot:

            Be without meaning;

            Act without thinking…

Are those who should lead;

            Who should shape the creed;

            Plant in us the seed…

That will grow our future.

Saturday, October 31, 2020

Locked Down and Floating

 Locked Down and Floating

 

You see the date on the timestamps.

But you don’t know it;

it doesn’t make any real sense,

or a difference.

Seeing all the Halloween ads,

you start to wonder:

Your favorite Easter candies?

When can you get them?

Halloween is here already,

Did Easter happen?

Yes, you know the day of the week,

based on your routine.

Based on what you should be doing,

Not by what you do.

And not at all by what you think.

The day? No matter.

Every day could be a Monday,

Or all a Sunday.

Productive, like a Saturday.

Lazy Saturday.

Thursday, October 15, 2020

Violence and Change

Violence and Change

 

Violence is usually only skin deep.

But the pain…

And the scars…

            And the way they change how

                        You move

                        And think.

But thinking can change.

And movement is change.

            And they can both change,

                        Again, and again, and again…

The Shallows Are Grounding

The Shallows Are Grounding

To decide is easy.

            A coin can do that,

                        In a toss.

            A Magic 8 Ball

                        With a shake and flip of the wrist

            An algorithm

                        With a data set

It is simple.

            Superficial.

It is unhuman.

To discern,

            Is human.

(But vocations are cliché… )

To practice judgment,

            Is human.

But judging…

            Is hypocritical,

                        And offensive.

                        Oppressive.

Depth causes drowning…

The shallows are grounding;

            The ridiculousness is astounding.

Words: Tight(ening) Tools

 

Words: Tight(ening) Tools

When words are used merely as tools,

They are crafted to accommodate fools.

 

But accommodate isn’t right;

They are used to fold the herd in tight.

 

To be accessible to the masses,

And shape everything the herd’s mind passes.

 

This is how words are used

By those whose minds, like skulls, are tightly fused.

Express…

 

Express…

Does it ever happen

That when you don’t need words,

Just then, they find you?

No need to express anything.

No one to express to.

            But something to express,

            Or at least words

            That want to work, to express

                        Through you.

It happens to me

            After…

            Or as often as I am

                        Able to be alone.

“The expression that there is

                        Nothing to express…”

When you don’t have to speak;

When you don’t have an audience;

Then you don’t have to speak:

            You can try to express…

            With all the work,

                        And all the trouble,

                        That entails.

            And dig deep…

            Or ascend to the peaks…

Saturday, September 12, 2020

The Meanness of Politics

The meanness of politics—
Of being self-assured,
Confident to the hilt—
Is a way to hide
That politics is always a mean.

Not a middle.
Not a compromise.
Not a force...
Of oppression and power.
(For how else do we find power, but by finding
  oppression?)
It is an appropriate reaction:
A something embedded and emergent
From the situation.

Something?
A policy
A promise
A compromise
(No, that was already set aside.)
A call to unity
(Ah, but who are we?
I don’t even know myself.)
It goes even deeper…
If we let it.
Something not known;
A mean to be found.
Embedded (evidential?)
Emergent
Relative, but to the situation:
Embedded.
Relative to all that is
All that situates us
Even when we don’t
(want…)
To see.
It emerges
Maybe of its own wisdom
And despite our…
What is taken as wisdom.
Not whine-some
(or a lot)
Not calculated
Virtù?
Yes…
Every Little (dictator) Prince
Has his place
(From) the rose tender
(To) the fleur-de-lis family
The situation,
What emerges,
That holds sway.
What can hold?
What can it hold?
Not just power,
But things together.
The mean of politics is that:
Holding things together.
What together?
To what end?
Ah, that is the situation.
(Not the question)
That always is
That always is
On a horizon of time
That always is there
A place and time
Democracy or dictatorship
Depends on what it means
And on what the mean is…

Saturday, May 2, 2020

Qua, Qua, Qua


Qua, Qua, Qua

-- Today everybody is thinking.
-- Ah, Lucky.
-- Don’t you mean luckily?
-- No, not at all. We think like Lucky. And out loud too. Very loud.
-- What?
-- Never mind…
-- That was a great album.
-- Yes it was. Puncher and Wattmann.
-- I thought it was Cobain and Grohl.
-- It was—Quaquaquaqua…

Into The Abyss


Into The Abyss

What may come?
They won’t be dreams.

Waking from a spring hibernation
To a summer of…

At least it won’t be the same.

Those hibernation dreams
            Some were nightmares
                        Of true horrors, that none of us actually saw
            Some were escapism
            Some were hopeful
            Some were dystopian, but we smiled
And now we walk out
            Some like a kid to the first day of school
            Some wishing they weren’t, or didn’t have to
            Some like zombies, already dead
            Some will never return
Most will—Again and again and again
            Into that abyss
            The habit of life
Habits of hope
            Habits of despair
                        All so hard to break

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Deserving


Sacrificing
            (to save ourselves)
And complaining
            (as if we don’t deserve it)

Missing
            (what we don’t need)
And hiding
            (how we feel)

Fearing
            (what we know)
And ignoring
            (what we don’t want to)

Pretending
            (we know)
And imagining
            (it will be OK)
Deserving?
            (to be safe)
Or understanding
            (this crisis)

Will


We will to control
To such a point
That we will condemn
Instead of console

We want not
What is right
We want, at all costs
to win the fight

It is mere ego
And not evil
To put at the center
Your own will



Parents


They couldn't tell us
Because they didn't know.
But they believed, and still believe
Left unspoken, but it does show.

We were never taught
What belief was and meant
Or how to read what was implied...
To decode messages unsent.

Because they can't speak
about the things they know
with the clarity and credence
we are always ready to show…

Despite their sacrifices,
we look down on them
So reasonably and easily
As we fail to understand them.

Sunday, April 19, 2020

Worth Finding, Worth Searching



It is where we went everyday—every time we went someplace that wasn’t a home, or our school. Our habits and plans were anything but regular, when we weren’t in some season or scheme. Team practices, midterms, finals and other things, of our own devising, took time and regularly planned work. But even in the midst of those seasons and schemes, we would end up right here. Just killing time and waiting for something to happen. Still young and restless; even when we wanted to rest, we didn’t want it to be predictable... or very restful. At least that was what we thought in our wide-eyed young minds.

This little cookie cutter dinner (not made of ticky-tacky, but all still the same) was just off the interstate and just close enough to home to walk if we didn’t have a car to use. It had an unusually large parking lot. We guessed it was for trucks from the four-lane, and every once and a while there was one. I always figured they were lost. It was an interstate, but who needed to pass by here to get anywhere? And even if you had to pass by, why stop here? And rarely could we figure out who inside the dinner was from behind the steering wheel of the 16 wheels parked outside. Only by process of elimination really.

We knew all the locals, and all the regular passer-throughs. Some times there were new faces, and sometimes they were interesting, even pretty. Rarely were those faces receptive. There was the staff too. None of them were from around here. Many of them didn’t sick around long. The interesting ones came in just for short stints from other cookies, other ticky-tacky shacks, most of them with smaller parking lots.

The college girls were the most interesting, and usually the prettiest. Of course, we were a bunch of high school boys. Boys. Even when the girls from school hung out with us there, they were just one of the boys. Some of the college girls were waitresses, some were customers. The waitresses would flirt with us, especially if they were just passing through. We would always scrounge up enough to tip them a bit extra, thinking that it would make them like us more; thinking that they were flirting because they liked us. In reality, they flirted knowing we would do just that, and for no other reason. How did that not occur to us? Willful ignorance, or wishful thinking? Neither, but a strange combination of both. It did develop what seems to be a lifelong habit of tipping well. In part based on those memories, and part on the fact that so many friends in college worked at places just like this. Now I tend to tip the flirty ones less. Still, I think I learned more about college life by flirting with and trying to get a date with college girls when I was in high school than I did actually going to college. And for quite a while now, the waitresses have been younger than me. I don’t need to learn about younger women at this point.

The college customers never paid us much mind. There were exceptions, even an anomaly. I ended up tutoring a girl on literature and practically wrote a few papers for her: Camus, Hemingway, Beckett, Joyce....

We were being loud and sarcastic, talking about a literature assignment from our high school class. She was in the booth next to us with her laptop. She asked us to ‘shut the hell up’ because she was trying to concentrate. It was actually one of the politest ‘shut the hell ups’ we ever got from a college kid there. We, with equal sarcasm, asked her what she was trying to concentrate on that was so important. It just so happens it was the same writer we had just been talking about: Hemingway. She was working on a paper on the same thing we had just finished a unit on. Of course, she told us to shut up to get our attention, I think. At least in hind sight, that is what I think. She of course despised having a high school kid tell her anything, but she wanted to go to grad school, so she needed the grade and so needed the help.

We had a spectacular literature teacher in our school. I somehow managed to get all of my classes with her. That was not something anyone wanted at that point. She was difficult, and got more so the more classes you took from her. I was oblivious to that because I loved the literature and the challenge. The college girl was a biology student. She was a research biologist really, she just needed the degrees so they would let her do what she was hell bent on doing, and what she was probably made to do. She never got literature, and she never really cared or cared to. I helped her get the grades she needed to keep her GPA high, which she insisted was essential for an Ivy League grad school. I got some sweet dreams, some new confidence in my literature skills and a new understanding of biology from her. No, not of her biology or of mine. A new understanding of evolution. And I am not talking about her not selecting me for breeding.

She impressed on me the fact that evolution was not a plan. Evolution was random and humans were not the pinnacle of some story of progress, not the ultimate goal of the system or plan. We were just as random as any other living thing and only better than others because we survived. Well, maybe better because we were surviving better for now. She was an atheist, and a rather militant one. It was about the only thing she understood from Camus, and maybe she thought he was too soft on the point. It was probably why she never got Joyce. Just the fact that he was educated by Jesuits and referenced religion at all distracted her from anything useful he might have to say. And Godot was obviously God, and as a result of no interest.

She was also sure that the way we were surviving was too heavy handed and going to result in our rather rapid extinction. That still hasn’t come yet, but I am more and more convinced she was right with every season that passes. I often wonder where she is now. A few years back I found her on the internet. Well, I found an obituary. She had killed herself. No idea why she did it, but I still think maybe literature could have helped… If I had known it better at the time.
Now I think I know it too well: the literature. I used to puzzle over it, wanting to know it completely and definitively. Know it like I used to think biologists knew DNA, evolution and all that stuff. Their stuff. I would read stories and poems, read the commentaries, the diaries, the letters… everything. Then I would listen to the lectures, expecting the key: the Urim and the Thummim to decode it—if it had to be magical and couldn’t be logical.

I never thought I knew, but I figured I was close. I was closer than others. And it was at that point I started to argue. I would tell professors, colleagues and definitely students what it all meant. If they could counter-argue, I would learn and listen. It was like how we used to argue politics in my family: always cocksure, but always willing to learn from a fight. Still, I always figured I was further along than anyone else, closer to the truth of any work I bothered to argue about. I didn’t have a firm grasp of the works, I knew that. I did, however, have it in may hand more fully than anyone else. What ever it was, it was on my hand; I just had to firm up my grip. Just a bit tighter, and I would have it completely.

Then, one by one, they slipped out all together: the stories, the poems, the answers and the people around me. When the last one fell to the ground, it took me a while, but I realized I could pick them right back up. (Well, not the people. That was more difficult.) Each time, each one, when I picked it back up, I gripped it differently. I felt it differently—in my hand, my mind… even my heart. After a while, I would drop them again: on purpose. Pick them up again and again: always differently and new. Always just as good. Always the same in some way: the words on the page were always the same. The same literal words, but everything else could be different.

It was no longer about the answer; it was about answers. It wasn’t about resolution, or being done; it was about the conflict, and how it never ended. This was exciting. The idea that it would never end was suddenly more exciting and fulfilling than the idea that I would someday find the end. It was about the process as much and the answers.

My grip on people changed at that point. Students and friends, colleagues, were held with a lighter touch on my part. But they stayed in my hand much better and, except for the ambitious ones, they enjoyed in much more. We found answers in the text, and to the texts, and they were answers for us as well—for our times and lives. Answers for my questions or their questions and both. And not answers to merely academic questions. Well, that is with the students and friends.

The colleagues were different. (I won’t even talk about the administration and publications.) Was everything relative all of the sudden? Was it all a free for all? If there were no answers (read: academic answers), what were out years of education for? (And the mountains of debt.) What of our authority as teachers, as experts? How could we make, indeed force, the world to be a better place with this kind of approach? Was literature then really just entertainment and escapism? The way I was approaching it, it had no singular and stable truth, and therefore could effect no change, no progress. Well, at least not any more so than pop culture: TV, popular music and movies. This approach wasn’t disciplined at all because it wasn’t scientific. (But was science really what we understood it to be?)

The way I learned to use my grip was not easy to stick to. It was rewarding—especially for my students. None of them went on to study or teach literature. In that respect I was seen as a failure. But who can make a living teaching literature these days? More importantly, I know it made their lives better.

But mine? At some point it wears you down. Santiago, Vladimir, Sisyphus: they all lived that life. Most people just read it. Some learn from it, grow a bit and move on. Pain is nothing to a man; born astride a grave we are; perpetually forging in the smithy; we must imagine him smiling. But it does get old, as I get older. It is still exciting and fulfilling. It is more and more exhausting. Is it worth it? Still?

I understand the biologist more than ever now. If I knew the stories better and could lead better back then, maybe she would still be someplace I could find her. But would she be worth finding? And if I found her at this point, would I be welcome as I am?


Monday, April 13, 2020

Art And Emptiness


Poetry is something
Teenagers do
And music
By the famous
Acting is
For the box office
Painting is
For kids in school
Even better: preschool
Art is an indulgence
A frivolous privilege
Or a drug for mindlessness
And consumeristic entertainment
How far…
Have we fallen
To treat art as such
As trite and pretty
As commodity
As fantasy
And nothing more
All this
As we search for meaning
In numbers and theory
As we fix
A hollow world
By filling it
With wires
Code and data
We run
And buy
And calculate
From the meaninglessness
That eats us up inside

Like That Cat

uncertain
like a toss
of dice
win or loss

one of them
is ever pending
not a game
never ending

a quark
its spin
is insignificant
whisper in the din

yet that
that is how
we balance
hanging now

Branches: Road Waiting Plague


A branch in the breeze
I can’t pass my time
Spitting on cats
Or counting peas
Still too much to be done
That can’t be stopped
By some disease
A branch in a storm
Sometimes the waiting
Is a whirlwind
Of sound and chaos
Thinking out loud
Licking and biting
Obeying or ignoring the boss
A branch on the night
The evening-star drooping
Its sparkling the only action
Quiet and calm is found
After all the coming and going
The fretting and struggle
A rest from the round and round

a moment


intent unknown
a glance
an accident
per chance

the tongue
or a finger
one slip
and it will linger

one touch
a brush
missed, angered
or a blush

thoughtful
or completely thoughtless
causing distress
or providing completeness

Saturday, April 11, 2020

The Words


The words on my lips
Can't bring to your ears
The things that I feel
My hopes and my fears
The things that you need to know
The things the world alone can't show

The words on my lips
Can't bring to your mind
The things that I see
Ideas I can't find
The things that you need to know
The things the world alone can't show

Won't come to my lips
These words in my mind
The things I have seen
The ideas inside
The things the world needs to know
The things that you alone can show



We talk, we fight, when we used to play
Everyday, more gets in the way
I am not an artist, but you are my works
I feel deep inside me a truth lurks
And I hope you, as artists, can give it to the world
In your own way, to your own time