Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Stuck in Stereo

half-hoping
for a grand
re-opening
of downslope
stands

static
round the outlines

assisting
the subliminal
resistance
with a fraction
of effort

forgiven

Monday, January 30, 2017

Cemetery

I am on the old porch again, scanning the bushes for a pair of yellow eyes. Beneath the omnipresent rumble of cars and trains shuttling around the nearby VA hospital, every now and then the faint rustle of lumbering claws appears, before disappearing again. Then the frantic search begins. As a child, I never left the safety of the porch, knowing whatever creature patrolled the bricked-in enclosure was roughly my size. I squint my eyes, looking for an outline in the darkness. Nothing except the lush complexion of tangled weeds stares back at me. I shudder, and leave the comfort of the enclosure.

The streets are flushed with garbage. Some of it loose, tumbling in the wind like so many artificial tumbleweeds. Others stuck like tartar between the lip of the curb and the gutter— routinely kicked from the curb and packed in by rain. A crow settles in and gets picking. His buddy watches from the lamppost above, accompanying the meal with a few coarse notes, lamenting the wet air, keeping watch. I stand watching them for a while, curious what prompts them to switch shifts. Every now and then, the watchbird’s chatting is cut short by an approaching car, and the feasting one scrams, returning shortly. I watch their ceremony unfold for a couple minutes before noticing the meal— a squirrel, now split open, its open casket of concrete being lined with the bushy fur of its tail. I stop watching after that. The air is thick with the distant ocean.

Navigating the streets, it seems not a whole lot has changed. The occasional regrettable vacancy. An ambitious development. More jarring and immediate than the background of constant moving vehicles is the work of the builders. Drills drill, hammers go ham and it sounds as if there is always the boop-boop-boop of a truck backing up. It’s hard to remember the last time I looked up and didn’t see the heads of cranes peeking over the crest of the skyscrapers. Not a whole lot has changed, in that this city seems to always be changing. I feel a relic, a keeper of the old blueprint— quite old. The wind snakes through the buildings and hisses in my face. I wrap my jacket tighter and press on. 

Some streets were suspiciously empty: others packed to the brim. I avoid the crowds, traveling through a labyrinth of my own making. I pass the old State House, where I used to gaze inside and wonder, stopping to read the inscription on the side for the fiftieth time. How many must die to warrant the title of Massacre? It always seemed dramatic— and just as this train of thought picks up where I left it— the granite tiles, peppered with gum and cigarette butts, turn deep red. The air cloys with the sickly smell of fallen bodies. A cemetery not too far away begins whispering to me. There are many cemeteries in this city— they’ve had a few centuries to fill them. 

The headstones are cracked and faded, some of them sunk so deep into the ground that only their foreheads are visible. Most of them have either a skull or an angel, sometimes both. Here and there are small clusters of them— families. The stones of the children are puny, nearly buried by the years. I hold their names in my mouth, and get a taste of the short sweetness of their lives. Were it not for the distance, I might have tasted some tears to go with them. The stones watch me. Their presence works a spell in the air so that whoever moves through them must move slowly, while the rest of the city blurs into a quilt of busy-ness. A dirt path guides me deeper into the sanctuary. I meander, meaning to turn around after each stone, but each in succession adds a name to my repertoire, another face in this changing city. I reach a grassy ledge where the path ends, and stare at the grass below. A few scattered stones here and there, but no way to tell what’s grass alone, and what is “the uncut hair of graves.” It all looks the same. Looking up this time, instead of cranes and the usual intrusion of metal, the white tip of the church is the only pin dropped in the sky. The bells aren’t moving at all, but I hear them ring.

My shoes slap the sidewalk descending to the waterfront. The roar of cars driving over the bridge mingles with the songs of seagulls. I approach the rail, scanning the land on the opposite side of the harbor, imagining my other self there, scanning me back, marveling at the sleek jungle set behind me. The sunlight is bold, prompting an arm to shade my face. With my other hand on the rail, I stroll along the waterfront, watching the gulls dance with the sun and spray. One of them lands on a buoy, bobbing gently, resting its wings. I envy the thought and take a seat myself, diverting my attention from the birds to the humans, also caught up in their little sunlit dance. Some of them hustle with bags full of objects of business, others stroll so vacantly one would expect them to stop moving at any moment. Some pass with a sandwich or burrito in their hand, and as quickly as the smell of melted cheese drifts across my nose, it’s gone. A man with a spotted white t-shirt and an awkward gait also drifts, smelling fouler than the breath of seagulls. Some families, visibly torn by the pressure to enjoy their time out, are making their way to the aquarium, a couple blocks out of sight. I feel a thread tug at my chest, suggesting to follow. 

Stepping into the lobby of the aquarium floods me with memories of a childhood I had forgotten. The wide open space and vaulted ceiling magnified every footstep and excited sound. I remember being that excited once, not even to be at the aquarium necessarily, but to be in a space this vast— to stretch my arms up and still be so hopelessly far from the ceiling. A couple of oversized crustaceans hang from thick wires above. Inside even further, the penguin enclosure welcomes visitors immediately. About a dozen of the fellas hang out on the rocks, while a few attract the bulk of the attention by swimming. I used to squeeze my way through the throng of folks and press my whole body against the glass, wishing I could swim with them. Once I never left, and my family made it around the entire aquarium before I noticed how much time had passed. Something about the miniature world behind the glass— like a train set, or a snow globe— made me want to live there, though there was neither sun nor any change of season. 

 The rest of the aquarium is how I remember it, or at least, how I expected to remember it. The sucker fish made its offensive public display, the octopus hid in a cave, likely overwhelmed by its limbs, and the starfish felt calloused and cold when I reached in the water to touch it. Moving around wistfully, I soon became tired and warm from the wet air and mass of bodies. I find a door leading to a balcony overlooking the ocean. A neat little stream of water independent of the sea rushes a few feet below the balcony, an ornate exhibit of modern engineering. Where the stream retreats back into the building, an albatross is perched, patiently waiting for some food to come swimming by. Heartbreaking. How long does it wait? I don’t stick around for the answer. I have done enough waiting of my own to know the answer: too long. Fed up with water, and now noticeably hungry, I leave the waterfront, wandering toward another hub of memories— Chinatown.

Most of it looks more unfamiliar now than it did even then— the dressed-up corpses hanging in the windows, the occasional fish-tank luring tourists inside, the dilapidated public housing for the elderly, a nearby methadone clinic, and a coffee shop on nearly every corner. The usual smell of garbage was lightly garnished with the faint, sweet smells of hot meals. Passing a sewer grate was particularly pungent. A stranger squawks for my attention but I keep moving, remembering what my father told me. You look friendly, he said, and others will take advantage of you. Eventually I reach the dingy little coffee shop I am searching for, aptly called “Coffee Shop.” Their “Big Buns”— stuffed with pork, egg, water chestnuts, and a couple other flavorfuls— used to be as big as my head. Cheap and effective, my father and I would eat here once a week, just the two of us. Mom didn’t like venturing into Chinatown very often, even if Coffee Shop was on the outskirts. She didn’t like going anywhere very much.

The kind woman behind the counter stuffs my plastic bag with a couple of sponge cakes— she was always doing stuff like that. I thank her and wave goodbye, walking determinedly toward the one location I have yet to visit. The peripheries of my journey start to darken, like the sky as the bottom rim of the sun disappears behind the horizon. Darkening, but still plenty of light by which to navigate. Shoving through a sudden gust of wind, crossing the intersection where I first took the stairs down to the subway, the same set of stairs I first climbed when our family moved here so many years ago. I look up at the same crooked buildings I looked up at then. This time, garish scaffolding blots the view, set up to catch crumbling bits of building. So much falling apart. I follow the panicked flock of pigeons swooping from the architectural pockets down toward the grass, taking a seat on a bench beside them. The air clots with the sounds of perpetual motion. I sit very still, unnoticed. The sun is now gone, the grass whistles, and the night sky, tinted orange from the glow of the city, hold a big pair of yellow eyes.

Sunday, January 29, 2017

Drift

Our days
crack apart
like ice.

I over here:
you, there;
we float

farther,
swept down-
river,

naturally,
serenely,
diverging.

Saturday, January 28, 2017

Dishwasher

One after another,
the stacks
spotted with sauce
pile up.

Load after load,
the sun slow-dances
across the blue
ballroom.

Until
the water runs cold
as an executive
order.

Friday, January 27, 2017

too slow

Angel comes round the corner
wilted, rapidly deflating

this night is going soooooooo
slow

he says
gesturing grandly to the clock

says it's not even seven yet
i eye the prized

clock cocking my head
watching for shifts in

Angel as he readjusts
his bearings learning

the true time
twenty after seven

and sudden quick-drive
of being thrown forward

through your life
one whole hour

the dismay dawning,
this night

he says
is going tooooo

fast
and now [like

now and always]
i'm behind

Thursday, January 26, 2017

oh my god

Oh my god, America.
You're seeing this, too.

It's worse than we feared.
I don't know what to do.

Each day
another slew of surreal headlines,
another liberty stripped,
a picture of men making decisions,
another police brutality clip.

Relinquishing our national parks
to them that build and milk.
Filling every cabinet position
with billionaires and their ilk.
Speaking at a memorial service
about the size of crowds.
Size, size, size.

See the trajectory:
how much goes past
that we cannot allow.
We are living a history
that must be excised.

It is enough
just to live through it,
yet not enough.

It is enough
just to know its evil,
yet not enough.

It is enough
to read, to speak,
to see, to trust what you see,
to not be convinced otherwise,
to despair whether time flies,
yet not enough
when it festers, when it gloats,
when it turns out and votes,
for those in hiding or
those on their way in boats,
for those whose family crossed
or were forced here in boats,
for those who never arrived
but been here all this time,
for whosever hopes are snuffed,
for them who have died.

Oh my god, America.
Just barely gotten started,
and already losing heart.

The hydra pipeline,
cut down and split in two.
We must meet our ethics,
do what we said we'd do.
We must harbor more
than our resolve
when the police squads
come sweeping through.

We must find our cause,
what wishes us to be sure,
and firm, and true,
and go after that
with freak focus.
We can't do it all.
But we can do one thing well,
we can speak our piece.
We've all gotta be freaks.

We knew he'd cry fraud
if he lost.
Who knew he'd cry fraud
just to strip voting rights
even more, at any cost?
We shake our head in public,
disguising our disgust.

What's the point of being free
if we can't afford to create art?
What's the point of being me
if I can't stomach my part?
What's itching the rich
to plunder all that they see?
Who's hedging their hegemony?

You can't arrest journalists
for giving witness to protest.
You can't ban scientists
from saying what we must protect.
You can't gaslight a nation
with the fallacy of 'alternate facts.'
You can't fool us into believing
our principles aren't under attack.

The locker-room monster
cuts funding to fight domestic violence.
The locker-room monster
commits atrocities in total silence.

Fuck your wall, Donald.
Forget the insoluble border,
set thine own house in order.
Like an insufferable pet,
it takes after its dear owner:
self-defeating and inhumane.
And it would cost so much more
than the billions we can't afford.
It would cost us the lamp
at our golden door.

Women's bodies
are none of your concern.
When will you come up with a plan
to keep millions from becoming uninsured?
When will the jig be up,
and we can see your damn tax returns?
You've made us feel like shit.
Now it's your turn.

You lied
when you said you'd surround yourself
with the best
to make up for your stunted mind,
so it didn't come as a surprise
when you surrounded yourself
with the richest, whitest,
most supremacist
folks you could find.

DeVos never felt the load
of taking out a life-crippling loan.

Carson knew he wasn't fit to be on deck,
but I guess he figured, aw what the heck?

Rex the fossilized tyrant of Exxon Mobil,
ain't an SoS supposed to be knowledgable?

Sessions guaranteeing criminal justice
won't wend its way except through us.

Bannon's delusions spewed in a monologue
out the decaying mouth of our demagogue.

Pruitt sued the EPA fourteen times,
obliged to oversee its violent decline.

We knew he didn't care for the land.
We knew he'd lend his tycoon buds a hand.
We knew he'd mock popular demand.
We knew there was nothing to be made great.
Anyone who thought someone else
would take care of this,
it's a little too late
to take your head out of the sand.

But we need you anyways.

Need you to tie yourself to the time
that you were always a part of.
Need to get heavy with love.
Need to make checklists of boring stuff.
Need to crystallize and criticize.
Need to forge and fight and fuss.
Need to feel all these eyes on us.

I won't ask you to give up yourself.
I won't point to the books on your shelf.

But when the better days are upon us,
it will have been worth it to keep our promise.

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

WRAP YOU IN THE RAGS OF RESTLESSNESS

My gifts, with
good grace surface
un-hinted, a paltry
parting blow, behold:

INSECURITY
doin' the bruised jig
of what's wrong with me

LOATHING
foaming from the orifice
fit for public office

REGRET
having strained, stained,
taking great pains to get here

SHAME
for floated dollar, for ruinous
cellar, for dreaming of hell

All yours! Ain't they cute?
Shoot, I'm gonna miss em.
Take em before I change my mind.
Don't feed em after midnight.
They are liable to alternate.
They piss everywhere.

And if one of em dies
the rest go too.

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

THROWING PUNCHES BECAUSE YOU CARE

Other cannibalistic
tendencies include:

Singling
out the kid
with a weird haircut
so they feel included.

Wanting
to hug the anxious
teddy-bear-man
on the bus,
though he may
go home and read
Breitbart.

Creating
art while killing
time.

Distributing
50,000 copies of a
Save the Rainforest
leaflet.

Haunting
the home you grew
up in.

Stowing
aboard a rundown
blimp.

Desperately
clinging to that thing
which you convinced
yourself would
do the trick.

Monday, January 23, 2017

GUESS I'LL BE THE ONE THAT HOLDS MY SALIVA

No, allow me. 

My mouth 
is furnished anyway
with the deepest 
basins and grooviest
grooves. Basically
it's been busting
records with its
voluminosity,
and we weren't 
even sure that was 
a word.

My gums 
know what's up. 
They have come out
from under the table
stuck to the underside
of a new fashion.
Harboring wet.
Gettin' slick with 
the prickly task
of holding back.

Really, 
this one's on me. 
Overclocking
my glands to meet
these nervous demands. 
Puttin' my tongue
in a tizzy, tincture
au naturel, lucky
me, should I ever 
get thirsty, there are
barrels of liquid
bullion— right here, 
let me show you...

a little closer...

Sunday, January 22, 2017

Inward

Involuntary
heaves, stutters of
muscle. Peripheral
quakes and ocular
mist, a thump somewhere
in the belly, swelling
of anchor ankle, another
signal shrugged, tags of
grit which get you
killed. Sturdy
cage mistakes
dust as its essential
endeavor, same as it
ever was.

Saturday, January 21, 2017

Given Up For Glad

You don't understand,
I say, not understanding.

You can't see the forest
through the trees, 
is about the easiest way
I admit not seeing,
for my calm confidence
is the practiced product
of equilibrium's
delirium.

You've given up,
she says, more aggravated
than disappointed (for being
denied any resolution), as if
there was ever something
in my grasp to give
up.

I have,
conceding for sake
of simplicity. Though 
it occurs constantly 
without warning:
the shiver-triggers,
my constitution
uncrumbling from
shallow wondering,
before I figure,
once again and again
and again, it must be
best this way.

Friday, January 20, 2017

Optimal Setting

I was not frightened
by the pine tree's
pinnacle, despite
the accelerating height
and circling scarves.

I did not demur
at the prospect
of some civil underwater
engineering project,
though I have no
relevant exoskeleton.

Who thunk it
over thrice, these
frenetic articulations
of an unparalleled
funkhouse?

Furlough
the preferable;
gobble preference;
else you'll find
at the apex
there's no bottom
to your madness.

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Frequency

Good to get lost when pushed away from
the crater's lip rouging cheeks with magma
burnt by buoying of boyish traumas some
selfish business in the black help me mama

I can't rehearse for opening but merely unleash
my talents in tangential trips through the maze
of guilty last measures making matters hellishly
interlaced smoothing my fulcrum with a glaze

Purple my laurels with permanent abeyance
and oversalt my future to help the days digest
a mountaintop pitch pierces forgetful silence
as fingertips slip from her silhouette 

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Waddle

Took a quick look
at the jagged outline
of the landscape
over Baseline,

and bit my lip
crossing under it,
imprinting the scene
for my bitter

brew, the scalding
stir of occasions
where I gasped
at the view,

pinned within
a postcard,
two ducks
crossing over

to reach water,
crossing yet
still arriving:
dwarfed.

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Stupor

Every moment
of your life
is music:
then one day,
either by
accident
or because
of something
(unknowable)
you done,
the music:
gone.

Monday, January 16, 2017

I Should Be Going

Gray sky unveils no discernible demeanor
for me to imitate so I keep facing straight ahead
at the unfettered frosted curb still snowing

obscuring my tracks though melted flakes gain
no traction on cracked embouchure as we were
building ourselves up for another dumb show

too smart for low roads too crooked for high
ways subletting trick decks exceptionally fickle
with our expectations accosting guessing

hostage or else dealt in by knowing even
if the doorbell descended as an arachnid
kiss and I could live forever oblivious

who'd want that subsiding upside-down
like a bat rejecting moonshine sterilizing eyes
with darling winged wash of fruit flies

you see I never embarrass my loneliness
or burden my buried sighs so thank you for
making this room and all but now is the time

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Crotalus Viridis

Coiled
in nest, telling
myself it never
mattered.

Battling
jealous generals
on the anniversary
of their deaths.

Vacancies
on the shelf.

Retreating
further, further
into envenomed
mirth.

Worthwhile
enterprises
scatter like
cockroaches
at the flick
of a switch.

None's done.
Whose blues.
What's cut.
Let's bet.

Gone or flown.
Hiss or miss.
Forgotten, known.
Led or dead.

Image and image.
I am stuffed
with bulging images,
imagine that.
Swallowed once
seasoned with history.

Histrionics
and swollen appendages.
Rife with belated
bruises from grating
loss.

Very serious,
the serial error.

El anillo 
de la vida.

My tail:
so tasty. 

Friday, January 13, 2017

Plestiodon Skiltonianus

Creature
comforts released
into wild,
never held again.

Repent, lather, repeat.

Stumble
through feathered
hoops,
some scaly thing
rampant
in the coop.

What
gave
way?

Undone
from giving
given been got
gotten so rotten
rotting, gotting
live or get die.

Towels brew
mildew in a disused
cornerthere go my
soggy hopes hoping
stuff to grow
from that dank chamber.

I writhe and hiss
in the folds of my stink.

Not minding reeking
for a week or three.

So long as my nose
does not relax its grip
on the faint stench
of survival.

A livid living thing,
dispossessed by animal
desires to reproduce.

If fade from this world,
let my dick be the first
thing to be cocked,
shaved, snipped, shaded,
inundated, separated,
in any case
no longer needed.

Thursday, January 12, 2017

Bufo Boreas

Wretched
prince-to-be,
the words you curse
in private
pimple your
future's complexion.

Your good sense:
gone; your goodness
wasted; your good
decisions, devastated.

Sucking the poison
from every cut,
only to swallow
every drop.

Dramatic.
Derelict.

Demonic.

Ribbeting
nasty gutterals.

Guillotine
rematerialized
from spit, slurring
and gnashing of gums.

Drumming
its finger-blades.

Skin shrivels up
trying every method
of escape.

What can you do,
if live you really must?

Meditations

I.

The return at last
to a reflex-clad
armament of improvement.

Escaped
before the glue
sets.

II.

Ice cubes,
plus morning's
unfinished coffee.

Yo ahogarse 
en un rio
derritiendo
del café 
frio.

III.

My feeble show
may not be wholly
appropriate,

but I am keen
to make a fool
of myself
for sake of my schooling.

IV.

What day is it!?

V.

You, throw me your eyes.

Forget what you had planned,
acquaint yourself with dark,
divisible forces, for eye, lo
siento, necesito tus ojos

for my indelible look of
surprise.

VI.

Por favor
trátame 

amablemente.

VII.

A chunk of soap
sits at the foot of my bed,
lucky to have been left
behind.

My notebook sleeps.

Neither have proven
to be any good to me.

Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Corrective Care

Tender exterior,
meet your superior,
your prattle prod,
your two-bit
topologist banter.

Follicles rebel
and turn up
at the perimeter.

Bathrooms,
open yet private
care corners,
must often be white
to let the light
bring out your
imperfections.

Peel away.
Prettify the vase
that inhales
every runaway petal.

Excavate yesterday's
nutrition, don't let
the disappointment
sink in. Let sink
run amok with pink,
let pink be apropos.

Take some pills.
Boil some water.
Clip a few hairs.
Scrub out the dirt.
Perfume the pain.
Create some stuff.

Care not
for what is enough.

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

control for (x)

trudge-tub days
defers molasses
rotisserie delays
rondo remorso
increments locks
of feathered horn
of twirl of vitamin
of vital blaring orgy
resists culmination
subsides over skin
flaring seminal scene
conveys no meaning
dubs joint delusional
progress faring less
as ever as ever 
toasted most callous
crust bested by 
feral touch tests
total weight limit
of bone esplanade 
over-explaining cascade
daring drudged-up
hyper-controlled
experiments to end
with the tally empty
as a church parking lot

Monday, January 9, 2017

Seven Shades of Outrage

I.
Plucked deep
below scabbed skin
of the arbor,
a low blow note born
out of winter's warm
caress.

II.
The egg-shaped
office shudders,
loathing imprint
from the asses
of the monsters
who sat there
before.

There will
be more.

III.
The stars are out!
They're not fooled.

The clouds: moving!
They've somewhere
they best be going.

Lips purse, indefinitely
gesticulating distaste,
flickering gestures
of pain.

IV.
Kick habit drenched with acceptance.
Knot spirit shredded to ribbons.
Do what you know is right.
Not what you think does less harm.

Yes I am talking to myself!
Mostly always! And mostly always
I am also talking to you!

V.
The latecomer geese are climbing.

I succeed only where I have failed,
and fail only by trying.

VI.
Forgive my selections of outrage:
they are toes being dipped
into a tempestuous pool.

They are all
I can manage to do.

VII.
The sky darkens.
I have been watching it
without knowing.

Tufts of light's breath
lingers over yonder.

Where I'll be looking
is where I want to be.

Sunday, January 8, 2017

the kids are guided into class by their shepherds

honey
           comb
                      
chamber m aid

 my story strips 
                                fortify rotted 
                 suction cups

over
          f   l   o   w  of root          canal

gashes      our        galoshes

who told you
        you could escalate

who adorned you
        with pixie lated hooks

caught between
           streams of kids

book
            ended by burly
   life                    guards

(another 
amber alert)
     
we sub
             merged
     into                matted 
             bushes

who let you
         let so much 
                blood

who woke up 
     thinking
              today no think

who in
     dulge de
                   luge

cross legged 
                     on tiles
                     recanting my best 
           stories

sliding with 
                                             gusto 
                   through packed snow

         brainless & dangerous 
your spirit 
                                plays inside me

another diorama                        of skits
i am sad                                  to see go

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Variations on a Dream

I.

This is what I wrote
when I was sleeping,

except instead of words
there was only
empty, a space
I knew you could love.

II.

In there:
nothing worth telling.

Only the words
crawling out of my mouth,
unable to be spoken
any faster,

twisting into smoke.

III.

So adorably stupid,
the thought:

I cannot move,
as if I were in a dream.


IV.

There, there.

Geese fly off
in a shape that
shifts and folds
like the calligraphy
of veins.

V.

Estoy siempre
en la pasada.


VI.

Into frigid night
we dispersed,
trusting we
would never
forget.

We did forget.

VII.

I thought it meant,
in the way.

It doesn't.

Friday, January 6, 2017

Lancelot

He felt cruelty and cowardice in his heart, 
the things which made him brave and kind.

Every tilt went his way,
and every soul knew his name,
though he never felt fit
to love himself without blame.

Every violent cur knew his armor,
and ran fearing his relentless blade.
He spared the lives of wicked men
though it put his conscience in a rage.

His face, they say, was barbarous,
gnarled like vines in a crumbling well.
The people knew and adored him despite,
but could not salvage the ties to himself.

He set out to quest in the name of his King,
attempting to escape the eyes of his Queen.
But the noble fool couldn't help his romance,
and sent every prisoner to kneel at her feet.

The rest buckles beneath history.
His name sparkles in every child's mouth.
He who loved his King, and his Queen even more,
but blamed himself for the fall of Camelot.

Thursday, January 5, 2017

Human Down

It was not
so bad a night:
fine-tuning the playlist,
a silver G harmonica
crossed off my wish-list,
only a few fleeting
moments of searing,
craving, let-down
of classic not-having.

Then I relented,
to pick back up again
in the after-sleep.

Seized awake
by my crotch contracting,
I groped my way
up the basement stairs,
unaware of how lucky
I was to ascend
unassailed by darkness.

As it streamed out
my body, my body
shuddered, faltering
as if it was being robbed
of its only source
of conductivity.
My chest shriveled up
like a clementine
untouched too long,
and my eyes,
though open,
lost their quality
of light. I
trusted them.
And fell.

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Brotherly Straits

They call hacks, understandably
distraught when they catch glimpse

of the new plumber brothers, killer tunic
plus fairy, arcane rune of imperceivable

synergy squeezing the juice out of every
cooldown. Rubbing their rumps, sore

losers flail their transparent rulebooks,
sputtering out unimaginative analogies of

hermits and shells, horses and knights, all
sorts of well-tried combos whose fairness

derives from never switching shoes, a trifle
unbecoming of champions. Should it stink

for the sloth-reflexive, for the single sperm
that carries the family name, for the brute

mannered or staccato'd speaker, suppose
it stinks. Our way was long overwrought

with taunts, glares, and occasional threats
of fratricide, overcome by several hundred

miles or so. Now at the dawn of our hacked
existence, we let lean on one another, as

brothers have and ought, and if they think
us formidable now, probably best not to let

them know we have only just begun our part,
victories beyond reckoning are still in store.

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Undercity

Beneath,
the walls yawn
and open
like a cat's mouth.

Tunnels wend
through cathedral air.

Moths
zapped by iridescent
backs.

Rank files
of cabinets
stuff the mezzanine.

Gnashed
bodies become
sleeping bags
for the unsuspecting.

Fingertips tap
light notes
on the breathy
organ,

troubling
silence with a throb
of sound.

Insects sleep, all of them.

A warm wind
rises
through a honeycomb
of antechambers,

filling the crevice with
bone-white,
cloud-grey
blood.

Musicians twirl
their instruments of flame,
crisping music.

Months are crunched
underfoot.

An orb of light
patrols the intestines.

Bait.

Barley and fennel
are the national flowers.

The moon seeps.

All the books
are full of pictures.

Every
face contorted
with pleasure.

Monday, January 2, 2017

Winter Vermin

Taciturn gargoyles
hold vigil each night,
tucking mulch

into the edges
of flowerbeds. Vying
for partial custody

of persimmons
snipped into confetti,
they totter over

the bawling bushes,
with rude artillery
de ruido, raking

in disgust with
their dust-dance,
curling violin strings

with the crook
of su dedos de piedra,
vermin de invierna. 

Those mute inventions
surf through pipes
and whittle my sleep,

leaving tiny parcels
of what the day
should bring.

Sunday, January 1, 2017

There!

Embarrass yourself,
embalm the shell
you sell short with
outrageous acts,
stuck to chest
as bells tacked
to a sweater.
A few days
of well-meaning,
full-hearted
and dumb
display,
and you might
move through
life better, or,
at least,
they will begin
to know you,
they of course
beginning
and ending
with yourself.