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poems from 2024 and 2025 |
Happy Mother’s Day, I Promise Despair rarely harbors itself here. Keenly aware when someone is not a worthy match. A mindful boxer who relaxes the gloves to let his opponent stagger and sway, considering if the occasion truly calls for another strike. Or maybe, like blood moon skies in this aging universe, I am just too preoccupied to notice when someone is turning out the lights. Today, it’s the single-blade razor leaving an ingrown hair on my cheek, and the fact that someday no one will remember how my legs once tread against second city streets. And the conversations those passing faces shared about home winemaking as if they were the first to unfasten stems and split open grapes. In that same way, as I trim and prune these poems and pick the plump, unscarred words The ones that nearly release themselves from the vine. Avoiding things like corner bakeries And Christmas at Macey’s I want more, but I am less If you feel lost in what traffic is left, just know that at one point there was so much more of me. Like the crumbled church on Jefferson that came down tonight without a soul knowing. Architecture composed a century ago Welcoming a century’s worth of sun Through stained glass windows that witnessed So many despair and grow And stand and drink down grapes It’s hearing her state in the past tense, “I always was a pretty good actress.” And the similar desperation that washes over me like decades when I think about weeds reclaiming brick sidewalks. The doom of paint chips flaking from pantry shelves, pared off like splinters from knives Shawn and I used to whittle in the woods. There, between the trees that you loved With an affection that glimmered in each tear Shed as the timbers staggered And swayed After a century of Daylight filtering through their limbs Striking the pages of letters you wrote before there was anything of me. I have always wanted to love like you to have fallen not far from those oak branches And there’s still time to learn because, you’re not even young yet and your sharp eyes needle the whisker free. UPY2K My parents were unconvinced that computers forgetting how to use their calendars would bring our demise, but we still had Y2K food storage in our garage and we still piled into the Suburban headed north. It was just after Christmas. We took our favorite presents with us. That bridge was our Narnia wardrobe, transporting us to a mysterious spot where we were warned not to wander too far into the woods because a rapist lived there. His hideout huddled between black spruce and empty hound dog boxes And we carried pocket knives in Michigan and held our own at the Shipwreck and every stretch of forest contained snowmobile trails that siren-called us. Abandoned hunting lodges, battered shacks, and the inhospitable homes of trappers who, through chattering teeth, would babble on about how the arduous nature of life was occasionally suspended by a memorable kill now captured in gray staged photographs. Tales that grew like campfire flames. Our home away from home was a log cabin that had been modernized as much as anything in that forgotten land. White siding and duck hunt wallpaper. Steep stairs that creaked under footsteps far more than the ice on that forever frozen lake. We didn’t buy into the notion that widespread chaos was ever on the horizon, but upon learning that previous occupants had buried a fortune in the basement walls, all we wanted to do was dig. Dad discovered a few dirt encrusted coins, but my fortune from that musty space were his empty beer bottles that my brother and I would exchange at the video store down the hill for ten cents apiece. A rickety emporium where we repeatedly rented Little Giants and purchased Take Off Your Pants and Jacket. A dime at a time our burgeoning movie quote vocabularies and song lyric languages were born. Could I squint hard enough to pull the leading lines of Main Street back together? There, on the lakefront, maybe the neon bulbs of the Tally-Ho would reignite. Would the rush of Upper Peninsula air somehow bind together these lifetimes like the frozen fish filets stacked in the shanty? Sometimes a place can become a ghost even if I can still hear the call of the wild, and feel the frigid twigs snapping beneath the weight of the sled. Martha your bench a blank sheet a mind fervently fumbling over life and all of the decisions that require patient articulation as small as it sounds i wish i sat next to you close enough to hear you sing close enough to smell the flavor of your snapping gum as you stood stoic beneath the strains unbothered by the chemical encircled by the cure and i hope someone still has that sound that they carry it and will eternally raise and lower your expectations, and pillows, and swinging voices in a hushed room bent for prayer the downcast faces of expressionist poetry more hope than fear more acquainted with the richness of the past than the fragmented photo albums to come and the impact of your motionless presence still stirred these locked legs to stand in silent vigil never quite able to net measured words in that consolation haze of cigarette smoke and monarch milkweed death and life intertwined before me High Heat in Hanoi Jack started smoking in the army so that he could catch a break. Saying, “there’s no such thing as warm gloves” while clinging to still frames still floating in cigarette smog. the benefit of the mitten the passenger on the South Shore who came from Arizona and had once gone two full circuits on a bus route because she didn’t know when to get off. Unable to pull the trigger now braving foreign weather so she woke up early to check the schedule and her careful Willie Nelson braids telling everyone that she refused to ride this train all day, she was far from home and didn’t want to miss the ballgame.” Jack started drinking on the flight home guilt and pride, relief and remorse hands shaking from the warmth when sports had lost their charm and his lungs had lost the war |