Saturday, October 26, 2013

It Pays The Bills





I want you to know
the light is on
where I reside
it is not dark
I do not hide
I abide my own rules
no demons to wrestle
no desires gone cold
bright enough to see to write
Whatever I am told
By voices  that come calling
To images that unfold
Eloquent moans from the inderground
Or Feeble musing by the less profound
Vaporous visages
Visiting
Knocking on a noggin
Maybe slow to open
But open just the same

It’s me
The shadow on your window shade
From the light cast by yellow vapor lamps on the blvd
There’s a lot of things a man should regret
Most I’d say is what he’s done to man
How barbarous They are
....okay, we...
...how cruel
and hurtful
and blind
To atrocity
But there are those
Might call it damn-lilly-squat-soft-thought
Or just plain
Victimism.
It’s the cruel view
The world in chaos
Carnivorous calamity
carnal culmination
Cravings
Ravings
Crude Carvings
Crass graffitti
Cave Paintings
Catastrophism

It’s me. I’m not here to cause you trouble
I just go where I’m told
...or land...by accident.
So, relax.
I can drift on down
That way...
follow the lights...
like I was never here
You never saw me,
never heard me through the door
The door you never answered
As I slipped by


I Hushed a whisper

‘The secret to the Secret,
And all the fruit it bore...’

But that whisper went unnoticed
Or was it sadly, just...Ignored ??

Damn man.
You came so close.
So slow to open
your mind.

There’s this guy down the street
Right around the corner
Going to pay him a visit
Much the same as you
Maybe this time he’ll listen
See, I’m his muse, too.
It pays the bills
And the bills are due.








Wednesday, October 23, 2013

TAKE ME HOME









Mary:  Have you seen how many pills Dad takes? My god!

Cara: The neighbor found him the other night. Weeping on the corner. Didnt know where to turn.

M: How'd he get out there? My god! Who, Hal?

C: (shakes head) Hobart...

M: Shit.

C: Is he alright? ...Dad? Dad alright?

M: ...wiid swings, Hard to tell what's him or the meds talkin. He swings hard in every direction...he called me a bitch whore cunt last week. that all I wanted was his money...stealing his life... and I was a disgrace to the family name. I cried for a day...maybe two...that one dug deep. But the nurses love him...just the sweetest old man....

C: Playing his fucking games again...

M: Always.

C: Should we get them all reviewed? Interactions or combinations? Side effects...

M: Yeah..again? Then what? Another round of something new that makes it worse and gives him grief. He's got enough going on. We've been through this enough...

C: What if we take him off?...Entirely?

M: He asked me that the other day. Woke up from his nap , his head still on the pillow, like it came to him in his sleep, he asked me straight out 'what if I stop the pills? Will I be in pain?'

C: I've seen him. He winds up tight like a ball of ropes, curled up inside himself clutching on to who-knows-what? Just tight stringy muscles, like ropes  wrapped around sticks, tightly bundled. Is he eating?

M: No. Some days he's ravenous, but, in general, no.  His day nurse...

C: Diane?

M: Yes.

C: I like her.

M: Me too. She asked if anyone has told him he can 'let go, now'? I told her that I've told Dad dozens of times - 'if i could end this for you, I would'. He was hurting and begging to go. I think he's afraid. I'm not going to judge him...

C: Says he wants to go see Mom...his 'dear wife'... that's what he calls Her to the nurses...what bullshit.

M: I know. But they had some good years in there...

C: Poor Ma. She didn't know.

M: Poor Mom. That fucking disease...

C: Should we take him off? ... Hospice?

M: I think we should have that talk.

C: With him? You think...?

M: I'd say, in the morning...when he's clear. He drifts out after lunch, and is a bastard at night.

C:Same pattern as last time.

M: Only worse. Less coherent. More angry. He can't tell 'sleep' from 'awake' so his anger carries over...

C: He said "this isn't the way it's supposed to be...".
 I said '...god doesn't let us make plans..." He calls me a smartass cunt bitch whore.

M: (ugh)...he's so fucking hurtful

C: He says 'If My Mother could see me now...she'd take me straight home!'

M: Momma's boy. Scared little Mama's boy.

C: Mean ass bully

M: ...and a mean ass bully,

Somewhere along the line, something got damaged. It was all rearranged....all deranged...wrong, yet erased from memory, just the same. In the grave before life's passing, a sad and lonely witness, to his own declining stage and ultimate demise.

RISK IT ALL








There’s a blank page

Had to be when this all started
But look’it here
The blood on the page up here…
See it?
…In the corners?
A spray? A spatter?
I suspect it starts there
From the outside
Then works it’s way in
First a papercut
Perhaps, a bit of a nick
Drip. Drip…drop, by drop
You start to flow,
grows Outa control
and the next thing you know
you got guts on the page
and your heart
splatters dead center
still pumpin’

...and we just started talkin’ 
now the Real work begins

You start squeezing, smearing, and smashing
Squashing. Splaying. Splutters …
splurts like farts
no time to wonder
The madness all that matters.
Oh, man, you can thrash around
But the most you can muster
No matter how profound 
Is killing yourself…You know that, man?
And for what?
Some schlock hustler?
Be they Small scale, big time, or huge
They'll just cook you up 
and let you stew
Eat you up
Pick your bones
Cast your carcass to the crows…
Yet you’d die for the chance.
So You do.


Saturday, October 12, 2013

Perfectly Clear










...pretty soon you'll have to be wary of who your FRIENDS are, because they will start 'tangent-targeting' you for Likes, dislikes, reviews....creepy stuff.
Big Brother, under the covers.
You never want a FRIEND.
Surely don’t need lovers.


I am a man of no culture. Not dwelling in the web. Hidden, airborne like vapor. Not a trail to follow. Nor a scent to sniff. What appears structured, just hollow. Not a Who. Not an If. No culture, no face to render, no credit...cash tender.

“He looked like……..”
“He was……..”
‘Yes I saw him, but not really...”
“Yes , for awhile, we were face-to-face. No I can’t describe him. Not at all.”
“I couldn’t tell you…”
“No, no one else was there. I was alone. I am sure. Saw no one…”
“We have surveillance.
“That wasn’t him.”
“I swear he wasn’t there.”

And these were the eyewitnesses.
This is how you have to be.
Spill your guts on the network and they learn about you
Too much about you
Your odd notions,
families
failures
emotions
frailties
fantasies

 ....and finances

Blab away
Easy prey
Online each day
No one cares
what you have to say
But they...
They do.

Best stay silent
Just Go away

Don’t scan
Don’t swipe
Burn
Don’t shred

Stray out, but if you must
Wear hats 
or bland disguises
in streets
shops
malls
or city bus

Don't borrow
Don't buy
Don't obsess
Don't possess

Change your look
…your identity to unlikely
nothing unexpected
but change it often
go unconnected

strip naked
go bare
Meld, blend, bleed,
unseen

Live somewhere barren
off a highway
Too long…
Too out of the way
No reason to go looking
And every reason to stay
Hidden in a desert
A lizard on a rock
There if you look hard
Gone before you can
Just a sense of exit
A flash before it’s gone

Yet I am sure they are looking
Spy sat’s overhead
Chameleon reeling on their screen
Drones driven to distraction
No target to target
Growing bored
by what’s ahead
Choppers shop the wasteland
Too hot to shop too long
Too grueling for the resolute
Backbreaking for the strong
As far away as forever
And still stay upon the sphere
They won’t cease looking

                                                                       
...when
I've always been right here.


                         

Friday, August 23, 2013

Next Up


I remember I went downstairs
For a smoke around midnight
Following the girl with thin thighs
With nowhere to hide inside skin-tights
She spun while banishing a tear …swipe.
And said “just ‘cause you riff, don’t mean you Write
Just cause you jive, don’t make it wrong
Just make it better. Just have a ball.”
And she was right.
That night, she was right.

What choice did I have?
Some people…sprinters
Some folks, joggers
I can be a broke-down plodder
So what?
Just get somewhere
That’s all that matters.

So I plod onstage
…hating Mic’s
Verging on panicky pee - pants
while drowning in stage fright
But being totally Ignored
Was my plight
...no recognition
......no applause
............. sitting there
Just backs at the bar
In heady patter chatter
Until I capped it
And it squealed
FEEDBACK
made heads snap
Back to me
the fool in the corner
At the back of the room
Lights fade
attention paid
they stare now at this Empty Shell
while one drunk yells
‘What the hell you got, Fool?’
That’s when I knew
I was Up.

Friday, August 9, 2013

MYRA


I came home that night. I drove straight through. Somehow I drove, was still alive and had not killed anyone in the process. I sat in the car for awhile, motor still running, thanking god, and being overcome by the fumes of exhaust in stale air-conditioning, swirling with the aroma of urine in my 'travel latrine', and the cold, old, greasy food wrappers abandoned on the passenger floor. I shutdown, fell out the door, and stumbled to the middle of the lawn, where I finally drew a cleansing breath, only to be overcome by the heady smell of  the night's warm valley bouquet -the orange blossom, jasmine, Bermuda blend pungent in the light mist drifting from the neighbor's sprinklers, when it finally hit me, and I dropped to my knees, there on the front lawn, the steady swish of traffic slipping by the boulevard behind me. I caved, I crumbled and I wept. Whatever it was that needed releasing, finally released. He was dead and I was dying. Men younger than I were dying, and I was mortal. Young and invincible, both of us, so cock sure and arrogant, crumbling now. My pride shattered…He...gone to Dust.

A woman approached. I had routinely seen her on the street walking her dog. She had seemed kind…her smile. She was polite and always said hello, no matter my state or mood. But now she knelt beside me and put her arm around me, and when I lurched at her touch, she held me tighter, refusing to release me.
“You are in pain. It’s okay,” she whispered, but did not try to shush me, rather she seemed to encourage the tears, which now sprung from fissures in the deep bedrock of my soul.
“I know,” she whispered, “I know.”
“You never knew him, he…” I blubbered.
“This isn’t about him. This is about you. This is your pain, and it is not a singular pain, this is life’s pain and it has caught up with you and it is having it’s day. Let it. Don’t bother trying to stop it.”
“Not here, ‘ I said ashamed at the show I was providing the passing parade, their headlights, prying eyes in the night. How would this scene play out in their heads?
“Let me help you. Let me open your gate, and get you to your door. It is okay, really it is.” I could not resist her kindness, her encompassing warmth. She helped lift me, first to a knee, then upright and she steadied me while I found balance over legs that seemed no longer willing to support me. We stumbled forward.
“What’s your name?” she asked.
“Mac…Mac Bivens.”
"Hello, Mac Bivens….Myra Kleinman.”
“I am so sorry about this Myra…I…”
I told her the code and she opened the security gate. I leaned against the post for a bit of a rest.
“You are a broken man. It happens to each of us. It has happened to me. The epiphany. My husband, died…It’s the epiphany isn’t it, Mac?”
“It’s all so overwhelming and so very hopeless…”
“It is if you let it, but I know you had a reason to be here. We all have some worth. Draw upon that, know in your heart you made…”
“Ha! I made sitcoms. There’s no worth to my work. No real worth to my life. I fucked that u…I’m sorry, Myra. I apologize for my language. I think I can make it from here.” Then I noticed her bundles lying on the grass nearby where I had folded. She must have been heading home from the market when she found me. “Here, let me get straight for a second, and I’ll walk you home. You have things to carry, and you can’t leave them out here on the street…somebody…swoop‘em up”
“You are in no shape, Mac. Let me…”
“This very second I need a purpose. I need to move, to do something, even something mundane like lugging groceries. C’mon, Myra, be a friend and let me tote your bags. I was pretty good at it in the old days.”
“Well, if the bottle of wine is still intact …”
“Think I have met my quota tonight, dear, Myra.”
“Yes, of course. I understand. ” she said, and I sense she did know it well. She stepped away, letting me lean only on the post. I gathered myself and found I could walk with some minor integrity.


Her building, was one of the faux grand hotel styles, with the cold, austere, and uninviting lobby. As we waited for the elevator, apparently being held on a floor above, a couple approached from another lobby door marked Parking Garage.
“Oh, Mac. I want you to meet Imogene and Lester.”
“Hello.”
“Mac was so kind as to carry my bags home from the market…”
I was pretty sure I was reading distain on their faces and wondered what they thought might be going on between Myra and I, even though she was probably twenty years my senior.
“Did you take a tumble, ‘Mac’?”
“Hu..uhmm?” I followed her gaze down to grass and dirt stained pants, a result of my recent defeat.
“Oh, no, that….I tripped on the curb and..I guess you’re right. Myra came to my aid, and I am trying to return the favor”
I was overplaying my part, I held up the grocery bags as if I had just bagged her dinner. “…just bringin home the bacon.”
“So you were stumbling down the street...?” he asked.
"If that’s an inference to the fact that I am inebriated, then you are correct, however, I wasn’t stumbling at all. I was driving. From Palm Springs. I got here okay...”
Jackass!
Jerk.
"Oh!" Myra responded to their criticism.
“Guilty as charged.”
“Lester was a career LAPD officer, and Imogene worked in the DA’s office, so you best be careful who you confess to, Mac. And, Imogene, Lester?…Mac, here is a troubled young man in a lot of pain, he deserves some compassion…”
“Sorry, Myra, no compassion for drunk drivers, never…ever.”
“None,” he agreed. "I've seen too many victims, and I spare my compassion for their loved ones, not the killer behind the wheel."
The doors opened, we stepped in, and the rest of the ride was uncomfortably quiet. Did that transpire in just three floors? When the doors opened, Lester held them and allowed Myra to exit and for me to sheepishly tag behind, before Imogene and he did the same, turning down the hall in the opposite direction.
“Good night, Myra, you sure you’ll be okay? You have our number!” they called back, I'm sure for my benefit as well as hers. Their door opened and closed.
Myra was obviously rattled by the what had transpired. She had no way to prepare for it, and had discovered her attempt at being a good Samaritan had rudely backfired, to her own great embarrassment.
“Myra I apologize from the bottom of my heart. You are a dear soul and I’d like to make it up to you. To Imogene and Lester…this isn’t who I am…”
“Draw upon your own worth, Mac. Be better than this…I’m sorry for adding to your pain.”
“No it was I, who …Goodnight Myra”.

I set the groceries down next to the door, sensing her hesitation to open it and invite in more trouble. 
I rode down and stumbled home disgusted with the fool I had become.