Push, push November 18, 2008
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There was a push, push,
then a knock, knock.
No voice, a little breathing,
maybe exasperation.
Knock, knock, then again,
maybe a whimper like
“I know you’re in there,
you know I’m out here,
why don’t you answer?”
I didn’t choose to answer,
ensconced as I was
in a warm room.
The night was bitter
and I didn’t choose to
throw in with it.
I chose to be alone.
There was a push, push,
then a knock, knock.
No voice, a little breathing,
maybe exasperation.
Knock, knock, then again,
maybe a whimper like
“I know you’re in there,
you know I’m out here,
why don’t you answer?”
I don’t choose it, that’s all.
why can’t you let it go? November 16, 2008
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“why can’t you let it go?”
like a chorus to a song
that makes you sicker
each time you hear it.
so i’m not the first who
can’t take a joke
can’t get around the rocks
in the stream without
some accident some violence.
i don’t remember anyone
leaving an instruction book
on handling things thrown
or even tossed my way.
it’s turned cold and my coat
is worn and torn and due
for replacement but there’s
no money or time to fix it,
to fix anything it seems.
all the friends and whispers
from God just bounce off
like i’m coated with teflon
like i’m covered by kevlar
like a rock with a soft core
not molten but wet and damp.
yes, i hear your voice
but i can’t listen to the love in
“why can’t you get over it?”
And probably, you know November 13, 2008
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Part of the problem, probably,
too much swearing, too much smoking,
lost to too little thinking, too little awe,
but, then, it is, probably, unseen.
There are wide gestures of inclusion,
the kids love that stuff, probably,
more than I can stomach, pass the Pepto!
And it’s like rush hour traffic, lurching,
I mean lurching in a waltz probably designed
by lack of planning, too little thought.
Woozy and congested, I can’t smell a thing
then you ask how I like the food and, probably,
it’s great but it’s just as likely White Castle
for all I know, for all I can sense.
Rocking back and forth is a bit of a nervous tick
I think it’s indicative of some social disorder,
at least, or, probably something worse.
But, look, I’m going to step outside for a smoke,
contemplate the scene and probably, you know,
split.
Who are the jackals? November 13, 2008
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1
It is a barren orb, if it isn’t flat, if the science
is good, but how can you tell or truly know
when you’re too fascinated by fiction to discern truth?
Hold me up, then, and I will follow, for as surely as night
covers day, we will find security, discover peace.
2
Animals once too timid to confront us now are rabid,
dogs chewing and tearing, and there is no antidote
to their poisons, their ripping teeth laid bare.
The life we once had, we cherished, has slipped away
and who were the jackals that took her, devoured her?
Part of the Panorama November 12, 2008
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Part of the panorama of this moment
isn’t anything that I see at all.
I felt this thing like the last vestage of Fall,
like tumbling dream-like in a torrent.
But you didn’t come here to hear me ramble.
This is your time so I shouldn’t be self-indulgent.
It’s like I haven’t been aware, cognisant
and you being here is such a gamble.
These crossroads life brings us are blind drives
just over the rise or on the hillside curve.
I know what you mean I don’t have the nerve
and it’s true as I try to handle these fragile lives.
Part of the panorama of this moment
isn’t anything that I see at all.
I felt this thing like the last vestage of Fall,
like tumbling dream-like in a torrent.
And while you rest standing awaiting the subway
I gather dust on this dirt road west of Madison
and the Wisconsin cold blows through my transom
and, still, I’ll ask once more for you to stay.
Jolie said November 10, 2008
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“Go home,” Jolie said,
as cold as it was bold.
I was stunned then laughed
chagrined and nonplussed.
This was a way to hold her hand,
I thought, although ancient,
it was a way to do this, casually.
Drinking and smoking are fun,
Jolie, but their effects wear off,
and you are left with you.
I am not, and older and wiser,
I move to the next waif, in hopes.
Who would? November 8, 2008
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Candy stuck to formica,
it seemed like it had been there a long time,
but once a house is deserted, unless the documents exist,
how can you know? Does it matter who built with formica,
who left the hard candy in such a hurry, or carelessly?
Funny, the floor isn’t sticky, just dust, some dust bunnies
and cobwebs, spiders shuttling back and forth from
cabinet to floor, never knowing their cousins up by the ceiling
doing the exact same thing in an exact opposite pattern.
There is no smell of food or mold, almost like everything was taken
or nothing was here to begin with, and the light seems to have to
force its way through the dingy windows, half covered by shades.
So whoever was here didn’t dislike the light, maybe they welcomed it,
but when they left it didn’t occur to them to pull the shades.
They had no reason to be afraid of robbers, gave no thought to it,
they were sure to be back, they thought, so they didn’t bother.
Who would?
Looking out the kitchen window, facing the backyard, the swing
is intact, the plastic toys, plastic wading pool, plastic stuff,
tells me it was young children here, and maybe girls,
no sign of GI Joe or super-hero figurines, probably girls.
The color on the plastic had faded some so if they left on their own
it was either in the Spring or early summer and it would seem
they believed they would be back, not a some point in the future,
they would be back this afternoon, back for supper, back for bed.
A child doesn’t purposefully leave its favorite toys out, just out like that,
unless they believed they’d be back, no reason to put them away,
Who would?
So this is what goes through the dectective’s mind as he sorts out things.
He doesn’t know the lifestyle or particulars at the outset but we expect,
no, demand that he get to the bottom of this…this apparent injustice.
And we are the audience to his procedure, due to TV news and cop shows.
We can’t think of a reason why he’d bother to grapple with this, we couldn’t,
Who would?
I miss him November 8, 2008
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When she said, “I miss him,”
it isn’t with melancholy or regret,
it’s the void of absence taking voice.
Not an easy thing to contain,
these parental feelings after the only son
heads off to college, happily separated
from parents but not unhappily.
Like his sister before him, he leaves a space
simply by being absent, and it wasn’t so long
ago we were tethered together so tightly
that any distance between us was unthinkable.
Today, it still is, but time and duty take us
to these separate places where we must be adults,
we must cling, but ever so loosely now,
no longer children, no longer co-dependent,
without ever truly being independent.
So when she said, “I miss him,”
it wasn’t with melancholy or regret,
it’s just the void of absence taking voice.
Just Sit November 8, 2008
Posted by vsap in Blogroll, Poetry, Uncategorized.1 comment so far
I waved off the server, no dessert tonight.
Deciding it was better to move outside, light a cigarette, and sit.
Just sit.
That’s not allowed anymore, really,
even in the throes of a slacker nation,
mere sitting is equal to laziness or inactivity, and
God forbid, taking a handful of moments and deciding to sit,
it’s just so careless.
And so it is in the era of cutting back and conservation
in the face of so many who urge me on to a new age liberality.
My cigarette and I are not conflicted
as we mindlessly burn, glowing hot but softly.
I can speculate on the nature of this,
I know the pundits and bloggers will even if I don’t,
there’s too many voids to fill, too many noises to make,
too much to be made of the mundane to let anything pass.
It could make me a star, if the time is right,
if I’m seen at the right moment by the right people
as they scan, cinematic eyes, glassy and gleaming.
I’m not tired or in the midst of some intense emotional storm,
I decided just to sit.
Something that will likely be criminal in that not-too-distant
Terminator-Blade Runner-Escape From New York future
we’ve been told for decades to prepare for.
Sometimes there is no preparation.
No amount of practice can prepare us for certain things.
So, take a moment, or a handful of moments,
and just sit.
This is YOUR President November 5, 2008
Posted by vsap in 2008 Presidential Election, Blogroll, US Politics, Uncategorized.2 comments
The political season is over. This blog will return to more gentle purposes. I did not vote for Barack Hussein Obama, not because of his name or race, but because of his lack of character and politics built on stone, with no root. So, here’s my final salvo, the quotes of the man 51% of Americans elected as President. Only God can save this great nation.
Here is your President:
“It’s not that I want to punish your success. I just want to make sure that everybody who is behind you, that they’ve got a chance for success too. I think when you spread the wealth around, it’s good for everybody.” —Barack Obama
“You go into these small towns in Pennsylvania and, like a lot of small towns in the Midwest, the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing’s replaced them. And they fell through the Clinton administration, and the Bush administration, and each successive administration has said that somehow these communities are gonna regenerate and they have not. And it’s not surprising then they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy toward people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.”
- Senator Barack Obama (April 6, 2008)
“Let’s be clear,” Mr. Obama said sternly. “What we’ve seen the last few days is nothing less than the final verdict on an economic philosophy that has completely failed.” – New York Times, Sep 17, 2008
“I know there are those who dismiss such beliefs as happy talk. They claim that our insistence on something larger, something firmer and more honest in our public life is just a Trojan Horse for higher taxes and the abandonment of traditional values. And that’s to be expected. Because if you don’t have any fresh ideas, then you use stale tactics to scare the voters. If you don’t have a record to run on, then you paint your opponent as someone people should run from. You make a big election about small things. And you know what – it’s worked before. Because it feeds into the cynicism we all have about government. When Washington doesn’t work, all its promises seem empty. If your hopes have been dashed again and again, then it’s best to stop hoping, and settle for what you already know. I get it.” -Barack Obama, from DNC acceptance speech
According to the Associated Press story, Senator Obama gave the little girl a brief explanation of his plan for universal health insurance coverage and improved education. Then he explained his view that the wealthy should pay the expenses of people who are not wealthy:
“We’ve got to make sure that people who have more money help the people who have less money,” Sen. Obama said. “If you had a whole pizza, and your friend had no pizza, would you give him a slice?”
Barack, the rock star, in Berlin:
“I know my country has not perfected itself. At times, we’ve struggled to keep the promise of liberty and equality for all of our people. We’ve made our share of mistakes, and there are times when our actions around the world have not lived up to our best intentions.” [Ed. note: I have no apology to Europeans, or anyone else for that matter]
And a final thought…
“Obama is a three-year senator without a single important legislative achievement to his name, a former Illinois state senator who voted ‘present’ nearly 130 times. As president of the Harvard Law Review, as law professor and as legislator, has he ever produced a single notable piece of scholarship? Written a single memorable article? His most memorable work is a biography of his favorite subject: himself.” —Charles Krauthammer