Last Day
back to work again
holiday almost over
last day of free time
Last Day
back to work again
holiday almost over
last day of free time
Bad Dream
have you ever woken up
and realized that you were living
your worst nightmare?
Shadow Mark
shadows mark the time of day
and as the darkness grows longer
we know there isn’t much time left
to do the day’s chores
it is then that we hurry
at the end of the day
when we are tired
and our work suffers
when I see the shadows long
and the day nearly gone
I just lay down and get ready
for tomorrow’s sun will be brighter
and I will be rested and restored
Same Old, Same Old
the days go by one by one
hoorah, hoorah?
each is the same as the last
an encore for more
more of the past
means less of today
and less of a life
a groundhog day
without Andie MacDowell
for a wife.
who wants, who wants,
who wants more of that?
not me, not me
that’s all I can say
maybe it’ll change
when tomorrow begins
the sun will come out
and sorrow will end
I hope that’s what happens
I really do
because I’m getting too old
for this same old, same old
too, too old
for this same old, same old
Thanksgiving
I am thankful that I am healthy
that is what I wrote on thanksgiving
in second grade
I just recently found that note
must have been a school project
assigned by a thankful teacher
thankful for us kids
and thankful for a couple days off
I remember learning about pilgrims
and the nice indians
who shared a meal
if asked now
I would be most thankful
for all the meals I have shared
with friends and family
Flash
strobe lights
light the model
in (hopefully)
an unblink of the eye
butterfly lighting
beautifying beauties
producing portraits
to sell jewelry
in glossy magazines
Inside My Head
staring at the ceiling
listening to podcast interviews
too dizzy to stand
and bored and tired
thinking about my life
makes me sick
or maybe I’m sick
sick of thinking
sick of food without drink
sick of my incomplete life
Letter to Professor S.
Dear Professor S.,
I am sure that you don’t remember me. I was an unspectacular freshman in way over my head. I am writing to say, “Thank You.” I never told you (didn’t know at the time) how much your class would change my life. I got put in your class just by chance. It was the last English class left at the end of a long day of registration. Perhaps (probably) I wasn’t prepared. I’d never read much poetry, hadn’t had the intro class, never had a college writing course, but I showed up. Showed up not knowing what to expect.
You called me Mr. Paris on my first day of class. Many have done the same since, but you were the first to do it without condescension. Don’t know why, but it meant a lot to me. I was being addressed with respect, as an adult. I was honored and scared. Must I now live up to this newly proclaimed adultness. Wait a minute, I didn’t ask for this. I knew right from the beginning that I wouldn’t be coasting through this class.
You spoke to every student that day, asking each about his history, what classes they had previously taken, why they took this one, favorite poet and the like. As you went from student to student, each was answering with their long history of study, love of poetry and long list of poets that I had never heard of. It seemed like each persons list would inspire a few minutes of talk on related poems or poets. Everyone was coming together, speaking the same language. Then it came to my turn. I was honest. It was the only class available, never studied any poetry, and mentioned the only poets that I could think of, Frost and Poe. Then I shrunk into nothing as no one said anything. Nothing. Silence. Silence. Silence. And then you moved on, and I was forgotten.
I spent most of my time in your class curled up in my embarrassed ball of myself. Never said anything in discussion, but listened. Listened and wrote down every poet that anyone mentioned. Then I went home and looked up everyone of them at night. I was learning about Elizabeth Bishop, Bukowski, T.S. Eliot, Auden, Williams, Hughes, Plath, Ashbery, Stevens, Dickinson, and Dylan Thomas. Sestinas, villanelles, and sonnets, odes and free verse. For someone who had never read any of these, it was a mindful. I was stuffing as much as I could in hope of catching up to the rest of class. I never did, but it didn’t matter, I was hooked. I was hooked on poetry.
I am writing to thank you for getting me hooked. For taking this eighteen year old searching for something more than physics and showing him the world. Not just he world that is, but what an artist can create. The me that left your class was different than the one who entered. I knew that I was one of those creatives that I had been reading about. I would never be satisfied with the normal life, normal friends, and the normal path.
The journey that was started that class has kept me searching for almost twenty years. I don’t know where I would be if I hadn’t had your class, but I just wanted to let you know that I am happy that I did. I am happy that I met you. I might not have made much difference in your life, but you made a big one in mine.
Thanks,
Brian
Da Bears Suck
da bears
dey suck
dumb ass
ditka-less
re-ditka-less
lov and the boys
cut-ler
with no one
to throw
da bama
still rootin’
but it don’t matter
dem gonna
lose again
After All This
everyday I push you away
and you still ask how I am doing
I never return your calls
or pleasantries
I run when I see you in the hall
I hide from you
I mock you
and yet still
after all this
you want to be my friend.