January

Growing older
The colder the bones
Of my knees and shoulders
The stonier my feet
And my boots in retreat
The icier my spine
Ever sharper the incline
So it feels that in ageing
I’ve been climbing
Mount Everest
And losing my zest
Lay down to rest
Fixed to the summit
Green Boots at last

Dance of the Relentless

It’s raining and there’s no sky.
It’s snowing without crystal.
There’s a river without an eye.
There’s a place without stigma.

There are bodies without organs.
There are dogs without sight.
There’s a path through a woodlot
But it’s overgrown with rot.

There are conditions without hope
And wars without appeasement.
There’s a place without race
And of the pain we inflict, not a trace.

There are feelings without feeling
And living without being.
There are memories without shape
And shadows that escape.

It’s snowing and there’s no sky.
It’s raining into an open eye.
There’s a place without stigma.
There’s a river turned to crystal.

Before the Sacred was Legal

We were looking at an old art deco building
In the city of our youth
Both of us stoned on some excellent reefer
When my friend said “that building is holy”
Soon as he said it it happened
I saw the Metropolitan Building
Floating above its own foundation
Backlit by the summer moon
Glowing with nimbus light
And for a few moments it was holy
It was everything we’d ever loved
The years of our poetic friendship
Our city its streets its river of time
They all belonged to us
Without a police cruiser in sight

Thinking about Kenneth Patchen

Every December I reread Kenneth Patchen
His poems are like Christmas lights
On impoverished streets
I remember buying a signed edition
In a Las Vegas bookshop
I think it should have cost more
But so should roses and sunsets
My heart goes out to Kenneth Patchen
His broken back and silent anguish
His poems mused me into meditation
Fused me into the flowering of forever
How many of his poems
Were like gifts we opened at Christmas
When as children we could receive
Why is it every time I read Patchen
I’m awash in grief and gratitude
It’s like the resurrection of something
Comfort has lost in us an avowal
About our duality and ambivalence
How we love and hate
How we end our wars with tears of joy

A Man Who Was Dead

How strange to see a bottle of Crown Royal
Reflected in a barbershop mirror.
A customer asked my father to save it
Until after a business meeting.
He died/ in a car wreck, minutes later.
I know dad went/ to the funeral
And told the widow about the bottle.
She said “why don’t you keep it, Frank,
My husband would have liked that.”
Once, when we suggested opening it,
Dad refused saying it didn’t belong to us,
It belonged to a man who was dead.
Ownership existing beyond the grave.
My father’s honesty was beyond reason,
What comes from experiencing war
When everyone’s everything is betrayed.
That’s why it’s not strange for me
To see a bottle of Crown Royal
Reflected in a barbershop mirror.
I know who placed it there and why it stays.

How to Approach November

To ward off seasonal depression
Consider an autumnal decompression
Think of November
As a yearly comember
To address the chill
Start with layers of yourself
Then begin to insulate
Against sempiternal cold
Accept the darkness as a friend
You’ll find it opens
Like a book in your hands
You’ll find the hours
To have their own horizons
And in your mind
Create what time consumes

After a Live Performance of Ofrenda de Cempasuchil

Ofrenda de Cempasuchil by Rodrigo Loman
(Marygold Offering for Día de los Muertos)

On the road to the cemetery
Marching steps grow heavier and sadder
Processions of musical notes
All ring with the glow of their candles

Flower music turns into fruit music
Baskets of shadow murmur with sound
Crosses of salt are spread over graves
To feed the dead with the earth’s bread

This offering of music flowers
From the crypt like the birth of birth
It lines the pathways with its golden glow
And flows past our reality into another

Suddenly sensation leaves the body
The dance is possessed by ghosts
It’s like bones are joyously dancing
And spirit feels itself in flesh again

We’ve all been made flesh by the music
Remembered by it and reanimated
Mixed into the melody of mortality
Stillness and the silence that sings

Nicolino Locche

(September 2, 1939 – September 7, 2005)

Punch a ghost
And you fall through an abyss.
Jab repeatedly at a shadow
And you beat your own brains
Against nothingness.
Throw your hardest left and miss
Stumbling through your momentum
Like a puppet come unstrung
To miss again with your right
Until it seems
You’re in a self-defeating fight.
That was the genius of Nicolino Locche,
“The untouchable one.”
He fought by not fighting
And even losing, he won.