239. Mojave Blink


one-two-three, morning hours pass

Driving down I-40

bushes on my right, wire to my left,

Fleeing fast from Cali

before LA traffic clogs the roads

Tripling my trip time

i’d rather pull a Céline Dion

And drive the live-long night

but morning brings strange blinking lights

Below the horizon line

as sunrise glows like rust-crusted loam

—A sliver, a streak, red twine—

thin as the skin my eyes cower behind

These lights isolated beckon to me

from mountains of sand dirtied by debris

An eye here and there winking my way

which will soon wind past them with the dawn of the day

stretch-clamp-stretch-clamp

Refusing to pull for a pause

my eyes squint past the haze in my brain

To follow those lights to their cause

whether nomads, machines, a government camp,

Alien crash site, solar grid amp,

the lights multiply like stars in the sky

of a night on the run from the sun’s burning blight

A paintbrush that melts shades of white into one

then streaks them across this void cruised along

‘Til I soar like a spacecraft at lightspeed

and my mind from its course feels freed

For a second, then dawn hits like a wall

smashing millions of lights into one burning ball

That colors my horizon as dusty as Mars

with blinks buried beneath, their graves just as far.


238. Slot


empty

so empty

oh won’t someone fill this slot o’ mine?

sure casinos are filled with newer machines

pop-cultured appeals and skin-deep screens

flashing and singing while I ring in the wings

with a modest three windows, lights throbbing green

begging the men to come pull my red knob

aching

none taking

watching my potentials pass along without a spin

too long it has been since a man came to me

gracious and playful and rich and carefree

asking no questions, just paying my fee

to pull this red knob in a hazened glee

notwithstanding their winnings only existing in dreams

lo

what’s this?

a man is sitting down now to bum his cigarette!

for the first time in forever I feel that lustful gaze

though his contributions are less than worthy praise

I shudder and I creak as rusty cogs muster glaze

to oil my inner goddess receiving love he sends my way

by filling my slot with increasing force and jerking my red knob

off

he splits

back into the sea of catcalling machines and beggars in makeup

quick

a moment

I could not decide whether to be grateful for his coming or his going

but I already had flushed him with every cent I hold

gushing from the strongbox stuffed by all the times I sold

my reels to passing fancies for a spin to warm the cold

set in these creaking gears o’ mine that owe their weight in gold

and so for love and longing the pit boss signs me up as scrap


237. Tempest


today I raged

at the wind

because that is the one force opposing

all the others displaced

there they are, over there—

stewing about on some other plane

where I can’t reach

I can see them!

but do nothing

shouting and shaking my fists with only the wind in response

“you bastard wind!” I shout

though it’s not really the wind

upsetting me

it is those, over there, I can see

but not touch

or touch

“leave me alone, you insufferable zephyr!”

then recant

for, if the wind goes,

what then can I rage at?

myself, supposing,

but I can reach myself

and who knows what might come of that

so I rage and add to the wind

with heating, bleating breath

until finally I am out of air

while the wind stays by my side

cooling me off and filling my lungs

just to yell at it again


236. Dear Father Christmas


Christmas! It needs no announcement,

Arriving each year without fail

On the heels of brisk blustering Autumn

And a frigid dark New Year at tail.

But, for now, light pierces the night

In a spiritually resonant way:

“Peace to the good, warmth to the loved,

Joy to the cheery,” say their rays

Filtered through glass with amberish hues

And beckoning snowy skies sing

Over church bells a-pealing and wreath-laden roofs

And bundled bunched kids snowballing.

But I feel none of all that which they feel –

Once I did! This same time long ago.

Back then, flakes were a prismatic flutter of awe

And these stores bathed the streets with their glow,

Just as tonight. Nothing has changed

Except perhaps me, overwhelmed

By the sensory tempest of holiday cheer

That blindsides me, lost at the helm.

I had only just vacated Old Marley’s Pub

Stuffed with bangers and smoky Old Fashioneds

To plop down upon an ice-glazed staircase

Where I leech off strangers’ traditions.

I spied those aforementioned children

Slipping across a solid lake;

Kitchens of rosy-cheeked relatives

In scentillating cookie bakes;

An elderly couple on their porchswing

Rocking to Elvis’ lulling croon;

A carnival of colorful caravans

Selling strudel ‘neath silvery moon;

A procession of costumed choristers

Skipping to “Ding-Dong Merrily”

Past an outlet mall’s North Pole gazebo

Where Santa ho-hos wearily;

The tongues of dimming lanterns lick

Sleek on billowing sleet

As the winds pick up, inhospitable

To those wishing to keep their feet.

Or perhaps it was to force all inside

Where they partake of a succulent feast—

The kind of which all who enjoy

Leave full, even when given the least.

Then off to bed, those drowsy heads,

Dreaming of angels or shades;

Warmth in their covers and memories hover

So that wonder and love never fades.

It faded for me, out here in the streets,

Shivering alone by choice.

I have family with whom I could be celebrating

But their laughter to me is all noise

For I have lost the light and the love and the cheer

That this holiest night is about—

Sitting frostbitten for most of the year,

Stewing in intermittent doubt.

My wonder is not in beholding the season,

But instead asking, “Why, God, why

Have you allowed the joy I felt in my childhood

To vanish like snow in July?

Where have they flown, those feelings of fondness

For all that makes my life good,

Leaving behind this sleet of despondence

That buries me in a chilled mood?

My only guess is adulthood;

This headspace comes natural to all

When harsh reality demands most of the room

And dreams answer no longer your calls.

Before I could sink fully into self-pity

For this apathetic state of affairs,

I felt the warm breath of someone behind me

Sitting higher up on the stairs.

I turned ever-slowly—their silence was startling—

Half-expecting to be mugged or shot,

Only to peer up into the calmest, kind face

Of a man who had seen quite a lot.

“A Merry Night to you, son,” he wisped with a smile,

Both of which were congenially sincere,

As he took three steps down to my level—

I did not once mind just how near.

“I can see,” he implored, “something weighs on your mind,

And offer my hand if you’d take it.”

“It’s nothing,” I deflected, “you can relieve,

Since this bed’s in my head while I make it.”

“I’d say that’s much better,” he chuckled in turn,

“For a mind’s much more easily turned

Towards things that are higher in spirit and aim

Than a heart whose hardness is earned.

That said, to confide in a friend,

Even one you don’t know all that well,

Who cares enough to ask what is wrong

Might get you out of your personal hell.”

So I let it all out to this complete stranger—

My heartache, my confusion, my pain—

He listened intently, with unmatched empathy,

I felt my frustrations drain

As we paused for a moment, to my benefit,

Calling high spirits to calm.

Then he proceeded to make an assessment

With tone applied gently like balm:

“The problem, it seems—just my opinion

Which you are free to dispute—

Is that Christmas is truly a culmination!

Yet, you treat it like the root

Cause for all the joy you expect

Though the rest of your year disappointed,

Turning you sour from witnessing little effect

And leaving your perception disjointed.”

He rose and patted my back to follow—

We returned to the scene I had seen

With children and cookies and couples and trees

And the sound of “Ding-Dong Merrily.”

Though the square was now empty, the echoes prevailed—

Dreams lingered and waltzed in the air

As my companion rhythmically nodded along

With the quiet reverence of prayer.

“The joy that you’re missing,” he gently spoke,

“Will return when you’ve found your lost piece

That builds a year worth celebrating

An investment towards your future peace.

For what good is a tree decorated underground

Or a Santa behind a glass wall?

What purpose serves an inn with no guests

Or a man who leaves love in the hall?

I tell you this, this Eve means the most

To a mother with nary a cent,

But her children surrounding her all through the dark

‘Til their warmth melts the ice that was sent.

For Christmas can be, to many, a symbol

Of what was once lost or evades;

Still, I urge you, push past hopeless feelings

Before the gift to feel anything fades.

Whether gypsy or Kachillionaire,

Life is not lived alone

Nor is it lived for the sake of oneself;

A house does not make a home.

No, a home is made by the cookies you smell—

beloved carols you can harmonize

—the memories hung every year on the tree—

The future you see in the eyes

Of the people who love you, who treasure your past

And are still by your side in the present.

You will find Christmas joy if you seek it each day —

A fruitful year deserves peace as its present.”

This son of man smiled the most heartwarming smile

And set off barefoot in the snow—

My eyes followed him for as long as they could

‘Til he disappeared past the lampglow.

But the lasting effect of his words sang on in my heart

Like angels oe’er blizzard-struck mountains

That would melt at the start of the forthcoming year,

Freeing bountiful, beautiful plains

Where I will toil and build and nurture and treasure

The things that make each morning bright

While casting aside the burdens of fear

That doubt if I’ll live through the night.

People now poured out into the streets

As their cheer chimed in the new day

And the wreaths and the tinsel and the holly and lights

Glistened brighter above all their play

While the snow fell down now in softer, slow chunks,

No longer whipping or cutting with sighs.

Horses pull sleds, all are well-fed,

And the church bells peal how time flies.

Christmas is not just one season of hope;

It rewards all the hope that we’ve shown

In putting to good use serving a purpose

For the people and places we’ve grown.

And those feelings, they filled me, though I thought I had lost

What was close to my heart long ago.

But with my path now lit, my future now clear–

That lost Christmas spirit now had a place to flow.

Off to my family! I’m dashing like Rudolph,

Heart light as when I was a boy—

For in Christmas Eve darkness I settled my piece

And with Christmas morning comes joy.


235. God Complex


Oh, how I’m glad that God’s not a man.

If he was

I’m sure that the full week of Creation

Would be done in a day

Sloppy, unrefined, the bare minimum

he wouldn’t have chosen a specific people

But made sure the whole world

Knew him

Worshiped him

Brought him women and wine to enjoy

And served him hand and foot and backside

As he used Earth as his own sandbox

To experiment and play around in

Like a child who could not be denied.

Oh, how I’m glad that God’s not a woman.

If she was

I’m sure that each day of Creation

Would have turned into a month

Since she would take so long to decide what was best

For sure

And she would choose a specific people –

That being women –

To set them on high as rulers over the globe

Only for those women to insult her

Criticize her for their own inferiority

And, instead of invoking her wrath,

Cause her to alter herself and the world without rest

Like an entertainer existing for approval’s sake.

And both, in the end,

Dissatisfied or humiliated with what they had made,

Constantly seeking the highs of beginning again

Would add and delete world after world

Ad infinitum

Or at least until they decided it was pointless –

They were pointless –

And deleted themselves.

Oh, how I’m glad

That God is God

Because we’ve got enough god complexes down here

To know we’d be damned otherwise.


234. Poet for Hire


There’s a poet for hire on Bourbon Street
Who will write you a song if you give him a beat
With his typewriter standing on wobbly stilts
Through the holes in his gloves and the laze in his lilt
As he burps and he rubs his bulbuous nose
And tap-dances drunkenly onto your toes
But he’ll knock out a sonnet if you give him a rhyme
Or a sip of the lime with tequila refined
Or a snuff of the snow, a buzz of the blow
Which he can use to bring himself high from the low
For poetry is the superior form
And he is a master of penning the porm
(A distasteful blend of porn and a poem)
That art which inspired him to live alone
And ask for your cents to spin a lyric
Compounded so the price goes up twenty clicks
But hey! He hammers out 8 porms a day
So is he a failure? Well, who’s to say
When you love what you do and you do what you love
And your thoughts are on things that are far above
Human comprehension, or your own for that matter,
For you’re running no race, ain’t climbing no ladder,
While folks give you space as you dance through their lines
Spouting your own in a slurred 6/8 time
As you entreat them to let you partake of their pocket
While hammering trash out on Letter Gothic.
For the Poet for Hire is a freelancing sort
Who gets only as far as the strength in his snort
Since just about everyone considers their life
(especially the one with a life rife with strife)
Reason enough to take up the cowl
As freelancing poets, give weight to their vowels
As they mix them and match them and dandy their dreams,
Insult their insulters, vent all that steam –
Poetry’s not the art it once was, you might see
Ever since ten-dollar words became worth less than free.


The Mellowdramatic Murder of My Reservation


The fault of a part is usually to blame for collapse in the whole.

This is the mantra of retrospective foresight, an employment that demands sacrifice for smoother waters tomorrow. Especially when it comes to social mingling and supposedly required interactions of the juvenile kind…I absolutely must be a master at this.

It is the only way I, the Don Quixote of the millennial era, can hope to blend in with false niceties and a cloak of similarity. Nevertheless, I still have hope for them! With each interaction, I learn how to entice my fellow twenty-something year olds, how to meet them as equals, how to tolerate their obsessions. Somewhere within the rotted crust of the whole lies a golden core, and I chew away relentlessly for that sweet center. Reservation is the hero here, certain that humanity is worth investing time and understanding in. Besides, I know, without Reservation and retrospective foresight…then I am a carp, flopping around on the top of a hill, miles away from the lake; it’s a nice view, but I need that damn water if I’m going to live.

Desperate for a breath of clear air from my home, a place I like to call “Hell’s Crotchpocket,” I opted for a semester studying in London, England. Here I could start afresh, with an optimistic mind and an open heart. All I needed to remember: the fault of a part is usually to blame for the collapse of the whole. I must steel every socializing nerve in my body, prepare myself mentally, and make myself the most impressive foreigner they’ve ever seen. One crack in the cement, and that whole edifice comes crumbling down.

Personal justifications aside, it was a failure. The fault must definitely lay with that Norwegian…A pal of mine (I think), fast friends despite being clearer opposites than Progressives and Conservatives, with his brash and unapologetic nature putting my own manipulative goodwill out to dry. He and I were due for a shindig that clocked in at nine, but that more experienced fellow assured me that drinking beforehand was a prerequisite. So I acquiesced, stood in the corner, as he and the rest of my flat drank. Long bottles of tequila, stubby glasses of rum, cubic vials of vodka, all disappearing down their hollow throats – my flatmates, ten in total, who insisted on showing me how parties are done in the UK. As the minutes trickled on, the clocklike array of cards began to mysteriously lose face, and I began to doubt if we would ever get to the party. The time rang eleven, though only for me.

It was supposed to be fun, a kickstart night welcoming all freshmen (and international students like myself). A night of easy dancing and cool music, an event of socializing and getting to know those whom you might spend the rest of your university days with – or the rest of your life, even. At least, that’s what I hope from the bottom of my heart it will turn out to be. I may have journeyed here to study, add another cinderblock in an impressive degree, but that doesn’t shelve my romantic telescope. And let me tell you, from this chilly mountaintop, the stars promised to be bright tonight.

But then the Norwegian was drunk. He was my closest compatriot in this strange land, and exceptionally handsome, so I was relying on his company to loosen crowds. But his tongue loosened first, loosened so much that it wrought a cannon to fire off as many derogatory statements into the hearts of our female companions as possible. I would have risked it, though. I would have risked it to not be alone at the forthcoming party, but he soon disappeared with a group of even looser buddies. All who obviously had attended the pre-drinking festivities of their own flats, and manifested within a cloud of smoke that reeked filthily of nicotine. For the record, the Norwegian did wildly gesture at me to join, but there were far too many of his kind now that my hand was forced to disappointedly wave him off. I shouldn’t have relied so heavily on his company.

And so the fault must certainly lie with these worthless pre-drinking festivities. Before he left, the Norwegian tried to force me to drink, said it would get my blood pumping – and he was probably right. But the stuff tastes like rubbish, and I would rather not act like rubbish, so I focus on Kings as the rest of the powwow passes around their Peace Pint. After the Norwegian, it was the Indian who got drunk first. But she was petite, and whined pathetically as the games penalties were heaped on her shoulders, sinking her further into that muddlebrained mire. I laugh, I compete in the categories seriously, but I am deeply anxious to hurry to the real party. The real party that might offer such a change from the stagnant cesspools of Hell’s Crotchpocket. Who would I meet? Could I actually convince a beautiful, intelligent young woman to drink with me? Of course, I wouldn’t have more than one glass; I must keep my wits out of courtesy for her company…Still, what of the dancing – will it be actual dancing? How do I approach her? What if my movements fall short of charming, and I-

The German directs my attention towards choosing a card. She is the only other not drinking, and as antsy as I to move on to the venue. “It must be everything I hope for, right?” I signal with my eyes. She might be a third year, but she’s still a novice at reading expressions because she just smiles agreeably and sips her Coke.

I am continually offered the community booze, and politely refuse with not decreasingly hidden disgust. Nevertheless, my optimism is unwavering, even as the drunken festivities clamber towards midnight, and I see shadows in the soggy walkways lurching homewards, probably those who arrived at its commencement around nine.

Actually, that sight does put a damper on my hopes.

Thankfully, the German has also had enough, and joins my pleas that convince the rest of our haggard troupe to move on to the main event…Finally! I confess to excitement, though I’ve always put a firm heel down on the throat of this particular brand of merrymaking…it’s simply not the kind of indulgence I’d prefer taking advantage of. But it’s an alien thing to me, this “clubbing” business, and novelty is enough to quiet principle for a brief while. I smile at the German for assisting this poor American in his dilemma. Perhaps she can take the place of the Norwegian?

Her eyes flutter and she places her hand gently on my arm. I smile sweetly back at her and escape before she further misinterprets my actions.

The rain comes in a light sprinkle. I won’t blame the rain, because rain is pleasant. The dance itself is in a pub on our university’s campus, so it’s a short walk through gravel unevenly shifted by tipsy toddlers, some of them not even able to make it through the trees. We arrive to a line of students longer than the building itself, waiting to get in…but it is all right! In fact, I am relieved, worried that the fault might come to lie with our late arrival and the absence of attendees. But a queue line in the rain? I come here expecting fun in a place I would normally dismiss, so what is a little wet wait? All these belching, chanting, ass-grabbing, smoking, swearing wretches – they’re nothing I haven’t dealt with before at home.

This is fine.

As the long line disappears, man by woman, into the club, I quiver in anticipation. Who will I meet tonight? What should I say? My breath smells fresh enou – crap, I think the rain melted the paste in my hair! But it is too late to tell, too late to change; the doors open wide, a red aura and trembling bass waves pouring forth from within. I expected this sort of raucous, but…not at this level. Still, I’m here for the people. I can hear my Reservation calling, that this is a crowd with infinite potential, and that the people of this crowd can offer me something fantastic. Well, then, it’s high time to meet them!

No sooner do I step inside the pulsating red shadows am I sucked up in an enormous mass, mashing and kneading to process me through its lumps of human flesh. The air itself is sweat, and that which drips down ungraceful figures flailing about in these cramped quarters serves as saliva – Several heaving gulps are required to wash me down this strange throat, this immense organ of bodies. The belly of the beast is nothing but alcoholic madness as bloodshot eyes look upwards into darkness, mouths agape like lifeless fish heads bobbing up and down in a pool of emptiness. Their meaty lips pull back in smiles, but they gulp desperately for air in secret as their glossy eyes swivel in search of the closest Zippo. They are clammy, cold, surrendering the faintest response as I swim in search of some semblance of life. I leave the bar and break for the tents, certain that misty air might wash the brains I desperately long to pick. Though I am met with questions there, they are not the pleasant kind: “Hey, fam, got have a lighter? Hey, do you smoke weed? How ‘bout a glass of beer, then find a real party?”

There has to be some safe haven here; Someone just like me, searching for someone just like them, as disgusted as I am with how far social intimacy has fallen.

But, the more I look for life in the whole, the more shattered parts present themselves in its stead. I try! I swear, I really do – But look there: at the bar, faults – on the deck in the rain, faults – in the basement club, faults – in the large white tents, faults. Faults everywhere, no matter how hard I try not to look for them. I can speak with no one, because no one has the capacity to speak, or feel reasonably, or do anything else but absorb the heat of corporeal contact, and so there is no one to prove that my founded faults are not grounded. What a waste of time, of sanity – I need to get out of this cesspool! I make my way out the doors, to the cool of the rain, but the crowd has changed. At least when it acted as an organ, a body made of many bodies, there was life still and a purpose for movement. But now the energy is gone – What remains is a sticky, hot lump, welded as one by the gas of booze and cigarettes.

I am swimming in shit. A mushy mass of shapeless filth, drained dry of organic usefulness and God-given autonomy, squelches with every step aimed at escape. Chunks of bloody corn stare at me, red kernels behind humanlike skulls worn to slivers by digestion – the hunger for acceptance. A rotting stench of sop swirls in my head, almost as if no longer a gas but a dripping liquid oozing from the crack of the intestinally tormented. There is puke on the floor, literal puke, but it can hardly compete with the bitter auditory diarrhea that sloshes around in my ears, sticking to the drums and the canals until I can hear nothing more than the sloshing of human excrement. Base groans and groaning bass, thumping in the loins of everyone present but thumping my brain to the point of insanity.

My back sticks to one of these walking stools, a portly girl with piercings in her tongue that might well be a key ring she swallowed as a child. Those kernels in her head speak one word: sex. She smiles, opens her mouth, I smell the rancid smoke climbing from the depths, see the piss coating her tongue, beg her apologies, and flee.

Now I am in the middle of it all. I cannot see the exit, or the Norwegian, or the Indian, or the German, or even a single thing I recognize as comfortable, familiar. All I see is a black mass, lumpy and wet, flopping about in the dark under that red light. I can barely breathe now, its putrid, moldy, rotting steam choking my mind and seizing my heart. I panic, lost in a shit-sea, paddling desperately for shore where there is none to be found. Mouths grin through the dark muck, anxious to sink deeper into the bowels of warm, empty pleasure. I am drowning in this fecal mire, my mind races, my limbs fail to move, my eyes register nothing before me –

In my blindness – a voice.

The voice drifts over the crap-covered floor from a stage, where a DJ stirs the pot. Waving to me from on high – my lofty Reservation! Her angelic smile beaming down, she opens her arms to encourage.

“Keep searching, my brave warrior! She is here, somewhere, just waiting for you!”

With a graceful gesture she beckons, towards those twisted faces half-dissolved from the juices designed to help them save face. They gawk at me with incomprehension as to why I resist the joys of invasive connection.

“But where? How much longer must I search? I’m so very tired!”

My Reservation does not answer, but gestures once again over those pitiful floating heads beneath. I can only bring myself to glance at them again, but their gaping, oozing stares are revolting to even feel upon the back of your head. Still, if my Reservation says she must be here, then she must be here! I hold my breath and plunge back in, filled with determination.

For an hour I sifted through the bile, through those animalistic pleas for pleasure, for someone above the roar of dysfunction. But my eyes began to cloud over, my brain waxes lax, and I almost realized too late that I was sinking into something new. Something the people here came to escape, something they had to lose their minds and their very selves to ignore.

Something called despair.

A laugh rises up over the turmoil. I start from my lapse, and flail desperately for the surface, the laugh growing ever louder. When my head breaks above the muck, that laugh pierces the grimy air of the dance floor, shrieking at a pitch that only I can hear – and wish I could not.

It belongs to my delicate, my innocent, my optimistic Reservation. She now hangs off the edge of the stage, pupils expanded in madness and cheeks split with her smile, howling in hysterics. She points aimlessly at the malodorous orgy.

“She’s there, boy! She’s there, somewhere, somewhere, somewhere!”

She then points straight at my forehead and cackles. But this is too much! My panic rises to a grand capitulation, and, without thought, I take off my belt and swing it above my head repeatedly, then let go. The belt hurtles across the room, over the toilet I’m sinking in, and wraps tight round the neck of my Reservation. She grasps for it, but loses her grip in the process, tipping over and plummeting headfirst into the shit sloshing onto the stage. Her ringing laughter is abruptly reduced to weak burbling. She does not resurface. But she lingers still, still lingers…

My head finally clears, and I walk freely out of the building without a single piece of crap smudging my shirt.

As I stagger home in the rain, I pass another group, drunk from pre-drinks and on their way to the party. At the back is a naïve-looking fellow: a babyface with clear and hopeful eyes. He is also a dreamer, excited for what he finds back at that party, the one I just left in horror. And who knows; maybe he will find what he’s looking for? It’s a foolish dream, I see at last, but I hope he does.

I am no longer so immature, to hope there might be someone like me out there, who believes that human connection can be made both rationally and emotionally, out of high-minded care and an eye for the future. To hope there is someone who can keep their head above the shit, and still keep a smile on their face as they aim towards contentment, not only happiness…Do they exist?

I, a child, so eager to cross the threshold of Hell in search of an angel, a righteous fool. Yes, I will still forge friendships with the Norwegian and the German and the Indian…the American, the Brit, the Chinese, every one of them. I will laugh with them, work with them, share stories with them, feel things with them. But what I can no longer do is expect the impossible from them. I tried so long, in the hopes that meaningful human connections among young people, built on merit and virtue rather than social pleasure and political convention, might still exist. I hoped that love might still be out there in untouched fields, harvesting the land in its purest form.

The drought killing those fields was the fault of the whole’s collapse. But it happened before I arrived, and I mourn that I can do nothing but settle for the last semblance of a home among the rubble. Since there is no single part to blame, I have murdered my Reservation, and dunked her in the very thing I sought hope from: the youth of the human race.

In this manner I say, without joy, without the despair of hoping, without Reservation, that the generation still consuming this undefined collective good…They cannot see the sun, through all the shit sealing the cave they dance in.


World Class


I’ve been all over the world
And it has been all over me
From the cultures in my head
To the landscapes in my knees
As I searched for one superior
That might lay my heart to rest –
For the Earth is like a market
And I demand the very best

But as I searched all over the world
It became evident to me
That the cultures were less productive now
Than society would hope we believe
And the people are obsessed with trifles
That do little to inspire with zest
And so I end up puzzling
Why the Earth has failed my test.

I know now what resonates all over the world
Is not culture, but you and me;
Individuals who make an impact,
Ignore the forest for the tree
To soar among the clouds and stars
And leave behind their nest
Above the world, which must look up,
Beholden to their crest.

I have been all over the world
And it has been all over me,
So I’ll save you the trip, reveal what makes it whirl:
Men, not man, make history.


Shit on a Shingle


When I first saw you sitting there
In the street flat on your derrière
One with the mud
Covered in crud
I thought, “How nasty is she.”
But after a few pints knocked back
My longing just picked up the slack
And now I can say
This fact, clear as day,
That lovin’ you tastes just as good
As shit on a shingle!

Some might claim my taste is shot
Or I’m out of my mind.
Some might say you taste like snot
Or have a loose behind.
They’d find you more appealing
Given the chance to mingle –
Which is why I say you are
My little shit on a shingle.

I tried my hardest to get you to bathe
And you foil my attempts to get you to shave
Your teeth are all crooked
Your low voice is shooked
And I’d have it no other way.
All the fellas’ heads turn as you pass
Cause your vocabulary is crass
But your beer gut jiggle
And your idiot giggle
Remind me that you’re just as tasty
As shit on a shingle!

I sometimes feel I second-guess
How much lee you weigh
And see my life is a real big mess
When you steal away my day.
But there are moments that make it better
To be with you than single –
And there are far worse things to eat
Than shit on a shingle!

Yeah, babe, you’re a vagrant at heart
As am I if you couldn’t tell
Which explains why
We shouldn’t try
To bite off more than we chew.
So I’ll give up what I thought I wanted,
Content to settle on being taunted,
For they don’t understand
How a plain starving man
Would count himself lucky to, morning and night,
Eat nothing but shit on a shingle!


Leave My Hangover Alone


turn off the lights
get back in bed
all i ask is for some peace and quiet
my swimming head
my bulging eyes
i’m trying to take the peace when I can get it
yes i know i know
i haven’t had a drink
in three days
but my head still hurts
and my heart still hurts
and it’s better to blame it all
on too much alcohol
then to look around for something I can’t fix
and most of the time
can’t even see
yes, better to hold your peace while you can
in the comfort of a little hangover
safe inside your head
so turn off the lights
and get back in bed
and give me back my peace and quiet.