Monday, December 31, 2012

Reorientation

The process by which the brain makes the world seem sharp and steady is a complex one- and easily disrupted. A couple crystals shift in the inner ear, and everything becomes a tilted blur.



                                                       Reorientation
                                            Vertigo lets us know
                                             what’s really going on:
                                             stability is an illusion,
                                             certainty masks confusion
                                             as the whole world spins
                                             spins, spins one man’s dusk
                                             into another’s dawn.                             

Monday, December 24, 2012

Hearing Tests

Yes, I had a hearing test in a soundproof room the other day.  I passed, but it got me thinking.



         Hearing Tests
            1.

First the head phones
and the test tones
like electric bats
in my brain’s cave
locating themselves
by listening to
their own voice.

            2.

Then the random words,
for me to recognize,
sharp and clear
then soft and low
as forgotten secrets
ice cream
book
doorknob
sidewalk
love.

                    3.

Finally, the voice commands
me to repeat after him.

Say life.
Say wife
Say rife.
Say strife.
                        Say loud.
                        Say proud.
                        Say crowd.
                        Say shroud.
                                                Say deaf.
                                                Say depth.
                                                Say breath.
                                                Say  death.

Monday, December 17, 2012

Christmas

A seasonal poem.  If you like it, please pass it on.  (Just give me credit and tell your friends about this blog.  Thanks.)


  Christmas
celebrates the miracle of all
our births into this manger earth
we share because there is never
enough room at the inn
and only our fellow creatures
can keep us from the cold.

welcomes the way the light grows
just when it seems the darkness
has won, making each day
a present we unwrap to see
how we can make it fit
since it cannot be returned.

marks the journey we all make,
bearing whatever gifts we have,
following whichever star
we choose, trying to be wise
enough to realize each step
is worth our wonder.

Monday, December 10, 2012

Wrinkle Shield

Here's something that occurred to me while emptying the dryer.  For those who do not use clothes dryers, you should know that Wrinkle Shield (some brands call it Wrinkle Guard or something else similar), tries to prevent wrinkles by turning the clothes over periodically until someone unloads the dryer. You should also know that the part of the dryer that rotates is called the drum and that Whirlpool is a popular brand of appliances in the U.S. 


                                                          Wrinkle Shield
                                                Since even permanent press
                                                does not last a lifetime,
                                                the trick is to take a tumble
                                                each time wrinkles start to set:
                                               
                                                a few moments of headlong free

                                                fall keep things feeling fresher yet.

                                                 And in those sunny countries
                                                where our Whirlpools are unknown,

                                                people and laundry turn together

                                                on this daily dryer drum,

                                                savoring the scented breezes

                                                since no buzzer says they're done.

Monday, December 3, 2012

The Wisdom of Wheaties

For foreign readers- Wheaties is the name of a breakfast cereal.  The epigraph is the disclaimer printed on the side of the box to keep the consumer from being diappointed when the box is less than full.

               
                          The Wisdom of Wheaties
                                                          ...some settling normally occur
                                                           during shipment and handling.
                        A box is always bigger than what it holds,
                        especially since some settling normally occurs
                        on any journey. What does not grow larger
                        grows little, shrinking as it shifts. And what is
                        not sold by volume is sold by weight so what
                        seems half-empty may now be declared mostly full –
                        as if content were a mere measurement and
                        satisfaction were simply something to survey.
                        While our bowls are not as brimming as we hoped,
                        they still give us something solid to chew upon.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Final Leaf Collection Later This Week

In this part of Maryland, homeowners have raked and blown leaves from their lawns into giant piles by the side of the road to be collected by the county government.


                      Final Leaf Collection Later This Week              
                  The brown leaf piles lie like burial mounds,
                  like time-worn mountains, like sand
                  dunes standing sentinel along the curbside

                  shore of a slender asphalt sea, a rising

                  river, a cracked and patched canal.

                  Or like light umber waves ready to break
                  upon a tarmac strand as one side’s

                  ebb is always another’s flow, depending

                  on which way the cold winds blow.

 

Monday, November 19, 2012

Turning Back the Clock at Two A.M.

Some more thoughts about setting the clock back an hour in the fall.  (In the U.S. we do that at 2:00 A.M.  while other countries do it at 3:00 or 4:00.)

                                     
                  Turning Back the Clock at Two A.M.
                        means we relive one hour
                        every year when most of us

                        are asleep and unaware

                        whether we dream the same

                        dreams again or take the time

                        to start afresh with higher

                        hopes replacing faded fears.

                        and if we awoke beside
                        our soundly sleeping former

                        self, what would we dare whisper

                        in our ear: wake up and see

                        what you’re missing – or rest when

                        you can; the rising sun knows

                        only its own standard time.

                      
                       

Monday, November 12, 2012

Falling Back

The Monday after we turn the clocks back in the fall, I always feel I'm missing something.


                             
                                                    Falling Back
                                      (on the return to standard time)
                                    Why does the sun say I’m late  
                                    when my watch says I’m early
                                    now that it’s dawn when it was
                                    dark before?   We can calibrate
                                    the clocks, but our bodies know
                                    better. Each gain feels like a loss
                                    when there’s always something
                                    we’ve forgotten but cannot ignore. 

                                   

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Extra Sensory Deception

This was written after a bout of "benign positional vertigo."


                                      Extra Sensory Deception
                                                1.
                                          Balance

                                    Our inner ear
                                    does more than hear;
                                    it tells us where
                                   
                                    we’re bound.


                                    But when inflamed,
                                    it plays a game

                                    and says what’s up

                                    is down.

 
                                                2.
                                            Depth

                                    Our inner eye
                                    does more than spy

                                    what things are near

                                    or far.

                                     It looks inside
                                    past things we hide

                                    and tells us who

                                    we are.

 
                                            3.
                                        Humor

                                     The inner voice,
                                     it has no choice

                                     but to say what’s

                                    absurd.

                                     When white is black
                                    we want what we lack

                                    and a laugh is the

                                    final word.

                                   

           


 

Monday, October 29, 2012

October Sky

Another leaf poem, I'm afraid.  This one is for my uncle, whose funeral I just attended.


                                October Sky
                    Why do some leaves seem
                               to soar as they descend,
                                           as if tumbling and twirling
                                     with untethered joy
                                                     makes them float

                       while others simply fall?

                           Is it merely the way
                           the wind takes them,
                           or does something
                                 about their shapes
                                           give divinity
                                                    to their ends.

Monday, October 22, 2012

Gone with the Wind

This is a bit of a rant, I'm afraid, In the U.S., at least, it seems very few people rake leaves anymore. Instead, the autumnal calm is shattered by the roar of leaf blowers. This can be very disturbing when you're trying to write a poem, so I've attempted to make it an inspiration/occasion for a poem instead.
(The poem is supposed to be single spaced except for five stanza breaks, but blogspot and Word are not on speaking terms this morning, so some extra double-spacing is going on.)

         Gone with the Wind
What is as silent as a leaf-fall
Or as loud as a leaf blower?

I remember when the gentle rasp
And rustle of rake in dry leaves
Marked the beginning of autumn.
Now the growl and groan of handheld
Hurricanes herald the start of the fall.

I guess I don’t blame the hired crews
Who come through with their headphones
And backpacks. The sweat they save may be
Worth the deafening whir when they clear whole
Blocks of leaves, like high tech cowboys
Riding herd on a colorful cattle drive.
At least they are efficient, weekday workers.

But why must my noisy neighbor pick
A Sunday morning to use his macho machine
To chase the first few leaves around his yard.
As if he were Buck Rogers blasting space aliens
Landing from that evil golden oak?

In my mind, he fires one last blast
And the recoil lifts him jetpack-like
To the heavens or to the place where
All such snarling beasts belong.

 And I’m left here on Earth, wondering why
We answer Nature’s lightest touch with such
A heavy hand. Is it because we cannot stop
The seasons, we shoot the messengers instead?

 

 

 

Monday, October 15, 2012

Mattress Land

Imagine a crowded mattress store, although many of them are mostly deserted.
(For foreign readers, in the U.S. it's not unusual for customers to try out the mattresses
they are thinking of buying.)

             Mattress Land
 
is where strangers briefly sleep together
on separate beds, wandering flocks of Goldilocks
trading places in search of the one that’s just
right - not too firm or too forgiving- for the price
they’re willing to pay;  or they lie on memory
foam, still as corpses, and pretend to be
the princess who can sense the pea beyond
the two minute test, the restless nights,
the bitter mornings, the pro-rated guarantee.

 


Monday, October 8, 2012

Late Fall

Another acorn poem.  Fewer are falling but with larger consequences.


                        Late Fall
When the last, lone acorn lands on the roof,
it’s so crowded with others the chain reaction
sounds like a small avalanche or a distant
pocket billiard break with the click and roll
of collisions and kisses until there’s
silence –  and everything is rearranged.

 

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Alien Abduction

  Alien Abduction

All but blindfolded, the victim
is bound and placed on a glass
turntable, then spun from what it
was to what it will become,
sensor probed by invisible rays
until the machine roars like a
descending jet then beeps three
times to say the dish is done.


   This is a bit of a riddle poem.  I don't write many of these.  Does it become clear (or too clear) what I'm describing?

Monday, September 24, 2012

Early Fall

This is about things that go bump in the night- and the daytime, too. (Sorry about the irregular spacing. Cutting and pasting from Word seems problematic today.)


   Early Fall
The acorns thump the roof
like slow, heavy hail
then roll like tiny bowling
balls toward the gutter


or sometimes sound more
like a roulette wheel
spinning for a winning
number and the soil it seeks.

One in a thousand makes it
there and even fewer
get to grow in nature’s noisy
and silent games of chance.

Yet oaks will stand here
long after this roof
begins to  rot, despite
our lifetime shingles and  
limited warranties. 

 

Sunday, September 16, 2012

World Trade Center

This one was started on September 11th.


                                        World Trade Center
                               I wish we could trade this world
                             for one in which one man’s faith
                             was not another man’s fear,
                             one person’s gain was not
                             centered on another’s loss,
                             and what we build would
                             
                              raise everyone and tower
                             
                              over no one as a taunt
                             
                              or a target.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Drawing 101


          Drawing 101
                  1.
               Line
             not the shortest path
            between two points
            but the scenic
            route, wandering beyond
            them both.

                  2. 
               Edge
            the place where one thing ends,
            just before another begins,
            separating the bird
            from the sky
            and the fish
            from the sea
            while conceptual artists
            explore the narrow space
            between beauty and
            bullshit.

                3.
     Negative Space
            It is what
            it isn’t.
            (Absence makes
            the art
            profounder.)
         
               4.
    Two Point Perspective
     In space, the farther
     the fainter and smaller.
     In time, some things grow
     larger with distance.
   
            5.
        Value
Squint and blur your sight
for a second and the world
becomes more light and dark,
not black and white exactly
but more than fifty shades
of gray.

 

           

           

 

Monday, September 3, 2012

Autumn Rain

A short one this week as I scramble to get ready for school.


                                            Autumn Rain
                                    The leaves have fallen face down
                                    on the damp, forgiving ground,
                                    as if leaves had faces,
                                    as if the ground cared.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Faith

Wrote this after almost falling by trying to look where I was going when I really couldn't see.

            Faith

When going down stairs in the dark,
best descend by feel and trust
the regular rise and run of the unseen
steps rather than stare in fear
and stumble over what you can
only dimly see, if at all; a final
jolt is better than a long fall.

Monday, August 20, 2012

Alternatives

This one might not need the last two lines.

      Alternatives

A young lady sits with her yellow pad
at the picnic table, pauses, writes, pauses,
then writes again. Is it a love letter,
a shopping list, a legal pleading, a poem,
or some other inventory of desire?
(Why do we not recognize or remember
some wants and needs unless we write them down?)

Here's a different version that leaves more up to the reader. If anyone has a preference, let me know.

          Inventories of Desire

A young lady sits with her legal pad
at the picnic table, pauses, writes, pauses,
then writes again. Is it a love letter,
a shopping list, a lesson plan, or a poem?




Monday, August 13, 2012

Downward Mobility

For foreign readers, mobile homes are large trailers that are usually put on permanent foundations and serve as houses for families.

     Downward Mobility

Why are so many mobile homes
so sad and stationary,
just marking time and losing ground?
Not so much the ones gathered
in neighborhoods, defiant tornado
targets with small gardens
and backyard pools,
but the solitary ones
abandoned along country
roads, like junked cars
that ran out of gas between here
and there,
old dream cars now
not worth the towing.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Proper Identification

    Proper Identification

From a distance, they look like prisoners
of war or a ragged line of hostages –
hands to head with elbows out, all standing
at stiff attention around a clump of trees.

But then they reveal themselves as birders,
binoculars raised to transfixed eyes
while they strain as I do to see and name
correctly all we can before it flies away..

Monday, July 30, 2012

Perspicacity

  Perspicacity

Who will win this fight
between foresight and
forgetfulness?
In what safe place
did I put my will?
Where did I hide
the emergency key?
In which notebook
did I write this poem’s
perfect end?



Monday, July 23, 2012

Last Laugh

    Last Laugh

“I was not always this short,” Jeff told me one night
our freshman year. “I was nearly six foot once,
but I suffer from Tamiroff’s Phenomenon. I’m losing
an inch or two a year – and the doctors don’t know when
it will stop.” I looked for a trace of a smile on his
normally impish face, but his mouth was grim,
his eyes sad. “That’s awful,” I said and patted him
on the shoulder, all the sympathy we males were
allowed to show each other in 1968. “Yeah, I know,”
he said and shuffled off toward his dorm room
for another hour or two of avoiding studying.

Five minutes later Jeff burst into my room,
laughing his head off and gasping
“Gotcha. Gotcha.”

Two years later he had shrunk enough
all but his bleeding head could fit on the cover
of Newsweek, along with a young runaway wailing
beside his fallen body. Onlookers at Kent State
said when they saw the National Guard kneel in unison
and fire at the crowd, they thought this is not really happening.

Gotcha. Gotcha.


                                                         In memory of Jeffrey Glenn Miller
                                                         March 28, 1950- May 4, 1970


For foreign readers and Americans under 40, the Kent State killings occurred during protests over the Vietnam War.  Fans of classic rock will remember Neil Young's song "Ohio", written in response to this event.  I first hear the song before it was actually recorded and a Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young concert in either late May or early June of that year.  I knew Jeff from his time at Michigan State.  He transferred to Kent State his junior year and died in May of that year.  The last time I talked to him was at MSU during his sophomore year..  He knew I was from Ohio and asked me if Kent State was a good school.  I said yes.

Monday, July 16, 2012

A Walk in the Park

    A Walk in the Park

The retractable leashes reel and unreel
in their bright plastic housings,
giving the dogs the illusion of freedom
and the masters the illusion of control
as they stroll among the other happy couples
and their smiling faces, real and unreal.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Ghost Runners

I won't try to explain wiffleball to those who don't already know the game, except to say it's a form of baseball that can be played in smaller spaces since the plastic, perforated ball does not travel as far.

    Ghost Runners

would take our place on base
those backyard August evenings
in our 4-on-4 wiffleball games
and if our turn to bat came round again
it was up to us to drive our own spirit
in with sacrifice, single, or suicide squeeze
(and to argue our phantom twin had surely
slid safely in to score) – and those who tried
too hard to homer would always whiff and leave
our young selves to die in the summer dusk on third
as our parents called to us, so close and so far from home.



Monday, July 2, 2012

Unfinished Business

This is about not quite achieving a goal, but I'm afraid the title may also refer to the present state of the poem as well.

   Unfinished Business

The wind gently wrinkles the lake’s calm waters,
quilting the swells from an unseen power
boat that passed this way at dawn
which now cause my kayak to rise and fall.

Behind me I hear a faint shushing sound
as if a distant steamboat were bearing down
on me, but I’m no Huck Finn; it’s just
the rubbing of my own life vest.

My sights are set on the other shore; then the clock
tower strikes the hour too soon, and I turn
back, my journey only half-complete.
Nothing rides my modest wake.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Visiting My Uncle

The title probably makes this self-explanatory.

   Visiting My Uncle

I sleep in my oldest cousin’s
boyhood bed, a single twin
built into the end of the narrow
room – its shelves crowded
with trophies topped by figures
frozen, forever serving invisible
tennis balls, shooting an unseen
puck, hurling a bowling ball
down an endless alley, or merely
stretching arms heavenward
in celebration of a forgotten
victory in an unnamed sport.

This was the only private
bedroom for what was a family
of eight. Everyone learned to share
space and effort – one bathroom for
six children, plenty of dinner dishes
to scrape and garbage to haul, lots of
laundry to wash and lawn to mow.
When the youngest died of an overdose,
was the grief divided or multiplied?

Now all the kids are grown and gone,
and my uncle has been battling cancer
for longer than his grade school grandkids
have lived, each one well practiced at sending
Grandpa get well cards and crayon pictures
as the greedy cells spread from colon to
liver to bone until he was declared near death
a half dozen times. Today he jokes he awakes
each morning eager to see where the pain
will pop up next, where the radiation or new
drug will next need to be aimed.

His tennis buddies still show up weekly
to play on his private court.
Too weak to walk, he rides the lawnmower
out to watch them and trade barbs
about someone’s lack of a backhand
and someone else’s lack of speed.
They play in the early evening,
when the air cools and the light
gets golden. You can see their younger
selves in their form, and their age
in their immobility. No one holds serve.
They seldom go for winners, mostly content
to trade shots and quips, to savor
the setting sun,
and to rally, rally, rally on.