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.



Monday, June 18, 2012

At the Local Barnes and Noble

Here's something I stumbled on in a near-by bookstore.

  At the Local Barnes and Noble

POETRY is placed between
POKER and SCIENCE FICTION,
between disguising what is
and describing what is not
while betting on
what soon could be.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Pandora's Promise

Just in case you don't know (and if it's not clear from the poem), Pandora is both a reference to the figure in Greek mythology who loosed all the evils upon the world by opening a box she was supposed to keep closed (leaving mankind with nothing left but hope) and also to the internet music service that plays music it thinks you'll like based on one song or artist you know you like.

    Pandora’s Promise

Programmed playlists have their appeal –
the computer knows you like this,
predicts you’ll like that –
but I prefer the randomness
of regular radio, of finding
treasures among the trash.
“Yesterday” after “Sugar, Sugar”
or one Magic Flute
midst one too many
Nutcrackers.

And when I’m driving through static,
I cherish the rare clear station more
than the satellite signal
or love by logarithm.

Discovery is finding what 
we never knew
 we had lost.
(Life sometimes shuffle plays
music we had forgotten
we ever heard.)

Certainty is the enemy
of hope.

Monday, June 4, 2012

Right Turn on Red

This is based on a real incident, except I was making a left turn, and it was not quite so close a call.


     Right Turn on Red

The old Chinese man crosses against
the light, carrying a cane he does not
seem to need, his stride so strong in
its T’ai Chi slowness, his Mandarin visage so
serene beneath a blue baseball cap.

I do not glimpse him in the dim morning
light till I’m halfway around the corner,
and it’s too late to brake. His lack of speed
is our salvation as our paths do not quite
cross. I see him reach the curb, unfazed
in my rearview mirror and realize
although we were both in the wrong,
he had the right of way.