Category: Uncategorized

  • Love Equation

    Love Equation 3

    FULL MOON, LOONEY TUNES
    Only artists or hermits or monks choose
    poverty, any other social theory is baloney.
    Wine, women and song cost little; studio
    space next to nothing if you live in a
    ghetto. A loaf of bread, a jug of wine and
    what’s her face works for a long time, at
    least when you are in your prime.
    An artist, poet or painter, wants to work
    as little as possible at some job that takes
    them away from their pen or easel.

    “So there’s that 47%,” Mitt Romney whined,
    “that we can forget. They will vote for Obama
    and collect their gifts.”
    “There are givers and the takers – those
    who contribute and those who mooch,”
    Paul Ryan stared steely eyed at the press.
    “If you’re poor or out of work it’s your
    own fault.” Rush, the bus, Limbo roared.

    Moochers, takers, goldbricks, sure fits
    artists. But I don’t think it applies to the
    poor or anyone who’s out of work or ever
    has been. I suppose there’s always been
    junkies, and winos, and panhandlers on the
    streets, lost souls with mental problems and
    those who are, OK, just plain lazy. It can’t
    be many. But these politicians and that radio
    guy somehow forget we just got out of the
    Great Recession and what’s available are
    still slim pickings, and I can’t see how it
    applies to homeless families or those doomed
    to meager lives in the ghettos and hollows,
    and slums across the nation through
    misfortune.

    That 47% has grown. Half of the country lives
    in or near poverty now. The Affordable Care
    Act has added 6 million to the ranks of the
    insured. 45 million to go. But the
    Republican governors refuse to let their
    constituents get the expanded Medicaid,
    so that won’t happen.

    There was only one artist at the Boston
    Center for the Arts who actually got on
    disability. Helen the heavenly. Many tried.
    They got their inspiration from a character
    by Thomas Pynchon. To prove that he was
    crazy, so he could collect government checks,
    he would jump, every year, through the plate
    glass window of a department store.
    Whatever antics my friends pulled didn’t
    work. The government techs said “Nix.”
    Helen was a poet, much published. She wrote
    like Sylvia Plath on acid. She was mad as a
    Hatter, as beautiful as a movie star. Once
    each summer, on a full moon night, she would
    wear her platinum hair in tiers, don flashy
    costume jewelry, wear a black satin gown and
    walk barefoot through the ghetto. No one
    could stop her. The police would find her in
    the morning, raped and beaten. They would
    file a report. Helen would give it to her social
    worker. “I couldn’t help myself.” She would
    say through tears.
    We all knew she set the whole thing up
    with her gangsta lover.

  • Shadows

    Neverman
    SHADOWS
    We wander the ghost lanes of
    our lost souls, coat collars turned
    up against the blistering cold.
    There is nothing left to gamble.
    All bets were off, for us, a long
    time ago. Time is all that’s left,
    It’s the kind one serves like a
    prison sentence.
    We huddle beside the Mission,
    smoke caged cigarettes, wait for
    it to open: prayer, meal, lights out
    at ten, spectral dreams with
    phantom men.
    Prayer? What is there to pray for?
    Tomorrow we will rise slowly,
    as from a graveyard like dead men,
    and haunt the world again.

    DEAD BOLT
    Key in the wrong door, maybe it will open
    to something better?
    I hear two doors close behind the locked one
    The sound is final, my visit done.
    I grew up near a race track, horses, dogs.
    All the races were fixed.
    There was a sign staked near the entrance
    someone hammered into the ground.
    “Jesus Finds The Lost.”
    Lost bets I wondered?
    No, the lost find Jesus, I concluded.
    Not as good as scoring money but they
    have to win something.
    I’ll end this poem with a conversation
    with a homeless person.
    “Are you lost?” I ask him.
    “I’m homeless. Can you spare some
    change?”
    “Maybe. I’m writing a poem. So far
    it has no meaning. I was hoping you could
    give it some.”
    “You want meaning from a bum?”
    “I’ll take it from anyone.”
    “You need the right key to open the right
    door. If you never find that key you’ll
    be locked out forever.”
    I gave him some change anyway.