NOT FAIR

Like a stealth missile from an unexpected source,
bad news decimates life.
My friend's youngest daughter:
Perhaps the darkest word in language: Cancer.

In her early 30's,
a young lady with a helping heart,
always doing for others,
while tyrants consume
gourmet food
good people
every day,
strut their wealth
for the world to marvel
or despise.
Psalmic dimensions here—
David cries out why the wicked
thrive.

Life is not fair, we cry out.

But sometimes the weather’s fair,
we go to a fair,
pay a fare to relish fare,
which sometimes is very good
and sometimes fair.
And life can be truly fair
or just fair
for others, sometimes us.

Is there any comfort there?

Originally published in Communicator's League

GRANDMOTHER ROSE: A LIFE BY ANY OTHER NAME

I stuck out my thumb,
hitched a ride to your suburb
one May day for no reason
I could fathom.

Just hadn't seen you,
you of the chicken soup,
matzo balls, borscht,
chicken a la King over mashed potatoes,
best damn thin pancakes I ever ate,
applesauce and sour cream.
Jewish scion of our family,
all holidays at your house.

Guess I had nothing to do.
A committed campus radical,
no anti-war demonstrations that day.
Stuck out my thumb,
surprised your afternoon.

Didn't go well.
You knew my politics,
pleaded with me to stop.
"You are so naive. Don't you
know the Communist Party
is behind your activities,
pays for everything!”

Grandma, the Communist Party
is like an old horse
no one wants to ride any more.
The War is terrible.
It must be stopped.


We never agreed.
Tension sat in the room
like a bad diagnosis.
But I am sure we hugged
before I thrust my thumb towards campus.

A couple of weeks later,
when you died in the waiting room—
“Because they did not get to her in time,”
my Aunt screamed to me over the phone.

Grandmother Rose—
how did you remember me?

Originally published in Communicator's League

TOLKIEN DIED

Even immortal men are mortal,
a bleeding ulcer and chest infection at 81,
nothing magical, nothing fantastic.

Tolkien did not die when he should have.
Reluctant to serve in WW I,
married, languished in Britain,
family-badgered, socially scorned,
enlisted as a signals officer,
shipped to France.

On the verge
of the Battle of the Somme,
lice ignited raging trench fever.
The prescribed ointment
maddened the lice,
sent him to a British hospital.

His entire battalion
destroyed at the Somme.
Lice saved the Rings.

Originally published in Spank The Carp

FORGIVENESS

My grandsons drag their tent
across the back yard,
uncover an Eden of garter snakes
roiling, scared,
slithering for safety,
one snatched by my oldest grandson,
grasped and petted
before it wriggled away,
the Curse forgiven.

When I was six,
in front of my house,
an adult garter snake
rose and hissed at me.

Terrified, I screamed
for our Great Dane.
Rowdy roared around the house,
snapped up the innocent snake,
shook it to death
while I sobbed and cheered.

For years, I told that story,
fondly remembering my dog.
Now, when I see my grandson
love and release his snake,
it is my snake
for which I feel.

Originally published in Beyond These Shores

WHAT WE CAN'T DO

What if one woman and I
were left on the Earth
to propagate the human race?
What if we couldn’t invent anything—
from a battery to a rocket,
cure smallpox?

Adam and Eve didn’t bother
with math or technology,
the ground watered itself,
luscious fruit to pluck,
the Four Rivers pure,
animals best friends.

When they left the Garden,
they needed it all,
progressed into civilization,
the last few hundred years,
bombs, machine guns, tanks,
trains, automobiles planes,
skyrocketing technology,
computers, the Internet, I-Phones,
from agrarian to urban,
plowing to the moon.

I couldn’t create any of these things—
a failed birdhouse in shop class—
my dear wife hardly better.
I write poems,
read on the poetry circuit.
She’s a garden artist.
We can’t develop a circuit for anything
or a chip,
would never have thought of atoms,
become our hero Salk.
Glad there have been billions
to invent these marvels.

Without the weapons though,
please, without the weapons,
but, it seems, those come with the territory.

Originally published in The Green Silk Journal

NEW FOR OLD

Pull down the old statues,
battle celebrations
glorifying war.

Melt them down,
make statutes
of protestors instead.

Flowers in her hair
above her smiling, defiant face,
flourishing a peace sign.

His head bandaged by a police baton,
fist thrust in the air
in solidarity with the people.

Forge these fresh molds
of youthful courage,
park them on the empty slabs.

Originally published in VietNam War Poetry

SEASONS

You can’t slip and fall on sunshine
which reveals my prejudice
against Old Man Winter
who I would trip when
he wasn’t looking
cause him to fall
and break his ankle
like my boss did
on that black ice
at the airport
which he couldn’t see
because of the sun glare.
Oh shoot.
You have to be careful
every season.

Originally published in Academy of the Heart and Mind

CONVALESCENCE

My dog leaps into
a mellowing life.
Her leg buckles to surgery.
Too young to put down,
she breaks my heart,
a helpless creature,
beautiful big black
eyes, a forlorn quiz.

In my old age, I come alive
to pet and whisper
into her perked ears
why she now lives in a cage
unable to chase
her squirrel foes,
attack the garbage truck
at the back fence,
protect me from the neighbor dog.

In her convalescence
that will never make sense to her
she fills my limited lifetime
as if it will go on forever.

Originally published in Poetry On Postcards

PINOCCHIO

Pinocchio’s nose began to grow.
The cat and the fox whiskered him over.
“What’cha got boy?”
He doesn’t know his nose has grown.
He thinks they want the pennies in his pocket,
the hat Gepetto made him.
Fox says: “What a great nose. How’d you do that?”
He touches his nose and scares his hand.
“I don’t know,” he stammers.
Cat says: “Tell the truth!”

Originally published in Poetry On Postcards

NOBODY DIED

When the shit hits the fan:
I  total the car.
Our TV and washing machine go kaput the same week.
Our daughter gets fired from her dream job.
Our grandsons move to Montana.

How long do you have to listen to our woes?

We often say to each other,
as a way to staunch the angst:
"Nobody died. But nobody died.”

That causes us to stop our complaining,
realize that the worst tragedy did not happen to us
as our minds comb through the tangled hair of others' lives,
indeed some bodies did die.

We have friends who have lost children,
three genetic cancers and a drug overdose.
Did you ever look into the eyes of a mother who lost her child?

We are aware of the world, the terrible storms across the globe.
Biblical earthquakes and famines, the moon turns to blood.

incessant wars, nation against nation

suicide bombings, escalating mass shootings, unfathomable beheadings,

the widening poverty the rich take glee in,

the local teen selling popcorn at the football concession stand
paid with a stray bullet,

media responsibly bringing the bad news
as if it were some perpetual Marathon runner
falling exhausted before our brains every day.

We absorb. Process perpetually
but always end
with our litany of solace:
“Nobody died,”
which is true for us for now.

Originally published in Poetica Review

JEANNE AND SHIRLEY

Young girl friends of mine
before the sex claw
pinched and scratched.

Sweet Jeanne.
Afternoons  spent together on your screened-in porch,
talking for hours, dabbling in youth.
You cried when I beat you
in the Spelling Bee.
I cried because you cried.
We held hands when your Dad died.

Wild Shirley.
An imaginary horse, I chased
you around the playground.
Skipped lunch with you,
ran through fields of daffodils,
wove crowns for our heads.

Jeanne, we were teens
when I saw you working in a department store.
Your dyed hair unrecognizable,
face thick with makeup, lip gloss,
barely able to restrain the disdain
for your nerdy friend.
Turned to a phantom customer
when I greeted you.

Shirley, a cheerleader moved to another school,
embarrassed when I said hello.
Your makeup pancaked me,
friends gossiped your reputation.
Ran away as fast as you could
from your nerdy friend,
cartwheeling my heart.

Were we to find ourselves
in rockers now,
miraculously living
in the same old folks' home,
would we be friends again?

Originally published in Spindrift Magazine

UNCOMMITTED

You treat my heart like a cat treats a mouse.
Pawing,
toying,
taking your own sweet time.
Until you pounce,
kill,
leave a partly eaten heart
in some corner.
Sweet, sickly purr.
Off again for another.

Originally published in Mad Swirl

STANDING OLD ON THE BEACH

I.

My beating heart
tries to
tries to
reassure itself.

Wife stands old beside me,
children and grandchildren
flit before the wild waves
waves break the same
and different like life
children flitting, flitting
like sea birds
try to
try to
wings beat against the wind.

My mind carried back
by the stiff wind
into beach memories

II.

As a child
I ride my Father as my boogie board
then holds me on the boogie board
after he passed
just me and the boogie board

III.

Lose socks at 14
on a beach date
condominiums with family
hot dogs and
buried brothers and sisters in sand

IV.

college parties
desperate for drinks, women
dump cheap Black Label
into rusty Daytona Beach garbage can
beer tasted like oil

V.

Demonstrations at Ft. Lauderdale
long nightsticks at the riots
birthed the 60’s rebellion

VI.

Now
yellow green double red flags
the warnings of life
red tide, flesh-eating
microorganisms
fear of sharks
tropical storms

VII.

Many shores
the ocean
my wife, children
always a return
wait
wait
for my children’s promise
my ashes surf atop the waves.


Originally published in The Raconteur Review

NUMBERS

My daughter struggles with a Statistics class,
complains about probabilities,
sends shudders of memories through me.

In old age now, I don't do numbers,
only see the ball scores,
know the higher number means a win.
Praise to James Van Tassel for the calculator. 

In eighth grade, the math teacher,
nicknamed Rajah,
huge in voice and demand,  
threatened to call my father
because I didn't pay attention.
Tried to tell him I didn't get it.

What mathematical de Sade
invented Algebra?
Saved by Mr. Piazza
the wrestling coach, a D minus
kept me on the team.

And Mr. Olson for Geometry,
Euclid rhymes with putrid.
He assigned everyone a personal theorem.
So, when he called on me, I always got it right. 
Vertical angles are always equal.

In college, took a general Math requirement,
had to pass to stay in school,
had a crush on the tutor, 
tried hard to please beautiful Ms. Christiansen,
No one in the world has gotten a
D minus, minus—except me.

On the LSAT for grad school,
the Math exam stumped me 
after six problems, ending with a question
about Napoleon's Bones math concept,
equilateral nightmare.
Fifteen minutes in, I put my head down.
The proctor asked: "Are you sick, young man?”

Learned helplessness, they call it,
born with that malady.
I am not proud.
How can you be proud of what you didn't want to be?

But I got smart, married
a woman who could measure things,
took the measure of me. 
I made it through life without numbers.
Can you beat those odds?

Originally published in The Daily Drunk Humor Magazine

BLOWING STRAWS

At Walgreen’s soda fountain
when Mom worked there,
so much fun!
In a booth, 
we ripped open the paper,
slid it down the straw,
just past half-way,
how far was key.
Accordioned the paper, 
blew hard,
sent the missile into
our laughing faces,
my brother and me.
Mom taught us
like a little kid.
What other Mom somersaulted?
Barefoot belle.  
Mom blew hard
giggled, laughed,
her Lana Turner eyes flashing.
Direct hit to the nose!
Before the divorce
sometimes Dad showed up. 
No! No blowing! No!

Originally published in Eskimo Pie

LAST WORDS

A young man crept down the urine-pained hallway,
                                         visiting a stroke-wrecked grandmother in an old folk’s home.
                            Went into the room of the once vital woman
                            who could no longer speak, only move her eyes,
blink yes or no when questioned.

 Outside Grandmother’s room, from the main room,
a sound, a sound he did not want to hear,
                                 repeated over and over, indecipherable
from a white-haired woman—thin as paper,
                                  rolling her wheelchair around as if she were dancing with an invisible partner,
                                  the sound, the sound, like the rasp of a sick crow,
                                  two words, repeated, repeated,
ears straining to understand the frantic crone’s plea.                                

As if turned into a harpy, she would start 
and not stop, never stop, like a bed pan sloshed across nerves,
                                   like tripping over a stringy mop,
the caw would never cease, 
                                   making him want to scream as he ran out into the hallway,
                                   driven mad as if Poe’s raven lit on the doorjamb once more.

‘Nurse, Nurse, what is she saying?’

“Forgive me; she is saying: Forgive me. That’s all she ever says.”

‘For what! Forgive me for what!’ 

“We don’t know. She says that every day.  Forgive me. Forgive me. Drives us crazy.
                 The more she says those two words, the more she swirls her chair around,
                           sometimes in a frenzy. She was once a famous ballerina.
That’s all we know.”

Years later, he forgot the ballerina, after his grandmother died.
                               In his own nursing home, pulling a comforter over his gray head, 
                                      from the ever cold, he remembered,
understood.

Originally published in Eskimo Pie

JUST A TREE

“It’s just a tree, Grammy.” 

Our five-year-old grandson 
comforts my wife
as we watch 
orange-helmeted, goggled workmen
cut down her cherished maple,
wracked by the heartless storm.  

Tears fall, branches wave
as if calling for help.
Tree falls, crushes memories,
parents knelt before the sapling
planted when their son was born,
hope the tree they planted
for their daughter
will live longer.

Originally published in Eskimo Pie

REVOLUTIONARY IDEA 

It's gotten bad enough 
this blue vs red embroilment. 

Missada, Jerseyork, 
Rhodemont, Virgwest 

heats up more every day,
nick the red and blue veins,  

Florkota, Tennorgia,
Massaz, Oreiana 

like the First People blood brothers
instead of killing, 

Loutana, Nebconsin,
Texaine, Callilina 

mix the states up,
re-locate the angst. 

Delatah, Missigan,
Idaowa, Whyken

Relate to new neighbors?
Do things differently? 

Alasio, Alaton,
Oklasota, Penntana 

Put down your guns,
replace stars with olive branches.

Hawaico, Arkanrado,
Connonois, Marysas

Do it now.
Please.

Originally published in Eskimo Pie

NATIONAL PAST TIME

I.

My Little League team sucked,
made the Bad News Bears look good.
We fired our coach who was a drunk,
hired a poet to replace him,
He knew nothing about the game.
But he wrote limericks
about each position:

There once was a pitcher with no luck
still known for his excellent pluck.
He threw such a curve
which never did swerve
and then he just passed on the buck.

There once was a shortstop named Slykes
who also was known for his gripes.
He swung and missed
and all the fans hissed
when he said he needed four strikes.

We never won any games,
but our pitcher and shortstop
joined the debating team and did well.

II.

There once was a bloke named Trump
whose antics caused many to flump.
He thought all were his slaves,
sent many to their graves,
wanting to dump his rump.

There once was a country
attacked by a terrible disease.
Everyone said we needed to stay home,
isolate safely until the virus ran its course.
We had elected a businessman.
His medical experience was going to the doctor.
But he said he knew about business.
He told everyone to get out there.
Get off the bench and onto the field.
Play Ball!
A lot of people thought he was crazy
and stayed home.
But a lot of people put on their uniforms
and began to throw the ball around again
and died.

Originally published in Poetry and Covid