Friday, January 28, 2005
Sound + Vision
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Very cool email this afternoon from Crazyhorse: I have a poem forthcoming in the next issue, which has come up four pages short, so they asked for a new batch of poems to fill out the issue before it goes to press. Hopefully, they'll find something they like but, truth be told, I had precious few poems to choose from. Almost everything in my second ms. is published, or will be. A good problem to have.
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Freezing rain coming in tonight. Very cold out, misting and gusty. The world where you are?
Wednesday, January 26, 2005
We can work it out
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Today's word is poikilothermic.
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C'mon, spring....
Tuesday, January 25, 2005
Odin's Raven
But, Steve.
Steve is the guy I hired as my personal care assistant. He comes in the evenings and mornings and helps me in/out of bed, dressing, that's about it. He's been working for me since November and has been quite reliable. Last night, however, he didn't show and never called. I waited until well after midnight and never heard from or saw him. Luckily, my family lives here in town.
Still today no word. He didn't show this morning. I have no idea what his deal is. It's frustrating. It took me three months to find this joker. I don't want to start over again just as I'm finally, in the last few weeks, getting everything in place, in a groove.
And now this.
Monday, January 24, 2005
Sunday, January 23, 2005
Friday, January 21, 2005
Thursday, January 20, 2005
Fire!
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Fighting off a cold. Feeling ok.
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Saw A Very Long Engagement this weekend. A little long, I thought, but lovely.
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Today's word is ASAP. I'm using it as often as possible. It makes me happy.
Monday, January 17, 2005
Brr
WEATHER
Bitch-ass cold was how you described the air,
your own pluming out into the month,
and I had to smile, your forecast
four letter visceral. No more
technical a term than the staccato chatter
of teeth, the blue vibrato
of lips, the stolid stamp of booted feet.
All around us, the mad wait
to besiege the stores
for milk, for bread, for eggs
if the first flurry falls,
if the ground goes ash fine and white.
Where is what I refuse
to wear, my coat,
my mits you joke knitting for me,
where is
and why not here,
the tilt of the earth no good excuse
for January’s anti-social
sky. On the doorknob, on the door,
in the air are the hidden
germs on which you spend
your days and words
and in this air there’s no good medicine
for anything. It’s cold
and the shiver of the world
stops in my bed.
Sunday, January 16, 2005
Writin' my will on a three dollar bill
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Finished Buffy, season 3. Pretty great stuff. Season 2 is still high up there for me, with its operatic qualities. The moment when Angel kills Jenny (was that her name?) still gives me a shiver. 3 is great, though. Which I expected. "The Zeppo" was an amazing episode, one that knocked me right between the eyes.
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Well, I didn't win the Morse prize, though the letter indicates my ms. was a strong contender. Another one down. It's coming so close, so often. Patience.
Thursday, January 13, 2005
a fortune inside your head
Wednesday, January 12, 2005
THE NUMBERS ARE NOT IN
The world is filled with those who want
someone else, just as the world
is split in halves, or hemispheres
if we want the word that says it
with a measure of beauty. Most times,
we do. But tonight, what
you get is halves. Tonight
what you get is another unanswered
question. Something like,
why do cyclones spin counter-clockwise
in this half of the world?
Something like my thoughts
in the shower, my body
washed by someone else,
and I’m thinking of dark matter,
not because my heart
on its haunches sits bleeding out
like last week’s pitiful possum,
its hateful mouth red raw,
but because dark matter is one more thing
I won’t ever understand.
No knowledge could I put on
that might plug the holes,
that might seal the chinks
through which my mind goes
after you. When I read
the absurd science
of how we might one day upload our minds,
it’s Ted Williams
I'm thinking of:
his severed head,
poorly cared for
in its Kelvin crypt of absolute zero,
now cracked, now
the Splendid Splinter even in death.
And it’s that wish
to come back better
or new,
to walk out onto the pliant summers
of our best years
when we knew sex to be as easy as breath
and like the next,
assured. Love, the dark
that waits holds
answers like a winning hand
and I’ve stopped
asking. Whatever I know,
I build it as a bird
builds her fragile bowl of a nest.
And in that nest a bird sings.
Of course,
of course,
she sings to the yolk white world inside each blue egg
and for a time,
for as long as I can stand,
I listen.
You still love rock and roll
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Check out the ultra-suave stylings of Backwards City Review:
Both of my poems are about breasts. But not really. Now you know you want to read for sure. ;)
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Received a cd today from Wendy! Very cool. And a card from Erica Bernheim in cold, cold Chicago. It has frogs in swim trunks singing. The card, not Chicago.
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Allison Krauss is playing right down the street from me tonight. I should try to sneak in. I did once. My senior prom night. My date and I left because, well, the theme was "Everything I Do I Do It For You," and isn't that reason enough? So we wandered around downtown till we came to the Memorial Auditorium where some kind of concert was taking place. We were by a side entrance when a man came out. I asked him to hold the door for us and he was only too happy to do so. We followed the meandering hallway until we came out backstage. It was a gospel concert. Musicians in suits stood around us and smiled at us. A giant man held his tiny wife in his arms, seated on his lap. She said we looked so pretty and we thanked her. We stayed and watched each group play, bluegrass, banjos, filled up with God. That was my prom night.
Monday, January 10, 2005
THE LIVES OF THE OPTIMISTS
So the jonquils are fooled into flaming up
though it’s January. The bricks soak
in heat like ruddy sponges.
Walking home, I hide
within whatever’s radiant.
A bird whose name I’ve never bothered
to learn sings its farewell
to winter. It’s January, tomorrow
we’ll grieve. Or the next
day, but not this thawed instant,
not in this false blush
of lilac. In my bones, the old scores
with the earth are laid to rest
and each dyspeptic grudge
blossoms into frantic, sweet, careening
love. In your bones,
the tidal hymns of blood.
This heedless smile once was yours.
So too my hands,
themselves fooled
by the tilt of the earth, the white face of a star.
Thanks to
But the funny thing is I couldn't remember which poem was being quoted. Heh. I had to open up my old Word file for my book and search for the phrase. This is not uncommon with my poems.
Hey, I just write 'em.
Sunday, January 09, 2005
Let's get together before we get much older
Thursday, January 06, 2005
Thursday rain
Wednesday, January 05, 2005
Notebook
SECONDHAND PORN
His laptop hums like a respirator or like a cat
it purrs as its disc drive spins up
It’s not cancer you worry about
It’s not cancer you worry about, it’s not
the carnation light of your clean
lungs you fear to see go dark in your fist
when the coughing never ends,
as you imagine seated beside someone
who smokes when you do not. No,
it isn’t that at all, you might
welcome the clouds, you might not,
I can’t say because I couldn’t
choose myself, waiting in
while one of our inland seas
would not let us fly home. Braided rain
smacked the glass, delay
was computed in a tower on computers
that voted for Nixon. Beside
me, a man could not be consoled
by his bored clatter of keystrokes,
the simple games designed
to undo time.
Universality is the divide between rust
and the sinking, soft swing sets
No one ever asks but I try to answer
Tuesday, January 04, 2005
road
Monday, January 03, 2005
Say hi
I admire anyone in poetry who works outside of academia. Bob Hicok used to (I still admire you, Bob!), and so does Mr. Young. A radiation oncologist, which means he is a lot smarter than me.
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It's the new year. New classes begin for me on Thursday, which I'm generally ready to begin. Wish me luck.
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Any one good at astrology? What does my year hold for me?


