Saturday, December 31, 2016

Pig Ears - 20161230

Nights before new years
Smear like dripped paint under toes
Noticed after the wall is painted
The room is cohesive color except for this patch of carpet

Muddled in the remnant of unnoticed motion
Inertia of focus in the brand of claustrophobic insular Americanism
Making rooms great again
That possessed the landlord to slather the sheetrock in white

To attract the best possible tenant like an Israeli settlement realtor’s yard sign
Trying to swallow speeches about who friends are
Palestinian poet talks about not losing hope
Like a man of recycled internments

Of inches and margin spacing of what gets to fit on the page
Friend of mine, we decide to go do something conventionally American
The Knickerbockers are in New Orleans and so his Queens
Orange and blue Metropolitans affinity bounces towards Poydras Street

Stubhub and nosebleeds, seats seven and eight to ogle the comfortable
To not feel like an ass-hat pricing one’s vantage for big men
Thinking of atheist sauna Christmas and my grandmother saying how not-insert family name
My father’s sons are for not hunting, basically an octogenarian called me a pussy  

My grandmother and I played poker at her table
She salted the cabbage like gargling for a sore throat
Gave me a Mary Catholic calendar for 2017
As I thought about talking to the woman I was almost engaged years ago
Past three a.m. last week and holding her feet in my hands like tiny cups

Drinking time’s dirt off in the red pressure geometry of women’s footwear
And just the way she walks in and over and exits flipping light switches
The smell of chocolate martini’s and Sam Cooke songs
Sucked into a vortex of sofa pillows and holidays

My friend thinks about how his grandmothers passed away by the time he was hatched
His engaged prematurely leaving this Earth in angelic tragedy
That bouncing ball of faith to see Jerusalem without weeping
The levee bonfires of Persian Phd cultural anthropologists painting canvases in his head

Confronting coffee baristas like a gangster for sequestering beans and shutting down speech
For a private party he is not invited
Baby fat liquid courage middle fingers and millimeters between fists through glass
Bursting sand like an AK47 in a Palestinian car trunk  

MSNBC Trump squawking Israel is a victim treated unfairly
Stomach in bends churning the cheeks of a goat head
To swallow every morsel from a carcass’ face at a P.L.O. campfire
Assemble, clean, and reassemble a rifle: testicle verification

Looking forward to a basketball game and fandom
Crossing from the west bank of the Mississippi not the Jordan
Ready to scream at tall men for dominating or failing to dominate
Other tall men while some dude who dropped out of Ball State

After one semester riding the bench for forty minutes
Makes more money than I do in a year
For clapping and standing up to congratulate players
That make him their bitch in practice every Tuesday

Shuffling through Ochsner healthcare bills on my desk, doorbell, game time
Parking next to Regions Bank
My friend sees French tapestries hung on the wall through a glass window
Herd down Poydras to the arena

Remember where my grandfather would walk us through
The Hyatt to go to Saints games in the Superdome
Katrina, renovation and that path ain’t der no more
Stairs and scooching ass in front of face in narrow mountaineer rows

Shoot the shit about Kristaps Porzingis Latvian giant 7 foot 3 and 21 years
Gets compared to other white dudes because the privileges of supremacy
Dissipate in an egalitarian acquisition of athletic prowess darkening the NBA’s color lines
So my friend’s brother and St. John’s and Chris Mullin and Dirk Nowitzki come up

Me living in Dallas post Katrina and a woman named Shyla we will meet later
Rings in my head of opportunities and windows in life of half spoken out of sequence
Contemplations squished between Anthony Davis’ unibrow
As a bomb goes off in a Baghdad market as Germans prost blah blah, words, numbers

Halftime four points up, beer run, yogi leg I step to the row below, let two black guys sit
Bar line and two blond Spanish guys, one with an HSBC credit card
Allow a third to cut in front of my friend and me
Escalate to commit the New Orleans sin of not knowing what the fuck you want to drink

When occupying the attention of the tender mulling thirteen minutes and sixty-three dollars
Into this trio of six-foot-four muddling Mediterranean’s and my Napoleon complex
Is soaked in the setting, of finally getting two Abita Ambers on draft, a twenty-dollar bill
Keep the change and return to something sacred in second half of fervently cursing

With a buddy about sports, international politics, war, and poetry
As grown men dribble for our entertainment and he says something about bread and circuses
Rome Juvenal 100 A.D., inauguration January 20, 2017
Final buzzer, lanes into stairwell, enjoy walking in the street when I can

Johnny Sanchez Mexican food on Poydras, think of work and menu prices
Magic jalapenos into pig ear chilaquiles with salsa and yard egg
Conchinita Pibil enchiladas with the other end of the Yucatan pig
Take my fake temporary teeth out and cover in a napkin sipping tequila and hibiscus

Day of the Dead Mural for Madre Maria and my friend thinks of his mother
And we share the swine’s hearing appendages slow roasted in spices
He says he misses the aftertaste
Shyla comes to and fro; in between I mention reading the Qur’an

For research for the book I’m writing; watching the Last Temptation of Christ
With William Defoe and my friend remembering when the movie came out
And his parent’s thinking about blasphemy and I say,
“What Jesus is never supposed to get any pussy.”    

Whiskey and Shyla makes my friend a tote bag as past eleven p.m.
Closing time and she stops to talk in the emptied restaurant, living in Dallas, Houston
Rolls her r’s about ancestry D.N.A. tests of being raised in a small Texas border town
First generation American with French parents and Paris is a city

Moving to New Orleans she thought it would feel like a city
But an apartment in the Quarter and it doesn’t, it feels intimate
A place where you can feel the dead around you
We flirt and I do not realize in that box-not-checked life I have held on for this year

Of thinking of car wrecks, job loss, daughter gone AWOL
Teeth still in a napkin and words of asking for a number
Do not come out and I feel that what if I want to be alone and I don’t get to be
And the mud of pig’s feet and smeared steps of yard eggs and painted walls

Dripping in the dance of the coming year
Of more surgeries and feeling like my body is a caterpillar eyeing his wings
In a painted spring or this, this moment right here in subtle brush stroke
To know the sunlight approaching midnight in alcohol and brunet locks

Of what men choose to say and when
Feel wanting to be in one’s body
That when a woman makes a point to startle the scene to tell you her name
Touch your hand and you revisit leaving a note inside the credit card receipt jacket

On the extra slip afforded to make up for muteness you start with half a sentence
Then you slip it in your jacket pocket
Tongue mouthing the gap between your canines
The quartet of incisors and the first time you ever kissed a girl 

Saturday, December 24, 2016

Christmas Eve - 20161224

Sometimes all you want in life is a moment of clarity,
a sliver of vision in the woodlands like a gleam,
a piece of the universe to be naked,
crystal and jarring to the texture of a breath. 

You break bread with midnight in words on a page
bartering in aged sentiments fermenting in the barrel
rotated and left to preserved air. 

The memory of transparency in youth,
the way a body could know variables like direction,
dreams of chimneys and magical forces
that would grant wishes or prayers in silent starlight. 

You stare until vision blurs and
a heart thumps dizzy and pacing that love actually is
a breathing mocking bird fluttering in nest,
a tree of sounds reminding and surprising in a morning song. 

Sunday, December 11, 2016

Smoke Alarms - 20161210

Fiddling ceiling smoke alarm beeping once a minute
Ladder, nine-volt battery exchange, placement, warning sound stops
Four hours later back home, beeping continues
Misfit, power connection failure, no determined solution

Voted Louisiana election, afternoon check Facebook of an atheist buddy of mine returning from Standing Rock
At Oceti Sakowin camp who cleaned port-o-lets, chopped wood, washed dishes
Prepped camp, held a body shield to a pipeline in arctic water cannon to let indigenous people speak
Letting friends know back in Providence, “I’m in R.I.” continuing an anti-capitalist revolution

Past sunset to Blue Oak BBQ in New Orleans talks heading with my poet-friend Paul, late out
Memory failure of conversations humans keep having
Of Nicaragua, Grenada, and Palestine, pigs shipped in Cryovac, slow roasted
Victims of white meat fires, red, all red 

Ordering, crossed-over menu items of what has sold out by nine p.m.
Pork is unavailable.  Chopped beef plate, once every six months
Eating cow and somehow, here, now, the decision has been made
With a compatriot to inhale sauce and meat and sip cup

Of water slipped button on dispenser spritz Coca Cola’s Powerade
To blend yellow in the ice melting discolored form purity
Wooden table, pickle, fork, Brussel sprouts, and animal
Talk Hamas and P.L.O. and Arafat corrupt money-taker lived in Tunisia

Conversations inside a people for a people to support and yet self-criticism
Misunderstood externally of splinters of fundamentalist thought-space exploiting
That corrupted bank account vibrating the memory of climate change
And 125 degree deserts and the Israeli pen of no water access or trade

Intellectual people cut off from the world in that heat and time basting in Zion
Of inside Gaza to Jabalia, to Nuseirat, to Khan Yunis
Of Northern Nazareth east of Haifa north of Jerusalem and walls
Of contemplating the second coming of if

The savior was real, of where said Christ would be reborn; it would be in the Palestinian ghetto
Ice caps melted, temperature homeostasis suitable for humans lost
A child born and blown up by a Jewish bomb or shot at a checkpoint 
To understand he was Palestinian the first time too

To say he was Jewish or Christian and somehow not Palestinian
Or to mix the character up in this duck, duck, goose chase triad of Abrahamic monotheisms
Misses the genetic blood chain of doing a test on any of us
And we get hybrids going back to Africa if you could sip far enough

This man of immaculate embryo, sanctified of spermatozoa focuses on some Portuguese portrait
Blue-eyed acorn to the world to seed Christianity west, laughing at triads to destroy temples
Of Palestinian does not mean Islamic, but what if this sequel it did
Just to fuck with the assumptions of picket fences with barbed wire and bullets  

Drinking more water, get up on-own to fill cup
Eyeing the remaining pickle on my friend’s plate
Heading out towards the Marigny to pick up Peter
A black Honduran from New York getting off-shift at the St. Roc market

The three of us head down Spain street
Park next to a steampunk Madmax-looking motorcycle
Paul says the space in the curve is owned by Solange Knowles
Well-press-suited black Muslims stand by a fifteen-foot tin door

Into the warehouse with D.J. music and shadow
High five to a guy in dreads and hoodie
Behind a corner of two-hundred-year-old brick work
When labor was all done by hands

See a buffet line of beans and rice, bread pudding and a family atmosphere
Solidarity community of day laborers party
Paul got the invite after our trip together to the Palestinian film festival last weekend
From Jesús an organizer, Mexican indigenous weathered face and hands

Shake broken English started after Katrina to stand up for the men and women
Standing outside Home Depot to rebuild a cracked city with callused hands
To safeguard a day’s pay for a day’s work under the exploitation of green card politics
To rebuild walls and roofs from seats in the back of pickup trucks hunkered with no seat belts

To have a voice in sanctuary city, someone to speak in the taken spoonful’s
Electricity run directly from the panel here for stringed lights, music
Candles at tables of humans playing gin, Tamika has a hand full of spades
Thinking of Oakland, no sprinklers, and one tip in the system, sounds in my head

John Lennon was shot thirty-six years ago, this week 12/8/1980 
Working class heroes and something to be
A yellow fist up black lives matter mural on one side the room
Day laborer’s brown body in the sun mural on the other

Bounce rap music cut and a brass brand’s horns blaze through the door
White caps, yellow rims and New Orleans black bodies
Tuba, trumpet, trombone, base and snare drums rolling
A cover of the Soul Rebels Let Your Mind Be Free

Step into the second line dance floor and shake that ass
No thermostat turn up the heat of bodies bend into the blend
Of cold concrete and disheveled rubble zone walls and space to feel the music
Women, men, drinks in some hands grooving comrades

Of what that word means and the fear it strikes in certain people
With heat in homes or air conditioning or iron domes
Head out to St. Claude avenue to the Art Garage next to Siberia
With street lights and a collection of post-Katrina hipsters

Selling homemade art and food shares in a shinier community on a variegated fringe
To the left of the entrance are framed cardboard homeless interstate signs
In a who-would-buy-that art recognition and flipped exploitative spectacle

In the rear a twelve-foot papier-mâché elephant with Sharpie pens
Where people could annotate their broken dreams
Peter and I talk next to the trunk of the African animal
Trump and a timeline ticking of people understanding what is coming

Amnesty International has a table and pictures with letters
Humans can sign to support the freedom of imprisoned activists
Farid al-Atrash, Aser Mohamed, Francisca Ramírez, Leonard Peltier
Big Fredda is playing later and someone signs for Edward Snowden

Head out to a vampire Spitfire bar on Decatur in the Quarter
Closing down tonight, Paul knows a woman and a bartender
Stock supplies dwindling and so it is Evan Williams in a glass
Listening to goth dance beats and pale faces mimicking ghetto booty

Paul contemplates his Uber app for some late-night income
Drives Peter home then me, piss break, fist bump, call it a night three a.m.
Six I hear the smoke alarm battery warning firing off again in the blur
Of zombie body waking to look at the plus and minus signs

Making sure the polarity was correctly placed in this ceiling machine
It was, but I had to use force to slam the white plastic covering shut
To activate the connection to keep the safety sensor from malfunctioning
Because the damn thing just wants to spit out the energy trying to help it 

Friday, December 9, 2016

One Seat

Pull door open, Friday, High Hat, Freret New Orleans
Head phones, Steve Jobs, Walter Isaacson biography
Ironic Zen, Dylan, Ram Dass, sleek iPod Nano audiobook
The look of the please-be-seated assessment

Is one alone, holding a copy of the Once and Future King in hand
As a dining mate, to please the logistics, the mathematics
To seat a human at the bar, starring at open tables for more
Says I do not have anything right now, but you can sit…

Oblige to the tender, professional solo diner
Knowing this is normal, the rambunctious rabble den
The outings of discourse in ordering and imbibing
The evening of release, a reward of company and observer status invisibility cloak

The soundlessness in the symphony
Noticing and unnoticed tremors, energy surges in reaction
The pulse of presence, of nutrient acquisition
In peeling the jawbreaker angels and impish forces of the naked recess

Cloaked in coquetry and companionship
A mother plays with her daughter who cannot sit still
Sweater in the December night duckling under a table
I order flounder with paprika grits and crispy broccoli over a sweet potato puree

A pale ale draft, jingle bell earring waitress behind the bar
A seventy-something gay couple waiting for take-out order a Dewar’s and a Chablis
Quartet of twenty-something females scanning big eyes like a bumble bee’s flapping wings
Fold my prosthetic teeth into a napkin

Read through fifty pages with the Wart learning about spears and boars
The safeguards of protruding sideways to prevent a pierced charging animal from splitting a man
Ants in hills taking up legion for Merlin to deliver magic
To make boys believe the world is a cup of possibility

Drank yoga earlier in the evening in twenty-six postures once over
Fire introspection toe stand the portal inside a man’s head
The thoughts in humid heat, ancient languages, and crinkled time
To smile into a limpid mirror through illusions laughing like a phoenix being born

The ash of sweat to crack union with alone and together how to do both, be both
We are continually born and reborn, birth is not a singular event
Memories of lives we have forgotten we lived, taken like whispered beautiful ravens
And the touch of a mother washing a son’s bloody shirt in the cold water of a kitchen sink

Forgetting what you think you know, what is gone, what is present
A fork, fish and vegetables to a mouth, soft and palatable
Unanswered phone calls and remembering it is not your fault you did not do anything wrong
That portable warmth one carries intractable no matter the shelf of the universe, one is


Monday, December 5, 2016

My Happiness

I found my happiness.
On my own
In terms that resonate in fractals years bent inward
Beaming in a testament to what I have chosen

There is nothing, but how one reacts
I found my happiness
Underneath my anger
I would tell myself I am not mad at her anymore or him or it

There was the initial male rivalry of older brother
Physical and submission to muscles that do not push back
In a strand lesson of Catholic masochism
Of who takes turn the other cheek literally

Pummeled and spat crack toothed
Blame for bicycling into prohibited territory
Thinking to break rules was to invite destruction
Like swallowing glass heated beyond stability

A dish of cauliflower in the oven puffed hemispheres with rosemary
Exploding upon placement on the counter
Shards catapulted into the crannies of the kitchen floor
Slicing feet and smiling that this is what one chose

To heat the oven keep the cell walls broiling into adolescence
To marriage, to divorce, to eight years of holding single fatherhood
Until the fire burns anyone that attempts to come close
To say I am trying to help

I found my happiness
In recognizing I was mad at me
I was angry at myself for not being better at the social game
Or figuring out there was a margin for error, but you have to take it

No one can give it to you, but yourself
If you are angry at anyone else
You are not.  You are only angry at yourself
For feeling like you failed at preventing the pain or acquiring the pleasure

Your perception led you to believe was ideal or warranted
And you are the byproduct of this perception
Hardened in years of attempting to stare people in the eye when they ask
How come you can’t be happy?

Depression sits on the shelf like two inches of whiskey at the bottom of the bottle
That reappears each morning in a Sisyphean endurance binder
That no matter what you suck up, that solution returns
Brown and odious for you to contemplate on how to be better

And one day you realize vulnerable and sober
That it is ok to live, that you need to give yourself a break
Quit being mad at yourself for this impossible standard
You would never hold anyone else to and in that pocket of acceptance in the now

I found my smile, teeth missing and beaming to say good morning
On the street passing up the forlorn heaviness of self-contempt
That I am worthy of my happiness and no one,
Not even me, has the right to take it away

I choose, I choose to love me, to be happy 
Nothing changed, but perception; I am still alone 
But I love myself in a way people approaching me might emulate 
Instead of the anger at myself I projected onto them bringing forth repellent

That I somehow did not deserve to be giving circumspection 
Beyond the immediate and in this self-liberation 
I am alive like laughter in a smile 
Kindled in solemn appreciation of existence