Wednesday, March 24, 2010
in which the poet, a brooding fellow, who never forgets a previous slight, cynically reflects upon the ultimate act of betrayal in his life using crass metaphors, vulgar illusions, and just a touch of profanity in order to appeal to the MTV generation.
POW
BLAM
the assault
weapon
inside
me
exploded
yesterday
without any
warning…
POW
BLAM
guts
all over
the floor
and
assorted
bodily fluids—
red, white, and green
just like
the Italian
flag—
splattered
in odd
misshapen
patterns
on the
drab
cement walls
outside my
quaint little
workspace.
it
was
she
who
caused
me
to
internally
erupt
like
a volcano
that had been
dormant
for
centuries,
suddenly
and without
any real
warning
vomiting
it’s sulfuric
shit
into the
stratosphere.
POW
BLAM
the remains
of yesterdays
hastily consumed
big mac
and fries
smeared grotesquely
on
the sidewalk
where passersby
do a little jig
to avoid getting
blood and gunk
and putrid puss
on their fancy
italian leather
loafers.
young children
walk by
and stare at
my scattered
remains
hanging like
christmas
ornaments
on the trees
and shrubs,
and chuckle
innocently
as they use
my bloated heart
as a makeshift
soccer ball.
POW
BLAM
i want to tell
them that this
is a cautionary
tale of
misplaced trust
and
vicious betrayal
and that they should
never,
ever,
let their
hearts
become
too fond
or too open.
but
my
vocal cords
were severed
in the blast
and so the
little bastards
will just have
to learn
for themselves
how fucking
heartless
some people
can be.
it’s a lesson
we all need to learn
eventually,
i suppose,
but few of us
ever do…
until it is
much,
much
too
late
POW
BLAM
Monday, March 22, 2010
Listening In
Special Operations Report
Date: 11/12/07
Submitted by: Agt. Warren Schiffler
Report Summary: Conversation between suspect and his girlfriend. As always the two argued about the suspect’s paranoid tendencies, but reconciled sufficiently enough to plan intimate activities involving radishes (most likely of the daikon variety). Although there was some evidence of animal neglect, the lack of meat-based protein on the suspect’s dinner menu is highly suspicious. I believe that the two may indeed be planning to move in the direction of a vegetarian, or possibly even a vegan, diet in the future. The suspect definitely fits the profile of a typical enemy of the industrial food complex—overly educated, liberal, effete, and far too health conscious for his own good. If he continues to acquire the majority of his protein from beans and legumes, it could pose a potential threat to our American way of life. I recommend that the suspect continue to be monitored carefully, and, if he persists in his wanton disregard for the well-being of the pork and beef industry, that we consider terminating him and deprogramming his girlfriend.
Saturday, March 20, 2010
A Poem About the Meaning of Life
for he was told that rational contemplation was the key
to understanding the deep mysteries of the universe/
and as he contemplated, he listened for
but he was always met by a strange, terrible silence /
and the more he contemplated, the louder this silence became /
and he searched some sign of order in the cosmos,
and he searched for truth,
and he searched for beauty,
and he searched for goodness,
and he looked to the great sages who came before him
but they had no answers to offer him
and he strove to make the right conclusions and the proper deductions—
as if that would be enough to lead him to the light of Wisdom—
but all his conclusions were proven unsound
and still he clung tenaciously to logic and reason
but all his logic and all his reason in the end
when confronted with the vast void
and, just when he thought he had
he was stricken by a horrific illness,
FORGOTTEN.
Friday, March 19, 2010
d a r k n e s s
....................the open field
.................i saw her there
...............tiny as a child
............and just as frightened
.........(of what?
......i wondered
...to myself) /
......and i walked across
.........the overgrown lawn
...........till I came to
..............the spot where she stood
.................deep in her own
.....................anguished thoughts
..........................and I told her
........................................................to take
........................................................my hand
........................................................in hers
..........................and everything would
.....................be completely fine /
..................but she looked at me
...............with the sad eyes
............of perfect realization
.........and said
...that nothing would
......ever be the same again /
..........i tried to give her
.............some small shred of hope,
.................but in my heart
....................i knew full well
.......................that she was right /
........................................................and then
........................................................the darkness
........................................................came.
Visions of India
I'm delighted to report that I have survived my second trip to India. Sure, I got the requisite bout of dysentery--on the very day I was supposed to deliver my paper at the conference I was attenting--and suffered the entire time from what I call TIC (Typical India Crud) from the incessent pollution...but, thankfully, I returned with my health more or less intact.
As usual with these kinds of trips, I went bonkers photographing just about everything I saw. But this time, for a change, I also shot a considerable amount of video on my camera. The resulting ten minute montage I put together gives a sense of what I experienced, but to fully appreciate the indescribable mayhem that is South Asia, you really have to go there for youself.
You never fully get what you expect from India. I spent hours on the Ganges watching the bodies burn and participating every chance I got in the ancient ganga aarti cermonies in Rishikesh, Haridwar, and Varanasi. I hung out with the sadhus and woke up at a miserably early time to do yoga and meditation with some very serious--and some seriously freaky--people from all over the world. And I discovered, much to my amazement, that I probably didn't need to travel to the other side of the world to discover higher truths about life and death. I already knew everything important I needed to know before I ever left home.
So, no, I really didn't need to go back to India after all. But I'm glad I did anyway. Sometimes you need a complete and total change of scenery to remind you of what you already know.
Enjoy the movie!
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Sunt Lacrima Rerum
That forever haunt
The fragile human heart
Tears of deeds performed by
Our primeval ancestors
In the mindless madness of
Ancient times
Tears of horrific things that happened
Long before we were ever even
Conceived in our parent's imaginations
Tears of childhood agonies,
Those god awful adolescent follies,
And the pangs of painful losses
That can never be replaced
In this life or the next.
No world without tears
No life without endless sorrows.
It is our human lot,
The price we pay
For our parking space
On this stinking planet.
Erotic Landscapes
of / the / cigarette / between / his/ lips
and / sucked / as / much
of / the / sweet / acrid / nicotine
as / he / could / into / his
hungry / lungs /
soon / he / felt / the / usual
burning / sensation / ravaging / through
his / embattled / chest
like / a / sulfur / flare / had / been
set / off / inside / of / him
then / the / violent / cough / cough
and / the / spewing / of / crimson
tissue / out / of / his / mouth
the / gasping / for / air / to / keep / him
alive / for / just / a little / bit / longer /
he / knew / his / habit / would / soon
snuff / the / life / right / out / of / him
but / at / that / particular / moment
(and / what / other / moment
is / there / anyway?)
all / he / could / think / about
was / how / many / more / drags / were / left
on / the / gnarly / cigarette / dangling / from
his / bloody / lips
Friday, March 5, 2010
Therapy Session
The Patient: The same as always.
The Doctor: And how is that?
The Patient: You know, I still can’t help feeling that life is fundamentally absurd and meaningless.
The Doctor: And?
The Patient: And I just don’t see what the point of all this is.
The Doctor: The point?
The Patient: Yes, what is the point anyway?
The Doctor: The point is to somehow manage to survive it.
The Patient: That’s it? Brute survival…just like any other animal?
The Doctor: Exactly.
The Patient: But I am surviving.
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Phantasm
.......in the pit of my guts,
and ice cold steel in my heart.
If you’re looking for pity,
.......look somewhere else;
if you want someone to listen
to your tales of woe,
.......I’m definitely not your man.
I’ve got more than enough
.......shit of my own
and I don’t need any of yours
.......piled on top.
I have heard the wails of
.......the bleeding fetus
ripped out of his mother belly;
I have seen the outstretched hands
.......of the naked poor
begging for scraps of food
to feed their starving children;
I have tasted the stray tears
of the oppressed,
.......the persecuted,
..............the martyred,
and I’ve turned away,
completely unmoved.
I am a mere phantasm
of a human being,
a thin shell covering
.......sinews and bone,
................but lacking vital organs.
So if you are looking for
A touch of humanity,
then go look
for a human being;
there’s no one like that
.......around here….
just dust and debris,
the tattered remnants of
some feeling creature
who ceased to exist
.............long ago.
Friday, February 26, 2010
Returning to Mother India
I’ve traveled all over the world during the past twenty or so years and I’ve been to more than my fair share of places. And some places, most definitely, are easier to travel to than others. Europe is a piece of cake (even Southern Italy with all its disorder and rampant corruption is a snap). Japan, Thailand, Hong Kong, Nepal, and Singapore…no problem at all. I barely struggle at all when I’m traveling through countries like these.
But India is different; India is difficult, maddeningly difficult. It’s crowded, noisy, polluted, and squalid. All of your senses are continually bombarded in India: the sites, the sounds, and especially the smells…they’re almost overwhelming. You can’t be comfortable in India, even for two minutes. You walk two feet and you inevitably step in the putrid shit of some fetid, half dead animal; mischievous monkeys swing insanely from the telephone wires, leaping to the ground to snatch food out of the hands of unsuspecting tourists; crippled beggars and con men attack you at every possible turn; even the simplest food item assaults you, overwhelming your taste buds and convulsing your bowels.
That’s why I’m going back to India so soon. I’m sick of cotton candy living. I need my soul to be roughened up a bit. I want to be thrown off balance, so that I remember once again what it means to be ALIVE.
During my last trip, I distinctly recall walking past the burning ghats in Varansi with their endless stream of corpses being offered up to Shiva or some other deity in the endless Hindu pantheon. Bodies shrouded in gold, glowing in the moonlit sky…ashes scattered by mournful family members in the sacred river where the devout purify themselves…the mad, holy sadhus holding court on the rotting, slimy steps of the temples. You sit and watch the spectacle and you are transported to a different time long before our own antiseptic, cellophane-wrapped age. You are transported, not just to a different time, but a completely alternative plane of existence. The physical world with all its mundane, silly preoccupation simply disappears and you awake in the world of Arjuna, battling the Kauravas under the ever-vigilant watch of Lord Krishna.
I am returning to India, not because I want comfort, or cleanliness, or some degree of order—that’s why I go to Germany. I am going back because every now and then in this pathetic little life our ours you need to be forced out of your comfort zone and bourgeois ways of thinking in order to get to the essence of what human existence is all about.
Last time I was in India, I strolled along the Ganges at dawn and sampled the sacred rites that have endured down through the millennia. This time I will gorge myself upon them. I will sit on the steps of the burning ghats in the company of my brothers, the sublime sadhus, and force myself to come to terms with the essential mystery that is the human predicament. And, even if I fail to arrive at any profound conclusion about the meaning of my tawdry life, I will be infinitely better off for having spent even a few moments squatting on the slimy, shit strewn steps cascading down into the sacred Ganges. Better because India does not allow for halfway measures. It’s enlightenment or destruction, spiritual rebirth or cosmic self-annihilation. In Shiva’s homeland you either loose yourself completely or you are lost completely. No two ways about it. And I for one relish in the prospect of loosing myself (if only for a few hours) as all thoughts of worldly concerns slip away like thousands of arti lights flowing down the river into dark, peaceful oblivion.
And that, in a nutshell, is why I must go back to India.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Death Never Comes
when you’re waiting for him.
he comes like a
silent cry
in the still darkness
of night—
while you are in the middle
of some fabulous,
wild dream
or at your moment of
greatest triumph.
you can wait
a lifetime for death
to make his appearance
and he’ll fool you
time and again.
but turn your back
for just one moment
and your fucked—
before you can blink an eye
the worms will be feasting
on your
.....vital organs.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Revelation in the Operating Room
Doctor: Damn it, I won’t loose her, not now.
Nurse: But doctor, the EKG reading is completely flat. There’s no hope.
Doctor: There’s got to be hope. I won’t give up now. She’s my, my…
Nurse: Your what, doctor?
Doctor: (Crying) She’s my long-lost daughter.
Nurse: But I thought that she was Suzie Schwarz’s sister.
Doctor: (Despondent) She was, damn it. She was.
Nurse: But you dated Suzie at one point, didn’t you?
Doctor: Yes. But what has that got to do with anything?
Nurse: You dated your daughter’s sister?
Doctor: (Confused) I suppose I did. But it’s not like there’s anything wrong with that, right?
Nurse: No, unless Suzie was your daughter too…She wasn’t your daughter, was she?
Doctor: How could she have been my daughter…She was Sally’s mother.
Nurse: Suzie was Sally’s mother as well as her sister? How is that possible?
Doctor: She was only her adopted sister. Suzie was really my younger sister, although we pretended that she was Sally’s sister, because I wanted my daughter to have a playmate her own age.
Nurse: So you lost your daughter as well as your niece. I’m very sorry for you, doctor.
Doctor: It’s impossible for you to image how difficult this is for me. What am I going to tell her mother?
Nurse: By Sally’s mother, who exactly are you referring to: your former girlfriend or your sister?
Doctor: What’s wrong with you nurse. I mean Suzie. She’s experienced so much loss lately. You know her son, Carey, died last year, don’t you? So she’s now lost both her children. Tragic.
Nurse: But wasn’t Carey Sally’s former husband.
Doctor: Exactly. You can image how hard it is going to be on her to have lost a daughter, sister, and step-daughter all on the same day.
Nurse: A triple tragedy for Suzie and a double one for you.
Doctor: It's also a tragedy for you.
Nurse: In what way?
Doctor: What I’ve never told you was that Suzie was your sister as well.
Nurse: So Sally was my…
Doctor: Niece
Nurse: And you are my...
Doctor: Brother
Nurse: But, doctor, why didn’t you inform me of these facts before we started going out?
Doctor: Would it have made a difference?
Nurse: I probably would have liked that bit of information just the same.
Doctor: You can hardly expect me to keep every relationship in this hospital straight all the time. I’m a very busy man. I got confused.
Nurse: I’m sorry for being so difficult at a time like this. Well, on the positive side, I now have a brother.
Doctor: But, sadly, you’ve lost a niece and are going to have a difficult time explaining to your sister why you are sleeping with her former boyfriend.
Nurse: Well perhaps she’ll be happy that her brother has found a nice girl. There’s only one real problem I have.
Doctor: What’s that?
Nurse: A few years ago, before Sally and Carey got married, I had a brief fling with Carey.
Doctor: (Shocked) What! You had intimate relations with Carey. How horrifying!
Nurse: Horrifying because he was my nephew or because he was my niece’s husband?
Doctor: Neither.
Nurse: Then what’s the problem?
Doctor: He’s not Jewish.
Nurse: But you were ok with that when he was married to your niece...I mean daughter.
Doctor: That was different. You were the girl I loved. I thought religion meant something to you. The wedding is off.
Nurse: Do I still get to come to family holidays?
Doctor: (Grasping her hands) Of course. There’s nothing more important than family.
Monday, February 22, 2010
the gunks
tumbled wildly one upon the other,
like a child’s oversized playthings
scattered wantonly about his room /
the goal, i have been told, is to get
to the top of this mess of rock
where there will be time
to appreciate the sweeping views
from the lofty mountain peak/
my hand reaches up to grasp the ragged bolder
lodged precariously above my head,
and with all the strength I have left,
i pull myself to the next ledge /
a moment to catch my breath,
to reorient myself, and
massage my aching leg muscles /
then it’s time to move on,
inching my way along this primieval
vertical landscape /
dave is already on top,
urging me on with
with his usual air of wanton glee /
for him, this is just a lark in the countryside
but my forty-four year old body is beginning to feel
every sore muscle, every cut, every scrape
of every branch that has violated the sanctity of my
once pristine, twig-like legs /
i curse him and his idiotic exuberance /
if I had a gun with me I would shoot him—
BLAM, BLAM—
ending his juvenile attempts to rouse me
(“too old to make it up the mountain, man?”) /
if i had the guts, I would retreat
right back down these damned boulders
and make my way along the well-beaten,
gently sloping path that winds its way
to the mountain house /
but i am forty-four—almost forty-five actually—
a time when a man can lose his vital essence
and start to settle for the soft ways of midlife
that inevitably lead to the swift, steady decline /
and i will have none of that…
not just yet anyway /
there will be no turning back for me,
no retreating from the misery of the climb,
no acknowledge of age, or pain, or weakness /
all i have to do is make it to giant boulder
hanging 50 feet above me,
and then i’m home free /
the endless agony will finally be over /
i plant my foot in the nearest crevice
and pull myself up,
a sharp, stabbing pain
shooting up my left arm /
cursing the limitations of my flabby flesh,
i haul myself up over one giant rock,
and then another,
till at last I come to the final torturous obstruction /
almost over now, I moan to myself,
and catapult my body over the top
with a loud grunt and heavy sigh /
i’ve made it,
and my reward—
if you can call it that—
is to be able finally to rest my stiff limbs
on the mountainside ledge
and watch as the soft clouds pass silently overhead /
i stretch out on the hard rock,
more comfortable to me than any feather bed
and welcome the sun beating on my face.
“peace at last!” I shout out to my companions,
proud of myself for being man enough
to endure the unmitigated hell
of a weekend mountain climb with the boys.
“whatdoyamean,” replies dave,
his big, stupid face now blocking out the sun.
“we’re only half way up;
we haven’t even gotten
to the really rough part yet.”
someday, I’m going to kill
that bastard.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
London Scenes
“What is your reason for coming to England?” the immigrations official asked me in the usual supercilious manner adopted by airport personnel around the world.
.....“I’m on holiday from my studies in Belgium,” I replied courteously.
.....“And what is it, maay I axk, that you study over there in Belgium?” he inquired, his crude cockney origins betrayed in every word he uttered.
.....“Philosophy,” I responded, thinking that would be the end of the conversion, as it usually was.
.....“Ohhhh, philosophy,” he bellowed, loud enough for just about everyone in Heathrow Airport to hear. “Look ‘ere, Harold,” he said to his portly colleague in the next booth. “We got us a regular Schopenhauer wid us today.”
.....The other people on line were turning around to stare at me now and I was beginning to become self-conscious.
.....“So tell me, Mr. Philosopher,” the immigration official said with mockery in his voice. “What sort of Phi-los-o-phy are you studying over there in the marvelous kingdom of Belgium.”
.....I decided to teach this stupid little cockney jerk a lesson. “Post-Thomistic, neo-scholastic metaphysical skepticism, focused primarily on the later works of William of Ockham,” I said as arrogantly as I could, waiting for the look of utter bewilderment to appear on his face.
.....“Oh,” he said with bored indifference. “I would have thought that in a place as sophisticated as Belgium they would have been more into the phenomenological epistemology of Heidegger or Husserl. A bit behind the times, ain’t they?”
.....With that he stamped my passport and called for the next person on line.
Ennui
“Maureen, we are going to the most superfabulous bar in all of London. The beer is incredible, the food is supposedly outstanding, and they say the place is filled with fascinating people from all over England. All of us are going. Don’t you want to join us?” I asked.
.....“No,” she replied, and turned around and walked away.
Existential Fish
“I’ll have haddock and chips,” I said to the Pakistani fellow behind the counter at McGill’s Fish and Chips Emporium, located in the Highbridge section of London not far from our hotel.
.....“No haddock,” he replied, barely looking at me from behind the counter.
.....“Ok, then I’ll have cod and chips.”
.....“No cod,” he said, again with barely a glance.
.....“Isn’t this supposed to be a fish and chips place?” I asked, extremely confused now.
.....“Yes, but no fish today.”
.....“Ok,” I said in desperation, my empty stomach now beginning to growl fiercely. “Then just give me some chips.”
.....“No chips.”
.....“Well, what do you have to eat?” I wondered.
.....“Eat?” he said, looking up at me with confusion reigning in his eyes. “Why do you want to eat?”
.....“Because I’m hungry,” I said.
.....“We are all hungry,” he replied and went back to staring blankly out of the window of his shop.
Yorkshire Pudding
.....My order: Roast beef with Yorkshire pudding. What could be more traditional than that? I think to myself.
.....The meal comes: rare beef and some tiny biscuits floating in gravy.
.....On the side is the creamy white pudding in a stainless steel serving bowl. I scoop out a heaping spoonful of the white stuff and stuff it into my mouth while my date watches.
.....Important lesson learned: What they refer to in England as “pudding” is actually the crappy little biscuits floating in the gravy. The white stuff is most assuredly NOT pudding, but some noxious British concoction that they serve to unsuspecting American tourists to punish us for our economic superiority and military prowess. Mine ended up spewed out of my mouth and onto the expensive new dress my date was wearing.
.....That was our first date. And it was our last.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Kathmandu
.............a place called
.............Kathmandu—
jasmine-scented,
snow-peaked
.............paradise
pearched precariously
.............on the jagged teeth
.............of Mother Himalaya.
No mist-covered,
.............mystic wonderland
filled with endless rows
.............of Buddhists monks
.............clanging singing bowls
.........................in garland-filled temples
in praise of sexy, seductive Tara,
goddess of transcendent desire.
No, just sense-clogging pollution,
.............nasty, clamoring cabs
.............threatening to level
.............any careless tourist
.............foolish enough
.............to step out into
.............the mad manic streets,
the incessant hawkers
.............selling spiritual bliss
.............in the form of some god-awful
.............piece of mass-produced
.............Buddha-crap,
and miles of cesspool bi-ways
.............flowing brown-bile down
.............the garbage-strewn
.............mountainsides.
There never could have been
.............the Kathmandu
that existed with such perfect clarity
in the far reaches of my
overly fertile imagination,
the kind of place where
.............sublime enlightenment
.............could be had
at the turn of every corner
and the mere sight
of the rugged Annapurnas
enough to send one into
a perpetual state of
............dizzying orgasmic frenzy.
Kathmandu is really just
............a state of mind,
after all,
not a place that exists
............in space and time.
It’s Kat-man-du,
Kat-man-godalmightdy-du,
much more magnificent
in anticipation than in actuality.
In my mind,
it’s the ultimate dreamland
where I could sit on some lone
mountain perch
.............with the saintly sadhu
as the silent snow leopard
.............passes idly by….
perfect bliss totally realized
in that space
where earth and sky
mingle joyfully in
.............cloud-covered,
.............dew-drenched
........................ecstasy.
There never really was
a place like
.............Kathmandu,
But that’s ok:
In this cold-blooded world
warm-flowing fantasies
are always preferable to
.............stainless steel reality
and the silent sadhus of the mind
much more fascinating
than the ones selling themselves
on busy intersections at
............20 rupees a shot.
Caribbean Moments
Dancing Gecko
gecko dancing along
the wooden planks
under my bed /
i can hear him scurrying about
the cabin in the dead of night
while I am trying to sleep /
for a hardcore Nieu Yourka like me
there is some apprehension
in having a living creature—
especially a slimy one with a
long tail and flicking tongue—
ramble about the closed confines
of my tropical shack /
but it is all completely fine /
i give him the space he needs
to do his little moonlight tango
and he gobbles up all the mosquitoes
that would otherwise pick me to pieces
in the dead of night /
After the Storm
The Caribbean rain
moves in swiftly from the east
and without any warning.
Only a few minutes ago
I was dousing myself in the
balmy rays of the afternoon sun.
Then, before I could even move
to the safety of shelter,
the sky opened up upon me,
drenching me
.......right down
.............to my spleen.
I suppose I should be peeved
at having my lazy sunfest
so rudely interrupted,
but this is the Caribbean
and even the thunderstorms
have their glorious appeal.
A short wait
beneath the kayak shack
as the heavy drops
splash playfully on the
shimmering blue water.
Before I can even settle in,
the sun returns
brilliant as ever,
then a stunning rainbow
flashes across the sky—
a gift from the gods,
perhaps?
Within minutes I am back
on the sandy beach,
soggy novel in my hand,
as thought nothing
happened at all.
And indeed nothing really did…
just a typical afternoon
Caribbean-style.
Friday, February 19, 2010
The End of the Innocence
I walk back to the house, pick up my well-worn copy of The Lord of the Rings and continue reading from where I had left off.
“I don’t know what’s wrong with you,” my mother says when she sees me on the couch with my book. “Everyone is outside having a good time, and here you are as always reading some idiotic book. Why can’t you be like all the other kids on the block?”
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Just Me and Joe

.....Today, for once, was going to be my day. Today was the first day that Hasbro, the maker of the G.I. Joe action figures (Don’t even think about calling them dolls!) was coming out with the white haired Joe, who we had all already determined had to be the general. In an act of uncharacteristic compassion, my mother had agreed that, while she was shopping on Roosevelt Ave., she would stop into Toy City and buy me the white haired Joe for my birthday. I would be the first kid on the block to have him and, therefore, because of the rules of seniority, would always have the highest-ranking G.I. Joe on the block.
.....I tried to be cool about the whole thing, but I know that I probably couldn’t help rubbing my good fortune into the faces of my less than delighted pals. We were playing on the street, when in the distance I could see my mother’s hobbit-like frame waddle down the street pushing a shopping cart. “This is it!” I shouted as loudly as I could to all my friends. “This is the moment when I get to be the one in charge, the guy givin’ the orders!” My friends gritted their teeth and I could hear them cursing under their breaths. But what could they do? The rules were the rules.
.....I ran down the street as fast as I could. My mother had the usual look of apathy on her face, but perhaps because it was my birthday she didn’t greet me with her usual, “Will you just leave me the hell alone until I get inside.” Instead she put her hand into the cart and slowly lifted out the large bag she had inside. It had the famous “Toy City” logo on it, so I knew that my wildest dreams were about to come true.
.....“Here’s your damn toy,” my mother said, dropping the package in my hands. “Now go play with your friends and try not to bother me for a few hours, will you?”
.....I ran as fast as I could with the package to the spot where my friends were playing. They were all looking up at me with incredible envy in their eyes.
.....“Well here he is,” I said proudly pulling Joe out of his brown paper wrapping. “Get ready to start taking commands.”
.....I pulled Joe out of the bag and lifted him up like the sacred object that he was and waited for the oooohs and ahhhhhs of admiration from my friends.
.....“Look at that!” I heard fat Ricky shout out. “Your mother really screwed you over this time.” In seconds, everyone was joining him laughing at me.
.....I turned the box around and gasped in horror. Instead of the white haired Joe, who would be giving commands forever, my mother in her usual state of confusion had accidentally bought the red haired Joe—the one we had determined was the doctor, the one who couldn’t give any commands at all, the one, in short, who no one in his right mind would ever want to have. The poor bastard wasn’t even able to fight. All he could do was wait around in the “hospital,” waiting until someone came in with an injury. And the reality was that no one’s Joe in the entire history of the G.I. Joe Universe ever got injured. They might get their head or limbs ripped off, but they never would waste their time going to see some candy-ass, red haired Joe doctor.
.....“Hey, Mike,” Rudy said. “I got a mole on my ass. Do you think your Dr. Joe could check it out for me? He, he, he…”
.....“What an idiot!” I heard someone say as I walked back home, my head hung in abject shame.
.....“How did the boys like your new doll,” my mother asked as she stirred the sausage and peppers she was making for dinner.
.....“It’s not a doll,” I snapped. “And you got the wrong one. I asked you to get me the doll—I mean action figure—with the white hair. You got me the one with the red hair.”
.....“White, red…What’s the difference,” my mother said, oblivious to my agony. “They’re all the same anyway. Just pretend you have the white haired one.”
.....Just pretend I had the white haired one. If only I could have pretended that my entire existence up until that point was just a cruel nightmare that I would one day wake up from, then I might have some consolation. Right now, though, it was just me and the doc—two sad, pathetic losers who were victims of a chronically unjust, consistently absurd universe.
.....And these were supposed to be the good years.Hero
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Mark the Spot
That mark above my right eye—I think that certain smart-asses
would call it an age spot—
was not there a year ago…
a year ago
all you would see
if you took the time
to look betwixt my baby blue eyes
and kinky latin hairline was a
creamy band of custard skin
flowing smoothly across
my eternally indifferent forehead.
Now that damned thing
has suddenly appeared out of nowhere,
dark and round,
mocking me by its very presence,
a dreary portent of inevitable decay,
a specter of more indignities
yet to endure.
It’s the same fucking spot
my father has on his wrinkled old brow,
but my old man is centuries old
and I am still in my prime
(whatever the hell that means).
Damned spot,
I would rip you off
with a jack-hammer
if I wasn’t afraid of
damaging my gorgeous mind.
Damned spot,
I would scrape you away
with some really harsh sandpaper,
if I knew you would stay away
for good.
Damned spot,
it’s too soon for me
to embrace the inevitable,
so just leave me the fuck alone,
will you?
Damned spot,
you think that I am fooled
by your apparent affability,
but I know you are
the harbinger of my
ultimate doom.
Damned spot,
you are death
staring me right in the face—
.15 inches in circumference
but lethal as a loaded gun
in a demented child’s hands.
Damned spot,
soon you will invite your
little brown friends to join you
for a raucous parade
across my face,
and those still in their prime
will say,
“Gee, how old he looks;
I remember him when…”
Damned spot,
I know that you will
eventually defeat me,
but for now
I’ve got my eye on you
and I’m not letting you
out of my sight.
Beware!
Monday, February 15, 2010
Lush Life
Your skin smells like jasmine—
or is it honeysuckle?
I could never tell the difference.
Silky skin,
so incredibly smooth—
smooth like vanilla yogurt
and just as inviting.
A dark brewed cup
of Belgian coffee
(bold but never bitter),
a glass half -filled
with Norman Calvados,
shimmering gold
in the Northern moonlight—
a perfect pair
if ever there was one.
A taste of coffee,
then a sip of calvados
(ahhh, what ecstasy!)
Only later did I realize
it should have been
the other way around.
There are rules for
these sorts of things
in civilized nations.
We once held hands,
walking down along the
left embankments of the Seine
as the tourist boats passed lazily by
and Notre Dame cast
its inviting shadow
across our path.
No better time
to be alive
and certainly
no better place.
You look just like Liza Minelli
and your taste borders on the sublime—
all Bennett, Martin, and
just the right kind of jazz
(soothingly familiar but never predictable).
I really thought that I would
fall hard for you,
but then I realized something—
right taste,
wrong face.
I turn on the radio…
Sinatra singing “The Summer Wind.”
Could anything be cooler than that?
Could anything be
quite as melancholy?
Miro opening at the Gagosian.
Everyone exquisitely attired,
lovely beyond description,
and drenched with that
strange sort of
unnatural refinement
that only true art lovers
from Chelsea possess.
There were some paintings
there too,
but no one seemed
to notice them.
Life Lesson (Wherein a Middle-Aged Academic Learns that All Happiness in Life Springs from a Young Child’s Nose)
......Young man, I said to him in an authoritative tone, don’t you know that it is extremely uncouth for a boy your age to be picking his nose in public?
......But the young boy was unimpressed by my admonitions and stuck his finger even deeper into his left nostril.
......Little man, I tried again, your manners leave much to be desired. Stop picking your nose right now!
......Again the young boy ignored me and continued to probe his nasal cavity with focused intensity.
......Now I was getting agitated. My friend, I said, I am going to tell your mother about your rude behavior and I can assure you that she will not be happy about it.
......Still, the boy continued to pick away, not even bothering to glance at me as I scolded him.
......My frustration was reaching the point where I was afraid that I would say something extremely unkind to the boy, but then at once I saw the point of his quest. For out of his left nostril sprang the most exquisite virgin princess, dressed in pink lace, riding a white unicorn. As the unicorn gained its footing, the princess lifted the little boy on its back and the two rode off together. I hear they recently bought a four-bedroom cape in an exclusive subdivision outside of Boston, where they live with their four children and a large humpback turtle named Gary.
Friday, February 12, 2010
A Place to Call My Own
There’s this little tamale place in Corona—down about 97th street—where I go sometimes when I get the hankering for traditional Mexican food. Now I’m not talking about the fancy shit that they serve in pseudo-Mexican dining establishments like Don Jose’s or Senior Pepe’s, which are nothing more than sanitized versions of Mexican cuisine aimed at pleasing the neutered palates of pasty gringos. No, what I’m referring to is the real deal: the kind of grubby, greasy, mouth-blistering Mexican slop that they actually serve in every piss-ass town south of the border. And I can assure you that this is most definitely the real, fucking deal.
I would tell you the name of the place so that you can go there some time, but I don’t think it has one. There was a tacky sign outside the restaurant at one point, but I think it was stolen by vandals in the early 90s. Now all that’s left is a tattered piece of cardboard in the window that simply says “Comida.” In case you failed seventh grade Spanish, comida means “food,” which doesn’t help very much if you’re trying to figure out what they have to eat.
My Mexican dive in Corona has its own unique ambiance that often goes unappreciated by those who covet such pretentious commodities in eating establishments as cleanliness and proper hygiene. But, if you can get beyond tables perpetually covered in the detritus of decaying half-eaten food particles and the thin film of grease coating every inch of the place, you just might come to appreciate its laid-back atmosphere.
I must confess that I have a particular fondness for the women behind the counter who take orders with all the charm of Marine drill sergeants. They have a look of dull apathy as they ring up endless rounds of rice, beans, and plantanos. They take down the orders well enough, I suppose, but the orders never come out quite the way you ask for them. It might have something to do with the language barrier…or the women who work there might just be incredibly stupid. I haven’t figured out which yet.
The place also as its own peculiar smell—something like a cross between rotting garbage and bad body odor. I know where the garbage smell is coming from: it’s not hard to notice the mountains of decaying food overflowing the buckets that serve as waste receptacles in the dining area which are rarely, if ever, emptied. I also know damned well where the b.o. is coming from: it’s the fragrance of choice of the local clientele and the army of homeless men who descend upon the establishment after getting their methadone prescriptions filled at the local rehab center down the street.
As you eat your lunch, you try as much as possible to ignore the fat roaches scurrying along the floors and on the walls. When the roaches attempt to walk away with your food, though, you have little choice but to flick them off the table. When that happens, the little Mexican children sitting on the floor jump up in delight. Fat roaches are like house pets to kids in this part of Queens. They dress them up in costumes according to the season, walk them around on leashes, teach them to do back flips, and give them funny names like Tito and Puta.
There are those individuals of limited cultural appreciation who are horrified at the thought of eating in a place like this. “It’s a fucking death trap, man,” my friends always tell me. “When the bubonic plague strikes again, this is gonna be ground zero,” they joke.
In my heart I know they have a point. I also know that they are right when they say that the food served in my favorite Mexican place in downtown Corona tastes liked “ground up dog shit mixed with cilantro and lime.” Although I myself have no particular gourmet’s fetish for canine waste products, I do have a fondness for cilantro, so I am able to ignore the otherwise repulsive flavor of the food. Besides, I spend so much time flicking roaches off the table that I’m barely even aware of how the food tastes.
“Why do you always have to go to that horrible place in Corona?” my mother asks every time I tell her I need to make a run there. The answer is quite simple: everyone has to have a place they call their own. Woody Allen has the Russian Tea Room, Robert Deniro, Le Cirque, and I have my little “Comida” joint. One day in the future—and I hope to God that day may never come—the Board of Health will probably come and close down my favorite little Mexican dive. Until then, I’ll always have a place to go whenever I get the hankering for small taste of sunny Mexico right on Roosevelt Avenue just east of the 94th street station in beautiful downtown Corona.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Utter Futility
If only human beings were created in an incorporeal state – then there’d be no such thing as lawn care (what does a spirit need with a lawn?) – unfortunately, my apparently horrendous karma has positioned me in the ultimate suburban nightmare: a place where the lawns are just small enough that every brown patch and every blade of crabgrass represents a moral failing of cosmic proportions. I have no doubt that the neighbors would think more highly of me if I performed child sacrifices on my front lawn…provided, of course, that the lawn itself was plush, vibrantly green, and free of unsightly weeds.
Start Over
embers of hell…The devil is caught in a trap of his own
making. Shit, get over it and move on with life. But life itself
...........is precisely the issue—a cruel paradox admitting no
reasonable solutions. Why have the gods all deserted me?
Gods be damned. It’s all a silly farce anyway.
.........................Is there something more? Could there
possibly be something, anything, more? No, nothing more....
That, at once, is the whole damn problem, and the whole
glori-fucking-fabulous solution. But who the hell wants
a solution like that. “Ask and ye shall receive,” said God,
but his voice was far too dim to be heard.
.......Nothing left but the roaring silence.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Who I Am
am as I appear / but my uniform is there to throw off those denizens of this staid and sterile universe who mistakenly believe that it is wardrobe alone that makes the man, and that a man is nothing more than what he appears to be /- i am more than you could know and less than I ever hoped to be / i am the alpha and omega of human experience...
- i was slimed in the River Ganges and baptized in the ashes of rotting corpses...
- i have drunk the nectar of human ecstasy and found it unsettled my stomach...
- i have had my heart ripped out and stomped upon only to find it born anew within me...
- i have watched the northern lights rise and fall in my prime and still desired yet another toast to youthful exhuberence...
- i have eaten dangerous books whole and had their wisdom enter my nervous system tearing it to shreds...
- i am iago and cassius, so tread lightly around me...
- i was there when christ was crucified on the cross but chose instead to lounge on the riverbed with the sleeping buddha.
- i have settled for less than i deserved and deserve much less than i have received from life...
- the art that i have created lies buried deep within me, so none will never see it...
[note: i chose to answer this question in my own way...basically by not telling you anything about myself and making that the point of my blog entry. my goal here is to show you that there is no right or wrong way to capture who you are in writing or art...just try to be yourself and follow your own inner genius!]
Visions of South Florida
Rehab clinic in West Palm Beach. I'm sitting outdoors with an acquiantance, totally intrigued by the pageant of humanity passing by.
“Who’s that?” I asked
“She’s a heroine addict whose parents are trying to put her in a psychiatric ward because she keeps cutting herself. A real basket case.”
“And who’s that one?”
“She’s a 34 year old woman from Boca who's facing twenty-to-life for stabbing her boyfriend twelve times while they were high on speed.”
“ What about him?”
“That’s Walter. He’s just an old junky who’s been trying to get clean for twenty years. I think his brains are fried because all he does all day is smoke cigarettes and mumble to himself about Jesus.”
“What about her?” I inquired, pointing to a quiet young girl sitting by herself, eating a hamburger and fries. “She seems fairly normal.”
“Are you kidding? She’s totally addicted to crystal meth and crack, and prostitutes herself every night to get money for drugs.”
“I can’t believe it,” I replied, now completely bewildered by the incredible disconnect between appearance and reality that I had observed since I arrived here.
“That’s not all…She’s totally bulimic…Eats food all the time and then pukes her guts out. Just wait until she’s finished with that burger and you’ll see her run to the bathroom.”
Sure enough, as soon as she took her last bite of food, she sprung up from the table and made a hasty retreat to the public restroom.
“Well, at least she has a nice looking body,” my friend commented, barely looking up from the issue of Cosmo she was reading. “In her line of work that’s very important.”
I was beginning to wonder if there was anyone in South Florida who was not an addict, a recovering addict, or a relapsed addict when across the street I saw a totally innocent looking young girl who looked no more than 18 years old. She was walking towards us, her blond ponytails bouncing with each step she took. When she passed us by she flashed a bright, angelic smile and wished us a pleasant day.
“Don’t tell me that there’s anything wrong with her?” I said with some degree of confidence.
“She’s the worst one of all,” my companion replied without skipping a beat.
“What’s her problem?” I asked.
“She thinks there’s nothing wrong with her.”
“And is there?”
“Of course there is,” she replied. “There’s something wrong with all of us. That’s why we’re here.” And with that she took a long drag on her cigarette and went back to reading her magazine.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
My Twenty Favorite Dylan Songs
As anyone who knows me realizes, I have become a huge Bob Dylan fan over the past three years. Basically, all I listen to at home, in the car, and while I am working outdoors is Dylan music. Now if that seems a bit dull to you, keep in mind that Dylan has over 45 years worth of music and his style has changed numerous times over the years. There’s no way I’m going to get bored with his music, because there’s just so damned much of it, and it’s all so fabulous.
Like any Dylan fan, however, I do have my favorite songs. This definitely doesn’t mean that they’re his best songs, just the ones that resonate with me at this particular point in my life.
Here they are in order of preference:
#1. It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry (Highway 61 Revisited, 1965) – a fabulous song with great piano work and terrific lyrics. I could listen to this all day long.
#2. Girl From the North Country (with Johnny Cash) (Nashville Skyline, 1969) – This just may be a perfect song. The fact that in this version Dylan and Cash keep messing up just makes it all the more wonderful and spontaneous.
#3. Boots of Spanish Leather (Times They Are A-Changin’, 1964) – Another perfect song. I don’t usually go for love songs, but this one is so damned complex that it’s totally intriguing.
#4. Subterranean Homesick Blues (Bringing It All Back Home, 1965) – The perfect 60s rock song. Too bad no radio stations never played it when I was growing up.
#5 Like A Rolling Stone (Highway 61 Revisited, 1965) – Considered by many to be the greatest rock song of all time. And it probably is.
#6. Baby Let Me Follow You Down (Biograph, 1985) – This early Dylan song didn’t even make it onto one of his albums. Just goes to show you that even a knock-off Dylan is better than most current singers’ top ten trash.
#7. Things Have Changed (Wonder Boy’s Soundtrack, 1999) – I’ve just discovered this weird, evocative song and it blows my mind. Won an Academy Award in 1999.
#8 I Want You (Blond on Blond, 1966) – Sure this is a silly pop song, but it was probably the basis for every Dylan caricature for the next twenty years. “I want youuuu soooo baddddd”…you’ve gotta love singing this blatantly affected!
#9 Someday Baby (Bootleg Series, Vol. 8, 2008) – I prefer this version to the one Dylan used on “Modern Times.” This was the song that single-handedly forced me to reevaluate my unfounded bias against Dylan’s later music.
#10. Mama, You’ve Been on My Mind (with Joan Baez) (Bob Dylan Live, 1964) – I love Joan Baez and I love Bob Dylan…and I especially love it when they sing a great Dylan song together live and screw it up.
#11. Beyond Here Lies Nothing (Together Through Life, 2009) – This song proved that Dylan is still a musical powerhouse even in his sixties. A gritty, evocative little song.
#12. My Back Pages (Another Side of Bob Dylan, 1964) - “I was older then, I’m younger than that now.” What other artist would dare insinuate that his entire fan base is a bunch of twits at the very moment of his greatest popularity?
#13. Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright (The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, 1963) – The Peter, Paul, and Mary version was a bit more melodious, but it lacked the subtle nastiness of the Dylan original. “You just sorta wasted my precious time”…Now that’s a put-down!
#14. Highway 61 Revisited (Highway 61 Revisited, 1965) – One of the greatest psychedelic songs ever written. No one else could write lyrics as wild as these.
#15. Forever Young (Planet Waves, 1974) – One of Dylan’s simplest but most powerful songs. I resisted the charms of this song for a long time, but eventually had to give in.
#16. Just Like a Woman (Blond on Blond, 1966) - Everyone loves this song…and so do I.
#17. You Angel You (Planet Waves, 1974) – A fluffy, throw-a-way tune on “Planet Waves” that I can never get out of my head for some strange reason.
#18. I Feel a Change Coming On (Together Through Life, 2009) – Another masterpiece from Dylan’s latest album.
#19. The Man in Me (New Morning, 1970) – Ok, this is a seriously stupid tune, but if it’s good enough for the Dude (see the “Big Lebowski”), then it definitely has something going for it. Besides, how can anyone resist all those “la la las”?
#20. One Too Many Mornings (The Times They Are A-Changin’, 1963) – A totally charming song with beautiful lyrics and a wonderful melody.
Friday, February 5, 2010
at the mall
what more can I possibly want?
i have so much already
that there is no more room
even to turn around
in the cramped confines
of my clutter universe.
But there is always
............something more,
always more to desire
and try to possess…
a lifetime of misery and regret…
................................hell
......wrapped
in pretty pink
..........ribbons
...............and
......................bows.
Dylan's Latest Masterpiece

I asked one of the kids in the backyard, who was about 20, what he thought of the music he was hearing, and he said to me with tremendous enthusiasm, "It's f#%&ing great shit, man."
What higher or more eloquent praise can anyone give a collection of music than this?
Possibly The Greatest Film Ever Made
The premise of the movie is actually quite simple: Jeffrey Lebowski (aka "The Dude") is a total slacker, concerned only with bowling and getting stoned. His life is turned upside down when he is mistaken for another wealthy Lebowski (the "Big Lebowski" of the title), whose wife owes money to a local pornographer, Jackie Treehorn. Treehorn's thugs commit the ultimate act of desecration when they urinate on the Dude's favorite rug - a rug which "really tied the whole room together." Egged on by his moronic friend, Walter Sobchak, the Dude attempts to get the Big Lebowski to make restitution for his soiled rug. The rest of the film involves the Dude getting increasingly intertwined in the mystery concerning the possible kidnapping of Lebowski's trophy wife, Bunny, and the delivery of ransom money to the kidnappers.
The Dude can be contrasted with Donny, who is "out of his fucking element" (i.e., unconcerned with the Dharma) and, even more so with Walter, whose experiences in Vietnam cause him to mistakenly believe that he can control reality. The Dude is willing to follow Walter's advice, but every time he does so, he winds up making his own life much more difficult. At the end of the movie, we come to realize that there was no kidnapping of Lebowski's wife (i.e., life is fundamentally absurd), Donny is dead, the carpet is still soiled (the reality of human suffering), but "the Dude abides" anyway (he returns to his normal state of samadhi).

Maude Lebowski: What do you do for recreation?
The Big Lebowski: What makes a man, Mr. Lebowski?
The Dude: Hmmm... Sure, that and a pair of testicles.
The Dude: Walter, what is the point? Look, we all know who is at fault here, what the fuck are you talking about?
Walter Sobchak: Huh? No, what the fuck are you... I'm not... We're talking about unchecked aggression here, dude.
Donny: What the fuck is he talking about?
The Dude: My rug.
Walter Sobchak: Forget it, Donny, you're out of your element!
The Dude: Walter, the chinaman who peed on my rug, I can't go give him a bill, so what the fuck are you talking about?
Walter Sobchak: What the fuck are you talking about? The chinaman is not the issue here, Dude. I'm talking about drawing a line in the sand, Dude. Across this line, you DO NOT... Also, Dude, chinaman is not the preferred nomenclature. Asian-American, please.
The Dude: Walter, this isn't a guy who built the railroads here. This is a guy...
Walter Sobchak: What the fuck are you...?
The Dude: Walter, he peed on my rug!
Donny: He peed on the Dude's rug.
Walter Sobchak: Donny you're out of your element! Dude, the Chinaman is not the issue here!
Who but the Cohen Brothers could possibly come up with dialogue as nutty and absurd as this? Every minute of the film is punctuated by incredible dialogue like this, delivered perfectly by phenomenal actors like Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Steve Buscemi, and especially, John Turturro, who I believe deserved an Academy Award for his portrayal of The Jesus. Three or four minutes of screen time in total and Turturro creates one of the most memorable characters in film since Scarlett O'Hara. If that kind of performance doesn't merit an Academy Award, then I can't imagine what does!

