Tag: poetry

  • Red Birds and Hazy Clouds

    Pretty cerise bird why

    do you peck at my windows

    all day long?

    My wife is in the kitchen

    and she does not appreciate

    this perturbation.

    She undulates between the

    counters.

    Gliding with guile.

    Sometimes I feel like

    without you—cerise bird—

    she would stop undulating

    across the marble.

    There would be no love in the morning

    and in the night.

  • while briefly alone

    Walking alone at night on the third day of fall not wearing a bra; walking to the store to buy a lighter – hair loose and makeup is fading, smiley lips at the busy busy people with their various lives – I look like I’m going somewhere by the way I gaze ahead and slightly skyward and the way the heels of my boots sound on the ground (he told me once that he is in love with the sound of my footsteps on wet pavement).

    I’m not going anywhere, really- the lighter was an excuse to get out of the house and to have a sense of direction in my wandering down Main Street along with other beautiful and ugly and tired and alive people (I wonder if they have meaningful direction, and if such meaningful direction can be revealed by the speed at which people walk).

    In the convenience store I ask for a lighter (they quietly wonder ‘what does she smoke?’) and I want to tell them that I don’t smoke much weed unless I’m drunk with friends who offer it with glazed eyes and the suggestion of escape. I never smoke cigarettes because I don’t want to be sad like my father on Christmas day who allows himself his Christmas Cigarette and looks both anxious and nostalgic and full of regret even though he always says “I have no regrets.” I don’t tell them any of these thoughts and feel inexplicably guilty for keeping them to myself.

    Walking home down the same street which now looks ominous. The sun has fully set itself (goodbye lovely streaks) and the moon is out, pale and menacing because it lights the faces of strange men who notice I am not wearing a bra. (Does the moon change character depending only on what it illuminates?) I walk quickly past the areas where men gather outside and discuss their monotonous lives punctuated by girls cute butts (the men are profoundly still; without question they lack meaningful direction).

    At this time of year the white hydrangeas look the most beautiful in rain or the light of dusk (I once cried while he was walking beside me; it was morning and a white hydrangea in the light rain as well as his hand in mine was enough beauty to both break and sustain me).

    With the lighter I light a bundle of sage. It is green and white sage. It smells like the forest and like something else I cannot name, which carries the weight of something reverent. After a while I run cold water over the wand of sage to quell the glowing embers before he is home and I am no longer with only myself.

  • Light walker

    All of the people at the library are beautiful,

    reflecting the glow of Swedish architecture

    and gentle care of alphabetization

    They exude the lush world of mind words

    feelings, revelations,

    translated through time and out through their skin

    The jogging people glide on the sidewalk

    with pulsating synchronicity

    Their faces bounce off of slow strolling folk

    and shiny condo mirrors

    as they complete a lung dance on concrete.

    In the park

    people lay on the ground

    letting green earth villi energize their blood,

    trees radiating sun concentrate

    The littlest ones putter round with delight,

    the big ones wish not to return to their plastic cubes

    And the creaky old ones savour the colours that

    they may never see again.

  • 18

     It’s your first day of school, and your teacher’s really nice.
    She gives you a piece of paper and tells you to write
    About what you want to be when you grow up.
    You don’t know the answer, so you put “Ballerina”
    Just like everyone else, and draw a prettier version of yourself
    In a tutu, and a big smile on your face.
    Then in grade one, your teacher plays the clarinet
    And she asks you if you know what you want to be yet.
    This time you write “Singer”, because that’s what made you happy…
    Singing when your parents fought, and when you found out
    Your dad cheated on your mother, and tried to take your brother,
    So she punched him in the face.
    In fact, each year after that, they continue to ask you
    What it is you want to be, and you can never decide but
    You know you have to eventually, and your mom says
    You’re smart, so you can be a doctor, lawyer, a teacher,
    Or anything you want.
    Then, in grade four, you have your first “love”,
    You try to make friends, but they never really stay,
    You got used to your mom not being around,
    And your dad keeps forgetting your birthday.
    Every day, you go home to empty cupboards,
    And a new babysitter, sure to leave
    Because your mom lost her job, and can’t pay the fee.
    She hides in her room, with some guy you had a bad feeling about,
    from the second he walked into your house.
    You lie to your brother and sister: “Mommy’s alright”
    But she’s losing weight fast, and you haven’t slept in nights
    And who are these people, always knocking on the door?
    Asking if you’re home alone, and you know they know you’re lying but
    you don’t know where your mom got those bruises,
    And why she’s always crying.
    After grade six, you’re at a new school, in a new place,
    And you no longer live with your mom,
    She ran away to be with that guy, and you found out
    She smoked crack cocaine. No one will tell you what that is,
    You just know it’s a bad thing, and the kids
    Keep calling you names, like slut, and whore.
    You’re bullied senselessly, and start to realize that thirteen
    Isn’t what you hoped for anymore.
    All through junior high, every one has something bad to say,
    The teachers are on your case, demanding you get good grades,
    You need to succeed but think, “how the hell is Pythagoras
    Gonna help me?”, and every Thursday, you go to therapy
    Due to the thoughts in your head, and that poem you wrote
    Your teacher found, about how you wished you were dead,
    And you think that if only they would ask you now,
    What it is you want to be,
    You’d say “Happy.”
    In high school, they don’t ask, just assume you have a plan.
    You need to have one in order to succeed, but it’s just as unclear
    As it was in grade three. You’ve got depression, anxiety,
    And you’re always running away from the shit you have to face,
    Hoping it won’t catch up, you’re fast enough, and these sports teams
    And committees are just a distraction from reality because
    Of all the things people say make a difference in school,
    Is that what really matters compared to what you go home to?
    You haven’t seen your father in eight years, and he’s
    Threatening to put your mom in jail… she’s still with that guy you hate
    That started her on drugs when you were in the fourth grade,
    But she talks to you like nothing’s changed, and the thing is,
    You don’t care because it’s better than when she wasn’t there
    And you’re still running.
    Your friends are getting worried,
    And you keep telling them you’re fine,
    As you hide the scars on your wrist.
    And every one is drunk, all the damn time,
    Because we all hurt from something, and it takes away
    The pain. In the mirror, you can’t recognize your face, and
    It’s such a disgrace, how you just don’t give a fuck
    About growing up
    Because you already have fast enough.
    You aren’t daddy’s little girl, your mom treats you like a friend,
    So you get lost in your own world, dream of running away,
    or an end… Why should you stay?
    You’ve hated yourself for the last nine years and found
    That no one can seem to figure out what the fuck is wrong
    You’ve slit your wrists up and down every night and
    They’re all still asking you what you want to be when you grow up,
    Not if you’re alright,
    And the funny thing is,
    You don’t even know,
    If you’ll make it,
    That far.
    Now, you’ve made it out of grade 12… Does anyone know what they want to do?
    Not really, but you’re going to university, it’ll be a good change, an escape.
    And mom says you’re still smart, you’ll go far, and you realize
    You always have been, so gold star, and speaking of your mom,
    She’s getting better, even if your father’s still a dead-beat, no-go-getter,
    With two other kids, and an alcohol addiction, it doesn’t matter,
    You’re doing fine on your own, and when you feel alone, you dance in the kitchen
    Like a ballerina in a tutu, with a smile on your pretty face
    And at 2am when you can’t sleep, you write poetry, and you sing
    When you’re sad, and when you’re not, you sing even louder,
    And please, keep running.
    Because now,
    You wake up every morning, and get to know the face in the mirror.
    You have a reason to be alive; your brother, and your sister,
    You strive to survive, and even on the hardest day, you force that damn smile,
    And remind yourself, how fucking beautiful you really are
    Because you’ve made it this far
    And you will,
    Be happy.
  • Today is hard

    Today is hard

    Today is hard

    Today is weird

    For sake of vanity

    I will not mention

    What happened last is clear

    Another Radical angle

    Another Line portrayed

    Another View to strangle

    Then think that we are saved I don’t know what it’s all about

    But I guess I will conjecture

    Whatever’s spraying from from this spout is a lost and lonely texture

    But can for once our people unite?

    And bring this to final close?

    Or should we wish to further this night?

    For some advantage?

    I suppose

    Off they went

    And took with them lives well spent

    Off we go now to take their lives unbestowed

    And we may not realize

    Looking through our privileged eyes

    That every Life, no matter, is precious

    But we cannot gain that common sense

    Because for it, we lose our causes

    Yet never do we take the needed pauses

    To think the impact of our ways

    And until, we will not lead to better days

    So we ourselves become frustrated throb

    To be Free, we must unite in mob

    Against imposing the impact of our world

    Even if we think we’re helping,

    Who are we to take their revolutionary word?

    And in the words of V, on the way things are: “If you’re looking for the guilty,

    You need only look into a mirror. I know why you did it. I know you were afraid.”

    But “Everybody is special. Everybody. Everybody is a hero”

    A Lover

    A Fool

    A Villain

  • Sonnet II

    Sonnet II

    He tried to break free but he’s not still around
    He tried to get up but his will had been drowned
    Tried to sit tall but he slouched on the wall
    Tried to walk but settled to crawl
    He could feel his body; every weighing pound
    Strong like a magnet stuck to the ground
    He could feel his pride taking a fall
    Torn down into nothing hearing the call
    Of a crowd so proud he knew not to stay
    The speed was fierce and the power was fright
    But he knew himself and his only sin
    When the fist came around for a powerful slay
    He dug deep inside and discovered his fight
    And he had no other option, but to win

  • Listen to the Kids

    Listen to the Kids

    Listen to the kids
    In all of our bids
    For Freedom and Knowledge
    For Adventure and Sins
    For in time we’ll find our dime
    And become the next kings
    Listen to the kids
    And let us go see
    What we want to become
    In the Age of the Free
    Listen to the kids
    If you wanted to know
    Where the world’s going
    And what it is to bestow
    Listen to the kids
    We’ll figure it out
    Against all this pressure
    And shadowing doubt
    Listen to the kids
    I’m sure you will find
    Us able enthusiasts
    With good health and good minds
    Listen to the kids
    We’re smarter than we seem
    Our empathic inspirations
    Are more than just Dreams
    Data, speed, and strategy — all powered by AI corthiq ember ai login.

    Inspired by the first line of Kanye’s VMA speech

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