Less than beautiful
I only wrote one poem today. Remember me promising honesty? Heh. Maybe I’ll draw a picture for it later… or maybe not.
Have you ever heard your own fart
Echo in the springs of the bed?
Some things
Are less than beautiful.
I only wrote one poem today. Remember me promising honesty? Heh. Maybe I’ll draw a picture for it later… or maybe not.
Have you ever heard your own fart
Echo in the springs of the bed?
Some things
Are less than beautiful.
I spent some time at the Ozarks this weekend. Two poems happened.
The warm evening air
Gently carries the song
Of a hundred happy frogs
Over the water.
The people are out too,
Talking to each other on their porches.
Their voices different
But they sing the same tune.
And this little haiku:
Time presses wrinkles
Earned remnants of smiles or frowns
Thumbprint of a soul
There is a man
who wanders into my cube occasionally
to chat.
It’s a welcome break from office tedium.
I brighten up and smile.
He sees me brighten up and always seems shocked, then brightens up himself.
Having seen this, I brighten up some more.
I have to wonder,
Does no one else smile when he walks in?
Does he get so little affection in life
that it only takes this amount of love to throw him?
When I was a kid, we used to pass a boy on our rural back road
standing at a muddy, grassy bend.
Just standing.
He used to wave
and I would wave back.
“He’s retarded,” my mom would say dismissively.
As if that made his all-inclusive friendliness less meaningful.
But she would wave as well.
I was always happy to see him.
There is a man who stands on his front lawn
In a derelict part of town.
Every day on the way to work I pass him by.
He waves to everyone whose face and car he recognizes.
We wave back.
Often he has more than one person on the lawn with him
sometimes sitting on his sidewalk steps
sometimes standing with their backs to him and chatting to one another.
His house seems to be a gathering place
at seven in the morning.
But I am a grown woman now
so when I pass him by
I worry about him.
Today I burden you all with some flash fiction.
The dying man couldn’t believe his eyes. Another hallucination? Broken as he was, he couldn’t help but pull himself toward it, hope strengthening his limbs.
His eyes ached from the bright, unforgiving landscape, and the sand had worked its way into his deepest joints. His skin was thin, hard leather. This place had turned him into a living mummy.
But hope lay ahead. After an eternity, he reached the threshold, where a waiter in a fine tuxedo politely held the door for him, the epitome of timeless old world culture.
The guest dragged himself through the proffered opening and felt a sudden blast of restaurant air conditioning roll over him like the breath of a benevolent god. He wept dry grateful tears.
“Table for one?” The waiter asked. The man’s graceful manner said he watched the desert eat men every day, and it was no excuse for poor etiquette.
The man opened his mouth to reply and found that his voice had shriveled away. He nodded instead.
“Would you care for help to your table, sir?” was the next question, delivered formally and without judgment.
He managed another nod.
The headwaiter gestured down the hall where two more waiters stood like polite statues. They came to life and aligned themselves on either side of him, supporting him under the arms.
“After me please,” the headwaiter said, and swept into the dining area. The sick man was helplessly carried along in his wake.
“Please take a seat,” the headwaiter said, gesturing at a table for one with a white tablecloth and an array of shining silver cutlery laid out, precise as surgical tools.
Once the man was propped into place, the headwaiter began to speak.
“Our menu has recently changed. The special tonight is a salad niçoise with quail’s eggs, seared sea bass with shallots over a lemon–”
The man cracked open his mouth. Every breath raked the back of his throat like sandpaper. Forcing out words felt like he was trying to exhale a handful of thumbtacks.
“Water,” he croaked, then broke into a weak coughing fit. It was torture; he’d have coughed up blood if he’d had any left.
“Please,” the waiter said, offended. “Allow me to finish. Our menu has recently changed. The special tonight is a salad nicoise with quail’s eggs, seared sea bass with shallots over a lemon risotto, a cold cucumber dill soup, lobster rigatoni with a creamy champignon sauce, and for dessert we have a cooling tiramisu gelato.”
For the first time, he looked his shabby guest in the eye. “However, we ARE a rather exclusive, fine dining establishment. I am afraid I will have to ask you for payment up front.”
Did he even have his wallet on him anymore? The man felt his pockets and was relieved to feel a familiar lump of leather had made the journey with him. It was amazing to him that such a thing could hold value for anyone. What could be more important than water?
With shaking hands, he pulled out the wallet and attempted to work a credit card free. They wouldn’t budge. The desert heat had fused his cards and his wallet into one solid, multicolored blob.
“This is a common issue,” the waiter said. “you don’t happen to remember your card or checking account number?”
The man shook his head.
“That is fine. We are happy to accommodate. You may use our phone to call your bank. If you don’t know their number, you can give us their name and we will look up the number for you.”
The man geared up to speak again. “First… National…” this much speech was all he could muster before breaking into another weak coughing fit.
By the time he recovered, the waiter had looked up his bank, dialed the number, and was waiting politely to hand him the phone. The man accepted it and pressed it to his ear.
“Welcome to the First National Bank phone tree,” it was saying. “Please wait until the end of the recording and listen to all of the options as our menu has recently changed…”

You might call me a ghost agnostic.
One time I found a video of a ghost. It was shot in a dark room with poorly balanced lighting on the camera, you know how it goes. The footage said something like, “MOST AMAZING SUPERNATURAL FOOTAGE etc etc.” You clicked on it, and watched a murky silhouette of a ghost. It was sitting in a chair. It kind of shifted around, like it needed to get its buttcheek meat properly situated. Then it disappeared. Wow. Most amazing. People are thrilled to the toes when they see something they can’t explain, so they don’t seem to realize what boring lives ghosts lead. All of a ghost’s angst and drama is built around wanting to move, to get out, but being trapped by their own bitterness or sense of responsibility. It’s just office life all over again.
Ghosts are people too.
Ghosts wear too much perfume
They smoke inside.
They enjoy a nice rocking chair.
They use the stairs
Turn on the stove
Get annoyed at closed doors.
They pace when troubled.
They trip people
And pull hair.
They make phone calls.
They battle household pets.
They drop dishes
And run loudly into furniture
And knock over lamps, they’re clumsy as shit.
Ghosts go for walks.
Use umbrellas.
They’re very stealy.
Ghosts love musical instruments
But are painfully tone deaf.
Anytime a ghost manifests and picks a wedgie
There will be an idiot with a camera
Who distributes this fascinating footage
To the awestruck, stupidstruck living.