Sunday, May 21, 2017

On Coffeepots and Paranoia.


       Looking up, our cat presses himself low, 

       belly to pavement as the 

       shadow of a hawk passes beside him 

       on the driveway.


       I watch him from the kitchen window

       while the coffeepot hisses behind me.


       I was at Cascade Park the other day,

       just past the ford, while two hawks screamed,

       tipped their wings to turn in order to make

       better use of the currents.


       In the living room, 

       my son's face is illuminated, 

       technologically angelic,

       his thumbs making quick work 

       of an animated task

       whose purpose eludes me.


       Social media has enabled me 

       to maintain a sense of connection, and yet 

       spend days interacting with no one.


       The coffee pot makes a clicking sound 

       that causes me to become unsettled, 

       like water leaking, or machinery

       gone wrong.


       I can no longer watch a plane 

       tip its wings without 

       at least a small feeling of unease, and 

       realized the other day that even watching 

       hawks do the same

       increases my anxiety.


  

Saturday, March 11, 2017

Fourth Annual Haiku Freight Train.

 

Tomorrow I'll begin posting Haiku like a freight train, a new one every few days, boxcar boxcar boxcar, or perhaps the poems are like those spaces between the boxcars, moments that flash before your eyes, works of art, then gone. I don't really know. What I do know is that this is the fourth March that I have photographed a train and decided to pair the images with Haiku. I fear that this is related to some kind of seasonal psychosis, or worse, but I like the trains, and the process forces me to focus on the poems. I hope you find something there too, in the Haiku, the boxcars, or the spaces between.


Sunday, February 19, 2017

Sandstone and Cinder Block

 

Somehow the Russians
have become worrisome
again,

as if it is 1982
and I am 10 years old
wearing a haircut
circa 1978.

They've taken up
a mildly threatening position
somewhere off the coast
of Delaware, headed north.

"The first thing
you would see
is a great flash."

I remember, 
as a fifth grader
I stood in our basement 
fearing the worst, 

knowing damn well
Ohio sandstone 
couldn't withstand
a nuclear blast.

Now I am older.
My cinder block basement
appears no safer.
Will I never learn?



Friday, February 3, 2017

Improbable Hope

 

In late fall of every year, when frost threatens,
I place a few plants in a basement window for winter,
in an act of suburban optimism, as if to illustrate
that hope still exists.

Then, in the middle of January, I'll find myself
in an old armchair down there, 
my ornery cat, T-bone, on my lap listening
to Talking Heads records.

As he sleeps on my knees, I look
at those plants struggle to survive
on a day or 2 of partial sunlight per week
and think to myself,

What chance have any of us got?, and maybe 
sing a bit as the cat's ears twitch slightly,
"I wouldn't live there if you paid me."
The last two years,

in these most inhospitable of conditions,
on a cold shelf next to the electrical box,
a primrose inherited from my grandmother
blooms improbable flowers.


Sunday, January 22, 2017

Cooper's Hawk Unrelated.

From the corner of my eye,
a cooper's hawk 
flew between the 2nd and 3rd
houses on Eastern Heights

sideways, I mean 
with wings pointed
up and down.

I hesitated for a moment
at the stop sign,
no one there to notice,
but my wife

who was smiling
at something
unrelated.