• Bucky the Horse and the Gods of Radiation (1)

    At the end of gravity, only the heartless still eat and smile and roll around in the dirty motel cities of the West…

    The dystopian nature of her guts made Linnifrid’s mouth taste like the moon. She looked up at it now as she sat on a grassy knob in some wayward rolling meadow of what used to be western Missouri. She was alone but smart, and the world was wired and dumb. She figured there just had to be a way back to her own time — maybe somewhere sweet and sunny and tame where she could really live the life she had always wanted — somewhere where she didn’t feel as if she had to erase her own birth.

    She drank from a small milk pitcher and watched the stars hurl themselves against the great ghostly apron light of the moon. Linnifrid heard her horse dig in the grass behind her and then he breathed out hard with a great rush and she knew he was somewhat scared. She was scared too — for in the distance the great metallic glows from the bombs dropping across the land lurched upward like grain silos on fire and the ribbons of sparkles casually fell back down to Earth to burn the walking and send them to wake.

    The horse’s name was Bucky and he was a big milky brown horse without a saddle. Linnifrid stood and went over to him. She ran a backward hand across the long face and she thought the horse’s chocolate eyes looked sad beneath the blazing sky. “What’s the matter, boy? Those damn bombs scaring you again?”

    Bucky nodded his head in agreement. “They sure are,” he said in perfect English speak.

    Linnifrid stumbled backward, startled by the oh so human voice emanating from Bucky’s horse mouth. “Did you just talk?” she asked in a crystalline dazed wonder.

    Bucky shook his head no and looked away as if he were trying to hide some deep embarrassing secret.

    “Look at me when I talk to you,” Linnifrid demanded, and she touched his head and pulled his eyes to face her. “Is this some kind of nasty trick?” she wanted to know.

    Shyly, the horse looked at her. “No. I’ve always been able to talk. I just didn’t want you to know about it.”

    “Why not? It’s an amazing talent.”

    “I was afraid you would sell me out for your own selfish gain.”

    “Bucky. I would never ever do that. We’re best friends for life.”

    “But …” Bucky struggled to find the right words. “What if you were riding me and you fell off and hit your head against a rock and died?”

    “Bucky! That’s a terrible thing to say. Why would you say something like that?”

    “I suppose because I’m just a paranoid realist,” the horse answered, his head down and his horse heart feeling a tad melancholy.

    Linnifrid softly smiled and then wrapped her arms around the horse’s strong neck. “Don’t be silly, Bucky. You’re just a deep thinker. That’s all. I always knew you were a very smart horse.”

    Bucky looked up and smiled at her as any animal would if they could. “Thank you. I always thought you were a very smart girl.”

    There was a sudden deep shattering blast in the near distance and Bucky reared and hollered. Linnifrid tried to calm him but the horse was too frightened and he bolted away into the deepening darkness.

    “Bucky!” Linnifrid cried out. “Bucky, don’t leave me here all alone!”

    Linnifrid started walking toward the small farm village where she lived when she could. When the raids came they had to leave and hide in the forests beyond. Tonight it was safe. They were all busy with the bombing. The air Linnifrid walked through was still warm even though it was January, and the ground was soft from the snow that so quickly melts. She walked tenderly through the crushed meadows, one after another, a patchwork quilt of starving green. She would stop once in a while and listen to see if she could hear Bucky chomping in the fields. Then she would walk again – toward the small huddle of dim twinkles cradled nicely where the land sloped down and spread out a bit. When she reached the last crest, she scanned the moonlit moors of America for any shadowy signs of her beloved Bucky. There was nothing.

    The house was meager and Linnifrid went straight to her room of red ambiance and opened up the window. It made the room cool but Linnifrid didn’t mind the chill. She was a thick-skinned girl of healthy farm girth, nearly 17, and her hair was long and straight and the color of writing ink. She sat on the sill of the window and gently scratched at her pale face. “Where are you, Bucky? Please come home,” she whispered to the night air. A spooky rush of wind lapped at the house. She shivered, closed the window, and crawled into her bed. The door slowly creaked open and in stepped Linnifrid’s father. He went to the edge of the bed and looked down at her, his face worn much too weak for a man of 51. He shook her leg. “Linnifrid,” he whispered. “Are you asleep?”

    She widened her eyes and looked at him. “No Papa, I’m finding it difficult to rest.”

    “Is something wrong?”

    “Bucky ran away. There was a blast in the far meadow and he spooked.”

    The man ran his fingers through the roughed up head of hair the color of bleeding rust. “I’m sorry to hear that, darling. There’s nothing we can do about it tonight, though. It’s late and the patrols are out. You’ll have to wait till morning.”

    “Will you help me look?” Linnifrid urged her papa.

    He scratched at his head and thought about it, but in a way that she could tell he was actually thinking about something far deeper. “I tell you what. We’ll help each other out with our chores and then we can go look for Bucky. Will that be all right?”

    “Yes, Papa. Thank you.”

    He struggled to smile and turned toward the door. “I’ll meet you downstairs promptly at six for breakfast,” he said on his way out of the room. “Goodnight. I love you.”

    “Goodnight, Papa. I love you too… Wait, Papa?”

    He turned back to her. “Yes?”

    “Why is the world such a messed up place?”

    He paused and thought. “Because love isn’t the most important thing anymore.”


    Linnifrid stood at the stove and fried him eggs and bacon while he sat at the table sipping coffee. “I sure do hope Bucky is okay,” Linnifrid said over her shoulder. “Just look at that frightful weather out there.”

    “He’ll be fine… It’s just supposed to rain some.”

    She put out his food on a white plate and brought it to him at the table.

    “Thank you, dear. You’ve always been able to make a wonderful eggs and bacon breakfast… But aren’t you having any?”

    “No, Papa. I’m too upset to eat anything… I could make you some griddle cakes if you think you’ll still be hungry.”

    “No. That’s all right.” Papa grunted and looked around the room, annoyed by something that was maybe or maybe not really there. “I miss the damn newspaper,” he said. “Nothing is the same anymore.”

    “Do you miss mother?”

    Papa wiped a napkin across his scratchy face and looked right into her eyes. “Of course I do. My heart hasn’t been the same since…”

    “I know, Papa. I miss her too.”

    “Did you hear the owls last night?” he randomly asked her.

    “I love the sound of owls.”

    “Owls are peaceful creatures,” Papa said. “The world needs more peaceful creatures.”

    “Yes Papa,” she slowly replied, for now her head was twisting toward the window and the through the glass she saw one of the manufactured tornadoes ripping across the landscape on a direct path to the village. “Papa!” she screamed. “It’s a twister!”

    Papa leapt from his place at the table and dashed to the window. “God damn! It’s a big one! We need to get to the cellar right now.”

    “But Papa” the girl pleaded. “What about Bucky!? He’ll die out there.”

    “Girl, this isn’t the time to be chasing down a wayward horse. We got to get to the cellar… Now!” He grabbed her by the arm and pulled her outside. The tornado was spewing dust and debris all around them as they made their way to the safe haven below ground. Papa pulled the doors open and ordered Linnifrid down the stone steps. He followed behind her and latched the doors tight from the inside but they still furiously rattled as the storm bore down. The girl had found the lamp and turned it on — the light casting a pale blue hue against the gray of the cellar. Papa squatted down on the stairs and listened to the havoc now stirring right above. “They’re trying to kill us again… Those bastards!” he cried out in fear and panic.

    Linnifrid looked at the riled man and was sad about that. He hadn’t always been so frustrated, she thought. He was once a very calm man; a man content with his pastoral life. “Come down from there, Papa,” the girl said. “It’s not safe so close to the doors.” He turned to her without a smile or a frown. “I think I may have some serious psychological problems,” he said, and he looked at her with troubled eyes. Linnifrid stepped forward and held the blue lamp in front of her so that she could see his long face. “Are you still taking your medication like the man at the medication store said to?” she wondered.

    Shakily he swallowed and said “Yes.”

    “Then maybe you need more.”

    “More pills? But I already take so many.”

    “The pills help cure all your problems. Don’t you listen to all the advertisements? Your druggist is your best friend.”

    Something fell across the cellar doors and the noise startled them both.

    “It’s coming good now,” Papa said, trembling and sweating in the dank of the insane moment.

    “Don’t try to change the subject, Papa. I think we need to take another trip to the medicine store.”

    “No! I don’t want any more medicine. It’s making things worse.”

    “Nonsense, Papa. They wouldn’t purposely give you something to make your condition worse. It’s a very proper industry. You just need to give it a chance to work.”

    “What is it girl? Why are you turning on me like this?”

    Another loud thump outside pricked at their nerves.

    “I’m not turning on you, Papa. I’m trying to help you but you’re being awful odd and stubborn about it.”

    He turned away from her and said nothing. He stood up and placed an ear close to the cellar doors to listen for the storm. “It’s quieted down out there. I’m going to go take a look. You stay here until I come get you.”

    Linnifrid stepped back and watched as her father pushed the doors open. A sudden burst of yellowish-brown light flooded the cellar. Softly she said, “Be careful, Papa.”

    TO BE CONTINUED


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  • Albuquerque French Fries

    The mountains in Albuquerque are to the east. In most places I’ve lived, they were to the west. I always found that to be a bit strange, but maybe it’s not. But I was on the east side of Albuquerque, close to the mountains, when I was suddenly struck with an insatiable desire for French fries.

    I stopped at some chain diner place and ordered not one, but two baskets of French fries and something to drink, a Coke maybe, I can’t remember, it being such an odd and weird time in this life.

    I was in Albuquerque for no particular reason. I had been in some cheap corporate place of lodging the night before. I just remember staring out over the lights of the city; there had been a lot of blue, not amber so much, as I had expected — blue, desert lights — and I was hungry for action as I smoked cigarettes and drank bottled beer.

    It was a mighty funny feeling not really knowing why I was in Albuquerque at that particular time. I just wanted to get away from the doldrums of it all, back in some place suspiciously called HOME, but not really being home at all, but even so, there had been no action to be found after all. It was just a bunch of lazy driving through another American charade parade. Honking and Howitzers, springboard diving into hard cement, cold dreams, loneliness… the constant… loneliness… strumming the walls of white-walled malls, walking among the living dolls swinging handled bags of Chinese crap as they smiled those fake plastic smiles to the point the heavy makeup nearly cracked and fell to the ground — and me, up and down escalators, elevators, in and out of parking spaces from another dimension, and there was the smell and the sun and all the Native American motif fizzing like digging it science-fiction sabers… And then a bookstore, where I could breathe, meld into words and covers, fondling spines as I walked the rows among the ink bleeders and readers, wives with glasses, wives with hair pulled back into a tight tail, with the kind of head that you could palm like a tender melon as she let loose in your very own lap — the luxury of Saturn’s dew and doom—  loving it, living it, bent to it, stardust whispers scraping across the firmament like the cloud-studded smile of a stranger now wiping at her mouth with a scratchy, white motel towel, high-heeled remnants of lipstick-stained cigarette butts in some cheap amber ashtray on the bedside table, the one right next to the three-quarter drained bottle of voodoo juice purchased at some Nob Hill poison joint.

    And I ate those French fries slow and alone, looking out the bug greasy window at the traffic all piled up and trying desperately to move. All them peoples frantically working away their lives just to live for a couple days a week, a couple weeks a year — “you’re all fucking slaves to the system” I said to the fries and then I knew the batty waitress was going to call the cops on me, so I left her a nice big, fat tip and told her “I was never here, you didn’t see nothing,” and then I ran out the door and I started to drive again.

    I rattled around Q-Town, aimlessly, again, searching for meaning, searching for enlightenment so often talked about — where was it? I ended up near the Sunport. I just parked somewhere under the sun and just watched planes come and go, people come and go, everyone in such a damn hurry to get to nowhere, in such a hurry to just wait, to be strip searched, to be violated in a windowless room. It was hot, I rolled down the windows, I sucked on oil cans of Australian limeade, that’s Australian for lemonade, good drink, and I wondered, what’s Australian for Albuquerque? There were no super fresh and hip boomerangs or two-step your dead snakes lumbering along Indian School Road… And that’s where I almost bought a condominium, townhouse maybe, but it made me think too much of childhood and milk and that made me sad. I suppose, childhood’s end right out there tip-toeing on the double yellow line as mad dashers come whizzing by that do not mention your soul in those radio prayers bleeping forth from plush dash… Awe, money man and your senseless soul, look at the trees once in a while, get out of this neon cave and get lost for once in your fucking digitized life, smoke a little sky, eat a little dirt, breathe in the sun and let the sunflowers puke forth. Man, you are becoming machine. You are being eaten alive by throngs of numbers, nonsense, nocturnal Novocain in the batty cave.

    774 Central Refreshment House — more juice required. Cocoa Puffs and milk and Milky Way wayward hanging out by the sea of Sandia. Drunk on 233 Insomnia Street with some invisible chick named Glory, Glory Hollywood Boom Boom in a blue dress and tattooed bed sheets all covered in shiny pistols and white daisies. She wonders why I sit there, on the edge of the bed, shirtless, my back curved like a bell jar, staring out the window, the widow ghost traces my scars with cold fingertips, like a map of downtown Boston, they run down and all around, some mad parade of direction all haywire, I have some seizure via Heaven’s reach, she tries to calm me with something on fire, it’s getting yellow outside, there is maybe crying inside, but not out here, not where shit is real and man be cold, and the record needle digs into the vinyl and Native American mystic music comes pouring out like I was liquid in some wigwam in the parking lot of the neon green Gallup pharmacy where the witch doctors freeze you up before you take that freedom walk, that vision quest that leaves your eyes white and wide as you kick at dead America with the toe of your most trusted boot and simply look away.


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  • Have you heard of not being summer?

    Driving through hot ass western Wyoming approaching hot ass Utah with my hot ass wife in June 2021 / Aaron A. Cinder

    I was born in Wisconsin in the middle of winter. It was cold and the waters of Lake Michigan closest to the shore were frozen over. The trees were stripped bare of all they wear. The snow was dirty white and deep. Human breath roared forth like dragon spit down on the sidewalks.

    Winter is one of my happy places. I was literally born for it. Winter is cozy, fireplace warm, homeward bound for Christmas.

    I hate summer. Summer is a battle for me. I am like opposite bear and want to hibernate May through August – in a cave of ice, with a frosty mug of A and W root beer, my laptop, and really good internet service. What should we call that? How about Fantasy Land answers Thornton Melon (played by Rodney Dangerfield) from the 1986 comedy film Back to School.

    Technically, summer doesn’t even officially begin for about another week, but don’t tell that to Tennessee. Temperatures today are forecast to top out at 94 degrees with a heat index of 106.

    As the guy on Office Space would say: Yeah, if you could just not be so hot today, that would be great. Thanks.

    The bottom line is – I HATE HEAT. I hate to go outside in the summer. I don’t like to be hot. I don’t like to sweat. I don’t like to be uncomfortable beneath a blazing sun. I burn easily. I hate the bugs. I hate getting into my lava hot car and burning my palms on the steering wheel. Summer is not cozy. Summer is obnoxious. I spend most of summer indoors in the air conditioning and with fans roaring in our bedroom.

    Then why did you move to Tennessee? Someone might ask with a crooked face of wonder.

    Well, I do like some things hot. Like my wife. She’s the reason I live in Tennessee. So, I put up with the summers here, but still bitch about it. The other day I suggested to her that we get a summer home in Antarctica. She thought that was a bit much. Okay, how about Iceland? She was more receptive to that.

    Now, I’ve lived in other hot places – Colorado, New Mexico, South Carolina, West Texas, Missouri. Colorado was the most seasonally diverse. New Mexico (the southeastern part) boasted an unbearable desert heat that would thrust one into agonizing days on end of temperatures well above 100. South Carolina was a wet, heavy heat that made everything, and everyone drip. Texas was a dry, windy, wildfire-like slap in the face. Missouri was like, eh, Missouri – there were good days and there were bad days.

    I thought as I got older, I would become more adaptable to the heat, you know, on a purely biological level. I went into this current impending summer of doom hopeful that would be the case, but as the mercury climbs higher day by day, I’m like NOPE. It’s not working. I’m not built for it.

    Just the other day in a hopeful trance, I was talking to my wife about Thanksgiving. She looked at me like I was crazy. I think I must be. But I truly wish I could erase the summer months from the calendar. Come on Mother Nature, can’t we just extend autumn and winter a couple of months more each? Please. If only I had a light-duty time machine.

    On a societal level, summer is often portrayed as the fun time of the year. For example, people painfully smiling as they cruise in lipstick-red convertibles on their way to play with their balls at some beach in paradise – inflatable rainbow-colored beach balls are what I mean, but then again, I’m sure there are some weirdos who play with their balls at the beach. Okay, that was unnecessary but I’m going to leave it because Cereal After Sex is a playground for pushing the literary envelope off the swing. Literary? Maybe not always.

    But I’ve gotten off track. Where was I? Oh yeah, summer. I have no desire to jump up and down on a beach in my skimpy swimsuit slapping around a volleyball. (No one would want to see that anyways.) I don’t want to wear shower shoes or shlippy shloppies (what us folks from up north call flip flops) down by the pool. I’m not a swimmer. I’m an always on the verge of drowning kind of guy. Pools don’t impress me. I like to look at the ocean and listen to the ocean, but I don’t necessarily enjoy putting my body in it. I’d rather play in the icy waters of one of the Great Lakes before heading back to my woodsy cabin. With the ocean, I’m afraid of getting stung by a jellyfish or eaten by a shark or being swept away by a giant wave. Do you remember what happened to Greg Brady in Hawaii? But then again, he was probably high.


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  • Have you heard of not being a racist ass clown?

    The Associated Press has reported that 31 members of a white supremacist group were arrested in Idaho on Saturday for planning to riot during an organized pride event.

    The story caught my eye because I used to live in Idaho, and I loved it. It’s a beautiful state. It also caught my eye because of the subject matter.

    According to the report, CLICK HERE, Coeur d’Alene police were tipped off after someone saw the men pile into the back of a U-Haul truck at a hotel — “like a little army.” Yeah, that’s real smart.

    After they were stopped, police found the men had riot gear, including a smoke grenade, shin guards and shields. A photo accompanying the AP article showed men with their faces covered and their wrists bound together in plastic zip ties behind their backs when they were arrested. One man was wearing a shirt with the words “Reclaim America” emblazoned on the back of it.

    Well, isn’t that just great. Which America are they trying to reclaim? The “Liberty and Justice for All” one? Doesn’t seem like it. Seems like they want to make their own rules and with their own hateful liberty in mind — “an uninformed patriotism” — as Barry Howard wrote in an op-ed for Good Faith Media:

    The phrase “for all” is inclusive, not discriminatory. “For all” means we aim to provide and protect liberty and justice for all individuals regardless of gender, race, economic status, political ideology, or religious background. To preserve liberty and justice for the privileged few is indicative of a shallow theology and an uninformed patriotism.

    I am of the mindset of let people be what they are, who they are. If you’re not hurting anyone, live your life as you see fit. The same goes for these would-be rioters. They’re free to believe what they believe, despite what I think of it and how harshly I disagree. But once their aim becomes to hurt people, to infringe on the rights of others, to resort to violence, or even worse, murder, in order to fly their own brand of flag, count me out. I don’t want any of it. Nope.

    And the bottom line is hate is just wrong. Right? But then again, I hate these people for being so hateful. So, am I wrong as well? Am I hypocrite? I don’t think I am. Maybe hate is too strong a word. I just don’t understand their mindset. Why is your focus on stepping on the necks of others? How do you feel joy in that? Why are you so enraged? And to target a pride event. Are you that threatened? Love is Love. And Hate is Hate. Which way are you going to go? How are you going to get to the disco? In a limo or a tank?

    I don’t know what that last line means. It just came to me. I don’t know why, but I am having some trouble writing this article. I don’t know if it is because I am so disgusted by these people, or just plain disgusted by society in general, that I can’t fully release all the thoughts that I have cloistered within me. I am so exhausted by the division in this country, in the world. I’m so exhausted by the rhetoric and the misinformation and the dutiful ignorance. It derails my own focus. It derails my attempt at mindfulness. The world is a distraction to my own peace of mind.

    I look at the picture that was attached to the AP article and all I see are cowards. They cover their faces with cloth. They shade their eyes with sunglasses. They consider themselves “soldiers”, but they are anything but. Their intent was to harm and disrupt, that much is clear. Who knows what would have happened in Coeur d’Alene if they had not been stopped? Thank goodness they were stupid.


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  • Bong Clerk

    I went to the record store on the bad side of town just to check things out. The traffic all mad, crazy, and lazy, some Subaru bimbo ‘bout slayed my ride as she swerved in and out of her lane while talky walking on her celly phone, probably ‘bout shoes and shopping and all that brainless shit so ravenously absorbed by this collective sponge of idiocy.

    I pushed my ride through my ol’ stomping grounds… “Yeah, I used to live there, there and there…” the city now bulging at the seams with all these newbies and they roar in here like some California ocean with their big rides and their big money, pissin’ up in another strip mall, another ShitMart, another layer of asphalt, another dull dollhouse of cement and glass where the blockheads can play “office” and get high on Africanized bees.

    I pulled into the oily, worn parking lot; it was littered with litter.

    I felt a Rikki Tikki Tavi ghost ship cut through my spleen as I walked across the lot and into the shoppe. The place smelled of incense and painted wood and old linoleum and lingering clouds of grass. I noticed they were rearranging the place. The shelves where all the DVDs once lived were now cleared and big signs talked about the place adding a book section in BIG CAPITAL LETTERS… And I thought to myself, BOOKS, finally, a grand idea.

    As I lingered about the place whilst the man clerkie who digs the new Taco Bell Doritos taco shell tacos sorted through the goods I was pawning, I couldn’t help but overhear:

    “NO, NOT LIKE THIS! IT HAS TO BE LIKE THIS!”

    And there was the manager cheeka all yelling at the girl clerkie because she wasn’t arranging the display of bongs correctly.

    And she was being a real dog about it too, being all huff and puff and HR Puff N Stuff in the poor girl clerkie’s face. And I felt bad for her when the girl clerkie came around behind the counter in her tightly woven ink on skin. I could tell she was mumbly wumbling nasties under her breath about her uptight bitch boss.  She was all nervous and stressed, probably being a new clerkie and all and she didn’t need this shit from the stuffed sausage cougar with bosoms falling out her top about tidying up big bongs on a glass shelf. She was just trying to make it in her little world in the big world that crunches her down every day because she doesn’t get paid nearly enough to make it these days. And I could see like this mad nuclear bomb all going off in her head and her bourbon brown eyes all turning green and I knew any minute she was going to vagina punch her, but in the end she had to hold it in, because that just wouldn’t be right, vagina punching her boss on her third day in the shoppe and even though I would of liked to seen it, seen that lady grab that hole and fall to the floor — in some kind of agony — it didn’t happen whilst I was there — despair, for the girl clerkie who had to swallow a nuclear bomb just to keep some lousy job that will just kill her in the end anyway.

    I took my money from the pawn, and I took my leave and went out into the oily, electric world. The traffic was bulging like an unfortunate ski weekend sausage fest — the kind where you drift off alone. It was hot outside. The sun this big blaring white eye all boiling and roiling and cooking us to pieces down here on Earth. I turned the AC on as I drove back to the other side of town and the place where I stayed at with the old man and his crooked bones. I sailed the long, hot lanes of traffic, across the flatlands, up and over the hills, to the hot, hot hideaway where I endlessly breathe alone.


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  • Walking to the Moon

    The birds began to sing

    at the edge of another dream

    My eyes hurt with sleep

    Heartbeat torn

    like old paper

    The skylight burns another hole

    through everything I hold

    But not your skin, your gaze, your soul

    I’m a rocking chair captain

    with threads of cold gold

    running through my veins

    this window is driving me insane

    Another hole to look through

    another view without you

    roof tiles and smokestacks

    a slice of cloudless sky

    Every day I whisper or scream –

    How I wish for flight, out of sight

    Naked at dawn

    these unforgiving hours

    A smoldering cigarette lights the way

    Through this smashed up haze

    I’m just a cast away

    on lost highway

    with nowhere to go

    but so many damn directions

    Empty roads beckon wanderlust

    Heaven torn asunder by the sun

    I’m down and out, beat

    I wanna run

    to the view from a summer porch

    buried in the green torch

    memories of stories

    told outside a backdrop

    of large glass windows

    Memories torn asunder by the sun

    This heartache wakes me to another day

    beating against the wall of my chest

    Struggling to breathe

    I want to let the world in

    but how do I believe?

    When everything I once captured

    has now been released

    And everyone I love

    Loves someone else

    And everyone I love

    lives in a different house

    And everyone I love

    doesn’t even remember my name

    Headlamps stir this torture

    like a straw in a poisoned drink

    I’m melting in the cold

    Truth untold

    Lie awake at night

    struggling to calm the burdens of the day

    My life gone astray

    Stone, metal harp

    greets me at the door

    turn the key

    and I’ll be free

    Because everyone I loved

    never even knew me…

  • Elvis in Atlantis

    I saw Elvis making crop circles in Atlantis

    From the window of my pink wooden house

    Rattling pigeons lining the lip of the rain gutter

    Squawking at the wash line

    Strung out in the strata of the bleaching sun

    I hung out in the window frame

    Smoking Camel Lights in a T-shirt

    Watching flocks of black angels

    Soaring above the leafless treetops

    The bourbon reek of the ocean

    Rolling and foaming across my

    Tilted square of freshly-cut lawn

    My radio zoomed into Prague DJs

    The red pin of the dial pointing magnetic North

    Tangled fibers of cotton

    Being spit from slits

    In my favorite vinyl tablecloth

    Rings of coffee stains

    Blood stains

    Love stains

    Remind me of where I have been… 


    It was the sway of electric light September

    A lonely hovel of a home

    Basking in the sore stomach of life

    Miles from nowhere

    Seconds from everywhere

    The typewriter clicks banged off the walls

    Steel drums clattered in the distance

    Monkeys tossed pineapple bombs in the graveyard

    And all was merely a flicker of time

    Bottled in a piece of cherry-lemon rhyme

    My Christmas tree bent and dried

    Presents left unopened

    The jagged shards of ornaments

    Looking like fragile teeth

    Ready to take a bite out of me

    Whenever I passed by them

    On my way to the bathroom

    To load another razor

    To scrape away my senseless charm…


    It was in the grocery store where I saw her

    Standing in the long line

    With a bottle of all-natural apple juice

    And carb-friendly yogurts

    Cradled within her arms

    She smelled like dirty peaches and chai

    Broke and fragile and hot high from behind

    Her zodiac leggings tight and cradling ass

    One strap of her orange top sliding off her dimpled shoulder

    She turned for a moment to cast a psychic, random smile

    Ocean water eyes from another world aglow

    A premonition of a wife to be

    Then watching her fade out the sliding doors

    As I plunked down thirty dollars

    For beef steak, potatoes and mounds of pasta

    And I dropped them all for love

    And followed her through the jungle

    Hoping she’d lead me to a crystal ball

    Or Kerouac’s meditation mat in the woods…


    And when I raised my head up off my table

    The vinyl stuck to my face trying to keep me down

    I realized I was dreaming again

    The jagged teeth of the ornaments

    Grinning wide, making fun of me

    And I went into the kitchen

    Turned on the light above the sink

    And went to work making a poison stew

    While listening to Prague DJs spinning

    songs about screaming for help.


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  • Sun burns world

    Sunburn my lady
    sun burns morning glory glows of you
    while I wait in the queue
    on some dock in Liverpool
    the dusk dawn of ending day
    perched high on the wireless clouds
    polished antique haze
    a dirty orange smear in the sky
    a trench coat wrapped in rain
    a pocket watch ticking out the pain
    songs of doves and ice-cold cod
    tolling bells of doom booming through the fog
    the sunburn rains on down
    an apple, a rose turning brown
    halfway through the memories on haunted hill
    halfway through the turnstiles stuck in glue
    sun burns red, sun burns blue
    a wind sick hotel in desert hue
    sagebrush rolling through dry dust dew


    I’m tapping on the dirty windowpane
    scratching out a lullaby with jagged nails
    the lovesick howl
    of another lonely road
    the lovesick boil
    of crooked yellow veins
    pumping globs along the asphalt trail
    thunderclouds muscle the mountains
    bloated bruises whispering might
    I take a flashlight and head out into the night
    sun burns down the juice of a pale moon
    stars like angel eyes fill the room
    of lightless morning desert bloom
    there’s a knock on the door
    but no one is home
    there is a fist on the brick
    shattering tender bone
    sunburn rains down wanderer all alone
    the clover and cattle moan
    a sherbet shining erection of sun
    blocks out the light of all that is done
    wet spit harbor lights shimmer and shake
    wet spit city lights clamber on the lake
    little blue boats sweep against the waves
    sunburn eye scans the sky
    to alleviate the savage
    to tempt the tea kettle to howl
    to rise one’s heart from horizontal rest
    yoga flirtations in a rocking chair
    sunburn swirl in a rocket ship
    her bottom lip
    licked moist within the sway of a hammock


    The sun burns a Bakersfield cathedral
    porcelain dolls wet with makeup
    make their way up
    God’s holy stairs
    and even angels stare
    at the divinity of sunburnt blonde
    kneel down and pray
    coddle the crucifix
    sun burns Jesus stained with holes
    high noon it’s time to go
    to the factory or the ghost town
    to the clown with an upside down frown
    time to go to longevity
    to sweat the sweat of brevity
    motel mattress smells of dust
    motel mattress saturated with lust
    checkout time was long ago
    pounding on the door… It’s time to go


    Sun burns the empty rot
    of a drive-in movie lot
    weeds and grass all a cluster
    speaker boxes corroded like old toasters
    the flicker of the screen
    sun burns a celluloid dream
    twists and melts and scatters away
    yet another sunburnt Technicolor Day
    cloudless blue burns right on through
    to this heart and on every bruise
    sun burns the junkie loading a needle
    high times on the highway
    90 mph plus to negativeland
    screaming green neon the width of the band
    whiskey sour at happy hour
    the beat of the desolate
    the beat of the chagrined
    taps out the code of a breathless heartbeat
    swimming rings around the warm wet circles
    piling up on the warped mahogany bar
    sun burns the ice chime singing to the glass
    sun burns the momentum of a lover’s last stance


    Back home in Hollywood
    trying to find the ocean
    back home in Dino’s Den
    the racing pen
    the hog tied hypocrisy of CNN
    humming American voodoo at the tempo
    of a sunburnt porcelain doll in heat
    swipe the cherry bomb across the mouth
    98.6 degrees of candy store junk
    dripping all along the Walk of Fame
    from hence the angel cove I came
    sun burns the jungle land
    of another Eden and Disneyland
    heat up the honey in the jet stream
    blur out the flag in another American dream
    sun burns the justice and the liberty
    sun burns the momentary meaning for us all.



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  • My Vimana

    I bought a green and red striped lampshade in a small shop on the corner of 5th and Main in some battered and bruised American town. It made my lonely place look like Christmas, but more importantly, I needed something to shelter me, from the rain, coming in my windows, running down the walls, it’s even chasing me, down and through the halls. Can’t remember what to see, I was looking for something to just say, something beautiful, something truthful, wondering what parts matched your eyes, your crystal-blue cornflower eyes, that made your face a place of peace, like high-country grass beneath the better parts of space, like a white farmhouse, a red barn, a green lawn, all ringed by a wooded place of trees and quiet and the amber hands of some Summer God, reaching down, parting the canopy and letting in the light.

    Clothes void of bodies, flutter in the winds of my crowded and unkempt closet, the one over there, on the wall full of bullet holes and big, red hearts all shattered and astray. I got venom in my pocket, I got a bottle rocket — “don’t shoot your eyes out,” the maniac under the bed, said, and Charlie Chan stares in through the window, biting down hard on a skeleton key. I was getting way beyond damaged… Much too soon and much too hard by the tollbooth dictator via Kansas way, that hot sway on the highway and the hunt for a Motel 6, somewhere near Lawrence, where Burroughs used to live and where he died, but it got too late and hazy, the lust wore off like bad medicine and I went on driving—to Kansas City, Amorika, via the fatal stroke of midnight.

    Sleeping pills and mind medicine sat on the bedside table like jewels. I could not sleep. I rattled my feet. I stared at the white ceiling, where there cast was the shadow of a one-eyed alien lamp, and then I thought it would be a good time to take a ride in my vimana, and I put on my flying pajamas, wrapped the dog tags around my neck, and then carefully crawled inside. I closed the hatch and ignited the mercury, and we went up, up, up and out through the retractable skylight of night like Mr. Wonka and his magical elevator. I looked around as I rode over the world, the rooftops all shimmering and wet from the rain running down your face, and the Earth an electric grid, with some places very dark, these, the dens of the poor and hungry and forgotten—and some places very bright, these, the dens of those that do all the forgetting.

    So, my vimana and I flew around undetected, no one knew us like I know them, if she only knew, what I know, what I know, what I know, of everything back then—and the sun began to creep over the edge of my destiny, and I felt it was time to bring her down. The vimana landed in some other world, looked like the realm of De Smet, South Dakota in the late 1700s. There was a great meadow of tall, yellow grass and it swayed back and forth a bit in the light breeze that they had there. I shut the vimana down and crawled out. There was a chill in the air, and I put on my long, black coat I kept stowed behind the seat. There was a howl of emptiness in the air—as if I had been the only man that had ever been there. The sun was not orange or yellow, but a bluish white. It was a steely sun, a cold sun, a sun undone by time and space itself, but it lit the world around me, no less than the sun of my own.

    I buttoned my black coat and put on my Moroccan cowboy hat and lit up a Marlboro red. I looked around at the landscape, seemingly vacant of any man or animal. To my left, a great, long wall of gray yet bedazzled rock for as far as I could see. To my right, that sea of tall, yellow grass crashing against some invisible shore like the feathers of tender Eve. Then straight ahead. There was something there, on a small rise of land. I wondered, if it was the grandmother vimana, waiting for me on the landing pad porch, ringing the dinner bell with the tail of a comet, hanging out the clothes for proper dying, ready to depart to my new world of love and peace and long sleeps in bone-bleached sheets in some white house on a clean street in small town bizarro-world Amorika. I crushed my smoke out with the sole of my cool boots, the boots I bought in Albuquerque right before all that madness began in the Nob Hill pub, and I walked on, toward grandmother vimana.

    As I got closer to it, I realized it was no mother ship at all, but instead, a grounded structure hewn from sturdy, gray wood, now bleached by the blue sun. There were four sides, a roof, a porch, rectangular windows with crisp white curtains, and a door. I walked the perimeter of the place and looked around, over my shoulder, no one to be found. I peeked in the windows. There was something there, but I could not tell. It was somewhat dark and hazy in there, so I went for the door. The white knob was cold to the touch. It turned. The door was not locked; it opened with a nearly inaudible squeak. I stepped inside, the wind outside blew in. I walked around slowly, quietly, like an uninvited guest. The floors creaked. It was just the one room, that is all. The walls and the air in there were void of any signs of life. There was but one thing in the whole of the entire place, and that was a wooden chair; it was set near the window that faced the direction I came from. I sat down in the chair; I adjusted my Moroccan cowboy hat and lit up another Marlboro red. I stared out the window for a very long time; it never got dark ever again. My vimana was gone. The wind shook the tall, yellow grass for as long as I stayed there, which was forever, like her crystal-blue cornflower eyes, melting winter’s dawn at the very moment you leave dreams and enter life.


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