Monday, August 26, 2013

Fucked, forever

The beautiful boys and girls used to run
ragged through the East Village, puking
on sidewalks and fucking themselves stupid
with the joy they borrowed from each other.

We used to meet their cousins – tight
and smooth, trusting adolescents
from the Midwest. They let their hands
rub up our thighs, to our soft or swollen spots.

Nobody’s cousin is fucking anyone tonight.

There was a time we said: love.
Then, we said: appreciate.
I discovered a lady’s tells, and she sent me away.

I could steal her money and cut out her tongue,
but she would still play with my fingers –
an aimless, silent monologue through a mouthful
of blood. This is how we knew each other.

This is when we drank and fucked, forever
looking for a path. She showed me her light
and it turned out to be a train and a tunnel
and we don’t know what we want anymore.

We do know what we need.

I need a bed that won’t quit and a meter
that won’t expire, something I can keep
time to when the light goes out.

And all she needs is the hard cock
of her handsome man.

Friday, April 19, 2013

For Boston

Boston is not our home, but our sisters
live there. Our sisters' boyfriends live
there too. The former loves we knew
are down the street, those wet-mouthed

boys and girls we kissed on Commonwealth
wait on corners with cold faces.
Kin, made of shared blood
and shared necessity, are creating

new life in the city. From within.
With one another. We are visitors
but our people are not. The city
has adopted them, like it always has.

Boston is not our home, but our mail
gets lost there sometimes. Traveling
by train or by bender, we look
to be welcomed by the ghosts

we left in the backyard of our
neighboring town. We want to have
a drink with you soon, Boston.
You're the friend we've had

since childhood. We don't always
think the same, but we all want
the same thing now. To get back
to the sweet closeness of when

we all felt safe. The soft where
that gives New England its heart.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

The Current Political Climate

We shouldn't feel this way this selfish way we shouldn't feel this way
At all. There's a lot going on out there & I just happened to see this
Come across my desk: A man wrote us a letter saying 
He was concerned about receiving mail from us 'cos

Of the current political climate & I said: Well what the fuck
Does that mean? & they said: The goddamn town is boiling!

All the lines can't all be winners. It's a sad state of affairs when
You're too tired to think & too drunk to chase the skirts
To act like you've been there before. But we have been there.
We've been there since the summer of 2002. We get our mail

There. We bring a cup of something hot & sit & wait
For the man to bring us good news about the climate political

Or otherwise. He hates our stupid names & stupid faces
& loses our letters like I'll lose your scent. Just because
He can just because it hurts too much to hold on.
He & I are old enough to know we're being naive

& we still don't give a good god damn. Fuck the right
Thing the adult thing club it like a baby seal & sell it

For a profit. 'Cos some good can come from the loss
Even if it is a bit messy & just a tad unpleasant at times.
These words just this particular set is a waste of wasting
Time & I'm so very sorry if you see them and think less

Of me at all so think of me when I was good when I was
A fucking monster unstoppable & damn-near bulletproof

When all I had to worry about was a finding a home a couple
Of bills I could call my own. I'm running an old program
In a new machine & the gridwork doesn't know how to react
& I don't know how to react to it & I feel we are all getting

Close to something we won't see coming won't be able to put
Our fingers on until it is wringing our weak & sore & stupid necks.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Burn the World

It is 12:15 a.m. on a Saturday, and my hair looks too good
to sleep alone tonight.

But I got drunk off that stupid joy,
and lady? I can't stand up straight no more.

Don't bother searching for my network, you can find me
underground. This is where/how I will live now. 'Cos

the light can't get us here, but the cold
sure will. I'll invite it in, make a home for it

like I did for you.

We were too full though, I see that now. We had no room left
for the things that should matter.

I see that now.

There was a time when it was bright, and I thought about buying new sunglasses
but I kept the ones I had because I was wearing them when I met you during the storm
when Ian and I went for beer and they almost got taken away with the wind, almost
got knocked off my face, but I kept them on, and you read me Whitman, and I wanted
to tell you how important I thought you'd be to my life, that I had never met anyone
that looked like you, that had your voice or history, but I didn't tell you that then.

I won't tell you that now.

There was a time when it was warm, and it was only one day, but in that day
I was thankful for the fullness and I was taking sips of you, taking swigs of stupid
joy, and I was feeling sublime and you were feeling like you never had before.
You have a brain, you said, and I laughed and said "I do". You have passion,
you said, and I nodded and said "I hope so". You're something rare, you said,
and I wanted to write you a novel, or maybe just a love letter for when you woke.

Now is not the time for overdramatics.
Now is the time to burn the world.

I'll puke on the flames if I want to feel warm again.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Talk

We talk about "love like the whole world", but we don't know a fucking thing
about it. We want to be movie characters; that romantic comedy ending
that plays for Sunday matinee schoolgirls and bitter intellectuals.

We talk about the future like we have a single clue of how it will look.
I'm going to live in a cabin. I'm going to have a two-car garage.
I will never settle down, and you will never be able to find me.

We talk about finding the one, and we're convinced that we have
when we find someone we've never known before. I've never seen
the cut of his jib before. Her scent is from far away places.

These things are important. These things are not love.

We talk about happiness like it's something permanent, like a disease;
once we catch it, it will never go away. We'll have to call former lovers
and tell them of the diagnosis. It's only right (and we're all about being right.)

We talk about our lives like they're worth talking about.
We are not special. We are not unique. We are painfully unoriginal.
And the loves of our lives will smell it on us. We can't hide the scent.

We've been damaged and tainted, brainwashed and slightly bruised.
We've done too much living and not enough in the same useless breath.
We were banished from our homes to look for new ones, only to find

the new homes don't want us either.

Friday, February 1, 2013

The Queen of The Salt Water State (For Kathleen Bennett)

But at least I know we'll never be that far now from each other/
just a couple hundred feet either side of sea level.
- Los Campesinos!, "Hate For the Island"



We thought we could solve the world's problems from this bed,
but we were woefully unprepared. We knew not what we were doing

and we liked it this way just fine.

In another postal code, I have given you a new name; a badge
you can carry and flash when you're in need. We should be so lucky

to bow before you: The Queen of The Salt Water State.

And just because I left, it doesn't mean I left you. For how could I?
You are the conversation topic now. The reason to return

to a place that won't have me. And I love you like the whole world;

that's still enough, isn't it? 'Cos that's really all we have
when it's hard and cold, and the soft spots and hot hands

can't be found. I stole that line from that Welsh band we like,

because we can communicate with chords and borrowed accents,
even though we are so very (sort of) far away. I drop my R's more,

because I thought it would make you smile.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

[We don't want to go home, but we are so very sick...]

We don't want to go home, but we are so very sick
of the cold. We rush down stairs, we mind the gap,
and we look for a corner to keep us warm. How long
must we search? It feels like it's been forever

without a bed. We rent-to-own, sometimes sleeping
on a mattress made of air. Sometimes, a sofa
made of bone. No, no -- now you've gone too far.
This is our issue now. We have not gone far enough.

But we are the truest blue -- won't somebody
see this? We've strangled ghosts we've loved more
for less, and we are prepared to misbehave.
We loved them, you see, but they didn't recognize us

anymore. They had to go! back to bed with those
sons of bitches. They kicked and screamed, broke
the backs of chairs as they went. And we laughed
a little bit, like we couldn't see the future. Like

we didn't know their hold on us. Like we didn't
feel their soft, cold palms in our itchy ones.


Sunday, January 13, 2013

Sentimental X's (A Title Stolen from Broken Social Scene)

The sound of this day is an incantation; we have conjured a spirit
both ancient and terrifying.
Why do we hate the state we've found?

We don't hate the state.

We are in simple disagreement. She was content
with the life she lead, the head
on her tanned shoulders swiveled.

We all want the next best thing. We all wait for

the next best thing. We all want the next hometown.
We all want the next Asian boyfriend.
Well how do you like them apples? 

We've got ourselves a comedian.

This room, we see, is too full of ghosts. I think our beer
has been dosed. Someone found us having too much
fun. Someone found our beds full-up with new flesh.

Found our volume too high, our laughter too sincere.

We don't want these ghosts anymore. Our new home,
grid like a maze, have hidden us in plain view. One
of many now. One of the disappeared. We have found

new life. You didn't believe, but we said we were exorcising. 

Please, don't read this unless you have to.
Sometimes writers
have a way of haunting back.