January
iv.
I’ll meet you there and
race right back
again
said the wind
I do not care for
cheese
said the moon
people forget
said the river
it’s easy to see how memory slips and
settles
Checkin' things out by the river.
I tend to evening chores
tomorrow’s worries television news
lend me your apron
said the wind there is still time
to drift and dust and
polish smooth
in falling
we rise
said the moon
filter out what’s potable
replace with
chemical equations
partake when good and ready
dredge dam redirect and
levy I could tell you stories
said the river
ripples only if
you see them echoes only
if you hear
Posted in goodnight, moon
colder than cold-in-a-long-time
moon. can’t look, lick or bite without
stickin to you.
A few things that = freedom from combing hair:
dreadlocks.
hats.
sleeping all day.
being bald.
being five. or the baby of your family at any age, unless
you are already bald, therefore free.
not having a comb.
having a comb but not using it.
having Fisher Price hair.
there are more things but it’s time to stop this list and find
a comb.
To The Guy At The Poetry Reading Who Ran Into My Eye:
First of all, I didn’t know exactly how to address you, so let’s just
say Ben.
And second,
I didn’t mean to stare in the first place, but
there you were:
in the way of my eye.
Listening to
the poet,
which I was supposed to be listening to, too
but got caught up
in watching you.
I wanted to see
how the words got from the poems
into you. So I could sneak in behind
and
explore two or maybe three
parts of you, like
nowhere near
that tattoo,
and the hand holding
your notebook, and the space
someone else might have missed
below your knee–
But just one knee, Ben.
Because there is freedom in
not knowing.