Saturday, April 14, 2018

GONE

GONE

It’s so quiet in this house you can hear a tear drop.
now that you’ve gone.

It is so still in this house you can feel the air move,
now that you’ve left.

It is so empty in this house I can barely fill my shoes,
Now that you’ve moved on.

Gone girl-
Gone son-
Gone love-


It’s different now
I must become different too. 

I should wash my self of my self,
Be like the melting snow.

Friday, April 13, 2018

DEAR GOD

Forever and even annoyingly calling. 
He calls me to him at all times of the day and night.
He calls in the middle of meals while I’m eating too fast. 
He calls when I am being impatient 
with children, store clerks and my wife. 
He calls when I am impatient and cruel to myself. 

God has basically put me under house arrest,
There is n escape.

He is a cop in a very crisp clean uniform,
Who is in great shape;
He can outrun, outfight, outshoot me
Any day of the week,
Every day of the week. 

He says, “You can either come peacefully,
Or you can resist.
But you are coming with me,
One way or another.”

Yet I resist this spiritual arrest,
My ego still thinks it’s better off
Without God-
But sooner or later
either by accident, serendipity, 
Or when the pain drops me to my knees 
weeping.

God is calling me, 
Which is to say that
 Love is calling me, 
Beauty is calling me, 
Unity is calling me, 
Kindness is calling me,

And I am coming, 
Slower, than quicker, 
By hook and by crook, 
Willingly…reluctantly,
I am coming,


 Dear God,
Thanks for your persistent, 
Relentless call.



Wednesday, April 11, 2018



DANCING IN THE DARK

Every morning mom tells me to make my bed but I never do. I don’t see  I should, I’m just going to unmake it tonight when I go to sleep. She watches me a lot, way more than she watches the other kids. I have 3 brothers ad one sister but it’s pretty clear that I’m her favorite. She tells me I’m special and I believe her. She praises me to the sky in front of her friends. They ooh and ahh agreeing with her assessment of me. I’m so good looking I could be a movie star. And smart too! I am smart without really trying and school is so easy.. I always finish the work quickly and then I’m bored so I go read for extra credit or I try to make my friends laugh. I guess my behavior is sometimes a problem for my teachers. I get all A’s for grades butLast year in first grade I had a much nicer teacher. 
I usually have checks on my report cards for not conforming to school regulations. There’s also a box for “keeps profitably busy”. I’m not even sure what that means but I know I like to get attention and I’m very popular. Even the other kids think I’m special and girls sometimes whisper and kind of giggle to each other when I walk by. 
When my mom gets mad at me she punishes me by putting me in the corner of the den behind the tv. I look to see if I can find faces in the grain and knots of the pine paneling. Sometimes I stand so long she forgets she put me there and I fall asleep on my feet. Really!
She is always checking up on me to see what I am doing. I like painting by numbers and gluing parts of models together. If she is happy or feeling guilty for being mean to me, she’ll show up with chocolate chip cookies for me. “I love all my children the same, she says but we both know that I’m her favorite. I’m special. “If you were only as good as you are good looking,” she often tells me. She expects great things from me. If I would only apply myself and find some better friends that would be a good influence on me. But I like my friends. I’m probably the bad influence on them.

Sometimes even though I am afraid to be alone with myself, I wish she would just go away and leave me be. She is always watching me and commenting. I am either doing good or bad so I have to worry and always be on the lookout for her. She’s very good at sneaking up on me. I have to watch out cause if I make a mistake I won’t be so special any more. Others will find out that I’m not as wonderful and perfect and special as they think and then they will no longer like me. 
They like me because I am so smart, and clever and good looking. I'm funny too. Did I tell you that. I am very funny. But then there are times when I am not funny. I am...worried. Worried and confused. Then I read and write a lot trying to figure out how to be happy again. Trying to figure out what's wrong with me, as my mother puts it.
You’re smart Harvey. You can figure things out.  You can  figure out anything if you just tried. "You have a very smart brain Harvey.”
What am I worried about? I'm not sure. It just feels like the world is about to end. Like a catastrophe is looming just around the corner and if I make one single mistake, it will all fall apart and I will fall apart too. These worries, this sense of impending doom makes me very tense. I feel pretty much like I am always tense. Tense and wary. Alert, like a squirrel or rabbit sniffing the air, always expecting to be attacked. 
My mom finds faults. What are you doing, she will say. But it is not a question really. It is an accusation.  And whatever it is I am doing, I guess I'm supposed to be doing something else. “Oh, Harvey. you'll never learn, will you, she laments.with everyone and everything. And she shares her thoughts out loud all the time to anyone and I think, even when no ones around. 
The floors creak and sound seems to echo in our house so I always know where she is, what room she is in. She is cleaning. She cleans the house all the time. We kids aren’t even allowed to be in or even walk through the living room. Once I forgot and the next day I saw that she had raked the carpet to get rid of my footprints. I don’t know why they call it “the living room” if we can’t be in there. There’s some cool stuff on a marble table. Ashtrays made of glass that look like prisms and create rainbows when light passes through  and those metal roosters with their sharp metal feathers. Once I cut my finger while handling the roosters.  Probably serves me right for breaking her rule. I’d like to examine other stuff too but I have to be careful I don’t get caught in there. I told her once, she should put up a velvet rope like they do in the movie theaters to keep everyone in line. 
My mother smokes a ton! Sometimes she 2 or 3 cigarettes going at once but in different rooms. And when she blows out the smoke she often sighs. I love watching smoke continue to curl up out of her nose even after she’s put the cigarette away. She looks like a dragon.
My mother sighs often and heavily. Thinking private thoughts she shakes her head and mutters a complaint to herself. Life is hard for her. At 4 o’clock she has her first martini. 
I can always tell when dad gets home. You can hear him stamp his feet on the outside mat and then unlock the front door. Then after he changes his slacks he’ll fall asleep on the couch watching baseball just before dinner. I eat fast, we all do because the dinner table is where the cold war between my parents can turn hot. Either way dad leaves to go play poker until 2 in the morning.  On weekends he hosts the game in our basement.  There’s tons of swearing and a blue haze of cigar smoke. It’s kinda cool. The men call each other bad names but no one gets angry about it. They laugh and join in. S.O.B is the phrase I hear the most.
Sometimes I hear mom trying to stifle her sobs in the darkness of the living room at night. I can see the red glow from the tip of her Viceroy cigarette and I hear the clink of ice cubes in her glass of vodka. I hear her moaning and I feel so sad for her. She is trying to hold back but can’t. She sobs heavily and her nose runs. Then she might see me worried and watching from the edge of the room and call to me. "Oh Harvey," she will wail and when she opens her arms I run to her and we cry together like it’s the end of the world.  I wish I could make her happy. I wish I could make her laugh and smile. I wish I was bigger. 

And then she will notice me. Notice that I am sad and scared and she will laugh like she is all better and just being silly.  Then she will get serious and warn me,  "Harvey, don't you ever, ever, ever do this to a woman when you grow up. Don't you ever treat anybody the way your father treats me."
When she’s done crying she will she will stand up and say  “C'mon, I will teach you to dance . Dad hates music and dancing;  mom loves music and dancing.  She broke her heel once and fell on the floor dancing at Phil’s Bar Mitzvah. She didn’t get hurt-instead she laughed long and hard. I’m pretty sure she’d had too much to drink. That’s how dad would put it. “Your mother’s had too much to drink”.
First she teaches me to waltz which is pretty easy. My head comes up to her boobs and the sequins that cover her dress are sharp and scratch my face. But I don’t care because I like her hugging me and she always smells so good. 
After waltzing we do the cha-cha. That always cheers her up. I got pretty good at it.. We dance in the dark, just mom and me and no body else, dancing in the dark.





      THE MUSK OX

 The emptiness within me
Is me, missing my own presence
 wild goose chase for wholeness.

 God is apparent.



Time and again
sacred flowers bloom 
around and within me.
I close my eyes,
I smell the fragrance 
of my own
divinity.

Monday, April 9, 2018

SHAME


I was nine years old. I had just gotten home from school. I was sitting in the den eating a banana about to turn the tv on when I heard the front door swing open and my mother stormed into the den. She grabbed me by the hand yanking me off the sofa and without a word dragged me to her car.”  I had seen my mothers anger many times before but this anger was ferocious!  We sped away.

 My mom started drinking her vodka around 4 o’clock each afternoon and we never knew which way her mood would go. When she turned surly and started sucking her teeth you could tell she was once again building her case against my father one resentful brick at a time. The Cold War was going on those days between us and Russia. Neighbors were building bomb shelters in their basements preparing for a possible nuclear war but I was far more frightened by the cold war that had been going on for years between my parents. We never knew if or when she would launch her furious attack on dad or choose to remain quietly seething during dinner lost in her self pity and resentments. Dinners were brief. We kids all wanted out of the kitchen before she began twisting the knife. She knew where dad’s buttons were and once he tried to evade her she’d twist her self righteous knife deeper into his wounds. “Enough Jay,” he’d repeat but once he had taken the bait she was relentless.  It wouldn’t be long before my dad would up and leave the house once again for one of several late night poker games with the boys. This was his get away and the more he avoided her the greater her resentment would grow.

I was 5 or 6 when I discovered my mother sitting in the darkness in the living room with her Viceroy cigarette glowing, ice cubes clinking in her glass of vodka. I would hear her trying to stifle her sobbing and I would go into this private world of hers to try and comfort her.  At 5 years of age I became her confidant. She would cry and I would cry along with her. She would tell me bad things about my father that only confused me because as rare as he was around, when he was around he always seemed like a nice reasonable man to me. And he was fair.  

One particularly morbid night as she held me close to her bosom she spewed “Don’t you ever, ever,,ever…treat a woman the way your father treats me”.  I remember feeling torn between my parents. I wanted to be able to tell who the good guy was-who the bad guy was. I wanted to know the difference between right and wrong and felt I had to decide which of my parents deserved the blame for all the unhappiness in our home.

Other times her targeted victim was me. “Just wait til your father gets home!”, she’d threaten after I became too big and fast for her wild swings of the belt.
My father was an attorney and valued logical arguments and support evidence for accusations. Since my mother was an emotional pinball he tended to doubt the validity of her accusations which resulted in my usually being able to wheedle out of any punishment. Of course this just frustrated her more and added to her fury. Such was the uncertain atmosphere most common in our home.

We weren’t driving for very long but we were out of our newer 2 story brick house neighborhood and parked between less familiar but taller 3 story apartment buildings. My mom parked and pulled me out of the car toward the apartment first floor door where she began violently knocking and shouting simultaneously, “Come on out of there you son of a bitch! I know you’re in there!

I watched my father step shamefully out of the apartment, his eyes cast down as she reveled in continuing her punishing tirade. “How could you do this to me? How could you do this to your family!”. 

Strangers on either side of the street slowed their pace and stared which seemed to fuel my mother’s attack. Her grip on my hand was viselike. Shame rose up and swallowed me whole. I remember clearly wishing I was invisible; I remember wishing I was dead. I had never before felt the pain of humiliation to such a degree. I didn’t know it then but I would never be the same. This event signaled the beginning of many long arduous years of self destructive behavior. From that moment on I lost all trust in both parents and in authority itself. My rebellion began in earnest. At the time I didn’t know I’d begun an unconscious journey of self destruction.  It wasn’t until  years later, that looking back I realized what better way to get back at my parents than by hurting myself. 







THE SWORD

A sword driven deeply into my back
so long ago.

I look to the night sky for a word
from the ancestors
and am answered with silence.
The stars do not recognize me,
nor do I. 

There is broken glass beneath my bare feet,
I dare not move but cannot stand still,
I am afraid and lost.

My new son is crying,
grieving his departure from the womb.
He has joined me in this harsh place called Life
and I have nothing to give him, 
I cannot comfort him,
I cannot comfort myself. 

My shame swallows me. 
I understand finally…
It is my sword.

Somehow I managed to stab myself in the back,
It was me all along.
It is me all along, 
I am the one to fear, 
the one who cannot be trusted. 

My wife cries, “Come to bed!”
But I cannot sleep.
I hear my son’s lament
joined by his brothers wailing
mixed with my wife’s impossible tears
all stirred together by
my terrible sadness.

We are all being born again, 
anew, and it is terrifyingly 
painful.
We are all holding hands
writhing through the birth canal screaming 
blindly. 

It is like this every time, 
the first night home, 
All of us together never
before like this,
This family, this 
snowflake, 
unique.

I am as frightened as Benjamin, 
who is one day old. 
I have always been this frightened,
always been returning, 
my whole life an impossible attempt
to return to the state of perfect safety
in mother’s womb,
to darkness, 
warm fluid, 
the cord that kept me from the terror
of being separate. 

This is the Truth.

This is the Truth!

I drove my sword deep into my own back, 
then blamed you fro crippling me. 
I wanted to drive that sword through you, 
through your heart, 
I thought that would free me
From my rage
but I couldn’t do it,
didn’t have the courage or strength
so I did the next best thing-


I knew that if I hurt myself
It would hurt you mother, 

I’ll show you!

…and I did.

This is the Truth! 
This is the Truth.

It was a man’s sword wielded
by a boy.

The time has come to take it back
from the boy,
from the wound, 
and as a man forgive myself, 
wield the sword truly and finally
cut clean the cord.

The poem seemed associated with the theme of my story which is why I included it.  Perhaps unnecessarily  but when it was written it held an extremely important insight into my own self destructiveness which began in earnest after the event described in the story….







Sunday, April 8, 2018

EVERYTHING REMAINS THE SAME

what is a ghost
but a memory that won’t be forgotten.
there’s no tellin when one may show up,
nor what sorrow it may bring.


Grief can arrive as a surprise
and take your breath away,
“what was that about?”
our minds might say.

after a while it’s hard to tell
what wound your ghost is nursing,
so many old and ancient hurts,
pushed down undone,
turn away and still they stay,

what if these ghosts are angels
sent from our souls
to finish the painful business
of facing the moments
that broke or closed your heart?

Once that love pump ceases,
you begin to feel ghostlike yourself.

The breeze,
trees,
the man between your knees,
all seem vacuous,
unsubstantial,
evaporating like steam,
ephemeral as a dream.

We are looking for an anchor
to tether us to the ground,
still searching for a corner stone
that cannot be found.

These ghosts arrive uninvited
and depart unexpected as they came,
I place my tired feet upon the ground,

as everything remains the same..