Category Archives: October 2015

Overstimulated Chi

Gall dammit
One simple goal
Get out there
Sniff out possibility
Embrace every future
Find pleasure
Sun and stars
Try new positions
Maybe a spin-off

Things are bleak
Soldier on
Chin up
Smile fiercely
Laugh, like,
No one is listening

Flesh wounds
heal overnight.
Real pains
Haunt you.
Chilled sensation
Lighting bands
Glorious agony
Tightly wound
Balls of rubber
Connective tissue

Foresty trees
Hiding a series
Of larger belts
An elaborate
System of pulleys
Meat puppets
Featuring
Internal combustion!

Barred Owl

This species of owl exists
in the Eastern United States
(North America,
for future reference)
It has ever since
humans began giving a shit
about where owls live
.

They, as a species
struggled so hard
adapted so effortlessly
to their environment
that in a mere 20 years
they achieve Manifest Destiny
Greatest of American Dreams

Musta come on too strong
Gun to the face
Shock to the heart
When did it become
either/or, none two shall pass
Not a competitior
In the human race

Change is inevitable
Not always mandatory
Wonderland is where
Stories live in the dark
Ms Poppins is a pusher
I’ve seen the universe
In the pupil of my eye

Blindspot

I float along the drift of this case where I met one guy while decorating the lights for a place I’d never been before it was time to see the people dance with wolves in the long night alone. Then the light shone over his shoulder twice before not seeing me sitting next to someone on the balcony making conversation with a girl who once hated my face is red from thoughts in my head about you in the arms of my care and innocence lost forever.

Do you feel it too?
I see you.
Vibrating
at my speed.

Making my way out of town.
I hope you get to know me before then.
The best thing about me is the people I know.

So cool

I look at the sunset
And say – that’s cool.
Do you hear passion
In the understatement?
My aching heart wincing
Pain from nature’s beauty.
Consistently unique colors
Smeared on temporal entropy
Like butter on dry toast.
I’m humming a melody
only I can hear. Monotone.
The chords are too weak
To support the structure.
Fortified harmonic lining
For her pleasure, at least.
Unintentional attention
Drawn to the sound itself.

Chat of Videos, fo free?

I did two totally amazing things today.  Continue reading Chat of Videos, fo free?

Espress Yourself

Madonna’s temple hangs in the thicket
Next to the halo, used only in emergencies.
Babies flirt with walking the runway
In heels made of wasted civil liberties
Locally sourced and organically grown
Garage bands striving for glory
Amid discord searching for harmony
Do what you love until you can’t
Then scrape together a Plan B
Like teaching or serving coffee
No worries about the money
Drawing in, creating kinetic energy
Negative space rushing to fill
The list of things to do before I die.

Communications

Face to face is best
Except for bad breath
So many qualities
Not listed here
Keeping my cool
Abiding like a dude
Biding my time
Remembering how to fly
No more toreador
No more floor mat
No more fronting
The last screw
Was my last straw
Story taking shape
Characters aplenty
Time to move on
The beginning ends
Right as I started
Before I can decide
To change my mind.

Iyengar Yoga

I suffer from depression.  The most textbook cliche major depressive disorder you can imagine.  It started at puberty, strongly influenced my adolescence and helped me achieve a mid-life crisis by age 31.  Throughout, I vacillated between self-pity pariah and lab rat.  Eking out employment in classically short spurts, rarely making connections with other humans.  When I was young and frail,  my family helped me survive the worst of it.  Now I’m old and frail.  Owing to a lucky combination of western medicine and yoga, I’m still here.  Just barely.

Yoga is a part of my life like water in a fountain.  I discovered it way back in 1999.  I had a membership to Gold’s Gym and they signed an energetic tan woman from LA for a 6 month contract.  She taught Yoga.  No qualifier.  Yoga “brands” had only infiltrated elite coastal cities at the time.  In hindsight, her style was a great foundation for the basic principles that make all styles of yoga fundamentally the same.  Once that teacher left one of the students from the series took over the class.  She’d passed her torch to a candlestick.  I quickly lost interest.  The shininess of the instructor was part of the draw.

Yoga didn’t come back into my life for a long while.  I lived whole lifetimes without it in my 20’s.  Then I found my studio and in it a community that feels the way I can feel.  Not always the same feelings, but the same sense of self-awareness.  It’s the one place I can cry without judgement.  My light within shines softly, waiting for a chance to light the torch.