Friday, January 16, 2026

mmmmcmxlix

Geeks Like Us

I know only what I know.  The
geek is freeing; the geek’s in me.
I am the geek, but my geek doesn’t
know how to get me out of this.

I can structure this as if.  But
that what gives me the gumption,
that which is my brain brains
me.  I’m not a freak, I’m a

Gemini geek. 
I can think but
I cannot want.  What does my
thinking want?  If that’s called
motivation then put me to

sleep.  Sleep like a geek
for a chance at a brain.

geeks

Thursday, January 15, 2026

mmmmcmxlviii

Bucket Overflowing

I know only

enough about it

to know that

I’d really

love to

go to

Barcelona.

bus to barcelona

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

mmmmcmxlvii

I Need to Get Out More

Lying in the apartment I
never seem to leave these
days, reading oceanside
romance, the sounds the

waves make, boats upon
them, the health of sand
beneath one’s bare feet.
But these days I rarely

venture out.  I think it
will depress me more
to wander around in
the city with empty

pockets.  Which may
be true. Nevertheless...

I Need to Get Out More

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

mmmmcmxlvi

A Piece of the Moron

     Magic, which is trying to hold onto people with your own hands...
                                                                       —Jack Spicer

I wasn’t attempting to alter the course of
my day any more, which is when it hap
pened.  Isn’t that how things so often 
go?  

And so I misread moon for moron.  Or at
least I think I had.  Years later (like maybe
five, ten minutes max), I was poring over

the text of the two pages whereupon I had
surely come across the lunar reference to the
cheese of it all.  But there was no moon.  Had

it been Muenster or Camembert?  The old
man in the maroon didn’t care.  He’d just
written moron when he had meant room.

There’s a lot more space in space, I think.
When I do.  Which is, lately, all too often.

daffodil moons


Monday, January 12, 2026

mmmmcmxlv

Fancy Talk

        And the stony words that are left down with us greet him mutely
     almost rudely casting their shadows.  For example, the shadow the
     cross cast.

                                                                                     —Jack Spicer

What stamina!  Sure, it’s amazing when
we find the discipline to induce and then 
rev up the necessary motivation required 
in times like these, but to be strong-willed

and experienced enough to know that it is 
possible, and to put that knowledge to work 
by stirring up enough stamina.  Wow.  I’ve always
been one to beat the odds when the chips

are down.  Haven’t I?  Hm.  Or is that
something I’ve held on to, a belief in
myself that is but delusional?  Would
it matter which way reality tilts, whether

or not the belief in myself, the confidence,
was legitimate or fantastical?  Because I
mean, either way, here I am, right?  I do
have a preference, I suppose. I fancy

living in reality over existing in a universe
of my own ignis fatuus.  Perhaps there are
those who’d want for the alternative, but
for the life of me, I can’t imagine why.

creature


Sunday, January 11, 2026

mmmmcmxliv

Riffing on Observation

More attempts at getting to the heart
of a pretty difficult matter without the
bother of conveying all of the difficulty.
Because when I do the latter, as I some

times do, it seems to me that I’m bringing 
on more grief, more tumult, torturing not
only myself a bit more with my attempts
at repeating the nature of my difficulties,

getting into the specifics as much or as
little as I do, but also dispensing the
tension outward to whomever might be
nice enough to pay attention.  I don’t

want to do that.  Certainly not today.
And besides, with all of the tools I can
use when going through the act of
piling these lines upon one another, for

whatever particular reason that I happen
to be doing so, besides the fact that this
happens to be what I do, that one thing
that I’m compelled and with discipline to

build under almost any circumstance, the
act of which (this writing) I have noted
has often saved my life or at least extend
ed it—anyway, to finish the thought that

I seem not to want to finish
given the
numerous devices which I can utilize
when doing this, surely there is a way
to express myself in way that can be

understood enough, a way in which
the delivery is much less stressful
than a rigid description without any
unnecessary flair?  Oh, there surely

must be.  I tell stories.  I freely
associate.  I understand the con
cepts of metaphor and parody and
whatnot, so surely there is a way

to do such a thing during which I
might lift my head high rather than
cower with it angled toward the ground
while doing so?  Or is this just a way, as

it seems to me now, of doing nothing, of
saying nothing, of stalling with the problems
still burning within me.  Please know that is
a rhetorical question.  For I needn’t an answer.

representing me


Saturday, January 10, 2026

mmmmcmxliii

Removing Some Tension from Each Line

If I have a strong desire to convey
the feelings and stress I’m having
from any situation, the contest or
challenge is all about how to con

vey those without dispensing to
anyone who might listen the act
ual stress, the torment that I am
going through.  That exact thing

which I am trying to relay.  And
for what?  If I’m just venting,
I mean first of all, if I’m just
venting, why bother you with

such things?  It’s healthy to vent,
on occasion, but now I’m interested 
in how best to convey something
to you that is causing me a bunch 

of personal turmoil without
giving any of that tension to
anyone else.  These are my
problems, and I do want to

take care of them.  On my
own.  So then what happens
when that becomes an
impossibility?  No, wait,

that wasn’t the question
or problem I was posing.
But, fine, it’s the one in
this case that really counts.

skeleton representating me


Friday, January 09, 2026

mmmmcmxlii

What Industry?

Down with the Greek gods! 
 And probably
the Roman ones, too!  Graffiti that foretells
is much more ephemeral than the sun.  Sol’s
bright sliver of daylight (on the road to Damas

cus, no doubt!).  Toll free calls with voices con
veying poems on the other end.  I used to do 
that.  For Special Olympics.  And for Southwest
ern Bell.  Sports and communications have been

my life.  Hardly (har har)!  But
ve been some 
slivers of daylight.  Well, that’s taking it a word 
or two too far.  Collecting the sheets of inked pa
per from the conveyor belt, quickly putting the

several hundreds of unique pages together,
binding them in the proper order, placing the 
bound product into a box, finding the time some
where to lift each box onto the truck, hop into 

the truck, drive it out to the nearest warehouse, 
seek out and investigate local bookstores, locate 
an eager audience....

playing Father Doherty in Angels Fall in 1989


Thursday, January 08, 2026

mmmmcmxli

Against Sonnets

Exerting a form of power used
to manipulate a group who the
“powerful” feel the need to sup
press (and let’s look at why that

desire exists here)—to force that
group into submission, into an
obeisance to the “powerful”—is not
a sonnet.  But if it is not a sonnet,

then I don’t know what might be
come the only answer to the what
is a sonnet question, if I may be so
obvious.  What in the world is a sonnet,

then?  Can it possibly be this non-rhyming
example of answering what is a sonnet?
Or would said non-rhyming sequence neg
ate its possibility as holding forth as one?

Gene Van Meter, April 30, 1941

Wednesday, January 07, 2026

mmmmcmxl

Don’t Eat the Mold

In actuality, I don’t even know
if this is really a problem.  But
eat around it, for sure.  I mean.
Look at it.  It’s disgusting.  Colors

bread should never see.  Colors
bread should never be.  Although,
in actuality, I’ve been to a bakery
that has bread in most any color

you might imagine.  But don’t eat
the mold.  Better yet, get some
new bread.  Then again, how should
I know what eating mold might do to

a nice person like yourself.  After all,
where did we get penicillin?  Or I do
think that is how I recall things.  That
it was once a drug derived from mold

that cured all sorts of outlandish ail
ments.  Saved scads of actual human
lives.  But who’s to know, really?  Not
me.  And we haven’t had any of that

stuff around in eons.  Perhaps it’s a
longstanding myth.  Many of us are.

is meryl moldy?

Tuesday, January 06, 2026

mmmmcmxxxix

The Contemplator of Words

See that man over there (rubbing
his hairless chin)?  That man is good
at contemplating words.  Or at least
we begin to hear tell of this.  “Ooh,

a play on words!”  he is heard exclaim
ing.  Most people just think he’s off-
kilter, but happy; a very contagious
kind of happy.  He doesn’t even seem

to ever be looking down at us plebeians.
But the poor thing.  As the generations
begin to tumble and then crumble,
that old man’s brain cannot even be

held as an example, to anyone, of any
thing at all, for those who’d later arrive.

choose happy - please do not urinate on our building

Monday, January 05, 2026

mmmmcmxxxviii

An Old Man’s Karmic Parodoxes

Reflecting on his topsy-turvy
but mostly hard-earned, lucky,
modestly successful life – okay,
it had been a rollercoaster,

especially here at what was
surely to be the tail-end por
tion of it.  He had never be
lieved in karma.  That was

too illogical.  Oh, he had his
dreamy fantasies, and for a
man bent on engagement and
logic (to a fault at times)—I

mean he was a poet—and he
could let his mind and at times
his body and spirit get caught
up in the big notion of romance,

of love, never fate, he was too
much of a control freak, but he’d
often make big decisions based
on gut instinct and butterfiles,

knowing full well it was not a
leading cause for true success.
Not for him.  However, for one
so internally steeped in logic,

he’d lived through some fairly
karmic circumstances, the
biggest example that always
came to mind was that he’d

historically denigrated even
the idea that a long-distance
relationship might be a serious
one at all.  One borne of long-

distance, at least.  And he’d
think occasionally of the very
attractive man he’d ghosted
after a few dates for the simple

reason that he incessantly e
manated a dourly pungent odor
of garlic from what must have
have been every single pore of

his body.  He would even joking
ly tell this story if ever the right 
time (to him) arose.  The years
went on and began to take

their toll, most especially be
cause the bright fortunate life
he led from place to place had
taken a tragic turn one mind-

altering day, changing his life
so incredibly, and only in the worst
possible ways, the ones that seemed
impossible to rise above.  Then,

wouldn’t you know it, he found
himself in a long-distance relation
ship with someone he had met on 
the internet.  And with someone

who seemed as satisfied with the
virtual ways as he was uncomfort
able with them, perferring the phy
sically present ways.  It went on

for many years, and even
when he eventually found 
himself in its seventh year
(having only had the

pleasure of his company
in the same physical space for 
less than a couple of weeks’
duration).... Well, ithout going

into any more details or
giving away how that turned
out, there was also the time
he had what he thought an

amazing connection on a date
some time after he’d parted
ways with garlic man.  There
seemed such a connection

and on so many levels, but
afterwards when requesting
what he figured would be an
easy second time hanging out,

he was blatantly told it didn’t
seem in the cards because he
didn’t like “the smell of your
clothes.”  Well, at least in that

case, crisis averted, I suppose.
As the old man grew closer to
sleep (hopefully just that) one
night late in his life, as he was

thinking about these events in
which he’d been a part of, had
molded his life in perhaps quite
significant ways, each circum

stance, on their own, he recalled
his stance on astrology, which he
thought quite related to all this stuff.  
He hadnput any credence whatsoever 

in the unscientific practice, even as his
world seemed inundated with examples 
in which the practice foretold severe 
truths.  But he had found at an

early age how enlightening it might
be, how truly engaging it was, when
one was first getting to know a person
in which there was obvious interest, 

or attraction, to ask the familiar
“What’s your sign?” and then move on
to a deep analysis of how each of
their astrological signs gave so many

clues about how terrific (or, heaven for
bid, haha, not terrific) their pairing might
ultimately be.  He could not even be
gin to imagine the hour he had spent

in long conversation on that subject,
and how it had brought him and the
person with whom he was conversing
most always closer, but sometimes al

so further apart, which could have easily
been taken as proof that astrology was
all but a spot-on science.  And that was
his last thought before, lying in bed in

his rather modest-sized apartment where
he’d lived alone ever since that great
tragedy so many years ago, before which
he’d lived such a wonderful, blessed life.

If one had been watching over him they
would have noticed the early deep but
fairly quiet intermittent rasps that would
occur in which an onlooker could tell

that the old man in the bed was
working his way toward sleep.  And
while there was no literal onlooker, 
those intermittent rasps turned with 

some haste into what would be long, 
ugly, extended snoring fits.  A nightly
routine the poor man had no idea
of, having lived alone for so many years.

old face


Sunday, January 04, 2026

mmmmcmxxxvii

Where Do Fleeting Thoughts Go to Die?

As the dated references fly out the window
into the field of forgotten.  Show of hands,
black and white movie?  Anyone?  Thought
not.  But fear not, because guess what!  Time.

kiss

Saturday, January 03, 2026

mmmmcmxxxvi

Sweating the Small Stuff

When you’ve lost something, or
you have a portion of importance
taken from you.  Oh, it’s nobody’s
fault but yours.  You can’t carry

everything.  The world.  Is pretty
heavy.  And it can be such a downer,
so maybe it’s not a good idea to dwell
on such things.  Except what if you

lost something that you can’t live
without, a piece of yourself that,
without its existence, in its proper
place, part of your circuitry, a piece

without which makes you less, sure,
but might lead inevitably to your dis
continuance?  Or if a teardrop of the
gas that runs your soul, should you

have one, without which....  Without
which... ....  Name something that
is useless without me.  Someone.
Anything.  Without which.... ....?

activate switch to operate

Friday, January 02, 2026

mmmmcmxxxv

Never Having Imagined the Unattainable


Another night of no sleep.  Or none

thus far.  Sleep is a decision.  But it

is sometimes a very difficult one.  I

mean, I wouldn’t say I have insomnia,


I’d say the burden of what I’m having

to do this past few weeks on in to the

upcoming ones is so heavy that it has

left me a at a standstill.  It happens.


Or has me awake for hours just staring

into the darkness.  Usually I forego the

darkness in order to just do something:

clean house, write poetry, watch TV, etc.


In times like this, however, my mind

simply races with all of the implausible,

the new impossibilities, the things I need 

my brain in order to creatively inch into


or out of or away from.  Goals, and

these I always have, very tangible

ones I think on constantly, especially

during such stupefying hours as these,


I can watch them move further and further 

into a distance.  And all the while I can feel

the presence that is whoever I am dissolve.

Dissipate.  A standoff.  A standstill.  A stalling.

how far can i reach

Thursday, January 01, 2026

mmmmcmxxxiv

Gothic Constellations Lead to Western Destinations
(regarding abstract poetry)

abstraction

i presume or from what i gather is quite different from culture to culture

and in ours for sure it’s too head-scratching for most

-(but that’s poetry)-

it seems to require quite a bit for numbskulls to get into it.

even considering 20th century art, etc.

but also

it’s about a step away from trad poetry, too.

because poetry thinks so highly of itself

that everyone generally thinks of as difficult.

we have to work sooooo hard to understand it. right?

(i suppose this is our multiculturalism topic for today.)

or do you get that notion?

not you yourself but don't you think others think that way? generally?

and i will say that if so they are indeed misguided at best.

but there are a lot of different structural mechanisms.

poetry architecture

and a lot of different—

what’d you say earlier?

literary devices.

ruses one might call them.

so people go oohhhh i just don’t get it; it’s so hard to get.

what a lyrical fallacy!

writers do have plenty of traditional devices.

readers might enjoy them or roll their eyes or be oblivious or

realizing they are upon one, get triggered into oh, how difficult poetry is.

writers are no more complicated than anyone else.

likewise, readers can run the gamut but overcomplicate the simplicity of reading.

can make things complicated.

can prefer or wish they were reading a novel or short story because

poetry=difficult

novelists and novels can be quite complex, as well.

but.

the words, the writing, the poem itself is for a READER

who absolutely should not generally need to know—much less understand—

any poetic devices, anything whatsoever except how to read and listen

or read and/or listen to get stuff out of what’s clearly on the page.

to get big stuff out of it, even, like what’s not obviously there, or what might be—

oh no—

complicated.

but like surfing, a sport, something i have no interest in but a lot of people do, you just need do one thing besides simply read/listen.

which is ride it.

go wherever it takes you.

wherever that is.

and where it takes you is never wrong.

i mean you can get the wrong impressions, you can wind up someplace unintentional, which is sometimes fantastic, and sometimes not, but it’s not wrong. it doesn’t make

the journey incorrect or even difficult. i mean especially if you enjoy the ride.

take it wherever it takes you, and you E N J O Y that in some form or fashion, or have that dumb i hafta solve this mentality like you and i tend to have.

keep riding and soon you begin to learn the different kinds of waves,

and how to ride them each best as you can.

and they all take you someplace.

often someplace beautiful

forget sharks & stingrays and shit.

i mean you may encounter those, too. like in real life. or actual surfing.

which you may enjoy much more than poetry.

but after a while, if you want adventure, you can find and appreciate sharks and stuff. and you can learn to ride more and more bizarre or bigger or smaller

or more unpredictable waves.

you can get a desire for those. a fetish so to speak.

you know, this is precisely the kind of didacticism that is pretty unnecessary

when it comes to poetry.

in my humble opinion.

and yet.

look at me.

enjoying a bit of complexity,

and a nice metaphor i (humbly) happen upon.

dimpled heart by del ray cross


Wednesday, December 31, 2025

mmmmcmxxxiii

Top Ten Movies of the Year

I didn’t even see ten.  And for these
past few non-cinematic years, I kept
thinking this fair, this new era of filmic
dearth (one among many), given that I’ve 

seen well more than my fair share over the 
years, as a student of cinema – or being so 
cinema-adjacent most of my life.  However,
this year’s lists make me jealous, make me

feel the demise of yet another thing obvious 
lacking that I’ve been existing through, the 
not living of it all.  There are so many things 
that have turned this existence into unliving,

and yet I guiltily feel this is a stricture wholly 
created in my mind, not real, that I could 
find a way to believe that I am living if I only 
put my mind to it.  And yet I do know better.

cinema

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

mmmmcmxxxii

Fiend or Faux

Something comes undone, I can feel it, but
I’m not going to say that I love it.  Like belly
buttons way before they’re ever sexy.  Unless
you go for that shit.  Somebody always does.

I’m working on this thing.  It’s a process.  We
all work.  I spend an hour or two trying to de
cide if that’s just fantasy.  We’re all messy
fakes and it is fuckin’ fantastic how much dirt

shows beneath the tips of the nails; we’re
just two disagreements from the hammer
really banging 
em in, our piney lids, our soft-
spoken sepulchers.  Nobody’s getting re

ligious just yet.  That’s a good boy!  I’m
reaching under some pronounced jawline
to give a little rubby-rub into that soft goatee
that sprouts like a tiny upside-down haystack

about two inches too close to the pooch’s goozle.
The doggone eden’s apple.  The mange gets a
thrum of electricity that flows through it, scrunches
the mangled haystack of the concocted chihuahua,

cradled, as it weren
’t, like a mewling ampersand
over its mamma-daddy’s pin-pricked forearm.

yeah, me too.

Monday, December 29, 2025

mmmmcmxxxi

Mediocre Blow

And then I was blown.
Just a few short bursts
is all it took to drain that
shit-pig twenty twenty-five

into an ether no bulge-heavy
bruise-colored cloud’s gonna
barter for. That’s it?!  I faux-fath
omed, worming my way back into

the television set, my new closest friend
that gets ever closer.  I wanna tie the
knot.  Around my neck.  And then like
machine-gun fire, the world is a-

rumble with death-laden life
again.  Nothing steady in death-
sounding.  Like a brand new corpse
dangling from a thrice-readied noose.

blown

Sunday, December 28, 2025

mmmmcmxxx

Approaching the End of Some Things (Good and Not-So-Wonderful)

     I’m looking forward to the next return (of Saturn). I don’t know 
     what’s around the corner. If life’s taught me anything it’s that I 
     cannot predict what’s going to happen but I look forward to the 
     first human robot marriage on tv and um that we will have run 
     out of water and we’ll be drinking other things duringthat return.
             —Amy Poehler on a podcast episode of Good Hang**

You know how it is when you get almost to the end 
of a book that has blown your mind?  Some of you do 
(show of hands*).  *Attempting to pretend I’m not taking 
this notion very seriously.  Except I am.  Diane, by the way, 

you rascal you, I love the angel on the cover of your Christ
mas card (the only one received this year by me).  I’m having
something lately that I don’t have very often: family angst.
All of the bronze-colored stars around this bronze-haired angel

make me feel just a little bit rich in my paltry apartment. Today, 
this morning, two days before 2026, this is a good thing, and I 
appreciate it.  I appreciate you, angel surrounded by bronze, which

is to say I appreciate Diane.  And the book I’m almost finished reading 
by Kim Hyun, yes, entitled Glory Hole.  Mind-bending.  That’s enough for now.

**The episode with Rachel Sennott

cash & symbols

Saturday, December 27, 2025

mmmmcmxxix

Things That Happened on Dad’s Birthday

I open the photographic pages to Dad’s birthday,
December 27th, to determine things that have
happened on his birthday.  For this exercise, I make
nothing of the fact that he has been gone for nearly

twenty-five years.   These are just things that happened
on December 27th.  Which is not entirely accurate, nor
even likely hardly accurate, given that the dates on so
many of my many photographs are incorrect, have been

waiting to be corrected, a process I’ve been going through
for what seems decades now.  Has it been that long?  Here
are some things that occurred on Dad’s birthday.  A man sits
at a desk in a home I resided for thirteen years.  The man

is awaiting his transition into the enemy, into evil.  In 2018,
an unidentified person, a blur, really, passes two trees decor
ated for Christmas in what appears to be a mall.  This shows
up handwritten on the date January 7th, 1961, written by his

mother-in-law at the time (my maternal grandmother): Glenn
came in tonite with his family Thurlow’s Dad had passed away
.
On that date in what is noted as 2014, Hiro and I are in line to
enter the Endup to dance.  Hiro is visiting.  Between and behind

our faces in the picture is the face of a gentleman with whom we
were both flirting for the duration of standing in the slowly moving
line into the club.  All smiles.  2023, a nicely made up bed in my
last apartment, everything so clean and tidy it for a moment re

moves the nastiness that I now associate with that over six year
home of mine.  2016 – in a apartment building I’d never been before,
on a jaunt with a friend of mine, a photo of me with my phone apparently
taking photographs of this apartment building lobby in which I had set

foot for only the first time.  My stance is more that of someone who has
a gun in his hand and is ready to use it.  But I’m smiling.  And I’d never.
At a Mexican restaurant in Dallas, Texas, it says, with my friend Don and
his partner, Patrick, who passed away several years ago.  Big tipsy smiles. 

I’m at a grocery store, perhaps in Chinatown, the photo is entitled “Copy of
Green Vegetables” – nothing can be seen in the photograph except for
what appears to be zucchini, or possibly cucumbers.  Most likely zucchini.
A photo of me in a peacoat and with a mask, during the pandemic, a bit

of an unhappy look can be discerned upon what you can see of my face,
and there is a caption in yellow: “have i mentioned that i’m hungry?”  2011,
photographs of depictions of critters, likely in some department store, of:
a dragonfly, a blue and white bird, a sleek dog or maybe a fox, a turtle, a

ladybug, a parrot, it appears, wearing a top hat, I can make out parts of
additional dragonflies and turtles.  Probably a completely incorrect date,
but it says 2016 (has to be 1999 or 1998, probably closer to summertime)
me standing out on what would be the land’s tip at Provincetown, Mass.

No depictions of my father appear on the pages in which I used the simple
search of “December 27” – there seem to be only a couple of photographs
even from before his passing in 2001.  The exercise feels a need to be twinned, 
I would think for better purpose, with photos from another search of his name,

Glenn Thurlow Cross

on dad's birthday


Friday, December 26, 2025

mmmmcmxxviii

SHAMPOO

I am the founder and editor of a magazine.
It has been on hiatus for some time now.
Years.  In times of crisis I might say, “I’m
going to start working on it again.”  This is

a time of crisis.  However, this is also the
day after which I made a promise some
months ago that at that point (this one)
I will begin working on new issues of the

magazine again.  I figure if one says some
thing publicly, like I am doing now (mega
phones might be used, yet people may not 
hear a thing; this is public), makes a procla

mation that “I will do ______,” then the like
lihood of one doing it might be higher due to 
the, I don’t know, shame or embarrassment 
or lost pride you mkight suffer after you’ve

made such a proclamation and yet did not do 
what you declared you would.  But I already 
made a promise to myself.  The day is here. 
There is no need for me to be public about 

such things.  I am the founder and editor 
of  a little journal that has been on hiatus 
for while. Today I shall begin to work 
to put together its newest issue.

agreed

Thursday, December 25, 2025

mmmmcmxxvii

Where Did Amory Street Go?

     One day
     I passed a place
     That had disappeared
                                —Kim Hyun

It was the East Coast.  This was in my head.

Was I ever there?  Did it ever exist?  I’d love

to pass you by, 253 Lamartine Street, to pull

into the driveway, say hello, walk up the several

flights to the attic room I lived in for several months

during the winter and spring of 1998 (old note to self:

do not put the actual dates, give the reader whiplash

with the slammed juxtaposition of non-dates, the elision

of different actual events, mixed in with unreal ones, or

amalgamations of them, or events believed to have existed

but perhaps never occurred. This gives the reader a sense

of ________. This gives the author, the person who experienced

these events and non-events __________ [and also some whiplash]).

I would love chug up to the top of your hill, Tower Street, Jamaica Plain,

a few typical Boston three-floored buildings down from the cemetery 

gate, find my way in, slowly walk up the three flights, caressing the 

banister for any memorial sensations, to where I slept, my bedroom,

separated by a hallway from my living room (my roommate had the

rest of the place, but we did share the kitchen and bathroom – I remember

chasing out the raccoons from the kitchen sink in the middle of winter in

the dead of night, more than once).  Are you there?  Were you there?

I would very much enjoy solidifying what seem my vaguest memories

of personal place in the area, 253 Amory Street, walk through the door

to determine that yes, this existed for me; touch the walls, allow them to

pull from my senses actual memories that may or may not have happened

there.  I see the geometry of each location, the layout, but very generally,

almost as if an architectural apparition.  Christmas in 1999, snow most

likely on the ground outside (Were we on the first floor like when I first

moved from there directly to the West Coast?  Like in the building I now

write this?  Never the threat of any ice on the ground in this fair city....)....

Amory Street and me


Wednesday, December 24, 2025

mmmmcmxxvi

Christmas Eve 2025
(Tossing out the garbage.  Preparing for what’s new.)

It is 2025.  These are strange times.  Why not
note this with a year.  There are always split
screens, but do there always have to be?  May
be.  In 2025.  And it is Christmas Eve.  Man,

what a shitty holiday season this one is, and
surely will end up being.  So low on the list.
Obviously, the Fall/Winter Holiday Season
and New Year generally have been times of

significance.  Among the strangenesses, a
lack of clear perspective.  I, for example,
have been perhaps exaggerating how low
this season is on the list of all seasons, on

the list of the past decade of seasons.  The
Holidays, to my mind remain the worst time 
period, a decade, too.  How can I gain perspective? 
I cannot trust myself.  And I’ve so few people

around (I count three aloud, who, 1 with
more regularity, who really knew me earlier
than 2015 – there, I’ve split a screen – 1
who knew me from directly before the big

change, and 1 who is special to me but I see
perhaps once a year on average since, if that)
that, well, how can one truly get perspective.
To be unable to speak with anyone who knew

me back then.  This seems to be the crux of
so many of the problems that have arisen in my
life of late, as I’ve for the first time ever dealt 
with everything on my own, or just with help from 

a distance or from, alas, the government.  My
few initially persistent attempts to make a
difference, to have more reality infused into
what was such an astounding and almost

unmanageable change.  Hey, but I’m talking about
it, and I suppose I have with some consistency,
perhaps too much, but clearly, a bit more clearly.
How do you know what I’m talking about?  So is

this directed to them, the folks who just faded away
all at once, some stating such damaging reasons (at
least they told me, at least they had them), others
just gone, some finally relaying nonsensical excuses

years later when I thought, well, at least I still have
that person in my life, there had been no harm, no foul.
But no.  Not in the least.  And the way each was unable
to or the way they decided to explain or not explain – the 

ones who acted as if all was normal.  I had gone through
what I’d not been able to imagine going through beforehand,
normal life events for some, devastating ones perhaps
or unimaginable for others.  Merry Christmas.  Who cares

what anyone thinks?  Except.  What I’ve been left with is
a mind-boggling set of circumstances that were and are
tragic.  And damaging.  Life, of course.  But again, all at once,
and during what was clearly the most horrid duration I have

ever known.  So toward the next tomorrow, it’s the same 
thing as always, only at this point, considerably worse than 
it has been for a few years.  Silly, vague whining I’m doing.  
want to think for purpose.  I want to be less vague,

rather simple.  And the goals I’ve reached in this, 2025,
again with a timestamp, as opposed to each year previous
for about 10 to 12 years, GOALS MET – a wonderful trip
to South America, a new kind of relationship, dealing with

goals but not being able to meet them fast enough, making
if not friends, at least new acquaintances.  None of this had
been accomplished since the set that vanished.  I have such
gratitude for those three who are still around, what I call

the local three, and he two or three afar who have re
mained, who make such huge differences.  I no longer
know the definition of family, real or chosen.  The very
concept leaves me exhausted when once upon a time, giddy.

But I persist.  And I’m not sure that’s good.  At least without
significant change in my mode, in the way I go about it.  I do
not like how these sound, these pieces I build upon lamentations
(chips on shoulders) and hopes, but they seem to insist upon

continuing to come, if but only, thankfully, on occasion.  I do
a lot of reflecting at the end of the year.  Things to get rid of
the grief of whatever has blanketed me, and ways to celebrate
the newness of what is to come.  Next to concentrate on that

new stuff.  Or that is to my mind how life best works.  Sometimes 
get stuck.  It would be an easy time to start to find myself
slowly being pulled into that quicksand.  I will not let it happen,
I say to myself.  And to you.  With gratitude.  Happy Holidays.

Less Garbage; More Movement on the Checklist!

2026 list


Tuesday, December 23, 2025

mmmmcmxxv

How Old Were You Sexy?

     Suffocating girl with a shiitake-colored face.
                                                   —Kim Hyun

We all want to look good.  And from so far back
(was it that far?) we have tried.  It is oh so sub
jective, this good looking.  And how harsh we
can be, thinking ourselves on the perimeter, out

of bounds (way outside the boundary), butt ugly.
It’s a ridiculous thing that is perpetuated from day
to day, from month to month and year to year.  WE
DO NOT LOOK GOOD!  Who says?  Mama?  Daddy?

And why was that?  How long ago?  Still, it rings in
our ears.  Or perhaps that perception came from the
books we’d read alone in our rooms every day and
night (flashlights under the covers).  “How old were

you when you realized you were sexy?” asks Chuck,
the gay cheerleader.  “Forty-five,” answers Fred, the
dance-a-holic.  To be Fred.  Oh, to be Fred.  And last
forever and a day past forty-five on that dancefloor.

full


Monday, December 22, 2025

mmmmcmxxiv

Boy-man Takes Control

Boy-man takes control, wants the power, has it.  The
room is stifling for the rest of the adults as this goes
on and on.  Something in Japanese plays loudly in the
room that is normally so quiet nobody notices anything

except breath.  “What this room needs is a girly-gal,”
mumbles the Grandpa, half-asleep.  Once, as he sat in the
worn reclining seat in what he used to call the den (there
was a gas fireplace), he’d have the control – the mechanism

by which a thing called a television could be switched from
station to station.  But televisions went out of fashion long
ago, then clean out of existence.  A bit of drool at the
left hand corner of Grandpa’s dry lips falls like a teardrop

onto his bare leg.  The chair no longer reclines.  Boy-man
laughs at a scene in Japanese.  Japanese laughter is quite
unique
, thinks Grandmother, who sits on the most unworn
portion of the long sofa, directly across from the gas fireplace

that can no longer be lit, no longer warms, warmth being so
completely unnecessary.  She is moving her arms around.  It
is an imaginary blanket made of yarn that she thinks she is
building.  The crochet needle imaginary, too, as her real 

crochet needle had been used years hence to eliminate 
Man-boy’s mother and father.  Did Grandpa do it?  Did 
Grandmother?  Maybe neither knows.  Maybe both know.

Hi Kids!


Sunday, December 21, 2025

mmmmcmxxiii

I’m a no good poet.  I say this sometimes, and not only in jest.

A no good poet.  But I think I know better, so I’ll change the

sentence ever so slightly (just not subtly in the least?) to

“Sometimes I’m a no good poet.”  Am I thinking then hahaha

I know that I am sometimes if not often if not usually a good

one?  No, I’m too hard on myself, for one thing, and the project

(this one) that I’m working on calls for daily poems, which, by

their very nature can be fraught with written-quickly syndrome

a syndrome, by the way, that I do not find distasteful at all, are

not edited much, and I
m usually fine with that, too.  But also, I have

my poetic heroes that I feel I don’t measure up to, and as I continue

to live I feel that more and more and less and less.  Less and less

as in who cares, probably.  More and more as in my heroes have

become more human and how is that a bad thing?  I’m sitting here

in almost complete darkness except for the light emitted by my

still-somehow-charged tiny dinosaur lamp reading a poem that

should or very much could easily replace the one I wrote most

previously in this very compendium (or whatever this 20-plus

year project should be called, is called, well it has a name, so 

I do not know what I am going on about here).  But this poem 

answers the question or ponderings posed in the section 

above all too clearly.  This is a real poem, unlike the mostly diary-

entry or journal-entry delivery of facts that is the previous piece.  It

gives the feeling of what I went through so much better by being

less direct and more emotive.  Or something.  It is a poem by

Kim Hyun from a book seductively entitled Glory Hole, and it was

apparently originally written by this South Korean poet in his

native language and translated to English by Sunhun J. Ahn and

Archana Madhavan (the translation feat itself boggles my mind).

From Seagull Books, put out in 2022.  The poem is entitled:

                      Dear Old Miss Lonelyhearts*

                    of “Dear Old Miss Lonelyhearts”


Note that the asterisk belongs to the original poem and refers to six

individually asterisked notations that follow the text of the poem.

Because I feel further compelled, as I cannot disregard such an

obvious duty to my readers, should there ever be any, to sell this book

to you, I shall quote three sentences of the poem’s text, found on page

74 about two thirds of the way down the page:

When I reached the alley with the fire station whose watch tower had

fallen, the clouds spread soft legs.  From dark genitals, a bright yellow

light trickled down and gathered like dew at the hole.  In the cracked

pavement, the sundrops pooled like raindrops.

old miss lonelyhearts scribbles


Saturday, December 20, 2025

mmmmcmxxii

The Great San Francisco Blackout of 2025

Of all the metaphors for death, a power outage?

Yes, and on the Saturday before Christmas.  It’s

happening.  And so are these lines.  During the

very event.  But I can no longer read my own

handwriting, so who knows, really?  It’s all spec

ulative for now, especially given that the power

went out around 1pm at my place, I needed sleep,

checked the news, saw that yes, there was a pretty

widespread power outage in the city, but the elect

ricity was expected to be restored by around 3:45pm.

So I slipped into a deep, much-needed slumber, expecting

to stay under for an hour or two. When I woke up, and

it took me at least an hour to even ascertain this,

it was nearly 10pm, and my place was pitch black.

I rounded myself up and went out to charge some

things (dinner and my phone, to be specific), stopped

at The Melt on Market, which was open, and they had

electrical outlets in the dining area – I asked before I

ordered a burger, fries and strawberry milkshake to

ensure the outlets actually worked—the cashier nodded

a yep—so I sat down at my table with my little buzzy

square, plugged things in, and of course there was no

working electricity in the dining room of The Melt.  I

was irritated, but not angry, asked that my food be

bagged and wound up eventually in the lobby of the

ugly jukebox-shaped Marriott by the Metreon, where

I charged my phone up to about 40% and began

checking around to see if I could see when my power

might be restored.  The official website declared my lights

should be back up at about 12:30am, so I left the Marriott

at around 11:45pm, walked back to my apartment, only

to learn once logging back on that the ETA to get the power

back had changed from 12:30am to 9am.  That’s a difference.

So what did I do, wide awake in a very dark apartment for

the next few hours?  I sat up in my bed half under covers

and played games on my phone until it was down to 1%.

Which was about 3am.  Then, with my big toe wrapped

around the neck of the one rechargeable light source, a

miniature pink dinosaur lamp that I’ve had for a few years,

I read some poetry, hovering over each page with my 

reading glasses on and the dinosaurs face, my one source

of light, pointed in the same direction. I wrote these lines, 

and so who knows how this will come out, if at all, if I

can decipher a word of it when I have the chance.  And

then I wrote another piece.  After which the light from

the dinosaur had grown so dim that it was as if we were

both squinting pretty ferociously onto the pages, back and 

forth between the lovely book I was reading and the journal 

onto which I was writing these words. No lessons here. Con

sider this one a diary entry (older ones were the original source

material for most all of these pieces, the catalyst for this 20 plus

year project) to mark the underwhelming if not apposite

event, this, the most enduring power outage I’ve known thus 

far during my 25 years here in San Francisco. Under other circum

stances, in better times (?), this could have been an adventurous, 

relaxing, pleasant and/or romantic how-many-ever hours or so, rather

than a bookmark in one of the most nerve-jangling, demoralizing

chapters in this life (I’ll just add that this all-too-optimistic soul

feels it necessary to point out that it is, however, by no means,

the worst chapter).

chapters


Friday, December 19, 2025

mmmmcmxxi

Back on the Television Show

The main character is calm.  Perhaps
you’ve been following (me), which means
I should maybe put in a spoiler alert warning?
Spoilers.  They don’t exist any more here,

presumably.  At least in most generic cases.
The train snakes through the once overpopulated
desert terrain.  Now they’re playing croquet with lesbian
undertones before they head to a diner that looks a

lot like the one from Paradise.  The mind wants to know
what the writer is feeling, and she tells the mind that she
used to have long yellow legal pads that she stole from her
office job.  I’ve made myself breakfast but I don’t feel like

eating it.  Is it the barebecue flavor?  I never liked barbecue.
Especially sweet barbecue.  And it’s messy.  “You’re going to
have a visitor,” says the mind, after reminiscing for the first
time about when she was an individual and not part of the hive mind.

Then there’s my breakfast.  I am getting an upset stomach from
the sickly sweet smell of the barbecue.  And me from the South,
too.  The show is over.  She’s going to get a visitor.  It’s become
quite the suspenseful motivation so I keep watching it each week,

among all the other wonderful things I could tell you about it,
all of which make it an incredibly fresh show.  This, of course, is an
opinion, and I begin to wonder what being an actual television
critic might be like.  My stomach sours thinking about that.

Because they eat each other?  They eat people.  This has become
a pretty significant plot point.  Oh, they don’t kill the people they eat.
And they will starve in a determinedly short period of time (not via
climate change).  But they sustain for now, among utilizing other 

ways, perhaps.  By eating other people.  People who have died.  There is 
always death and there is always living.  Oh, I could tell you so much more,
but I’ve definitely lost my appetite for my breakfast.  Who eats barbecue
for breakfast?  And these new humans, if that’s what they are, eat people.

zombie madoc