Monday, April 11, 2011

Tuesday, March 22nd - "Abraham's Apology to Isaac, or: My Inability to Fully Suspend the Ethical Teleologically"


Curved like a scythe when the rain comes,
shadows collect like tears in your open palm.

So, my angel-haired darling, my sweetheart
of the smoke: dream easy and fall hard.

At night, I see you standing erect,
the mountains above curved like your spine,

the silhouette of your body a still life
painted vaguely on an empty field.

What kind of father does it make me,
who refuses to bend down to touch you?

Monday, March 21st - "Sky Lights"


Another living clich̩ Рa poet
watching the sunset dreamily.
I want to ask, “Haven't
you ever read Baudrillard?
Don't you know it's all spectacle?”
Instead, I bury my hands
in the pockets of my jeans,
look over my shoulder at the pub
advertising half-price drinks
for anyone willing to trade dignity
for another chance at glory.
Without our verses, songs
will still be sung, measurements taken,
dreams transformed into art.
Shoulders rubbed against each other
until sparks explode. I forget
to put on my black shawl: I am still
in mourning for the words this scene
will never inspire me to pen.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Sunday, March 20th - "Dinner Table Economics"

My father says he doesn't understand it, saying thanks
for one's dinner. After all, it's not as if some invisible being
had a hand in picking tomatoes in Florida, in shipping them
in cheese-wedge shaped bags up to the supermarket,
in slipping them over the countertop to purchase. It's just
capitalism, he says with a shake of his chin, slowly sipping
his decanter of red wine. No one needs a thank you. We all
come out ahead, in this transaction. That's the beauty
of America, you know. He pushes his peas around with his fork,
stares greedily at the bread basket in the center of the table,
dabs his mouth daintily with the thin paper napkin,
which tears almost as soon as it makes contact with skin. Well,
we may as well get it over with, he says, noticing
the slight grimace on my grandmother's face, breaking
like a curse word etched into her worn out forehead. If you insist
on saying grace, get it over with, so we get on with dessert.
My grandmother shakes her head, says it's all right, says
she's already finished saying a thousand thank you's
in her head, by the time my father is finished. Well then,
that's good, he says, his mouth cracking loosely
into something resembling a smile. See, we're all
happy. We all got something out of it. Now
you know why when I get up in the morning,
I only feel obligated to say thank you to myself for all my luck.