30 December 2018

aborted

the door slammed
the lid shut
i didn't even get the chance
to say i'm sorry
to say i love you
to say whatever the hell it takes
pardon my french
but these words bite
trapped forever unspoken
you gave up on me
without even trying
i'm lost in longing
for what might have been
for a life unlived
for a chanced to breathe
you stole my voice
won the argument we never had
afraid i might change your life
i'm suffocating alone
imprisoned without a choice
abandoned to wonder
how you could reject
someone you never knew
all i asked for was love
never even got to mess that up
i may be voiceless
but i can hear the angels singing

18 December 2018

The Dog King (a travel essay)

Honestly, the size of his balls made me the most nervous. This was no tame mutt but a wild pack leader submitted to no one. Nipping at my heels he embodied all my feelings about being in this spot in the first place: I hated package tours. 
When I travel I make plans like outlines—hoping the details are surprising moments with a large dose of acculturation flavor. Though technically a tourist I dislike acting as one and package tours are the epitome of all I eschew in travel. On this sticky Thai day I had acquiesced to my local friend’s wishes, appeasing her guilt in being unable to take off work to personally show me around and her inability to believe that just wandering the streets of Bangkok finding unexpected sights would satisfy me immensely. 
The tour left at an ungodly hour from a local hotel and promised a ride through the floating market and a trip to an elephant show. After hours in nauseating morning traffic I knew the fine print included being herded into the path of vendors whose wares and services promised to significantly increase the cost of the already expensive all-inclusive day trip, so instead of following the dutiful crowd of my fellow simpletons when the opportunity to browse came I struck off outside of the main market area hoping to find some authentic flavor.
The narrow stone bridge beckoned and I eagerly headed toward the modest ramshackle dwellings most likely empty of the very vendors I sought to avoid. My sense of direction allowed me to explore without fear of finding my way back and several blocks further on my spirits had lifted to the point where I thought the day might not be a waste after all.
Enter the dog king. Usually I enjoy local wildlife. But this mutt made me nervous. He ran straight for me across an empty lot as I passed. Of no particular breeding, his short blonde hair and wiry build combined with a few scars in non-lethal places spoke of a confident survivor. I already mentioned his balls. Seriously. Prominent. At first he just followed closely at my heels. I had a water bottle but dreaded using it—in a fight I was pretty sure he would win. The few Thai phrases I knew did not include “go away” or “bad doggie”. Occasionally he nipped at my heels but without making contact. Was this his way of establishing dominance? I didn’t really want to know, I just wanted him to go away. The whole stay-with-the-group began to gain some appeal.
Walking at my normal confident stride I hoped he would get bored and wander off. That’s when things went further south. Turning my steps back towards the market I suddenly saw a pack of about five dogs spot me and race across a bridge in my direction. Visions of me bandaged in a local hospital, rabies vaccines, stitches, tropical diseases, among other worst-case scenarios flashed through my head. 

At that moment the dog king proved his balls: he single-handedly chased off the entire pack, establishing his claim to me and their defeat. We walked on, him at my heels, me grateful yet still slightly uneasy. I finally lost him at the stone bridge—a worker yelled at him as I crossed—and I gladly rejoined my placid group. While staying with the group can be the safe way to go, the best stories lie off the beaten path. I’ve never done a package tour again. 

10 December 2018

glimmer

I wake up in darkness
and lie down in shadows
the sun has forsaken these northern lands
the year dawned with promise
yet ends now in sadness
I've nothing to show for the work of my hands

my feet trudge through long days
filled with aimless production
a humbled dream gypsy is a sorry sight
the clock hands press onward
though I know not to where
or what lies past long days with less and less light

the fog wraps me closely
in its comforting gloom
my heart stumbles a bit at what lies in store
I have come to the end
an ironic good sign
a place to begin if I hope for more

I wake up in darkness
and risk a second glance
through fog and through shadows a star dimly gleams
when all has been taken
I'm empty and ready
the impossible shows all's not as it seems

03 December 2018

December Days

Wrapping my arms tightly around
my knees I watch the shadows
lengthen on the sentinel fir trees,
the groping fingers of relentless
night creeping steadily up their
immovable limbs as the world
begins to bed down and another
day ends although the clock merely
heralds an afternoon hour. Caught
off guard at the sun's yearly southerly
pilgrimage I wonder anew how the days
fly and tomorrows become memories
lit by hazy golden-hour suns long
since set. Childhood summer
evenings when the sun laughed
until well past bedtime and old
dark winter days loomed merely
as a spectre of ghost stories told
around driftwood fires on the beach
seem to inhabit a tale from Arabian
Nights and I'm struck by how the
now can consume with unrelenting
absorption. The still trees lean ever
so imperceptibly into the fading light
as if to capture for a final fleeting
moment all the yesterdays that
though past are no less real in
the light of today. Balanced
on the brink of what's to
come while wrapping
arms around all that
is tightly wound
into today, I'm
grateful for
the unseen
embrace
on these
December days.