Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Never Be Better

Never Be Better
He had never been a great runner. He was good, he couldn’t have been fifth in the standings otherwise, but he wasn’t great. He didn’t have the legs or the heart. He had the desire, he wouldn’t have been perched on the starting block, eyeing his finger tips if he lack the will, but he didn’t have the heart, the physical heart. The doctor and the second opinion had said it was too big, too big to do what he did. He didn’t listen. He wouldn’t have been where he was if he had. He wouldn’t have grazed the limelight had he listened to the nay-sayers and scoffers, the ones who said he couldn’t run after what had happened in Salt Lake, what had almost happened in Atlanta. They didn’t understand. He couldn’t, but he was going too. As the two thousand eyes watched he was going too. Their wasted breath and sentiments meant nothing to him. He hadn’t been born to run, but he’d do it anyway.
Two blocks over, crouched in a stance that mirrored his own was last years champion: a lean, knotted muscle squeezed into a matching blue short and tank top outfit with his name in white relief across the back. It was largely unnecessary. They all knew who he was. His face had graced the cover of ever magazine and his name was uttered from every radio broadcast. Everyone knew Alan Better, the youngest world record holder in the 400 meter. He was the golden boy, the blue clad knight of the track, as one columnist had called him. The front page of the local news that day had read “No One Is Better” with the subtitle, “Repeat Inevitable”. Some whispered that he could keep a 100 pace through the whole track, some openly discussed it. The sky was the starting point.
And it was a blue sky that covered the track that day. Deep in its monotonous hue. Clouds were nowhere to be seen, uprooted from the ground by loggers and taken to places unknown. The runners had finished their last minute warm ups and were crouching in to their set positions. The crowd, blanketed under a murmur of anticipation, shifted and eddied like a disturbed, wind blown pool of water. Far up in the bleachers their sat two men, one dressed in a black overcoat, the other in a sweater of the same color. The man in the sweater leaned into the man in the overcoat.
“Who you got?” The man glanced at him, then turned back. “I mean, I got Better, but who you got?” The man watched the track. “Come on, you gotta have someone” the sweater man said a little more anxiously. The overcoat man’s white beard moved as if he was about to speak but the pop of the starting gun, deafened by the distance up the stands had punctured the bubble that had kept the crowd in check and all at once the unrelenting surge of held back emotion breached the white wall separating the stands from the field and it spilled over onto the track.
He ran. He ran hard, perhaps the hardest he had ever run. He was sick of the doubters, he was sick of the people that told him he couldn’t. He was more sick of the people that ignored him, passed him over for features on ESPN and Sports Illustrated, sick of just being another number, another runner, another nothing. He was done so he ran, ran till became his younger self hurling across a grassy field in a pick up football game. He ran till he no longer felt his feet beneath him but instead they had become a blur of flawlessly smooth motion that propelled him past his counterparts. He was barely aware of the crowd’s gasp at his burst of speed, barely aware of Better’s mouth open in disbelief and determination as he passed him at the 200 mark. He had entered his own world in which everything else slowed and the only thing that he was conscious of was the rhythm of his step and the beating of his heart. Its rhythm pumped, faster and faster as time moved slower and slower. Then it stopped. Everything flooded back into his awareness at once, the crowd’s roar became overwhelming but he could barely hear it over the silence of his heart. Where had it gone. A hot rush of pain gripped the front of his chest and worked its way through him till ever inch of him was screaming. Yet he said nothing. All he could do was look forward at the finish line that was fifty yards away but with every step he took grew farther. He knew he wasn’t going to make it, he had always know but with one last look at the finish line the closeness of it astonished him.
“Almost” he whispered as he stumbled, the other runners passing him. He looked up to the blue sky that was slowly receding from view.
“Almost.”
Better went back often. He would bring a folding chair, climb up to the peak of the hill that sat next to it and seat himself overlooking it. He had told his friends and family that it he did it to reminisce, to remember the glory days, and they all agreed and declared that it was his right. He had been, after all, a world record holder, the best of his peers in the 400. But those times were gone and he knew it. It hadn’t been obvious at first. He slowly dropped from first in the rankings to second then to fourth. It had only been after his sponsors had dropped him that he realized that his days of running were over. He hadn’t saved, hadn’t invested, and hadn’t cared. Now nobody cared about him. The sports world forgot his name, his kids had left the house, his wife had died and his friends had all but left. Now he sat alone atop a hill overlooking it. It was empty now, a section of the stadium had collapsed and city officials had deemed it to costly to renovate so they had allotted enough money to have the debris removed, the track torn out and the field re-grassed. Only the sign stood, slightly worn but still proudly proclaiming the name Ted Jefferson Memorial Park. Better folded up his chair in disgust, “should have been my name” he said with his back turned from it. A taxi pulled slowed and, almost on second thought, pulled up to the curb near the hill. The driver rolled down the window and yelled across the green “Hey, ain’t you Better, Allen Better?” Better walked over to the passenger side of the taxi and looked in. “yessir, that’s my name”
“I remember you, the runner right?” The taxi driver was an elderly man dressed in his favorite black sweater.
“Yessir, that’s me”
“Need a lift”
“Don’t got no money”
“its fine, this one’s on me, I got you”
“That’s mighty swell of you” Better said as he got in.
“Home?”
“Home.”
The taxi pulled away. There wasn’t a car on the road.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Over There

Over There
there is war
raging in long forgotten sands.

Over there
there is blood
it drips from mortar, mine and shell.

Over there
there is death
stars winking out through a cloud's viel.

While over here there is only neglict.
We stand like stone that would rather forget
The toil that shaped us, that keeps us free,
now is scorned by its child across the sea.

Knowledge is Folly

The love of knowledge is folly
For ignorance is bliss.
The wise man cannot free his soul,
From the gaping abyss.
He can only reflect and think
Of the eternal deep.
To march to ones demise is cruel,
Better to walk in sleep.

True Love

True love is dead, true love is dead,
lost from man, preserved by poets
who watch it floating in its jar
surrounded by formaldehyde.

Rest on Wings of Caterpillars

Beside the winding path their lay a grove
of trees that nestled inside of its trove
was bounty that life would change to beauty
and would through its metamorphosis free
the little one from its callous cocoon,
so it could fly up to the sun and moon
and learn the secrets of all space and time.
Teach me O' wise one of air, hear the pine
that walks forth boldly from trembling lips.
Soft lips that seek to tell of what we missed.
For none attain your stature, you alone
are crowned the Monarch upon the sky's throne.
You have mastered this Earth. You will fly
until the sad day that you too will die.
Yet death to you is naught but a false road,
for in the eternal is your abode
Teach me O' Monarch, raise me from the sod.
teach me to turn from a worm into God.
I would go to the grove and be a lord of the air,
But somehow i doubt that the grove is still there.

O' Crimson Love, My Crimson Love

O Crimson Love, my Crimson Love
That flows out of the spring,
Fly free, fly fast my crimson dove
Over rose and thorn of life’s sting.
Fly free from folds that hold you down;
Flee, flee from wanton life’s embrace.
Let me caress you with the ground,
Let me bring warmth to your still face.
Our love here and now cannot last
For mortal ties are bonds to break.
Yet, we’ll gain the future and past
For what is the sea to a lake?
O Crimson Love, my Crimson Love,
Though I rest near your cadaver,
Know that I will follow, my dove,
Know that I will follow after.

It Came to Me upon a Storm

It came to me upon a storm:
The wild whisper of the wind.
Although it did not hold a form
My other thoughts were drowned in din.
While in lament it spoke to me
And lit my path through space and time.
The portals opened to the sea
And I spilt forth into its mind.
My consciousness made time stand still
As I became a grain of sand
Upon this plain of poet’s will
And I began to understand.
But as soon as I took a breath,
As quickly as it came, it left.

Why Must I Bash You on Your Head?

Why must I bash you on your head
to make you understand?
You say I have no rationale
and do so 'cause I can.
But reason's not in rhyme,
and likewise sense is not in sight,
so do not say you taste the thyme
in my unleavened bread.

On My Visit to the Hospital

Sterile,
The only word that can describe
the stench invading my head,
like Persian soldiers breaching Athenian lines
and moving through Thermopylae to attack
the vast expanse of inner Greece.
Here ghosts in white coats linger,
gliding from battle to battle,
stooping over the wounded and damned,
heralds of false hopes that fallen men
cling too when their fingers fall,
to weak to hold a sword or spear
in the face of the incoming enemy;
foes who blacken the sky with arrows
like a blanket pulled over a scarlet bed spread.
Sterile,
There is nothing alive here.
White washed walls scream of the monotonous
passing of the souls upon the winds.
Better the rancid rancor of decay
of Persian and Athenian more alike in death
deposited in decomposing heaps,
blood seeping to mother earth
flesh rising to father sky,
then the putrid stench of bleach.
For in the carnage of war
some may still come out alive.

I Will Halt this at Hello

I will halt this at hello,
for i know not where this shall go.
To where did star-crossed lovers flee?
The grave, sweet grave will grant reprieve.
A path that neither wants to walk,
so we shall part and no more talk
of past fantasies no longer
sweet, my sweet. Resolve grows stronger
to lock the chest holding my heart.
Pandora's lips, please do not part
and utter the forbidden phrase
that will hurl me into a maze.
For I will never come to grips
with minotaurs mouthing their what ifs.
Please my love don't make me choose
for whoever I choose, I loose.

One Night I Dreamed a Dream

One night I dreamed I had a dream,
an awful fate I'm sure you know.
Awoke in fright of things to come
and crushed it so it could not grow.

How terrible a dream it was,
to dream a dream is nothing short
of war between to evil parts,
an endless struggle, pointless sport.

What dream can stand the test of time?
Can man to dream eternal give
when dream to man no solace brings?
For I'll not live to see it live.

Nor will I die to give it life,
for I must make my own life long.
Like light I pop up on this sphere
and at the speed of dark I'm gone

So no more tempt me with these lies
Begone O' Nightmare, flee you creep.
Leave my bed in peace eternal.
Please leave me to my blissful sleep.

Ode to the Night's Silence

The muffled silent melody
screams out at night, you I adore.
Your absence, it is hell for me,
it leaves me wanting more and more.

Your eerie tones of brass and base
echo and echo in my heart.
My loving temptress hide your face.
I alone understand your art.

Lo' what cacophony is this
that interrupts my mistress' song?
Be still my love, take hold of bliss.
Peace, wait, this won't take long.

A crow had in the other room
across the hall began to squawk,
a noise not even called a tune.
Begrudgingly began my walk.

The door creaked open with sigh
"can you hurry?" It seemed to say,
"Night wants to sing, she wants to die"
Gesturing with wooden arm "Obey!"

"Of course, of course. I will oblige
though not for you I do this deed
but for my mistress," I replied.
I stepped in on my shadow's lead.

A monster, I did see it now
beneath the sheets it heaved and moaned.
Though full of fright I wiped my brow,
Now callous as if struck and stoned.

It snarled and spat almost in spite.
Its hatred for my love now known
And slipping through the darkest night
I struck, I struck it to the bone.

With knife now drawn and sheathed inside,
The bewildered thing gave a scream.
In blood soak sheets it promptly died
And I walked out as in a dream.

The muffled silent melody
screams out at night, you I adore.
Your absence, it is hell for me,
it leaves me wanting more and more.

A Half-Washed Graffiti Mark

Upon a bathroom wall I propped myself,
all that I am and all I hope to be.
A bet, a risk, a gambit, all or none
and come tomorrow, I'll be, hopefully.

I scrawled a bubbled word to leave my mark,
the tang of sharpie sang a job well done.
Its voice then mixed with smells of putrid fear
And so i left, awaiting Setting Sun.

At once at dawn I happened 'pon the scene.
Though black blood trickled down in flattened spheres,
the evidence of the janitor's rage,
My name still stood in ink. I am still here.

Never Ask a Monkey Why

I brought my clock to Mr. Chimp,
The smartest in the land.
I placed it on his office desk.
"Could you lend me a hand?"

A thoughtful look took hold of him,
He hooted his consent,
or so I thought that's what he said.
I'm not sure what he meant


"My question is why does it tick?
Reply was furrowed brow,
He pointed at the inner cogs.
"Already know the how."

He smashed my watch upon the ground
with a remorseless stare.
Then grabbed a piece with zealous joy.
"Already know the where."

A look of terror grasped his face,
he knew not what to do.
He then showed me the maker's name.
"Already know the who."

He swept the tenants of his desk:
a mad search for a pen,
with which he tapped out intervals.
"Already know the when."

So he took his chair and hit me.
A black eye and a limp
were all I had to show for it.
"Last time I ask a chimp."

Upon Completion of this Poem

Upon completion of this poem
please end my life. You'll do no wrong.
Take hold of spear and pick up stone
and smite me, sing a cheerful song.

Take up the ax and crush my head,
obliterate my bones for soon
we will be rich when I am dead.
So smite me, hum a cheerful tune.