Thursday, February 23, 2012

Train


A train leaves Chicago traveling south at 90 miles and hour
Arrives in Orlando at half-past eight
Catching me late for work
Hating the genius who planned this parade

I roll down my window and
Listen
To the clack, clack, clack, clack
Syncopated rhythm of the 
Rails,
Clack, clack, clack
Runnin and a hummin and a
Box cars
             BOOM
Box cars rollin
Clang, clang, clang, clang
One after the other . . . 

You do the math
Half an hour late to start
Now I'm stuck here waiting on this train
That  seems to be slow-ing down as. I. speak.
Dragging time . . .
       Drag- ing time . . . 

Dragging time along with it 
Like that Salvadore Dali painting
Or a sticky pink strand
Stretched
From the hot black top
To the heel of my left high top 
Slowing me down
Just enough to throw my whole day out of
al-
      ign-
ment.

I sit. Here. Waiting.
And watch
The fwip, fwip, fwip, fwip
Poetry in motion of the
Cars,
Fwip, fwip, fwip
Visceral emotion of the 
Tag art
Gang
BANG
art flowing
Bang, bang, bang, bang
One after the other . . . 

Who teaches this . . . ?
Baggy pants Picassos
With their aerosol brushes
Blowin art ten feet high
On the side of a freight

Big balloon letters
And a fairly detailed Oscar the Grouch
Because nothing says "Bad to the bone"
Like a Sesame Street character

Then I think . . . 
What if that guy, Cristo,
'Stead of spending all that money building bras for volcanoes
Or Wyland!
Were to paint up a train
So that no matter how the cars were switched up
You'd see fish . . . 
Or whales swimming

But then that last car passes
The gate swings up 
I'm on my way
And I think 
Nah
Then you'd just have people
Blowing off work altogether
And driving around all day
Hoping
To get stuck at a crossing.


The Good Stuff:

Pelicans - always pelicans
Red shouldered hawk, flying, with 4-foot red rat snake
Fresh flowers
Valentines
Couples massage
A brand-new byline
Yielding for pedestrians
Songify
A President who sings on key
Dove chocolate

and blogging ... occasionally









Sunday, February 20, 2011

Some very good people, a very good place, and a good time


I've been away for awhile. But, I assure you, it has been for the best of reasons. My business has exploded and I've been working like a fool from dawn to dusk. I didn't mean to leave you hanging. Lots to say, just not much time to say it.

The picture above was from last night's reading at the Kerouac House in College Park. Finer company you couldn't hope to keep. Poets, writers, and benefactors, brought together to celebrate the life and legacy of Jack, to make sure it doesn't get lost in the muck of his sad final chapter, as a brilliant mind succumbed to the terrible disease of alcoholism.

The embedded audio below is a podcast of Out and About with Jeremy Seghers on WPRK-FM, a radio show from Valentine's Day weekend, where Darlyn and I read our poetry along with some favorites by Neruda and Michael Ondaatje. We come on at 35 minutes in if you want to queue it up directly. But if you do, you'll be missing Mean Mary, a wonderful singer/songwriter from Nashville, who performed with us live in the studio.


Sunday, January 23, 2011

Paging Tavi ... Rikki Tikki Tavi, party of 10

A picture may be worth a thousand words, but here are some words from today's newspaper, that paint quite a picture. I'm not going to explain this . . . I'm just going to put it out there and let y'all guess what the story may have been about . . . no fair Googling it. Here it is:

"I guess I need a snake lover; either that or someone with multiple mongooses."

This line is good enough to stand without a separate list of The Good Stuff. Carry On.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Hairy Potter

I'm kind of worried about my new "themed" barber.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Deere Darlyn

A couple of winters ago, I took Darlyn home to visit my people. Nebraska - land of big shoulders, and bigger tractors. My brother-in-law is a farmer in Western Nebraska - Willa Cather country. At some point, as we were all walking slow, burning off a big meal, he took us to the massive barn where he keeps his tractor collection. We're not talking Tonka trucks here folks. We're talking about the real deal -- John Deere green from door to door. Being a guy, it didn't take much for me to fall under the spell of the smell of motor oil and deisel fuel. I felt the rush of potential as Tom spun the big weighted flywheel and the old pre-ignition tractor sputtered to life with its syncopated hiccopy cadence.

The big surprise, for me, was Darlyn. I looked over to make sure she wasn't bored and saw a gleam in her eye. Her eyes danced across the ponderous farm machinery and she clapped her cashmere-gloved hands with the delight of  a child on Christmas morning. She had her eye on one of the more recent additions, a big modern enclosed cab job And I knew that, given the chance, she'd be up in that cab, bouncing on that suspended seat, making vroom-vroom noises and singing the theme from Green Acres in a heartbeat.

I wasn't wrong. Vroom-vroom!

The good stuff:
Living in Florida in January.
Rowing reunions
Building a business
Building a s'more
Fresh produce
Vegetarian pizza
Turning "to do" to "ta da!"
The circus coming to town
Cash Cab

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Happiness



Spent the last few days under the weather. Darlin' Darlyn nursed me back to health with hot ramen and tender loving care. One of the highlights of the past few fever-addled days, was sitting side-by-side on the loveseat in my library, playing guitar and singing folk songs - Darlyn's sweet melodic voice floating smooth and soothing over my own, tortured Tom Waits. I like the way this picture highlights the grooves in the well-travelled fretboard of my 1970s-vintage Yamaha G-65 classical guitar. Even the frets themselves look dished and worn from 40 years of therapeutic noodlings. We've traveled a long way together -- from This Land is Your Land and Kum Bi Yah  to Blackbird and Classical Gas, through break ups and make ups and countless campfires. I have newer guitars - sleek electrics with equalizers and built-in tuners. But for good old-fashioned chicken soup comfort, it's hard to beat the sweet, mellow sound of my old friend.

The good stuff:

Darlyn -- just because
chicken ramen
Lemon zinger tea - with Grand Marnier.
humidifiers
hometown heroes
antibiotics
seagulls - miles from shore
the day after the fever breaks
new sidewalks
acorns crunching underfoot.


Friday, December 31, 2010

London, 2008: A dark night in a city that knows how to keep its secrets


When you pay good money to be scared, this is the kind of place you hope to find. Here we are, in a deserted alley, on our way home from drinking Absinthe at The Ten Bells -- last stop on our Jack the Ripper's London tour. It was a fascinating night of true crime hosted by Donald Rumbelow, a guy who had literally written the book on the case. Rumbelow -- one of the all-time great author names :) -- claims to have been the studio-hired resource who briefed Johnny Depp on the case prior to the filming of From Hell. We met in the furtive shadows across from The Tower of London, and trod the cobblestone streets of Old London -- one square mile bounded by Roman stone and conflicting suburban police jurisdictions. Rumbelow wove a captivating tale, then opened his attache to conduct a little book sales business. I got the last copy! There are lots of folks offering Jack the Ripper tours and they steal each other's business like Gypsy Cab drivers. We were fortunate to get Rumbelow, and we were his last tour before taking a several week break for back surgery.

The good stuff:
Comfort food
Apple cinnamon oatmeal
eucalyptus
Niquel
Antibiotics
glad tidings
great joy
angels - of all stripes
DIY web design