Tag: old age

  • Old dog

    Penny 2016
  • Sharp Edges

    Sharp edges have gotten my number,
    certainly, my blood type, reflex rate
    (hyporeflexia) and charted my pathways.
    They know my recipes requiring knives
    or graters and linger in anticipation.
    
    They fight for primacy on my workbench. 
    I expect them there; see them lurking.
    They can’t hide and are really pissed!
    I cherish my scars; each Ouch! a cue,
    a precious possibility of life to come.
    
  • Going out of Living Sale!

    I’ll stick that sign at the end of the drive

    Monitoring any respond…spying through

    Cracks at the sides of shades, now drawn,

    Which, unlike my neighbors’, were raised

    Night and day in defiance of hidden lives.

     

    Must I place items neatly on slackly shelves

    Or will the sign itself be enough to summon

    What I am seeking….and what am I craving;

    A grimace, a laugh, a Jehovah’s Witness tract;

    A splintered door jamb and feet rushing in?

     

    What would adorn a shelf, entice another,

    That they would not already have, though,

    Perhaps, deny?  My truths, though clean,

    Sparkling spirals to me are likely idiocy

    To them as theirs to me.  The sign is enough.

  • what’s your name?

     

    Crap!  What’s your name? I know your face, your touch;

    Remembered colors, tones and patterns tease!

    It’s only a word, an ordering, our farce of supremacy.

     

    Yes! you grew behind our house….the southern wall

    Against sun-bleached boards….gray and mute;

    Towering stylized suns in yellows, browns and greens

     

    Relentlessly tracking your maker east to west.

    Even if I could say your man-given name would…

    you acknowledge me; curtsy or sing or curse?

     

    Your name….a memory lost.  Is it a cleansing,

    Allowing a simple bliss in being and yellows,

    Without the words to anguish or sadden?

     

     

     

     

  • A Poem I’ll Write Someday

    I crossed the line without noticing;
    stepped over it as I missed my turn
    or as I mumbled execrations at the
    4-way stop, unsure of when to go.

    Yesterday I heard a guy mumbling,
    reading the words I carry on my back
    as he overtook me huffing hard,
    “Old man! Old man! Old man!”