
hazy shades of gray
lazily blurring the lines
I exist, but not
my blood rushes to color
the margins clutching my soul
***
A storm is brewing. We may lose power. I’m tired. I’m cold. I’m also grey.
Meh. Have a tanka. It’s all I got.

hazy shades of gray
lazily blurring the lines
I exist, but not
my blood rushes to color
the margins clutching my soul
***
A storm is brewing. We may lose power. I’m tired. I’m cold. I’m also grey.
Meh. Have a tanka. It’s all I got.

Image source: Google
The sun did not shine.
It was nighttime, you see.
So I sat with my book
Just as bored as can be.
I sat there with Daddy.
Mom slept and I sat
I hoped I could read her
The Cat in the Hat.
We were almost done!
My treat was on track!
For next we would read
How the Cat would come back!
I saw where she hid my new
Treat!
Treat!
Treat!
Treat!
If I could sneak a peak
That would be cool and neat!
I would not make a BUMP!
That would make Mommy jump!
I snuck!
In the bottom drawer it sat!
I snuck!
Out with the next book
Of the Cat in the Hat!
Half done with the first
Why did I skip it like that?
I knew I was wrong
Breaking rules was not funny.
But I wanted to peek
Before the sun was sunny!
“I knew I could get away with my prize,”
I thought with a smile
“And Mommy will not wake or stir
Not for a while.
I will take a quick peek
Like a bad little sneak
And once my sneaking has peaked
With not even a squeak
I will un-sneak my sneak
Oh how Momma would freak!
But my sneak-game’s on-fleek!
She will never know
Of her son’s geeky streak!”
I climbed up the couch
By Daddy I sat
With my major awards
Two cats in one hat!
Dad looked and said “Hey!
How did you get that?
How did you get two cats?
You did not read the first hat!”
But I whispered, “No! No!
Please speak softly, OK?
Or you will wake up my Mom
She would take it away!”
Then I heard Mom yell loud,
“Bring that book back, B.J.!”
I scowled at my dad
Who laughed with a wink
I was so very mad
At that foul Father fink
As my sneak was un-snuck
I thought isn’t this rich?
Never would I have thunk
Dad was a punk-ass snitch!
** *
Written for imaginary garden with real toads Celebrating Children’s Poetry – Dreaming with Stacie, and shared on dVerse’s OpenLinkNight # 193. The prompt was for us to write a poem that draws upon our childhood imagination.
When I closed my eyes to speak to my younger self, I was instantly transported back to the 70’s. True story! I was about four, or as I liked to call it, “Four-and-a-half”. Mom was teaching me to read, and I took to it like a duck to water. This is where my nerdery began.
I was nowhere near emotionally developed enough to deal with a cliffhanger, and Mom was too tired to let me read the first book to her so I could get to the second one. I took matters into my own hands, and Dad ratted me out real sneaky like and laughed in my face after I got in trouble with Mom. I swear, if I had been big enough to kick an ass, his ass would’ve been the first one I kicked that night. It’s like dude never heard the old “Snitches get Stitches” nursery rhyme, Knaamean?
So yeah, I wanted to kick my dad’s ass that night. Dirty snitch! May his soul rest in peace.
Read other dVerse poets’ OLN poems here.

Image source: Google
Every day
at the same time
she catches him.
Back of the bus,
eyes fixated
on his handheld
luminous rectangle,
corners of his eyes
softly, sadly yielding
to gravity.
Every day
at the same time,
she catches him
surreptitiously
studying her
from behind the
safety of his
luminous rectangle
as her blush-brush
burnishes
her best face.
Every day at the same time,
for the beat of a hummingbird’s wing,
they are locked within the same space-time,
with her smirking a silent challenge;
is today the day?
Am I stunning enough for you
to break the ice and say
good morning?
Every day
at the same time,
the answer is always yes
she is indeed stunning enough,
and
every
day
at that same time,
he stubbornly ignores
this obvious answer.
Every day at the same time,
before the hummingbird
flaps wing for a second time,
his eyes retreat to his rectangle,
only to feel her eyes
burning him from behind
her bronzing brush.
Every day, like clockwork,
within the third flap
of a hummingbird’s wing,
he returns her hidden gaze
wondering if this woman
was willing to breach his
technological barriers
to lift the corners of his eyes
with a peacock-feather-brushed
good morning.
Every day,
at the same time,
the answer is always yes,
but not today.
Today,
unlike every day,
after their daily ritual,
both resolved to take action.
Next time,
the burnished,
blushing lady said to herself,
if he doesn’t greet me,
I will move closer to him and ask
if he sees anything he likes.
That should break the ice.
Next time,
the sad-eyed man said to himself,
I’ll just take an earlier bus.

Image source: Google
** *
Posted to imaginary garden with real toads for Physics with Björn: Space time and the special theory of relativity. Björn has us writing poems about space time! I know! So dope, right? I like to think that I would’ve made a pretty rad astrophysisit if I hadn’t wasted all those formative years hating myself and whatnot. Ah well.
(I left astrophysicist intentionally misspelled just so that everyone could have a clear idea of how far away I am from becoming an astrophysicist.)
Anyway, head on over and check out all the wonderful poetry about space time.

Image source: Unsplash.com
Back off, weekend daddy
Crawl back to the lies from where you came
Foolish journey
You can’t love her part-time all the same
Ruled by convenient choices
You run away when realness makes you feel
Beggars can’t be choosers
You can’t have the nectar without the peel
I feel like you should know
That the seeds you sow
In the garden will grow
Even if you don’t show
You can say what you want
Empty words ring hollow
Like the life that you flaunt
Your substance falls below
Beat it, winter loser
Slink back to the fires that kept you warm
Spineless coward
Couldn’t brace to fight against her storm
Tread through that least resistance
Your privilege paved a way I couldn’t follow
No man is an island
You left me alone; alone you’ll know sorrow
Could you recognize me?
Would my eyes be the key?
Like yours they show misery
At what you’ve stolen from we
I know that you must hurt too
Withered possibility
I cannot grow into you
Cause you weren’t there for me.
** *
I followed NaPoWriMo’s day 4 enigma prompt somewhat. And now, I could use a drink. Sweet dreams, everyone.
trE shared our collaboration on her blog. This is our first collaborative effort in many years, and I’m happy with the result. Check it out if you like.
it stings a bit: A Collaborative Effort with “Just Barry” – http://wp.me/p1traG-1Nb

Image source: Unsplash.com
The officer smirked, trying not to laugh. After admonishing dad for speeding, he walked back to his vehicle with a funny story for his coworkers; a tale of my dad slyly lying about the urgency of momma’s baby, due to deliver my brother two months from now, and of momma over-selling the shit out of her non-labor, as I, a terrified six-year-old, observed in saucer-eyed, horrified silence.
We must’ve been quite the sight; dad explaining his urgency to the cop with a softness that matched the long shadows just after the sun dipped below the spring-sprinkled horizon; momma – unprompted, on-cue, and with a scenery-chewing overacting exhibition to make Shatner wince – unsuccessfully selling the urgency dad had just lied about with the authenticity of a wildlife film narrator; me in the back seat, wide-eyed and instinctively quiet, taking it all in; the patrolman’s flashlight, an impromptu stage spotlight for our three-person routine (four if you’re counting my brother, but the cop didn’t buy it, so let’s just go with the trio.)
After a beat of silence, our eyes finally adjusted from the shock of the cop’s harsh halogen giving way to soft shades of amber, dad shook his head, a grin growing on his darkened face. He looked back at me. “You cool, B.J.?”
I nodded, and squeaked out a, “Yeah.”
“Yeaaaaah?” he repeated, mimicking me.
“I mean… yes,” I corrected myself with a smile, relieved that dad sounded like dad again.
We didn’t have a term for code-switching back then. It just felt like Dad was bilingual and was training me to be too. I knew that whenever he broke out the Wildlife Film Narrator voice that shit just got real. He always used it when white people were involved, and always when those white people were in positions of authority.
I instinctively knew to get my shit together whenever he used it.
If anyone heard his everyday-people vernacular, they’d have a hard time reconciling the fact that both voices were his. When dad was being dad, he always reminded me of Shaft-meets-Sho’nuff-the-Shogun-of-Harlem; brassy, cocky, and cool-as-hell. I admired both voices, knowing that Sho’nuff was dad’s native tongue. Both were authentic in a way; Sho’nuff was my dad, the Film Narrator was the long shadow cast by dad.
Momma code-switched too, but it never sounded as jarring as when dad did it. Mom’s tone was always a hairsbreadth lower than frantic; it was like she was barely holding things together in her head. But momma always sounded like momma, even when she was performing. Her professional voice reminded me of how folks talked on Dynasty before someone dipped in diamonds got their face slapped; unnecessarily British and whatnot.
Dad shot an incredulous glare at momma. “Really, Terri?” he crooned sarcastically, firmly back in Shogun form. “Nooo, officerrr… I’m not in dayyyneger of laaabor, but it HUUUUUURRRTS!” Dad mimicked momma’s impromptu histrionics perfectly.
“Oh hush, Barry! I was just tryin’ to help,” mom shot back between giggles. “You didn’t get the ticket, did you?”
Together, their gallows-laughter was the greatest musical duet I’ve ever heard. My parents loved comedy. Our bad days were terrible, but our good days could wring sunshine from a rainy evening dusk just like it did that spring evening. Dad’s laugh sounded like a chorus of good-humored seagulls. Mom’s laugh was carbonated; starting low, and then bubbling higher, eventually meeting dad’s seagulls high in the atmosphere. Though I’ll never hear either of their laughs again, it just occurred to me that they are always with me. Whenever I’m trying to make people laugh, all I’m really doing is trying to recapture this moment, if only for a moment.
sunset ignites clouds
terrain perfumed by rainclouds
inhale deep, smiling

All four of us! (Mom is pregnant with my younger brother in this photo.)
** *
Written for NaPoWriMo’s day 3 prompt, an elegy. I was also inspired by dVerse’s Haibun Monday: The Shadow Knows, hosted by Hayesspencer. I didn’t share it on dVerse though, as this isn’t a traditional Japanese Haibun. I did enjoy writing it though. There were some laughs and tears during the writing process.
Want to see how traditional Haibun are supposed to be crafted? Go here.

Patrolling her territory,
my world,
never coming when called,
always checking in
distant and affectionate,
refusing my offerings
until just beyond my reach,
owned by no one,
she is mine and I am hers.
This nebulous non-arrangement
somehow evolves
my capacity to love
and accept love
without labels, trinkets,
tags, or attachment.
Then she’s gone.
** *
I followed imaginary garden with real toads’ Flash 55 PLUS! Prompt, complete with optional “Worlds Apart” vs “Extremely Close” themed challenge. This was a fun one. I feel like it’s been too long since I hopped on the lily pads and played a bit.
Go here to read other contributions to this prompt.
Also Known As Book #3 Hello, you guys. I have been quite busy over the last year or two or three and I have had some inquiries regarding authorship and if I had any books for purchase. Yes and Yes. I am not good with these sort of things. With my first book, Pinwheels & Hula Hoops: […]
If you enjoy insightful poetry, please check out my friend trE’s new book. She’s one of my favorite poets.
via Introducing A New Kind of Down: The Breath & Bones of a Writer — a cornered gurl

Image source: Pintrest.com
Ever avoid
your own reflection,
ever annoyed
by introspection
scared and annoyed
by imperfections
far closer than
they appear to be?
Your poor solution
seems uncaring,
unmoored pollution,
thoughts unsparing,
forgone conclusion,
my truth you’re wearing
I’m your illusion
and you’re scaring me.
** *
(Video probably NSFW. Your mileage may vary.)
And we’re off! NaPoWriMo has officially started. I was going to do some type of theme, but I changed my mind and decided to keep it breezy and use whatever prompt I found interesting. Today I used NaPoWriMo.net’s (optional) daily prompt and tried my hand at a “Kay-Ryan-esque poem: short, tight lines, rhymes interwoven throughout, etc…” I didn’t follow the prompt completely, but I’m pretty chill with the result.

Image source: Google
Morning alarm pierced my skull.
As I groaned to silence it,
I locked eyes with Wifey.
Words needn’t pass between us,
but they did, as microbursts
of shorthand dialog tends to form
invisible webs between vessels.
“I think I’m staying home,”
my mouth and eyes said.
My head pounding,
the weight of my own body
collapsing my bones
into the lush comfort of our bed,
the covers embracing me,
bracing me for non-stop cartoons
and marathon Texas hold ‘em drawls.
Wifey peered through my marrow,
doing the math in her head.
“You had too much Irish Death last night,”
she deduced,
“and now you’re waiting to die.”
I am wounded,
but I never shy away
from a game of cat
and also-cat.
I pivot and counter, declaring,
“Theoretically speaking,
we’re all waiting to die.
It’s all a matter of degrees.”
Score one point for the good guys.
I elucidate some concessions,
hoping to persuade her to my side.
“But my head is pounding,
possibly from too much Irish Death
I suppose,
but mainly from spring allergies,”
I sniffle unnecessarily,
“and I didn’t drink enough water last night,”
because I’m no lush with self-control issues;
this is biology’s fault, dammit!
“And my body aches from
too much young man work,”
c’mon and pity my
alcohol-soaked marrow;
I know you’ve seen it!
“And I’m depressed,”
-heart-string-pluck!
“and so yes, I am lying here, waiting to die,”
which was the truth; I mean I was lying there,
right?
Wifey’s eyes smiled
the way they did
when we use to play Texas hold ‘em together
before I gave up on playing with her
because it was no fun
playing against someone
who didn’t have a poker-face.
Then she began;
“Well while you’re lying there waiting to die,
take a look at our bank statement
and weigh it against our mortgage,
our utility bills, and our
ballooning credit card statement, including,
yes darling,
the very comfortable bed
you hide from the world in
as you lie there waiting for death;
“Yes, please lie in your holy sanctuary
that we have yet to pay for.”
Our bed
wasn’t quite as comfy as it was earlier,
but I still had the river card to turn.
“One day of my waiting to die won’t kill us!”
I counter, in vain.
Suddenly, my day of rehydrating while
binge-watching cartoons
feels further from my grasp.
Her smile widens. I can hear
the poker analyst in my head yelling,
“No help on the river for this groggy
hungover desperado!”
She gloats,
her pair of aces
staring daggers through
my sob-story.
“True, I cannot refute that,” she begins,
“but while you lie there waiting to die,
consider my role in management.”
Uh-oh.
“I would love to curl up next to you
and wait for you to… well, not die…
I kinda like having you around…”
She’s setting me up…
“…but I cannot indulge my wants…”
I don’t like where this is going…
“…because I need to go to the place
that pays me to make decisions…”
IT’S A GODDAMNED GUILT-TRIP!
GROAN! PLAY DEAD! DO ANYTHING!
“…like the ones I have to make today
to set the apparatus in motion to sanction
a few troublemakers
for not being team-players
and setting all I built aflame
just so they can rule over the ashes.
I guess in their own way,
they’re waiting for death too.
Sadly, I don’t have that luxury.”
The poker analyst in my head bellows,
“He’ll be spending the next few hours
on the bus
wondering where it all went wrong…”
With the microburst of
unspoken conversation ended,
where seconds felt like minutes,
I drag my undead carcass
from the world’s most comfortable
unpaid mattress
and shuffle to the bathroom
to brush my teeth.
That foolish woman!
She actually thought she’d bested me,
but unknown to her,
I can still lie and wait to die,
even on company time.
** *
Written for dVerse’ Meeting the Bar: Irony hosted by Frank Hubeny. I’m a sarcastic a-hole by nature, but irony is a wee bit subtler than that. Still, get me started on irony and suddenly I need an editor. I know it’s a long one, and I’m sorry. Hopefully, you were entertained by it a bit.
And since you’ve made it this far, why not head over and read other poets’ contributions to this prompt.
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