—Public Domain Photo
THE REAL DEAL
—Sue Crisp, Shingle Springs, CA
What if this COVID is just a bad dream?
I'll wake up from in a state of disorientation,
not knowing the REAL from the FAKE news?
—Sue Crisp, Shingle Springs, CA
What if this COVID is just a bad dream?
I'll wake up from in a state of disorientation,
not knowing the REAL from the FAKE news?
In the dream world. it's making clowns of us all.
In the real world, it's not clowning around.
—Public Domain Graphics Courtesy of Sue Crisp
_______________________
Shelter in Place
—Photo by Cynthia Linville
28 SECONDS
—Cynthia Linville, Lincoln, CA
The future runs up and
pushes you from behind
and you tense
every muscle
into stillness
because you know, now,
nothing will ever be the same
And as you stumble forward
you start counting
on your fingers
every single thing
that has ever gone wrong,
looking for that one thing
that could have been different
But this madness envelopes you
like wet cotton wool
hot and sad
and (in self-defense)
you fall backwards
into yearning
hoping to find the past in your sleep
And you wake up
savoring a breath of sweet relief
but it evaporates
in the scalding glare.
You wake up talking to the dead
but you no longer believe
they can hear you.
—Cynthia Linville, Lincoln, CA
The future runs up and
pushes you from behind
and you tense
every muscle
into stillness
because you know, now,
nothing will ever be the same
And as you stumble forward
you start counting
on your fingers
every single thing
that has ever gone wrong,
looking for that one thing
that could have been different
But this madness envelopes you
like wet cotton wool
hot and sad
and (in self-defense)
you fall backwards
into yearning
hoping to find the past in your sleep
And you wake up
savoring a breath of sweet relief
but it evaporates
in the scalding glare.
You wake up talking to the dead
but you no longer believe
they can hear you.
Joshua Tree
—Photo by Cynthia Linville
Every heartbreak begins somewhere—
a hairline fracture
splitting open
every cherished word
spaces
gap
sentences
dissolve
hard truths
crumble
disintegrate
—Cynthia Linville
Tower Lion
—Photo by Cynthia Linville
—Photo by Cynthia Linville
The past is a place
harboring trains that go to nowhere
saturated shadows
flashing over scorched banks
a place where grief-colored smoke
extravagantly unspools
echoes amplifying
until your ears ache
—Cynthia Linville
—Public Domain Photo
RORSCHACH TEST
—Caschwa, Sacramento, CA
what are we to say
about this world we live in?
only perceptions
believers shelter
at home while deniers flock
to public places
we pay to hear an
orchestra play symphonic
works from folks long dead
who are not ever
reborn to raise their baton
and keep things just right
but “experts” spout out
their conclusive opinions
on how to play it
maybe untrue to form
says less about the doer
than the audience
here in this poem,
Haiku’s correlation to
nature is not found
does that mean it’s lost?
will someone put up money
to help get it back?
and that, my friends, will
conclude perceptions; want more?
get your own ink blot
—Public Domain Photo
JUST OLDER
—Caschwa
deep thoughts
seriously
may require bending down
far enough to touch honesty
by hand
will it
cry out in pain?
or is that just your knees
distorted and maligned for years
stop it
if this
becomes more than
a mental exercise
you will have to sign a formal
release
and then
we can begin
to delve way down into
that mire of memories you hold
so dear
we have
broken the ice
gotten under your skin
but we did not find much to share
keep it
—Public Domain Photo
WHATCHA WANNA BET?
—Caschwa
The top
stakeholders of
the companies that rank
highest in environmental
abuse
hire a
crew of people
to keep their own dwellings
immaculately clean and pure,
then boast
***
a high
percentage of
proud claims that “it is not
about the money” are in fact
ALL lies
***
it has
been said that we
poets do not get paid
much, as if that was our only
true goal
***
our dog
lost its driving
privileges due to
being ninety-eight years of age
too bad
Clown Convention in Mexico
—Public Domain Photo
—Public Domain Photo
SO DANCE
—Caschwa
dancing naked is not out of your league
means to become certifiably clean
whether beaches, warm, or private clubs, mean
allemande, courante, Sarabande, and gigue
those shiny barbells you see at the gym
are bare bells for cleaning all of your parts
so drop everything and dance, limb to limb
—Public Domain Photo
HARD TIMES AT THE CIRCUS
—Kevin Jones, Elk Grove, CA
There is moaning
Down on Clown
Alley. There
Is always
Moaning down
On Clown Alley.
This time
It's for real.
—Public Domain Photo
Even pediatric doctors have failed at getting McDonald’s to permanently “retire” its clown mascot, Ronald
The clown has been seen going into public schools to promote kids to consume its unhealthy fast foods
Since 1963, the clown has been especially used to advertise McDonald's during kids’ Saturday morning T.V.
McDonald’s grinning icon keeps "creeping on" despite the plague of American childhood obesity
Like Mickey Mouse presents Disneyland as “The happiest place on earth”,
Ronald McDonald attempts to present for its restaurants the same kind of fantasy
Especially with the golden-arched “McDonaldland” children's playgrounds
Despite the fact that McDonald’s workers are probably by no means as happy as Disneyland's
Such as a beaten-down, tired teenage Asian girl I encountered taking orders at a McDonald's drive-through window
She said “Welcome to McDonald’s” in a tone she might have told me to go fuck off
And I let her keep the change as a tip ‘cause I couldn’t blame her
Indeed, I have been always at odds with the fast-food chain while hating its wicked clown mascot
Ever since I recall I even won a coupon as a prize for a grade-school writing contest sponsored by McDonald’s
—Michelle Kunert, Sacramento, CA
—Public Domain Photo
There’s a singing “clown" who appeared on America’s Got Talent two years ago, calling himself “Puddles Pity Party”
Perhaps you've seen further performances of him; he’s posted online and on YouTube
Frankly my feelings are that “Puddles" needs to drop the “creepy clown” appearance—
He wears a puffy white, black-trimmed outfit like that of murderous psychopath, Canio, in the Italian opera, Pagliacci
Surely this guy could come up with some other dark character or persona to sing under
His thick clown make-up appears to be too much of a mask of expression and emotion on his face
And one has to wonder what is he trying to hide under, if he is really a conscientious person
—Michelle Kunert
—Public Domain Photo
THE VIRUS HUNTS FOR BALLOONS
—Joseph Nolan
The bungee-cords between us
Are all frayed,
The ones that linked us up
And prevented our falls
From distant horizons,
Previously known only
To imbeciles,
Who wandered off, alone.
Some have given up making
Whatever it was they made.
I, for one,
Have stopped making scones.
I am reverting to something
I abandoned long ago: doughnuts!
Pretty soon, if this keeps on,
We will all turn into balloons
That blow away.
The virus is hunting
For balloons, they say.
Something hot and fat to pop!
—Public Domain Photo
WHEN SOUND MEETS A VACUUM
—Joseph Nolan
What are the trans-ramifications
Of sounds in air
As they meet
The vacuum of space?
They say that sound needs matter
To vibrate through
In order to move,
To continue its resonance,
But vacuums, also, know
The sounds made on planets,
The meanings of words,
The feelings of cries
Like sounds passing through
Walls in cheap motels.
I know they do not die
When they drop off all matter
Into the vacuum, outside,
Cream on the surface of milk.
And I sit here, empty,
As though there were a vacuum within,
Waiting for something
To buzz against my outside wall.
—Public Domain Photo
IN LOVE WITH SIZZLE
—Joseph Nolan
We’re in love with sizzle,
Beauty, charm and grace.
We prefer these things
To talking
About natural space—
About the steak, itself,
The gristle and the bone,
Since we are never satisfied
With being alone.
—Public Domain Photo
SEASONAL DELIGHTS
—Joseph Nolan
It’s all right
If you prefer
Persimmons in December
To cherries
In late May;
Who’s to say
Which are better?
But I know,
When gorging
On red cherries,
That golden apricots
Are coming soon,
Before the end of June.
And cherries, red,
Beneath green leaves,
Against blue sky,
Tell me it’s time
For joy in summer,
And that luscious raspberries,
Are coming, coming, coming,
Coming, soon!
—Public Domain Photo
YOUR ATTENTIVE FUTURE
—Joseph Nolan
The future listens
To hopes, worries,
Desires and fears
And says,
“I am here.
I am waiting
For you to grow near,
Each, to your own fruition,
To the inevitable manifestation
Of your destiny.
It is here with me,
Your future!”
—Public Domain Photo
Today’s LittleNip:
COWBOY’S TOMBSTONE
—Joseph Nolan
On a cowboy’s tombstone,
In granite,
It read,
“Three pats of butter
and a slice of white bread.
That is what it comes down to—
Everything you said and did.
Don’t let go of your vision,
Since when you are dead,
All you can leave behind is
Three pats of butter
and a slice of white bread.”
_______________________
Thanks, poets, for today’s potpourri of poetic ponderings, including riffs on clowns, our Seed of the Week. Well, as Caschwa says, “So Dance”!
Here in our area, Sac. Poetry Center uses Zoom for weekly readings and workshops. For more info, go to www.sacramentopoetrycenter.com/:
•••Mon., 10am: Writers on the Air hosted by Todd Boyd: RSVP in advance via email to writersontheair.message@gmail.com. Zoom link: us04web.zoom.us/j/358106078?pwd=YzdvelcxOW1CNWg2YnBuc05ZYUJaQT09 (Meeting ID: 358 106 078/Password: 025674)
•••Mon. 7:15pm: SPC Monday Night Poetry From Coast to Coast. Zoom: us04web.zoom.us/j/7638733462 (Meeting ID: 763 873 3462 ["P O E T R E E I N C"] Password: spcsdv2020)
•••SPC Tuesday night workshop hosted by Danyen Powell: Bring a poem for critique: us02web.zoom.us/j/346316163 (Meeting ID: 346 316 163)
•••Wed., 6pm: MarieWriters workshop (prompts) hosted by Nick LeForce: zoom.us/j/671443996
Also this week:
•••Fri., 7:30pm: Video poetry reading on Facebook by Davis Poet Laureate James Lee Jobe at james-lee-jobe.blogspot.com/.
For more about El Dorado County poetry events, check Western Slope El Dorado Poetry on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ElDoradoCountyPoetry/.
For other upcoming poetry readings and workshops available online while we stay at home, scroll down to the blue column (under the green column at the right) for info—and note that more may be added at the last minute.
And to see the reasons that Mickey-D’s dropped poor Ronald, go to www.mashed.com/202684/the-real-reason-mcdonalds-got-rid-of-ronald-mcdonald/.
_____________________
—Medusa, still dancing ~ ~ ~
Photos in this column can be enlarged by
clicking on them once, then clicking on the x
in the top right corner to come back to Medusa.