Category: The Book of Covid

  • Ways I may have changed

    It might be that my exterior melted a bit last year
    that it’s shinier now, more like fiberglass, which I hadn’t noticed to be honest
    until just last week.

    That it’s a little more weather resistant, which is nice.
    More sun proofed. Akin to the skin
    of a sailboat — a sunfish sailboat like the one
    my dad wanted to buy when I was a teen, and he was in his forties,
    when we took that class about
    tying knots.

    I used to pride myself on my permeable skin.
    I would chat with you
    we would chat about this or that, and through our chat
    I would find myself replenished.
    My roots. My happy roots.

    But now things bead up on me sometimes.

    I look down at my legs, at my hands and I see water beads
    I shake off those beads and I think

    this is a way that I may have changed
    a bit last year.

    Ocean ready I am.
    But covered in beads.

  • Clank

    I want to clank my fist
    against the armor they’re constructing
    inside me.

    Rattle the scaffolding
    just enough to let them know
    I know

    there are laborers hammering away at this
    shiny new space suit

    they’re building inside me

    I can feel them hammering with their tiny hammers.
    My skin can feel them all

    so I can
    survive

    this new terrain.

    For example:

    coffee shops, I’m told,
    are where humans
    like to sit and read.

    To write short poems.

  • Cold warriors, we

    He gave me back my hard drives today
    by the pond by the geese
    by the free-range 3-year-olds who
    don’t even know what “pandemic” means.

    By their moms who don’t trust the geese, don’t trust
    the two old(er) guys at the picnic table
    with matching gray streaked
    beards handing

    a box
    between them.
    Wordless very much
    like the cold warriors
    they are.

    They are cold. We are cold.
    It’s a cold day.

    I want to shake the box and the hard drives
    and let all the
    photos and movies of my kids
    as kids rain down, coat my hair
    like pixel dust with their music videos and
    the sound files we kept of their
    toddler voices with
    New York accents

    my beloved
    lost characters from
    “Our Gang.”

    We put our masks back on when people move close.
    Slip them over, up over our mouths.

    We talk about how we’re still
    making time for creative projects.

    He can’t help me with my drives.
    He has to work on his script.
    I can’t read his script. I need to work on my poems.
    We both need to work.

    We sound like two people talking about how
    the stores are closing soon,

    and if we want to buy that shirt
    those slacks, that stylish hat
    we’ll need to get it in gear and
    head to the mall.

  • Driving down 8th street after the rain

    We’re out in the morning
    driving down 8th street after the rain
    looking for coffee in a favorite neighborhood

    trying to figure out if this store or that cafe
    made it through the night.

    I’m expecting to see palm fronds in the street
    sandy-colored mutts running at an angle
    cars and cans tipped over
    telling the rest of us to be quiet be quiet
    while they try to
    sleep it off.

    A hurricane
    came through town these last 13 months
    there was a
    hurricane in town, touching down,

    and we’re out and about in the morning now
    driving through the next-day sun.

    The street’s wet from 13 months of
    when’s it gonna end
    and we’re looking around for coffee and
    an old rhythm.

    Looking down streets
    and in windows
    to see who’s still here.

  • Threaten me with your breeze

    Threaten me with your breeze,
    Your touch this
    Fragile skin I’ve got has cracks.

    If you come to my door, I’ll open it slow,
    Step back, pull up like for a fadeaway,

    I’ll raise my voice,
    Keep you at bay.

    Don’t breathe into me, my friend my foe
    don’t send me words.

    I won’t
    breathe
    into you.

  • It’s changing

    It’s changing things.
    I’m evolving into future
    me, some better biped. A cellular
    remodel til I can

    eat at a restaurant outside or
    be in a friend’s backyard
    outside and if they walk past me,
    too close, it’s ok,
    not too close
    after all.
    And I can
    use their restroom.

    And after that, after this:
    flight. super strength.
    heat vision.

    I’ll be some
    better biped
    changed by a vaccine and
    40 years in the desert
    and all the things
    it did
    to all us.

  • When I come back to the office

    When I come back to the office
    we will all look older.

    And that’s because we will all be older.

    No one will return as they were. As they left. Even
    if they sit in similar seats, and the fashions
    haven’t changed all that much.

    Meeting rooms will be booked. Restrooms taken.
    Notebooks will be misplaced and there will
    be coffee, I’m sure and
    everyone will have
    an avalanche that happened
    while they were away
    some ice that broke off
    that fell off of them

    into the canyon below.

  • Suddenly, yesterday

    And then suddenly, yesterday, it was Spring.

    With dreams of visits to foreign lands —

    to movie theaters, coffee shops,
    to the insides of other people’s houses
    where dining room tables turned into desks
    might become dining room tables
    with a few things on them
    once again.

    All in the seasons ahead.
    Far away, down this curvy road.

    But trees and fields fly by in the Spring.

  • The gift of boxes

    An underrated skill. The ability to
    enjoy the sky,
    a perfect book

    a wonderful chat

    a cup of tea,
    if that’s your thing.

    Not a case of denial.

    Just watching the news, making plans
    and then taking out your boxes.
    These ancient things.

    “Look at him. Look at her,” they might say:

    “Check out that outstanding
    compartmentalizer.”

  • Write what we know

    Wondering about
    all the quarantine screenplays
    that are being written right now
    in smallish spring apartments with
    open windows where
    people perhaps don’t bother
    zipping up their flies as
    much as they
    normally would.

    The romcoms sure about falling in
    love on Zoom, but also
    the quarantine buddy comedies the
    online detective stories the
    psychedelic misadventures the meditative spiritual
    wonderama’s the Judd Apatow-produced
    off-color with a heart of gold
    guy and gal night outs without
    actually going out the
    all in one day coming of age
    teen true stories the castaway
    remakes with a basketball because that’s what was on hand
    and the turners.

    and the hooches.