Melatonin dreams

The dreams never stopped
But were usually always forgotten.

The worst were the wish-fulfillment dreams,
When I would wake up thinking we talked,
You never died
Or I had already finished my appointments for the day.

In reality I would wake up late
Sometime in the afternoon
Without accomplishing a thing.

Wasted potential,
Or that’s what you said to your friend
That I overheard,
It wasnt true of course
As time is spent up all the same
But I thought it was for awhile.

Some abuses were slights but
They still felt like being punched in the face.

Love as empty gas tank

I had simply run out,
Stranded on some highway between
Maybe
A lumber town and
Steel town
Or else nowhere.

I had done a lot of loving
Fucking and
Especially losing,
But I needed a break to refuel.

Love is not an easy game,
But it was by far the best one,
Even if one had to train harder than any sport
And take proper rest.

Nobody plays by the rules when all is fair,
Or maybe the cheating bloodsuckers that
Keep pushing that phrase
Don’t want anyone else to make them look bad.

Death, taxes, joy and suffering

Its said that two things are certain;
Death
And taxes,
But that’s not the entire truth.

Its witty but does not extend far enough
Because suffering and joy
Are also certain.

The exact mix of either of them
Depends on the person
But everyone will experience them to some degree
And with some frequency.

Even the pit of depression offers some joy
And even a life loved in blissful ignorance some pain,
I’m not questioning the size of the Yin and Yang
But declaring they do exist.

Memories of dreams

I awoke to find I had lost a pillow
And memories of dreams flooded in with
The expected emotions.

I remembered you,
So many of you,
and I I had to choke a dream memory
That felt too real for comfort
and likely caused the flung pillow,
Either in my sleeping rage at having been
Disturbed
Out of the dream of love
Or in the slow realization that it was
Not the reality any longer
And would never be again.

Some things once broken are never truly fixed
And some things once fixed are never again whole.

The importance of being Ernest

Names are symbols
Even when they are unceremoniously chosen,
But their meaning is rarely a given.

I was lucky to share my middle name
With two great men in particular,
My grandfather and Hemingway,
Both men of great strength,
Courage
And character.

Sometimes names were a life sentence,
A bar whose expectations one could never
Live up to,
But I took strength in mine.

If I am half the man they were,
When all is said and done,
I will have lived well
And somewhere between
Hearst and
Paris.

The breaks of life

I watched the steam rise off my skin

like flames licking at my bathroom ceiling

and watched as my mug of chilled water

clouded over.

 

Hemingway,

I thought,

was a man broken over the back of time

over

and over again

but it was the break in his 20s

that killed him.

 

A man broken by a woman

is nothing new

even if that man faulted himself

instead of the invulnerable one,

but it is a lesson in love and

loss

that we should all hear.

 

The heart is not to be played with

tinkered with

or deceived,

because life will dig its powerful talons into

your skinny,

fragile

neck

for playing love like some game.

 

It could have killed me before

when I sat

desolate

puking in my shower

from the loss of an Artist,

or the, scared boy I was, having to leave

the Scientist that captured

my heart in the depths of a depression,

somehow,

more magic than science and I

didn’t eat, sleep or feel much else for months,

or when I rolled back and forth,

body heaving under the weight of the news

the Teacher was leaving,

my heart in her luggage,

or when you grabbed my convulsing arm,

“come here!”

the Nurse said so forcefully

and pulled me into the bathroom,

stripped off my clothes and made me sit in the

scolding

hot shower with you

like we did for so many years to talk.

 

Love was not lessened by having

been felt many times

if anything it became more severe,

at least you knew the stakes,

and only the ignorant or

incapable of love

would suggest it got easier or

hurt less.

 

Life had not quite broken me yet,

but triggers like angels danced in dreams

for many years past,

and certainly dance still,

to the same

macabre

song

of life, love and loss.

Man out of time

Months no longer mattered
Much less days
And time itself took on a liquid form.

Time was never much of a fact for me
I never gave encouragement to notions of
Supper time or bed time
And especially
Time to unwind.

My mind was already unwound enough
And it could never be reunited or relaxed
It was as it was.

There was no sharpness to life lately
And everything took on the familiar
Grey, blurred qualities I was used to.

This was how it felt to be out of love,
Out of life
And somewhere part worries or doubts.

Who is that poem about

The postcard sits on my fridge,
that was our fridge,
Not as a sad reminder of
Better
Times
But as a reminder to miss you.

I don’t miss you anymore
And there’s something cold
And seemingly empty about that,
As if you had meant nothing.

Its from Switzerland’s Chateau De Chillon,
And you said you missed me
Although we had only hung out once
And you disguised your love by saying
‘Much love’
When you signed off,
But we both knew it was a quiet misdirection.

Happiness washes over me reading this
Postcard from a mystery woman in my past
Because that is not who you are now
That was another you
And another me.

I wouldn’t bet the farm that those will be
The happiest moments of our young lives
but anyone hedging bets would not
Handicap that bet too much,
it might be a favourite.

And the beautiful Irish had said
I reminded her of Hemingway because
I was handsome
Honest
And a hell of a writer.

Maybe it didn’t matter what anyone else said,
Besides a handful of lovers,
Because I was handsome and honest,
Worthy of hatred for my vileness,
And I could write.

More importantly,
I was worthy of great love
the deepest sadness
And was hellbent on passing away talent.

The kick

Familiar receptors from an old me
Have opened up again
Begging me to be fed.

The great human condition of loneliness
Asks whether I will give up
Another piece of my heart
Or feel the familiar sting of bring alone.

It’s tempting to spend some heart,
Even in today’s tight economy,
For some relief from the dull suffering.

I’ve handled worse than this,
But being stoic isn’t always the answer,
And often its just being stubborn.

Familiar fingers run their phantom fingers
Through my hair and down my chest
And I realize my desires will stop at nothing
In their efforts to feed.