Thank You Good Sir

You sounded happy
I don’t know you
But suspect you’d want me to know Christ
Like you do

The sunset interrupted your reading of Saint Augustus
So you interrupted my conversation
Pointing out the colors
They were beautiful

It was a good thing
You looked, I looked, my wife looked
I don’t know what either of you thought
But I tried not to think

Thinking has killed beauty for me
So I could only look for a moment
But the mood I had from it
Made everything easier

January 1, 2016 Vers Libre

Bad Thinking

I’ve been reading about the mind
Learning about how mine is broken

Broken?

This is still my honesty

September 1, 2015 Vers Libre


The Orchard’

I’m growing an orchard
Of only kindness trees
That’ll bear the sweetest fruits

We’ll pick the fruit together
And make preserves for the cold times
So we eat and survive until the spring

Then we’ll have fresh fruit pie
On a picnic blanket, kissing each other
Under the shade of our trees

August 1, 2015 Vers Libre


Sleep Tight

I want a girl with pity
To kill me fast
Maybe in my sleep
After a night of soft kisses
Maybe I’ll go to sleep thinking that I’m wrong
I might tell myself that I can be loved
Sleep might take me before my better logic does
It would be nice to have that ignorance again
And die with it

June 1, 2015 Vers Libre

Right Words’

I’m too impatient for the right words to meet me here

So these words will have to do

They’re simple words and old words
But they don’t collect dust

I’m proud of these words

I feel I use them well

May 1, 2014 Vers Libre

Jack the Lion

The easy thing to do would be to stand here and cry.”

The man looked up from his little book, Everyone keeps saying that he wouldn’t want us crying, but how else do you show that you’ll miss someone?” He closed the little book, I was the last one to see him alive and the one to watch him die. When I saw him I was past hope, past lying to myself, and I knew he was not going to make it.”

Two days and a haircut earlier, this man felt and looked like a boy. He watched the family gather at the old man’s house. The nervous laughter that happens at times like this offended the boy. He understood it, but he wouldn’t be a part of it. He sat by himself in his grandfather’s chair. The old man was clean and never carried a scent, so the recliner still smelled like leather. This would all be easy if the boy was a believer. He wouldn’t have to let go. He would just have to wait to see his grand-dad again. He had hope, lots of it. The old man was a lion and this wouldn’t be his last roar. Still, the boy wrote kind words in his little book. The same kind of book his grandfather kept in his shirt pocket.

Always have pen and paper.

It was one of the old man’s rules; part of his way of life. He was a self-made man who started off his working life walking an hour to his job. Walking a little faster at night when his shift ended, his hand on his knife at all times.

The boy felt the knife in his pocket and felt proud of himself. The old man taught him a lot over the past few years. They weren’t distant while the boy was growing up, but they didn’t have what they have now. The old man saw that the boy was turning into a man. It was a slow change, but he was becoming a man.

God, why couldn’t he believe? He had faith when he was young. He had faith through the death of his mother, through what people would call rougher times. Why couldn’t he have it now? The boy couldn’t think about this. He started to cry, but no one noticed because he never made a sound when he cried. It was just a few leaks around the eyes. He kept on with the kind words in the little book. He wished the words would come to him like magic even if he wished that he wouldn’t have to use them. He knew he wouldn’t have to use them.

He couldn’t decide if he was selfish or chicken shit for not going in to see the old man yet. He kept writing. He mouthed the words to himself, The easy thing to do would be to stand here and cry. Everyone keeps saying that he wouldn’t want us crying, but how else do you show that you’ll miss someone?” He cried and kept writing.

The boy’s words were stopped by his cousin’s voice, Jack. He wants to see you.”

Jack walked into his grandparents’ room and stopped lying to himself. The old man nodded and said, Well, I guess it’s time for me to go then.”

I wish you didn’t have to.”

I do too, son, but I have to.” I know.”

Tell everyone I love them. Tell your grandmother she’s my life. Keep her going to the doctor. She doesn’t need to rush to see me.”

I will.”

I know you will. You think you’re weak, but that’s where your strength is.”

The boy cried and made a sound. I’m damn proud of the man I met in you.”

A lot of that is you grand-dad.”

That’s how I’ll stay alive.”

His grand-dad nodded off to sleep for a few last breaths. The boy could feel all the parts of the old man that would stay alive inside of him.

They weren’t enough.

I love you,” said the man, no longer a boy.

February 15, 2014 Little Story Gallery