Welcome and thank you for visiting my blog. As the title suggest, this is where I archive my 'public' writings. You won't find any BS opinion postings here; just poetry with a few short stories sprinkled about. Take a look and thanks again!

The Grander Era

Times like these long for me
And I them

Where are the infants
Aghast by wood blocks and Legos?

Yearning ancient elephants
Wandering Oakland’s Madagascar

Large enough for smaller times
Grander eras hung awaiting

A pontoon wavering
Atop undiscriminating seas
Grander Eras.

How seas provide current

Twelve-eyed prophets

Ringing ears

Dens of thieves and books of lies wearing purple

Angry felines gnawing scruffs

Sleeping stories of living untold

Drowning

            The sea calls a name
Undiscriminating
Grander Eras I heard.

Thomas's Winter pt 1 - Firewood

          “Don’t forget to patch that hole in the basement wall before you leave tomorrow.” The echo of his father was deafening.
          “Alright.” Thomas’s voice croaked with the strain of frozen December air and too many cigarettes that morning.
          The sun had just exhaled the last of its dawn and now cast the crisp jail bar shadows of the naked forest across the two of them as they inspected the snowed land for salvageable gems of firewood. His father led the way several yards ahead. Thomas had forgotten how much he missed winter. He managed to survive southern summers, even enjoy them. Still it was in his blood to love the colorless landscape. Thomas already began debating whether or not he would in fact patch the wall. He could just as easily tell his father he’d never mentioned it to him. After all, it wasn’t Thomas’s house, nor did he wish to make it such. He knew the scheme to be indecent, that Mom would be ashamed of him if she could hear his thoughts. For a moment he hated her. He hated her for wanting to relocate so far from the city, for smoking, for marrying his father, for having her foresight so Thomas may inherit it as her child.
          “Tom?”
          “Yeah?”
          “Are you stronger than me?”
          Thomas looked up at his father – into his eyes this time – and through the distance he scrutinized the lazy skin of his eyelids slumped over their lashes, wanting to sleep like the rest of his father’s body. “Yeah, Dad.”
          “Come see if you can break this branch off. It looks dry enough for kindling.”
          Thomas made his way up the white veiled crest. He felt as sheets of the snow, partially melted and refrozen into crusty layers, gave way to the pressure of being walked on. He continued to juggle his commitment to the wall. It was all pointless – collecting firewood, getting a Christmas tree later, patching the hole in the wall – all as pointless as asking his father to pick up milk from the store yesterday.
          Life had become circular in the presence of his father. They might carry on about what day and time Thomas would drive him to perform his regular checkup or when to schedule the fMRI later that month only to have the same conversation again at lunch, at the end of the day, and continue these iterations up to the day of the appointment. These events were becoming much more frequent. Thomas thought of the hole in the wall – a vortex – his father and him spiraling toward the center of critical mass and inevitable collapse. He thought of his father leading the way to collect the firewood this morning.
          “This one right here.” His father pointed to a specific branch amongst the array spiraling out of the fallen tree. Thomas dropped his pile across a jumble of young collapsed maples that failed to survive the season. With a quick twist-and-pull the tree relinquished its arm to him. He went on to snap it into halves over his knee, his father watching. “So I was thinking of inviting your sister over for the holidays.”
          The snapping branch spoke for Thomas. Why couldn’t it have been Celia? He thought. Why couldn’t their mom have called her, being the older one, to handle their father? Why couldn’t she be deemed responsible enough? These were, of course, futile questions. Joe’s Gentlemen Club wasn’t paying enough to cover her rent, let alone her cocaine. She may have had a chance were she one of the dancers, but she didn’t make the cut. No one spoke of it openly, but Celia was somehow robbed of genetic advantage. Under the seduction of low key light and booze side projects made ends meet. Thomas recalled his visit to her inner city flat.
          “It’s very… hipster.” He took his steps lightly, lest the floorboards creak at his remarks.
          “Fuck you. You live out of your car.” She tossed her candy red wool coat on her bed. In four steps she turned to face him, leaned against the kitchen counter, and slouched into her cigarette.
          “That’ll all change soon. I got some magazines looking at my resume. If they read my blog they’ll figure it out.”
          “Mom ask about seeing your place yet?”
          “Oh yeah.”
          “And?”
          “It’s a work in progress.” Thomas casually inspected the bed as he sat but did all he could not to imagine its history.
          She gave a puckered grin through another drag of her Newport. “You’re a fucking pussy.”
          “Well…” he thought of all the criticisms floating around the dilapidated room like dead fish ready to be harpooned, “you have your approach I have mine.”
          “I guess.”
          “Speaking of secrets, did you finally tell Mom you dropped out?”
          “Yeah she’s pissed.”
          “What about Dad?”
          “That’s her call.”
          Thomas snapped the branch over his knee again.
          “Tom?”
          “Hm?”
          “What do you think?”
          “Of what?”
          “Inviting Celia… for Christmas.”
          He snapped another. “She doesn’t have the money.”
          “Well I can cover that.”
          And another. “I think she’s busy studying. They’ve got finals going on right now.”
          “Through the holiday?”
          “I just don’t think she’ll be able to come, Dad.”
          “Well I should at least call. You should too.”
          Thomas picked up the rest of his bundle. “Where do you want to go later? You didn’t answer me before we left.”
          “Where to go later?”
          “For the tree. To get the Christmas tree.” The broken nubs of the branches stabbed into Thomas’s arms.
          “Oh.” His father turned and continued across the hill.
          Thomas stared at him, through him, through the next twenty years. It played out uncontrollably. Today it was the Christmas tree, then it would be bathing a decrepit father that can’t remember his son’s name; fighting with him at the supermarket because he has no concept of his whereabouts and suspects Thomas to be an attacker; wandering the woods around the house for hours, calling police, forcing himself to hope that his father isn’t fatally injured by a car or a fall to the concrete… forcing himself not to hope that it’s finally over; staring into the sunken confused eyes of a withered body, submerged in the bathtub as they look past him – a struggle to find a soul – and ask, “Thomas?”
          That will be the moment, Thomas decided. That will be the day that it’s too much to take. The explanation will be easy; any number of his father’s medications could cause it. It will be quick and too likely to be disbelieved by anyone. Thomas won’t be looking. He’ll be downstairs or out for a short errand… too likely to disbelieve… perhaps even inevitable. It’s what Thomas would want if it were himself. When it is himself. Thomas was nauseous now.
          “Do you remember the name of the place you kids always loved going to? They usually had good ones.”
          “It was… it started with a ‘T’ didn’t it?”
          “I don’t know, I’m asking you.”
          “It was…” Thomas struggled. “Fuck. Oh fuck I know this.”
          “You know, I’m sure it’s closed down by now.”
          “I’m telling you I know this.”
          The nausea mutated into panic. Thomas compulsively began replaying Sudoku and various memory games in his mind. He was a fiend of them and regularly placed his keys and wallet in uncommon places, reciting and constantly testing his memory. Confronted with the event horizon of the vortex Thomas swam madly against the current combating what no one else seemed to realize. Again he cursed his mom for passing her foresight down to him.
          His father once recounted a brief history of his family to Thomas when he was a young boy. Thomas’s grandparents were killed in a car accident when his father was little so there wasn’t much to know. What his father could recall was Thomas’s great grandfather and how he was known to wander the streets confused in his late years. Back then such things were blamed on past injuries like his fall from the ladder thirty years earlier. Even as a young boy Thomas knew it to be a misdiagnosis by the neighborhood whether his own father was willing to admit it or not as he struggled to remember the task at hand each day. If Thomas somehow managed to escape the same fate he found no solace in it.
          There would be periods of time, weeks or even months, when Thomas and Celia would be saved from visiting their grandmother on Mom’s side. Thomas noted this and duly deemed it strange, the only thing stranger being the actual visits themselves.
          She lived in a small condo their mom helped pay for out of her own salary. Decorated with dream catchers and hundreds of little dolls made of horse hair, leather, and colored beads, Thomas assumed somewhere in his bloodline he carried a Native American tribe. He and Celia would sit casually yet always disciplined – an act they grew accustom to – watching whatever channel their grandma had last left on the TV, cautious to not watch anything modern lest it be condemned as evil. When he was six Thomas had once drawn a picture of his favorite dinosaur, a stegosaurus, for his grandma. They too were evil and thus wiped out in accordance to God’s will, as well as holocaust Jews and the passengers of the Titanic.
          Sometimes Mom would get up to prepare soup or coffee in the kitchen, leaving Celia and him alone with their grandma. She would stare out the window silent until Mom returned to usher her back to reality. When she confronted their grandfather about her condition he ignored her, far too concerned with the return of the alien mother-ship to dispense Jesus’s new edicts… this is why he had to exile himself to his mobile home in Mexico in the first place.
          As Thomas became a teen he was no longer forced to visit their grandma, left only with his fragmented childhood memories. He decided that she was staring out at the evil surrounding the condo, reciting silent prayers to protect herself from demons, ill-intentioned men, the landlord, the modern world… evil things. He came to this conclusion sitting on a bench at the school yard staring blankly at the swaying trees and classmates scurrying about him as they made their way to buses and cars borrowed from their parents to go home. This was the vice Thomas wrestled with.
          As Thomas’s mom lay in the hospital bed, beyond the salvation of chemo or any other therapies, cradling her last handful of breaths, he saw a glint of grace in her eyes. A gratefulness that she would not go out like her mother or uncle; that she was still fully aware of reality. In Thomas’s family they did not speak of frailty; not of his grandfathers’, not of his father’s, not of his grandma’s or great uncle. All things despairing were left to be understood in unspoken time. So, accordingly, as she dispensed the final breath counting down to her death, she looked into Thomas placing her fingers to his forehead and grazed them across his brow, over his temple and to his cheek. She gave her final blessing of safe travels. She and Thomas knew his fate. Celia had been robbed of all genetic advantages except the one Thomas would give up everything to have. In Thomas’s family they did not speak of frailty, only of how similar he was to his grandma and the things he too did like his father. So Thomas played Sudoku and crosswords, counted cards in euchre and solitaire, and recited the location of his keys and wallet each evening; a mantra to tether his mind to each day.
          Perhaps, he thought, he should have never pursued his journalism career with earnest, never gotten an apartment. It might be better if he lived homeless and not dependent on upkeep like his father. When things turned for the worst he would just die of his fragility and be swept away by the streets he chose to call home; an animal in the wild. Natural.
          “Remember when we tried to cut down that tree in the backyard, the old birch in the backyard?” His father’s voice was crisp.
          “And Celia was freaking out,” Thomas chimed in.
          “She would not leave that trunk.”
          “I can’t believe we left it for another… what… Five years?”
          “Seven.”
          “Really?”
          “Mm hm.” He was certain.
          Thomas laughed. “She should have been an environmental activist.”
          “She was afraid of it hitting the house.”
          “You’re joking.”
          “Oh she didn’t care how sure your Mom or I were. Out of the question.”
          “I thought she loved the tree… for climbing or something.”
          “Nope. She didn’t want it to hit the house.”
          “The branches damaged the roof in a storm a few years later.”
          “Sure did.”
          “Oh god…” Thomas had caught up to his father by now, pile still in hand. “She refused to let you guys cut it down because she didn’t want it to damage the house?”
          “Yep.”
          “Oh my god! I didn’t even realize that. I never knew that was the reason.”
                “I’m sure your Mom or I mentioned it at some point. Sometimes things click differently when you hear it again.”
          Thomas looked at his Dad. “Yeah… Wow, yeah that’s ironic.”
          “We did a lot of silly things for you kids. You didn’t know any better. That’s just what growing older is all about.” The words stretched out and covered the time between the two of them out there in the woods.
          “Right.”
          “After all that sort of shit happens you just laugh it off by my age.” He turned and smiled at Thomas.
          Thomas chuckled. “Right. So where did you want to get the Christmas tree?”
          “I like those.” He gestured to a crowd of towering pines haloed by glowing backlit clouds of the mid-morning.
          “Yeah just give me a day or two to shape one down to the size of the house.”
          “There’s a place about five minutes toward town that had some good looking ones. I saw them while driving back from the store the other day.”
          “Alright. Let’s turn back and get some lunch then go.” They had collected all the wood they needed.
          “Sure. Oh hey, Thomas, before I forget…”
          “What’s up?”
          “There’s a hole in the basement wall. Something fell over or something, I just noticed it the other day. Anyways, could you patch it up before you leave tomorrow?”
          “Yeah, Dad… I will.”
          Much more frequent.

Sea of Stars

I have camped across the nation.
Slept under velvet skies of Yellow Stone,
Of Adirondack,
Of the Porcupines,
And never seen the velvet glisten.

My sprawls across nature; objectified.
Goals, attainable, require rest...
Too exhausted to stare at velvet
After eight miles on foot
Through nature's bounty.

I need to
Reinvent objectivity; my goals
I must seek out the velvet and it's glean

This is what populates my conscious
While in the vast sound stage
In front of the lens - glassy - it glistens
Like a star.
Like a star....

...Look at all these here; all of them
This stage, this scene,
We are all a single frame - 
Instances
- Looking back at one another,

But this is a lie; a deception
of our own vanity.
I have a story, twenty four years long.
They have a story...
They have a story...

We burn.
We burn to shine,
Every dot on this canvas...
Triumphant tales of conquer we dream
to regale to some gussied reporter on ET

Define us, lens.
Make a sea of stars shine.
Lap velvet over us,
Over our worn hopes.
Make a sea of stars, we dream.

Soup at Zuma

The air hums amicably.
Crisp Wednesday midnights
make for good company
on long-kneaded days as these.

Five dollars will fulfill their destiny
tonight, at Zuma on Old Woodward,
where a Pink-haired, wired thing
strikes a smile and the register drawer.

The Minestrone noodles fold
and slop over themselves, like the day,
working against their midnight hour
resolved to stay noodles long as possible.

There's no need to chew.
The small heap of vegetarianism works
its way down into my abyss and says,
"Goodnight," like the day

Tuesday Morning

This is the rhythm that never ends.
Each foot forward is progress;
Is Discovery
Of the topic we shan’t ever write of,
Architects of snappy culture.
Scrutinizers of syllables

Or so I've been told by some
And myself
(and disregarded many a time might I add).

I have watched sails burn in furious stride
And even burned my own in name of it.
(a few times in fact)
Holding ashes, I think we all contemplate
The cinders that stain our palms
That we so choose to inhale,
Harvesting cancer in our breath.

Gratefully, the ashes have cooled and settled
I walk with them in small jars,
Contained and appropriately labeled,
So not to jumble the contents
Or let it spill upon me and others
As I walk to the rhythm.

It is remarkably paced.
It is constant;
A heartbeat in meditation.

The Monster in the Mirror (VI)

There are two figures atop a summer hilltop
It is day... and sometimes night
One is a priest sitting in the grass
The other is a soldier swinging with their sword
They both have a Monster on their back

Their Monsters whisper of what they are
And what they shall become... what they shall not do.
The priest weeps for the fall of everything
The soldier laughs at the challenge of victory
The summer will be long

The two sit quietly unlike their world
Next to each other...
Ten thousand ways apart.
The priest wears black by nature
The soldier wears color by choice

The Monster knows me well
The Monster is my father
The Monster is my desire
But I vouch
The Monster shall never be my child

The Fighter

A powerful thing you are
A beautiful thing
Born and made of Violence
You are sworn to it
Both a captive and a politician of it
You are the fighter

Every stomp and quiet step you take is a battle
Take them! Take them on I say!
The children the parents the dictators and the lovers
Show them your dominion
Inform them of your power over them
They shall not pass and you shall stand above

Scars? What of them?
You flash them brazenly like all your bloodied comrades
"Chicks dig scars" and P.S. Fuck Off
Yes I hear you and thus I will not assume an iota of you
You are complex, impenetrable on all fronts
You are the fighter

Fight for your power so they know you never fell
Fight for your friends and family so they may never be touched
Fight for the weak under your wings
Fight for your survival
Fight the sex that destroys and vanquish it
Fight the men with their own swords

Your gloves are as iron as your will
The arena you've built is astounding and vast
The walls feel cagey like iron; like your gloves; like your will
Gripping the walls peering through the spaces I think I see you
Your swing is percussive and piercing
I've no doubt your stamina outlasts entire stars

Your arena is vast.

The Monster Rewards (V)

The spring blossoms with uncertain tones of light and shadow
The days and the nights are no more
The Monster is my father
All the words and wants and imagined worlds;
A shade of blue or black on the grounds of EveryCity
An appalled universe no longer knows us

"Do you recognize it?"
"You are now a warrior"
"On the grounds you command"

As fair Dennis called me General
And soul-sworn colleagues offered honor,
Rendered their loyalty to my broken spine
Bestowed me with relics of a kinship
All in heavy expectation.
So withered by his own power

"Did I not promise you a universe?"
"Did I not promise you a god?"

I am empowered and swollen and uncontrolled
Becoming lost; devoured by something else entirely
Buckling once more
The Monster cast out a heavy wing
And I hide in the shadow of its amnesty
Where all the tears and mournings and dark days are cast in still iron

Time drips intravenously 
"Some day, but not today."
Laconic, drifting, I rattle my mind at duality
"It is necessary"
I wonder what we are, the Monster and I
"We are the importance of nightfall"
We are dark
"The contrast that ensures certainty"
Is summer upon us?

Good Partner

"Stoics are the bones of us"
I spoke softly
To ease a roaring ocean
Tidal waves clawing for breath

Farewell to your beauty
Farewell to your heinous
Farewell to your sick
Farewell to your tears
Farewell to your bruises
Farewell to your unscathed girls
Farewell to your banks
Farewell to your dark parents
Farewell to your tantrums
Farewell to your legends
Farewell to your myths
Farewell to your science
Farewell to your godless prophet
Farewell to your rock
Farewell to your desperate brother
Farewell to your teen idols
Farewell to your fried feasts
Farewell to your business
Farewell to your Manipulation
Farewell to you at twenty

And I'll meet you with my one-line grin
Where still waters still run deep
Then perhaps you can call me friend
And I'll tell you about my dreams 

Biographies of...

The high noon came like lightning
and thrust tentacles of life
into the barrel chests of midday manikins

Lit up like Spartans
they frenzied amidst their townspeople
consuming fish bones
, sour grapes
, labor
and all unloved things
to prove it was never so
; unloved things
and manikins

The Monster & the Machine: The Monster's Prophecy (IV)

"Do you understand now?"
Its fangs dripped with my glints of dawn as we sat in the
     winter's silence
"Are you still now? Are you obsidian?"
I feared we would regret this; with our heartless futures and
     unspoken songs
"We will live enough."
But what of the Astrologer's prophecy?
"I am your eternity. I am your prophet."
I meandered and meditated and mourned for our
     decimated carnations
"Your carnations, not mine. I will make you a king."
The Monster circled me stalking my words and my wants and my
     imagined destinies
"Are you obsidian?"
And it stretched forth a talon riddled claw

With all my fighting will I could not deny the neon pigments
     shown through a Kryptonite God
"Do you understand now?"
Here the tales of EveryCity were told
Here is where the EveryColor was born
Iridescence was us
"All the god and universe you could dream of..."
So I flailed out a hand, all rotten with apathy and intellect
And the Monster gripped it feverously with prophetic knowledge
     of black days
Throwing up my limb, stripped naked, the Monster declared
     new order
"All hail."
The Monster fused with me and vindicated my birth and became
     my father

                                                                       Spring had come.

The Monster's Genisis (--)

When I was a young man I remember patroling
Observing, through a dark open space, between glass cubit walls
Litanies of bodies frozen in their immortality for our entertainment

          It was art
          It was science
          It was a terrible thought

And I focused deeply, for what could have been years
For what has been years
On a the mummified scurry of red and blue railroads that brought all of our parts to life

         All the flesh shed away
         All the bullshit drilled off
         All the life that flowed and made us went for miles

And I saw, so firmly, this same core in winter trees and satellite roadmaps
So foundational I could have believed it to be everything
Until I drove across the map and climbed the trees and found no minds

          What minds?
          What souls?
          What Jared do you speak of?

Now, years later, The winter had come for me
And an icy wind blew over my naked face and stomped out that which I thought
Was a roaring fire, but revealed, only to be the shell of match flame

What are you, Jared A.D. Radtke?
I am a servant
I am a toiler of details who seeks perfection
I am a conscious, a moral calculator struggling to smiile
I am a hefty eye-high pile of social principles and right doings and justices
I am a yearning for completion, for stories untold to be told
I am a renowned fantasy of locomotive progression

          That is what you do... But what of Jared?

What of Jared?

What of you?
Tell me!
Tell me, you! You, reader of literature and poetry
High-minded aristocrat
So fucking articulate and untouchable
You, bleary-eyed liberal with all your cool books of thought
Munching on your hyper-fucking-organic corn and carrots
You, upright citizen, Jesus.... YOU!
Tie strung tight ready to suck affixated cock!

What
                      of
                                        you?

What if I were to tell you a gray tale
A gray tale of a gray boy
Of whom the world did nothing to...
                  and nothing for, either.
This boy was the creator's chalice
And this boy can't do math
And this boy listened to rage all night
And the boy resented the world for nothing
                  - as far as a boy could be concerned
And collapsed into fantasies
And found a modus operandi promising life eternal
And everything was for it

And when he realized reality insists upon the departure of roses and good luck charms
His fantasies promised to stay and made a pact
                  to always stay
The fantasies grew fangs
To clench departing roses and charms

Now the boy has lived for ten long years
With a monster on his back
Now a man, he is thanked for it every day,
And the Monstor too.

You Will Know Me at Midnight: You Will Know Me at Dusk

You know what I see when we sit here?
When the air navigates between us?
And you rattle all sorts of cagey places?

I know you, I do.
I've seen you on rock stages
In spikey percussions
In the gushes of blood and voice
spout out from the clouds deep into black yards

And you will know me when you learn to drill
And sink deep and forever
Into a single thread

And when you know how it feels to pluck that thread
To run it between your lobe's fingers
Than strum ferverously into heaven
You will know me and that you and I are in fact
Very...

Epiphany

The days have been walking
Deep wrinkles set heavy in their faces
As I have labored tirelessly 15 and plus hours
My brain's spokes a stuttering endlessness:

"Quiet!"
"Heat off!"
"Rolling!"
Which talent and gimmicks come next?

But this morning my conscious peaked out the window
Under slept but rested, I sat up
Letting my eyes defocus across the infinity of frosty planes
A thick cake of tranquility

Then, I knew finally,
Why we shan't toil ourselves over pass time labor

Home Life

Falling,
Drifting drifting drifting...
The pavement welcomes me
With the somber march of piano solos--

--The earbuds protected me.
I'm cradled by my leather office throne,
And the cool din of electronic windows
Into my perilous imaginations.

I erect my homely figure with tired,
      Heavy,
                 Gelatinous,
                              Knees...

          I ingest my perimeter.

This beige box in which I reside,
Like college dorm rooms,
Has Teflon walls incapable of photographs...
Going on twenty years...

From here I listen to Tim
Cry out into the dark of night,
Sleeping on full time jobs
And resuscitation of ancient principles.

Mother wakes up in an angry winter sweat.
Paces back and forth weeping for the cat we never owned.
Whaling about the fall of Men;
How incompetent and fucking hateful we are.

          I make it to the end of the hallway.

Beside me is the cave
Where Pierce guzzled his grass, speed, and melancholy,
And Taylor and I pinned him down for exorcisms of rage.
Now? Tim just gasps for air in his motor snores.

At the base of the steps Shady ages with the season.
Forgets that Taylor and Pierce aren't coming home...
Stares at me passionately vacant
Protesting my orders to go up and sleep.

Hissing flaccid embers...
Mother forgot to turn off the fireplace;
Exhaustion from war
and living.

          Finally, the BattlezoneTheatre of War;

I stand in the contemplative glow of the kitchen lamp,
Glance my fingers across the forgotten battle scar
Where Tim landed four knuckles
In desperation to avoid mother's face.

Before earbuds
I watched the war
And the sight of lovers holding hands was awkward;
My Chinese neighbors calling for their children in Mandarin.

On the table is a letter from Grandpa Richard
About how Jane's rants of alien devices and moon conspiracies
Weren't his fault but the shrinks', and now he's set a trap for them
From his lonely boat in the Pacific.

          I don't know what - I didn't bother to finish...

First Steps to Victory

Greeting my heroes for the first time in months,
bowing at their stanza pages for revrant wisdom,
In the low-down uptown cafe,
I snatch the whisper of memory incense.
Lingering from my corded sweater,
Burned in happy obsession and calmifications,
The incense is a beautiful teacher with fiery hair -
          Who snapped and poofed away my potassium torch
          I used to burn a hole in my chest
          To fill with obsidian marbles and coal-lead monoliths
- that asked "what are you doing there?"
To a gremlin rocking back in forth in the corner of my skull
Gnawing on my liver muttering,
"My work is all I have"
"My work is all I have"
"But isn't it beautiful?"
"But isn't it beautiful?"
"Isn't it beautiful???????"
And new prophets, and incense and grass graced me.
Explained to the gremlin that New Years had passed.
Valentines was approaching.
I'd need it back... everything.
So the gremlin sneered -- "Fine then!"
And rung the juices and tears out of my ragged liver,
Squeezed...
And squeezed,
Until my machine-face buckled.
As I gasped for expressions of love and breathing,
Incense plunged into my back
Punished the gremlin with a kiss
And it cried with me in apology.
Now, the incense fills my nostrils

Grand stars and christmas lights, gouache and leather notebooks, cheeks and music, incense;
Welcome home