the perfect poem doesn’t exist nor does the perfect blow job the perfect cover band or the perfect alibi
but so what the blow job broke a long dry spell the cover band flailed and screamed the alibi held up for a while and the poem appeared in a zine edited by insane people all during a week when chaos battered the rich man’s stock market
and that’s kind of perfect in a don’t give a fuck kind of way
I’m writing this on a 24″ screen computer that just made me US$1100+ poorer, and such amount may not seem like much to a European or North American reader, but for a low-income neighborhood third-world 25-year old poet this is close to (if not) a financial suicide.
And to think I started writing on tiny pieces of paper. Crazy. Crazy. Crazy. Crazy.
I’m also sitting next to 70oz of beer, and I’m going to type the most expensive poems on earth with the help of this bad boy.
Now, on to the next poem! The beer is finite, but the will isn’t.
the instinct to procreate hardwired into all domesticated primates has led me to send you this valentine card in a facile, shallow attempt to convince you that my biological imperative actually represents something ephemeral and profound like “love,” rather than being yet another example in a long line of ritualistic gestures intended to daze and confuse you just long enough for me to climb on top of you in yet another fruitless attempt to plant my sperm inside your cervix. sincerely, your honey bun
I lost my drinking hand. This kind of thing happens all the time. People lose stuff. Keys. Wallets. Virginity. Marriages. Houses. Doesn’t matter.
I thought I’d left it at the titty bar on the boardwalk but when I called and asked about my drinking hand Chris, the bartender, said he hadn’t seen it but that he’d ask around. Bartenders are used to people losing stuff.
It’s possible I left it at the liquor store. Jim, the owner, is a good guy, a bootstraps kind of guy. He’d put my drinking hand in the Lost & Found if I left it on the counter or dropped it by the cooler. If Liquors & Lottery had a Lost & Found.
The name Liquors & Lottery suggests Jim hasn’t lost his sense of humor. But its blunt description does suggest he’s lost his creativity touch. Once that’s lost not even Chris, the bartender, can find it no matter how much he asks around.
Losing my drinking hand in such an unexpected way reminds me of that story by Gogol in which a guy loses his nose. He spends the entire story looking for his nose and it eventually turns up in a cathedral and refuses to return to his face. Gogol never lost his creativity.
I doubt my drinking hand is in a cathedral. It’s gonna’ turn up at that little titty bar on the boardwalk. It’s Amateur Night. My drinking hand is probably working its way up some pretty girl’s skirt right now. I’m calling Chris back before I’m banned for life.
You are my medicine when things are fever-pitched fucked-up shit dismantled glitched. When calm disperses like cigarette smoke in fan blades, overhead— tarring popcorn ceilings and textured walls with burns and invisible drops of carcinogenic rain. What better salve for the poundings in my chest— palpitations consternations vascularizations reformations indemnifications of a life, juxtaposed, away from those eyes that mouth that touch of skin, yours, the sedation of cool breath on hot forehead and the combing of fingertips through currents of sweat-matted hair— this world I know. You are my medicine.
I sit in diners and write poetry, baby – it ain’t much. And my bank account is losing which means I’m losing in this game of life where everything is measured by money. But there is something to be said about Perseverance when you’re on the losing side. I won an award for Perseverance in 8th grade and it must’ve been telling because it is the one thing that’s stuck with me no matter what my situation has been. It sits on my shoulder like a little angel whispering keep going, you can do this. So I listen to it, trust it and write this poem.
Captain Kirk always made me hot and i desperately wanted him to fuck me, just as i imagined him fucking Mr Spock.
i wanted to be bent over his Captain’s chair, on the bridge, Warp speed! Mr Scott, warp speed!
he would whisper in my ear as he took me, thrusting hard and furious, whispering about the Gorn and Tribbles, and how i felt better than Yeoman Rand and Nurse Chapel, or the green girl from Orion.
we would transport down to the surface of a strange new world, make love in a jail cell after they captured us. Mr Spock would beam in to save us, but he caught us joined together, his eyebrow would raise, fascinating.
and i would die in his arms, as red shirts always die, and no one gets between Captain Kirk and Mr Spock.