POETRY, The Kitchen

the blessing of the kitchen

Chef came up to the line,
looked at me and asked.
“you ready, Lobo,
you’re not gonna fail me,
are you?”
“No, Chef.”

I pulled out my little maraca,
Rev. Larry gave me years back
to use to call forth the Kitchen Gods;
and danced on the line
back and forth,
shaking it.
singing a prayer in Ianish.
An’ I was off.
Chef started calling in the tickets.

Songs played in my head
and I danced all night.
spinning and turning.
and putting the the plates out,
wave after wave
until we all started asking.
“Is the last ticket in?”

“Time to pack up, clean up, and leave.”
Chef replied.

I cleaned my knives, spoons, and spatula,
put ’em in my knife roll,
and rolled it like a cigarette;
then I went to Chef,
before I headed to the bar down the street
to meet with the rest of the crew.

“Well chef, I did the dance,
walked the walk,
blessed the line.
we came through great.”
He smiled.
“You forgot to bless Pastry”

2001, POETRY, Syllable Tapestries, The Uncollected Poems

The Half Poems

1
I live in a house that is half-done?
Plywood floors, glued and placed together,
made to stay with nail guns.
Empty shells and miss-fired nails settle about.
My whole life is packed away in tomato boxes and milk crates,
climbing the four plastered walls of my room
and two storage bens.
The pieces I do pull out, clutter the floor,
to sleep with the dogs, dirt and fleas.

2
I recline in my half-made bed
half-dressed,
gazing about the half-lit room
which bicircumvents me.
I perceive things in halves:
Halfized.
I revert my glare to my half-bulging stomache.
It’s bulging not from food,
but words.
Words from this book and that.
Words from this voice and that.
I taste from each,
putting down
that which is left half-read,
half-heard.
I only have half the time.
The corporations and government have the other.

2.5
I do not eat as others,
finishing all that is on my plate.
I eat as a chef,
tasting
before I send the dish away.
‘How do you know it’s good,
if you don’t try it yourself’
So when I sit and eat as others,
my meal departs with the waitress
half-completed.
Half-eaten.
And I, half drunk
on a half carafe of red Chilean wine.

3
I have forgotten my childhood,
vanquished,
and repelled it from my truck window.
Pieces of my life fly about the black tar river,
run over by slick rubber tires,
jerked up into the air
to catch on a grill,
or float half-chaotically down upon the river again;
sooner or later, to be picked up by a prison detail.
I only have half a life.
Do I have enough of it to be honest?
How can I be more then half-truthful
anymore.

POETRY

Mirror Eyes

I plucked my eyes out,
one by one
and replaced ’em
with mirrors.
So what you see,
when you look into my eyes,
and read my words, is not me,
but yourself.
What you judge
          is not me, but yourself.
What you hate is not me,
              but yourself,
                                 and your mistakes.
As I declared a long time ago;
my howlings, 
                  I keep to myself and the moon.

POETRY

The Buick

My car
was given a black eye
and a broken jaw.
So I took her to the doctor;
but the insurance man took her away,
And put her to sleep.
Yes, they took her away from me.
My car. The Buick.
Mean ole insurance man.
 “Snap Fingers”