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The Easiest Thing in the World - 1. The Easiest Thing in the World, and other poems
.
.
Preamble
Just A….
“You’re just a…” this; “Just a…” that,
Have I too often in my life heard;
“Cuz, you’re just a Fucking F*g…
“Yeah, you’re just no better than that word.”
And they’ll say how stick and stones
Are best for a c*cks*ck*r who must
Be shown his place in this world…
Think Matthew Shepard on bob-wire trussed.
While the ‘gay panic’ defense,
For predators like his murderers,
Springs them scot-free out of jail;
The kills are licensed to perjurers.
Premeditating takes time,
So I’ll just have to accept the tag
Till the day they come for me,
Saying, “No one cares. You’re just…. A F*g.”
Poem No. 1
I have read how Melville’s
Seventy-two Civil War poems
Were composed within weeks,
With not a one of them started till
The war’d come to an end.
Then from his pen poured forth
An unbroken stream of consciousness,
Recalling the details
Of moods and events from start to close,
In poem on poem.
So, as the three-year mark
Inches forward for the Pulse murders,
It’s time I too let go
And remember what I saw and felt
In tragedy’s aftermath.
To free my consciousness,
To allow long-stymied processing,
Is now my only goal –
That and remembering the victims
And the piece of hate that killed them.
Poem No. 2
We’re told of the murderer’s
“Religious mercy”
How with his virgin handgun
He put them down,
A “kind” bullet through the brain
For those crawling –
Already cut to ribbons
In the opening
Spray from his assault rifle –
Crawling away,
Bleeding to death, yet alive,
Executed
By abomination – his
“Religious mercy.”
Poem No. 3[1]
I remember seeing them on TV, the two families
agreed to bury fiancés Juan Ramon Guerreo and Christopher “Drew" Leinonen side by side, the joint headstone to memorialize their love and optimism
for a future that will never be. So I would rather pretend I do not know
family selfishness split them up – one buried in Michigan; one in Florida –
but if need be, let this
Juan Guerrero
& Drew Leinonen
stand memorial to your love.
.
Poem No. 4
A Triolet…
So the reporter insisted,
robbing their dignity in death,
”gay” were not the names be-listed –
So the reporter insisted –
purporting lies much too twisted
and be-fouling them with his breath.
So the reporter insisted –
robbing their dignity in death.
Poem No. 5
Prelude:
Here within my head, like
strains of involuntary recall,
the horrors play back, like
his rifle’s relentless recoil.
Villanelle:
For, if not us, who’ll remember?
Despite all the things they might say,
It’s we who must nurse this ember
Tell who made June a December,
Dashing so many lives away –
For, if not us, who’ll remember?
They are prone to misremember
And politicized. Come what may,
It’s we who must nurse this ember
With the Club’s dead, we’re a member,
Each a survivor in our way –
For, if not us, who’ll remember?
Time will work to un-remember,
Smother feelings under its sway –
It’s we who must nurse this ember.
And never let them dismember
The truth of why they died that day,
For, if not us, who’ll remember?
It’s we who must nurse this ember.
Poem No. 6[2]
Of Man nor God, I neither knew
Yet each held sway upon my heart
As if the other owned the part
Both lied about and said was true.
And so a dirge-like melody
Haunts over and over again
To be sad incessantly when
Mad laughter sounds like elegy.
Funny though, for it’s always here –
This schism split down to the bone,
Making me half-cherish my own
Backwards logic like something clear.
For neither Man nor God can know,
The human heart about to break
Does so not through chancing mistake,
But cocoon-like, so it may grow.
Poem No. 7
Deniers come in many shades –
Purple to say Jehovah’s Witnesses
Weren’t killed by the Nazi Machine
Rouge to insist how the Khmer
‘liberated’ the Cambodian folks
By putting their skulls on display
Red for the Republicans who
Stick their ostrich heads in the Fox ‘News’ sand
Of foreign-controlled media
Gold stars of effort go to those
Who say the gold stars of the Holocaust’s
Six-mill died from nat’ral causes
And for Pulse Deniers, what shade
Best troops their lie that Gay people weren’t killed
In blind hatred for who they loved?
There’s not one hue that fits them best,
So blithely march on, you Pulse Deniers,
Under your rainbow flag of hate.
Poem No. 8
Skyscraper:
Left alone
in shadow’s reverie
how soon the human brain picks apart
the pixels of the matrix we think of as soul,
but what comforts lie beyond the void
viewed through a lack of love
un-absolved?
There are none,
and you see what I mean
before I have a chance to say it,
for every human connection must still bind us
if we are to proceed as a race
unafraid of progress
kept level.
Quantum thought
must rule our every move
within this chess game of existence,
and more so, it must be unconsciously given
to those frightened of humanity,
causing pause in their heart
when they hate.
So, left then
by shadow’s reverie,
the mind of Man blows itself apart
each time it examines what makes up our own soul,
but so it must be in a matrix
sought as a void to fill
with our love.
Poem No. 9
Kyrielle:
Too often madness is homegrown,
And hearing the killer's father left no doubt
When he said the H-words needed to atone:
‘Kill 'em, and let God sort them out.'
He appeared on television
As victims on the floor were still bleedin'out,
Lauding the wisdom of his son's decision:
'Kill 'em, and let God sort them out.'
And what of the murderer's wife?
She accepted his evil plan as "devout,"
Knowing of his Grindr account and secret life:
'Kill 'em, and let God sort them out.'
So must we praise divine mercy
As but an ugly plant from hate's soil to sprout,
While before our living eyes we're forced to see:
'Kill 'em, and let God sort them out.'
Poem No. 10[3]
Tanka-Stanza:
One hundred and nine
sad trooping of the colors –
just one video
of support and compassion
tagged "fake news," One. Hundred. Times...
Poem No. 11
.
Jack Spicer, the poet of note,Warned fellow poets not to rush into things.
He testified vision comes first,
And poems should start like the Myth of Leda,
Knowing our fate lies in God’s arms.
How am I to be hero to this work,
when all I view seems unbearable?
The posted videos are myriad,
and comments left soon after the event
filled with warmth, and sympathy, and anger,
are now buried beneath avalanches
of bot Holocaust Deniers moved on
to teach our children how the queers made up
a media-lie known as Orlando.
So where is my humanity as I
Pick up this pen and begin this poem?
Where’s my vision of how this stream of words
will settle in the mind of a reader;
will I be able to become hero
and see the end of this poem before
my streaming flow of ink and consciousness
write the very last word upon this page…?
I intended this to recall to mind
how the flood of the initial efforts
of reporters, commentators and Gops
lecturing survivors how this event –
how they themselves amid the blood-carnage –
weren’t targeted for whom they love, for whom
they watched their boyfriends, girlfriends, and spouses
be executed with the F-word on
the lips of their witch-hunting assailant,
was an assault on “America,” not Gays…
how it had nothing to do with them, those
nasty F*gg*ts and their nasty quote-un-quote
“Sexuality,” that straight-made straitjacket
to limit, control, castrate, lobotomize,
retaliation-free for a century
until the Gay Minority forced them
to use our self-chosen moniker of Pride –
the Gay Word – how no, this mass-murdering
has to do with anything except that.
And how, in the initial force-feeding
of this coverup, the pale whitewashing,
noble men and women stood in Washington
to belie the lie as utter hogwash.
Republicans too, some of them that is,
suddenly grew a backbone and then claimed
the Gay Minority as theirs too
for the first time uttering the idea
that Gay Americans matters to them.
A far cry though from Democrats’ inclusion,
the party who first advocated for
non-discrimination; a Queer Bill of Rights;
in its televised National Convention
way back in 1976.
So, now my vision for this poem seems
like an idea struck upon a cold flint
a million years ago, for then I saw
a poem of me watching videos
of those brave Republicans in Congress
standing up for Truth, Justice – and for Us –
and listing here their names for posterity,
but the pathetic reality is,
I can’t watch them again; I am no hero,
not to this cause, this poem, or to me.
These words will end in the same condition
In which they started – hurt, confused, angry.
Knowing our fate lies in God’s arms,
And poems should start like the Myth of Leda,
He testified vision comes first,
Warned fellow poets not to rush into things,
Jack Spicer, the poet of note.
Poem No. 12
Elegy
June in Florida, and sweetness
Lingers on even urban airs,
Drawn from its hidden shadow-lairs
By the moonlight’s coy discreetness.
Such beauty has license to rove
Within or without every heart,
To shelter there or soon depart
Like a boat from a private cove.
But so too in Night, evilness
Sweats chaos from its stinking pores,
Drowning out the Good it abhors
In base, dog-eat-dog primalness.
Crickets cry and gunshots are heard –
Who was singled out this time ‘round?
Close ears if you can to the sound,
But your turn’s coming, take my word.
Poem No. 13
Chain Verse:
I remember survivors’ testimony –
The murderer paused in his tracks,
After putting down with cold acrimony
A young black man with a bullet through his head,
Lecturing the dying with his facts
That any other Blacks who were not dead,
Should stand up, and exit with his best regard,
Saying sorry for his attacks,
“Because in America, you’ve had it hard.”
Because in America, you’ve had it hard…
Forgive him for his Queer bigotry
And crawl out, if you can, with his kind regard.
So once more, the victims had shoved down their throats
The bile taste of religious ‘mercy’
With the killer’s words acid-etched in history
Leaving all of us who have been left behind
To fathom hate’s idolatry
Like a burning bullet through a loving mind.
Like a burning bullet through a loving mind
There’s no way to restrain such spite
Exiting all of us who’ve been left behind,
Acknowledging how nothing’s really changed yet
And their hate is well within sight
Waiting for the next attack without much fret,
For they say that’s the fate of this ‘life’ we lead,
And there’s no point really to fight
Before that moment we’re left there, forced to bleed.
Before that moment we’re left there, forced to bleed,
Cut by religious mercy’s glass shard,
Severing life they’ve deemed unworthy to lead,
“Because in America, you’ve had it hard.”
Poem No. 14
Gravity I
My thoughts merely appear
To circle ‘round a drain….
An endless repetition,
One thought gravity-pulled down
But never pulled through the plug.
My thoughts appear merely aimless….
Poem No. 15
Haibun/Lanturne:
Most of them were so young, so vibrant with the surge of springtime life; they were suffused to the gills with optimism. The murderer took so much more than promise with him, when he took their lives.
A
June frost
lingers still
in Impatiens'
scent
Their
other
name matters –
those Touch-Me-Nots
froze
We
gard’ners
of silence
can only mourn
blooms
lost
in time,
never changed,
never thriving –
froze.
Poem No. 16
A Kyrielle Sonnet
In pain, how the pain remains
To ever gild anew with fresh
Smirching stain what the pain contains
As a haunting ache of the flesh
To die it rules, without regret,
And mingle life’s blood afresh
In death’s never-ending upset
As a haunting ache of the flesh
But turning points must come to all,
Though they with gravity enmesh,
Slowing down hope to only a crawl
As a haunting ache of the flesh
In refrain, how the pain remains
As a haunting ache of the flesh.
Poem No. 17
Gravity II
For each Black Hole of sorrow in the world,
Consuming itself, making density
Endlessly swirl at its pain-filled center,
Is there a White Source outlet somewhere spun
To return that crushed sadness back to us,
Refreshed, remade, re-enacted as good?
Do our sorrows get recycled on Earth –
What is taken away as endless pain
Returns as pulsar-flashes of goodwill
That we can see and feel, and yet know not
The cosmic crucible from which they came…?
Poem No. 18
a translation for Jack Spicer
In my dream, it seemed
the easiest thing in the world –
I simply reached out and
with the tip of my index finger
resting on the side of the
cockpit fuselage
I kept the jet from crashing.
Why then is it so hard for God?
What part of His imagination
fails humanity on a daily basis?
How many planes fall from His
sky each day…?
How many of His lives are lost
to guns each day…?
To hate each day…?
To bigotry, misogyny, homophobia,
to racism, sexism, genderism,
religiosity…?
To all the litany of “little” things
the mere brush of His finger
could do away.
I awake from my dream
wondering why my powers
of sympathy are
so much greater
than His?
But, and there are
always buts, stringing themselves
across wastelands of
human time, death
and misery….
But, why should we think
God cares? Is not that
the greatest human sympathy?
If we did not care about Him,
who would…?
Not nature; not Melville’s
heartless White Whale,
the hot storms of the earth,
nor its fissures or sinkholes
swallowing our lives with
no regard for family, or
wives or children; or husbands
and parents – no.
What we care for makes us human,
and that includes the poor
helpless little entity
which we keep safe and warm
against monstrous reality,
the small little one
of our hopes and fears,
the one we call God.
To Him we attribute
that finger I dreamed of,
the one that saved lives
with the simple will of thought,
and acts with a sympathetic heart.
To him it would be as nothing
to ‘save’ everyone at all times,
and keep human misery a myth.
But…. The fact He cannot
proves His nonexistence every day,
in every way.
The Easiest Thing in the World
Poem No. 19
A Triolet II…
To our face the reporter insisted,
stealing from them their dignity in death,
not ”gay” were the victims’ names be-listed –
To our face the reporter insisted –
grinning, purporting lies deeply twisted
and thereby be-fouling them with his breath.
To our face the reporter insisted –
stealing from them their dignity in death.
Poem No. 20
Ballade:
Last night I dreamed of an earthquake
Whose tumult seemed quick and far too vicious –
Upheaving the floor like a snake
With undulations deep and capricious –
Feeding Man’s fears of the superstitious
Which view every hint of omen
As warning good deeds of the malicious
Truth that sudden Death’s no phenomenon.
In cold sweat, I bolted awake,
Aware too well these thoughts are pernicious,
Demanding my heart take a stake
In niggling such phobias omniscious,
While seeking some kind of peace judicious
To acknowledge and yet shorten
Fear’s power to be the injudicious
Truth that sudden Death’s no phenomenon.
By writing, I try to remake
A time which was not openly flagitious,
When ‘brutal’ was a sometimes-ache,
Unlike the world now where it’s ambitious
To govern sound minds with the seditious
Notion horror’s daily again,
Shaking awake with the repetitious
Truth that sudden Death’s no phenomenon.
Envoi:
But you, you monster so inauspicious,
You took their lives at night, and then
Re-kill the day with the conspicuous
Truth that sudden Death’s no phenomenon.
Aftermath[4]
On June 12th,
The day of the attack,
Parts of the world unfriendly to
Gay Politics and advancement of equal rights
Lit up with earned stripes
Of the rainbow flag.
On June 12th,
Adam Lambert and Queen
Performed Brian May’s operatic song
Who Wants to Live Forever, about the only moment
Worthy to be human for,
The opportunity to love.
On June 12th,
Almost as reaction to the affront
Of the sickly ‘Pulse Deniers’ themselves,
A switch flipped on, and rainbows glowed
On formerly hostile monuments to our liberty
And our choice to be free.
And on that day,
Three years ago, some stood with us;
Some pretended what they liked about the tragedy;
But we, we stood as one around the world
And counted our dead so we could
Memorialize them in love.
~
[1] See the following article about the planned joint funeral for fiancés Guerrero and Leinonen: http://time.com/4366957/orlando-shooting-juan-guerrero-christopher-drew-leinonen/
[2] Of Man nor God, I neither knew is modeled after Emily Dickinson’s “Nature and God – I neither knew”
[3] One hundred and nine – the video and its Pulse Deniers’ hateful Fake News charges may be seen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXdOprHk39Y
[4] Aftermath – the video of the Lambert/Queen performance may be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bc-AmpIVJWM
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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