Thursday, March 25, 2021
New Love Poem For Joom
Today's Timericks (with a helping of Van Gogh.)
Amazon and unions mix/just like smoothies and chop sticks/Amazon has sent out spies/so workers do not organize/Workers on a sit down strike/make old Bezos feel warlike/But with Democrats on top/unions are sure not to flop.
When a poet disappears/very few are shedding tears/Poets, gadflies, nuts; the same/All are playing just a game/So say ignoramus crowds/who have never ridden clouds.
The world is an asylum/and we are trapped inside/Anyone escaping/is caught and swiftly tried/Van Gogh escaped so often/and painted what he saw/until he broke the windows/of ev'ry jail bourgeois.
Wednesday, March 24, 2021
Prose Poem: A Plastic Bag Diet Will Save the World!
We all have to make life choices from time to time.
I made one a while ago that I must share with you.
After hearing about all the plastic bags
being found in the stomachs of whales
and camels and cows,
I went on a plastic bag diet.
They are best eaten raw, sprinkled with
sea salt.
Make sure you get a variety of plastic
bags -- from the grocery, drug store, and dollar
store.
The different kinds of polyethylene they use
on the bags gives them a distinctive
taste and texture.
Don't be tempted to cheat by sneaking
in a few paper bags! They're full of corn
syrup.
And stay away from bubble wrap --
it'll make you flatulent.
Nowadays I snag my breakfast
from a trash can while out
walking in the park.
I meet friends for lunch downtown to
enjoy a plastic bag smoothie.
I usually skip dinner,
although sometimes I'll munch
on a quart-size baggie while watching
the boob tube.
Why am I sharing this with you?
Because I believe we can end
world hunger, here and now,
if we all work together to provide
enough plastic bags for everyone.
So won't you please bring all yours
to our Plastic Bags to
End Hunger Initiative
at the White House Rose Garden
this Easter Sunday?
Donations are tax deductible.
Koszonom!
Today's Timericks.
Gun control, that bugaboo/still upsets both me and you/I say ban 'em; you demure/Can there be a useful cure?/Tax 'em like we do tobacco/maybe that will stop a whacko.
Cereal boxes now contain/shrimp tails and perhaps bird brain/These are prizes I would ban/were I selling Raisin Bran/Rusty nails in frosted flakes/give consumers nasty shakes/I don't want such horrid dregs/and so I'll stick to ham and eggs.
Sheltering in place did cause/weight gain like old Santa Claus/I was thin and in good shape/Now I'm rounder than a grape/Snacking in anxiety/since there's no society/sure is not a funny joke/next I'll probably start to smoke!
Tuesday, March 23, 2021
Prose Poem: The Breathing Act of 2021.
I'm proud to say I played a small part
in helping to pass The Breathing Act
of 2021.
Too many people are taking advantage of
our liberal and naive breathing policies.
Our forefathers fought for the right
to breathe, for the truth of "One Man, One
Breath!"
We can't let that sacred privilege go by
the boards by giving it away to every Tom,
Dick, and Harry that saunters into town
and demands a breath.
As of this coming May,
no longer can just anyone take a breath of fresh air;
you have to have a valid photo ID,
a birth certificate, a Social Security number,
and a zoning permit.
Anyone caught breathing illegally
or fraudulently will see the inside of
the slammer pdq.
I know some soreheads complain
that if you can't breath you can't live.
Well, my answer to that is this --
stay and breathe in your own country,
why don't you?
Or if you're a felon hoping to breathe
again, you'd better keep your nose clean
and your hands dirty with good honest
labor -- no living off of welfare.
Then, and only then,
will you be allowed to breathe again.
Rest assured that our Breathing Integrity
Committee, of which I am Chair,
will leave no stone unturned to see
to it that each breath is legitimate.
Any breath that is in doubt will be
thoroughly investigated, and, if
warranted, nullified.
And needless to say,
we are putting the lid on
absentee and mail-in
breathing . . .
Today's Timericks.
Finding laughs is hard today/Things seem more like shadow play/I believe that hope exists/when you cut away the cysts/of despair and stark fatigue/and believe that no blitzkrieg/can prevail for long if we/place our trust in Deity.
She is dealing with parosmia, a distortion of smell such that previously enjoyable aromas — like that of fresh coffee or a romantic partner — may become unpleasant and even intolerable. Along with anosmia, or diminished sense of smell, it is a symptom that has lingered with some people who have recovered from Covid-19. NYT.
I smell garbage when I eat/roses now are not a treat/And my lover stinks so foul/I would rather kiss an owl/Tell me, Covid, am I doomed/to never sniff a thing perfumed?
Spring is sprung; mild zephyrs blow/But still asparagus I know/as something green and slimy which/makes my taste buds start to twitch/I'd rather celebrate the Spring/with a pan-fried chicken wing.
Mormonism, like some other faith groups, requires members to tithe 10 percent of their incomes but is more organized and deliberate about collecting it and understanding why members cannot pay. Washington Post.
I have never been strong-armed/or told I should be alarmed/if my tithing I don't pay/I'm not forced to so obey/out of fear or as a bribe/in thrall to some pious scribe/I pay tithing as a way/to thank God for each new day/In return, when I'm distressed/I still know I'm being blessed/God is not a financier/All He asks is love sincere.
Monday, March 22, 2021
Today's Timericks. (Now with German quark!)
Senators who like to fib/always making with ad-lib/sheltered by immunity/have the scruples of a flea/Voters who will keep them in/must be drinking bathtub gin.
Milk on walls and bread on floors/these are springtime cleaning chores/Antiquaries so expound/how the old folks messed around/with wood ashes and bedpan/to keep homes real spic and span/Me, I'll stick to alcohol/It makes cleaning quite a ball.
Now when shopping I expect/foreign foods to oft detect/ Fonio and German quark/Nori and chinchona bark/locust bugs from Myanmar/But where is my grape jelly jar?
Preachers come in many sizes/and some really like their prizes/coming from communion plates/and their pious delegates/Could I stay poor as a vicar/would I worship a stock ticker?/Luckily, I feel no call/to go shopping at the mall.
Sunday, March 21, 2021
Prose Poem: The Dogs of Rangoon.
I left home to become a feral dog at a young age.
I was tired of sitting at the table
and wearing clothes all the time;
I wanted to snarl over a piece of offal
and squat wherever I wished.
So I wandered the world
on all fours,
grew a muzzle and a tail.
Picked up fleas and lice.
Caught the mange in Budapest.
And finally came to Rangoon
one sultry evening,
when the street lights were
sickly yellow
and the flying termites
dripped from the sky --
I gobbled them up with gusto.
Just my kind of place.
At first I simply chased other dogs,
nipping at their backsides.
Then I attacked the night people --
those brave, foolish people,
who were defying curfew,
marching in protest.
Being Buddhist, they never harmed
animals -- even a mangy creature like me.
It was wonderful.
I ripped apart their longyis
in a foaming frenzy, as they ran
from the police.
I loved chewing up their sandals;
most of 'em only had one pair
to their names.
In the daytime I slept under the Yangon River
docks, where it was cool and fetid.
One night I attacked an old woman
on her way home with a package
of soup bones.
She fell and hit her head on the curb.
She didn't get up again.
I feasted on the soup bones until
a crowd gathered around me.
They wouldn't let me leave, no matter
how I snapped and snarled.
They beat me with sticks and clubs.
Just my luck --
a bunch of lousy Christians.
But the laugh is on them,
because I've been reincarnated as
a general in the Tatmadaw.
And I remember distinctly each
one of them . . .
Today's Timericks. (Featuring Waffles!)
The world is filled with trouble/the world is filled with grief/and any happy moment/is usually quite brief/Don't read the headlines, brother/and sister, turn off the set/Just play a bit more sweetly/in life's short string quartette.
The poet of tomorrow/an algorithm uses/to check forbidden nuance/that might come from her muses/With cancel culture rampant/and deepfake on the rise/a poet can't get published/without the right disguise.
A Sunday morning waffle/eaten in pajamas/is better for your spirit/than all the Dalai Lamas.