5.20.2026

Plato (Probably)

Fine, I'll tell you:

Years later

I still go there

in my dreams

sometimes.


It's usually in the morning

between the garbage truck

beeping, backing up, dumping

and my alarm--

the most vivid imagery

with the sounds

of reality interfering;

a sacrosanct incongruity

which only a father could love

precious flesh beside him

in the sweat.


It starts the same

with a skiff pulling up

to that island

clandestinely

persona non grata

lying low in its hull.

My beloved drunkard

of a captain drops me off

on the eastern shore

to explore the ruins

that we tried to save.


It's different in dreamscapes.

There's fine sand

and stairwells stubbornly exist.

I scour the ground

for treasures undiscovered

remembering what's most precious:

the bonds we built with strangers

united by a common goal

unrelated to our woes ashore.

Unlike those in power

we understood the assignment.


I hear a tour passing by

a football field away

and hit the deck

like respiration's overrated.

Sabotage 

or centrifuge?

Assassination 

or distillation?

Ignorance ain't innocence.

We developed an immunity

to antibiotics.


The sun comes up

and I scramble to my feet

not regretting the sacrifices made:

a normal life, children

when I swore I had a baby

aborted in the womb

by a snake whose death

will only sadden me

when I see him again

in hell.


We'll die on a Tuesday

with things left undone

that we aimed to achieve

and packages in the mail.


If you're big on goodbyes

now's the time.


Maybe in the next life

we'll be able

to replicate 

beautiful things.


3.27.2026

Love Pounds

Slow is smooth

and smooth is fast.

Probiotics 

aren't working

as advertised.


You can hear better.

I can see better.

Together 

we'll figure it out.


What you don't 

understand

between you

and your god

is the exception

that proves the rule:


When I rock you

to sleep

I'm rocking myself

but I'll love you

'til magnets

stop pulling.


2.08.2026

Cosmopolitan

I’m home alone, flipping through a Bannerman military goods catalogue from 1940, and the sound of that brought back a memory. When I was five and my mom still lived in my father’s house she’d lull me to sleep from the next room by reading a magazine. The sound of her presence made me feel safe enough to trust closing my eyes. Its absence, silence, had the opposite effect on me. “Mom, I don’t hear you turning the pages,” I’d whine from my tiny bedroom. She’d increase the speed of her fingers moving paper to comfort me from the couch, the lamp light casting shadows on my ceiling. What I wouldn’t give to be back there right now. We never know how good we’ve got it at the time.

1.10.2026

Visitation

The void when you leave's

a tsunami receding:

sea sucked back so fast.



Currently reading: 

"Never Flinch" by Stephen King.