Sunday, September 29, 2019

The Wild at Your Door

The wilderness is closer than we think,
The animals,
The wild things,
Our closest link.
Despite our best,
To pave the rest,
Habitats expand instead of shrink.

In they creep in the dead of night,
Or boldly in the morning light,
Coyotes on the patio,
Frogs make a cameo,
The natural world flexes its might.

No boundary between us and them,
They come and go on a whim,
Architecture's not prohibitive,
Animals are freely distributed,
This manmade landscape is not so grim.

Carelessly we've walked the earth,
Moving on when there is a dearth,
Measuring the things we need,
How it's grown or if it bleeds,
And how much it could be worth.

And after everything rusts,
The hardy survivors readjust,
To a world without me or you,
'Tis sad,
But probably true,
The wild things will grow right out of our dust.

9-29-19

Friday, September 27, 2019

Unapologetically Me

Where does it end?

An age old question. One which the ancient sage of Seacaucus, Entrypio the Meh, called The Grim Inevitable, which appeared as a great-walled warehouse full of low-cost auto parts along the interstate. So, no one's quite sure.

We don't like to consider it much, but we know. It's the same place everything ends. Where all souls finally rest.* Everyone from friends to my dad to David Bowie.

David Bowie lying in a tomb somewhere seems like a joke. Afterall, how could such an outsize being sent straight from outerspace ever be anything but totally alive? Because like you, like me, like Maya Angelou, and yes, (sorry to break the news), even Elvis, we will all slip away. And that sucks.

So, before then, let us be who we are meant to be. Always.

For instance, I have a sweet tooth, but it isn't Snickers that satisfies. What really makes me drool is a certain pop sensibility. I am a fan of most music, but sometimes, all I really, really want is a zigazig ah! I was born this way. Sue me!

My first recollection of singing along to a song is belting out the lyrics to the "Theme from The Greatest American Hero (Believe It or Not)." I wish I could say it was "Immigrant Song" by Zeppelin or even a KISS song, but alas my first true love was an AM radio staple. Alternately, I was instantly hooked on The Beatles, but had to learn to love The Stones, so I've got that going for me. However, it's always the most saccharine-drenched tunes that make me feel like I'm living in a musical. I might just break into a sweet dance routine as I burst into song!

It's just who I am.

And that's who we should all be. The person we are meant to be. I wish the global policy was do unto others as you would have them do unto you. In my opinion, as long as you don't step on someone else's crops you should plant whatever you want, water it well and let it grow. Whatever your deal is, own it. Haters be damned!

If only it were that easy, right?

Let me get to my point, if I have one. It is this. In an ever-changing universe where things feel and appear to be more chaotic and ridiculous than ever, it's good to have a little something that feels familiar. Something that feels safe and maybe, if you're lucky, gives you a bit of a sugar-high.

Take for instance, Blink-181's** new album.

Yes, they are still around. This record shows clear evidence of maturity. No one's taking off their pants on this record. Likewise, the juvenile jokes are not as much of a focal point as they once were. Still, this is a collection of songs that makes you wonder why anyone would ever belittle all the small things. It is an album that makes you feel as though nothing has fallen to pieces, yet. That is satisfying. Sometimes we need a little respite from the storm, even if it means hiding in a heap of pop trash!

More than that, here is an example of being true to oneself. No disrespect, but no one was clamoring for a new Blink record, really. (I mean, other than Blink fans.) But they went ahead and made one anyway.

We are nothing unless we are being unapologetically ourselves. You, me, whoever! Living true to your own heart is the path to a life well-lived. I mean, what's the point in worrying what the neighbors might think? Just get on with the show, you know? We shouldn't waste time tormenting ourselves over what others might think or say. That's their problem. And we waste our precious time thinking about all the woulda-coulda-shouldas.

To sum up: just go do your deal.

Be you, but don't be a dick about it. If creating something makes you feel good, do that. If launching yourself on a dirt bike over a sand dune gets you hot and bothered, then ride on, man. If writing makes you happy,  then go and write. No more excuses. Get started. And if that pop-trocious song on the radio makes you feel secretly happy, well, then raise your voice and sing it loud and proud.

Afterall, there are no points for arriving safely and quietly in the grave.

9-27-19

*Save for Keith Richards, who will be the last witness to Armageddon.

**Of course I know it's actually Blink-182, but it's 181 since Tom ran off to search for aliens. Maybe he's onto something...

Thursday, September 19, 2019

The Thing That Didn't Happen

Friday, September 20, 2019
Dawn
Groom Lake, Nevada
Approx. 80 miles northwest of Las Vegas

AKA: Area 51

"This is a federally restricted area. Turn back immediately," a terse recording blares from a nonthreatening arsenal of speakers affixed to each of the multitude of aggressively swooping helicopters overhead.

Dark mountains, silhouetted against a sky painted with brilliant streaks of orange, conceal the exact nature of the threat. Security cameras posted at close intervals across the landscape indicate that a merry band of yahoos, stirred up by wacky Internet trolls has, indeed, descended on the most well known secret base in the United States of America.

The raid on Area 51 has begun.

"Multiple bogeys proceeding north-northwest from southeastern quadrant, west of Gate 5," a detached voice crackles over the radio. Inside a darkened and well-secured room, an array of blurry, closed-circuit monitors verifies a large crowd moving, amoeba-like, across the desert landscape. Security specialist, 1st class, Rupert Bindlestaf, eyes the monitors nervously, glancing at his commanding officer, General Callahan. The General, lips curled, brow wrinkled in disgust, shakes his head.

"Go round those idiots up," he barks. "Every last one is about to spend the weekend in jail."

"Yes, sir," specialist Bindlestaf responds, turning to leave.

"Bindlestaf, don't do anything dumb," General Callahan says.

"Yes, general," Bindlestaf replies.

Alarms squawk all across the isolated airstrip, setting lockdown procedures into motion. Buildings and hangers, impenetrable on a typical day, become hermetically sealed self-sustaining bunkers under the threat of breach. Security personal move out to meet the waddling masses in nothing sexier than Econoline vans. The experimental thermo-magnetic hovercraft stay safely parked seventeen levels below the surface.

Specialist Bindlestaf unhurriedly straps protective gear onto his body while nibbling on a stale apple fritter from the break room. He checks Twitter and chuckles at something the president has tweeted in the wee hours of the morning. Everyone else has already geared up and headed toward the crowd. On a TV, there's a news report about tropical storm damage in Texas and another storm about to hit Cabo. Bindlestaf fondly recalls his time spent partying at Sammy Hagar's bar in the Mexican resort town on his recent vacation. Distractedly, Bindlestaf reaches into his locker and grabs his weapon and then, fritter finished, he sets off to locate a ride.

Out on the flat, dusty grounds of the facility the sun has risen and the sunshine illuminates nothing more than a typical runway. The people in the mob, surrounded by security staff, seem disappointed. There's nothing to see. Not up here on the surface, anyway.

Bindlestaf approaches in the only vehicle he could find, a golf cart. As his colleagues are beginning to load the trespassers into vans, Bindlestaf surveys the perimeter. He spots a second group of people running across the dry lake bed.

"I'm gonna need some back up," he speaks into his radio, jamming the accelerator into the floorboards. He sets a course to intercept this new group of intruders. There are about sixty of them. He expects that they will be reasonable and compliant when they see he has a weapon. At least he hopes so. He takes a quick look to make sure he hasn't actually lost his rifle again.

"Oh no," he murmurs. Sitting beside him in the golf cart is not his normal rifle, but one of the alien-tech weapons all security members are issued at the base, just in case there is a Code Green. (Code Green being shorthand for "aliens have landed and they want their stuff back," of course.) Bindlestaf looks up. He is right on top of the group. He can see the whites of their eyes.

"Stop!" he shouts. "You are trespassing on a federally maintained and operated facility. You are all under arrest!" The crowd slows down, but they just go around the lone security officer in his golf cart.

"I said stop!"

No one listens. He looks at the rifle that isn't supposed to exist and considers his options. After a moment, he flips the plexiglass windshield down, picks up the alien weapon, pointing it out through the front of the cart, and smashes the accelerator down. He angles around, trying to get in front of the group. He turns to confront them and is about stop when he hits a large crack in the dry earth, causing the golf cart to lurch violently to the right.

That's when it happens.

Bindlestaf's finger slips. A quick beam of white hot light is emitted from the weapon. There is no sound, rather the absence of sound; every sound for miles. In the millisecond that the weapon goes off, forty-two people in the crowd just simply disappear. No ashes, no screams. Gone. Rupert Bindlestaf is in shock. General Callahan, watching on the monitors grinds his teeth and exhales angrily. "Of course," he growls.

Far across the dry lake bed, a large-lens camera and a crew from Vice catch all of this on digital video. The producer is already duplicating the images. Without a word, the crew instinctively begins packing up. Soon the world will know about that one time a soldier inadvertantly gave away government secrets.

9-20-19

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

What Can Last

Out here,
The world goes on forever.
This desert,
Seems to last forever.
So clean,
Despite the dust.
It is pure,
Unmarred,
Impurities burned away,
Lifted by the sun's rays,
Evaporated.
All that is left is what can last.
Fearsome creatures great and small,
Impenetrable growth,
And stone,
Written with lost dreams,
A wry commentary on impermanence,
Written by someone unknown,
Unknowable,
Lost to time.
All that is left is what can last.
This stone,
This arid sky,
Stretched from horizon to horizon,
Forever.
Let us rejoice in this strange,
Dangerous,
Beauty,
While we're here.

9-18-19

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Tuesday Long Ago

On a Tuesday long ago...

Everything changed,
Chaos reigned,
And we've slowly tried to put it all back together.

That's impossible.

In our minds,
That day is never far away,
Powerless we watched,
Confused and gutted.

When I listen,
Really listen,
I can hear those engines,
Improbably loud and low.

When I close my eyes,
And allow my mind to go back,
I am witness once again,
The horror of the moment is still palpable.

Of course we won't forget.
How could we?

9-11-19

Sunday, September 8, 2019

Just Hold On

Ruts and potholes lie ahead,
Every journey underscored with dread.
We soldier on with grace and poise,
At times capitulating to mental noise.
Fear's fretting and sweaty hands,
Invade thoughts and impose demands.
It's easy to feel overwhelmed,
Imagine boarding the boat Charon helms.
But across the River Styx lies uncertainty,
Only Death and no guarantees.
This life we lead is valuable,
Because each and every soul is fallible.

We must take our risks and carry on,
Shouldering ahead until the dawn.
There are days on days that feel like night,
Our only hope is to remain in light.
Times when the way ahead seems wrong,
When we merely hold on until the dawn.
Just hold on.
Just hold on.

9-8-19

Thursday, September 5, 2019

Inspired by a Sunrise

Look up!
Look around!
This drudgery is not life's purpose.
We are missing the point!
The meaningless tasks we engage in,
The petty annoyances,
The things that just don't matter.
Enough!
Take a look at the glory to be found,
All around you,
Every day.
Work can wait,
This moment cannot.

9-5-19

No Dispensation

Tomorrow will arrive right on time. There's no getting around it. We will live in that future. Together. So, We must build a brilliant f...