Lori R. Lopez's Blog: Poetic Reflections

December 2, 2015

Thirteen-O-Clock!

Let’s be serious.  (A very stern look.)  Ha, fooled ya.  Probably scared you a tick or a tock if you’ll admit it.  You won’t?  Are you sure?  Are you absolutely certain?  Fine, be that way.  I can be that way too.  (Arms folded.)  These are serious times, calling for serious columns and serious verse.  But at this moment we will not be serious.  We will ignore the times, the clock, the hands of Fate, and declare that it is time for a mad tea break (like a coffee break but with tea).  A tepid water with lemon break in my case.  It might even be time for a new clock, as the joke goes.  I don’t get that joke.  My clock regularly strikes Thirteen.  What is the big deal?  It comes after Twelve.  Don’t give me that look . . . like I have a frog in my ear instead of my throat, or my hat is on backwards!  (Why must people always give me that look?)  You there, wipe that expression off your face.  Here’s a hanky.  I’ll wait.  Thanks.  Now we can get on with our discombobulagreement.  Thirteen follows Twelve.  Says so right there on my clock.  Just above Acme Humdinger Doohickeys.  They make the best timepieces, don’t they?  Anyway, this particular piece of time is pointing straight at a one and a three.  Don’t tell me you can’t see it.  Perhaps you need an eye exam.  Or a head exam.  I tend to flunk those.  Nevermind.  We’ll forget about that.  And the part about being serious.  You know I can’t for long.  It’s really a strain.  Quite exhausting.  I have to cover my mouth — with both hands — stifling the silly impulses, those outbursts of humor that burble and make my head bobble, then bubble forth out of a primal bottomless well in my pit of pitiless pitter-pats!  Or is it my armpits?  Aunt Laurel used to call me a pit when I was growing up.  I wonder what she meant by that.  A cherry pit?  A peach pit?  I’ll have to ask her.


Okay.  Moving along at the gong of Thirteen because I can, because it’s my clock and my party and I can laugh if I want to, so I am putting my foot down to insist . . . phew, that was tiring.  I need a breather.  An air break, I guess.  You go on without me.  I’ll be right behind, huffing and puffing and attempting not to blow houses down . . . counting little piggies on one hand, my blessings on the other . . .  Go ahead, read some poems.  I dare you!


Oh, I see that I’m still busy scribbling them.  I forgot.  As slow as I write, it could be a problem.  We might be here all day.  And night.  And month.  What month is it now?  I accidentally ate my calendar while making a sandwich.  I mistook it for lettuce.  That’s understandable.  They shouldn’t color the pages green.  Like dollars.  What were they thinking?  I’ve eaten all my money.  I should stop making sandwiches.  And sense.  Not that I’m making much cents.  I’m being nickeled and dimed by penny-pinchers.  Swell, now I’m just babbling.  Next I’ll be psycho-babbling and they’ll have to lock me up.  I don’t know how or why, but I seem to have gotten off to the wrong start on my left foot down a gopher-hole (not nearly as fun as a rabbit-hole), with the best of intentions gone awry like my crummiest-laid plans or something to that effect.  Which is a mouthful of hooey, if you ask me.  (Take my advice, don’t ask.)


Speaking of advice . . . pardon me for a minute, I need to scratch my head.  No, I do not have cooties.  I am rather perplexed at myself.  Has that ever happened to you?  I am beginning to question if there is any purpose to all of this.  Some internal, intrinsic, inherent (take your pick) rhyme or reason for going on and on about so little or nothing.  Is it necessary?  Maybe I ought to stick to the poems.  Or fictional prose.  Maybe I should do something else entirely!  It’s a good thing I don’t listen to the voices in my head or the suggestions in my Suggestion Box.  Where would I be then?  I’m a writer.  It’s tough to tear myself from words to be an artist too, let alone give it up.  Sorry, it cannot be done.  I haven’t tried since I know there isn’t any point in trying.  It’s part of my soul, my blood, my very essence . . . what makes me tick like clockwork.  A wind-up clock with thirteen hours, of course, and Jazz Hands.  A nice little beret or propeller beanie on top.  That’s me, and nobody can take it away from me, unless a villain should build a contrivance to suck the talent and imagination out of a person’s mind and bottle it or lock it in a box or condense it inside of a nutshell.  That would be fairly heinous and diabolical.  It wouldn’t be nice either.  Villains are such meanies!


Don’t misunderstand, I am a fan of villains when they are cool like Frankenstein’s Monster or Dracula.  Those are classic villains of book and reel, eternally awesome.  They don’t make em like that anymore.  These days monster creators use modern devices and instant glue that can cement your fingers together if you’re not careful.  (Trust me on that.)  It isn’t the same.  It’s different.  And different can be its own kettle of corn or coolishness.  I should know.  I like to differ.  In fact, I beg to differ whenever possible.


I miss the ages when you could be weird without being told you have to be like everyone else — have to conform, fit in, blend.  I like being offbeat.  I enjoy those incredulous stares.  The ogles of disbelief.  I like being peculiar, as you probably know by this point, which isn’t a point at all.  I am aiming for your fondest bemused jigsaw-puzzlement; your noggin-shakingest jaw-slackery; your mockingbird hootin-toots of utter bafflence.  Which aren’t words at all if you’re a snit-picker, but I take much poetic license in my writing, even when I am not writing poetry.  You would know this by now if you were paying attention.  I hope you have been, however challenging it may be to follow my absurd drivel and dislocated chains of thought in these rambled preambles to the latest bursts of my worst verse.  (I never write my best verse.  That would be futile, for I could never top it and would plummet into a state of despair.  I try to avoid that.)


The world seems filled with baddities and saddities these days.  We need to focus upon the oddities of life, I feel.  The harmless inanities and insanities of existence.  Such things can put a smile on my face, for I am a bit of a clown at heart.  I was a class clown as a child in my day and occasionally wear make-up as an adult in a circus-clown greasepaint manner.  A “Baby Jane” Bette Davis fashion.  (That’s a reference to a classic movie from my childhood, in case you were unaware, and I developed most of my fashion sense from it.  That and the Addams Family, I suppose.  Lurch was quite a dresser!  Then there was The Bride from the second Frankenstein film.  What a trendsetter!  Before my time, but styles have a way of coming back, do they not?  Like bouncing balls and yo-yos.  Boomerangs too.  Duck!)


Oh dear.  I was actually trying to be serious there a second and flopped miserably.  You are really better off reading the little tags inside of garments, terms and conditions, warning labels, pop-ups on your computer than these horrible introductions to my awfullest poems.  The poems themselves are bad enough.  If only I could stop myself from blurting out this nonsense.  Go on, get it over with.  Wade through the verse if you must.  I shall bury my head in a bucket of embarrassment.


Voilá!  Je presente . . .


(Pardon my French.  Though I don’t know why they say that, it’s really very lovely.  And pardon me as I disentangle myself from the removed veil of a botched flourish.)


 


 


    Thirteen-O-Clock!


 


Oh dratted tempest of capricious time,


Why must you addle me with your chime?


Is there no fiddlestick lever to yank


That will stifle the echoing croon of your crank?


Are the cuckoos and loons of the night


Conversing at lung-top, in whimsical flight


With cacophonous blather, the lather of hens


Clucking or fussing about nows and thens?


Is it possible you have inner springs to unwind,


A clashing gear-gnashing of teeth to grind?


Could you suffer mechanical indigestion,


With clockworks upset or spontaneous congestion?


 


My ears are inclined to dread your automation,


The methodic precision of hypnotic vexation


Ordinarily tuned out, causing attention to lapse;


A curse, but not worse than the mysterious taps


That have lulled me to relax in their precision,


While unregulated by any natural division.


Paranormally-charged, like a persistent drip,


The ticking grows louder beyond the connip


Of treading over staid prosaic bounds . . .


Past the threshold of conventional wisdom’s grounds


To a wilderness zone of twilight unknown,


With an alarm clock’s tension-jangling tone!


 


’Twixt the steady metronomic marks of time —


Your synchronized motorized clicks that rhyme —


Sound the off-beats of gadgets, clandestine tocks;


A furtive assemblage of chains and sprocks


To unwind at the blindest unkindest hour,


Ignored by most, yet imbued with grave power.


Occultish, arcane, the feyest of enchantings


Appear at the stroke of Thirteen-O-Clock rantings!


I can lie awake tossing or burn midnight oil


In a tomblike reverie of brood and toil,


Certain to be disturbed by your latest clamor


As I struggle to focus upon fanciful grammar.


 


Years had I abided by the rules of the Twelve


And its limits of minutes that archaically shelve


An overtime abundance of thoughts that won’t fit,


The creative endeavorings not ready to quit,


Crammed into brief instants expired too soon,


Desperate for chances that weren’t opportune,


Scrambling to meet deadlines and winding up short,


My nerves in a bind, down to the last resort.


Running out of time was a daily affliction;


There weren’t enough hours in my life of constriction,


Of collecting hourglasses that didn’t add up


And begging for more with a half-full buttercup.


 


I have languished exhaustive, immersed in self-pity


For the measure of stitches that aren’t very pretty,


Yet bind me together if I’m falling apart


Every time a clock rings or announces the start


Of the macabre thirteenth hour I know to exist —


At the height of Nocturne, in the center of a twist


Where shadows all meet in the eye of the storm.


As nightshade lengthens, I tremble to stay warm;


A hollow head vibrates with the patter of mouseplay


That incessantly trails the chronologic display


Of watches and clocks, every manner of keeper;


Temporarily jarred from the realm of the sleeper.


 


Eyes bleary, I smother a yawn with my hand


In the hope of not swallowing a mouthful of sand.


When the portal of eeriness creaks slow and wide,


Still-life on my desk will trek side by side,


Jerking and stiffly parading around


Like old-fashioned toys, grotesque and key-wound.


Conflicted, I shiver at the eerie cavort


Of figures and creatures in teeming rip-snort.


An army of mayhem, they’ve started to bite!


The seconds drag on; I’m contorted with fright.


Thirteen is unlucky!  My silence is broken


In mirror shards, yet the words are unspoken.


 


A battle of wills; a grim balance of need as I plead:


“Do these eldritch minutes help or impede?


Has my sanity fled?  Have my mental parts rusted?


Could a clock on a tower be any more trusted?


We are guided by the tolls of huge clanging bells,


By whistles and sirens, machinery knells.


What are they telling us?  Where do they lead?


Are we pawns in a game of steeplechase greed?


Who set all these clocks?  Who fired the first pistol?


Is there really a forever behind the crystal?”


Time will not always tell, despite what they say.


I’m afraid the thirteenth hour is here to stay.


 


 


    Shortcomings


 


I have a few things wrong with me.


For example, I can be disorganized


as a carnival of fools


with my Alice watch unwound


or running too little too late


in a harebrained scheme


of impatient haste.


I might be mercurial as a polluted fish;


an alley cat on a tin roof in the middle


of August;


a bear on a trampoline


jumping for joy like a magic jellybean


containing a worm.


I will forget to remember things


that I wanted to forget


but can’t remember to


because I forgot to write it down.


The note might slip through


my fingers anyway and waft


in the breeze — forcing me to


scamper and chase it only to miss


by a wisp every time it lands.


I’m not all there and can neglect to pay


the piper, the fiddler, or attention.


Though I do try to listen to


the important stuff,


it can be tough to be in


the moment every minute;


a lot of the time I skip off into some


twaddlesome lanterloo of my own invention,


when not huddled in a corner


of the past


or fretting about tomorrow


in yesterday’s time zone.


My wits are whetted by absurd strings


of hyperbolic guddle and fuddlement.


I tend to grate the edge of reason


so sharp with my teeth while asleep


it can cut my hair, trim my fingernails


as I’m barely hanging on by them,


collect in strips and stripes


like wood shavings or cheese.


I’ve knocked on wood so hard


that it gave me splinters.


Words can fail when my tongue


is tied in a pretty bow


I cannot unfurl because


my finger got tangled up and trapped


when the ribbon was trussed


like a high-class hoity-toity pretzel


at the Prince’s ball.


And my stomach is frequently


knotted into a balloon menagerie,


pinched and creased like an origami zoo.


I am sure you know the feeling.


There’s a hole in my pocket


that leaves a trail of shortcomings


behind me wherever I go.


I could mend it with


a needle and thread but I might


jab myself in the leg


and leave a path of blooddrops


spilled over flaws and foibles,


the defects and deficiencies


that accumulate like bric-a-brac


or knickknacks, gimcracks,


spare parts, loose ends . . .


Oh look, there’s another!


If you should pick up a stray weakness,


it’s probably my fault.


Just drop it in the Lost And Found


where I can claim it


once my absence of mind


will allow.


 


 


    Time


 


If I pick at it like a thread


I fear it may all unravel


I can’t keep track of every second


For they get away from me much too


Easily.  I once looked at it as


An expanse, optimistic in my youth


Now as the candle burns lower


I find myself guarding it


More precious and valuable somehow


And try harder not to waste it


Without losing who I am


The senses of humor and perspective


That cling like static electricity


It takes a lot of time to become


Somebody — at least it used to


A rounded individual, someone great


Or at least good


Soon they will have a pill for that


Or surgery; a download for what used to


Take a lifetime.  At any rate


I think I missed a turn


Along the way.  It’s too late


To backtrack, and I am not one


To retrace my footsteps


I keep going on, right or wrong


It might not be the destination


I set out for.  Perhaps I settled


On a fate instead of waiting for


A destiny.  This life thing can be tricky


My view of it has grown shorter


Like my vision; patience too


And I have realized how uncertain


Plans are anyway as I ponder my


Tomorrows, scheduling minutes


In advance that are merely


Borrowed time and wishes, nothing


Certain.  Except that what I am now


Is the best that I can be at the moment


Not my very best; that will always be


Over the rainbow


Through the looking-glass


On the horizon


Just a little bit farther


A few strides away


Almost at the tips of my fingers


Slightly out of reach


But there, right there


So close I can nearly


See it if I squint


Hear its cadence, faint as a breeze


Wavering, an illusion


That flickers and drums


A more or less steady


Marching song.  Like the rain


A keyboard pounded by inspiration


A throbbing tempo on a dance floor


A rescue chopper’s rhythmic thumps


The flutter you hear in a sonogram


The pulse of everything


That ever was.


 


 


    Friday The Thirteenth


 


It is said


the planets may veer on such bleak dates, as fates


shy from the portents of stellar magistrates,


misled by a moldering graveyard, an alley’s invite —


for mayhem and mischief out of the light . . .


 


Where we might


fall prey to the murderous vibes of cursing crows,


harbingers of doom hunched in deathly rows


upon rooftops, gable peaks, high wires and boughs;


ebon soldiers of Fortune with piercing trumpet vows.


 


No simple cornmongers,


these are agents for the master of dark destiny —


dressed in black tie and tails, pallbearers of misery,


abiding the call to usher each star-crossed loser


drawn from a hat by the lottery’s drab chooser.


 


Look and learn


as flickering candlewicks turn to seething tongues,


the stark cries of birds emit from a billion lungs


neath the glitteral peers of livid eye-whites


forming shadow-puppeteer connect-the-dot frights.


 


Far above


is an umbrella of winks, where a gaudy umbral dome


frowns down at bottom-dwellers skulking the gloam.


We are bound by its firmament, by cosmic constraints


to shuffle on schedule, bear our daily complaints.


 


En-masse


we anticipate Friday’s advent, ecstatic for release


from the drudgery and toil, the machinery’s grease.


But not every fifth day of the week is so blithe;


if it falls on Thirteen, beware the grim scythe!


 


Dread will spread —


with frigid dismay, thick as butter on bread


over what could betide us, what perils lurk ahead —


conveyed like toys on a circuitous assembly vine


through the factory of Life, to the end of the line.


 


Bitter cold,


funeral-procession hearses with low-rider shocks


steered by drivers in moth-balled tuxedo frocks


congest the lanes, a broad belt of rush-hour panic.


Breaking the night, bats and crows hurtle manic.


 


The Thirteenth


will forebode disastrous consequences untold;


a period of tribulations when good luck is on hold,


suspended for an interval of twenty-four hours


that you may survive if you have special powers!


 


Should you feel


unlucky, expectations will be abysmal —


hope in short supply, the odds acutely dismal.


Air might crackle with arcane mysteries nigh


and your hair stand out as you wave bye-bye . . .


 


A mere number,


thirteen possesses no strength, I believe.


Such a day cannot harm, fight or aggrieve.


It is fluid, we know; composed of chance, thin air.


An evanescent flow to embrace and share.


 


I regard it


an occasion for celebration, the opposite of


a terribly off-day.  I think it’s okay to fall in love,


start a journey, pet a black cat, take a ride.


Do not dig a hole and cower inside.


 


We mustn’t fear


the grimalkin or grimoire for spells cast;


must not blame the culture of an iconoclast,


any more than a page’s ink for a worst-selling book.


And yet, The Thirteenth we had best not overlook!


 


 


    Current


 


Months unfold — a deck carelessly shuffled,


spilling across table or floor — a flat road


paved by slippery laminated cobblestones


like Tarot cards that purport to tell


the future.  But the numbered boxes


are empty, void of meaning, waiting to


be filled . . . blanks in the run-on sentence


Time writes.


 


Now the pen is out of ink, the roll of paper


sodden as it glides down a river of lost hopes


toward a rushing cataract of dreams.


The waterfall’s roar thunders in our ears


with a mighty flood of thoughts,


yet we cannot slow or dam its tenuous


stream of days and years, we can only strive


to float . . .


 


And not sink; to keep our heads above


the tides of Change that sometimes


pour like white frothing rapids


and other times subside to trickle —


a shallow layer clear as glass,


diluted and glossy, short of substance.


I am swept on my back, never a very


capable swimmer.


 


The current is all we can touch, not


yesterdays and tomorrows.  They are


just ghosts or figments, ethereal vapors


elusive to our reach, beyond our


present grasp.  Maybe one day


their images will be more defined than


memories; captured, concrete as fantasies


on paper.


 


 


    the truth about nothing


 


I have questions for the cosmos,


like why if I put lipstick on


my lips are not sealed


and how a couch potato can use


the remote control when everybody knows


potatoes have no limbs.


(Except Mister and Missus Potato Head,


but they’re not exactly real, are they?)


Where do June Bugs go in July?


How did the man get in the Moon


before there were astronauts and


ships to carry them there?


Why are we floating in Space


so indecisive and awkward —


simultaneously revolving


and following an orbit —


instead of going somewhere else


or spinning out of control?


Why doesn’t Gravity hiccup every


now and then, or get tired


and take a vacation?


And why isn’t String Theory


full of knots like my hair?


These are thought-provoking wonders,


wouldn’t you agree?


I am certain you must, else your head


has to be missing most of its screws


and could fall off at any second.


There, you see?


Better grab it or it might gather moss;


you could get mud in your eye


or pebbles in your ears that would


rattle around the inside of your skull


and then where would you be?


With a headful of rocks instead of


marbles!


A lot like a fish that doesn’t swim.


I can’t quite figure those fish out.


They come in a box and are orange


not gold, like the bowls of fish


people keep on tables for decoration,


only these are dry and crunchy


and have no scales unless you count


their dehydrated flecks of cheesy powder.


Thinking of them drives me crackers


so I am asking . . .


how does a loser stand a chance


when the wheat and the chaff


are separated, the corn and husk sorted


into organized chaos —


Frankensteined by mad scientists


recreating seeds that were already perfect?


Why does Man tinker with things that are


better left alone?


It is much the same as to arrange


orderly rows of mismatched socks.


It doesn’t make sense, like chickens with


stripes instead of pox; roosters with brushes


instead of combs.  And why are they


running around crossing streets, or squawking


about the sky falling?  I want answers!


Do you think it’s fair that failures can’t win


because to err is human?


I seem to have more questions


than when I began this soliloquy of ponderings.


If an eyeball itches on a lonesome eve,


can you hear the sound of one eye blinking?


Will you heed the flail of a thousand lashes


against the blade of Chance


cutting down the middle?


What does that even mean?


You see, I have lost my own marbles


among the blur of queries spilling


from my brainspout.


I am driven to hysterics by the flutter


of a cuckoo in my noggin


that must have flown in one ear


then out the other, unless it remains trapped


like a pigeon in a warehouse or store.


I can’t tell.  Sometimes my days


are literally upside down,


sleeping at Dawn’s break, rising at Dusk.


Oh no, do I belong in a coffin?


Should I travel by hearse?


Time has no measure over me, nor dominion.


I am a lost soul who lives by a clock


of thirteen hours not twelve, and navigates


by polkadots rather than the stars.


I move in slow-motion


while days have sped up,


which is a frustrating condition.


I am intrigued by a cattail twitch stirred


by the brittle wind as I ask the heavens,


will there ever be the wag of a dog’s tail


on a wetland’s mourning?


Do not feed the night though its belly growls,


for in the wiles of weeds and marshes


hide the songs of thrushes midst


the rustles of rushes


and the termagant reeds!


As you can see, the lines of this poem


have snapped under the strain of too much


senseless pollen getting up people’s noses


and making them go kachoo


as I have clearly gone haywire


in the aftermath of a total brainsneeze.


There is no truth about nothing


in the end;


there is but the dribble and drip


of faucet-noses,


the harmless broods of stranger breeds,


and the drool of aimless thoughtlessness


gone mad from the silly mud


that molds character,


the gumption and pink bubblegum


pasting the universe together.


 


 


    Yin Or Yang?


 


This world is an unsympathetic place


Where the weak can be crushed


Whether by physical or emotional baggage


Then weeded out by Evolution.  There is no


Room for being too sensitive or trusting


There is no sympathy for the broken


They are sacrificed to the volcano of


Progress that flows with molten avarice


To consume the present and pave it over


Erecting cold modern structures as empty


Of life as a city of ghosts, outdated and


Abandoned, or never lived in.


 


The world is a marvel of tender beauty


Of majesty and immeasurable riches


That have nothing to do with gold or silver


Coins or cash.  There are true wonders


Of Nature, and guileless amazing creatures


Who live without burdens and boundaries


Or they once did.  There are depths unlimited


In their souls, as in the heights of


Human spirit; the glow of warmth and grace


Kindness, determination, love and peace


That is possible if we stand united and believe


In good, however bad the times may be.


 


Our world is a duality, a Yin and Yang circle


Of dark versus light where moderation is


Key; balance is everything, like a juggler


Riding a unibike tossing crystal balls


That could shatter when dropped


And the future be sacrificed forever each time


The ball doesn’t bounce — analogous of


War and Fate.  We are the flingers


The catchers charged with maintenance


Equilibrium, stability, a steady hand


If a generation fails, the next must


Scurry to recover that which is lost.


 


 


    Candlelight


 


For Soledad Medrano


 


“It isn’t pretty.”


Three words she cast to the sea of night,


A message in a bottle


For whomever should find it


Washed on a shore, perhaps bobbing


In the waves of the celestial tide,


Swept by a current of sorrow and tears


Both shed and unshed.


Some tears are invisible, you know.


They burn the skin like acid


From the inside where none can see


The scars.  I saw these words,


Brief and vague, excruciating and poignant,


Far flung to the eclectic electric crests


Of social media; the faceless odyssey


Of cyberspace . . . a bumpy ocean of endless


Distraction I grapple, unsuccessfully,


To avoid while writing or drawing.


It isn’t pretty.


Such a cryptic thought, shared


With the gravity of a quiet life-or-death struggle,


The kind we can pass on a street


And not glimpse the severity,


Filtered through kaleidoscopic senses,


Or the lenses of expired rose-colored spectacles


Needing a new prescription.


Yet it caused me to wonder, to pause


And study it for illumination.


Busy, giving the statement a quick glance,


I would stay tuned for an explanation, a clue


To its riddle.  Like so many casual comments


Tossed out to random observers


At any given moment across a vast divide,


I couldn’t dwell on the meaning.


Only later, in another day or two


Would I learn how significant the remark


And recall that it struck me as rather odd


And terse; I had wanted more, something


To clarify.  But I did not know her well enough;


A joke, a witticism would have felt


Out of place, the wrong tone.


I so rarely glimpsed what she shared


And couldn’t think of the proper response,


Uncertain what it referred to, that brooding


Note . . .  A concerned reply from a virtual


Stranger would not have changed her mind,


I suspect.  She needed to talk to someone.


Belated realization.  Tragic retrospection.


I with my own introverted demons,


Time-challenged and pressured by


Continuous deadlines, agreed in silence:


It isn’t pretty; a lot of things aren’t.


But some are, and perhaps she needed to


Hear this.  I waited for what else she might


Add.  It was the last I would glimpse that night,


And the next.


Three simple words, how they touched me


With a twinge of mystery, a spark of curiosity.


And after that an indelible grief


In hindsight, for a moment of rue


I will always carry.


You can’t get a moment back


Once it is gone.


Had I reached out to ask, to inquire


What she meant . . . would the outcome


Be different?  We are left to feel such things,


To wonder in the aftermath


What we could have done.


Now I mourn


And treasure those terms:


It isn’t pretty.


Written of darkness and agony


One dim October eve.


I was there and said nothing,


Preoccupied with my own issues.


I must live with that too.


I will remember it, an eternal regret.


A solitary vigil.


A chance wasted to connect


And be a true friend.


Farewell, Soledad.  I did not say


Hello or goodbye at the time.


I just watched as I will


From the shadows of my own


Private share of past anguishes.


Now I know precisely what


You were telling us.


You seemed very nice, a lovely soul —


Who unfortunately harbored disastrous


Torments, inconsolable wounds.


A courageous author, brave enough to


Speak out about the unspeakable.


I among others will greatly miss your


Presence; your beautiful eyes and smile.


You were a light in the dark,


And your candle burns on.


 


 


    Paris


 


My beret is removed in sympathy


for terror in the City Of Light;


for Parisians, our fallen sisters and brothers


across the seas.  As French hats were lowered


when New York wept on Nine Eleven.


The world sobs together


for any town or neighborhood


targeted by hate,


ravaged with a violent yet curable disease —


the cold disregard for human life.


I hang my head in sadness,


grieving at the torches of disputes


on foreign lands or at home . . .


the bloodshed, turbulence, separation


dulling the shine of hearts joined


in mutual respect.


Atrocities occur too often,


wherever there are weapons aimed;


when groups with power cannot agree.


Cherished places are desecrated,


the calm of streets shattered by


bombs or bullets; by cowards and the brave,


who may resemble two sides of a coin


tossed in the air to decide who is right


and who is wrong.  History turns to myth


when the facts are slanted or obscured.


It is cities like Paris and New York


that unite us all, that belong


to the globe, a greater sphere,


though we may not have visited;


we feel we know them so well


and dream of seeing their sights,


of strolling their lanes like lovers.


No extremes of heartless murder,


massacre, brutality


can mar the vision we embrace


or steal the spirit of a people joined


in hope and peace.


 


 


    Plan C


 


From day to day


opinions can change,


ideas may shift


and firm or razor edges


can soften, reform.


Plans should be written


in pencil not ink,


certainly not carved in stone,


or there will be much crossing out


and chipping, smoothing,


then revising more


as we seek to refine our views


until perfected.


But even then, like artists


we must accept that nothing ever is.


What we scribble, etch, engrave


is a changing blueprint that may


end up being what we do when


all else fails . . .


either a complete surprise


or an alternate route —


Plan C,


after the other alternate (Plan B)


was scrubbed.  Erasing is neater.


Less time-consuming too.


I seem to have less and less of that,


and my plans will change accordingly.


It’s all interconnected, a network


of weights and balances,


like the universe.


I had a lot of plans once upon a time . . .


History is what it was,


a progression of events


from conquests to heroics,


depending on who recorded or witnessed


the happenstances;


the comedies or tragedies —


so often defined by violence,


by somebody taking away


someone else’s rights.


Now and then it might seem


The Good Guys won,


but there were usually more than


two sides,


an untold story.


For every win there had to be losses,


not always deserved or intended.


There were twisted fates,


unforeseen consequences,


stray bullets, random bombings,


grudges, mistakes, bystanders,


and innocents fell.


Wars seldom go according to plan,


while acts of terror are faceless plots


directed at ideals, beliefs, appearances.


Or the schemes of individuals


with axes to grind


and access to weapons.


There has been too much


destruction and hatred.


We can’t go back and fix that


because a Time Machine could create


a bigger mess, upset the scales


and tip things more out of whack


than they were.


We can only heal the present


and do our best for future generations


that history will not repeat.


I wish they would stop hiding


the truths


we should be learning from


to correct errors in advance


instead of multiplying them.


We have computers now


to help with the math.


Forget about Plan C;


it probably stands for Crazy.


By then it’s generally kind of late


to be repaired.


Or maybe the situation isn’t hopeless.


Maybe it needs another look.


And then sometimes,


just when Fate convinces me


that my luck is rotten as a black peach,


the worst or best serendipity reverses


my point of view entirely,


turning things around


from bad to good or not as terrible —


showing me the brighter side,


a flower growing on a battlefield,


a tree that survived


a forest fire — withstood the blaze


green and resilient among the charred


stumps and trunks of a bitter scourge.


One shining moment,


an uplifting reminder that all isn’t lost


if we find a shred of dignity or hope,


something to believe — telling us


not to give up.  Sometimes that is all


there is, all we can take away


and grasp.  Cling to this, a reassurance,


the thought that luck can change.


It might not be the end, the impossible


dream or limit of endurance.


It may just be a point of departure,


low tide before the current rises,


an ebb before the flow.


Or maybe, part of a grander design:


a cosmic sense of justice and order.


Karma, kismet, destiny.


We all share the fate of the world;


we are all one people under the sun


and stars.  There is no room for


ulterior motives, skewed priorities.


Life, innocence, peace . . .


those matter.


Not killing, not war, not death.


Stick to Plan A


for All Aboard,


All-Purpose,


One Plan Fits All,


the All For One And One For All


Approach . . .


just be sure to think


Ahead.


Plan B is for Bullies, Barbarians.


It’s Bonkers, Belligerent, Buffoonish.


Plan C?  That spells


Calamity!  Catastrophe!  Casualties!


Or Cuckoo and Cockamamie.


Do the alphabet.


It’s as basic as A-B-C.


 


 


    Clockfolk


 


The people in the clock are listening.


I know they’re in there.  I can hear them


between the ticks and cuckoos,


as sure as I can reach up and touch


that round silver moon just sitting


in the sky watching


the clockfolk wonder about me


like everyone else — except in their case,


I wonder about them just as much.


They’re tinkering inside, messing with


the way things are . . . the gears and


levers.  People can never leave stuff alone,


they have to change how things run,


raise the bar, alter the system,


upgrade rules, wreck or improve


the status quo.


Here today, gone tomorrow!


But clocks have worked pretty much


the same for ages,


other than the kind that aren’t actual


timepieces.  There are no gears and cogs.


No springs.  Who knows what they are —


alien technology or modern junk.


I blame the people in the clock.


Why couldn’t they be satisfied?


As soon as I like something,


it will disappear, replaced in a flash,


tossed on the scrapheap of the obsolete —


burying yesterday’s new thing.


 


 


    Loonacy


 


I can be a loon though I haven’t a feather.


I may carry an umbrella in all types of weather.


I might climb a scaffold without a paintbrush


and take my time while in a slight rush.


 


Don’t expect to be gotten or understood.


I refuse to be analyzed (as if you could)


like a bug under glass; I will still be duller


when vividly magnified in Technicolor.


 


How can the unfamiliar be appreciated?


The different may be snubbed, by some even hated.


My ways are mysterious as an unread book,


a head that has never been nodded or shook.


 


I seldom do the things you’re supposed to do.


Must be missing those parts, or some of the glue


that keeps it together, holds everything in place


like gravity and harmony.  I don’t have a poker face.


 


In fact, I’m surprised to be recognized at all.


My features can look bland, unspecific as a ball


that isn’t defined by a particular sport . . .


just plain and anonymous.  That is my sort.


 


Yet my heart is as light as an unstrung balloon;


I am deliriously me in the shimmer of the Moon —


when a clock strikes Thirteen and Time goes still


as a Will-O-The-Wisp mocking a Whippoorwill.


 


Not everything has to make perfect sense . . .


I am as blissfully ignorant as I am dense


about the state of the art of an artichoke heart.


Oops, I tugged a loose thread and am coming apart!


 


 


    The Monster’s Lament


 


What if I told you space and time isn’t real?


That it’s all an illusion, a fabric to hide


the ugly mechanical parts, the guts and bolts


of the truth . . . that the universe you know


is a dream of smoke and mirrors,


a dash of cosmic dust?


Not the dust of stars and planets,


but a darkness so complete it is brighter


than a sun; a force that encompasses


nothing and everything at once,


upon a metabolic mindfield where matter


is infinite and pure, defying distance


and limits.


 


Would you regard me a misguided thinker,


somber, bleaker than a forest of ice-trees


if I lost my faith in the ability to bend?


You must have disdained the obvious,


an elaborate frostwork of ornately sculpted


one-of-a-kind patterns within the chilling


haunted structure, clear and blinding in


the day, white and gray at night.  But none of it


is genuine, permanent, shaped from rock;


it melts exposed to glare, vulnerable to seasons.


I, a starveling for affection, crouch in the shade


of my convictions; an outcast freak born of graves


and corpses.


 


Can you see into my soul?  Would you meet


my eyes if I gave you the chance?  I have found


that one can blaze a path by stepping softly


without creating much sound or disturbance.


As I creep round the edges of civilization . . .


do you notice me, or are you blind to my


lurking out of shyness, my glimpses and gazes?


I have watched you and wonder if you could


look beyond the deformities, my eccentric


nature without growing alarmed, summoning


the club-and-torch brigade, the pitchfork


militia.  It is so easy to be unaccepted if you


stick out.


 


Would you view me as a threat because


my heart stopped beating, my flesh was cold?


Do you find it monstrous to live again through


a few borrowed parts?  Maybe it is Science


you should fear, having made me what I am.


That is what defies logic and principles,


crosses barriers and prudence, shirking morals


for the sake of experiment.  Perhaps you are


correct that I should not exist as I am,


for I am a work of artless forgery, a sham.


There is no place for such an aberration, whether


in society or the wilderness.  I must seek a cure,


a refuge.


 


The victim of Mankind, can I forgive you for


my suffering and then for spurning me,


your invention?  Where shall I fit in, this


creature of distasteful features and virtueless


traits but outside your cities and provinces?


I have no home, no purpose.  I must find a place


at the end of the earth, neglecting to mark


a trail of footprints as evidence, not leaving


a single fingernail shred behind.  And the time


will pass slower, every detail intricately rendered


by anxiety, but it will pass before you know as


you try to forget your mistake, groping within to


expunge me.


 


I may endure despite all efforts, a reminder of the


dreamworld once crafted to gawp at imperfections.


The walls of belief and race and culture erected


in order to have drama, to disrupt the glorious


mundane monotony of everything as it should be,


of a peace so tranquil that it drowns you


like an undisturbed lake.  I rose from the base


of that pool, from its muddy depths,


and fascinated you with my garish visage,


then frightened you — more human, more


sentient than your kind would tolerate


in a beast.  Therefore, I shall not vex you


any further.


 


I desired to walk beside you, engage in equal


pursuits, but I am aware now I could never be the


same.  That was my folly, for we were not created


equal.  What is disparate cannot be transformed


and labeled authentic.  Science must have limits,


must be wielded with due conscience and ethics.


I am the antithesis of humanity and life!


How vain and warped to conceive that one


such as I could serve as an acceptable substitute


for a man.  I am sufficiently intelligent by your


standards to recognize what I am and am not . . .


I am death.  I am deceit.  I am an ogre.


Nothing more.


 


~ An elegy alluding to Mary Shelley’s FRANKENSTEIN

Trilllogic Entertainment: Poetic ReflectionsAuthors: Lori R. Lopez
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 02, 2015 16:58

May 10, 2015

Mothers

I was planning to call this “Blank”.  I had even typed it up at the top in preparation, but at the last minute I decided to change the theme, so I guess you readers have dodged a bullet.  One that creates much noise and smoke while signifying nothing.  Just a typical exercise in poetic reflecting, or columnity, or something to that effect.  You know what I mean.  Hopefully.  If not, don’t worry.  You are not alone.  There are many out there who have no idea what I mean most of the time; possibly all of the time.  Besides the ones who have never heard of me, let alone met me or read me, which is virtually indistinguishable.  I am really much more me when I am read than when I am not.


With that said, or mumbled (I think I was mumbling or muttering it, though I cannot be certain since it was all in my head) . . . I see we are off to another fine and confusing start.  How nifty!  I do so love to obfuscate.  Or is it discombobulate?  I can never keep straight whether I am doing one or the other.  Suffice it to say that I am being vague and rather muddled.  We’ll leave it at that.  It may not stay left, or right for that matter.  It may wander off and stay something else entirely.  It’s so unpredictable.  We’ll just have to see what it ends up being, I suppose.  Whatever it is.  To tell you the truth, I’ve already forgotten.  Let me grab something and stick it here.  Hold on . . . (rummaging) . . . got it!


Oh, sorry, it scurried away.


Wait, I’ve got this.  Or that.  (Digging deeper.)  Hmm.  I’ll just put some duct tape over the empty spot.  There, good as . . . well, the gaping hole is gone.  Let’s move on, shall we?  I think that would be best, rather than dwelling on the obvious patch in the middle of the page.  Pretend it isn’t there.


Didn’t your mother teach you it’s impolite to stare?  Oh come on, I bet she mentioned it once or twice.  Of course she did.  She must have.  You’re in denial, that’s what.  You should listen to your mother.  That’s the problem with this world.  People stop listening to their moms, and pretty soon it’s a jumbled heap of unpicked-up havoc and chaos.  Haven’t you heard that mothers know best?  It’s true.  Ask anyone.  Ask me, I’m a mother.


Ignore it, I said!


Okay, I see we’ve become a little obsessed with the duct tape.  Just because it has silly yellow ducks on it is no excuse.  Really, you’re behaving rather juvenile.  We were trying to have a nice one-sided conversation in which I do the talking and you do the listening, but now you aren’t even paying attention.  I might as well be playing Tiddly Winks, or Badminton.  I could be.  I was playing them the other day.  It was very nostalgic.  I used to play them a long time ago, a long long time, and I’ve taken them up again.  I was a bit rusty, but it’s one of those things you never forget, like riding a bike or twiddling your thumbs.  You can forget how to swim (trust me), but you don’t forget Tiddly Winks.  Or Badminton, also known as Batmitton at night since you have to avoid swatting bats.


I’m teaching my sons everything I know about the games.  Noél and Rafael were soccer players and Mexican folklore dancers growing up.  This is all new to them.  After mastering the art of skipping, which Rafael had managed to skip until he was an adult, I thought it was time they learned something useful . . . something serious and more competitive.  As a mother I need to prepare them for the world we live in.  It’s never too late.  We had overlooked these vital skills.  What manner of mother would I be if I failed to share my experience and valuable knowledge with my kids?  Not that I claim to be great at being a mother.  I tend to worry about it, actually.  Hoping I’ve been a positive example and influence.


Whether you’re a mother or not, I’m sure you can relate.  We all have moms, unless we’re especially odd.  Even then, even if we hatched from an eggshell or sprang from a can that stuff pops out of when you open the lid, we must have started this crazy thing called life the same.  It’s fairly universal, the whole mother thing.  Whatever our language, beliefs, customs, species.  Just think how incredible it is that we’ve had one, or somebody like a mom.  Every child needs that.  Just as, I believe, every woman needs to experience a maternal bond with someone else, or another creature, a furbaby, a kid with feathers or scales.  We make connections of the heart, and the roles of mother and child are essential, whatever side we may be on.  Then again, we are all children of the earth.  We should, every one of us, feel connected — with each other as well as with Nature.


Phew, that was a heavy thought.  My head feels lighter now.  Oh no, here’s an afterthought:  The roles of parent and child are often interchangeable over time.  There, my mind feels much clearer.  I fear I went off on a tangent, making statements instead of the usual cotton-candy fluff.  I do my best to skate around such unfortunate bother, the starched-socks bee-in-the-bonnet nonridiculous nonsense that can creep in and spoil a rambling essay that says so little and means a lot less.  Now and then I may lapse into something which nearly resembles a point (if your pencil hasn’t been sharpened for a while).  You’ll have to forgive the occasional outburst.  It must be a personality dysfunction.  I am kind of quirky.  And kooky.


Now that I have explained myself thoroughly, let’s talk about mothers.  I don’t know why that popped into my head, but it’s as good a topic as any to go on about in a roundabout sort of way.  I was first typing “a roundabout wort of say”, which is fairly different.  I’ll save that for next time, perhaps.  It’s a subject that requires adequate time to rattle off with as little attention as possible.  Yes, I will have to shelve it for future discussion and hope it doesn’t roll from the shelf to be lost under a table or sofa, or collect dust in a corner.  My mind’s attic does tend to get dusty.  I wonder where all of that dust comes from?  Is it outer-space dust?  Is it the soot of candles burned at both ends or the ashes of burned bridges?  Might it be those chips off old blocks, the splinters or slivers pulled out of fingers, the sediment of eroded rocks and cliffs and beaches?  Maybe it’s spilt fairydust, sleep or hourglass sand that has trickled out of place.  Could it be the Moon’s dried tears, the hardness of clouds, the fog turned to powder?  Stray particles escaped from that Hadran Collider contraption?  Old brittle grease from the gears that keep Time slipping away and everything else going like clockwork?


Speaking of which, we’ve run out of time to discuss mothers.  I shall have to write poems missing a theme after all.  The slate is blank, folks.  Please disregard the title.  I’ll send a little painter with a bucket to redo it in due time, whenever that might be.  Perhaps when I’ve paid my dues.  Wait, I thought I already did.  Is Life trying to double-deal me extra charges?  That’s some nerve!  Hold on, I must go and argue with those quacks in the Bills Department.  In the meantime, here are a few poems about whatever they’re about to entertain you.  Like elevator music.  And the recorded jingles they play when you’re left holding the phone — not to be confused with holding the bag . . .


 


 


    mothers


 


A mixed bag, you never know what


You might get, reaching into the pot


Or the hat to draw a mother.  A hugger


Or a slugger; a nagger, gagger, lagger,


Washragger; baker or shaker; comforter,


Quilter, or a blanket excuse for screaming.


You could be mothered, smothered,


Tothered, sister and brothered . . .


Will she dress you up or dress you down?


Will she understand or reprimand you,


Teach you or preach to you?  Will she


Reach out from the darkness of her past,


Lead you into the sunlight of a golden path


Or new day, encourage you to cross rainbows


And let smiles keep you dry, take your hand


When you are lost yet leave you the space


To find yourself?  Can she make you laugh


When you feel like crying — make everything


Fine again after the world clobbered you?


Did she do her best to love you and provide


As much as she could of the essentials;


Give you life without giving too much


Or taking too much in return?  Don’t fret,


The odds are in your favor of landing


A good one.  Chances are, if you have


Known a mother in your life or ever felt


A mother’s touch, a mother’s protection,


Her absolute affection, then you are rich


Beyond compare and there is nothing that


Will ever compare with that.  Everyone


Has a mother.  Good, bad, or indifferent.


But if nothing else, know that you are


A child of the universe and you are blessed


With the ability to dream your dreams,


Sing your songs, dance your dances,


Write your wrongs, most of all to live.


And eventually to change your life if you


Wish, if you so desire.  Because a mother


Granted you the chance, carried you and


Gave you a birthday.  Whether you have


Eaten your cake or not; whether it was


Upside down or weighed a pound . . .


Know that you were loved at least that much,


For that is love.  That is sacrifice.


It is the greatest gift you will ever receive.


Have you given her your thanks, forgiven her


For any of the mistakes she was bound to make


If she was human?  Even if she was an alien,


They’re probably imperfect too.  So give her


A break, give her a hug . . . in your arms or


In your heart.  It is not too late.  It is never


Too late.


 


 


    Mama


 


The tolls of years were too evident


The toils of a life could press and chisel


From so many sides until what remained


Was sculpted to a woman


 


Once a carefree child, a budding girl


Then a comely maiden whose high degree


Of fairness did not guarantee being treated


The same, for the world could be so mean


 


But the woman was stronger for it


Smarter and wary; ever more cautious


Of changes and artifice, the double faces


On strangers who lied with straight tongues


 


Tired of their smooth talk, crooked morals


Weary of a twisted route and false paths


Even at times of friends who could be


Twin-edged or masked like Zorro


 


She spoke softer, more reluctant and shy


Than when she was fresh to the world


Of landslides and woes.  Time must whittle


Away that charm-school polish and naiveté


 


Disappointment erodes the eagerness and


Confidence of youth, leaves a trail littered by


Rubble and lost hopes, tears melted to glass


Fragments of dreams lay scattered in her wake


 


The paragon of womanhood, she became


Entangled by the ties of deception, abandoned


In her prime; the only good man she had ever


Known was married to The Law


 


Handsome and courageous yet a coward


Unable to commit himself for a family, for her


The fraud claimed to love her too much; a fool


He would spare her from bereavement


 


She lost him anyway, finding the door


Walking through it such a difficult thing


She kept the secret when she left him


That was burning in her womb:  an egg


 


As a single mother she raised the child


Without support; fingers pointed, scornful


Looks, belittling words cast in her direction


But she held her head up and endured


 


The girl was her light, the only reason for


Her smiles.  Calling her Mama; a small thing


Can make all the difference, change a dismal


Day into an array of sparkling moments


 


Or rip open a soul to let everything of worth leak


This woman would know the horror and pain


The grief and heartbreak at last when her child


Was hit by a stray bullet one bright innocent morn


 


Her sorrow could not be measured like rainfall


It was devastating.  She felt her life had been


Extinguished, as if the bullet sailed through her too


For an eternity she wandered in a haze of misery


 


Until she chanced upon an egg without a nest


And carried it home to hatch.  The bird emerged


Fuzzy and pink, gray and brown, kind of purple


Then grew to a brilliant hue of crimson


 


Red was her daughter’s favorite color


The bird reminded her of the girl, the way


His black eyes peered at her, thinking she was


Mama; how he hopped and pranced with joy


 


The softness of his feathers rubbing her cheek


The notes of his cheerful tweets and whistles . . .


An offbeat pair, an oddball family, they had


Each other.  Both were saved from being lost.


 


 


    Mother Nature, Mother Earth


 


At the apple’s core, the center of all things,


The nucleus of organic and mineral elements,


There is one voice that speaks loudest,


Bearing the authority of a vast web linking


The cosmos, connecting each strand, each heart;


Flowing like a river of silk in every direction.


Her emotions are renowned, widely feared


By those who lack a depth of perception,


Who fail to acknowledge that her spirit


Lies within us as well as around us.  She is


Our anatomy, our character, our composition


And constitution.  We are in tune, we are one:


Liquid and solid and gas combined,


Part of the ether, part of the past and future


And everything between.  The ground below


Our feet, the atmosphere we inhale in a gasp


Of pleasure or exhale to speak out and sing.


She is as stunning when she wakes as when


She goes to sleep.  A pin-up queen, the ideal


Of breathtaking charm; the duchess of


Delicate balance and proportion; the epitome


Of dignified, feminine, matronly, maidenlike


Grace; of grit and determination, glorious


Unconquerable attitude.  As close to perfection


As you can get.  She is beauty and inspiration,


Wisdom and purity, life and death and birth.


She is the current that generates creative thought.


The spark that ignites artistic brushstrokes.


The charge that leaps from braincell to braincell


Conducting moods and actions like an orchestra.


The impetus for change.  The melody of hope.


The harmony of peace.  The motivation to be


Bold, to be brave, to be different.  She is


The stardust of dreams, the fabric of love,


The essence of imagination.  She is the mother


Of invention and Nature, which have been known


To clash like siblings; she is who we come home to


After drifting a sea of constellations or swimming


Against moontides.  She may be riled by


Random circumstance; watch out for her


Tempestuous personality.  When reacting to


Contempt, neglect, the ravaging of her gifts,


Beware a woman scorned.  Her wrath is


Tremendous, and there is nowhere to run


From her unladylike behavior.  Angered,


She will hurl lightning with a cacophony of


thunder as if the heavens were crashing down.


She will pour a flood of tears; inflict a wave


Of anger, anguish, provoked emotions.


Try to understand, underneath the drama


There may be a wound unhealed, scars from


A history of disrespect or lack of care.


She is first a lady, like any mom, and requires


Courtesy.  Like the female of a species,


Her strength and perseverance deserve


A shining regard, a reflection of her love,


Though she may linger in the background


Unnoticed, forgotten, less flashy and


Attention-seeking.  A nurturing force,


She furnishes a bounty of thankless support,


Asking so little of her children while


Imparting a diversity of unrivaled treasures,


Shelter and nourishment.  It should be a crime,


A mortal sin to not appreciate her —


To not protect Mother Nature, Mother Earth.


 


 


    Mummy


 


Once I had a mother


Who was not like any other


She was a lot like yours, I’m sure


But yours was not a lot like her


My mummy was rather odd


As if emerged from a creepy pod


Or a moldy old sarcophagus


Raveled in linen straps like a truss


Then she produced a kid like me


As out of the ordinary as can be


Possessing attributes uncommon


Wearing one long rag like a cup of ramen


The same as you in certain ways


Yet sorting the gnarliest of Bad Hair Days


Every strand in a perplexing knot


Which vexes and flusters me a lot


But isn’t why I seem abnormal


It’s that I’m never quite conformal


I use strange words that don’t exist


And like to give my life a twist


As if it were all a sinister plot


In fact, I’m not so sure it’s not


We were born alike, I guess


Unless you crawled from a gothic mess


Where you were being put together


A jigsaw puzzle of flesh and weather


Sparked to life by nuts and bolts


The limp target of electric jolts


It wouldn’t matter in the least


If you were made of ginger and yeast


Concocted by a spell, a voodoo curse


Spat out by a cat or something worse


As long as you don’t pull my threads


Unwind my bindings, mock my dreads


We can play here all day and night


My mummy’s tomb is sealed up tight


She likes to take the lengthiest nap


We won’t disturb her if we clap


Her ears fell off countless years ago


She’s bandaged so it doesn’t show


I think she’s the prettiest mummy ever


Rigorous too, rather ghoulish and clever


Except while playing possum or passed out


Dead to the world as a drunken lout


Silent and brittle within a box of stone


Or stiffly chiding to let her alone!


At times I’m cradled in her cold embrace


A little mumby, wrapped toe to face


Rocked by shriveled arms and breast


My head against a vacant chest


It is then I sense a special flutter


Like wings inside thicker than butter


Forever could I sleep in her gaunt hug


Cozy and still, never feeling more snug


A mummy’s love is a sacred treasure


Enduring beyond all earthly measure


It is there I am safe at last to slumber


And nary a care may dare encumber


Until her withered appendages break


From too many games of Paddycake


And a swaddled babe would sorely tumble


To the museum floor then crack and crumble


I will lie at her feet in strewn decay


To be swept, repaired, and made okay


My owies glued, the bandages restored


And my mummy laid flat as an ironing board


To rest in one piece with me at her side


But I always slip out, then skip off and hide.


 


 


    With Respect


 


These days a mother might be scoffed at


For staying home, as Feminism battles to


Gain recognition, as women fight for equality.


It’s unfortunate that this is necessary


In a world where mothers are so important


And should be revered, considered valuable;


Where ladies have demonstrated themselves


To be as smart and wise as any man, as


Talented and skilled, as strong in so many


Ways.  We have nothing left to prove.


Yet it’s sad that men born of women could


Still put females down and treat them


With disdain or even violence.  A shame


That humanity has not even reached the


Level of intelligence and civilization


Where no culture will consider women


Objects, possessions, property.  Where


No person will be enslaved, no girl forced


To wed, no worker paid less for being


Branded an inferior gender.  Why is


The modern world so unfair to women?


It is as inexplicable and absurd as bias


Over the color of one’s skin.  Until we


Judge everyone by their individual merits


And deeds rather than superficial traits,


We cannot call ourselves a civilized society.


Men are not the only persecutors; women


Need to stop pressuring all women to be


This or that, to be champions of whatever


They now view as feminine.  I am for


Balance, for a middle ground between


Extremes.  I think the world needs more


Gentle men and gentle women.  Let us


Remember, ladies and gents, to be kind,


To be decent, and to treat others with


Respect — just like your mother taught you.


 


 


    even monsters have moms


 


I


I have heard it whispered


along the edges of the zones


where nobody is foolish enough


to enter, afraid of what prowls


the interior.  I’ve heard a lot of things:


idle talk, truth or wisdom, advice


for staying alive.  Words are like rain.


You know you can’t rely on the drops


to be clean, to keep falling.  They just start


and stop when they please.  Ghost rain,


it comes and goes.  That’s all there is


in these parts.  The great storms of the past


are gone.  They say the monsters guard


lakes underground, secret pools in the


desert, tarns sheltered by mountains.


There are many rumors and legends


about the creatures, driven by hope


and desperation; by greed, humanity’s


bane.  We battle them to stay alive.


It keeps us from fighting each other,


makes us feel civilized.  We might be


reduced to mere savages — packs of


marauding beasts, without actual beasts


to set us apart from them . . . establish


who, correction, what we are not.


They set a standard of behavior,


Not that everyone is polite, considerate.


We are all just dealing on our terms


with the collapse of society, the demise


of anything good or sane.


 


II


A repeated wisp of gossip flashed in


my skull like a beacon.  The catalyst for


this adventure:  I wondered if it was


a fact the things could have mothers.


Such a wild notion sounded quite


incredible, fantastic, yet I knew


from studies of history that most life


originated from a womb of some sort.


It’s my belief there is a cosmic mother


for everything, a maternal source.


I carry a sense of this inside,


on a deeper level, and there the idea


didn’t seem far-fetched or impossible,


struggle as my brain did to grasp


that these hideous beings of nightmare


were young and vulnerable at any point.


What is real does not necessarily


have to be reasonable.  Only tenable.


After most of the animals disappeared,


monsters came down from the hills,


out of the wastelands — dreadful,


so nasty and harsh-tempered.  Men were


still organized; governments hadn’t failed,


been overthrown, the concept abandoned.


With the monsters came pernicious wars


that halted internal conflicts between


human beings, who must now bond


and band together against their


childhood fears, these wretched ogres


out of a distorted mind’s imaginings.


 


III


They are winning — thrashing us with


sly unpredictable attacks, untraceable —


striking anyone, any age, in devilish hits.


The methods vary; no certainties exist.


A single constant, that they are brutal.


Utterly vicious; terrifyingly cruel.


My hands tremble as I scrawl this.


I wanted to be a writer when there


were presses, practically a lifetime ago.


I scribble thoughts on scraps found


in abandoned houses, with ink or paint,


dirt mixed with spit or sweat, blood


from an arm if I must.  Anything.


I feel compelled to record the horrors


taking place, to serve as witness in case


we disappear.  We cannot last . . .


They allow no chance for us to rest


or rebuild, to prepare, as if the earth


has simply opened up and spills them


forth in retaliation, out of self-defense,


an endless legion from Hell.  I did not


need to seek them, crossing into Badlands,


the infernal hinter regions they inhabit.


I must know, must see with my own eyes;


as my mother said, curious to a fault.


Are they born or shaped with vengeful


nonchalance . . . spewed out of a molten


mud frenzy?  They come to feed and toy


with us.  At first my kind had hunted them


for water; we cower from their raids.


 


IV


Resistance seems an exercise in futility.


The will to survive is frail, splintered by


brain-numbing assaults.  We are human


after all, subject to emotions and faultlines.


Anger fades to acceptance, to inevitability,


the embrace of fate, a doomed mentality.


We are a lost species, perishing like others,


soon to be extinct.  My days are numbered


by the odds as well as years.  I have little left


to relinquish.  The sacrifice is purely selfish.


I need to glimpse them at their root, their core.


It won’t be long . . .  Steps crunch black soil


that is firm yet fragile.  Courage flares, a torch


blazing with interest, fascination, kindled


from a meager wick, the wavering flame


of a candle.  This will be my glory, my last


hurrah!  Fingers do not shake as I pause


to pen a final statement, a belated insight:


Knowledge is life; love is water,


to be sipped and savored; truth is


everything and nothing, for it cannot


be held in your hand, only your heart.


I will carry it to my grave, but in the end


have an empty fist clutching air,


grabbing the wind as I topple and die.


All I wish at present is to endure


long enough to reach my destination —


to have the satisfaction of a small


yet profound victory.  Coarse snarls!


I duck behind a ridge, pulse throbbing.


The frightful cretins have no mercy.


 


V


Brawny, bold, they stalk these barrens


to protect what the creatures claimed.


I do not begrudge them terrain or water;


they can have it, these diverse masters


of the planet, like dinosaurs before us;


apex predators.  Hail the current kings,


it is their turn to reign.  I hope they’ll be


kinder, not treat the world as we have


despite our intelligence.  We brought this


on ourselves, a new age of violence,


unleashing a dominant species to replace


corrupt rulers.  Could it be that we created


these monsters somehow?  Playing God.


What stupid malignant lords we were.


It saddens me, for some of us did not


deserve this awful conclusion to the


human chapter.  It is the sweetness, the loss


of innocence I mourn once the beasts


are distant from my position.  Recovering,


resuming the journey, I scout discreetly


then hear a chorus of howls as if baying at


the Moon, but the sky is pale not dimmed.


Sunlight still gleams, and through its radiance


I can view a circle of ogres prancing, parading


gruffly in a festive tenor.  Apparently a custom!


Orbs round with astonishment, I stare between


two rocks, then gasp in wonder at a crying infant


nestled by the arms of one that squats within


the ring of celebrators — each unique and ugly.


Here it is; I cannot believe my fortune!


 


VI


There has been a birth, an addition to the tribe


of abominations.  However crude and vulgar,


the fiends are capable of sentiment, compassion,


not mindless rampages without a trace of


cunning or concern.  More exceptional;


more depraved, barbaric and revolting than


I could have conceived.  A chill travels my veins.


Cold fog penetrates my soul, the brume of


terror seeping into my bones, crystallizing


the marrow to bits of ice like a shattered window.


I cannot believe my eyes, no, they must be lying!


How could these killers — these heinous unholy


slashers of men, women, and children — have


families of their own?  Then I recall the crimes


of mankind, the slaying of lambs and calves,


baby seals, jovial dolphins, whales and elephants,


and each other . . .  There has been no lack of


wars and slaughter by human beings during


the ample generations of our existence.


My guard is lowered.  Abruptly I am moved


to uncontrollable sobs, gut-wrenching tears.


The wails betray my presence.  Monstrous brutes


detect my location.  Abruptly I am in the midst


of a new circle.  The mother saunters near,


bringing her baby to join the throng.


Trollish beasts salivate like I will be their


banquet, the feast of demons.  My gaze is locked


on a child.  All babies are cute if you squint.


This one is beautiful.  And I realize in a burst


of madness:  You can indeed love your enemy.

Trilllogic Entertainment: Poetic ReflectionsAuthors: Lori R. Lopez
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 10, 2015 01:02

March 31, 2015

Horror Limericks

Time, time, time.  I think it’s time.  Yes, that’s what it is.  The next subject for a poetic reflection.  No, no, no.  Scratch that.  Well, it is high time for a new column.  I mean, here it is the sixth year of writing them (having passed the fifth anniversary ten months ago).  It is nearly the seventh year, in fact, and I’m just getting around to it?  I would say this is long overdue.  The clock has been sprung, and the pendulum has flown off the handle with the cuckoo bird.  It’s a lot like that time-changing nonsense where we are instructed to set our clocks forward or backward to lose or gain an hour.  An entire sixty minutes!  It just happened again.  This month.  Right now, the very day I am getting around to my next column.  I lost an hour.  No wonder I feel confused.  And it’s not as if there are too many or any to spare . . .


I have a serious problem with there not being enough hours in the day.  I would join a group for it, but I am not that good with groups.


Now I will probably obsess over losing an hour.  I should start a petition to end this madness, before they swipe any more of the time I have left.  I’m not getting any younger!  But if I started a petition I doubt that I could finish a column this month, which is more important.  Next month it will be a full year since the last two.


Wow, I have been busy.  With all sorts of busyness.  Such as skipping months, along with skipping to the loo, skipping rope . . .  Nonetheless, I am back.  You can pinch me, or yourself.  It isn’t a dream.  My apologies in case you are among the few who might have missed these rambled sojourns into the dark and light side of verse.  There is usually a good deal of contrast, as well as general absurdity.  An unstable mixture of extremes, like a science experiment gone wrong.  Or a witch’s cauldron, where who knows what was thrown in and what could crawl out.  Yes, that pretty much describes it.


What have I been doing?  Why do you ask?  What have you been doing?  I’ve been writing stories and poems . . . for anthologies, magazines, my latest horror collection.  Oh, and I released the second volume of my poetry series last year, The Queen Of Hats.  For Twenty Fifteen (which is the present, in case you’re reading this from the future) I plan to wrap up Volume Three, Blood On The Moon.  It’s in progress.  It still needs a bunch of additional poems, and more of my peculiar illustrations . . . but hey, the cover’s done!  That’s something!  And its thirteen chapters are half complete since they begin with previous columns.  I hope to wrap it up this year, in spite of the missing hour.


Oh sure, they’ll give an hour back in the Fall.  By then I’ll be way behind with everything as a result of losing one now, so nice try!


I was also busy cramming columns into the fourth volume of the series, which still needs a couple after this one.  It’s all very exciting.  To me, anyway.


I have been more off than usual in keeping on track.  Sporadic as they may be the past two years, I do hope to be more consistent with these poetic prattles.  And I hope you will bear with my erratic tendencies.  It is best not to force any form of artistic endeavor, or it can become a labor of labor rather than a labor of the heart and soul.  I never want it to become just “work” for me.  I prefer it to be inspired.  So I beg your indulgence as well as your patience.  And your attention span.  I do not necessarily require your understanding, since I dabble in nonsense as much as sense. 


Harumph.  The above has nothing to do with the current theme, which is —


Wait, I just realized this very column is a milestone.  Let us bang a drum, crash a cymbal, toot a horn.  Are you ready for the big announcement?  Are you holding your breath with anticipation?  Stop that right now!  I don’t like to be rushed.


Here it is.  Drumroll, please.  Monkey . . . somebody wind up the monkey!  No, not the cymbal monkey, the drum monkey.  Oops, the drum rolled away.  Oh well.  Enough monkey business.


Here it is, again . . .


Ahem.


This is my fiftieth column.


(Insert eerie music.  No, a fanfare.  Hmm, perhaps an ice-cream-truck or calliope tune?  Yes, that would be odd.  Maestro?  Where did the maestro go?  Nevermind.  Forget the music.  I’ll just hum a bit, off key.  Or not.  My throat’s kind of scratchy.  You’ll have to imagine the humming because one cannot really itch a scratchy throat.)


What’s that?  “Nevermind” isn’t a word?  It is if I say it, and I just said it.  I say it all the time.  Most of the time.  I say it, I will have you know, whenever I say it!


What was I saying?  Oh, fifty!  That’s big, isn’t it?  What do you mean it’s only half of a hundred?  I can count.  I have fingers and toes.  It’s still an event, worth celebrating.  Who invited that wet sock?  And that peanut gallery?  The wet blanket did?  And who invited the wet blanket?


Nevermind.  (See?)  Maybe I was cold.  Or too dry.  The point of all this is that it’s time for a celebration.  Something special.  It’s an occasion, which only happens occasionally.  Or just once in this particular instance.  Send in the clowns!  Let there be cake!  A nice chocolate vegan cake.  And balloons!  It calls for ducks too.  I love how they quack.  Not that geese are anything to sneeze at.  Or mongooses.  Mongeese.  Unless you’re allergic to that sort of thing.


WARNING:  The following three paragraphs are off-topic remarks.


In the midst of not writing this preamble, writing a prior preamble that wound up unfinished, two cohorts and I stopped at the San Diego Central Library to pick up a medal from my first Local Author Exhibit in Twenty Fourteen.  Browsing at the gift shop, I found a button that said READ and another saying BEST-SELLER! so I got them, although I cannot in honesty wear a Best-Seller lapel label as of yet.  They didn’t have one for the lapel level I am at, more of an UN-Best-Seller; possibly a Worst-Seller.  I’ve saved the button on my desk as inspiration.  I shall literally keep hoping for the BEST.  When you write out of love, for the sake of art — and because your head would burst from ideas if you didn’t — whether you are a Best-Seller, a Better-Seller, a So-So Seller, or a Least-Seller like me seems irrelevant.  What matters is that you are read, and therefore I can proudly wear the one that says READ, for it can also imply that I am Read.  Thank you for that.


On the same day, my sons and I stopped to see Godzilla at a theater — sitting in the front row like I used to as a kid when I would go to matinees alone and get lost in the stories on the screen.  (Between reading countless library books.)  Godzilla harkens to Sunday matinees at home when the original Japanese films were shown on the tube, attended with my brother and mother, a cherished piece of nostalgia.  These moments are a quintessential part of who I am as a creative spirit.  And the big green monstersaurus has long been a favorite, so I cried at the end of the new Godzilla.  Monsters are wonderful.


Visiting hat shops made it a perfect day, because hats are another facet of who I am and have been since I can remember.  While she sat through the Godzilla movies, my mother did not comprehend my monster and hat passions.  She took toys and hats away that people gave me if she felt they weren’t appropriate for a girl.  I stubbornly developed my own style in wardrobe as much as in writing or art.  And I have plenty of cool toys!


Okay then, back to the matter and the column at hand.  What shall we talk about now?  I’m not even sure I still have an audience after the last column (eleven months ago) with the antiquated Shakespearebabble.  There have been loyal readers who weathered the thick and the thin times, whether I made up my own words or digressed from the subject (not to mention any subject whatsoever) into the nothingness of sheer jabber.  I marvel over this more than any comic-book hero or villain, if you get my drift.  It simply astonishes me.  What were we talking about again?  Or better still, what weren’t we talking about that we should be?


Hat shops, Godzilla, Central Library . . . ah, it must be books!  Of course.  They are very close to my heart as an author, poet, illustrator, and reader-slash-bookworm.  Okay, I don’t actually eat them, but I do relish gobbling a good tale.  I have lapsed as a reader, unfortunately, since I spend most of my time doing the other stuff.  Even in my sleep, which is very disconcerting when I awake to find that I didn’t actually get any of it down.  I guess I need to learn how to sleep-write.  And sleep-edit.  Maybe sleep-read!


I miss reading books.  Paradoxically, I am surrounded by them.  Many are reference tomes, primarily word books.  I love words.  And I do read those in snippets.  Books often have words, whether a lot or a little.  Some have more pictures than words.  But if each picture is worth a thousand words, then I suppose they do have a fairly good amount of indirect language.  The word books I am referring to, if you will pardon the pun, although it was entirely intentional, are very special for they contain a large number of rare words.  Too many folks these days only like the commonest of terms.  I adore the strangest and most peculiar.


I really went off on some deep-end diving-board tangents here.  I’ve been saving the babble too long.  Oh dear, look at the time.  And the calendar!  It’s already Spring!  There was a Supermoon and a Solar Eclipse on the Equinox.  Then it was the International Day Of Happiness, and World Poetry Day!  It appears there are any number of reasons to celebrate this month, including that tradition about wearing green.  And the Fifteenth, the Ides Of March, was my mother’s eightieth birthday.  She’s been gone fifteen years but is not forgotten.  It is truly an exceptional month.  The perfect one to publish my fiftieth column.


Speaking of which, you may have noticed up there at the top of this ridiculousness that I typed “Horror Limericks”.  There is an explanation.  I promised a friend I would write some limericks, as that is the main form of poetry she likes.  And, believe it or not, I have not written any limericks since beginning my poetic reflections.  You know, these columns.  I could have written some as a child.  That was ages ago.  Many ages.  Some very Dark Ages.  Perhaps you’ve heard of them.


I can be quite nonsensical, so it amazes me that I had not yet turned my poet’s wit to the topic of Limericks.  Great absurd limericks have been penned, though not by me.  This is a tragic oversight, and I am grateful to a friend for bringing them up.  Then I thought:  I should do some Horror Limericks!  I’ve never heard of those.  I’ve done Horror Haiku, which I had not heard of either until I did some.  It was rather popular.  I will, of course, do some nonsense limericks as well.  How could I not?  I am nothing if not absurd.  I may even throw in some anti-limericks.


Confession:  They will probably primarily be anti-limericks.


I may not be the best limericker, but I will try my best whatever that may be.


Without further ado, here are some limericks for Vix.


(See what I did there?  Clever, eh?  Wink, wink.)


Okay, this might not be what she meant.  It is, however, what I would write.  And so I did.


Egad, where did March go?  It has slipped by (thanks to that missing hour).  Soon it will be April Fool’s and I will have to say I was just kidding . . . . .


 


 


    Horror Limericks


 


They are frightful, exciteful, often inane.


While they could make you laugh or plain go insane,


They would rather you scream


For they’re all a bad dream.


Horror Limericks are like smoking a chain.


 


 


    Birds Cheeping


 


What’s with those birds singing outside while I’m sleeping?


Have they lost their little minds?  Why so much cheeping?


It’s freaking me out!  My grip is slipping . . .


Don’t they ever have problems?  I’m flipping . . .


Too late, they’ve done it, I’m up!  Back to grim reaping.


 


 


    Feeding Fault


 


On the eve of a lunar crescent roll’s somersault,


A pepperish pair crept the cleaver edge of a fault.


Baring a maw that would gape rather wide,


Guilt gulped the salsa and his blushing bride . . .


The sweet unseasoned lady could have used more salt.


 


 


    Mad Jack


 


There once lived a mad Jack who liked to chop


He hacked with a vengeance and couldn’t stop


Till he cut down a town built upon stilts


And the furious folk, clad in vests and plaid kilts


Drew their hatchets and each gave the crazy a lop.


 


 


    Treachery


 


Treachery tiptoes in the threadbarest socks


With the soft careful stealth of thieves picking locks


And the gentlest touch


Betraying so much


That a leopard would not even miss his spots.


 


 


    Bedtime Story


 


A few monsters living under a bed


Disagreed on the story about to be read


So they crawled out to fight


About which one was right


The poor fellow above is now dead.


 


 


    Nasty Crassty


 


There was a nasty crassty from Kersplucket


Who collected bad vibes in a rainbucket


So crummy was he


That he made ogres flee


And gave goosebumps to ghosts who couldn’t duck it.


 


 


    The Grungeon


 


There once was a devil-hearted grungeon


Whose appetite was born in a dungeon


He enjoyed a good codger


Especially named Roger


Eaten with a pitchfork while lungin’.


 


 


    Big Bly


 


Big Bly was a monster with a despicable curse


Who did not know which option might be worse


To be extremely grotesque


Or chained to a desk


So instead he lives under a bright yellow hearse.


 


 


    Berserk


 


(to be read from either end)


 


Oh dear, I fear I have gone utterly berserk!


The trouble is, it seems like such a lot of work


What a terrible crying shame


And I have no-one else to blame


I do dislike when people think I’m a jerk


I keep losing my mind, which can be so hard to find


It’s like I’m stuck in a revolving door of some kind


Or trying to go forward in reverse


I keep misplacing my universe


I am really out of whack, off track, in a turned-around bind!


 


 


    Sinister Eels


 


Sinister eels may lurk in the shallows


Of the puddles that line these stark avenues


As you walk in the dark


On the whim of a lark


So beware when the dropped rain begins to ooze.


 


 


    Bucktooth Henry


 


Bucktooth Henry was a terrible tyrant


So awful he could mortify a Fire Ant


Until he choked on a stick of gum


And the red-faced end of him did come


They would bury Bucktooth near a hydrant.


 


 


    Slumber


 


Nothing is more satisfying than a nap


But death is too long, like a bear-tooth trap


Sleep can be a waste of valuable time


Shutting my lids feels akin to a crime


I ask that you give me a most vigorous slap.


 


Out of every night comes a chance to dream


Or the possibility of a nerve-wrenching scream


We may be helpless to choose


Whether we win or we lose


For life is the opposite of a plot or a scheme.


 


In slumber we are captive to the mind’s egresses


And the unplanned randomness of inner stresses


Provoking these oddest of wanders


Contrarily opposed to daily ponders


We dream the worst or best that our brain confesses.


 


The soul is bared when we lie undefended


Vulnerable and still, or thrashing suspended


In a state of fantasy


Where minds roam free


And hearts take leaps like dolphins ascended.


 


 


    Night


 


I have long stayed awake in the hours of Twilight


To write, watch a film, view life in black and white


When the world has a calmer pace


Minutes dangle or run in place


And the years seem to vanish on the face of Night.


 


 


    Story


 


Once upon a tale came a garbled allegory


Whose moral was that borrowers would be sorry


Until the plot was forgot


And the conclusion was not


In time the poor fable would be his-story.


 


 


    Allergic Reaction


 


There once was a gent with an allergy


Whose doctor advised that he swallow a bee


The buzzing was bizarre


So he puffed a cigar


Now he’s worse than before with a skreigh.


 


 


    Tatters


 


A far cry from the rubble-rabble


Of the broken brook that would bubble-babble


With a creeky croak


And one cheeky choke


There are many things that lead to trouble-trabble


Away from the city lurk vipers and beasties


Yet the urban jungle harbors other feasties


Where stalkers prey on the meekish mild


Picking off the solitary like a weak-kneed child


We are all the targets of these walking deceasedies


Every shadow shines with heebie-jeebie eyes


The glowing orbs of furtive goons and guys


Who value life as shallow and cheap


Crawling out of a naked deep


Their blood as cold as the top of the skies


With knives and bullets like teeth and claws


We are caught between their feuds and draws


Or feed their unwholesome appetites


With thuggish snacks and bites


Reducing our lives to mere tatters of gauze.


 


 


    The Birdbrain


 


I once knew a birdbrain who lived in a tall sycamore tree


Though a touch confused, he seemed much happier than me


I would hear him chirping quite merrily


And fear he could tumble out scarily


I’ll never know since he flew off with a flock of Wannabe.


 


 


    The Mock-Goose


 


Along the road to Perdition walked a recluse


Who had the oddest aversion to a mock-goose


No such creature existed


Yet his phobia persisted


So he feared that his fear was just a sad excuse.


 


 


    Motley


 


There once was a sea-diver from Splotney


Whose left foot had a corn he named Motley


They were very close friends


Till the diver got the bends


Now his diving is off, like as knotly.


 


 


    Grimmer


 


There was a Grim Reaper who was a poor sleeper


And accidentally poked out his left and right peeper


Then could not find his way


Or distinguish night from day


So he was re-assigned as a blind landmine sweeper.


 


 


    Neither Here Nor There


 


In the state of being neither here nor there


An idle maniac decided not to care


If he tried juggling thirteen crystal balls


While ignoring a series of weird phonecalls


Now he’s playing with half a deck and doesn’t share.


 


 


    Cuckoo


 


Once there was a cuckoo-bird who was the word


Until a random dictionary labeled him absurd


The cluck demanded a complete revision


And expanded his clockwork precision


Now he pops out every hour on the second or third.


 


 


    A Chainsaw Moral


 


There once was an artist with a shiny new chainsaw


Who thought that cutting was another way to draw


He trimmed every beard


Then it happened as he feared:


All the statues in town have a clean-shaven jaw.


 


 


    Gobbledegook


 


Jibbledee mibbletee bloo


My wish is coming true


This rhyme has no meaning


The clocktower is leaning


And the gobbledegook’s full of glue.


 


 


    An Empty Head


 


Somewhere outside of Muncie I left my left brain


Then felt the lost marbles were driving me insane


And pulled the right half out of my ear


Now everything is balanced and exorbitantly clear


I am happy getting nowhere in the fast lane.


 


 


    An Odd Verse


 


There was a silly man from North Worse


Who had nothing to do with this verse


When it came time to rhyme


He had nothing to add


So he moved to a town called Not Much Worse.


 


 


    Slanted


 


I tend to wear my hat’s brim a trifle canted


For the angle is quite rakish and enchanted


Which does lend a nice effect


And helps to hide an unsightly defect


Of seeing the world as if the ground were slanted.


 


 


    Gearhead


 


There was a big meanie from Knock-Knockitz


Who bore minor grudges in his pockets


Till another gearhead for goodness sake


Invited him to jump in the nearest lake


Now the fish have to deal with his sprockets.


 


 


    A Puddle Muddle


 


I once passed a town in the heart of Kidney


Where everyone had a cousin whose name was Sydney


And they walked with canes that were not umbrellas


For it never rained on the ladies and fellas


Yet the puddles there rose as high as mid-knee.


 


 


    Scary


 


Not everyone is quite as normal as they seem


There are those who have escaped from a terrible dream


While they might look ordinary


They are more apt to be scary


And like nothing better than to hear you scream!


 


 


    Old Luggage


 


A cave-dwelling purple bruta-bagey


Was visited by a rude dorphen-haggy


Who brought so much old luggage


That her host felt too buggage


And pitched all of it off the closest craggy.


 


 


    The Jester


 


There was a jolly old jester named Lester


To whom the bells of his own cap did pester


With every step the shrills resounded


Their mocking notes of irk abounded


So he cursed the dingalings to fall and fester


 


It happened the way he wished when they dropped


As if by miracle, these sly tinkles plopped


From branches like rotten berries


Fit to frighten starved canaries


Thus Lester in sheer befuddlement stopped


 


Away they rolled with a jinglesome clamor


That caused the harlequin to shuffle and stammer


In sorrow when the fool realized


A jester was just a man disguised


Unbelled, he was but a carpenter with no hammer


 


All his lines without punch, his mimes in a crunch


Bereft as Quasimodo without the slightest hunch


Lester recognized his folly


And pursued those bells, by golly


Trailing a stream of cats who thought they were lunch


 


The clown pitched a heated tantrum as he skipped


Behind the tiny bells that tolled and flipped


Poor Lester’s temper would be lost


He vented frantically the cost


Of replacing the ring-dingies wishful thinking had stripped


 


The follower gambolled like the clumsiest ox


After the chimes that sped quicker than the slickest fox


Downhill they spilled and bounced


To an alley where Lester pounced


For his bells had come to a dead end, landing in a box.


 


 


    A Circus Ditty


 


A circus of clownfish paddled up the proverbial creek


To visit Shytown and give the locals there a peek


At the sleek and ditzy antics


Of flipping, flopping, dripping frantics


And an aquarium sideshow with an eight-legged freak.


 


 


    Fair Warning


 


The fangs of the backbiting Slingsnatch


Will stab your spine and your nerves attach,


Then into your courage sink cusps like pins . . .


While those teeth flash a few thousand grins,


Out of your flesh will its legions hatch!


 


 


    Ode To A Limerick


 


There once was a crazed poet named Du Bard


Who preferred doing everything too hard


When composing a limerick


She attempted a gimmerick —


Now that poet doesn’t know it but she needs to be on guard


For one dark and stormy night the verses purpled


She killed off her darlings which turpled


Poetic license expired


Her muse up and retired


Then the darlings returned, zombidly extirpled.


 


 


    The Woolly Wyrm


 


Under the twinkling stars of a punch-drunken sky


Lurked a lionhearted snake with a spit in its eye


And a cold midnight gleam in its lengthy tooth,


That could bite much worse than a tiger-shark truth —


For daring to exist without a good reason why.


 


The grim writher thrived in a fey ambiance of doom,


His ego sinister, with a quantity of gloom,


Abiding in shadow, safe from the arched necks


Of rabid appetites and feverish pecks . . .


Not a hair on his head, the thief burgled many a tomb.


 


Yet his nature called to be more than a woolly wyrm;


This compulsion ached at the apple-core of the squirm,


So he set out to devour the true undead


With hearts still beating, a warm brain in their head —


To transform, the portly man-eater’s diet must be firm.


 


Bald and plump, wearing a kingly bristle-patch beard,


This snaggle-jawed whiskered chomp stalked the night most feared.


His belly grumbled and growled the more he prowled;


Incensed, the creep left city and village fouled —


As he crawled amuck, the garish bandit gobbled and leered.


 


He possessed no remorse for these dire banquets and feasts;


Considering humans the lowest and vainest of yeasts,


He fed as if he deserved far more than others,


For he had no sisters, no friends or brothers —


A solitary hairy monster, remotely wilder than wildebeests . . .


 


He gulped down the sleeping and chased the night owls,


Relishing their horror, the sharp pitches of men’s howls,


Then curled in a cave to sleep it off, a bloated slug,


The binge’s weight like an overdose of drug . . .


At last the brimming scourge boasted twelve chins and jowls.


 


The serpent had gorged and burgeoned till he couldn’t move,


Then encased himself with a shell; tucked securely in his groove,


He would slumber and change to another shape:


A huge Buzzard Moth, each wing like a cape —


The worm had turned as if through magic, with a lengthy poof!


 


He was back to eating carrion, the decaying flesh of mortals,


While his flapping all in vain earned him choruses of chortles.


No longer feared, he was an object of contempt;


Being oversized did not make the moth exempt . . .


Too heavy to fly, the wretch must wait to feed like Bladderwortles.


 


 


    The March


 


March used to be so fierce with a lionic tempestuous roar


Of furor and chill, the final waves blustering from Winter’s shore.


Now most of it lies subdued, a mere bleat;


Even Antarctica has felt the heat —


Once the champion of cold, its vast iciness can thrive no more.


 


The ranks of Doomsday parade ever onward, full of grievous pomp,


With no trace of mercy, no compassion, the black army will tromp


Over flower and leaf, every plant . . .


All creatures must dread the sound of its chant


As the march led by Man rumbles forth — a grinding glorious stomp!


 


Wrought by intelligence, blind ambition and progress, day is done


And the night will be long; a harsh season of discontent shall run


The race of time and consequence for all,


Extremes unknown before this Roman fall.


A choir sings; I hear the knells ring; a violin plays for none.


 


Did we do enough when the hour was upon us like a glutton?


Or ignore the alarm, its gongs and chimes, and push the Snooze Button,


Along with the red nuclear launch switch,


As if possessing self-destruction’s itch?


Were we asleep, unguarded?  But now is past time for tut-tuttin’.


 


Too late to close barn doors?  March off to peace, not war?  Settle the score?


We must prevail, I implore; not tread footsore, lose esprit de corps . . .


We can rise above these dreadful errors,


Cast aside our lifelong childhood terrors . . .


Do what we can however tardy, and change our fate forevermore!


 


I weep for March; how meek its wail, how weak and frail it thunders now.


Perhaps we can turn things around.  We mustn’t give up, this I vow.


We are not quitters, merely slow to wake!


Let us join forces and these causes take . . .


It is time to hear a different drum, a hopeful beat; no curtain’s call to bow.


 


We must not break, must not forsake the gifts of humankind in strife.


So blessed are we, so rich the beauty of our world, each precious life —


The creatures who share it we owe so much,


To protect like children, shelter as such.


How can we not revere the nature that surrounds, once sweet and rife?


 


March on, let us!  Not to a funeral dirge but a spirited fighting song!


It isn’t over until the battle is won; let us at last, each of us belong


To the right side and resist Abysmal’s tomb;


Give in to the just — grant Evil no room!


Here on a dismal landscape, let us do our best to amend the wrong.

Trilllogic Entertainment: Poetic ReflectionsAuthors: Lori R. Lopez
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 31, 2015 19:14

April 30, 2014

paranormities

Although I tend to be old-fashioned and behind the times in many ways, whether by choice or budget or for some other reason probably a bit more peculiar, I do on occasion manage to be on time.  It is purely by accident most of the time.  It’s not as if I have some big or little clock I consult like a crystal ball to guide me.  It just sort of happens, as it would happen, and of course I have to make the best of the situation.  What choice do I have?  So here I am on the four hundred and fiftieth birthday of William Shakespeare (wow, this guy’s old) writing an introduction to a “Poetic Reflections” column that has nothing to do with William Shakespeare — according to the title — and it struck me like the gongs of a pendulating clock that hey, I should add a mention of the bard in case he reads my column.  Or even if he doesn’t.  Because he probably doesn’t.  It isn’t as if I’m famous or anything.  I’m not that deluded.


In honor of Shakespeare, I shall throw in some even older English than I usually use in my writing.  Since he’s old.  It seems appropriate.  Who’s still with me?


Let us hitherward be on with it, if you are still here, and gallivant off to the frippery for some well-worn vintage threads to make those captious nattlesome shrews whinge and peenge and fleer at the flounder of lachrymose slathertrashed beggarly whiffingers.


(I am not making this up!  Stick around and I might be.)


Lest the noisome flamfoo yelpers chimble and clapperclaw us to shreddles with their eel-skinned tongues, away to the belltowers where we shall obspliterate the ear-flaps (okay, some of this is mine) of the fremescent nowl-noggined bablatricious quidnunckers with a deafening sound and fury of foofish belfry peals.


(Well, that may have cost me some readers!  But it really isn’t worse than some of my made-up terms.  And I certainly never shy away from inane babble.  Besides, Shakespeare is pretty popular.)


Okay, enough bardolatry.  In the intro, at least.  Suffice it to say, I am a fan of The Man — being the wordsmith and smelter that I am.  I bow and tip my hat to the madcap Father Of Wordfoolery!


Getting back to the theme at hand, in case you survived all of that Cat-Latin illoquence, I would love to speak on the subject of “paranormities” . . . however, I am afraid we’re out of time.  I think it’s a conspiracy of clocks.  They are constantly going faster and faster, the sneaky devils, but I’m on to them!  Oh yes, I am aware of each and every sinister second or minute they trim from the Time Tree (or whatever it grows on).  I’m keeping track.  I know there should be more time for things.  There used to be, and it is maddening how short the days have become.  I simply cannot catch up and on the contrary seem to become increasingly behind schedule with everything.  I am always jogging in place just to stay in the moment, and forget about seizing the day or grabbing the brass ring!  It’s like trying to hop a ride on one of those supersonic bullet-trains.  Good luck with that, hobos and tramps!  Good luck!


(Calm down, calm down.  Everything must change.  It is one of the first things you learn in life, even before you take a step.  It is as unavoidable as baths.  Correction:  You can avoid taking baths for a long time, but then you will be avoided by everyone else.)


Oh very well, if there is time for this incessant drivel, I suppose there is time to squeeze in a word or two on the theme.  It is an interesting topic, which is quite uncommon.  (I tend to pull them out of a hat after cutting up cereal boxes and those pages of small print that come when you buy an electronic device.)  But that’s all I can really say about it.  I mean, it isn’t as if I’m some expert on the matter and go around giving presentations.  So if you want a lecture, you will have to go to a Paranormities Convention.  Of course, you won’t find any because it isn’t even a word.  It is just one of the many that I have twisted and pretzellated for my own purposes with complete disregard for whether it is in the dictionary or not.  Yes, I infuriate the wordagogs left and right.  Okay, I don’t really since I made that one up too, but I would if wordagogs existed!


Let’s just call them wordmongers and be done with it.  And I don’t care whether it’s a word or not!  We aren’t playing Scrabble!  Anything can be a monger, even an acorn, so get over it.  (They drive me crazy with their rules!  Sure, you can use whatever words you please if you’re William Shakespeare or Lewis Carroll or Doctor Seuss, but anyone else forget it!  Even my computer is a critic, underlining countless terms in red as if I am the worst speller or best misspeller in history!  Oh my gosh, it’s even underlining “misspeller”!  There, it just did it again!)


Not that I think everyone should go around spelling however they please.  There have to be standards, I agree.  I’m not trying to set a bad example for anyone, honestly.  I simply can’t help myself.  I have never been normal, ever.  It dates back to when I fell out of the coconut tree and landed on my head.  Most people are born differently, but we can’t choose how we enter the world.  The monkeys are my friends.  Remember that.


This is getting a little too personal.  As you probably know, I’m a private person who puts on her strait-jacket one sleeve at a time . . .  Oh swell, now I’m having an attack of Déjà Vu.  They hit me for no apparent reason, like an ice-cream headache.  Or an ice-cream truck.  I never see them coming.  Weird.


Be that as it may, the choo-choo train has left the station and the cuckoo bird has flown the clock.  There has been much ado about nothing and almost nothing about paranormities.  That’s just the way it goes sometimes.  Most of the time.  And now it is time to bring on the poems, so without further ado (about anything), here they are . . .


Ahem.  Here they are . . .


Um.  Let’s try that one more time.  Here they are!


Or maybe not.


Here . . .


Hmmm.


Here.  They.  Are.


Well, this is embarrassing.


Oh, there they are!  I see them.  I must have been seeing things.  Or not seeing things.  Or looking in the wrong direction.  Whatever.  They’re here.  Here they are . . .


(Down there.)


(Quit looking up, you’ll never find them!  I know people say to look up as a good thing, but in this case you shouldn’t.  You must look down.  Yes, I know that is not considered a good thing, but in this case it is!  You will find that I break a lot of rules.  I even break the occasional ruler.  It’s just how I am.  I may even use “very” and “sudden”, because I don’t like being told that I can’t.  But we’re getting off the subject here, so let us get on with the paranormities.  And the poems.  Down there!)


 


 


    paranormities


 


It can be the tryingest of circumstances


To relieve oneself of inhibitions


Superstitions, premonitions


Not to mention exhibitions


But if we exorcise our right to devote


Ourselves to that which haunts


And reduces us to quivering lumps


Of clay flesh molded


And misshapen by experience


We can be better for the expungination


Of those demons


Unless, of course, the little devils are real


In which case it is best to ignore them


And hope they go away


Because to full-out attempt removing


Such atrocious houseguests


May do more than scare the dickens


Out of you or me


It could leave permanent scars


Cause indelible damage upon your psyche


And your soul


It is quite one thing to tinker with our fears


And something else entirely to mess with


The supernal fabric that separates


Living and dead


The preternaturally inclined


Paranormities of the thirteenth kind


Them


Over there


In the beyond


So let us banish the very thought of it


Perish it too


Just get rid of it


And we will never speak of this again


Pull the covers up over your head at night


Barricade that closet door


Refrain from looking under the bed


No matter what!


And remember, if you hear something tap


At a window


A closet


Your bedroom door


The front entrance


The rear exit


The cellar door


A portal to the attic


A trapdoor


The garage


A shed


A kitty or doggy door


A gate, possibly to Hell . . .


DON’T ANSWER IT!


Live in a state of cautious optimism


And carefully arranged delusion


That everything will be all right


I’m sure you’ll be fine


It’s only your imagination


Right?


 


 


    Mayhem


 


I was strolling in an old cemetery


An undertaking I oft enjoy


When I heard a disquieting noise


That seemed a foreboding ploy


By something or someone rotten


To make me blink, emit a shout


“Sinister!” I merely mumbled


Of that there was no doubt


For I next distinctly heard a moan


Emerge from the sunken ground


Precisely underneath my feet


And then a quite creepy sound


Much like a wheeze, perhaps an oath


As if fetid air were squeezed


From a skeleton’s chest or bellows


How the chilling disturbance teased


Already taut nerves to be plucked


With invisible fingers of dread


I wanted to flee, to skedaddle outright


Yet remained where I quivered instead


A twitter-light layer of fog was present


Its vapors up to my knees or higher


Causing my toes to tingle with fright


And roast as if toasted in a funeral pyre


The brume roiled in a crimson heat


I was forced to bolt, bumping a slab


That marked the grave I had tread upon


There I froze in a pose with naught to grab


When the headstone tumbled over


Creating a shudder that rippled the dirt


And rocked a nearby resting place


My fears would whimper, whisper and flirt


As a second hunk of marble tremored


And a fleshquake wriggled through me


While the marker tipped and crashed


The crepuscular occurrence proved to be


My last filament’s unraveling


For the trembles of the fallen stones


Would concuss the entire graveyard


Rattling courage and the weary bones


Ere a series of measured thumps ensued


I was taken hostage by the gloaming


In a muffled cadence like a beating heart


More tombstones thudded the loaming


My five wits fled, and from my clumsiness


A cache of scrawnies came out of their sloom


To claw through the lids of pine-hewn boxes


In pauper graves at the crack of doom


A feffulent stench reached flaring nostrils


As I sullen-sickly peered into the dark


With a nightfoundering sense of deprivation


And beheld the nebulous ranks of stark


Ethereal vestiges that lingered


Revenants sighed by the jaws of Death


Still clinging to their ivory frames


Diaphanous spirits shorn of breath


Ringing the fringes of unearthed plots


Where a penumbral aura filtered moonbeams


And the skeletons staggered out of their lots


I had disturbed the sleep of the wasted corpses


Whose broad grins were cranky, unamused


Their teeth on edge and bared in grimaces


The gaunt scowls made my body confused


For my knees became dauntedly enfeebled


My pulse turned rapid in a flight response


Though I could not depart on wobbly limbs


And was forced to pretend nonchalance


Disgruntled, withered, the surl-tooth gnarls


Fixed hollow sights on a horror bookwright


Who had clumsily upset their epitaphs


And roused them from the dearth of light


By daring to walk across their graves!


Such colossal cheek could not go unheeded


An intruder, I felt ineptly conspicuous


Until the skelters at once receded


To gape at me from beyond the tombs


Beside their spectral mortifying shades


I was torn by an impulse to jot it down


And the necessity to survive my escapades


At last I surrendered and scrawled a poem


A helpless pawn to inspiration’s thrall . . .


I am scribbling it still, a writer to the end


My only hope that I can capture it all


If I last till the morn, the ghouls may retire


Fading, withdrawing by the gleam of day


Elsewise you will find me clutching my pen


A notepad beneath and my skin a bit gray


Fingers ink-stained, a tophat toppled aside


Thus I will perish, to be buried among them


A mask of terror plastered on my face —


The elegy:  Here lies the author of Mayhem.


 


 


    Getting To The Bottom Of Tops


 


I sit and play with tops all day


Which is really such a distraction


As some may be tough to spiral enough


Others don’t turn with an equal reaction


Neither do they whirl in an opposite twirl


It can be unpredictable at best


They break the rules as if we’re fools


I can’t get them to stay at rest


I don’t get much done except having fun


And it seems a lot to do


To keep them rotating, happily gyrating


I can never visit the zoo!


Many things are missed on my To-Do List


Since these tops took over my life


The pirouetting is truly upsetting


I don’t need the added strife


My eyes are rolling, my brain is bowling


I’m dizzy from the Virginia Reeling


I wish they would spin out of the nuthouse I’m in


I don’t like this merry-go-round feeling


If I wanted to unfurl, I could become a squirrel


Instead of riding this mad carousel


These tops must be evil, the work of a weevil!


My guts are churning, I don’t feel so well


Is there an exorcist for dancing The Twist?


Please stop the train, I want to get off . . .


It’s going in circles, I have other pet irkles


I think I’ve developed an allergic cough


It is kind of numbing, I hear them humming


In my ears, an eerie whining


Like I’m the next to die in a horror film’s eye


And I’m unraveling as if it’s The Shining


Get out of my head!  The ringleader is red


And he’s getting on my nerves


Go away, little rats!  I’ve a case of the drats


I can’t take any more of these curves


I’m the victim of tops, and it just never stops


You’d be wise to heed my cries


Sure, they look very cute but there’s a bitter root


For they’re the devil in disguise!


 


 


    foul play


 


The darkness in a foul mood


Can spread, infecting souls


With a blight that transcends the lowest


Rock-bottom disease known to Man


It is a plague of conscience and mind


Dwelling in the fathomless abyss


Of the human heart


Where not even angels can set foot


Or risk the feathers of their wings


Being singed and scorched by the heat


From the absence of light


For here is where the truest evil frolics


And festers in an ugly boiling broth


Like a cancerous tumor’s countenance


Leaving a wicked taste in the mouth


A fetid odor on the breath of Life


This mood will linger on the lips


In a devilish vampirical smirk so cold


It burns the eyes to behold


Rendering the sockets hollow, stark


And your poor blind soul must grope


Through unrelenting shadows


Attempting to outrun the terrors


In the stagnant frustration of


Dreamflight, the kind where you are


Fleeing a nightmare yet your steps


Take you nowhere, only to a higher state


Of anxiety as your heartbeats echo


For you cannot outrun the foul play


Of childhood memories, whether vivid


Or wisps and fragments in which


Evil came to visit, or moved into


Your bedroom but didn’t stay


In the closet, hide under the bed


And it wasn’t a game


It wasn’t fun at all, and you wished


How you wished with all your heart


That you didn’t have to play.


 


 


    peripheral


 


You know those ephemeral glimmers


The odd flitters and flashes


We see out of the corner of our eye?


They happen a lot, glimpses into darkness


A dash of menace, a glance of alarm


But lately they are tougher to descry


As if they are even more elusive


Racing faster than the speed of light


Ducking my gaze with the slightest hint


A spark, a strobe of something wicked


Evasively darting past or dodging


And all I can catch is a glint


My head cannot turn quick enough


Like a trick of the eye, too brief


A twinkle, gone in less than a blink


I suspect acts of jeopardy are implied —


By monstrous finger-shadow-puppets


The shimmer of a face with a sinister wink


I almost hear whispers under the breath


Murmurs of plottings, yaffles and mutters


Of sly innuendos, rumors kept hushed


While fairy wasps and wisps discreetly pass


Like paranormal orbs or particles of dust


As if the evil afoot is being rushed


I’m afraid to close my eyes even a second


If I look away the visions tantalize


Paranoid impulses rise with each whisk


Eyes flick to the peripherals at any motion


The least movement incites grim palpitations


From the subtle shiftings swept so brisk


Intangible, oblique — I cannot escape


The devious portents and indirect threats


Of their craftiness and cunning stealth


I fret over each furtive insinuation


The artful uncandid fleetings of doom


That imperil my safety and mental health


How I disdain the perfidious poltergusts


That spell trouble and impending disaster


You know the feeling, that sense of dread


For me it is rare not to be stitched with fear


Existing in havoc with flights of despair


Molars corrading, dismal notions in head


They are out to get me I am convinced


Circling like wolves to tear me apart


I live in a panic, a malagrugorous state


My demise is already a foregone conclusion


Yes, woe is me!  It’s my middle name . . .


Oh the horrors that I must contemplate.


 


 


    The Dark Hearse


 


I had a dream that wasn’t as positive as King’s


Though it held grave profundity, bold promisings


Mine was nightmarish, a bitter-deep refrain


Engulfed in the diabolic mists of the strictest plain


An image accompanying the greatest evils known


Like the inaudible clangor of dying alone


Without knells rung, any praises sung


 


Lonely and forlorn, unnoticed or celebrated


Of such I dreamt, a sorry end anticipated


Then woke in a lather, my heart a bass-drum


Broken free of sleep’s vapors, the dire outcome


I escaped the hand of Destiny, survived a nethertrip


Perhaps it was a mix-up, an administrative slip


Through the fabric of my fate, or I got there too late


 


A fortunate coincidence that liberated this soul


From the shackles of punishment due for the role


In a lifetime of playing the villain or bad guy


It is easy to be typecast once living a lie


To be stuck in a groove on the record of Time


Dizzy with the whirligiggles of a paradoxic paradigm


It wasn’t the right path, and I now face the wrath


 


It is coming for me, fueled by fire and brimstone


A fury unleashed out of the hottest Red Zone


That dark hearse from Hell is calling my name


Running on the fumes of infinite blame


I may not be innocent, without a few flaws


My confession is valid, I have broken some laws


Yet my crimes are small, almost nothing at all


 


I predicted the future, mishaps and diseases


A Tyromancer, divining truth from curdled cheeses


I wanted to stand out from the usual palmreaders


The crystal-ball seers and religious heartbleeders


Out to save the world from trials and tribulations


I was trying to save myself in the coagulations


My targets were buffoons, the easy gossoons


 


Believers that answers might thus be discerned


By a clump of milk clots could lessons be learned


The craziest of methods I studied in vain


And presented as signs the conjurings of my brain


Every solemn tiding or omen was pure baloney


Utter fable, the fabrication of a ridiculous phony


And this my purport, the malfeasant extort


 


For you have to admit that it sounds too absurd


Deriving prognostication out of a curd


Now the hearse with flames is on the prowl


Windows tinted, motor revving with a beastly growl


Tail fins sleek, black coat gleaming, it surges higher


Hood and flanks burning with yellow and orange fire


I hear the deathmobile’s roar as it thunders to my door


 


A false prophet, I am sure I should have kept mum


I failed to foresee my folly and glean what would come


It is cold comfort to feel snatched by a blazing dragon


The advent of a hellish souped-up meatwagon


With a demonic driver grinning behind its wheel


Charging to collect me in a fell swoop of steel —


A joyride on the dark hearse; what could be worse?

Trilllogic Entertainment: Poetic ReflectionsAuthors: Lori R. Lopez
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 30, 2014 19:22

April 3, 2014

lake monsters

Fishing about in my brainpool for a suitable title and theme of my next poetry column, I hooked a big one.  You know the beast, one of those grandiose whoppers that gives birth to legends.  Despite the magnitude of its dimensions, it is a little odd as a subject for a group of poems, yet that has never stopped me before.  In fact, it only seems to encourage me.  And now that I think of it, perhaps it is high time for a column that is rather outlandishly off the track and around the bend.  I do love a good venture into the Land Of Odd.  Also known as Tinker Town, Bananasplitsville, Coconuts City,  Cotton Candy Land, Crackpottersville, Battyburg, Madhatterton, Who’s Whoville . . . the kind of places I am most likely to write on a cardboard sign and stand beside the road hitchhiking to — in a parallel galaxy where mice are men and men are meeses, which are like mooses without the horns.  Not that I am trying to give the impression I’m weird, because I am most emphatically not!  Well, I am weird, don’t get me wrong, but that has nothing at all to do with lake monsters.  Then again, you never know.  I try to keep an open mind about such possibilities, in case I should ever meet a lake monster or be abducted by aliens or find a fly in my soup.  I have found cockroaches in my soup, incidentally, although that is another topic entirely and would be more appropriate in a different column.


Don’t mind me, I’m just being myself, or as close to it as I can considering that weirdness doesn’t actually have an official description or dress code or hairstyle or shoe size or instruction manual . . .  So how should I know how to be, and who can say how or who I really am?  It’s a bit of a One-Size-Fits-All category.  Weirdos are lumped under a single polka-dotted umbrella as offbeatniks.  But you really can’t say that anything abnormal and out of the ordinary is one way or another, can you?  Wouldn’t generalizing it be contradictory in a sense, when being weirdos would imply that we are very unlike anyone, including each other?  Okay, this might be making too much sense for one of my nonsense rambles.  I think I am dangerously close to coming to a point.  Not a pinhead sort of point, the other kind.  No, not the type you get when you sharpen a pencil.  And before you suggest it, not a dot on a map either!  Or a decimal point!  Let’s just change the subject and get back to what we weren’t discussing in the first place, shall we?


Don’t ask me what that was.  My memory is notoriously full of holes.  Just picture the moon being made of Swiss Cheese.  That’s my brain.  It may look like a sponge but it’s not.  It’s Swiss Cheese.  Without the cheese.


I’m not sure where I’m going with any of this, because I tend to be a bit stranger than fiction, if you get my drift.  And I do drift.  Oh how I drift.  But back to the matter at hand, which is . . . ah-ha, lake monsters.  (I cheated and peeked at the top of the page.)  Seriously, what is this about?  It’s rather loopy, even for me.  And not loopy in a loup-garou sort of way — that would be pretty silly since we’re supposed to be discussing a far less furry crypto-critter.


Well, who can be certain that werewolves and lake monsters are not related to some degree?  If you think about it, lycans and lichens sound an awful lot like cousins, and everyone knows that a lichen is just a fluffy version of a waterlily.  So who’s to say that a wolfman is not a lake monster’s hairy kin?  One might in fact deem him a lake monster while he’s taking a bath.  Never thought about that, now did you?  Exactly.


Okay, I don’t want to appear flaky or crusty or even slightly crumbly.  I am not baked goods.  But I am going to make an editorial decision here, as opposed to poetic license, and bail on the afore-mentioned theme.  It simply isn’t working out, so please disregard the title up there.  And whatever I’ve said thus far.  Pretend it never happened.  I’m too lazy to start over.  (Sorry, there are no refunds available for the minutes lost in reading the above.)  We shall segue into something else . . . once I’ve made up my mind what we’re actually talking about.  There must be a better choice out there, floating around in the ether like those squiggly blobs that swim in front of our eyes.  We’ll pause and wait for it to splat us in the face.


Oh, quit your complaining!  There are plenty of things to read that make sense!  If you’ve ever been to my previous poetry columns, you must know that I do not always feel the need to go on and on about something.  Going on about nothing can be very cathartic.  It allows you to meditate; just be careful not to premeditate — that could get you into trouble.  It could even be held against you in a court of law.  Clear your head and enjoy the mindless emptiness of meaning that my column provides.


Where were we?  Or rather, where were we not?  Waiting?  Right!  I knew that.


Nothing so far.  But we all knew that.  Let’s see, where are we going with this?  You may think it paradoxic to be going somewhere with nothing, but I assure you it is possible.  Not everyone can pull that off.  It’s a tricky proposition.  Or preposition.  Or premonition.  Whatever.  Now I have Déjà Vu and my head hurts from thinking too hard.  You can’t force these things.  They’re either there or they’re somewhere else.  Who knows where?  In a lake, perhaps.


That title is looking better.


There are so many theories on lake monsters, approximately as many as there are lakes.  I could probably find something unnoteworthy to say about them if I really tried.  It’s back to the lake for us!


If you’re still with us, that is.  And if you are, maybe I’m not the only one whose brain is like Swiss Cheese.  Just a thought.


Soooo, are you certain I haven’t scared you away with my frightfully off-the-wall drivel?  It can happen!  Now and then I scare myself away.


Ha, there, it just happened!  Except I wasn’t scared, I fell asleep.  After a nice nap, that title doesn’t seem so bad at all.  I believe you can anticipate a few poems to do with, well, you know.  It could even be the weirdest column yet.  One can hope!  One can also wonder . . . when you gaze into the lake, is anything looking back?


Beneath your reflection.


I’m not referring to fish.


Or frogs.


Or turtles.


Or mudpuppies.


A minnow is a fish.  I said no fish.


Ditto for a bullhead.


And a catfish.  Despite the whiskers.  Still a fish.


Ignore the dead bloated guy.


And the Atlanteans.


Forget the Sea Monkeys.  They don’t even live in lakes!


Noooo, clams do not count.  For one thing, where are their eyes?


Crabs?  Are there lake crabs?  Yes, they do have eyes, don’t they?  But I didn’t mean crabs, and now I am getting quite crabby!  Nevermind, just nevermind!  I withdraw the question.  Read some poems.


 


 


    lake monster


 


She lurks in the drink, a sweet-water pet


The kind you might not be sure to have met


Elusive as Bigfoot, a popular myth


Every lake has its legend on one of her kith


A tarn in the highland became her home


When an oddity left Mother’s side to roam


She swam to the mountains and there would stay


Diving and splashing, a figment at play


For such fabled beings are like unicorns


Rumored and rare, yarns of tails and horns


Chimeric and lithe, a creature of whim


A fanciful mystery, a history most grim


For she ate a few chaps fishing from a small boat


When they reeled in her lunch, deep in her throat


And she opened wide to expel the trouts


But swallowed the men beyond any doubts


Their craft was discovered, an empty shell


Inspiring the tales that wives like to tell


As folklore would have it, she was fierce and sly


A man-eating monster, who was actually shy


And only ate people by a tragic mistake


Yet once was enough for the story to take


Her renown would be sealed, and the price of fame


Was losing her privacy, acquiring a name


The locals would dub her by the beast’s lofty lair


Mad Minnie for Lake Minnewonka’s fantastic bugbear


Her shore became crowded with goggling fans


The kind who sought snapshots of catch-as-catch-cans


Which drove her to the bottom of a frothy pool


Reclusive, notorious, inclined to drool


Unable to frolic, afraid to show her face


A very Sad Minnie would curl up at the base


Or glide through the depths like a submarine


To emerge at night by the moon’s dull sheen


If the coast were clear, using stealth and care


Tuned for beeps and pings, an unblinking stare


Then smack the surface with a jubilant tail


Make waves, cause ripples, lunge out like a whale


Giggling and capricious, a child in a bath  —


Snorts of glee echoed as if on the warpath


Convulsing tree boughs and soaking the bank


Heaving caution to the wind with herself to thank


And spectators camped by the lake would arise


To shine spotlights in the poor critter’s eyes


Blinded, keenly startled, she panicked and dove


For the craggish floor of the alpine cove


Where her cranium collided on a jutting rock


She collapsed to the bed, very stunned by the knock


Blood spilled to the water and darkened its hue


Teams of science geeks jumped in, turning blue


Half couldn’t swim but the other half found her


Together they looped several lassos around her


The locals and gawpers all pitched in to raise


The titanic young dragon to resounding praise


They attempted reviving her; she lay cold and still


Was Minnie dead?  Through the crowd passed a chill


No heartbeat was detected, no breath puffed to steam


They sat in a vigil holding hands with one dream . . .


By morning she was gone, having stolen away


And did not return for she’d swum far astray


Perhaps she was seen on another lake


In a distant land, sailing mists like a drake


Or flat and lengthy as a drifting log


To vanish by magic between gusts of fog


A solitary figure, stately and discreet


Moving like a ghost ship that lost its fleet.


 


 


    fishbait


 


The lake is still upon the surface


With nary a ripple out of place


Hugging her shoreline wrapped securely


In a glassen cloak of captive grace


As night solemnly joins land to water


And a mysterious realm can unfold


It is then the lake reveals its depths


Of emerald beauty, allure untold


Her mouth yawns widely to engulf


Any unsuspecting random spirit


If you value life as precious


You had better not step near it


For the lake heeds not your feelings


Waiting patient and subtle to imbibe


With a watery glimmer of disregard


Giving off a tender treacherous vibe


 


She can drag you squirming to her belly


Entwine your limbs in drowning plants


And paralyze with a frosty embrace


As your breath escapes in pants


The bubbles ascend to the surface


From a bleak and nasty underside


While you rue the fateful steps that led


Too near the water, this downward slide


Sucked within her lips and jaws


You cannot escape the foul wet bite


Of turbid teeth and hook-like claws


As she tucks you in for a kiss goodnight


The lake will drain your bodyheat


With frigid contact, she grants no wish


But will nibble you to bits and pieces


Until you are chum, the bait of fish.


 


 


    the creature


 


It was a black lagoon beside a dead lake


Of ghastly sluggish waters from which protruded,


Like worked-to-the-bone fingers of a failed success,


The rotted extremities and stumps of trees submerged


In the changing tides of industrial climates.


 


Such trivial concerns long overlooked in the course


Of history, of centuries that marched in legions


Like armies to conquer flesh, harness fire and wind,


Unleash disaster from sky and summit, roar obscenities,


As if by dragonbreath or divine unholy wrath.


 


Laying to ruin the stormed barricades of stone,


The embattled ranks of wood and trampled stalks


That clung defenseless, rooted in soil shifting to sands


From down within the bowels of tormented earth, for nothing


Built or born, however imperious, was impervious to change.


 


Here lurked the truth, a confession of damming evidence


Stacked up in layers — sticks and stones, mud and corpses


At the bottom line of humanity versus nature and nurture,


Whatever kind of nature might be left in a grim age,


Beneath the surface of what was and what should be.


 


A creature evolved mad with full-grown enmity and eyes


Opened to the greed, the transgressions of those like him


On two legs who were not condemned by gills or scales,


By monstrous differences to exist apart, below the civilized —


If the destroyers of worlds could be so defined.


 


Emerged whole, crawlen out of a fetal griefstruck womb


Throbbing with the pulse of cosmic and poetic justice,


He swam then climbed the slope onto the inlet’s berm.


Resting there, testing appendages, he wobbled to stand


Upon webbed toes and stagger forth in the realm of men.


 


Walking on dry land with wet legs, he left a swampy abode


To trace a solid stream that trembled with a rushing current,


Until he must hurl himself to the side and watch


A ghost of man-driven metal rampage through darkness,


Orbs gleaming, expelling a stench of noxious fumes.


 


He curled, hunched and brooding, in terror;


Summoned by circumstance to embark on this ordeal,


The solo alien odyssey of passage, of transformation.


Suffocating, his resolve to search overwhelming,


He endured, beholding enigmas, struggling on.


 


The creature matured with a wild innocence


As he tread firm ground in confidence, conviction,


Crossing a desert of arid intensity in every direction.


Eyelids sagging, hooded by glare; the pace brisk at night,


He survived, a fish out of water, adapting to foreign land.


 


A city’s hulking skeleton loomed, rewarding labored steps,


An arduous journey of blistered feet and parchment skin.


Shrunken, diminished in the company of ravaged leviathans,


He peered upward at vacant towers, vertical wreckage,


To discover himself encircled, a ring of shadows.


 


They were the children of Pathos and Chaos,


The permuted metamorphic spawn of Progress.


They had gathered, drawn like him to seek community,


For it was an instinctive need of even the the most estranged


Or isolated soul, to not be alone in the universe.


 


Each one of a kind, without a species in common,


Rendered by a generic maker, the creation of abrasive deeds.


Curiosities, atrocities, with a variety of distinctions;


Unique, anomalous, none of them the same;


Kernels of warped matter, mutations of a man-made Hell . . .


Who were the real monsters?


 


 


    Bessie


 


Before you jump into a lake


You may wish to look before you leap,


For you never know what might jump out


Or be lurking in the murky deep.


 


Take care along the water’s edge


For a snapping mouth could take a bite;


There are many things that may go wrong —


I suggest you back away outright!


 


And it isn’t merely lakes to fear,


There are monsters lurking everywhere . . .


A stormdrain, river, creek, or shower;


A glass of water will cause a scare.


 


The greatest danger I’ve come across


Was in the humblest of places:


A puddle of mud on a plain dirt lane


Put my heartbeat through its paces.


 


I was minding my own business once


And splashed a foot into the muck.


You can imagine my immense dismay


When my shoe grew rather stuck.


 


It wasn’t that the mire was sticky


Or the puddle muddled with a patch of briars;


I stepped into a monster’s chops


And needed a pair of pliers.


 


She had swallowed my entire foot


And wouldn’t give it back!


I thought I’d have to learn to walk


One-footed from the lack.


 


I scrutinized my situation,


Then tried to reason with the beast.


“I need that foot!” I told her.


“So please interrupt your feast!”


 


I named her Bessie in order that we


Might be properly introduced.


She wasn’t inclined to release my piggies,


And I pondered how to get myself loosed.


 


She muttered with her mouth full


That a mudbath was no wishing well.


She may have said some other things


But I really couldn’t tell.


 


“You aren’t making any sense.


Don’t talk around your food.”


I demanded that she spit it out,


For the puddle-shark was rude!


 


“I’m attached to those toes,


And it’s my favorite heel.


They’re not yours to keep!


I mean, how would you feel?”


 


I carped, “It’s my best shoe too,


So I insist that you stop!


Give me back my foot, thief,


Or I’ll call a traffic cop!”


 


I shamed the ornery anklebiter


With a testy spew of grouching.


“And what are you supposed to be?


Stand up straight, quit slouching!”


 


She expelled my tootsie then,


Blatting in a snittle-fit huff


With tremendous indignation


That she’d heard about enough.


 


The cranky krakenous hybrid


Unreeled from her shallow slop,


Extending an endless profusion


Of eelish neck that ceased to stop.


 


Perhaps the height was finite,


But it seemed to climb forever,


Like a beanstalk to the heavens


Or an example twice as clever.


 


“I’ll have you know you stepped on me!”


A faraway voice grumbled.


“Let’s call an ox an ox,” she barked,


“And admit it was you who bumbled!”


 


“That’s a load of hogwashed nerve!”


My jaw hung open, catching flies.


“You’re jealous of me for being short!”


The retort evoked surprise.


 


“You think I’m envious of you?


I can write on the sky!” touted Bessie.


“I’m a big monster in a little pond,


And much prettier than Nessie!”


 


“You’re nothing but a hippocrite —


A puddle serpent with her head in the clouds,


Who dreams of swimming with the big fish,


An inflated pack of snooty highbroweds!”


 


The behemoth truly had it coming,


Yet it wasn’t very nice to say.


My words cut Bessie down to size,


And a salamander crept away.


 


 


    a fish named frog


 


Things can be muddled, horrendously confused


From life imitating art or death while we snoozed


Maybe all of our dreams are regrets in reverse


And the thoughts in our heads but a fairytale curse


Like a song in our mind that gets broken and stuck


At times a bad break can turn into good luck


Perhaps a fish named frog isn’t nearly as crazy


As trying to see truth when your lenses are hazy


 


The world is like a pearl in a shiny oyster shell


With naught guaranteed between Heaven and Hell


There may be woolly monsters or a clump of moss


What we pull from the hat could be an albatross


Just stay out of the water when you jump in the lake


And don’t ever say never or the earth might quake


It’s the fine print of rules that will drive you insane


These fishes named frogs are purely inane.


 


But you can’t plant a violet and push up a daisy


Or jump over the moon if you’re feeling too lazy


The sky may be overcast on a clear blue day


A clam could be sad, yet a lighter shade of gray


And you’ll never stand taller than the bird in your eye


You cannot walk much softer than the heart of a pie


A fish on your shoulder as you gargle out of tune


Means your voice is froggier than a yodeling balloon


 


If monsters had middle names and goldfish dreamed of legs


There’d be urchins in the pond hatched from dinosaur eggs


Let us gallop like scallops on the backs of water stallions


Rapscallions trotting after in a herd of Spanglish galleons


And none would be the wiser for we paddle our own canoes


Call the fishes what you please, it’s your turn to pick and choose


Just don’t juggle with the turtles or make fun of a zebra’s spots


There are rules to be contorted into lovely bows and knots


 


Regardless who you are, you shouldn’t argue with yourself


Leave the attitude at home, the complaint jar on the shelf


Brush those chips off your shoulder, the crumbs off your lap


Never tiptoe in reverse or walk on hands without a map


Don’t wear a bottom-hat to the opera, pajamas over a coat


Let your counting sheep run off but never let them get your goat


Lend your socks to an octopus when removing every doubt


And be sure to skip the rope, for it won’t lend you any klout


 


I’ve forgotten about frogs, or were we talking about fishes?


It is impolite to mumble when making your three wishes


Countless axioms are moot unless you maximize your addage


Then subtract the difference between a turnip and a cabbage


If you have a carrot top, you can always join the aside-show


Where nothing is straightforward, except where babybuggies go


And that fishes may be frogs if they were once in time a tadpole


Therefore, guppies can be puppies if they learn to dig a hole.


 


 


    Lady


 


There are ballads and chronicles of females in lakes


Benign, wicked, an enchantress or harsh mistress


Poised between angels and she-devils they wait


Like ballerinas captive in a wind-up music box


Suspended in motion, preserved in memory


There for the asking by those in need or want


Of a momentary comfort, a crystalline indulgence


But the lake is a chill and demanding lord


For an elegant lady — flesh cool, eyes glittery


Glimpsed like jewels through a lucid tea


Strands of hair fanning, spread in a majestic cloud —


She cannot breathe underneath its cloak of waves


The bubbles are her drowning chain of commands


A shimmering trail of last gasps, unheard sighs


As the lake tows her down, down, down . . .


Spinning, twirling like a dancer, eyes wide


Into the pit of her confinement, a glass coffin


That only the bottommost-dwellers can see


Nestled on a bed of shells, interred like a queen


To awaken and greet visitors with a regal smile


An icy touch or stare, a beautiful siren’s welcome


Until then she rests, her hands modestly folded


In classic repose like a fairytale princess


Features unperturbed, absent of expression


Her dreams the nightmares of a fractured predestined fate


An indentured servant to a body of ageless drops


The pool of lost hopes and shattered illusions


Dredged by vast sorrows spilled into a glacier’s footprint


Wept by the mother of Time, collected like rain in a jar


In turn a fair lady was chosen to wallow in its tears


Demurely offer solace and sharp blades with a statue’s calm


The composure of a department-store mannequin


Frozen in a gesture as she is locked


Though she undulates toward the air like current


And exudes the lissome grace of a swan


Do not be fooled by appearances for she


Is less content to be window-dressing


A symbolic slave to the travails of womanhood


Exalted yet imprisoned, becoming a nymph


In all but spirit, for that has died and been embalmed


The lake her grave, a watery vault, the lady’s tomb


She cannot escape its grasp, the walls of the crypt


Blurred eyes no longer pierce this veil of dark and light


Her burial shroud of liquid envelops like a net


Surrounding a dolphin or porpoise, trapping a whale


Her screams and misery are silently contained


In limbo, within the velvet fathoms of the lake.

Trilllogic Entertainment: Poetic ReflectionsAuthors: Lori R. Lopez
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 03, 2014 05:54

February 24, 2014

horror sisters

'Tis that time of year, my dear, when it must be mentioned unmentionable things.  You know what I'm talking about . . .

read more

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 24, 2014 19:40

January 28, 2014

havoc

In life there are periods of calm punctuated by phases of unrest when things become hectic.  And then there are times when You-Know-Where breaks loose and we are thrust into a state of absolute havoc.  But that isn't what I wish to discuss.  It's simply an observation.  We all have those sudden cliffhangers when the tension is cranked beyond our limit.  When we're dangling by a scrawny filament or skating on a brittle sheet of ice.  We may even feel disoriented, like our life is not our life.  Picture if you will a cuckoo bird landing on

read more

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 28, 2014 19:19

August 26, 2013

inspiration’s perspiration

Yes, you read correctly.  This is about perspiration.  But not just any perspiration.  No, no.  The stuff of inspiration.  More to my point, the sweat of inspiration.  I'm not talking about sweaty armpits.  I refer instead to the beaded brow of an artist slaving feverishly to convey the resplendent vision of an illuminated mind struck by . . . you guessed it . . . inspiration.


I am going to be uncharacteristically redundant, so please bear with me.

read more

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 26, 2013 14:34

June 10, 2013

bombilation

There is a lot of static in the world.  The drone or buzz of contention in the air.  A steady hum in your ears if you're like me.  You can hear it if you stop to listen.  It's there, whether soft or loud, in the electric wires; in the throb of pulses, the steady march of Time.  In the heat of a moment when everything stands still and some messed-up misguided member of society feels alienated or miserable enough to contemplate something unthinkable, drastic, catastrophic . . . in a vain unconscionable effort to balance chaos.

read more

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on June 10, 2013 18:19

January 31, 2013

retrospect

If people could save all of the time in a bottle that they spend in retrospect . . . clinging to what was or what could have been instead of looking forward to life, moving on . . .

read more

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 31, 2013 20:12

Poetic Reflections

Lori R. Lopez
A series of eccentric and sometimes dark columns containing original verse and prose that will make you question your sanity or mine.
Follow Lori R. Lopez's blog with rss.