Essays & Poetry (mine or others) pertaining to historical and current events and burning social issues.

Saturday, February 27, 2016

The Conversation We’re Not Going to Have




This poem written at the request of another friend,
who over a glass of wine and intimate conversation
said I should pen it.




Because the sub-context of your last Christmas card
Was: I cannot be your friend anymore
I am going to Heaven and
You are going to Hell
How ironic, I thought, celebrating Christ and all
I felt a bit like Mary Magdalene except
Jesus wasn’t here to defend me
So, my conclusion is:
You’re a hypocrite and not fit to
shine my heretic boots
So, I agree, you get the last (judgmental) word
Thanks for the memories
I won’t burden your soul
with a reply
Actually, I prefer not to play this game
ever again
Rots of Ruck,
Your former best friend for
nearly fifty years…

RMK, almost Spring 2016



Editors note: Sometimes we just have to weed our gardens.





Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Chorizo


     
Image result for free images of chorizo scrambled eggs

                              

 First I get out my little iron skillets
 I put the chorizo in the 8 inch one
 and turn the burner to medium

 Then I see his face, serious
 as he shows me how to milk
 the chorizo out of its skin

 The vivid orange meat oozes
  into the pan
  Oops! I’ve forgotten the onions!
  So I quickly peel and chop and
   put them in the 6 inch pan

   And the green pepper, same thing
   He had sautéed the onions and
   green pepper together, first
   I am a seasoned cook, I can
    improvise to catch up

  Then he used a slotted spoon
   and many layers of paper towels
   to daub the runny orange grease
   off the sausage

                       
  He did all of this with great ceremony
  like a magician, sharing his tricks-
   I was so impressed

   I would not learn until months later
   from his parole officer that
    he specialized in impressing-
    He was a typical ex-con
    he was from southern California
    a real actor, that one
                       
   He built a covered deck off my
   trailer and a covered porch
   over the back door
   I was so impressed-
   Later, he would tell that
   he had never built anything
   that he had researched carpentry
   at the local library
   Inside, he built a pantry
   in the hallway and a laundry by
   my stacked washer/dryer
    He knew how to match the
  veneers seamlessly, so
   it looked like the original
  I was so impressed…

  When my eleven year old daughter
   turned in rebellion, he knew
   precisely the words to calm her
   after all, his staying depended on
   everybody getting along

   He charmed my mother, too
   and soon was rehabilitating
   a basement room
   on her house
   Later, I would find out that
 “His price was a bit high”


 When I needed a vehicle that
  I could sleep in to do research
  in Montana, he volunteered to
  trade his canopied truck for
    my car-for a week

 He was so ingeniously accommodating
  he penetrated our lives
  soon, we were engaged-How much
   Good fortune could come from
  answering an ad? I wondered

   It was the early eighties
    I was in my early thirties
   Looking back, I see how
   Truly gullible I was

   Then he began to disappear for
   longer and longer periods
   of time
   Later I would find out that
   he had made a connection in
  Tacoma and he
  was strung out…

  One day we were Christmas shopping
  and suddenly he got violently ill
 I rushed him to the Emergency
 dropped him off and drove to park
  Before I could follow him in, he
stormed out, crying: No insurance!
 They will not take me!
 Later I would find out that ERs
  do not help junkies…

  In January he had been gone
  two weeks, when I decided to
 go talk with his P.O.
  who asked: What don’t you know?
  I teared and the parole officer
  was forthcoming: He is not just
  a poor soul who was imprisoned for
  dealing marijuana like he probably told you
  (That was exactly his story)
  He is a bonefide heroin addict who
   was busted as a mule and
   my bet is he’s mainlining again


 His words hit hard and true,
 just as he meant them to
 I went home broken hearted,
 Then I noticed things missing:
 35mm camera, microwave, VCR,
 leather valise, my box of gold coins
  and I was irate!

   My older brother’s classmate owned
   a local pawn shop
    I went on a hunch
   He fingered his files and pulled out
   half a dozen tickets, saying, I doubt
   he’ll be back to redeem these…
   I read the tickets: He stole that
   stuff from me!
   What would you like to buy back?
   He smiled, consolingly

  Next I went to the library and
checked out an armload of books
 on heroin addiction, determined to
  prepare myself with the knowledge
  I would need

   I am eating my chorizo and scrambled eggs
  enjoying a toasted English muffin with
   honey slathered on
  all the while recalling the high price I paid
   to learn about chorizo

                       
  I stacked all of his belongings in
  the middle of my living room and
  covered them with a quilt, so I
  didn’t have reminders while
  I waited

  I made calls everywhere I could think of-
  Could not find him
  Then two weeks later, he called, contrite:
  Can I come home?
   My only reply was:
  Come and pick up your stuff.
   He arrived, tears welling up in his eyes
   I had completed my research and
   hardened my heart
   There was nothing left to say
  I helped him load up his belongings
   to get him on his way

   A month later a letter arrived from
   Terminal Island Federal prison in
   California- he explained that he had
   specifically robbed a particular service station
  committing grand theft so they would put him
  in the federal system as a re-offender
   where he could get federally funded rehab
   and he loved me and, by the way, would
   you send me my camera?

    His camera! I redeemed that pawn ticket
    just before it expired and I could not afford
    to redeem roughly three thousand dollars
    worth of the other stuff he stole from me!

    I was so incensed I tore the letter into little bits
    then burned the bits
    A few more letters came
    I never responded and
    Then no more


  Out of curiosity about a year later, I
  asked a friend of mine, who happened
  to be a parole officer, if she would see
  what happened to him
  She looked him up in an interstate
  data bank
   His file was marked:   Terminated
  she said
  So I asked her what that meant
  Her reply: released or dead


  Curiosity satisfied, I let it go
   He had built porches and cabinetry
   and he was one helluvan artist, having
   left some incredible paintings behind
   which I gave away
   As far as I was concerned: debt paid

  As I finish of the last bite of my chorizo feast
  I smile, feeling, at last wise  
 Could have learned how to scramble chorizo
  with green peppers, onions and eggs from
  somebody else, but then
  I wouldn’t have this story to tell…


 from the Love Roulette Chapbook,
raintreepoet, reporting.











Thursday, February 11, 2016

Apalon Beauchaire

                    
Image result for free lighthouse images


  In a Coast Guard tower
  on a leather flight jacket
  a seventeen year old girl lay
  receiving a gift of love
 from a twenty-one year old
 drop dead gorgeous crew man
  who had previously stolen
 her heart with his first
 succulent kiss

  There had been many sexy
  conversations based on
   What if this happened in
  the future some day? and
  there had been an
  acknowledgement of obvious
  Love- at-first- sight attraction

   But, she was a country kid
   slow to trust a guy from
   the city
   because that’s what she
   had been taught

  He was bright, more worldly
  and had a wry wit
  She was constantly in stitches
  around him and
   he was wise enough, although
   young himself
   not to pressure her

   Trust grew by kindness and
   listening and
   making her laugh and
   stroking her long hair
   and telling her how much
   she reminded him of
   Veronica Lake

   He was a master story teller
   enthralling her with a mythical
  character he called Apalon Beauchaire,
    a French man, who was a
    World class lover and
   always got the woman
   of his desire

   The day it happened
     on a sunny afternoon
    in July
   She was visiting him
   on base in Port Angeles

   He asked her if she wanted
   to see the tower
  Of course she said yes,
   adventuress that she was

    As they looked out at
     the bright mid-day, she
    kissed him and said,
    What if some day
    became today?

    He smiled big, took off
    his flight jacket and
    gently laid her down…





reprinted from Love Roulette