tommy lasorda
i go to meet my wife
at the wine store
she’s in there with some dude
who has his fist in the air
like he wants to give her a fist bump
and i think, do we know this guy?
my wife is backed away like he smells like dog shit
and, oh, oh, i think
i’m witnessing sexual harassment
sexual harassment of my wife
so i go in there all….
and he sees me coming for him and he’s all…
then out of the blue he says by way of an introduction
hey, tommy lasorda
and i wonder why he’s bringing up
some fat, retired baseball manager
in the middle of harassing my wife
but then i realize that i’m wearing a dodgers hat
and tommy lasorda was the manager of the dodgers
from 1976 to 1996
he won 1,599 games and two world series championships
and oh, i forgot
this asshole was sexually harassing my wife!
so i say, yeah, tommy lasorda, real tough-like
so this d-bag knows that i’m not playing around
all the while i’m thinking
why tommy lasorda
like there are so many other great l.a. dodgers from that era
that he could’ve mentioned
like steve garvey
or orel hershiser
or sandy koufax or don drysdale or
fernando valenzuela
i’d even take pedro fucking guerrero
but he picks tommy lasorda
who, let’s be honest, didn’t really do much
but sit on the bench and yell shit
when he wasn’t getting up to hijinks with the san diego chicken
it wasn’t tommy lasorda who took a 3-2 count
backdoor slider over the fence in the ninth inning
of game one of the 1988 world series
that was kirk gibson
he did that on two injured legs
i would’ve taken kirk gibson over tommy lasorda
i would’ve taken anything actually
over this piece of shit harassing my wife
all casually
then saying, see you guys later
like we all came into the wine store together
after a quesadilla lunch
when i know it was just my wife and i
sitting there eating quesadillas
and not some sexually harassing third wheel
who couldn’t name a los angeles dodger
beyond the last time
some woman gave him the time of day
without him telling her
that she needs to smile more
because a smiling woman just makes his day
and all i could think as he left
was that i didn’t say shit to him
was that i should’ve asked my wife
to go to the grocery store instead of the wine store
but last week
she was in the grocery store in her women’s march t-shirt
and some fat old asshole
who probably looked like tommy lasorda
shouted
TRUMP!
TRUMP!
at her
so it really doesn’t make a difference
where a woman is alone
wine store
grocery store
dodger stadium
there’s always some male asshole
waiting to harass them
tell them how sexy they are
that they need to smile more
call them a bitch if they don’t respond
if they don’t act gracious
if they don’t act like this is the best
shit that’s ever happened to them
greater than all the loves of their life
greater than any joy
better than taking a 3-2 count backdoor slider
over the fence
at the bottom of the ninth inning
of game one of the world series
and hobbling around the bases like the king of the world
with tommy lasorda waiting for you at home plate
to give you a big hug
and a smack right on the back
of that well-sculpted
athletic
american
ass.
--John Grochalski
Thursday, May 31, 2018
Wednesday, May 30, 2018
day FOUR HUNDRED and NINETY SIX
The New Normal
Yesterday
My seven year
old
Politely asked
the nurse
Could she please
get the freeze spray first?
The IV is the
worst part
At the start he
was too sick to
care
That minor stick
only a thousandth of the pain in his small body
Irrelevant
I thought I
would watch him die
He was dying
White cell count
elevated
Anemic. Blood
transfusions needed
He had stopped
talking
I lie on his
stick legs in the
Metal hospital
crib
As they fed the
tube up his nose
On the day when
he could no longer say my name
When the doctor
came
With hope in the
form of difficult choices
He said
“This will be
his normal.
He is only
three. He will not remember a time
before.”
And that was odd
and at the same time
comforting.
It was also
true.
And though I
carried him back for the first treatments
Yesterday he
walked beside me
chattering all
the way
I have taken him
to every single treatment.
I taught him to
look away and to breathe slowly
When the IV had
to go in.
There is no
choice.
It has to be
done.
Every eight
weeks
The IV must go
in.
This is the new
normal for us.
Once, the
hospital messed up and
sent me the bill
staggering in the thousands for just one visit
For a fix that
makes him well
and an artist, a
good student, my living child.
His bill is
covered because what
he has is a
disability
It is the
difference between
Living and
Dying.
It has to
happen.
The IV has to go
in.
But the new
national normal
Would change all
of this
One of my
senators called kids like him
“Burned out
buildings”
Not worth the
renovation
Not worth
spending on
So I called and
I wrote and I tweeted and I emailed and I signed all the petitions.
And I begged
people I knew and didn’t know to do the same.
My own cousin
wrote
“Trump will make
America great again. Wait and see.”
And her sister
wrote
“Why are you
always so angry?”
Because this is
the new normal.
And yesterday
He asked by
himself for something
To help erase
the last
Of the pain that
stands between him and eight weeks
of wellness.
And every day I
will check the news to see if it will be a day
That I can
breathe a little
Or a day where I
will fight on
Because this is
the new normal.
~MG Gainer
5/18/18
MG Gainer: English
Professional for hire (Editing, Social Media, Instructor); proud WV native, so
keep your jokes to yourself. Pronouns: She/her
Tuesday, May 29, 2018
day FOUR HUNDRED and NINETY FIVE
MY
GRANDDAUGHTER
her daddy never finished high school
not for lack of trying
that second year of tenth grade plenty
her mother, my daughter
I’m grandpa, maternal grandfather
my daughter, her mother
she tried to see something in him
they never married and they never argued much
after a few years they just seemed to give up
dad comes around once in awhile
big events he wants to share, birthdays, the circus
my granddaughter
yesterday she ran into the house
eight years-old, all excited
Daddy took her to the rally at the Colosseum
she got to shake the President’s hand!
--Chuck Joy
Monday, May 28, 2018
day FOUR HUNDRED and NINETY FOUR
More Spleen from Uncle Charlie
Where is Poe?
These streets, these flat elephantine thighs
dragged through the soot.
Specters! Hooligans!
Addicts!
Dog shit!
What have you done with Montparnasse?
Shit on Christ! Where the hell is Poe?
I demand an audience at once!
You call this
Civilization?
The air is choked with nonexistence.
You! Fetch me some hashish at once...
And if you please,
where in the name of God
might one find a decent moll in this shit house of a town?
Hell to pay! Take your damn he-she!
I know your kind, diluting the absinthe with cream soda.
Fucking heathen!
Where is Poe?
These streets, these flat elephantine thighs
dragged through the soot.
Specters! Hooligans!
Addicts!
Dog shit!
What have you done with Montparnasse?
Shit on Christ! Where the hell is Poe?
I demand an audience at once!
You call this
Civilization?
The air is choked with nonexistence.
You! Fetch me some hashish at once...
And if you please,
where in the name of God
might one find a decent moll in this shit house of a town?
Hell to pay! Take your damn he-she!
I know your kind, diluting the absinthe with cream soda.
Fucking heathen!
I piss in your hat.
--Jay Passer
--Jay Passer
Sunday, May 27, 2018
day FOUR HUNDRED and NINETY THREE
norwegian day parade
all of the white men
are wearing sports t-shirts
and hats emblazoned with the american flag
they are making america great again
by loitering on street corners
with beer breath before noon
the women have visors
with rainbow-colored see-through vinyl
they talk about the men in sport shirts
drinking beer on the lord’s day
the streets are lined with people
waving norwegian flags
ruddy faced kids who’ve never seen california
let alone the northern lights in winter
cheer in plastic viking hats
as long black limos push waving white girls
and geriatric g.i. joes
down sun-soaked streets of majesty
behind wooden viking ships on wheels
they are celebrating culture
pasty pale-faced culture
the right kind of
culture here in brooklyn
eating food with no discernable tastes
pasty pale-face food
the kind of culture that doesn’t get complicated
that can assimilate in just a generation
culture that won’t get you stopped on the streets
by cops down here
cops who waved at cars passing by
cops who know their neighbors
cops who do not carry ak-47s and wear camouflage
like they do in other parts of the city
where parades get flagged as possible terrorist activity
where gyrating and dancing are seen as a threat
and all of the white men cheer
when the white girls wave
their blonde hair as golden as the sun
and all of the white women wave their flags
remember back when they were young
and rode down 3rd avenue in limos
and all of the geriatric g.i. joes should be put out to
pasture
as politicians sweat on podiums
holding damp paper
waiting to introduce this week’s wounded veteran
to the kids in viking hats grunting
and flexing their muscles
little kids with blond hair and blond teeth
who look like little conquerors ready to tackle history
the ones who will become soldiers
the ones who will become cops
cops who will know their neighbors
cops who will wave at cars passing by
and marvel at viking ships on wheels
and marvel at white girls waving
who will bow when the national anthem gets played
by multi-cultural kids in a marching band
kids who will become the kind of stand-up guys
who will only use their ak-47s
on the right kind
of people.
--John Grochalski
Saturday, May 26, 2018
day FOUR HUNDRED and NINETY TWO
Fast Food
I see the kid laying tangled in his bicycle
outside the McDonald’s in San Diego. It’s as if
my brain was mechanically separated and pressed
into a splotch of an exit wound right then. I’d
panic when mom took us for dinner and for about a year,
made incredible scenes, with full, crazed tantrums
to stop us from staying, always insisted
on the drive-thru, and when
we did eat there because my sister
wanted to ride Grimace, I’d wolf down everything
and memorize escape routes, my heart
pounding in my ears, little feet pacing the rubber floor,
filthy with pollen and splatters.
--Bob Pajich
I see the kid laying tangled in his bicycle
outside the McDonald’s in San Diego. It’s as if
my brain was mechanically separated and pressed
into a splotch of an exit wound right then. I’d
panic when mom took us for dinner and for about a year,
made incredible scenes, with full, crazed tantrums
to stop us from staying, always insisted
on the drive-thru, and when
we did eat there because my sister
wanted to ride Grimace, I’d wolf down everything
and memorize escape routes, my heart
pounding in my ears, little feet pacing the rubber floor,
filthy with pollen and splatters.
--Bob Pajich
Friday, May 25, 2018
day FOUR HUNDRED and NINETY ONE
Watching
the
president
talk
about
sending
more
soldiers
into
Afghanistan
claiming
we
will
win
this
war
after
16
long
years
feel
like
a
crow
standing
on
the
road
during
a
pouring
rain
unable
to
fly
too
tired
to
move
looking
at
the
oncoming
car
knowing
how
it
will
end.
--Matt Borczon
Matt Borczon has written eight books of poetry, the latest My Reality is out through Alien Buddha Press.
the
president
talk
about
sending
more
soldiers
into
Afghanistan
claiming
we
will
win
this
war
after
16
long
years
feel
like
a
crow
standing
on
the
road
during
a
pouring
rain
unable
to
fly
too
tired
to
move
looking
at
the
oncoming
car
knowing
how
it
will
end.
--Matt Borczon
Matt Borczon has written eight books of poetry, the latest My Reality is out through Alien Buddha Press.
Thursday, May 24, 2018
day FOUR HUNDRED and NINETY
He would have been celebrating his birthday
How do you choose a bouquet
of flowers for a seventeen-year-old boy?
I close the bookmarks of guitars.
I was never sure which was his
favourite, was going to ask him
to suggest a top five and I'd pick
one so it would still be a surprise.
How many seventeen-year-old boys
dream of a bouquet for their birthday?
It's a day you don't think about
until something makes it extraordinary
and suddenly you remember
breakfast, your journey to work,
that unexpected phone call.
A bouquet it has to be. I'll create my own.
The standard ones are all white and blank.
One Texan yellow rose for truth.
White lillies for life that stretched toward
but never reached adulthood.
I thought red roses but they look too much
like drops of blood, splatter from bullets.
I wrap it with thoughts and prayers
as another boy, shot at school, is laid to rest.
--Emma Lee
Emma Lee's most recent collection is "Ghosts in the Desert" (IDP, 2015), she co-edited "Over Land, Over Sea: poems for those seeking refuge" (Five Leaves, 2015), reviews for The High Window Journal, The Journal, London Grip and Sabotage Reviews and blogs at http://emmalee1.wordpress.com
How do you choose a bouquet
of flowers for a seventeen-year-old boy?
I close the bookmarks of guitars.
I was never sure which was his
favourite, was going to ask him
to suggest a top five and I'd pick
one so it would still be a surprise.
How many seventeen-year-old boys
dream of a bouquet for their birthday?
It's a day you don't think about
until something makes it extraordinary
and suddenly you remember
breakfast, your journey to work,
that unexpected phone call.
A bouquet it has to be. I'll create my own.
The standard ones are all white and blank.
One Texan yellow rose for truth.
White lillies for life that stretched toward
but never reached adulthood.
I thought red roses but they look too much
like drops of blood, splatter from bullets.
I wrap it with thoughts and prayers
as another boy, shot at school, is laid to rest.
--Emma Lee
Emma Lee's most recent collection is "Ghosts in the Desert" (IDP, 2015), she co-edited "Over Land, Over Sea: poems for those seeking refuge" (Five Leaves, 2015), reviews for The High Window Journal, The Journal, London Grip and Sabotage Reviews and blogs at http://emmalee1.wordpress.com
Wednesday, May 23, 2018
day FOR HUNDRED and EIGHTY NINE
all of history
the
desert at fifteen below and
you
want to talk about god
to
the starving and the slaughtered
you
want to fuck the daughters
of
the men you crucify
want
to teach them the equation
that
lets power become
more
than love
and
so this poem will be my
song
of joy at the news
of
your death
these
words will be the stones
that
grind your bones
into
dust
--John
Sweet
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