EVERYTHING IS A POEM
Present for the first breath,
the morning sun, sensation
of the yellow stream.
Eidetic images behind my eyelids,
an anticipated montage
of memories at my Memorial:
Father rows while I troll for pickerel
in between the lily pads.
I’m on a hunger strike
until I get my bacon and eggs.
Mother chases me around the block
trying to give me an enema.
Father disciplines me by insisting I mow
our small lawn with a pair of scissors.
He rewards me with some shiny Indian
pennies and two dollar bills for my collection.
He runs around with a toilet plunger,
as smoke billows out of our basement.
He didn’t want to disturb the neighbors
by calling the Fire Department.
We cemented our souls in a pine grove
under the bulging eye of the moon.
The heat warmed an old stonewall
singing the leaves off overhead trees.
My Pakastani Doc opens and closes my heart,
after inserting a stainless steal stent,
exclaiming:
“There’s nothing more we can do for you.”
I catch a glimpse of the world hereafter
and see naked girls, rosy-red as ripe pomegranates
waiting to mate with any man who doesn’t wear
a cross or Star of David.