Saturday, April 5, 2025

I Never Asked For This

He is sand now, he is crumbs

and not even dumped into

the river like he wanted. 

Not much grayer than

he was when he still lived.


A cardboard box with a soggy bottom

The thunk of plastic wheels

bumping over the curb.

About what he expected.

but not what he deserved. 

Disrespectful? Rotten.


Presumed and not consulted.

Consumd and then insulted.

I am mindless. I am numb.

I am out of ink and dumb.

I look around, gather the last

of what he left behind.

Assemble the scraps and bind them

into…what? Aw, crap. 

Another fucking book.



Friday, April 4, 2025

Wrecking Ball

I am sleeping like a ship

Full of bones and bullets

Buried in the sand

Where there used to be an ocean 


I am sleeping like an aggie,

like a cat’s-eye or an alley,

rolled into a crack between the floorboards 

of the house that I grew up in

listening, then as now,

for the first resounding note

of the symphony of the wrecking ball


I am sleeping like the rubble 

of the house that I grew up in

I am sleeping like a floorboard,

creaking as I snore. Most of all,

I am sleeping the satisfied sleep

of the wrecking ball


I am sleeping like a slap 

Like a bar of soap squirted 

From your fist

I am sleeping like a butter knife

In the bottom of the drawer,

 beneath a blanket of spoons,

dreaming of its marriage

to the whetstone 


Thursday, April 3, 2025

Crowd Control

 The justice center remains boarded up

Five years after the protests. 

People still ask me 

if the city is as dangerous as what they hear.

They seem skeptical when I tell them no,


Private security companies are thriving.

Their employees are like cops 

without the unions to protect them. 

If they fuck up, they’re easily replaced.


A guy in cut off shorts gets on the bus.

Butterfly tattoos on his thighs. 

He should be thrown in jail


A woman torn in half

By her own cleavage 

My wrists should be bound

With zip ties


A million microscopic whirlpools

Hungry to suck you under

A million spiral staircases

To tumble down


The blinking lights, the barricades,

the tear gas.

Real power means never being 

Held accountable 

Real love means smiling

Through the endless waves of hate


The cops may be having difficulty

filling their vacancies,

but there are still plenty of people

eager to commit acts of violence

in order to preserve their fantasy of order.


The front of the car crunched 

the side of the bus scraped raw

I’m just calling to see if you’re safe

No need to speak. Just nod

Or shake your head 

And I’ll know somehow


Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Gas Leak


Empty cans of paint loaded into the trunk of a rental car. 

The desire to return to an imagined state of purity. Was there ever one? 

They evacuated the building while the fire department tried to find the source of the leak. They gave the all clear then immediately rescinded it. I stood out in the sun, watching people walk by. A man carrying an assembled tent on his back walked past, never once setting it down.

When they say purity, they mean whiteness. They want everyone to be white. As if that was inherently a good thing. 

He complains that the only car they had available to rent was a Prius and that when he got in his head touched the roof. “I had to drive all scrunched over,” he said, then gave me a fist bump, which was his way of saying both hello and goodbye. Like aloha. 

And the government was busy kidnapping brown people and putting them in jail in El Salvador and everyone just kind of accepted it, even if they didn’t think it was okay. What could they do?

And I forgot my password. And the cat refused to sit in my lap, even though she usually likes to.

Of course many people vote against their best interests.

And I tried not to stare but I sneaked a peek when I thougth she wasn’t looking but she caught me and I felt terrible. But I knew I would probably do it again. 

I’m white and to be honest I don’t think it’s anything special. Though a little part of me, a little lump in my scrotum, is relieved because it makes me less likely to be spirited away to rot in a jail in El Salvador. 

Belief in the existence of purity is a kind of madness. 

They never found out what caused the gas leak.

And I went out to happy hour and ordered the cheapest thing on the menu and felt terrible. And it wasn’t even worth it.

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

What Happens to Shadows During an Eclipse

 The wall of light could not hold back

The rushing torrent of water. 

It could not stop the stampede or the fire 

or the tanks. We were so proud of it, we spent 

So much time building it. And it proved to be

totally ineffectual against all the things

that could destroy us. But oh it was pretty. 


I guess we thought its shimmering surface 

would mesmerize the forces of chaos 

the way it mesmerized us. 

But they barreled right through

without stopping to admire the swirling colors

and glowing layers we had worked so hard

to cultivate and collect. In retrospect,

we should have used stone. We should have 

dug a moat. We should have erected

an electrified fence, thirty feet high 

and topped with razor wire. 


But we worried that would make us 

too much like them. We thought 

we would preserve our integrity

if we chose to protect ourselves

only with the most ethereal of defenses. 


And so we were enslaved, and so we suffered,

And so we died. Without glory, without dignity,

and even though -or because?- we were right. 



Sunday, March 16, 2025

The Future

I leave work early to get my bimonthly shot in the eye. It’s cold and rainy as it has been all week, and the streetcar is fragrant with bodies cocooned in wet blankets. 

The waiting room of the eye clinic is packed. When I’m finally called, the aide –as usual, someone I’ve never seen before, despite my frequent visits- tells me they had three people call out sick. She gives me drops and checks my eye pressure with a device the size of a pen, instead of the usual machine. She leads me to the room with the retina scanner but it’s in use so I sit outside while she leans against the wall of the narrow hallway. I ask if she’s a knitter, pointing to the tattoo on her forearm. “Socks, mostly,” she says. I try to make small talk but she’s unreceptive. It’s Friday, and we’re both tired. 

When the room finally frees up, she has trouble adjusting the retina scanner properly. I’m so tired of all these machines, tired of this whole eye business. I’m tired of pretty much everything, really. 

She leads me to the dreaded Small Waiting Room, where I sit crammed in with a bunch of elderly people. The guy next to me screams at his phone is what sounds like Croatian, but there are no other seats for me to move to. I take out the hundredth anniversary issue of the New Yorker from a few weeks ago. It’s surprisingly dull for such a notable occasion. There are a lot of congratulatory ads along with an article about the fiftieth anniversary of Saturday Night Live. I nod off occasionally. I wait for an hour and a half before my name is finally called by an aide who I may or may not have seen before. They are starting to blur together. 

She leads me to another room and puts drops in my eyes and leaves, and a few minutes later Dr. Wang arrives and says the scan showed that the bump in my retina only looks slightly better, so he wants to start me on a stronger medicine. I ask if this is normal and he says it happens with seventy percent of his patients, but the insurance company requires him to try the weakest medicine first before it allows him to try stronger kinds. He leaves and the aide returns to have me fill out the forms for the new medicine, which require a lot of personal information, including my social security number. 

She departs and Wang returns and gives me drops and asks if they burn, gives me more drops and asks if they burn, then gives me the shot with one sudden stab. It doesn’t hurt but I feel it slide in, which is unusual. He must notice my discomfort because he asks if I’m okay. If you would’ve told me a year ago that I’d be getting a shot in my eyeball every eight weeks, I would’ve freaked out, but at this point it’s just a minor annoyance. He says that the hope with the stronger medicine is that I should only need it occasionally.


Afterwards I head across town to the Tomorrow Theater to see if they can squeeze me in to the sold-out Miranda July event. I hadn’t planned on even trying but a coworker told me I should stop by. I was hoping they’d be working the door, but it’s a woman I’ve never met, though I know her face from the staff handbook. She grills me, asking me who told me I would be able to get in. I tell her and she looks suspicious. I say it’s no big deal and turn to go, and she tells me to wait until closer to show time and she’ll see what she can do. I feel embarrassed and stand in the corner of the tiny, crowded lobby, feeling awkward. I don’t like crowds, plus my sugar is low and on top of it my right eye is filled with floaters like a series of cat scratches. I’m surprised to see a bunch of people from work, including the head of the museum. 

At last the woman at the door leads me in and seats me in the back by the sound board. The head of the museum is right in front of me. I sit down next to an attractive woman, perhaps a little younger than me, who asks me how I got a seat. I tell her and she says she saw that they were sold out but they told her they could get her in. We both talk about how much we love All Fours. She says she works as a somatic therapist who also makes steel sculptures. She seems really interesting (despite my doubts about the whole somatic therapy thing), but we don’t get to talk much before the lights go down and the director of the theater comes out to introduce Miranda July. 

She comes out onto the low stage, looking exactly the way she looks in her movies and author photos; short curly hair, wide eyes that always look a little sad and bewildered. She wears what looks like a man’s red robe. 

I dislike the theater director immensely, and once again she proves herself to be a  twit. Happily, July tends to ramble on at great length after every idiotic question, and even happier, that rambling is interesting and entertaining. She comes across as less flaky than I had imagined judging on interviews I’d read; she’s smart and funny and everything she says seems propelled by anxiety, which I find charming and relatable. 

After about an hour, the director opens things up to questions. July asks if she can try something; she wants to swap clothes with someone in the audience. She asks anyone who wants to do so to stand up, and she walks up and down the aisles trying to decide what outfit she feels drawn to. “Oh, I love that sweater, but… no. Sorry. This feels so cruel,” she says, and like with so much of what she does, it’s difficult to tell how much of it is an act. The artificially of her shtick always feels like there is an undercurrent of sincerity though, which keeps her from being too precious and annoying, though she always seems to step right up to that line. Her early work felt a little too cloying to me, but over the years she has mastered the high wire act. 

. “I think maybe a man’s clothes,” she says after a few minutes of sadly turning people down. 

“Oh, I’m wearing man’s clothes,” the woman next to me says, and leaps to her feet. 

July finally picks a tall, well-dressed man to swap outfits with, and they duck behind a folding screen that has been set up on the stage. She keeps making little comments and cries of pleasure that seem like they could easily become sexual but never quite do. It feels uncomfortable and manipulative and playful and genuinely intimate. 

The theater director keeps making comments like “I wish you all could hear the things I’m hearing!” and “See, this is the kind of experience we bring here at The Tomorrow Theater!” Until the museum bought it, the place was called The Oregon Theater, and showed nothing but pornography.

When they are done changing, July steps out from behind the screen –“No, wait, you can’t go first,” she scolds- in the man’s stylishly mismatched suit, and emerges in the flowing red robe. Everyone applauds, then she takes questions, occasionally pausing to preen and pose. “I wish I had a mirror!” she chirps. 


There is a break, after which they are going to screen her film The Future, which I haven’t seen since its original run. The woman next to me is surprised; she didn’t know they were showing a film. My sugar is still really low so I go out to the lobby to get some popcorn. My neighbor follows me and when I get to the counter I ask if I can get her anything. I say casually, but I can tell by the way she declines that I have made her uncomfortable. I find I have this affect on women a lot, and I’m not sure why. Perhaps my desperation to be loved comes through without my meaning for it to, and they find this repulsive. Perhaps they can see through my friendly, jovial façade to see how deeply miserable I am.

I remember that the first time I watched the movie, I was initially irritated by it, but by the end it won me over. I watched it the woman I was seeing at the time; the first girlfriend I had in Portland. She lived upstairs from a man who claimed to be the inspiration for the male lead; the story of him pouring lighter fluid on his hand and setting it on fire was his. I was skeptical, but then we watched some Miranda July short films she had on tape and sure enough, the guy downstairs was in one of them. 

This time I feel captivated all the way through. I had forgotten how steeped in loneliness it is, how the entire thing seems to be about much we need to connect with other people, and how difficult it is to do so. I think of the lovely, curly-haired sculptress beside me; the irony is not lost on me. Or maybe I’m just projecting.

When it’s over, the somatic therapist and I walk out together. I want to ask what she thought of the movie but I’m feeling overwhelmed by emotion.

I hold the door to the street for her and she says, “Bye.”

“It was great talking to you,” I say. She strides away without another word and I hobble off through the rainy darkness to wait for the bus to carry me across the river, from my lonely present into an even lonelier future.


Wednesday, February 26, 2025

The Bell

Blanketed by fog, the morning sun looks like a full moon as I head to my appointment with dr taggert. This is only my second time seeing her since the nurses went on strike nearly six weeks ago. They signed a new contract over the weekend but they’re not back at work yet. When the bus pulls up in front of the hospital, I see that the tents and port-a-potties for the picketers are all gone.

The metal detector is in operation for the first time in a while, and I put my bag in the tray and set off the alarms when I hobble through on my crutches. A polite young man wands me over and for the first time it starts to beep. He asks if I have anything in my pocket and I tell him just pens and he waves me on without checking to see if they are in fact pens and not a knife or gun. 

I check in with a man I’ve never seen before, then head up the green elevator. The lights are on in the office but I’m very early. I only have to wait a few minutes before taggert bursts out and hollers for me to come in.

She asks where my wheelchair is, as I knew she would, but she seems satisfied when I tell her I’ve been using crutches all the time, which I have. “The wheelchair is just so much harder,” I say. 

She says she understands. “I told you about my brother, right? He had MS as a kid and we wheeled him around everywhere.” She’s not wearing her mask, and I can’t stop staring at her mouth, which I’ve only glimpsed before. There’s nothing wrong with it, in fact she looks younger and prettier without the mask, plus for the first time her hair is down. Freed of its ponytail, it’s golden and longer than I imagined. I would not recognize her if I saw her on the street. 

The only other person in the office is Bridget, the new receptionist. Taggert says the nurses will be back tomorrow. I ask if she’s relieved. “Oh god yes, this has been a nightmare. But I saw what some of them will be making and I think maybe I should’ve just become a nurse. Now maybe you can tell me, does the chair look right to you? I can’t get the leg rest to go back any further but maybe it was always that way?”


I slip off my postop shoe and sock and she peels off the bandage. “Well, this still looks good,” she says. “Really good. Wait, what about your knee? Is that still… oh, that’s healed up too. Wow. Okay, let me just get this callous off.” She plucks it off with a knife and says everything is healed up underneath. She slaps a bandage on and says, “Oh wait, it’s all wrinkled up, that’s not…do I need to cut it? No, I can just fold it over like…you know, the nurses really are better at this. Anyways, that’s it! You’re all healed up! You don’t need us anymore!”

“Really?” I ask.  I had figured on there being at least another visit or two. It’s strange to suddenly be separated from people I’ve spent so much time with over the last year. I wanted to hear how they weathered the strike, if they enjoyed the time off or were just tense the whole time. And of course the one I miss the most is KC, her awkward flirting, her terrible singing… I feel sad knowing I may never see her or any of them again. But mostly her. 

Or I may be back in two weeks. Regardless, I should draw them a thank you card with my info so they can keep in touch, though I’m pretty sure they won’t. 

“So now what?” I ask. 

“Now you can start breaking in your shoe, though if you’ve had it a while you might want to get a new one,” I tell her I’ve never worn it and she says I should still get a new one. “Besides, Medicaid covers a free one every year,” she says. “Oh wait, you don’t have Medicaid.”

“Yeah but soon no one else will either!” I cry.

“That fucking guy,” she mutters. “I can’t even bring myself to say his name. But give them a call. They should be  adjusting your inserts quarterly anyways.”

“Quarterly?” I groan. She nods and gives me that bug-eyed stare I’ve grown so accustomed to, though its intensity is oddly diluted without her mask. 

“A wound like this takes ten to twelve months to fully heal up, and even then it’s only ever going to be 80% of what it was before,” she says for possibly the thirtieth time. “You are always going to have to be hyper-vigilant. The moment you se any signs of rubbing or soreness, you rip those shoes right off and get them adjusted. And if the sores open up, you call us immediately.” I tell her I will, though I feel tense and tired just thinking about it. This isn’t over. This will never be over. This is my life.

Taggert holds my coat up so I can worm my arms into the sleeves. “I feel like your butler,” she laughs, and escorts me to the door. She surprises me by giving me a big hug. 

“This is so anticlimactic,” I say. And it’s true; there are no emotional outpourings, no fitting denouements to any of the character arcs. Apparently this story ends with just me and Taggert hugging awkwardly in the vestibule. From a narrative perspective, it’s pretty weak. But perhaps there’s something fitting about that, even if it feels unsatisfying. 

Sitting on the counter is the bell you get to ring when you finish your treatment. For the first time, I notice that there are actually three bells; the one I rang last time, and also a town crier type hand bell and a squat cowbell. 

“Don’t I get to ring the bell?” I ask.

“Oh my god, of course!” Taggert laughs. “I forgot! It’s been so long since anyone’s rung it!”

I grab the little cowbell and shake it maniacally. It clonks dully, a harsh, ugly sound. I should’ve taken the town crier bell, but it’s too late. You can’t undo these kinds of mistakes. Taggert nevertheless waves her arms in the air and cheers. Bridget grimaces and shakes her head. I ring and ring and ring that fucking bell.


Outside, the sun has burned away the fog, and the world and all its denizens are cast in a harsh, cold light. It feels strange to be going to work after my appointment instead of the other way around. As I wait for the bus, a spotlight seems to shine on the litter at my feet one object at a time. Soggy brown wads of paper towels. A sheet of newspaper. A family of cigarette butts. A wrapper for a king-sized Snickers bar. A guy in a bright yellow vest is lethargically sweeping it all up. 

A man with purple hair walks past, wearing a black jean jacket with the words Where Roses Bloom So Does Hope stitched in Gothic lettering on the back. I move so the guy with the broom can sweep up the Snickers wrapper, and then the bus comes and I climb on and we head down Glisan, taking the Burnside bridge across the river, which is still shrouded in mist, despite the sunshine, into downtown, past the empty storefronts and boarded-up buildings, past addicts frozen in place and cops strapping on their riot gear, past people with baby carriages and mobility devices, couples holding hands or walking their dogs or getting coffee, past all these stories unfolding all the time around us, until finally I pull the cord to ring the bell for my stop.