Tug o’ war
A pass to the slot
A flick of a stick
A puck in the net
Done dirt quick.
One flag lowered
One flag raised
For the first time in life
Which one to praise?… Read the rest
A pass to the slot
A flick of a stick
A puck in the net
Done dirt quick.
One flag lowered
One flag raised
For the first time in life
Which one to praise?… Read the rest
’Tis grief.
For story unwound
For truth obstructed
For lies unbound
For faith deconstructed
For country splitting
For Lady spayed
For Liberty flitting
For patriots betrayed
For servants abandoned
For dirt poor dying
For now open-handed
For despots thriving
What I am feeling
’tis grief.… Read the rest
2025 = (2 + 2 = 5)
No.
2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4.
2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4.
2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4. 2 + 2 = 4.… Read the rest
Slow, arcing convergence.
What are the chances?
One in a million?
A little more headwind here,
A little less tailwind there.
Totally different outcome.
“Time and chance happen to them all.”
Old words written truer than new ones hastily spoken.
Here we sit in the glow of our screens,
Survivors of a thousand near misses.… Read the rest
ἀντίχριστος:
Limp, slouching wolf of unbridled appetite and self-love
Cloaked in a FAKE! “Made in China” tunic of an ancient itinerant Jewish preacher
And immigrant
Who didn’t give a g-damn about politics,
Head crowned with 47 red-tipped, gilted thorns and a
Halo of Lies.… Read the rest
For E.C.
It was a most excellent “36th birthday” . . . /s
I shared CHEEZ-IT communion with E.C. and held her hand.
I watched her go down the tube slide “One more time!”—many times.
Thinking her Dad was trailing behind her (a physical improbability), she stuck her head back into the maw of the slide, cupped her hand to her mouth, and called out:
“You comin’ Daddy? You comin’?”
How does an “almost” 2-year-old girl learn to amplify sound with her cupped hand and call out around a blind curve and through a tunnel? From whence comes the courage?… Read the rest
And I went to see the doctor of philosophyWith a poster of Rasputin and a beard down to his kneeHe never did marry or see a B-grade movieHe graded my performance, he said he could see through meI spent four years* prostrate to the higher mindGot my paper and I was free
—“Closer to Fine”, Indigo Girls
*personal note: twelve years
17 Then I applied myself to the understanding of wisdom, and also of madness and folly, but I learned that this, too, is a chasing after the wind.
18 For with much wisdom comes much sorrow;
the more knowledge, the more grief.
11/5/24
My ballot is a match.
I strike it and
Burn down a joker’s house of cards.
Fight fire with fire and
Forge a Freedom House.
I vote
’La.
(one week later)
11/12/24
Wait.
What just happened?
I’m confused.
I struck a match
and fought fire with fire
but the joker’s house of cards didn’t Burn.
(Freedom House just a “concept”)
I ask AI Chatbot:
Why didn’t the joker’s house of cards Burn?
AI: It_is_coat_ed_ with_flame_ re_tar_dant_ Lies.
Me: How can it Burn?
AI: Self_im_mo_la_tion.
Me: What do we do?
AI: Let_it_Burn_____Stand_ by_to_ launch_ res_cues.… Read the rest
There are three things not worth defending—no, four you should walk away from:
a con man selling cheaper eggs,
a nation trading its birthright for a blow* of traitor,
a “concept” of a country,
a church that fails to recognize an antichrist when it sees one.
*spelling correct. reads as intended.… Read the rest
The social media apps and texts started dinging around 6:30 this morning (we already knew).
Friends reaching out, grieving, trying to process.
I tossed a couple of scripture grenades on Facebook using the flawed “Swing the ‘two-edged sword’ so it means whatever you want it to mean!” methodology of exegesis to get it out of my system and kick a dent in the side of the moment.
Yesterday, and then again today, two Facebook “Friends” from high school (one of whom I honestly don’t remember) showed up, as if on cue, to reveal their theological obsessions with genitalia and scatology by regurgitating debunked lies in an effort to explain why it was necessary for them to vote into office—again—a white man who is a manifestly horrible human being, sexual predator, criminal, and traitor over a biracial woman who is a manifestly decent human being, the wife of one husband, law-abiding, and true to her oath.… Read the rest
“Woe . . . They say that what is right is wrong and what is wrong is right; that black is white and white is black; bitter is sweet and sweet is bitter.”
“As a dog returns to its vomit, so a fool repeats its folly.”
(a “two-edged sword” cuts both ways)… Read the rest
11/5/24
My ballot is a match.
I strike it and
Burn down a joker’s house of cards.
Fight fire with fire and
Forge a Freedom House.
I vote
‘La.… Read the rest
T. has been cutting my hair for nearly 10 years and knows my head like nobody else in Huntsville. She has every curve, trouble spot, bald spot, and protuberance of my ample 7 ¾ hat-sized head down cold.
Even on occasions when she might be unsure of the “way I like it”, she asks me, but she also checks my “dossier” on her phone just to be sure: Thin, but longer on top (my hair grows up like a beehive, not out), shorter on the sides, with an even shorter taper down to my neck.
Over the years, she has been a consummate pro and the best barber I’ve ever had.… Read the rest
Attending an estate sale is an excellent means of practicing memento mori, the ancient discipline of contemplating one’s inevitable death. Whether you’re the family left behind, the estate sale company workers who plan and execute them, or the buyers who gravitate from sale to sale picking over the material possessions and detritus of a person’s life, there is no dodging the hard facts: someone is dead, and soon, you will be too.
A fresh wave of awareness of my own inescapable—and ever close—demise washed over me recently when S. and I attended the Joffrion family estate sale. The Reverend Emile Joffrion and his wife Martha had served their beloved church family at the parish of the Church of the Nativity (Episcopal) in Huntsville, Alabama for some 67 years.… Read the rest
The question I dreaded answering came early in our recent trip to Ireland at around 5:30 a.m. on the drive from Dublin airport to our hotel from our 62-year-old cab driver, a seemingly nice enough bloke and good conversationalist, who, as we discovered after using an app to hail a cab with a set and transparent price for the return trip, probably charged us about double the normal fare (my bad for not asking his rate in the first place).
“So, do ye hav’ any Irish in ye? Any relations still livin’ here?
I avoided his eyes fixed on me in the rearview mirror, hung my head, and hesitated.… Read the rest