meeting in the middle
what can i tell you
that you don’t already know?
probably nothing that really matters
oh sure
i could fill your head with facts and
figures
my opinions on any number of things
the highlights and low points of my life
and quantities of nonsense
unearthed from the disordered dictionary
in my brain
but why would you care?
we might agree or argue
smile or shout
but i have no good advice for anyone
no spectacular wisdom to impart
what’s sweet on my tongue
might be sour on yours
and the inner maps we’re born with
determine so much of what we do
as we journey through the jungle we call
life
so i’ll be me and you’ll be you’ll
and we’ll talk and laugh
and live without any expectations for anything
but perhaps friendship
the echo of silence
some nights the silence echoes
louder than any clap of thunder
my heart aches for a voice
as my hand involuntarily reaches for another
only to touch a ghost
engulfed in the ocean of loneliness
i flail in its frigid waters
as it leaks from my eyes in great salty
drops
that caress my lips in the mockery
of ironic imitation
some voices are smooth whiskey
some the raucous screech of crows
some hands are roughened some smooth
none of that matters if love is there
i lie wide-eyed in the silence hoping
sitting in drydock
today
i met a woman
dying
letting go of life
would that i could
have transfused
some of my time
into her veins
she has
more reason to live
than i
i've swallowed too many words
held back too many tears
there’s a dead
dwarf star
where my heart should be
and my stomach is full of stones
i lounge in hamlet's living room
blowing smoke rings
into an empty world
how flat and stale and
aye unprofitable
this landscape lies
i need a good jolt of juice
lunch at the all-american café
sitting in this honky-tonk diner
just a quick stop on the way to nowhere
i can feel hostile eyes puffy and sullen
holding me in a spotlight of curiosity
and contempt
as i standing out like a radioactive
alien
at a high school football game glance at
the menu
offering nothing i really want but i
have to put something
in my stomach so i can keep going to
wherever it is i’m going
i ordered the soup of the day from a taciturn waitress
then keeping myself to myself buried my
face in a book
which now that i think on it wasn’t too
bright because
these folks aren’t readers and books are
generally suspect
now when they’re not staring at me
all eyes are on the television over the
counter
blaring the latest news from the state
designed
to keep us fractured frightened and
misinformed
and when after what seems an eternity
the soup’s sloshed in front of me i
famished
dig in but there’s no comfort in this
meal
i taste violence in every spoonful
RC deWinter’s poetry is widely anthologized, notably in "New York City Haiku" (NY Times, 2/2017), "easing the edges: a collection of everyday miracles" (Patrick Heath Public Library of Boerne, 11/2021) "The Connecticut Shakespeare Festival Anthology" (River Bend Bookshop Press, 12/2021) in print: 2River, Event, Gargoyle Magazine, Lothlorien Poetry Journal, the minnesota review, Night Picnic Journal, Plainsongs, Prairie Schooner, San Antonio Review, Southword, The Ogham Stone, Twelve Mile Review, York Literary Review among many others and appears in numerous online literary journals.
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