Plastic yellow roses don't
hold their color under
the skies of July.
Absurd colors swirl madly
into the black center as
the faded man searches for
something, anything that isn't
gray.
There's no marker.
In 1972, the faded man watched
his father console
his father
on the night his cousin died and
the faded man's father's father
couldn't understand why
a God would take
the young and leave
the old behind
to grieve in such
agony and pain.
The faded man has seen
grayer skies than he ever
would have imagined or
dreamed of and oh, yes,
he has seen rainbows
and blue skies;
but the gray plastic rose
has sent him tumbling
down the years
to all of the places
that sadness does not reach,
but he finds it lurking now
in every corner and
nothing, no thing, will take
it's place.
In 1976, the faded man
talked to God and
begged him to reconsider.
Ignored by God and
the rest of the universe,
he told them all to go to Hell.
The faded man feels faded
inside and out.
Secretly, he was never really sure
he was really here.
There should be a marker.
The faded man forces himself
down to his knees,
thinking maybe she
can hear him better
the closer he gets.
The faded man has lingered
long past all of the
others who put
the color in his life and
his mind circles round
and round the keen idea
that he might as well
end his fading now.
The faded man once brought home
a dozen yellow plastic roses and
now he wonders if
he should go get one
or a dozen
or a hundred, just
to watch them fade?
What would be the point?
That, of course, leads back to
the question of why and
what is the point of any of it.
The faded man can only hope that
he never stops caring about
the answer.
Mike Carson
7-30-2009
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Goodbye
I. Before and After Dying
Yesterday a wasp landed on the rail to my back deck
and died.
Today a honey bee made a feeble attempt
to enter my car and join me
on the drive to work.
The last gasp in late fall
of bees looking for a warm place
to be before dying.
Believe me, I can relate.
About a month after my dad died,
my mother took me and Gail outside
to show us Sam’s star.
She said it suddenly appeared about
a week after his death and was proof
that he was watching out for her.
I told Gail I was worried about her,
Gail said, “Don’t, she’ll be alright.”
Those of us who have not, but need to
say goodbye;
twist in the breeze like the last
leaf on an oak, desperately clinging
to the known and familiar ways.
A wise man once said, “Make no changes for a year,”
and then he died, leaving his wise woman
in charge of the lost and grieving
left gasping for air in the vast vacuum
that followed his passing
from this presence to the other.
II. Pain
Goodbye hurts,
it hurts down to the marrow
of my bones
which someday will be
pulverized and returned to the sea.
The hurt blackens all
of the colors that used
to live in my life and
readies me for the deep, dark night
that leads somewhere, but
no one here can say for sure where.
No, don’t give me the surety
that you have no right
to give. You don’t really know
anything for sure, just as I.
I know that hurt can change
a rainbow into black and
like all other obstacles we face,
must be overcome before it
takes us down
below the ground.
III. Us
There have been 18,800 days
of me and
7,035 days of us.
When I say goodbye to you,
I say goodbye to us and
most of me.
It was late on a Thursday evening,
early November and I was down at
the gas station helping Sara with her
paperwork and you dropped by to say hello.
You were getting impatient with me by then;
your transfer had gone through and we had already
danced and kissed and you made sure I
had the chance to run my hand down
your leg and it would have happened
that Saturday night if Sara had not got drunk
and picked a fight that Bud had to finish and
we all ended up at the jail half the night,
but with another fun story to tell, but
I never told this one,
did I?
I asked you where you were going as
you started to wander off and you
replied that you were going to
the Holiday Inn to drink schnapps and beer and
I recalled what you had said about
what that leads to on the night I saw
you tie a knot in a cherry stem with your tongue.
I looked at Sara and calmly asked her
what I should do.
Sara, who besides having a Psych degree,
was in San Fran in the summer of ’67 and
on a farm in upstate New York in the summer of ’69.
From the moment I hired her,
we started teaching each other.
We certainly both got each other immediately.
Sara looked at me and uttered the immortal words;
“Shit or get off the pot.”
I ran into your arms and
all of our tomorrows.
We got schnapps and beer and took it
to my place and sat on the floor and starting watching
LA Law and
never made it anywhere near the
end.
IV. Beauty on the Balcony
On a cool winter’s evening,
long after midnight,
you stood on my balcony
naked to the world
and I waited for
my warm place to be
to return to me.
There are places, words and feelings
that never fade, no
matter how dark
it gets. I remember saying,
“I love you,” and your reply,
“Don’t say it unless you mean it.”
I wanted nothing else but
to share your space for
the rest of my life.
It was just one month later
that we both knew for sure.
shining down on us
“I could turn the air conditioner on…”
“I want to hold you for the rest of my life…”
“So very dark…”
All of our tomorrows
belong to yesterday and
even the moonlight fades to black
after the stars are
hidden away and
the whispers die
in the late autumn breeze.
MJ Carson
11-01-2009
Yesterday a wasp landed on the rail to my back deck
and died.
Today a honey bee made a feeble attempt
to enter my car and join me
on the drive to work.
The last gasp in late fall
of bees looking for a warm place
to be before dying.
Believe me, I can relate.
About a month after my dad died,
my mother took me and Gail outside
to show us Sam’s star.
She said it suddenly appeared about
a week after his death and was proof
that he was watching out for her.
I told Gail I was worried about her,
Gail said, “Don’t, she’ll be alright.”
Those of us who have not, but need to
say goodbye;
twist in the breeze like the last
leaf on an oak, desperately clinging
to the known and familiar ways.
A wise man once said, “Make no changes for a year,”
and then he died, leaving his wise woman
in charge of the lost and grieving
left gasping for air in the vast vacuum
that followed his passing
from this presence to the other.
II. Pain
Goodbye hurts,
it hurts down to the marrow
of my bones
which someday will be
pulverized and returned to the sea.
The hurt blackens all
of the colors that used
to live in my life and
readies me for the deep, dark night
that leads somewhere, but
no one here can say for sure where.
No, don’t give me the surety
that you have no right
to give. You don’t really know
anything for sure, just as I.
I know that hurt can change
a rainbow into black and
like all other obstacles we face,
must be overcome before it
takes us down
below the ground.
III. Us
There have been 18,800 days
of me and
7,035 days of us.
When I say goodbye to you,
I say goodbye to us and
most of me.
It was late on a Thursday evening,
early November and I was down at
the gas station helping Sara with her
paperwork and you dropped by to say hello.
You were getting impatient with me by then;
your transfer had gone through and we had already
danced and kissed and you made sure I
had the chance to run my hand down
your leg and it would have happened
that Saturday night if Sara had not got drunk
and picked a fight that Bud had to finish and
we all ended up at the jail half the night,
but with another fun story to tell, but
I never told this one,
did I?
I asked you where you were going as
you started to wander off and you
replied that you were going to
the Holiday Inn to drink schnapps and beer and
I recalled what you had said about
what that leads to on the night I saw
you tie a knot in a cherry stem with your tongue.
I looked at Sara and calmly asked her
what I should do.
Sara, who besides having a Psych degree,
was in San Fran in the summer of ’67 and
on a farm in upstate New York in the summer of ’69.
From the moment I hired her,
we started teaching each other.
We certainly both got each other immediately.
Sara looked at me and uttered the immortal words;
“Shit or get off the pot.”
I ran into your arms and
all of our tomorrows.
We got schnapps and beer and took it
to my place and sat on the floor and starting watching
LA Law and
never made it anywhere near the
end.
IV. Beauty on the Balcony
On a cool winter’s evening,
long after midnight,
you stood on my balcony
naked to the world
and I waited for
my warm place to be
to return to me.
There are places, words and feelings
that never fade, no
matter how dark
it gets. I remember saying,
“I love you,” and your reply,
“Don’t say it unless you mean it.”
I wanted nothing else but
to share your space for
the rest of my life.
It was just one month later
that we both knew for sure.
“Will you take this woman…”
The moon and the stars wereshining down on us
“I could turn the air conditioner on…”
“It’s better this way…”
“To have and to hold…”
with a deep yellow glow“I want to hold you for the rest of my life…”
“Promise?”
“I do.”
as we became one“In sickness and in health…”
“Where did the stars go?”“It’ll be alright.”
by candlelight.“So very dark…”
“I’m here, dear.”
“Till death do you part?”
“I can’t feel you anymore…”“I did.”
“Yes, we did!”
“Whisper to me, wet and wild…”All of our tomorrows
belong to yesterday and
even the moonlight fades to black
after the stars are
hidden away and
the whispers die
in the late autumn breeze.
“Goodbye my love.”
MJ Carson
11-01-2009
Monday, August 17, 2009
The 17th August The 17th
Raging spirit,
furious words flung at
a brick wall,
only to reverberate
in silence.
It has been seventeen years
since your light went out.
Each year there are fewer
and fewer who
knew the glow.
We never played that game of golf,
but then again,
you never were that
tossing baseballs in the side yard
type of father.
You were the type that
drew corrections to the builder's plans
for our first house and
then re-plumbed the hot water yourself
after the idiot builder put it
in the attic and it burst
taking out the ceil heat.
You made them pay for it,
but did the work yourself
to make sure it was done right.
I watched your every move and
I decided somewhere along the way
to be an engineer, but I didn't
cope with life quite well enough and
I know I disappointed you as
well as so many others along the way,
but in the end I think;
you really understood.
Here I sit flinging words
at a brick wall.
You were a provider;
you provided strength and
humor,
the amount of
love and affection you could spare,
a home and hearth and
the power of words.
You taught me to
keep flinging the words until
the walls fall down.
17 years,
I started this journey at 17.
34 years,
two times seventeen and you were gone.
51 years,
I guess going for four
won't be so bad,
as long as I keep
writing the walls down.
I still rage about
the loss of light, but
I can see that by your
own standards;
you lived carpe diem
every day.
Drink up,
live well,
love well,
die well.
This I think,
you taught me well.
Mike Carson
8-17-2009
furious words flung at
a brick wall,
only to reverberate
in silence.
It has been seventeen years
since your light went out.
Each year there are fewer
and fewer who
knew the glow.
We never played that game of golf,
but then again,
you never were that
tossing baseballs in the side yard
type of father.
You were the type that
drew corrections to the builder's plans
for our first house and
then re-plumbed the hot water yourself
after the idiot builder put it
in the attic and it burst
taking out the ceil heat.
You made them pay for it,
but did the work yourself
to make sure it was done right.
I watched your every move and
I decided somewhere along the way
to be an engineer, but I didn't
cope with life quite well enough and
I know I disappointed you as
well as so many others along the way,
but in the end I think;
you really understood.
Here I sit flinging words
at a brick wall.
You were a provider;
you provided strength and
humor,
the amount of
love and affection you could spare,
a home and hearth and
the power of words.
You taught me to
keep flinging the words until
the walls fall down.
17 years,
I started this journey at 17.
34 years,
two times seventeen and you were gone.
51 years,
I guess going for four
won't be so bad,
as long as I keep
writing the walls down.
I still rage about
the loss of light, but
I can see that by your
own standards;
you lived carpe diem
every day.
Drink up,
live well,
love well,
die well.
This I think,
you taught me well.
Mike Carson
8-17-2009
Friday, August 14, 2009
It’s Easy To Hide Inside A Dream
There is no hiding place for the poet
I dodged the issue for thirty long years
Running from that stage fright, don't you know it
Forever putting excuses to my fears
~
I dodged the issue for thirty long years
While living a life so worth the living
Forever putting excuses to my fears
My own soul to keep, that now I'm giving
~
While living a life so worth the living
When I'm holding the treasure in my hands
My own soul to keep, that now I'm giving
Well worn particles of time's golden sands
~
When I'm holding the treasure in my hands
I can see the world with eyes wide open
Well worn particles of time's golden sands
Bound for that which I was always hoping
~
I can see the world with eyes wide open
Running from that stage fright, don't you know it
Bound for that which I was always hoping
There is no hiding place for the poet
~
Mjcarson
I dodged the issue for thirty long years
Running from that stage fright, don't you know it
Forever putting excuses to my fears
~
I dodged the issue for thirty long years
While living a life so worth the living
Forever putting excuses to my fears
My own soul to keep, that now I'm giving
~
While living a life so worth the living
When I'm holding the treasure in my hands
My own soul to keep, that now I'm giving
Well worn particles of time's golden sands
~
When I'm holding the treasure in my hands
I can see the world with eyes wide open
Well worn particles of time's golden sands
Bound for that which I was always hoping
~
I can see the world with eyes wide open
Running from that stage fright, don't you know it
Bound for that which I was always hoping
There is no hiding place for the poet
~
Mjcarson
Sunday, August 2, 2009
Drowning
I saw you
in the deep waters
of life
going down
for the third time
I, your knight
with all his armor
dived in to save you
pushed you clear and
soon was drowning
treading water
faithfully
in your service
and you came
to me
and
removed
the cold steel
that was rusting
in the open waters of life
whispered in my ear
"come hither
swim, dear, swim!"
~
mjcarson
6-25-2007
~
Saturday, August 1, 2009
Survival
It’s raining as I stare out
at the five lane…
flipping my cigarette
I walk back into
solitary confinement
just in time to hear “Down In A Hole”
and I pick up my pen
to tell some more lies
about how fine life is
you know…all about
that brass ring I grabbed
all the while ignoring
the white knuckle grasp
I have on sanity
Have I done anything at all?
Did I move them?
Really groove ‘em
Leave them anything they could quote?
“If I wrote a song you could sing to your children,
will you remember my name…remember it then?”
“I knew I could make those people dance…”
we were there once upon a twilight evening,
blessed just to be alive…
If I could sing it to you,”
would it make a difference?
I could write a happy poem and
that would not change
the truth
of the stars
hiding
behind the clouds
nor the fact that we’ll all be
hidden away some day
by the men who wait right over the ridge
to put us in the warm earth
regardless of whether we changed the world
or just ripped it off
no matter how we
lived or died
this ends
There were two white gold rings
bought at Service Merchandise
in 1989
one lies under a hillside
beside a church in Inskip
the other
got too tight
quite a ways too tight…
I had to hide it away
what I never did with my love
but I am not sure that I ever learned
how to show it very well
When the time is done
and it is time to reflect
What did you add here?
Could you point it out to all?
or would you even need to
My life lives
in words
on a page
There’s a void between
what is and should be
but from all
the sources do
I rely
music owns my soul
I can’t hide it
I write because I can’t sing
I voice with my pen
because you can’t hear me
I’ve heard the debate
about how many muscles it takes to smile, but
that only matters to those
that have them all
It’s stopped raining now
and Jim Croce sings
“I Got A Name”
perfect
I walk outside for another smoke
and peer in vain
for the stars
Mike Carson
11-25-2008
at the five lane…
flipping my cigarette
I walk back into
solitary confinement
just in time to hear “Down In A Hole”
and I pick up my pen
to tell some more lies
about how fine life is
you know…all about
that brass ring I grabbed
all the while ignoring
the white knuckle grasp
I have on sanity
Have I done anything at all?
Did I move them?
Really groove ‘em
Leave them anything they could quote?
“If I wrote a song you could sing to your children,
will you remember my name…remember it then?”
“I knew I could make those people dance…”
we were there once upon a twilight evening,
blessed just to be alive…
If I could sing it to you,”
would it make a difference?
I could write a happy poem and
that would not change
the truth
of the stars
hiding
behind the clouds
nor the fact that we’ll all be
hidden away some day
by the men who wait right over the ridge
to put us in the warm earth
regardless of whether we changed the world
or just ripped it off
no matter how we
lived or died
this ends
There were two white gold rings
bought at Service Merchandise
in 1989
one lies under a hillside
beside a church in Inskip
the other
got too tight
quite a ways too tight…
I had to hide it away
what I never did with my love
but I am not sure that I ever learned
how to show it very well
When the time is done
and it is time to reflect
What did you add here?
Could you point it out to all?
or would you even need to
My life lives
in words
on a page
There’s a void between
what is and should be
but from all
the sources do
I rely
music owns my soul
I can’t hide it
I write because I can’t sing
I voice with my pen
because you can’t hear me
I’ve heard the debate
about how many muscles it takes to smile, but
that only matters to those
that have them all
It’s stopped raining now
and Jim Croce sings
“I Got A Name”
perfect
I walk outside for another smoke
and peer in vain
for the stars
Mike Carson
11-25-2008
Friday, May 29, 2009
Life On Monday Night
It was Howard Cosell that told me
John Lennon was dead,
during the course of one of our
regular Monday Night sessions and
both of us wept at the senselessness
of such an act.
Even my father, my regular Monday Night session mate
from the beginning in 1970,
was moved. This was the same man who had sat in his chair
and scoffed in 1964 as his hormonal 12 year old daughters
and his amused 6 year old son
watched Ed Sullivan introduce The Beatles
to an adoring American audience, who in later years
admitted that yes, they were pretty good, and who was in fact
the same man who watched
Ronald Reagan explain American football to John
in the booth with Frank and Howard and Dandy Don
on Monday Night in 1973,
again during one of our regularly scheduled sessions.
Our lives didn’t revolve around football,
but it was our good common ground and Monday Night
became the pinnacle of the ritual.
It came pre-loaded with the best games
and biggest names,
a prime time jewel.
It was Monday Night that got us
a second color TV for mom’s bedroom.
Monday Night was the prime time
for father and son to bond. We didn’t miss
much of the first six years and when I returned home from the Navy,
we eased back into it whenever possible.
I did, however, take Monday Night to a higher level
while in San Diego, an NFL city
with a hot team in the late ‘70s.
National City had a bar where you could:
play Asteroids, drink beer and watch girls strip or
shoot pool, drink beer and watch girls strip or
watch the game on a big screen projected TV
(very rare in 1978), drink beer and watch girls strip or
go out back and supplement your beer drinking
with something a little stronger and then come in
and watch girls strip.
We went there for the big TV screen, of course.
On Monday Night, in California, the party started early and
finished late, but while in California I
didn’t have a car and
never drove anywhere.
I bought Big Blue from a friend of dad’s,
she was a 1973 Chevy Impala
and built like a tank, but much faster.
Big Blue and I set the world on fire
for five years until December 1st, 1986,
the Monday Night we both
went down in flames.
I worked and went to school with David,
he was from New Jersey and
his main claim to fame was
having his collarbone broken by Bill Bates.
Bill (not Bates, he played for Dallas)
hung with us frequently,
he had tried out for the Kansas City Royals and
was studying sports broadcasting.
Most of our activities were
sports and beer related;
we formed a city league softball team,
we went to UT football and basketball games,
played Sports Illustrated dice baseball,
and just basically got together
when we could.
The Giants were playing the 49’ers.
The Giants were on a roll and in fact,
won it all that year. They had Phil Simms and
Lawrence Taylor. The 49’ers had Joe and Jerry,
no last names needed.
This was a big Monday Night session,
this required a big screen.
Not as rare in 1986, Mr. Gaddi’s
had a big screen,
pizza and
pitchers of beer and
a party on Monday Night.
It was a good close game
up until Mark Bravo dragged
7 would be tacklers 20 yards down the field
on a simple play down the middle.
There was no stopping the Giant train then.
Mr. Gaddi’s closed up at eleven, but
the game played on.
Roger’s Place was two blocks away and
had a TV and pitchers of beer,
the train was back on track.
Roger’s Place closed at midnight and
the Giants won the game, but the train
was still rolling…
this was a mistake that found a place to happen.
Doodle’s shared the parking lot
with Roger’s Place.
Doodle’s was a full bar where
one could get lucky or
very unlucky.
It looked good to us at 12 am,
what could go wrong?
Two for one from 12 to 2?
Tequila sunrises, two at a time,
“This train is bound for glory, this train…”
Two hours of
heavy flirting and
laughing and
crying and
drunk dialing ex-girlfriends
(we used quarters back then) later and
it was 2 am,
time for the train to pull in to the station.
We said our good byes
and all headed for
the back roads to home.
I bet you are thinking you
know how this ends, but there
were no blue flashing lights or
great tragedy.
The moral perhaps as subtle
as a sledgehammer, but
this is actually a mystery,
one I have tried to unravel
for the last 23 years.
I made it safe and sound
back to my subdivision
and had only to maneuver 4 blocks
to arrive safe at home.
At the top of the hill
the road went straight down,
perhaps 4 football fields in length,
ending in a hard left
before an abrupt dead end
and after a gentle left at the bottom of the hill.
My Jenson speakers were blaring
“Highway To Hell” and
I floored it and
never let go and
never came close
to making even the gentle left turn,
driving straight through some rose bushes,
a mailbox,
a beautifully manicured lawn of
Kentucky Bluegrass
and being stopped only
by a fire hydrant.
In Hollywood they gush 20 feet,
in real life they bubble up
some water that wouldn’t
put out a campfire.
In Hollywood they take you off to jail and
madcap adventure ensues,
my night in jail was rather sobering
and boring.
I was three months away
from graduation and applying
for jobs in transportation.
I got off easy, but that was delusion.
The only job I got was managing
a gas station.
I lost my chance to make sure
the trains were running on time
in the blink of eye and
the inexplicable
press of a foot
on Monday Night or
early Tuesday morning,
if you prefer.
Big Blue was never the same again,
neither was Monday Night and
truthfully,
that was the night
the party ended.
Mike Carson
5-27-2009
John Lennon was dead,
during the course of one of our
regular Monday Night sessions and
both of us wept at the senselessness
of such an act.
Even my father, my regular Monday Night session mate
from the beginning in 1970,
was moved. This was the same man who had sat in his chair
and scoffed in 1964 as his hormonal 12 year old daughters
and his amused 6 year old son
watched Ed Sullivan introduce The Beatles
to an adoring American audience, who in later years
admitted that yes, they were pretty good, and who was in fact
the same man who watched
Ronald Reagan explain American football to John
in the booth with Frank and Howard and Dandy Don
on Monday Night in 1973,
again during one of our regularly scheduled sessions.
Our lives didn’t revolve around football,
but it was our good common ground and Monday Night
became the pinnacle of the ritual.
It came pre-loaded with the best games
and biggest names,
a prime time jewel.
It was Monday Night that got us
a second color TV for mom’s bedroom.
Monday Night was the prime time
for father and son to bond. We didn’t miss
much of the first six years and when I returned home from the Navy,
we eased back into it whenever possible.
I did, however, take Monday Night to a higher level
while in San Diego, an NFL city
with a hot team in the late ‘70s.
National City had a bar where you could:
play Asteroids, drink beer and watch girls strip or
shoot pool, drink beer and watch girls strip or
watch the game on a big screen projected TV
(very rare in 1978), drink beer and watch girls strip or
go out back and supplement your beer drinking
with something a little stronger and then come in
and watch girls strip.
We went there for the big TV screen, of course.
On Monday Night, in California, the party started early and
finished late, but while in California I
didn’t have a car and
never drove anywhere.
I bought Big Blue from a friend of dad’s,
she was a 1973 Chevy Impala
and built like a tank, but much faster.
Big Blue and I set the world on fire
for five years until December 1st, 1986,
the Monday Night we both
went down in flames.
I worked and went to school with David,
he was from New Jersey and
his main claim to fame was
having his collarbone broken by Bill Bates.
Bill (not Bates, he played for Dallas)
hung with us frequently,
he had tried out for the Kansas City Royals and
was studying sports broadcasting.
Most of our activities were
sports and beer related;
we formed a city league softball team,
we went to UT football and basketball games,
played Sports Illustrated dice baseball,
and just basically got together
when we could.
The Giants were playing the 49’ers.
The Giants were on a roll and in fact,
won it all that year. They had Phil Simms and
Lawrence Taylor. The 49’ers had Joe and Jerry,
no last names needed.
This was a big Monday Night session,
this required a big screen.
Not as rare in 1986, Mr. Gaddi’s
had a big screen,
pizza and
pitchers of beer and
a party on Monday Night.
It was a good close game
up until Mark Bravo dragged
7 would be tacklers 20 yards down the field
on a simple play down the middle.
There was no stopping the Giant train then.
Mr. Gaddi’s closed up at eleven, but
the game played on.
Roger’s Place was two blocks away and
had a TV and pitchers of beer,
the train was back on track.
Roger’s Place closed at midnight and
the Giants won the game, but the train
was still rolling…
this was a mistake that found a place to happen.
Doodle’s shared the parking lot
with Roger’s Place.
Doodle’s was a full bar where
one could get lucky or
very unlucky.
It looked good to us at 12 am,
what could go wrong?
Two for one from 12 to 2?
Tequila sunrises, two at a time,
“This train is bound for glory, this train…”
Two hours of
heavy flirting and
laughing and
crying and
drunk dialing ex-girlfriends
(we used quarters back then) later and
it was 2 am,
time for the train to pull in to the station.
We said our good byes
and all headed for
the back roads to home.
I bet you are thinking you
know how this ends, but there
were no blue flashing lights or
great tragedy.
The moral perhaps as subtle
as a sledgehammer, but
this is actually a mystery,
one I have tried to unravel
for the last 23 years.
I made it safe and sound
back to my subdivision
and had only to maneuver 4 blocks
to arrive safe at home.
At the top of the hill
the road went straight down,
perhaps 4 football fields in length,
ending in a hard left
before an abrupt dead end
and after a gentle left at the bottom of the hill.
My Jenson speakers were blaring
“Highway To Hell” and
I floored it and
never let go and
never came close
to making even the gentle left turn,
driving straight through some rose bushes,
a mailbox,
a beautifully manicured lawn of
Kentucky Bluegrass
and being stopped only
by a fire hydrant.
In Hollywood they gush 20 feet,
in real life they bubble up
some water that wouldn’t
put out a campfire.
In Hollywood they take you off to jail and
madcap adventure ensues,
my night in jail was rather sobering
and boring.
I was three months away
from graduation and applying
for jobs in transportation.
I got off easy, but that was delusion.
The only job I got was managing
a gas station.
I lost my chance to make sure
the trains were running on time
in the blink of eye and
the inexplicable
press of a foot
on Monday Night or
early Tuesday morning,
if you prefer.
Big Blue was never the same again,
neither was Monday Night and
truthfully,
that was the night
the party ended.
Mike Carson
5-27-2009
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