Searching For Mangos

 

 

The oil spray-on car cleaner smelled like Cape Cod sand and Miami sunsets. Cigarettes were now 7.75 and the paper numbers blew softly against the warring red and white Marlboro sign. The Newport add was brighter. Teal and lime green. Neon orange. Pleasure it said. Pleasure.

Submarine sun reflected off the glass specks melded into the gas station concrete. Reminding me of the acid pill Delaware said was covered with blue glitter. Like Dorothy’s ruby red sparkly slipper, she took from the dead witch.

Last night my parents danced in our mango colored living room like two people who were happy. This was their act of negotiation between now and the past. Only my dad had cried after as Nina Simone sang stories of Mississippi. Goddamn. They had laughed of dope days and LSD trips on beaches – my dad’s ex devil girlfriend luring him into violent red tide waves in the snow.

Memories traveling through time and space like clocks and rockets. The room was lit with candles and the flicker of the flames created animalistic shapes against our city walls. They had been doing this every Sunday since the first day of our new lives, when my mother had begun her two-day affair. All they had left now were the memories. Not about themselves together, because those would bring about painful truths. These were stories of their unlived lives. The memories of today.

Last night my father sipped his red wine and asked, “Kyle, how old will I be when you’re fifty?” I did not answer. Instead, I rose from the hardwood table, washed out my pasta bowl, and poured some more merlot into my oversized glass.

My father has been talking about death increasingly lately. I watch him read the obituaries on weekend mornings; he says he wants to see which childhood classmates have passed on.

I’ve seen age slowing carving its name out on my own face, my forehead a little rougher, the smile lines around my mouth beginning to deepen. I am twenty-one, and on Saturday, I plucked a gray hair from my chin and thought about shaving off my beard entirely, but then stopped. I will be old one day, but not yet.

His face was not what you would call handsome in a young Marlon Brando kind of way. Rather, it was interesting. Aesthetically intriguing. He turned 18 in 1969, the year the first man landed on the moon. Entering into adulthood in an era of transformative happenings. Because of this, his parents thought my father was destined for greatness. Growing up his nickname in his neighborhood had been Mooney. Martin Luther King Jr. had been assassinated a year prior to my father’s arrival into this grown up world, five years after Malcolm X and JFK had been gunned down. My father’s year was different though and not consumed by death. A year of planet walking and new beginnings. A year of making something more.

His Mother had given birth to his younger brother in July of 1967, but he had died when he was born. As if he had never existed.

My father’s older sister was born in 1943, so he grew up on her stories of a beautiful America. When he decided to get up and go he left behind an American small town ideal. Pre suburbia, a place where milk was delivered in slender glass bottles. His own father had been the town’s milkman as a teen. Diners with malted shakes, burgers, and a jukebox filled with black tunes to move the white teenage masses. In some ways, he had always lived through someone else’s memories. Theses images were pleasing, at least for him.

“You know I cry too sometimes,” he had said to me after he had found me slumped over in the living room, with my head resting too heavily against my palms. My girlfriend had just called me a faggot outside the school dance. I told him I was crying because my best friend’s golden retriever had died. But that was three years ago. Now I knew he cried more than sometimes. He cried all the time. Always.

Last night my father had begun to cry again. He watched me while we listened to Fats Domino. He watched me while Delaware watched my mother, and my mother watched the clock. “Are you crying again Dad?” I asked him. I know my mother could sense the annoyance in my voice, but my father is too self-absorbed to recognize other people’s shifts in tone. “No, Kyle,” he said. “I’m just happy”.

Leaning against the hot white concrete wall, I watch the stubbly worker scrub down my ten-year old red Buick, while Marvin Gay’s “What’s Going On” travels between the gas pumps in the almost summer air. I’ve been planning to leave this place ever since my father started getting mixed up permanently. At first, I thought he was just being eccentric. Or maybe slightly delusional. His older sister has been on the medical dope out in San Jose for the last fifteen years. When Delaware left last night, my father whispered to me that Delaware’s been forgetting lately, says he doesn’t know what he’s talking about on their early morning walks. “But Dad,” I said, “those are your imagined memories, not his, how could he remember?” “No Kyle, they are his too.” He is sure.

Last night they argued about people overseas. Delaware said Italian people are all about smiling and French people are all about complaining. My father laughed and said he had it all wrong, French people were the complainers, and Italians always showed their teeth.

I wonder how they feel about black and white Americans; I wonder how they feel about each other.

Delaware was born in a coal-mining town in rural Pennsylvania, the same year four black girls were murdered in an Alabama church basement. He had come to the north to study the stars, to get away for a bit. But his mother called him a traitor and he became too use to life far northeast. There was an impossibility of returning home.

Him and my father had met at a little blues bar, and had bonded over their love of dry gin. Or so they tell me. If it is true it’s an anomaly resurrected in time.

I am usually silent when we have our dinners now. Stitching together a rare narrative in America, especially for a Sunday evening. We have replaced the segregated church day, with integrated liquor guzzling and loud stories to mask what is never said. I’ve learned that in order to be a good citizen in America, you have to forget a lot. Or keep it on the inside.

Seven months ago, my mother went out to dinner with her high school boyfriend and did not return home for two days. My father sat on our outside porch and waited for her. He stayed awake fueled not by anger, but by heartbreak. When she returned home, they did not speak for the first hour. Then she went out on the porch and told him she had made love with another man. “Escaping is not the answer,” he replied. “Sometimes,” she had said. I could hear their low voices move up and down through the living room windows. Images of their dusty sex toys clouded my mind. I had found them in a shoebox under my father’s side of the bed two years prior. They would not be using those again.

Our new lives had begun. My father would become obsessed with what was left behind. On his dresser are photographs of smiling white faces working the pre suburbia farmland. Me as a little boy dressed up in a white dress my babysitter had borrowed from her life-size Barbie. Photographs capturing the uncapturable. In a Cape Cod campground in 1986, my mother and father sit on a wooden bench in the woods, and drink pop out of glass bottles. My mother’s oversized grey sweatshirt hangs loosely off her carefree breasts, and my father’s left hand rests somberly on her thigh. Another photograph shows him and Delaware laughing when Delaware had an Afro and my father had a hippy beard, they are in a rusty kitchenette overlooking some city skyline. Radical. There they were. And self-indulgent. Often arrogant on Sunday afternoons. Photographs I have already seen, he shows me again and again. His effort to express love in a world that has lost its meaning.

My red Buick glimmers as dusk approaches and I contemplate not returning home. Some days it is just too hard. At night my mother sleeps on the plastic covered couch in the TV room. My father clenches his pillow closely, imagining her old scent, suffering from a sorrow so filling his belly curves outward with loss of hunger.

Last night I dreamed I was running through the grass on naked feet, away from my perfect yellow two-story home. In my dream, I am fifty and my father is dead. Delaware is buried in Pennsylvania, and my frail mother is living in her hometown of Chicago with a lover she hates. We speak only twice a year. I can see my two daughters dressing the playboy models with their paper doll clothes, thinking Mommy is a Martian because she has pubic hair. And I’m in the bathroom wondering why I married a woman after all. Thinking about what it means to be a man. What it means to be a man who loves other men in America. Nothing in the dream invites intimacy.

My father makes up stories, because he cannot remember facts. He chooses not to remember facts, as if he himself were a fiction. Even when he is not home, his memories are still lying there on the windowsill. Straddling between private and public space.

Last night my parents danced in our mango colored living room like two people who were happy. Delaware and I watched my father’s eyes brighten with excitement, my mother’s flare with false fragments of time. She did it for him, I guess. An obligation. A desire. A common surprise. There they were putting into reality a memory of something that did not exist. Spectacular.

Tired from the twist my father sits and talks with exuberance. He uses words that could create whole landscapes. Words that could free you. Epic. Mythic. Big. We do not believe his stories. We are only able to help him remember us when we were a family, the stories from the photographs lying on his dresser, the close yesterdays and today’s.

But not his own – we couldn’t grasp those, and lately the memories were all from his imagination. They were not collective. And like searching for mangos in a concrete field — he would never find them.

We sit and listen to Nina Simone, again. “Turning Point,” it’s my father’s favorite tune.

See the little brown girl
She’s as old as me
She looks just like chocolate
Oh mummy can’t you see
We are both in first grade
She sits next to me
I took care of her mum
When she skinned her knee
She sang a song so pretty
On the Jungle Gym
When Jimmy tried to hurt her
I punched him in the chin
Mom, can she come over
To play dolls with me?
We could have such fun mum
Oh mum what’d you say
Why not? oh why not?
Oh. . . I. . . see. . .

My father presses his palms together off rythm to the melody. His white hands move like dancers in heat, fingers stretching through the air with delicate machismo, softly making memories through motion. I try to memorize his weakening muscles, dripping flesh on broadened frame. What are the lyrics of a New England blues? How does it sound?

This will be the last song he will hear before his mind dies. When the possibility of memory to free him is nearly gone. A time when he will no longer remember the words, and softly hum the wrong tune.

Fifty-cent Tabletop apple pie and a Budweiser. Jesus dangling over the Newport cigarettes on my dashboard. One day I’m going to get up and go. Drive to a full service gas station, crank down my window and tell ‘em fill it up, I’ll take the supreme today. Smile and drive away real far until it’s just God and me. Pleasure I’ll find. Pleasure.

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Slow Motion

  • Italicized phrases from the song “Slow Motion” by Third Eye Blind


I guess I didn’t mean it, but man you shoulda seen it
.  We drove through the star-polluted night going ninety-five down 95 – well, he did.  I sat.  Motionless.  Clenching the Sky in my sweaty palms as the car beat in rhythm with my heart.  Music blasted while I poisoned my veins, anticipating them to be filled further.  We arrived and parked nowhere as the liquor blacked out my life. He jumped, an unwanted Spiderman hero here to breakdown my hardened womb.  Enter.  Trapped in neon light halls, white walls surround us.  He’s lost, and I follow.  A recipe for disaster as he sings,  “but girl, if you would let me, I’ll take your pants off.” I let him, maybe?  I told myself I wouldn’t lose this time.  Images float in when it’s over, when it’s done.  He leaves my side and I lie there alone in quiet space, more alone than when I am flying solo.  Regret stained all over the bed as I poke his tender skin.

“Come cuddle,” I say.

“Hold on,” his deep voice coarsely replies, yet he never comes (I guess we have something in common tonight).  Heart hollow, I lay my spinning head against foreign sheets, not flesh.  Sunken hope surrounds me.  Maybe we’re both young urban psychopaths.

At 9 a.m., the sun rises a most beautiful ruby red. His smile wakens my tired eyes, permeating butterflies into my dehydrated system.  And I too, smile back.  He holds me with forearms that are softer than any felt before.  Yet his muscles look all too familiar.  Gentle and dangerous?  They always go hand in hand.  Sweat trickles down my un-toned body as we begin to make lust.  Lips lock and he tastes sweet despite our un-brushed teeth and day-old bodies.  I want him.  His gaze radiates wetness between my legs, though I hardly remember him drinking me last night.  Delicious.  What other word is there for breathtaking first encounters?  Sigh, oh my.  We bury our souls inside one another, orgasms for breakfast.  Luscious, our flesh explodes. Later bathing in the afterglow his touch is missed already, even though his masculine palms clenched my baby-bearing hips three seconds prior.  Will it fade?  Too scared I am, for he seems imperfectly perfect.

We go back the way we came, ninety-five, driving slow, not wanting to leave the irreplaceable sweet scent of passion mixed with incense and Nantucket Nectars to quench thirst and panting.  Five days young together.  What is he to me?  What will he be?  I can’t tell, I can never tell.  Slow motion.  See me let go (aaahh).  Oh yeah…

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The Future If We Get There

There will come a time
when no one living
will have known you.
When the earth
will rise and turn,
and the child, heavy
from a sleepless night
of earache, will weep
in the moonlight –
blank walls glowing,
the skylight her only friend.

And you will be floating,
watching and silent,
trying to find
a way back.

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On Hollywood Blvd.

I watch his eyelids flutter in the early morning
hours. Dreams of technicolor magic
beneath his olive skin.

Today may be the last time it is like this.

Rainy LA morning
and the east coast blues
is calling me back to NYC.

How I wish I could hold us, freeze
us for hours upon hours and take in
every crevice of his flesh,
every angle of his moonshine. Hold
him on my tongue, like summer dew.
Stillness, divine stillness.

Us and a California rainstorm.

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Where Have You Been My Blue Eyed Son (People Always Get Cold Feet Before They Die)

*Italicized phrases from the song “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” by Bob Dylan

My dad said the coffee was still hot on the table. Still alive. His father had been complaining of cold feet the week before.

*

The death season was almost approaching, one could see it in the way the shriveled sapphire leaves blew about against grey concrete. They were no longer vibrantly blood filled red, but parched and dehydrated. Corpse-like.

The sun would have begun to settle in the afternoon at that time of year, its warm body slowly approaching sleep before the children did. During identical weeks years later I would deeply inhale as I walked with my younger sister home from after-school, and years later still, I would sit in the coffee shop and watch as the pigeons scrounged for their final hot snack. I would remember the red-punch air of summer while softly letting the hairs of my nostrils be tickled by the fresh coolness permeating the fall air. “When we get home lets make leaf piles,” I would say to Riley. She would skip ahead laughing with her friends, her blonde braid looking like a tattered corn-silk rope worn out from too much time spent on the seesaw in Harvard Square.

My sister and I would arrive in our S.U.V. sized weed yard and build natural faulty trampolines out of oak leaves.

During the same month, week, or day some decades before, he lies on a couch smelling of antique books and musty pig feed.

I call him now. Is he listening? Is he listening? Would he have thought of us then?

*

We sit in the car. My dad is driving. I won’t leave the city with my hands on the wheel. I call it highway fear. I am going to die prematurely; perhaps if I refuse to speed I can stay alive a little longer.

*

This grey van is bigger than our old one, and lighter too. Silver actually, not grey.

*

My sister and I used to sit topless in the backseat of the grey one in August. I would pull my sunflower shirt over my bare flat chest, and Riley would do the same with her identical outfit. Imitating me when there was still something solid left to imitate. When my dad pulled off the highway to refuel, we would unbuckle quickly and climb into the humid day.

My dad would reach into his jean shorts and pull out two empty hands, his face beginning to glow. The glow that illuminates his ice blue eyes when he watches his three girls (my mother, sister, and I) dance to Fats Domino in our mango colored living room, the same glow he gets when he tells us of the lady on the train who got her poodle thrown out the moving window along with a lit cigar. This is his glow of happiness.

His painted hands would reach behind his ear, then lower down to our eye level. In his palm would lie just what we had been waiting for, a quarter to use on the Coca-Cola vending machine.  It’s bright red frame lonely leaning against the white-paneled wall. This was the one time during the year when we are allowed to drink soda; I think that is the reason we chose to ride with dad instead of mom anyways.

After the tank is full, and our aluminum cans half empty, Riley and I climb back into the van. We would engage in our annual ritual of getting drunk off the Coke on the way to the Cape. I’d pretend it’s the beer my dad drinks on our porch on summer nights.

As the van speeds up, the glass windows no longer protect us from the sun, so we would peel off our tops once more and get shit-faced.

*

When I drive above sixty my palms begin to drip out water as if the highway has just created one thousand new pores across my fingertips. Is that highway fear? Or fear of self?

My dad holds the wheel loosely. I want McDonalds, but we pull over at a rest stop with a drive-through coffee shop. My dad insists we walk to the ordering window (stretch our legs). Because of this I am wet and cold, but he charms the lady at the counter, and I walk away with a free blueberry muffin. We sit in the silver van in the Honey Due Donuts parking lot; the rain has polluted my platinum hair. I watch the drops beat like cops against our windshield.

Raindrops think they’re flying, until they hit the ground.

*

I used to listen to the sound of rain against my skylight at night (this was before the time when Apple changed the way we hear). I would press the black velvet sack lightly against the record, hit repeat, and watch the arm move over and needle lower to produce melodies. The water against the roof would serve as my personal disc jockey, remixing Nina Simone’s “Like a Woman” on vinyl.

I still break like a little girl.

*

This afternoon the rain is silent.

We choose to listen to Dylan; I think we left Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell in New Orleans.

Oh, where have you been, my blue-eyed son?
Oh, where have you been, my darling young one?

My father is my father. My father is his father’s son. We pull out of the parking lot and escape onto the American road that has no end.

I want to drive in love to Hollywood someday, just like my parents did.

My father asks me to taste his coffee so it won’t spill. I refrain. The coffee spills. I should have listened to my father. I should always listen to him.

*

He said the coffee was still hot on the table. Still alive. He had been complaining of cold feet the week before.

“I bought a pack of white socks.”
His feet had been cold.
“I left Boston in early afternoon. I hadn’t been out to visit in a few weeks”

The Citgo-sign was still asleep as he followed that dirty water home.

The car I have failed to remember pulls up to the stucco house. An impoverished Californian home in the middle of New England. Farmland on the brink of being transformed into suburbia.

The times they were a changing.

*

A Big Mac wrapper blows by us in the wind.

Oh, what did you see, my blue-eyed son?
Oh, what did you see, my darling young one?

*

“I walk into the house. Nancy comes inside.”

This is normal, except usually Nancy is not home. The high is where her heart is.

*

Nancy has only been to our house once. Her breasts looked like elongated Christmas ornaments hanging from her frame. Yet, her eyes weren’t sparkling gold (I wonder if heroin deludes the shimmer). She is in her early forties, but the wrinkles on her forehead have deepened beyond her years.

It’s my mom’s idea to do brunch. It is not her idea to do it with Nancy, but she is my dad’s younger sister so she does not complain (aloud). My mom hands my father a twenty to go get some bagels around the corner. She pours the coffee beans down the drain.

My father rides his bike over to Brueggers. This was during the years when we still sat there on Saturday’s.  Just the two of us.

“I dream things that never were and ask why not?” The sign looms large above the city landscape, black ink boldly striking the color absent backdrop. We eat a bagel each, and I drink my Nectarine Fizz gazing out the glass walls. The sun’s vertical rays move against the horizontal crosswalk. When the streetlight is red, the ants play chess on mother natures man-made game board until dusk.

My father rides his bike home from Brueggers, the tan bagel bag steadily sitting in his front basket like I used to do when he rode me to preschool in the church singing, “down by the bay, where the watermelon’s grow.”

Riley and I both prefer Hey Arnold, but she watches Blues Clues in the TV room. She does this on purpose to annoy me, this way she can have the whole couch to herself.

Nancy is arriving soon. I don’t feel like helping my mother put plates on the table for this woman who sent me a pink bracelet once. I don’t even like pink. I like my graffiti sweatpants.

*

And what did you hear, my blue-eyed son?
And what did you hear, my darling young one?

We’re gaining mileage now; the hills on either side of us are capped with fog crowns. This would be beautiful, if it wasn’t Western, Mass.

My father continues to tell me the story, “Where’s dad? I say to Nancy.”

He was planning on a hello; there was no room for goodbye.

“Your didn’t hear?” Nancy said to him. “Dad died this morning.”

She said it matter-of-factly.
But the facts did matter to him.

*

From my eyes that are struggling to watch his face, I catch a teardrop drip down his sixty-three–year-old skin.
I guess we can’t keep the rain outside today, after all.
His father died at 60.

Oh, who did you meet, my blue-eyed son?
Who did you meet, my darling young one?

*

In my dreams of waking hours – my father eases onto the empty couch, the bag of socks slipping out of his too weak hands. The only warmth filling the hardwood room comes from the thin lines of steam exhaling off the aromatic liquid.

He sits and talks to the coffee cup, the last living thing is father had touched.

*

We silently listen to Dylan. He sips the coffee that I refused to drink. It is cold now. Corpse-like. He parks the car and I thank him. No father wants to watch his daughter testify.

We exit the car before manually turning off the soundtrack to this story. Two hours and half a lifetime have just passed us by.

We stand in the parking lot. I face my face of the future.

He looks into his own eyes of long ago.

“You know what they say Mase” he says, and I smile. His painted hands rise. “If the rain keeps up, it wont come down.”

*

He had been complaining of cold feet the week before. The coffee was hot on the table. Still. And alive.

Oh, what’ll you do now, my blue-eyed son?
Oh, what’ll you do now, my darling young one?

A stranger removes his dirt-covered shoes. His body lies naked on the table in the morgue. Clothed and sock-less.

Only his soles were warm.

*

What we create, will outlive us (for the most part).

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A Concrete Revival & Other Jazz (work in progress)

Wild Horses keeps blaring from the rambling man’s apartment upstairs.  I know I’ve dreamed you a sin and a lie. I have my freedom but I don’t have much time. Faith has been broken, tears must be cried. Let’s do some living after we die. Wild wild horses, we’ll ride them someday. It’s been on repeat all afternoon.  Good ‘ol New York noise.

 I suppose I’m a wanderer at heart. An endless schemer. A thinking man.

There’s a young boy in Togo named after me. I once got a black eye during a futbol melee in Mexico City. And somewhere, there exists a Chinese historical documentary where I play the role of a bearded Jesuit missionary. Maybe.

This is really about us though.  Her. I keep rereading the note she left:

I’m sorry, but we have to see other people, just for a little while. It’s not you, it’s me, I just need some space and some experience elsewhere in order to truly appreciate how wonderful you are. Please understand that this will only strengthen our relationship in the future, it’s a building block, ya know? I’ll be back, I promise.

That was it.  No contact since.  God, where is the end of missing someone?  What rock can I go sit on that will make me stop loving her. Longing for every piece of her. Tell me, I’ll go right there.

Sit on that rock and zip, zap, zop, I’ll be cured of my heartache. Oh and also, I feel it is important to let you know this: I firmly believe that lightning is everything.  Everything.

We fell madly in love for a while and traveled the world and dreamed until in turned into a disaster.  Or, at least that’s what I like to believe.

She would take her bra off quickly and often.  Quickly and often.  Those tits, I can still picture my pointer finger slowly tracing circles around her nipples until I landed on the points.  Pinch them ever so slightly. It would make her whole body quiver, and then she’d bite her bottom lip.  I loved when she did that.  The cutest half smile I’d ever had the pleasure of licking.

I saw a man do that to her once.  Pinch her nipples, not dream about her smile, not glaze her lips.  I know someone must be doing that right now.  That fucker.  He looked rustic.  Back in the early days.  And I could already tell how they met  He’d go to this neighborhood coffee shop because it seemed like the thing to do, sit and pretend that he wrote romantic poetry .  Maybe he did write romantic poetry.  I don’t know how else Prea could have let him up to her place.  I use to watch her, I never told her that.  The first time I walked to the counter and ordered my black coffee she was resting her head against the olive antique chair near the window.  The day was rainy and humid.  Thick city air.  One knee was bent to her chest and her hands grasped the book with such a gentle elegance I couldn’t stop staring.  Beige t-shirt and skinny jeans.  Hair pulled away from her face in a loose thick braid.  Eyebrows perfected.  I drew sketches of her that night in my apartment.  Pen and ink.  I came once too. I had to.  Smeared a drop of my cum against her red lips and watched the ink run down the page.

Mostly I only use to sketch these intricate jungle monsters that had Lego’s for feet.  She was the second girl I ever drew.  But the first one I really felt.  I don’t feel that much anymore.  The taste of a wild tomato.  Juices on my tongue, I feel that.  But I don’t really feel.  I bit this girl Amanda’s clit last night in the elevator.  I went to a rooftop banger on the Bowery with Kurt and Brendan.  Coke and con-artists.  Brendan’s usual Thursday night crowd.  She was real messed up.  Swigging vodka like it was diet coke.  Hexagon tattoos on her forearm all layered.  I don’t know what it is with hipsters and hexagons.  They worship that shit.  Her cunt wasn’t juicy enough.  Sweet and soft, but not Prea’s.  Fuck man.  Quickly and often.  That’s how she comes to mind.  Boom.  She’s there, right in the center. Big brown love-filled deer eyes gazing at my  face when all I’m trying to do is get inside and bust magic.

*

On Sunday, the most glorious day of all the seven, I dreamed I was tripping on fantastic acid that I had never dreamed within a dream existed.  I woke up with sweaty balls and curly baby hairs.  Sheets soaked.  Yes man.  Hello whirlwind.  The damn construction men keep drilling at 6am when I get back to my 2nd floor walk-up from slamming not enough beers to mute them.  Grab the remote, shut off the birds and the children in the park. Quiet, zoom, fuzz.

I still have Jessica’s grand TV, wish it was a piano.

I’m a nut eater, musketeer, puppet masquerade ballroom dancer.  Oh Prea.

A piano.  I heard this musician last night down on Ludlow.  I mean really heard him.  His fingers danced like elastic ballet men that were so weightless  they didn’t know the meaning of voids…

Here we go. Let’s begin.

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4:48 – Williamsburg Coffee Shop

You could have been a miniature painter
in a past life
delirium
Brooklyn bound
trains run every 16 minutes
and I like the way taint
is a torn up wet paint sign
My boy – let us brush this town
red.
I still have one night
and one hand worth living for.

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