An American Journey

Gate to Seoul

I am planning a trip with my father and brothers

Following the rivers north and westward from Kansas City

As Lewis and Clark once did

Traveling through Plains and Badlands and Mountains

Seeing with my own eyes

That point where civilization ends

From an Interstate Highway pull-off

 

The beauty of mountains carved by the hand of God

Or geologic time and erosion

Reshaped by man and high explosives

To form edifices of our memories

The mythology of our great leaders

Causing both awe and embarrassment

Not far away the native peoples create another tableau

Reclaiming the stones as their own

 

I put my feet and heart at the mouth of the coulee

On the edge of the Little Bighorn River

And imagine how hard it was to run breathlessly to the top of the hill

Being broken in body and spirit when overrun alongside Custer

Simultaneously, I’m bounding from cover to cover like the Crow and the Sioux

Feeling raw emotion

As the land and the white standing stones mark the vanity of

Manifest Destiny at all costs

 

I hear that Yellowstone in the springtime is gorgeous

If you don’t mind the traffic jams of bears and bison

And tourists lined up in their recreational vehicles

 

In May, the sun-chasing roads should be open

While the peaks are still blanketed white

And the rivers start to boil with snow-melt

Stampeding like the Rodeo in Cody, Wyoming

 

I just want to take it all in and

See the West that was

And never was

And never really could be

But still is the West

The one that lives in our collective memories and pulses with the heartbeat of

America

Red White and Blue Glare

 

Gate to Seoul

Independence Day
In a military town
Filled with fireworks
Real and metaphorical

Sitting on the patio
With the family
As rockets burst
Beautiful melancholy

Emotional displays
Remembering our freedoms
Our victories
And our losses

Sipping away the evening
In brilliant flashes
Celebrating America
Understanding the cost

Blessings, Damnations, and Woes

Blessed are the protesters
In peaceful assembly
Demanding justice and equality
For yours is The Dream made real
Mahatmas one and all
Standing before Nirvana
On the Road to Shambhala
Yet You lack one thing to enter
You must shed your violent alter-self
You can not harbor violent souls
And cross the gates to the peaceful happy land
Though the price of peace may be your life
Unyielding while bearing your cross
As all the martyrs that came before you

Blessed are the peace officers
When they live up to the term
Protecting and serving the people
For yours is the Badge of Honor
When you protect the people
Nurturing them under your shield
Of peace, and prosperity, and equality before the law
Yet one thing you lack to stand before The Judge
You must purge yourself of the wolves
Hiding themselves in your ranks
You must cast aside their violence
Before it destroys your flock
Or they drive you into the wilderness

Damned are the troublemakers
Hurling insults and bricks
Setting fires and looting
Your anarchism nullifies the voice of the people
You doom the saints that are actually bringing change
To another round of violence
Your bile drowns the discussion
And poisons the fields before they ripen
Your harvest is nothing but ashes
Repent before you are consumed
Broken shards of glass and flames
Become your funeral pyre

Damned are the cowardly bullies
Who instigate events
Demanding people respect their authority
And choking out innocent life
Simply because they can
Using guardian positions to prey upon innocents
Your black-hearted hypocrisy dooms you to failure
As the people rebel against your evil empire
Your anger and cowardice besmirches your profession
Repent or suffer the fate of the wolf and rabid dog
That must be put down
In order to save the flock

Woe to those in authority
Who abuse their power
Making themselves and their friends rich
On the backs of the people
Using crony capitalism and politics
To keep the people divided and
Inflamed with daily tragedies
To distract the people from the fact
That you are robbing them of their future
By poisoning their present
You do whatever is necessary
To hold on to your positions
And enjoy the succulent feast
While the people languish in misery
Repent and turn from evil
Before the greed in your calloused heart
Fans the flames of street protest
Into your Thermidor

Woe to the Cassandra prophet poet
Who sees the present in the past
Augers the future through discernment
And knows that the voice crying out from the wilderness
Is seldom heard and understood
Because the heart of the people
Is based in primordial violence
And even in an advanced state
Relies upon tribal fealty
Like troops of monkeys
Fighting over the best fruit trees
To clearly see the pathway forward
Knowing it won’t be taken
Is perhaps the worst punishment of all.

The Thaw

As the world heats up the institutional glaciers are melting
Revealing the boulders that were trapped in the flow
Erratic stones that can be chiseled away and made into art
Monuments to mankind’s ability to make progress