When I was in my late teens/early twenties, I would eat the occasional moth, grasshopper, ant, etc. to entertain my young children and their neighborhood friends.  I also swallowed other things, goldfish and guppies to name a couple, to amuse them (and myself I suppose).  This was great fun on camping trips.

Haven ridden motorcycles all my life, I’ve ingested countless flying things I’d rather not think about.  During the eighties there was a group of crazies who called themselves the Moon Men.  They’d show up unannounced and uninvited at motorcycle rallies and campsites.  Their wild antics were high entertainment so, in most cases, they were not chased away.  On one such trip, I stopped at a mountain restaurant to eat on a balmy summer weekend in Colorado.  Half a dozen loonies, Moon Men extraordinaire, were flitting about the café to the consternation of cooks and waitresses, catching moths, picking up bugs off the floor.  Each had a glass jar into which went all the creepy crawlies he captured.  Later that evening, around a blazing community campfire, the Moon Men cavorted and entertained me and a host of other midnight riders.  The Moon Man with the most critters in his jar was the star of the show.  He was acknowledged in low ritual, rewarded as it were, honored by his peers, encouraged and slapped silly (no far reach) while he smacked his lips, yummy-yummy, and ate the day’s catch of the entire group.

Somewhere along life’s path, I decided not to intentionally kill any more bugs.  That is, bugs not biting or stinging me and/or my children.  Those I promptly stomp, swat, chase, generally swear a sincere vengeance upon.  Flies are not a part of my amnesty on critters.  I hate the filthy, slimy, sometimes biting little bastards.  I collect Rosie the beagle’s doo-doo every morning, drop it in one of those plastic grocery bags and tie it loosely in what I call a half-knot.  I hang the bag from a light fixture in the backyard, go my merry way and wait.  A couple of times a day I retrieve the bag, hold the top firmly closed at the half-knot, and literally punch the living caca out of the flies that have crawled into the bag.  Yesterday, I am glad to report, I took out over a hundred of the little vermin and hardly got any on myself.  I am determined and easily amused.

Last week, driving back from our wedding in Colorado, I was chatting with Kathy about what bugs me in life (no pun intended, heh-heh).  She was driving (what a good and special girl to give me a break) and I felt it my duty to entertain her.  A tiny green bug was crawling around on the windshield on my side of the car.  Using my right index finger, I encouraged him over and over to hide himself in the corner between the rubber molding and the glass (I knew he was a he because I saw his little peesqueeter very clearly, thank-you very much).  I asked him what he thought about the graveyard just the other side of the windscreen.  “What goes through all your little buddies’ bug brains when they smash into that invisible barrier at eighty miles an hour other than their butt-holes?”

Kathy, amused at my discourse (I think), decided the little green bug deserved a name.  After some deep consideration, she christened him ‘Nevada Bill’ in honor of the wide and ‘less than scenic’ state we were motoring through.  Bill, as if excited to finally have a name, exhibited an amazing ability to hop several times farther than the length of his tiny bug body when I poked his little butt with my finger.  He landed on my shirt pocket and perched there looking up at me as if to say, “Now what?”  It was either that or Bill needs glasses.  I pursed my lips and shot him a little whoosh of breath.  Bill didn’t like that.  In one little giant hop (I think maybe Bill can fly), he landed on the side window.  I tickled the down button on the door panel and out he went into the wind-stream.  I kind o’ liked that little guy.  Sure hope he doesn’t run across any Moon Men.

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© artwork & words conceived by & property of Tom (WordWulf) Sterner ©

 
 
~this is the end~
~beautiful friend
~the end~
~this is the end~
~my only friend~
~the end~
~of our elab’rate plans~
~the end~
~of ev’rything that stands
~the end~
~no safety or surprise~
~the end~
~I'll never look into your eyes again~

~James Douglas Morrison~
  

~midnight 31 December~
~the final click~
~on the citizen time-clock~
 ~marking the year 2011~
~a young man in Colorado~
~stared into the internet tunnel~
~the only light in his room~
~watching & listening~
~to apocalyptic doomsday~
~wizards & witches~
~the electronic medium~
~he erased the badgering rhetoric~
~from his mind-space~
~posted the words of the poet~
~James Douglas Morrison~
~to his Face Book page~
~closed his eyes & went to sleep~


~fourteen hundred miles away~
~in a place named California~
~& unbeknownst to him~
~the young man’s father~
~practiced the precise steps~
~of the ritual~
~word for word~
~these poets share a~

~familiar rain~

~earth creatures~
~ghosts & men~
~stand down for this one~


~whose memories are shadows~
~wispy glimpses of that which~
~has not yet occurred~
~sacred guardian of the afterlife~
~ruler of the night~
~keeper of spirits transitioning~
~from one plane of existence~
~to another~


~brother owl watches children~
~brown in the sun~
~laughing & running through~
~pale lavender/deep violet~
~fields of alfalfa~
~a spool of string between them~
~trailing high into the sky~
~brother owl knows what children know~
~the bones of the kite where the string is tied~
~are not its beginning or end~
~nor is the spool spinning in their hands~
~they are creatures of moment~
~children~
~ecstatic & so caught up living~
~its delicious bits are all~
~that cannot end has not begun~


{continued}

http://wordwulf.com
WordWulf
Inquiries: tracy@traceliteraryagency.com
& wordwulf@wordwulf.com
©artwork & words conceived by & property of
Tom (WordWulf) Sterner©

 
 
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She lived a hard life in a world where survival was the everyday waterline of success.  I left her in that white room six years ago to howl a lament in the hospital parking lot, what turned out to be her death song.  My sister came to join me.  “Momma’s pain is over,” she said, “She is lost to us now.”  I hurried back to the room to visit Momma’s hollow corpse.

Some weeks later my good sister advised me that she, two of my brothers, and other two sisters were taking Momma’s ashes from Colorado to Wyoming.  They intended to make a ceremonial goodbye, to loose Momma’s remains on the Wyoming wind as Momma had done with her husband, our stepfather, five years before.  She released him to the garden and the small square of grass on their red dirt, moo cow, Wyoming ranch.  My sister asked me, “Will you go with us?”

Oldest of seven children, Momma’s first son, I replied, “No, I’m not ready to say farewell to her and would never leave her with the monster man, our stepfather.  The oldest of my brothers, fourteen months younger than myself, was “doing time” in the prison at Canon City.  Momma never liked him much, favored me always.  The two of us, my brother and me, knew a different kind of life than our siblings.  We shared a love/hate bond because of the Momma dynamic.  I asked my sister to divide Momma into seven parts.  “Take them all to Wyoming and do what you will with five of them.  Bring the two last back to Colorado after they have witnessed five degrees of separation.  These two parts I will keep for myself.”

Life goes on.  Six years later I found myself married to what finally felt like “the right woman” for me.  She was sixth born in a middle-class family of seven children.  Her father was a successful pharmacist and devoted father, her mother a good church woman and dedicated wife and mother.  My wife regaled me with happy stories of family road trips and camp-outs, girl scouts and bible study.  The younger man, me, would have become confused and angry listening to stories from that “other world.”

We live in California now, my wife and I, 1280 miles away from my five children in Colorado, each of those miles the one too far.  Having spent her childhood in Washington and Oregon, many of my wife’s stories have the ocean as a backdrop, the most significant of those, in my opinion, were the two trips she and her siblings took, the singular dual ritual of releasing father and mother into the wind and vast deeps of the Pacific, a place they both admired, respected, and loved.

Recently I drove those 1280 miles to spend a couple of weeks with my children and grandchildren.  My youngest son of twenty-three years returned to California with me to spend a few days visiting.  Momma was with us in her plastic bag in the black plastic box with the lid that will never close.

My Colorado boy wanted to see the ocean and so off we went.  My wife drove us the 150 squiggly miles to where California ends in the west.  I took two pinches of Momma from the box, spread them on the sand-silt of the beach, pressed my fingers to my lips, tasted the silken residue of Momma’s ashes.

My son stood ankle deep in the tide.  “Woo!hoo” he whooped ecstatic, speaking into his projector while filming the big water, his vast, endless and beautiful youth enveloped by and a-tempo with the terrible roar of the ages.  I returned my gaze to the sand, water licking at my boots, and she was gone.

Momma was afraid of water.  She took no comfort in its swell and weigh.  Still I gave a bit of her back.  She would have liked my wife’s people, her parents.  The me I am now would have too.  In another life where it was safe to let go we might have been regular folks, good people, like them. 

My brother is bitter, wants no part of what is left of Momma.  The ashes left are mine to do with whatever I choose.  I’ll take her with us when we move back to Colorado, repeat the ocean ritual in those great Rocky Mountains we both loved so well.  I might never let go of my Cherokee Mother, she will certainly never let go of me.  If it were to be, the lid would close o’er that plastic box of Momma’s Ashes.

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Pacific Interlude
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~I’m a lucky man~sitting in a lawn chair~Colorado springtime~
~breathing in~breathing out~that’s enough~time spent well~
~my wife’s in California~earning our living~she’ll join me in a couple of weeks~
~she brings home the bacon~til my words find their weigh~I’m a lucky man~

~Venerable Youth~

~wherever I am~
~sparrows’ voices will remind me~
~of this day when I am~
~watching his sister~
~cut his hair~
~these vulnerable youth~
~children of mine~
~it is peaceful like~
~after love making~
~after death~
~on the afternoon breeze~
~before midnight~
~peaceful like~
~sparrow feathers~
~in a burning bag~
 
 
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~Violent thunder & hail~
~camper shaking & leaking~
~in half a dozen places~
~dog scared out of her wits, wrapped around my feet~
~instantaneous gutter river freeze~
~better get used to it, my California friends~
~Colorado springtime singing to my blood~
 
 
~watching him play in the kitty litter~little boy’s antics make more sense to me than anything I’ve ever done~did I ever have that much fun~

 
 
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(8393)
undaunted & alive
nearer them Christmas
thoughts of my Children warm me
find me giving thanks
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(8952)
poetic device
inconsistent edge
impossible & defies clarification
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(9077)  
knot narcissistic
listening to music
reading an epic novel
having written both
 
 
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(8798)
loyalty/spaces –
loved ones, family –
we learn in our time apart –
tenets, value, faith
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(9060)
wandering minstrels –
strings of their guitars quiver,
music arrows fired
straight & true, their hearts
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(9123)out in Kathy’s woods –
beautiful birdsong –
rhapsodies a poet may cherish –
love deeper than flesh
 
 
gone full circle - children know the truth we should learn to learn from them - bring the circle close 

sounds all write-muse attends them-mad poets & murderers-voices of demons

flowing the flux - guitar weeping mad - fingers welding stubborn chords - liquid metal mind
 
 
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Tom at the Pacific Ocean 10/17/10
 

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