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larry-schug
I'm retired after a life of various kinds of physical labor and am currently a volunteer writing tutor and a volunteer naturalist. My eighth book of poems, is "A Blanket of Raven Feathers" (North Star Press) Visit my website www.larryschugpoet.com.
can’t get a hold of HIM tonight, phones are busy, lines are jammed in this reverse marathon telethon where the callers are the beggars, pleading for donations from the Lord. The Lord is busy right now. To leave a message after the tone: press 1 for health press 2 for wealth press 3 for love press 4 for all the above press 5 press 6 press 7 if you want to go to heaven.
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Sep 8, 2019
Sep 8, 2019 at 11:37 AM UTC
Calling God
Use your turn signals, **** it. Keep your speed close to the limit. Use your side mirrors. Come to a full stop at stop signs. Pull over and sleep when you’re tired. You’ve got a map; you know how to follow the red highways between here and there. You know where you want to go; but all those other fools on the road don’t have a clue, may not even see you. Just use your turn signals, **** it. That’s enough advice; you know the rest-- how to light up your eyes when you laugh, how to keep an open mind, open hands, an open heart. Be honest with yourself. Use your turn signals, **** it.
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Sep 8, 2019
Sep 8, 2019 at 11:34 AM UTC
Advice for a Road Trip
Mother Earth’s children run wild, uprooting her garden, filling her house with smoke, pouring poison down her well and torturing her pets. Though she’s mad as a sandstorm, Mother’s more sad than angry. She punishes the children with famine and flood, but in the end, she sighs like a spent storm. Time is a prolific father, but not as kind as I am, Mother scolds. If you children would stop your mischief now, I could heal the damage before the Old Man comes downs the road. He’ll be fuming like a volcano, raging like a blizzard and swinging his scythe, deaf to your cries, the sand in his hourglass about to be turned.
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Jul 18, 2019
Jul 18, 2019 at 6:45 PM UTC
When Father Time Comes Home
If you fold up your paper, turn off your radio and TV, sit on the steps and sip your tea, watch the birds and speak no words as the sun rises yellow and round, making rainbows on the dewy lawn, you could fool yourself into thinking there’s no ****** war going on.
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Jul 18, 2019
Jul 18, 2019 at 6:42 PM UTC
You Could Fool Yourself
Coyote prowls the swamp behind my house, searching for a duck or goose nest hidden in tall yellow grass, thinking of eggs for breakfast, perhaps a downy duckling or gosling, maybe some baby mice for dessert. Coyote sniffs around the nests people make, too; people who seem unaware, can’t sense coyote’s presence anymore, so go about their business as if coyotes are merely the stuff of old stories. They seem surprised when coyote finds their nests, say things like “We didn’t have a clue.” or “It came right out of nowhere.” or “It happened so fast.”— poor excuses for inattention, sleep-walking, made after coyote has ravaged their nests, scattered sticks and moss and grass, then laughs about it when the moon is full. And There Are Coyotes that prowl the land inside you, too, seeking to feed on fears you thought hidden even from yourself like prairie dogs in their dens. **** those coyotes, so wily, digging up burrows, feeding on carcasses; they survive all the poisons you douse your insides with, the traps you set, laugh at bounties on their hides.
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Apr 30, 2019
Apr 30, 2019 at 8:27 PM UTC
Coyote
The animal caged inside the caged animal knows by the sound and rhythm of footsteps, who approaches, their intent, their mood, hears the sound between steps the same way a musician hears music in the space between notes, the same way a poet writes between the lines, the same way a lover reads the silence between I love yous.
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Apr 26, 2019
Apr 26, 2019 at 11:53 AM UTC
Between
The white cells, seemingly not fearful of   oozing, festering, metastasizing, fear black cells, wearing hijabs or dreads. The white cells are fearful of the brown cells that **** and process their chickens and mow their lawns for them. The white cells fear the red cells though they like moccasins, canoes, and wild rice soup, fear yellow cells may be smarter than them so they label them ***** and Chinks. The white cells   don’t seem to mind asphalt-coating, starlight-stealing, convenience store sprawl devouring healthy green cells-- alfalfa cells, forest cells, swampy, boggy cells, black-eyed susan cells. The Chamber of Commerce calls it growth, progress; but this town needs a tourniquet, maybe chemotherapy.
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Feb 13, 2019
Feb 13, 2019 at 3:17 PM UTC
St. Cloud, Minnesota
I wake early. You sleep beside me. The taste of your pink butterfly lingers on my tongue, on my lips and mustache, coats the inside of my mouth. My nostrils still smell it, my fingers smell of it. I write this poem while your butterfly is cocooned, its fleshy pink wings folded around my whispers and moans.
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Dec 17, 2018
Dec 17, 2018 at 8:56 AM UTC
Butterfly
Dude, you were born with a phone in your hand, thumbs twitching. I was born with a pencil, a scrap of paper, an envelope, a stamp and patience I hope you notice you're reading this on-line.
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Nov 16, 2018
Nov 16, 2018 at 5:44 PM UTC
Give a Geezer a Break
She’s perched a small pumpkin on a candle stand atop the kitchen table-- an autumnal centerpiece. Though it’s close to Halloween, no jack-o-lantern face grins at you, no flaming eyes flicker. This little pumpkin does not move, of course; there are no miniature horses to pull it like a coach from the castle at midnight and no fairy tale slipper has fallen from it. This pumpkin is more a lesson, a how-to on silent meditation, a guide to learning to be what you are, to live within your pumpkin-ness, as it were.
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Oct 30, 2018
Oct 30, 2018 at 9:05 PM UTC
Still Life With Pumpkin