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patricia-valese
American
I found ribbons where others found nothing Peacock feathers lying on the ground I know the name of your father, I know your name The soul of you inside my own soul As we passed each other in the final round
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Feb 24, 2018
Feb 24, 2018 at 11:26 PM UTC
Leaving Is The Life Force Living
What country is this? Not mine, What kind of people allow its people… What kind of bigotry promotes this What color is blood? Your gun is shiny and sticks out of your pants, It rubs against your ***** and fits perfectly In your hands The sweat in your palm Is made of gunpowder and *** Jizzle juice monsters Preying on our streets, Spraying your ball-bearings over baby carriages between the eyes of grandmothers silencing the singers who only want to sing. Can’t you all go somewhere? Meet somewhere in a desert where Your bandanas can fly High on poles of braided bones With skull dust and snake bile and maps meant to lead you to the utopia of your sick wet dreams There,  Jizzle man, you can have it all Blow up your rivals and your friends Bleed yourselves into the rhapsody of bullet holes and death. And then let the rest of us move on.
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Oct 3, 2015
Oct 3, 2015 at 9:43 PM UTC
Jizzle Juice America
When I was 15, I remember buying singles like The Lion Sleeps Tonight,  Louie, Louie,  Wild Thing, I Got You Under My Skin… I remember buying 45 RMP plastic speed adapters for pennies- pressing them into the center of the records hearing them click in place. They were a part of my youth, little plastic things that popped out of the pockets of my jeans whenever my mom did the wash, invaluable, necessary, plastic discs that appeared everywhere - inside my jewelry box, on top of my dresser, even in bottom of my black & white, catholic saddle-shoes… incredible, magically, musically endowed, little middle plastic things, like guitar-picks, strumming radiant sounds in a back-yard universe across the beams of a basement winter's homily inside the space-lined ears of a bleached blond teenager whose heart & soul were permanently scorched.
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Dec 27, 2014
Dec 27, 2014 at 8:38 PM UTC
Ode to the 45 RMP Adapter
Just as the goodness gets caught in the closure The doves are driven from the sky Blackness bores down on the heated stems of the dandelions the lions leap once before they die I thought of you on that river Your faded flannel shirt tied to your waist A broken oar in your left hand As you paddled lopsided to the dock I knelt down to meet you brushed the salt stains from your face caught the smell of ****** on blistered lips inhaled the kiss off you – then let it go will you be there when the waters meet when the last sparrow circles west and all the skulls of all the kings have bullet-holes as they’re laid to rest You knew the season, the changing wind The way the storm clouds hovered low, You sensed the ending, the deluge coming the river unrelenting, swirling round your small wooden boat, your stoned-clear eyes and broken oar.
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Jun 6, 2014
Jun 6, 2014 at 12:39 AM UTC
The Broken Oar
…For Now the people I know are talking taxes, the price of heat, ******* food! The people he serves wipe their spoons on silk napkins, slap each others’ shoulders take each others’ wineskins, corkscrews in their eyeballs, walL sT. on their grins The people I know get up in the morning, every morning, everyday (in every possible way) to get to work, work all day, then come home tired, a bit more afraid The people he serves are out of his league truly rich men with swash-buckle needs avarice men with bundles of greed to lay upon the stooges who desecrate the dream who pick up the court jester and let him play lead… we fund them both – the rich man and the clown dress them up in emperor clothes, bow down to their blows, we take it all and plead for parity, wipe their smell from blistered hands cuddle in cameraless work-cells with a smartphone or a podcast jam The people I know talk about the government the inequality, the lopsided way it’s rigged, the unfairness in squeezing every dime tell each other things like – ‘chin-up’ ‘don’t give up’ ‘nothing we can do about it anyway’ The people I know, talk
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Apr 5, 2014
Apr 5, 2014 at 11:58 PM UTC
A message about my Governor, Chris Christie
Autumn places itself between freedom and frost between the children of summer and the emerald field of game who wanted it what make of man imagined the first drill who invented the schedule the five-day-work-week that drains the skin of spirit and intercepts the soul who spoke for us as we lay sleeping upon the sand
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Oct 15, 2013
Oct 15, 2013 at 8:18 PM UTC
The Placekicker
How Much Gets Me On A Bus? to the City? (I live 30 minutes away) more than this ever will - POETRY I’ve been writing ‘poems’ ever since I remember ever since 11 – reciting these phenomenal words of wisdom to any and all who would listen forcing family-members & friends that’s the thing about poetry, it makes you feel like it’s important, makes you think the words you sling together aren’t really yours it comes to you, through you, needs to come out of you, and when its over you’re just as amazed as they should be. but they’re not, I mean they like poetry, admire it, even enjoy it sometimes, but they could honestly give it up in a heartbeat, live without it. You know what I mean? I’m like you like all the people who come here I'm part poetry as poetry is me A Dodge Poetry Attendee many years – my arm once around Gwendolyn Brooks, cried in a church with Lucille Clifton talked Newark to Baraka – know the honorable Slammer, Patricia Smith! I’ve sat many years with the Lords of Literature - my professors who all seemed to know “whose got it” the intellectuals of American prose who seem to be searching for a rookie, the next best troubadour college-student that will grace their faculty-doors… The poetry I read here is incredible Some of the best stuff on the net, poignant, painful , honest, raw, sensual, serious – provokingly real words I read here startle me, stun me at times so clear in meaning, well-crafted, chosen words unusually strong They’re the kind of words the got-it people have, the poet people (probably all people have) poetry is just another way of finding an infallible song – (I still say we should go sing it on the bus!)
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Jul 26, 2013
Jul 26, 2013 at 11:29 PM UTC
A "Hello Poetry' Tribute
How Much Gets Me On A Bus? to the City? (I live 30 minutes away) more than this ever will - POETRY I’ve been writing ‘poems’ ever since I remember ever since 11 – reciting these phenomenal words of wisdom to any and all who would listen forcing family-members & friends that’s the thing about poetry, it makes you feel like it’s important, makes you think the words you sling together aren’t really yours it comes to you, through you, needs to come out of you, and when its over you’re just as amazed as they should be. but they’re not, I mean they like poetry, admire it, even enjoy it sometimes, but they could honestly give it up in a heartbeat, live without it. You know what I mean? I’m like you like all the people who come here I'm part poetry as poetry is me A Dodge Poetry Attendee many years – my arm once around Gwendolyn Brooks, cried in a church with Lucille Clifton talked Newark to Baraka – know the honorable Slammer, Patricia Smith! I’ve sat many years with the Lords of Literature - my professors who all seemed to know “whose got it” the intellectuals of American prose who seem to be searching for a rookie, the next best troubadour college-student that will grace their faculty-doors… The poetry I read here is incredible Some of the best stuff on the net, poignant, painful , honest, raw, sensual, serious – provokingly real words I read here startle me, stun me at times so clear in meaning, well-crafted, chosen words unusually strong They’re the kind of words the got-it people have, the poet people (probably all people have) poetry is just another way of finding an infallible song – (I still say we should go sing it on the bus!)
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44
Today is Donna’s birthday – All these many years later I still remember it – several times today I thought of her and gently waved hi Donna was the name of my first baby, (short for Donald, my ex) my girl baby who lived for 4 days and then changed her mind. She was a summer baby too. When I think of both Donnas I see tiny, Italian angels petite , pretty little things with brown golden hair. I still see the dimples on their faces, and the bright black light shining in their eyes… Tonight I hold a candle in their memory Tonight I drink to the summers of their birth, Knowing that their lives will always live in me – Both Donnas, One, who came to me in childhood. magically fused by friendship and something more – and Baby Donna, whose fragile body held such sweet life Both Donnas, who have been with me through so many changing skies… inside of me where their faces are etched in crystal and their wings form a door.
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Jul 12, 2013
Jul 12, 2013 at 11:16 PM UTC
Donna
…I am a fraud I pretend I’m a poet, tell people I am – but I can’t be poetry is the only place inside of us, that spot inside us the precise point – where you and I can ever possibly meet Poetry is the space, place, between us where our real selves, (our godly souls) could hopefully meet It’s is an invitation, a crafted document invisibly appearing in the center of the room artistically conceived and heavenly borrowed humbly human in delivery and speed. if you’re lucky enough. honest enough transparently apparent enough if your poetry is good enough God could shoot right though you! like arrow-flames from Avatar traveling through the words moving without sound if your honest enough, if you could face yourself, and you’re not a fraud….
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Feb 10, 2012
Feb 10, 2012 at 11:58 PM UTC
I AM A FRAUD
Game hour chicken breath & big blue’s beer spotted moon
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Feb 5, 2012
Feb 5, 2012 at 8:40 PM UTC
a 10 word poem