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ross-robbins
ross-robbins
American Ross Robbins, born and raised in Western Montana, currently resides in Portland, Oregon, where he abuses iambs, thinks lovely thoughts (he can fly, he can fly), and is pursuing degrees in English & journalism.
Just now, laid out like your favorite uncle gone before his time with auntie stretched out beside, I woke to the perfect metaphor for the too-bad, so-sad, too-fast nature of time—or maybe was a simile, as in: the way month upon hour slips away like… Like…like the runt daisy in the bouquet from the ex-lover you never wanted to hear from, least loved bloom among a fistful of beauties never smiled upon at all—Yes—least of all, this wasted flower, its whole-milk petals yellowing And (like time, lest your forget) fluttering, broken-off, to the coffee-stained and salt-strewn countertop…like that, indeed, or something close. That was on my mind as I half awoke—but stirring entire the bundle of words of the ideal image died (yes, sad) in its place: I thought of writing some clever tale how waking up the flash of a line of the perfect literary device some glowing simile or metaphor (how time is the flight plan of a hummingbird and before we can begin to grasp the next orders barked at the co-pilot, the captain has steered the thrumming craft from sugar water to sheltered branch, and what moment passed between is one of many such ticks and tocks, the aggregate meaning that when we wake up suddenly 30, 40, or deceased like your dear uncle, it never seemed like time was passing at all) slipped away from me—wait, I’m getting there— and the words’ escape and time’s escape were somehow one and the same… But no, I thought, too precious. Besides, it’s for sure been done. March 30, 2012 4:02 a.m.
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Jun 30, 2012
Jun 30, 2012 at 3:37 PM UTC
Just Now
Just now, laid out like your favorite uncle gone before his time with auntie stretched out beside, I woke to the perfect metaphor for the too-bad, so-sad, too-fast nature of time—or maybe was a simile, as in: the way month upon hour slips away like… Like…like the runt daisy in the bouquet from the ex-lover you never wanted to hear from, least loved bloom among a fistful of beauties never smiled upon at all—Yes—least of all, this wasted flower, its whole-milk petals yellowing And (like time, lest your forget) fluttering, broken-off, to the coffee-stained and salt-strewn countertop…like that, indeed, or something close. That was on my mind as I half awoke—but stirring entire the bundle of words of the ideal image died (yes, sad) in its place: I thought of writing some clever tale how waking up the flash of a line of the perfect literary device some glowing simile or metaphor (how time is the flight plan of a hummingbird and before we can begin to grasp the next orders barked at the co-pilot, the captain has steered the thrumming craft from sugar water to sheltered branch, and what moment passed between is one of many such ticks and tocks, the aggregate meaning that when we wake up suddenly 30, 40, or deceased like your dear uncle, it never seemed like time was passing at all) slipped away from me—wait, I’m getting there— and the words’ escape and time’s escape were somehow one and the same… But no, I thought, too precious. Besides, it’s for sure been done. March 30, 2012 4:02 a.m.
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38
It’s work, this wailing, a daily occupation. Alongside the light-rail A ghost bike, a placard, a quickening in the blood. Murmur, breathe myself to sleep, fleece this feeling, Blue skies somewhere and yeah, life goes on. I struggle to wake, my sharpest knife slides along this peach’s stone, scoop this flesh, devour. Crepuscular light, Fecundity of life, Lacerate this daytime cut through with dim. Celerity of dusk, and with it this gloaming, My quidnunc neighbor seals ear to wall to trace my hitching breaths from air. But it’s tomorrow now and it is warm in Paranoia Park. This violinist, though hardly Paganini, embroiders sound onto sound. His bow draws a frisson along my spine, my nerves His strings, vibration, shimmering, a shock, a flush. This moment: a reprieve, my coffee break from grief. All the trees are turning orange. The days all turn to sleep.
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Nov 10, 2011
Nov 10, 2011 at 3:52 PM UTC
Grief
Callused hallux digs the dirt, nervous of what’s yet to come—I can only say: Breathe, jumpy, think of light. All cannot be grim as a goose Who, unaware, is warming an egg Not graced with life, unfertilized. She chases off all who draw near, Her fear the hatchling’s peril. Poor mother goose, your ribs are showing, Your breast has thinned, and winter’s coming. Listen, anxious, light is simple Simple like the egg that hatches. You are holding fast to that which only keeps you thin and sad. Your former life’s not graced with light, you cannot hatch New life from sorrow. September 2011
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Oct 3, 2011
Oct 3, 2011 at 1:27 AM UTC
To an anxious friend
When insistent morning forces the cracked blinds It finds my eyes stuck Atop a stiff, angry neck. I wake And I rumble My joints grind the coffee beans A bit coarse to dank the water My callused hallux worries the floor Dripping done, I pour with sore fingers The steel carafe silver as a nickel The kitchen sink ablaze and singing Light reflecting Last night’s ice cream spoons. The warm mug soothes my a.m. arthritis My arthritic mind coughing cobwebs and sleep. This moment stands for itself alone. Truth can wait until past noon— it’s coming soon. The truth comes soon. 10/2/2011
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Oct 3, 2011
Oct 3, 2011 at 1:25 AM UTC
Coffee
Two Bicyclists At Mullan and Reserve in Missoula, Montana a bike leaned crumpled on a cop’s waxed hood As two miles up the road an 18-wheeler Shuddered with its engine’s throbs Hitching in the driver’s chest, his head in his hands, “The rider is dead.” * Driving by in rapid succession these scenes added up to an awful conclusion Do you remember, Alexis? The way we gasped, the moment of realization, the awful knowledge that this bicyclist had slipped beneath those rear tires swinging out wide, his chest crushed and heart fluttering a bird’s goodbye too late at night to be out of bed beneath those wheels, perhaps the same Rider I’d found five years before, blind-drunk and head over handlebars Crashed with his legs wound like bone shoelaces in the pedal and frame the widening puddle of ***** the blood seeping from his face, his hollow cheeks his refusal to wake, his fear of an ambulance and my slow waking to the fact he didn’t want police because he was higher than God. Screamed in his ear time and again, as if even if he’d died I could bring him back through my sheer desperation; as if I could stave off inevitability with will; as if any one of us could hope to battle God, the end, the fragile frames of bone and bicycle ****** beneath this parade of wheels. No. No. No. But yes, he did wake slurring “No” to the ambulance, “No” to the whole scene, as if His denial could act as time machine, he could fight against the present just by wishing for the past, wishing hard enough. And I know the feeling, I know it well, every hangover day praying to the Santa Claus god “I’ll do better, I swear.” This wishing gets us nowhere, but it’s easy to philosophize when it’s someone else’s ribs cracking. Oh, wasted bird, fly away home. Ross Robbins September 2011
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Sep 24, 2011
Sep 24, 2011 at 11:50 PM UTC
Two Bicyclists
Two Bicyclists At Mullan and Reserve in Missoula, Montana a bike leaned crumpled on a cop’s waxed hood As two miles up the road an 18-wheeler Shuddered with its engine’s throbs Hitching in the driver’s chest, his head in his hands, “The rider is dead.” * Driving by in rapid succession these scenes added up to an awful conclusion Do you remember, Alexis? The way we gasped, the moment of realization, the awful knowledge that this bicyclist had slipped beneath those rear tires swinging out wide, his chest crushed and heart fluttering a bird’s goodbye too late at night to be out of bed beneath those wheels, perhaps the same Rider I’d found five years before, blind-drunk and head over handlebars Crashed with his legs wound like bone shoelaces in the pedal and frame the widening puddle of ***** the blood seeping from his face, his hollow cheeks his refusal to wake, his fear of an ambulance and my slow waking to the fact he didn’t want police because he was higher than God. Screamed in his ear time and again, as if even if he’d died I could bring him back through my sheer desperation; as if I could stave off inevitability with will; as if any one of us could hope to battle God, the end, the fragile frames of bone and bicycle ****** beneath this parade of wheels. No. No. No. But yes, he did wake slurring “No” to the ambulance, “No” to the whole scene, as if His denial could act as time machine, he could fight against the present just by wishing for the past, wishing hard enough. And I know the feeling, I know it well, every hangover day praying to the Santa Claus god “I’ll do better, I swear.” This wishing gets us nowhere, but it’s easy to philosophize when it’s someone else’s ribs cracking. Oh, wasted bird, fly away home. Ross Robbins September 2011
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30
And yeah sat talking about Surrender and thought of how fighting addiction with the mind instead of the heart could only end with one splayed out like a lamb gone to the wolves the throat all ripped and blood pumping heartbeat rhythmic life draining out And yet that image resulted in nothing, there is no poem forthcoming, and Pictured blueberry pie with splinters of glass in it, that's how I picture ****** The fact that I don't have the answers doesn't mean I've stopped looking. I keep searching and thinking and obsessing and all this thought changes nothing, but hey, gotta stay occupied somehow right? I am not sure why the world is As Is, No Warranty, I guess if there is a "God" then we were meant to figure it out for ourselves apparently because no Magic Sky Captain is parting the clouds and booming down voice all baritone to say, "Well, Ross, you want to know bad enough--obviously--so here's what's really going on." Learning to be comfortable with not knowing the answer to what this is all about -- there's a goal worth striving toward, never for, because if I'm convinced that for (or forth-ward) there will be a solution to the equation then I'm in the same **** position anyhow -- or wait -- or You see a horse in the field it's back all bowed like a comma yes that's the image I think of from here on when I pontificate on the never-ending way of the day to day... Back may bend but will not break.
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Sep 7, 2011
Sep 7, 2011 at 6:49 AM UTC
[ideas for poems yet no new poems yet]
I give thanks, I have faith that the year to come comes on like honey and bourbon That is to say that life's day-to-day way It intoxicates, opens gates, and Do not need spirits Cuz I I can drift smiling Sleep of supplication to the yen of faith Oh and yes that broke the rhythm, Lord don't castigate, Don't lacerate my Words my rhymes (seems overly obvious to Use "time"; Use it to my advantage if not in verse, then, As was saying Oh oh Oh Lord please Don't suppurate the wound of writer's Block before my mind's sweet eye Oh, time, oh Lord my imploration: Let this year, then, truly be As sweet as yams in late November. Amen. (Thanksgiving 2010)
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Sep 7, 2011
Sep 7, 2011 at 6:45 AM UTC
I give thanks
Looked in the lint trash What, a bucket of spiders? But that's just my smarm, I mean Charm, yes so charming, I Feel I should tell You: See, I am the kind Of a man whose particles of rage all blend blisters into macrame What? That's to say I only craft with vengeance, Art is Hell. I'm not really sure, see, it seems I have so many words inside and yet No order, no syntax, no form, no norm. Can't spin A.D.D. into gold, No, I can't tremble, blink, then in that Blink! Distill a miracle Of words whose sentience, er, Sentence myself to the chair, The chair at the computer where, Confounded, I shiver and sigh, sob, eye.
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Sep 7, 2011
Sep 7, 2011 at 6:43 AM UTC
On Perfectionism, Cluttered Mind
1. In Japan the color of mourning is white. The blinding flash of strangled brain Festooned above the funeral route, All the crepe-stream blank of pigment, Blank the mind once dying's done. Maybe find a bit of hope there, thought Of light beyond alive, not The blackness promised by A firm belief in nothing. 2. Regardless of catharsis thus-far crying's done no good it seems the sap can leak all trite and flood surround with sighs but I I'll still be penitent for naught for all the wrongest sins, to own up must say "vanity's what needs my focus" I--a deal so ******* big no other face can crowd the mirror of my mind's eye, I all I see, see No one looms quite large enough to crowd me from my view. 12/7/2010
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Sep 7, 2011
Sep 7, 2011 at 6:41 AM UTC
Two Untitled Poems from December 2010
so today I awoke orchid in head and gave it all away. The "all" being my grip on the here, any thought of the now, trees Feel. Chainsaws roar through the awareness of leaves, puddlejumping in branches waving shade in the oil and *** of the street, leaping in splashing down the block from the catastrophe of white trash eyeing my innocence pretended for show Eye through plight of falling forest, I give this away, Flower in mind withers, decays, Puddles soak through to my skin beneath denim.
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Sep 7, 2011
Sep 7, 2011 at 6:39 AM UTC
puddles, trees