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 Aug 2015
Joseph Sinclair
Self-delusion can’t get any worse
than passing off as poetry
what is no more than verse.
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
So finally they’ve been forced to confess
that they have found a complication,
that they will now have to redress
and will require procedural reflation.
Calling it a procedure is less worrying, I guess,
than calling it an operation.
And if it ends up in a mess
the end of which is a cremation,
there’s no need for that to depress,
at least it will provide a point of conversation.
A light-hearted progress report on my recently aborted angioplasty.
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
The sins of the father are visited on the children
or so the bible would have us believe.
My own experience suggests
that it is the sins of the children
that are visited on their parents.
I see in my relationship with my son
an absolute parallel with
my father’s relationship with me.
The guilt I now feel for a failure to feel,
for behaviour that was unthinking
rather than unfeeling,
but still obstructed feelings,
in my past,
I cannot criticise
him for behaviour
that I recognise
and identify as being my own
in the past.
and suspect will one day be shared
by my own progeny.
It makes me feel no better.
Nor, in truth, does it make me feel worse.
It simply is.
And has to be accepted.
And can merely be abated
by belief in the mantra that
what goes around will come around.
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
How she despised the scent of worthless lying,
Aroma of a thousand wretched, wasted days
Of anguish at the prospect of love’s dying
Last embrace before the vast displays
Of bitterness that’s death-defying.
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
I look back to the memory of one revered
and recognise belatedly that, as I feared,
with all such thoughts that are but refugees
from Life’s repugnant and loathsome disease
that is a chronic chronicle of cardinal regret,
the anguish is not prepared to leave me yet.
The pain enters the maelstrom of my mind
sufficiently, it would appear, to raise the blind
on life’s insidious theatrical disguise
that renders impotent such exercise.

The jack hammer’s incessant pounding in my brain
brings infinitesimally lesser pain;
whilst rotting matter that life does excrete
continues to mould pallid at my feet;
and I, the perpetrator of the piece,
anticipating the relief of a surcease,
must yet continue suffering the bitter blend
of redress that forestalls the dividend.

There is a situation that, when taken out of season,
evokes a painful memory for whatever reason.
A rainbow within a bubble of soap,
the search for trouble with a bronchoscope,
the desperate wish just to recuperate,
despairing hope that they will not reciprocate.
And when all else is but a heap of ash,
other than that consigned to a memory cache,
then it is time to place within that store
those ills from which recovery can be no more;
to tread a path and seek a blessed state
from which to be a learned advocate
of such as heaven and not the living hell
in which the guilt of conscience still does dwell.

Now count your dead, you others who survive
as bees continue to enjoy their nectar in a hive.
As animals may play, imprisoned in a cage,
As we creative writers persevere despite our age.
It is but propaganda to deceive
and not sufficiently authentic so as to believe
when  Death, that great aggressor, determines to intrude
and interrupt the joy of an imperative  good mood.

I’ve opened curtains and raised many blinds
and peeped into the crevices of minds.
And now it seems at last it’s all been said
There’ll be no further peeps, and so to bed.


.
This is the completed poem of which part was posted earlier.
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
When the sheep are shorn
the newborn lambs do tremble;
when hasty oaths are sworn
it’s wisdom to dissemble.
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
My lovely daughter Emily
is fighting for her life.
She may not be aware of it
beneath the surgeon’s knife,
admitting of a doubt
for her is never rife.

I wish I might have half as much
courage in my own
meagre confrontations with
the symptoms that I’ve grown
accustomed to and which
are vastly overblown.
I had to get this down on paper in order to handle the over-pressing concerns that I'm trying to deal with.  Your prayers and good wishes for Emily's recovery from the SCT procedure conducted today are besought.
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
Oven's just been cleaned
Next week's my operation
I too will sparkle
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
My candle burns as brightly as of yore.
“Your what?” the punster gaily asks.
Oh, please do not be such a bore,
I’m really not up to linguistic tasks.

There is no verse that I adore
enough to don one of those casques,
and do not carelessly abhor
The adulation in which Millay basks
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
Sometimes it is enough
To travel to the dentist
And lose your toothache
Before you’ve gone a hundred yards.

Or plan a visit to the doctor
And find that stomach pain
Has all but disappeared
Before you leave the house.

But I could travel to your side
With passion burning in my heart
A million times
And never lose my love for you.
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
[See notes below]

That model of a ****** rifle
is one with which we need not trifle
the acronym is far from hard to see
representing, as it does, accuracy.

Indeed, extreme tasked ordnance
from Latin countries such as France
appreciate a form such as exacto:
regarding it as simply ipso facto.
EXACTO, an acronym of EXtreme ACcuracy Tasked Ordnance, is a ****** rifle with self-guiding characteristics.  The EXACTO program completed a round of live-fire tests in February 2015. In the tests, an experienced shooter used the guided rounds to track and hit a moving target several times. Video showed the bullets maneuvering in-flight to achieve hits. Additionally, an inexperienced shooter used the system and was still able to hit the moving target.  (Paraphrased from Wikipedia)
 Jul 2015
Joseph Sinclair
Following a visit to the phlebotomist this morning, I penned the following:

She stuck a needle in my thumb
I gave a mighty yelp.
She said that she was satisfied.
I asked: “Do you need help
To take my blood that ancient way?”
To answer which she said
“It’s simply that you look so pale
I thought you might be dead.”
 Jun 2015
Joseph Sinclair
Blood tests are something I could do without
But they are alas a necessary evil
And though it’s really not a thing to shout about
They haven’t so far (in my case) proved lethal.

However it was with a deal of trepidation
That I presented myself at phlebotomy today.
The result did not match up to my anticipation;
The perfect vein was quickly pierced I’m glad to say.

It did, at least, give some sense of direction
To medical support for my ongoing treatment
Avoiding, to my great relief, any infection
Or disconcerting prospect of impeachment.

While the symptoms are improved by the procedure,
The condition, sad to say, is not remitted,
And the problem, even sadder, gets no easier,
While the health practitioners remain committed

To additional probing examination,
And are calling me for further tests next week,
Despite the blood flow’s vast immoderation
That required a lot of plugging of the leak.

When they put me into my final casket
And thus dispose my bones and body once for all
I can imagine someone there will ask it:
“We wonder why his body seems so awfully pale.”
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