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#schedules
I wouldn’t call what we do ‘blogging,’ would you? I’m somewhat conversant with blogging and it would be like: ‘December 14th, I realized I was out of dental floss, so I called 112 (France’s 911) and they yelled at me.” A poet might say: The morning was pale and judgmental, the light didn’t illuminate, as much as accuse me of oversleeping. I’d just spit-out the last of my bubblegum toothpaste, when I tugged the dental floss only to be rewarded with a two-inch fragment. The sink gurgled like a drowning swimmer as I rummaged through the medicine cabinet and then the linen closet - where we store spare soaps, shampoos, mouthwashes and the other detritus of modern hygiene - but no floss. I’d started the shower minutes ago, expecting a quick entry and now the bathroom had become sauna-like. French bathrooms have these box-like, ‘on demand’ water heaters, like 2 gallon coffee percolators, that dispense hot-as--holy-hell water, the mist of which, falling on the chilled, white, underfoot tiles, created a ceramic slippery-slide. I searched Peter and my travel toiletry bags, but alas and again, no floss. The ticking clock, that merciless, bureaucratic tool, mocked the undoing of my morning schedule. In a moment of clarity, born of despair, I picked up my iPhone and demanded “Siri, call One-one-two!” The French telephone system returns a higher-pitched, single-tone ring with longer pauses in between. Three rings later I got an answer, “This is an emergency.” I announced (‘C'est une urgence’). “What is the nature of your emergency,” a calm, dispassionate A.I.-voice asked. “I’ve run out of floss.” I blurted. There was a long pause where I could almost hear the A.I. dispatcher glitching. “Mademoiselle,” it finally said, “calling 112 is not a joke.” “Neither is plaque!” I replied - thinking of how proud my dental hygienist would be of me. “Yet here we are,” I added, before the line went dead. . . A song for this: https://daweb.us/xmas/Christmas_21.mp3
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Dec 16, 2025
Dec 16, 2025 at 10:15 PM UTC
blogging
I wouldn’t call what we do ‘blogging,’ would you? I’m somewhat conversant with blogging and it would be like: ‘December 14th, I realized I was out of dental floss, so I called 112 (France’s 911) and they yelled at me.” A poet might say: The morning was pale and judgmental, the light didn’t illuminate, as much as accuse me of oversleeping. I’d just spit-out the last of my bubblegum toothpaste, when I tugged the dental floss only to be rewarded with a two-inch fragment. The sink gurgled like a drowning swimmer as I rummaged through the medicine cabinet and then the linen closet - where we store spare soaps, shampoos, mouthwashes and the other detritus of modern hygiene - but no floss. I’d started the shower minutes ago, expecting a quick entry and now the bathroom had become sauna-like. French bathrooms have these box-like, ‘on demand’ water heaters, like 2 gallon coffee percolators, that dispense hot-as--holy-hell water, the mist of which, falling on the chilled, white, underfoot tiles, created a ceramic slippery-slide. I searched Peter and my travel toiletry bags, but alas and again, no floss. The ticking clock, that merciless, bureaucratic tool, mocked the undoing of my morning schedule. In a moment of clarity, born of despair, I picked up my iPhone and demanded “Siri, call One-one-two!” The French telephone system returns a higher-pitched, single-tone ring with longer pauses in between. Three rings later I got an answer, “This is an emergency.” I announced (‘C'est une urgence’). “What is the nature of your emergency,” a calm, dispassionate A.I.-voice asked. “I’ve run out of floss.” I blurted. There was a long pause where I could almost hear the A.I. dispatcher glitching. “Mademoiselle,” it finally said, “calling 112 is not a joke.” “Neither is plaque!” I replied - thinking of how proud my dental hygienist would be of me. “Yet here we are,” I added, before the line went dead. . . A song for this: https://daweb.us/xmas/Christmas_21.mp3
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22
Death can alter Death can change anything at the altar Death can deter Death can damage the liver and the motor Death is powerful Death is really awful Death is painless for the deceased Death can destroy mums and lilies Death can change schedules Death kills bookworms, nerds and fools Death can. Death can change everything Under the moon. Death can change anything Death can Death can easily kick the can. Copyright © December, 2025, Hébert Logerie, All rights reserved. Hébert Logerie is the author of several books of poetry.
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Dec 4, 2025
Dec 4, 2025 at 11:38 AM UTC
Death Can Change
It’s hard to quantify experiences, but to coin someone else's original phrase, ‘you know it when you feel it.’ Now that I’m living in Paris, at my Grandmère’s 76-room ‘hôtel particulier,’ I find myself on the itchy edge of wealth, influence and power and while I don’t consider myself necessarily of that class, I’m certainly exposed to attempts to drag me into it. Many afternoons, as I come home wearied by classes and braced for hours of study, there are these silver trays with little white, gold embossed envelopes (invitations), casually placed where they’re unavoidable, and it’s not unusual to find that one of the CMs has laid out a dress for me and a suit for Peter - though we seldom attend these events. I find myself vociferously defending my schedule (for the thousandth time) - and I’ve only been in school three weeks: “Grandmère, I’m in med-school, I have homework.” Let’s wax freeversely of the upper-class (as if I belonged).. *In elegant but confined houses where lives unfold in drawing rooms and the inhabitants are sharp and snobbish. They struggle against social and ****** constraints - frustrations essential to the drama and pathos of wealth. Let the rabble be messily heterogeneous and agenda-set “inclusivity.” It’s nothing to us. It hardly foregrounds harmony or authenticity. Civilized people are more reticent and buttoned-up. It’s sexier and more romantic, to drive toward marriage, where lovers work to deserve each other, and individuals integrate into couples. Failing this urbane integration, love degenerates into solipsist libertinism and eventually, these sad outcasts catch their deaths - apart and alone.* . . Songs for this: Am I the Same Girl? by Swing Out Sister It Hasn't Happened Yet by William Shatner
0
Oct 1, 2025
Oct 1, 2025 at 6:43 AM UTC
crusty
It’s hard to quantify experiences, but to coin someone else's original phrase, ‘you know it when you feel it.’ Now that I’m living in Paris, at my Grandmère’s 76-room ‘hôtel particulier,’ I find myself on the itchy edge of wealth, influence and power and while I don’t consider myself necessarily of that class, I’m certainly exposed to attempts to drag me into it. Many afternoons, as I come home wearied by classes and braced for hours of study, there are these silver trays with little white, gold embossed envelopes (invitations), casually placed where they’re unavoidable, and it’s not unusual to find that one of the CMs has laid out a dress for me and a suit for Peter - though we seldom attend these events. I find myself vociferously defending my schedule (for the thousandth time) - and I’ve only been in school three weeks: “Grandmère, I’m in med-school, I have homework.” Let’s wax freeversely of the upper-class (as if I belonged).. *In elegant but confined houses where lives unfold in drawing rooms and the inhabitants are sharp and snobbish. They struggle against social and ****** constraints - frustrations essential to the drama and pathos of wealth. Let the rabble be messily heterogeneous and agenda-set “inclusivity.” It’s nothing to us. It hardly foregrounds harmony or authenticity. Civilized people are more reticent and buttoned-up. It’s sexier and more romantic, to drive toward marriage, where lovers work to deserve each other, and individuals integrate into couples. Failing this urbane integration, love degenerates into solipsist libertinism and eventually, these sad outcasts catch their deaths - apart and alone.* . . Songs for this: Am I the Same Girl? by Swing Out Sister It Hasn't Happened Yet by William Shatner
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27
I’ve met a couple of second-year med students. I thought I was organized but apparently, I’ve just scratched the surface. Everyone uses Google calendar “GCal” - for EVERYTHING, and I’ve seen it, their days are packed - bye-bye ‘free time.’ Want to grab lunch, hang-out or even hook-up with someone? Check their GCal and send them an invite. (poem time!).. GCal flex 💻✨ I got the word 💬 At first 🎬 I was lowkey sus 🤨 could it be thus ⁉️ but they offered proof 💯 GCal 💻 runs 🏃🏼‍♀️‍➡️the superiority complex 🏫 everyone keeps-it-g 💻✨connectedly 👭 AI puts our schedule 📆🕰️ in GCal 💻 form, so right away ⛗ 🏁, we’re ½ 🌓 way home 🏠 The typical school day = 12 hrs 📅 Save your brain, let GCal 💻✨be 🐝 the boss 🧠➡️💤 Sleep 😴, snacks 🍕, 5-mi walk 🚶♀️— got it on lock 🔒 No wingin’ it 🚫, just colored blocks ⬛️ all on the clock 🕒 So, freshie AV 👩🎓 will get a ping 📱— “Come chill?” 🛋️ I’ll click yes ✔️, cause it’s just the drill 🔬 “Share lunch?” 🍽️ Invite sent ✉️ Netflix and chill 🍿? Event alert! 🚨 Invite a romantic move 💌 “Hook up?” 11:30 PM 🪛🌙 You never ♾️ know, he 💁‍♂️/she 💁‍♀️ might accept 🔩 ☔ Maybe GCal  💻 love is 💔 or lit 🔥, but dating’s doomed 💀, in the calculus of m-school scheduling 🗓️🙅♀️, so just move 🚛 on In med-school ​​📚, we’re like a team 🖇️, we need to be tight 🗜️, we’re all 👥 on the clock ⏰, and nothing 🫙 can be left to chance 🎲. . . Songs for this: Closer (feat. Halsey) by The Chainsmokers I Ain't Worried by OneRepublic Levitating (feat. DaBaby) by Dua Lipa Calendar by Paris Combo
0
Aug 13, 2025
Aug 13, 2025 at 12:51 PM UTC
GCal flex 💻✨
I’ve met a couple of second-year med students. I thought I was organized but apparently, I’ve just scratched the surface. Everyone uses Google calendar “GCal” - for EVERYTHING, and I’ve seen it, their days are packed - bye-bye ‘free time.’ Want to grab lunch, hang-out or even hook-up with someone? Check their GCal and send them an invite. (poem time!).. GCal flex 💻✨ I got the word 💬 At first 🎬 I was lowkey sus 🤨 could it be thus ⁉️ but they offered proof 💯 GCal 💻 runs 🏃🏼‍♀️‍➡️the superiority complex 🏫 everyone keeps-it-g 💻✨connectedly 👭 AI puts our schedule 📆🕰️ in GCal 💻 form, so right away ⛗ 🏁, we’re ½ 🌓 way home 🏠 The typical school day = 12 hrs 📅 Save your brain, let GCal 💻✨be 🐝 the boss 🧠➡️💤 Sleep 😴, snacks 🍕, 5-mi walk 🚶♀️— got it on lock 🔒 No wingin’ it 🚫, just colored blocks ⬛️ all on the clock 🕒 So, freshie AV 👩🎓 will get a ping 📱— “Come chill?” 🛋️ I’ll click yes ✔️, cause it’s just the drill 🔬 “Share lunch?” 🍽️ Invite sent ✉️ Netflix and chill 🍿? Event alert! 🚨 Invite a romantic move 💌 “Hook up?” 11:30 PM 🪛🌙 You never ♾️ know, he 💁‍♂️/she 💁‍♀️ might accept 🔩 ☔ Maybe GCal  💻 love is 💔 or lit 🔥, but dating’s doomed 💀, in the calculus of m-school scheduling 🗓️🙅♀️, so just move 🚛 on In med-school ​​📚, we’re like a team 🖇️, we need to be tight 🗜️, we’re all 👥 on the clock ⏰, and nothing 🫙 can be left to chance 🎲. . . Songs for this: Closer (feat. Halsey) by The Chainsmokers I Ain't Worried by OneRepublic Levitating (feat. DaBaby) by Dua Lipa Calendar by Paris Combo
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35
(a disastrous morning Sonnet) I am the very model of a girl who’s late for morning meal, my charger failed, the printer jammed, the morning’s start has been surreal I lost a scrunchy and a shoe, I had to use some dry shampoo my Keurig had no k-cups too, I’m feeling like a total shrew! Our pre-dawn jog went really well, but now the morning's gone to hell I couldn’t find clean underwear, I’m desperate to charge my cell, I got some soap in my left eye, I stubbed my toe and nearly cried While brushing teeth and hair in haste, I wonder why I even try. Anna’s got an attitude, she’s not someone who’s normally rude her hookup so ‘experimental’ has an irregular sleep-in schedule how’s she going to get to class if she’s babysitting sleeping-lass I guess I’m not the only one, who’s schedules simply come undone. I woke her with a gentle voice and soothed her out—we had no choice My morning happened to sideways go—but it fueled this grandiloquent tale of woe! . . A song for this: Something Stupid by Michael Bublé and Reese Witherspoon
0
Nov 17, 2024
Nov 17, 2024 at 9:24 PM UTC
a modern girl’s delay
We’re coming up on the spooky pumpkin-latte season, when days suddenly end, while I’m busy in some sterile, fluorescent chemistry-lab and there’s nothing to do but walk down dark science-hill to the dorm. Is that rustling the sound of leaves or footsteps?  The most effective horror stories come from spaces of doubt and hover between reality and possibility - but no fears, this isn’t my Halloween story. Apparently, there was a scandal last year, about underage girls being served at bars around Yale - I mean, seriously, who knew? Sunny’s still having fun. She’s out every other night like a hunting cat ‘meeting’ all these new freshie girls. She has the best takes. Her hungover Sunday morning debriefs are not to be missed. I’ve gotten comments that suggested that the party lives of U-girls are seen as dysfunctional, but to me they’re perfectly normal. Everyone seems to want college life to be saccharine and sanitized. I figure most students live highly stressed lives. We’re expected to show up to multiple classes, on time, prepared and be ready to perform at the highest levels academically - then add to these pressures our elaborate social and study demands. Young adulthood is strict in ways you may not remember. Poor us. sigh So we have a little fun. I’ve been bottled-up, by and large, this semester - mostly by my own twisted need to get ahead in every subject and I joined a Yale Society - dumb, I know, like I have the time. But I was tapped and Annick (my sister) said “DO IT!” I bet I quit when the going gets tough. Why did I think senior year would be easier?   Fall semester is a time famous for freshmen heartbreak - with everyone newly away from home and old boyfriends. About that... I hate it when boyfriends get old and you have to get rid of them. Not chronologically old - don’t call your lawyer, this isn’t ageism rearing its ugly head. There’s the chafing-like pre-breakup irritation, because you’re suddenly separated by distance and experience. it’s easy to feel out of touch and unable to voice your joy about the new life you’re living. It’s the little things that tend to bother you first, like the sudden strangeness of lingering silence on the once-exciting video calls. Ugg, breakups - the subject freaks me out - I get shivers up my spine and feel nauseous, just thinking about them - I’m not mocking heartbreak. Where was I? Oh, yeah. Adolescence should feature at least one earth-shaking, world-shifting, heartbreaking first love - unless, of course, covid happened. Do I harp back to covid lockdown too much? Well, it happened. It was our Vietnam, and we were unprepared. There’s a guy showing me some persistent interest - something I have no time for - or interest in. He’s a tall, sporty, transfer student from Princeton. Not unattractive, in a sort of eager, and dense, hipster way. “I have a boyfriend,” I told him, hoping he'd lose interest. “He must be invisible,” he observed, several days later. Then, “If you’d give me a chance, you’d soon find out I’m a sparkling conversationalist.” He updogged. “Introverts,” I said, “we should be running the world, but no one listens to us.” “I like a woman with ambition,” he said, encouragingly. “Go away,” I replied, and he did. But he was back in the morning because he’s in my residence and we share a shuttle bus stop. sigh Question: Why are they still calling storms hurricanes? I mean, now that they can have male or female names, shouldn’t they be themicanes? . . A song for this: Alfie by Cilla Black Does Everyone Stare by The Police
0
Sep 18, 2024
Sep 18, 2024 at 11:21 PM UTC
sighs
We’re coming up on the spooky pumpkin-latte season, when days suddenly end, while I’m busy in some sterile, fluorescent chemistry-lab and there’s nothing to do but walk down dark science-hill to the dorm. Is that rustling the sound of leaves or footsteps?  The most effective horror stories come from spaces of doubt and hover between reality and possibility - but no fears, this isn’t my Halloween story. Apparently, there was a scandal last year, about underage girls being served at bars around Yale - I mean, seriously, who knew? Sunny’s still having fun. She’s out every other night like a hunting cat ‘meeting’ all these new freshie girls. She has the best takes. Her hungover Sunday morning debriefs are not to be missed. I’ve gotten comments that suggested that the party lives of U-girls are seen as dysfunctional, but to me they’re perfectly normal. Everyone seems to want college life to be saccharine and sanitized. I figure most students live highly stressed lives. We’re expected to show up to multiple classes, on time, prepared and be ready to perform at the highest levels academically - then add to these pressures our elaborate social and study demands. Young adulthood is strict in ways you may not remember. Poor us. sigh So we have a little fun. I’ve been bottled-up, by and large, this semester - mostly by my own twisted need to get ahead in every subject and I joined a Yale Society - dumb, I know, like I have the time. But I was tapped and Annick (my sister) said “DO IT!” I bet I quit when the going gets tough. Why did I think senior year would be easier?   Fall semester is a time famous for freshmen heartbreak - with everyone newly away from home and old boyfriends. About that... I hate it when boyfriends get old and you have to get rid of them. Not chronologically old - don’t call your lawyer, this isn’t ageism rearing its ugly head. There’s the chafing-like pre-breakup irritation, because you’re suddenly separated by distance and experience. it’s easy to feel out of touch and unable to voice your joy about the new life you’re living. It’s the little things that tend to bother you first, like the sudden strangeness of lingering silence on the once-exciting video calls. Ugg, breakups - the subject freaks me out - I get shivers up my spine and feel nauseous, just thinking about them - I’m not mocking heartbreak. Where was I? Oh, yeah. Adolescence should feature at least one earth-shaking, world-shifting, heartbreaking first love - unless, of course, covid happened. Do I harp back to covid lockdown too much? Well, it happened. It was our Vietnam, and we were unprepared. There’s a guy showing me some persistent interest - something I have no time for - or interest in. He’s a tall, sporty, transfer student from Princeton. Not unattractive, in a sort of eager, and dense, hipster way. “I have a boyfriend,” I told him, hoping he'd lose interest. “He must be invisible,” he observed, several days later. Then, “If you’d give me a chance, you’d soon find out I’m a sparkling conversationalist.” He updogged. “Introverts,” I said, “we should be running the world, but no one listens to us.” “I like a woman with ambition,” he said, encouragingly. “Go away,” I replied, and he did. But he was back in the morning because he’s in my residence and we share a shuttle bus stop. sigh Question: Why are they still calling storms hurricanes? I mean, now that they can have male or female names, shouldn’t they be themicanes? . . A song for this: Alfie by Cilla Black Does Everyone Stare by The Police
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38
5:32am walk three avenues if you don't catch the M116 bus 6 train 1 stop transfer 4 train 3 stops 10 minute walk deli stop 1 small tea + 1 everything bagel w butter 1 block "good morning" to the security guards she won't make eye contact but she'll smile so let that be something 4 flights of stairs 12 of us in an office for over 6o hours a week holding each other accountable holding each other close
0
Sep 25, 2016
Sep 25, 2016 at 6:02 PM UTC
i moved to new york and found a job and people i loved
Soccer moms and sander scars Suburban life is strange. Play dates and in-line skates Schedules to re-arrange. Yoga teachers and lay preachers And those are not a metaphor. Costco trips and air-kiss lips Nobody trusts a bachelor. Coupon savers in SUVs Never use turn signals. Driving while chatting hands-free Wearing golden **** whistles. Appointments to make daily With exercise gurus. Cocktail luncheons for charity Toddlers wearing tutus. Traffic jams of cars and vans Honking at each other. Double parking on narrow streets Calling each other mothers. Starting out fifteen minutes late As is the usual way. Somehow never figuring out how To have an on-time day. Screeching home a night in time To throw together a meal. Watch television with family And pretend that is all real. Put the kids to bed right on time Try to have quality time. While the other half is half-asleep From that second glass of wine.
0
Mar 22, 2016
Mar 22, 2016 at 12:13 AM UTC
SUBURBAN SONATA