Tag Archives: #writing

JESUS IN ARMANI

He walked down Seventh Avenue
in a suit the color of storm-light,
Armani stitching holding together
what the world once nailed apart.

No halo—
only the low ember of a man
who has watched every century
try to erase him.

People stared
the way sheep stare at thunder,
uncertain whether to scatter
or kneel.

He did not speak.
He did not lift a hand
to bless or curse or gather.
He only walked—
sandals traded for leather,
robe traded for silk,
the same heart beating beneath.

As he passed
the glass cathedrals of want,
mannequins bowed
in their frozen hunger,
mirrors shivered,
recognizing their own reflection
in his quiet contempt.

A woman selling roses
felt her breath snag
on an old wound.
She offered one,
thorned and trembling.
He took it
the way only the ancient take anything—
with sorrow enough
to swallow empires
and mercy enough
to refuse the feast.
Some said model.
Some said ghost.
Some said madman
too expensive to ignore.

But the air bent around him
like light around a wound,
and the city—
dressed in its bright, glittering sins—
did what cities do:
it looked,
it lingered,
it forgot.
No sermon.
No miracle.

Just a man in Armani asking, without asking,
“Have you learned nothing?”

:: 12.11.2025 ::


A FLAKE OF ICE CALLED SNOW

I wished this poem would become
a flake of ice called snow—
one trembling shard of heaven,
pure enough to vanish on a warm palm,
yet brave enough to fall.

So the wind, ancient in its counsel,
took my whisper and lifted it
into the high blue chambers
where winter forges its silver truths.

There, among the quiet anvils of cold,
my words stiffened into crystal
each line folding upon itself,
each syllable narrowing into frost.

By dusk it was ready.
And the sky released it
my poem, now a single snowflake,
descending through the stillness
as though time itself held its breath.

The village did not notice.
Children continued their play,
the church bell tolled its tired hour,
and travelers hurried toward their shelter.

But one old woman at her window
saw it glint, and smiled
the way only memory can.

She held out her hand.
The flake landed gently,
melted instantly—
yet in that soft collapse
my poem entered her,
warm as a forgotten kindness,
light as forgiveness.

And the elders say
this is the true labor of snow:
to arrive without demand,
to bless without witness,
to vanish—
yet leave the world quieter
than it found it.

So let this poem fall again and again—
each time a new crystal,
each time a new grace
until your heart, Phillip,
is a field where winter’s silence
rests like a benediction.

:: 12.07.2025 ::


IT DISGUSTS ME

It disgusts me
to keep being a man.

The night drags its curtains down like a tired whore
who once, long ago, believed someone would stay till morning.
Every house kills its lamps, one by one,
obedient, cowardly, already half-dead.

They crawl under blankets,
they dream small dreams of bread and rent,
and common sense, that fat jailer,
whispers: lie down, forget, rot quietly.

I spit on common sense.

Yet I remember my mother’s hands folding those same blankets,
her palms cracked from work, still trying to keep someone warm.
I rip the sheets, I tear the night open with my teeth.

I walk.

I walk through barbershops that stink of corpses and cheap cologne,
through cinemas where love is sold in cardboard kisses
that taste like the first kiss I ever stole behind a school wall,
already knowing it would not save me.

My shoes are full of fury,
my eyes are knives that have forgotten how to close,
but somewhere under the blades my pupils are still
the black astonished eyes of a child who once looked for stars
and found only the ceiling of a room that smelled of onions and sleep.

I am sick of roots,
sick of being buried alive in my own skin,
sucking wet earth,
shivering downward like a worm that dreams of wings
and remembers, dimly, that wings were promised once
by a voice that sounded like a father’s, before the voice learned silence.

I refuse the tomb they call a life.

I refuse the clean shirt, the polite smile, the slow suicide of days.
Still, I carry in my pocket a button torn from my dead brother’s coat, a ridiculous small thing I cannot throw away.

Monday comes howling,
a burning wheel dripping blood and gasoline,
and it sees me (jail-face, prison-heart)
and screams louder because I scream back.

But the scream also carries the lullaby my grandmother sang
to stop the bombs from falling, the one that never worked
and that I still hum under my breath when no one is listening.

Look:

Sulphur birds hang from balconies like hanged men,
guts of houses spill into the gutter,
false teeth grin inside forgotten coffeepots,
mirrors puke when they see what we’ve become,
umbrellas rot like black corpses,
navels drip poison into the air we breathe.

And yet, in the cracked window of a tenement
a single geranium keeps trying to bloom, obscene, heroic,
red as the mouth of someone who once said “I love you”
and meant it, even if only for one afternoon.

I walk past orthopedic shops where bones beg to be free,
past yards where underpants and towels hang crucified,
weeping slow dirty tears that taste of every love we murdered,
and of every love that refused to die and embarrassed us by living.

I am done being quiet.
I am done being human in their way.
Let the whole city burn if it must.
Let the night rip itself apart.

But if it burns, let something be saved in the burning,
even if only the memory of a hand that once touched another hand
without asking for papers, rent, or tomorrow.

I walk with my heart on fire,
beating golden wings against the cage of ribs,
beating, beating, beating
until something (god, devil, love, chaos)
finally hears me and answers with thunder
or with rain
or with the small cracked voice of a child asking why the sky is black tonight.

I am not asking anymore.
I am coming.

Carrying both the torch and the tear.
Carrying the disgust and the impossible tenderness that will not let me put the torch down.

All of it disgusts me,
so all of it must change
or all of it must die.
But if it dies, let it die in my arms,
the way my mother died,
the way every small tenderness dies
when the world keeps refusing to be worthy of it.

Then, only then,
I will set the fire
and I will cry into the fire
and the fire will be beautiful
because it will be the only honest thing left.

(Homage to Pablo Neruda)

:: 12.02.2025 ::


SERENDIPITOUS PLEASURES v2

Deep in the soil I heard Earth sigh—
a long, low tremor through the bone;
and I pressed my face into the cold, wet loam
to borrow strength from roots unknown.

I cried for light—
for the sky that flees when sorrow bends the knee—
yet the ground, patient as a mother,
held its silence over me.

Then high above, a single bird
stirred the dawn with feathered grace;
her tiny claws, like hymns of morning,
woke the numbness from my face.

She built her nest with threadbare treasures—
twig and straw, and faith, and pain;
a little artist in the branches,
laboring for life again.

And in her work I felt my heart—
the lonely part that keeps its vow,
that loves the world despite its wildness,
and breaks, yet rises somehow.

For this is a wild world, beloved—
men cut it open, women bleed it,
and sorrow climbs both stem and stone;
yet even in the wounds of living,
we find the seeds of love are sown.

O world so fierce, so torn, so tender—
you bruise us, yes—but teach us too:
to kneel to Earth with humbled spirit,
and rise to sky with vision new.

:: REV 11.30.2025 ::


THE DRUNKEN VESSEL

I went down those indifferent rivers,
their currents no longer chained to men.
The old ropes snapped—ha! they hunted
the ones who dragged me:
howls in war paint,
and those bodies nailed to painted trees
broke the spell of order.

I didn’t care for cargo or captains anymore—
not wheat from Flanders
nor cotton spun from the bleeding hands of empire.
The uproar silenced,
and the rivers—
they finally let me decide.

I hurled myself into those wild tides,
more reckless than a boy chasing lightning.
I outran the anchors of reason—
peninsulas screamed as I tore past them,
laughing like God drunk on creation.

The storm loved me.
I danced—light as bark—
on waves that swallowed widows
and spared fools.
Ten nights.
No lighthouse touched me with its stupid eye.

The sea kissed my hull with green tongues,
rinsing off the vomit of men and
the purple wine of regret.
It tore out my anchor—
threw away the hook.

Since then, I’ve been bathing
in that poem of salt and sky,
a galaxy melted in milk.
I drank its verses,
and sometimes, I’d see a face—
a drowned man’s dream,
drifting upside-down,
smiling like he knew.

Sometimes, love turned red
and fermented in my belly,
a rhythm older than any song,
bitterer than any drink,
sweeter than flesh.

I saw skies ripped by lightning,
and water climbing into the sun.
I know what men say they’ve seen—
I saw it truer.
Suns bruised and bleeding
over oceans full of dying gods.

I’ve dreamt nights so green
they glowed like ghosts.
Snows melted into kisses.
And the sea whispered secrets
in chlorophyll and starfire.

Months I followed the swell—
mad and swollen,
a herd of storms stampeding reefs.
I never once thought
a woman’s feet could calm such rage.

I crashed through imagined Edens—
strange Floridas
where flowers blinked like wildcats
and the sky dragged rainbows
like wedding veils through ash.

I saw swamps boiling,
traps full of bones,
dead giants melting beneath reeds.
Waters fell from nowhere
and the horizon swallowed itself whole.

Glaciers hissed like silver suns.
Waves split open the sky.
And in the black scent
of tangled trees,
serpents thrashed as bugs devoured them.

Oh, I should’ve brought children
to see those fish!
Gold and blue and singing—
like lullabies before language.

Sometimes the sea sighed,
exhausted and old,
and laid her dark flowers at my feet.
I knelt like a woman praying
but not for mercy.

Birds screeched,
and dropped their arguments
onto my back.
The dead floated through my ropes—
they slept as I drifted on.

Now I’m a broken plank
lodged in some cave’s green throat,
thrown skyward,
out of reach
of any rescue boat,
any human hand.

Free.
And smoking under violet clouds.
I once pierced the sun
with a splintered mast—
brought poets the jam of gold mold
and the spit of starlight.

I was a stray board
covered in electric moons,
black seahorses chasing me
while July struck the sky
with fire hammers.

I’ve heard, far off,
the sex-calls of monsters,
felt the whirlpools groan.
The ocean spun me like thread
but I stayed still—
somehow.
And I missed Europe,
its broken walls,
its old regrets.

I’ve seen constellations burst
like archipelagos,
and islands that smiled
just for the mad.
Do you sleep there,
Vigor not yet born?
You golden birds?

But I—wept.
Too much.
Every morning is a wound.
Every moon, a cruel joke.
Every sun—another goodbye.
O let my ribs snap—
let the sea finally take me whole.

If I ever want water again,
let it be that black puddle
where a boy—lost like I was—
lets go his toy boat
in the twilight of forgotten gardens.

No more, no more—
can I trail the ghost of cotton ships.
Nor stare at flags with pride.
Nor swim beneath
the brutal gaze
of prison ships.

:: 11.27.2025 ::


PROFUNDUS (Elegy of the Dumbfounded)

I am dumb—
you caught me eating beach sand
while steak lay warm upon the table.
Now my teeth crumble into castles,
the tide reclaiming what I tried to build.

Youth once begged: raise your empire!
I—old sentinel of my own soul—have learned
haters see, though blind, lovers, blind, still see.

There stays an emptiness I never filled;
the sensitive, they see too much,
and the poor dine richly in their sleep.
I weep bolts of lightning—
for laughter once made the universe,
and in that bright convulsion we were born.

We were so young—
time itself still unborn—
when a few of us dared the dark,
seeking the womb where life invents itself.

I stay dumbfounded
by free will—
we all possess it,
yet never choose.

:: 00.00.2025 ::


A LITTLE THROB OF QUIET LOVE

It was a breath I almost missed,
a hush against my skin,
the kind of touch that drifts to you
before the words begin.

It was a feeling without sound,
yet every beat replied,
the way a violet lifts its face
toward spring it can’t deny.

It was a hand I could not see
but felt within my own,
a warmth that eased the frozen parts
I thought were carved in stone.

Real love does not announce itself
nor rush for all to see;
it grows the way a hillside keeps
the snow in memory.

Slow as an early morning star,
faithful as falling dew,
it threads the heart with gentleness
and makes it brave and new.

:: 11.19.2025 ::


G I ATE REAL ITY

am? I am sniffing a scent
of a hint of a garden
with all fruit and how
sad she found out
she’d die five weeks
earlier in Life /wish
i wish i had a Chasity
belt to deal with fame\
since meaning fell with her
(ha, once more)

:: 11.17.2025 ::


CLUBS ARE THE WEAPONS OF WAR

SOMETIMES, shadows walk like people
and talk senseless things—
sometimes geometry is just chance,
and broken numbers need to dance,
and Jack of Diamonds sheds the Queen of Hearts,
and her eyes are the swords of conflict,
the shape of your heart → broken love.

If I told you that I loved her—
you’d think something wrong;
just a man wearing many faces.
If I told you I loved you—
I met a woman with love hid in many places.
I know the space, the size of a soldier,
and the clubs of cards—
  → it’s not the shadow I walk.

Yet still the dusk leans in, listening,
as though it knows the truth of men:
that every borrowed face we wear
is stitched from longing’s ancient thread.

And sometimes dreams outrun their keepers,
seeking forms they cannot fill;

and sometimes hearts, like worn-out decks,
shuffle themselves against their will.

But here I stand—no mask, no mirror—
beneath the quiet, faithful moon,
confessing to the old night sky
that love, once loosed, returns too soon.

And if my steps seem split in two,
one toward her, one toward you—
know this: the heart, bewildered, still
chooses the path that feels most true.

For even when shadows walk like people,
and numbers break, and queens depart—
somewhere a single, steady flame
remembers the shape
 of your
    heart.

:: 11.16.2025 ::


I AM

I am a soul walking in flesh,
yet never contained by it.

I am a poet shaped by centuries,
though born in this brief age.

I am a man who moves like the elder winds—
one who remembers corners of existence
forgotten the moment most awaken.

I am both echo and origin—
the flame that leans toward heaven,
and the ash that still remembers the fire.

I am a sensitive spirit—
not fragile,
but finely strung,
like an old violin whose seasoned wood has known
storms, prayers, and trembling hands.

I am a maker of worlds—
one who dreams beyond the narrow frame of Earth
and carries the marks of elsewhere.

And you are—
in the simplest, oldest words—
a child of God
who has not forgotten
that you once knew the sky
from the inside.

That is what you are.

:: 11.15.2025 ::