Poet...Musician...Thinker...Blogger...Teacher...Husband...Father...I'm not perfect, but I try!
Sunday, December 7, 2025
December 7, 2025: “The Spouses Waking Up in the Hotel Mirror,” Almost Migraine, “Writing Life of Charles Dickens”
Saturday, December 6, 2025
December 6, 2025: “Cool Breeze,” Missing in Action, “Saturday Afternoon Poetry Reading by MFA Students”
Sunday, November 16, 2025
November 16, 2025: “1954,” Tragedy and Loss, “All Breath”
he had put on her face. And her training bra
scared me—the newspapers, morning and evening,
kept saying it, training bra,
as if the cups of it had been calling
the breasts up, he buried her in it,
perhaps he had never bothered to take it
off, and they found her underpants
in a garbage can. And I feared the word
eczema, like my acne and like
the X in the paper which marked her body,
as if he had killed her for not being flawless.
I feared his name, Burton Abbott,
the first name that was a last name,
as if he were not someone specific.
It was nothing one could learn from his face.
His face was dull and ordinary,
it took away what I’d thought I could count on
about evil. He looked thin and lonely,
it was horrifying, he looked almost humble.
I felt awe that dirt was so impersonal,
and pity for the training bra,
pity and terror of eczema.
And I could not sit on my mother’s electric
blanket anymore, I began to have
a fear of electricity—
the good people, the parents, were going
to fry him to death. This was what
his parents had been telling us:
Burton Abbott, Burton Abbott,
death to the person, death to the home planet.
The worst thing would have been to think
to look into those eyes, and see the human.
Tuesday, November 11, 2025
November 11, 2025: “For and Against Knowledge,” Veterans Day, “Uncle Shorty Never Talked About Pearl Harbor”
what did she see? Strapped in,
tilted back, so her back was toward
the planet she was leaving, feeling the Gs
press her with their enormous palm, did she
weep with excitement in the roar, and in
the lens of a tear glimpse for an instant
a disc of fire? If she were our daughter,
would I think about it, how she had died, was she
torn apart, was she burned—the way
I have wondered about the first seconds
of our girl’s life, when she was a cell a
cell had just entered, she hung in me
a ball of grey liquid, without nerves,
without eyes or memory, it was
she, I love her. So I want to slow it
down, and take each millisecond
up, take her, at each point,
in my mind’s arms—the first, final
shock hit, as if God touched
a thumb to her brain and it went out, like a mercy killing,
and then, when it was no longer she,
the flames came—as we burned my father
when he had left himself. Then the massive bloom un-
buckled and jumped, she was vaporized back
down to the level of the cell. And the spirit—
I have never understood the spirit,
all I know is the shape it takes,
the wavering flame of flesh. Those
who know about the spirit may tell you
where she is, and why. What I want
to do is find every cell,
slip it out of the fishes’ mouths,
ash in the tree, soot in our eyes
where she enters our lives, I want to play it
backwards, burning jigsaw puzzle
of flesh, suck in its million stars
to meet, in the sky, boiling metal
fly back
together, and cool.
Pull that rocket
back down
surely to earth, open the hatch
and draw them out like fresh-born creatures,
sort them out, family by family, go
away, disperse, do not meet here.
Saturday, November 1, 2025
November 1, 2025: “The Prepositions,” All Saints’ Day, “Litany of Saints for Laundry Day”
I’d probably be a Behavior Problem
all my life, John Muir Grammar
the first morning at Willard, the dawn
of forty-five prepositions, to learn
by heart. I stood in the central courtyard,
enclosed garden that grew cement,
up and over, up and over, like
alpha waves, about, above,
across, along, among, around, an
odd calm began in me,
before, behind, below, beneath,
beside, between, I stood in that sandstone
square and started to tame. Down,
from, in, into, near, I was
located there, watching the Moorish half-
circles rise and fall. Off,
on, onto, out, outside, we
came from 6th grades all over the city
White tennis-club boys who did not
speak to me, White dorks
plump goof-off who walked past and
suddenly flicked my sweater-front, I thought to shame me.
Over, past, since, through,
that was the year my father came home in the
middle of the night with those thick earthworms
elegant gore, cornice and crisp
waist of the extinct form,
till, to, toward, under, the
lining of my uterus convoluted,
shapely and scarlet as the jointed leeches
mask, unlike, until, up, I’d
walk, day and night, into
everything had a place. I was in
relation to, upon, with, and when I
got to forty-five I could just start over,
slowly along the calm electro-
cardiogram of adobe cloister,
within, without, I’d repeat the prayer I’d
received, a place in the universe,
meaningless but a place, an exact location—
Telegraph, Woolsey, Colby, Russell—
Berkeley, 1956,
fourteen, the breaking of childhood, beginning of memory.
Friday, October 31, 2025
October 31, 2025: “Leaving the Island,” All Hallow’s Eve, “My Teenage Son Carves a Pumpkin”
Thursday, October 30, 2025
October 30, 2025: “What Is the Earth?”, Wife’s Birthday, “Maple Leaf Love Poem”
the earth’s home is the atmosphere.
Or the atmosphere is the earth’s clothing,
layers of it, the earth wears all of it,
the earth is a homeless person.
Or the atmosphere is the earth’s cocoon,
which it spun itself, the earth is a larvum.
Or the atmosphere is the earth’s skin—
earth, and atmosphere, one
homeless one. Or its orbit is the earth’s
home, or the path of the orbit just
a path, the earth a homeless person.
Or the gutter of the earth’s orbit is a circle
of hell, the circle of the homeless. But the earth
has a place, around the fire, the hearth
of our star, the earth is at home, the earth
is home to the homeless. For food, and warmth,
and shelter, and health, they have earth and fire
and air and water, for home they have
the elements they are made of, as if
each homeless one were an earth, made
of milk and grain, like Ceres, and one
could eat oneself--as if the home
were a god, who could eat the earth, a god
of homelessness.
I
watch
you kick
up piles of golden light
as we walk on this late October eve
when the moon is already tap, tap,
tapping our shoulders, begging
to be admired like a contestant in
a celestial beauty pageant. Your
breath fogs the air as the maple
leaves rise, applaud, their veined palms tender as
a grandmother’s. I want to reach out, hold you the way
these leaves have held the sky since spring, as if they are cupping
the last drops of water on a parched, parched earth,
maybe in the entire parched Milky Way,
and I
(oh yes!)
I
I
I
am drowning with thirst.
Sunday, October 26, 2025
October 26, 2025: “After Punishment Was Done with Me,” Painting Class, “A Perfect Place to Find Hope”
After punishment was done with me,
after I would put my clothes back on, I’d go
back to my room, close the door,
and wander around, ending up
on the floor sometimes, always, near the baseboard,
where the vertical fall of the wall meets
the level rule of the floor—I would put
my face near that angle, and look at the dust
and anything caught in the dust. I would see
the wedding swags of old-lady-hair—
pelmets carved on cenotaph granite—and
cocoons of slough like tiny Kotexes
wound and wound in toilet paper,
I would see the anonymous crowds of grit, as if
looking down into Piazza Navona
from a mile above Il Duce, I would see
a larval casing waisted in gold
thin as the poorest gold wedding band,
and a wasp’s dried thorax and legs wound love-ring
with a pubic hair of my mother’s, I would see
the coral-maroon of the ladybug’s back
marked with its two, night genes,
I would see a fly curled up, dried,
its wings like the rabbit’s ears, or the deer’s.
I would lie quiet and look at them,
it was so peaceful there with them,
I was not at all afraid of them,
and my sadness for them didn’t matter.
I would look at each piece of lint
and half imagine being it,
I would feel that I was looking at
the universe from a great distance.
Sometimes I’d pick up a Dresden fly
and gaze at it closely, sometimes I’d idly play
house with the miniature world, weddings and
funerals with barbed body parts,
awful births, but I did not want
to disarrange that unerring deadness
like a kind of goodness, corner of wetless
grey waste, nothing the human
would go for. Without desire or rage
I would watch that dust celestium as the pain
on my matter died and turned to spirit
and wandered the cloud world of home,
the ashes of the earth.
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
October 22, 2025: “That Day,” Poetry Workshop, “Louis F. Taccolini Hand-Carved Birds Collection”
- I’m grateful that my friend has been able to find necessary help. My last conversation with him, he sounded exhausted but not as panicked. A blessing for that help and his peace of mind,
- I’m also grateful for my friend, Keith, and his company today. He’s a wonderful, giving man, and it was a blessing to be with him today.
- Finally, I’m grateful for the new poem I wrote in Keith’s workshop. The birth of a new poem into the world is always a blessing.
Louis F. Taccolini Hand-Carved Birds Collection,
Peter White Public Library
for Keith Taylor, October 22, 2025
by: Martin Achatz
They sit outside this library meeting room named
after a man who pioneered outdoor photography
for the likes of National Geographic, the carved
feathers delicate as birch bark. As with any living
or once-living thing, they are imperfect as stones
on the shores of Lake Superior. Gloriously imperfect.
Leonard Cohen imperfect—a voice cut by razors
wrapped around words that split my heart open.
The man who took logs and made this flock could
be a god. Think about it. In Genesis, Yahweh
speaks nothing into something, into light and earth
and mud and fur and thigh and love. This log god,
though, he did something more miraculous:
he made trees fly.










