Thin-Skinned

Poetry
I’m sitting on the edge of tears.

Death by 1,000 paper cuts.

Thin-skinned.

Ankle deep in things I wish I would have said.

Chosen victim,
Fool,
Coward.

Do not be so hard on yourself.

It is brave to feel
And to love.

But it is also stupid.

Ankle deep in all the things I might say one day.

Just don’t fuck up the mood tonight, ok?

Thin-skinned.

See-through.

Blue veins.
Blue brain.

One day, I will step off this tightrope.

Body

Poetry, Uncategorized
These old kneecaps
Full of empty threats.
One day they’ll mean it,
And I’ll cry.

You ever try to fill your chest
Beyond your lungs?
One day my ribs will
Throw their arms up in concession.

Thighs, “thickms”,
Strength, strife.
Run, rage, hope, hate.
I think I love you.

Left eye more open than the right,
A shy Cupid’s bow
And my grandmother’s nose
To connect it all.
Teeth that can’t stand 
To be near each other.
Eyes, always guessing,
Pressing closed against the sting.
Some days I wish I was just a body.
Thoughtless and fearless,
Present.
Just here to be.
Without a memory or a worry
Or anything, really,
Except for blood, my mother’s skin,
And my father's bones.
fire pit at night with embers flying out of it

Contained but powerful

Poetry
Why do I always cry when I think about why I love you?

Why am I so scared?

It is a new experience. 
It is like feeling heat but not knowing the source.

And then
One day you realize 
You're able to open the frosted glass doors.

And behind them 
There is the fire.

Burning with peaceful conviction. 
Patient warmth.

Something new but familiar.
Beautiful but risky.
Contained but powerful. 

dusk night sky in San Diego with a crescent moon

When you look at a star

Poetry
You catch a photon of light
In your retina.

A photon that has traveled 
Hundreds, thousands, millions...billions
Of years 
To find rest in the bespeckled mitt
Of a golden-brown iris 
And set fire to the nerve endings
That reach for your attention
And hold you by the ears
And force you to look into yourself 
As you look into the night sky. 

Was that photon destined for you?
Was it fate that you two would meet?
Has it been on its way
Pinballing off silver moons
And glowering meteors?

Programmed into it — you.
No question and no alternative.
You were meant to meet.

I wait for the next time
A wink of starlight
Leaps into me 
And places me both near and far
To it all. 

Saturday morning

Poetry, Uncategorized
Wears a misty cap.
And the asphalt sings
With a metallic odor.
This feeling hangs 
Like a lead shawl
Drawing down my eyelids
Against the white sky.
Coastal sage scrub 
Pleads on the side of the I-15
For the brush of a coyote’s tail.
Desperate optimism.
Anger, taps on the glass window
Annoyed that it has to wait.
But it’ll wait,
Even if it takes all night.
It is better to hash this out.
Kick at the puddles.
Scatter this muddy water
Across the sidewalk.
The wet season has been long 
For us. A monotonous drizzle.
White noise and floods
On a Saturday morning.

The full moon will return

Poetry
I thought I was waiting 
On the right time to say this.
But I was right all along
And waiting was wrong.

The anger is changing
How I read your reactions.
Emotional violence
Ignites the dark silence.

The full moon is hanging
Somber in the smog.
We flash down the 10 West
“Would you just give it a rest?”

My fears do the blaming.
My ego is a paper maché planet.
We guard against the unreal,
We drown in what we feel.

Darling, we are waning.
Shadows crawled in our heart.
But the sun will still burn
And the earth will still turn.

And the full moon will return.

The Queen of Camancho

Poetry
Maria was born 
In the southeast desert of California,
Like the place where Walter White hides out;
Like the place where Denny’s is a bar
And a restaurant;
Like the place where Cher is from.

She had aspirations.
She would not die in the desert
Without being known.

Without. Being. Seen.

She married a man 
Who inherited a luxury car
Dealership.
She moved into his parent’s house
In the dark orange sprawl 
Of Camancho, CA.

She was, and she is
The most beautiful woman 
In Camancho.

And her husband knows it.

“Wear this. Pose for me.”

She’s there. In Christmas lingerie
Smiling at you
Beckoning you
To look anywhere except for her cleavage.

On the side of the 138.

She is there, smiling.

At home,
She steps out into the navy night.
She acknowledges the impatient
Winter wind.
She squints in the moonlight 
Knowing she is 
The Queen of Camancho.