Rare wind in deep night,
waning spring moon silhouettes
dancing pepper tree.
Ya know when a book cuts straight through all the nonsense and nails an issue as it presently is? Well, I've listened to a book on Audible (and even re-listening due to its remarkably lucid language) that does that in regards to the UFO/UAP phenomenon. To many, even raising the specter of this subject is an immediate no-go. To anyone who might feel that way, I'd still encourage you to listen to it. Published 2011, UFOs: Generals, Pilots and Government Officials Go On the Record by Leslie Kean.
(untitled)
Lisa Loves Bisa
Walking along the sand
at the shore
and you see someone has
scratched Lisa Loves Bisa;
you don’t wonder if
somehow the tide
created the message
or maybe a specie of
cute little crab
had nothing better to do—
no—you know
there was
a complex specificity
shinning through,
a whole narrative
of two people alive.
And when you walk through
the fields and groves
of captivating beauty,
sunlight hitting them so
in the moment—
all medicine and nourishment
of astonishing and divine
inscrutable pulchritude—
and consider it all as
recurring motifs of existence—
know you are part of a creation,
another mark in the universe
which goes on and on,
afloat upon
an ocean of love
made of starlight.
Triptych On Love
I
In a perfect world language and cadence
would be consciousness--a spaceship connecting us
to all the other suns;
music, prose, and verse, an aperture to universe;
art a paradox—free and locked in a box;
kids would say things wide-eyed,
figuring how to grow old and wise,
and love would be a hand out,
little understood and rarely refused.
II
To think of eternity is to imagine
time to live every life ever lived.
To think of God is to know free will, fate,
and seeking shelter should go on forever—
that vanity and the vanities
needn’t ever leave,
apart of a wheel making the world go round.
To look into the eyes of a long-lasting love,
this time or the next,
is to know of it.
III
I am here many times, spectacle to the young,
and the heart it sees
alienation is only a symptom—
just not ready to receive fruit from
what has passed to the past.
Until it’s easy for all to see
that we’re a drop in a sea,
and remember all we’ve wanted to learn,
you’ll never know just how much you’re loved.
Notions of You
If I saw your eyes so large and sharp,
I’d keep an eye open and hope like a kid
for the surprise—the scintillation coupled with
the firing of your smile,
turning the moment sterling
like a sudden ray of sun
over an ocean’s morning mind.
Though maybe you’d be blithe to mine;
and perhaps I’m too old and deep—
still I’d love to teach you mountains I’ve climbed
and revel in your interpretation
of such a union.
My imaginings would yet to comprehend
the core of your beauty,
and ways fraught with wandering would stop—
even a good movie or an
Impressionist exhibit
wouldn’t take my mind off you.
I would like to lie with you;
and look into your eyes;
to feel us together, neck-moist,
and to kiss your lips as best I can;
to smell your hair, wet with sweat,
wanting to do whatever you wanted.
And after, in settling repose,
where side by side we’d decide
what color particular numbers were,
or immediate steps to
best affect the world—finding
within this separateness the
sweetest of gifts: lover and friend.
Where growing to know intimacy
would make one wonder whether
life was meant for such pleasure;
I want to hear you whisper in my ear
so severely I feel like the second movement
to Beethoven’s Seventh: a solemn love tune—
not lonesome, though alone and longing.
There had been some long-standing issue with this domain; I couldn't erase text which I had put up there back in the 00s. Hiring a freelance computer/IT specialist, I was able to do so today: alipes.org
Notions of You
If I saw your eyes so large and sharp,
I’d keep an eye open and hope like a kid
for the surprise—the scintillation coupled with
the firing of your smile,
turning the moment sterling
like a sudden ray of sun
over an ocean’s morning mind.
Though maybe you’d be blithe to mine;
and perhaps I’m too old and deep—
still I’d love to teach you mountains I’ve climbed,
and revel in your interpretation
of such a union.
My imaginings would yet to comprehend
the core of your beauty,
and ways fraught with wandering would stop—
even a good movie or an
Impressionist exhibit
couldn’t take my mind off you.
I would like to lie with you;
and look into your eyes;
to feel us together, neck-moist,
and to kiss your lips as best I can;
to smell your hair, wet with sweat,
wanting to do whatever you wanted.
And after, in settling repose,
where side by side we’d decide
what color particular numbers were,
or immediate steps to
best affect the world; finding
within this separateness the
sweetest of gifts: lover and friend.
Where growing to know intimacy
would make one wonder whether
life was meant for such pleasure;
I want to hear you whisper in my ear
so severely, I feel like the second movement
to Beethoven’s seventh:
not lonesome, though alone and longing.