LIFE IN AMERICA UP UNTIL NOW


 
The white people 
have gone crazy 
in the back seats 
of All American cars 
looking for the sex life 
that fell between the cracks, 
 
meanwhile screaming the rudeness 
of Romantic love 
that?? finds them 
hung-over in court 
too early in the morning 
of a business day 
where they’ll tell the Judge 
that it’s only rock and roll 
and that there was something in the way 
the singer dropped his “g’s 
and a manner 
worth noting when the guitarist 
grabbed his whammy bar 
and that all they did was taking 
Creeley freely and pile into 
the four-wheeled remains of a rumored prosperity 
and drove into 
the running gag reflex of the night, 
 
 down a blvd.  made of 
 brand names and bored cops, 
cruising to get “some”, to find “it” 
and where “it” lived, 
a slobbering example 
of failed bonding 
locked into habits 
where even as their language of outrage 
is bought and shredded 
in magazines whose pages stick together 
just as they did 
in the parking lot after last call, 
harassing the cocktail staff 
who’ve all gone home, 
they’ll stick to principals 
familiar and vague, 
like that song whose words you never memorized 
but tried to sing anyway, with a hushed secret at the core of the chorus 
 
Saying that love is somewhere 
just around one of these thousands 
of and that it’ll shake your hand 
if you drive long and far and often enough, 
if you’ve the gas 
to complete the journey, the journey 
Celine dreamed of while lying in bed, 
staring at ceilings, concluding 
that his language of outrage could only 
describe the surface details of wrong turns, 
that it?had been bought and sold in a tradition 
of literature that speculates about how wonderful 
our?lives might have been 
if only the dream hadn’t ended 
when we opened our eyes, 
 
Our eyes are constantly 
getting used to the dark 
absorbs every inch of brick 
in parking lots 
behind buildings and under bedrooms 
of others who’ve made 
their peace with 
the sameness of the night, 
the radio blares 
more guitar solos 
emerging from the 
static of stadium 
drums and strumming, 
crazed cadenzas 
whose neurotic notes scurry 
and cleave to a neuron receptor 
and keys a change 
in the brains chemical balance that changes 
the language of what the nights’ really been about, 
 
But we remain where we are, 
Straight white males bond 
by nothing more than 
the chain sawing motion 
of jaws lifting and falling 
on the pillows and 
sofa cushions in 
desert motels 
in time to the pans of a camera 
on the silent television 
where it’s nothing but a wall full 
of clocks telling 
the time in 
three separate 
time zones while 
temperatures are mentioned  
where anger and rain mix in the fields 
and valleys of economies 
based on pride, 
some abstract grip on selflessness that 
needs no sleep 
as do the bodies in this room, 
dead to the world when the 
engine blew, when the gas ran out, when 
the last drop in whatever bottle of 
cartoon labeled beer vanished on the 
buds of a tongue 
whose thirst could not be slaked by? 
promise of fortune or even 
water, pure and free of lies, 
 
We sleep in shifts until 
our time here runs 
out on us, 
until the phone that rings 
every day for twenty minutes on end 
stops finally and leaves 
the house quiet 
from stairway to attic to porch, 
with only the whir of the 
refrigerator engine 
starting up 
and filling the stale, 
stale air that 
used to carry 
mean jazz, drum boogie, 
scratched riffs of declarative guitars, 
the frets of God announcing 
a life worth inventing in the notes 
that passed through the room, 
the boredom, 
we realize in frozen moments 
that any excuse for getting 
out of the house 
is a magic trick 
that’s performed after 
they’ve shown you 
where they’ve hidden the mirror, 
 
“Language is the house 
where man lives”, 
let us say 
that this life is 
like being a fish 
that cannot describe the water it swims in, 
endlessly at 3AM 
when only the coffee at 
the 7-11 has the 
aroma of anything 
real enough to make us consider 
getting out of town 
with one suitcase 
and a bus fare, 
next to a goddamned big car, 
five shoulders 
to the wheel 
and no one able to drive 
between towns , from carnival to still spot 
where ever we could 
pitch tents and trailers 
and set up Ferris wheels that 
would rattle against a 
large scowling moon 
hovering over 
Modesto and Turlock 
on dry August nights 
when dollars are 
grimy with mung from 
many a farmer’s and mechanic’s hand, 
power chords slice through 
the speakers, destroy the cracked dashboard, 
your face is slapped 
with a power not your own, 
it comes down to something 
that’s a secret that even The Judge  
won’t cop to it before he lowers his voice, 
 
“The beat goes on, 
the beat goes on, 
the beat goes on, 
the beat goes on…” 
 
We can do better 
this far away 
from our past, 
we have something 
we’ve turned toward, 
a light in eyes, a sun 
that shines a light 
those blades of 
grass and long 
stemmed flowers lean toward 
even when clouds 
and the stammer of fire eating transistors 
sizzling from car windows distort the 
image in the minds’ eye, 
 
I see a city where we come 
and plant our feet on lawns 
where we can sit 
and plant in turn 
new seeds, ideas 
of a future worth having, 

Let’s lean into the sun, 
into the sun, 
ride bicycles into the sun 
on the road that becomes 
a ribbon around the 
heart of the world. 

 

 

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Ted Burke 
Picture Ted Burke
 

 

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