Sunday, December 25, 2011

The Whimsy Tree


There once was a wondrous Whimsy Tree
It never bore the same fruit twice
It sometimes grew green apples
But it sometimes grew pink mice
Last autumn, it grew pinwheels
But in winter it grew socks
And then in spring it grew fur hats
And painted cuckoo clocks
That summer it bloomed kangaroos
And even grew a beard
But then it grew a lumberjack…
And strangely disappeared.

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Lost Cat

I lost my flea-ridden, one-eyed cat
His name is Nasty Fritz
He's four years old, he smells like fish
He scratches and he spits

I put up posters everywhere
With a picture of Nasty Fritz sleepin’
The posters say: IF YOU FIND THIS CAT
THE REWARD IS YOU CAN KEEP HIM

Mr. Randy Rylids


Mr. Randy Rylids has bottle cap eyelids
Which is rather worse than you might think
‘Cause Mr. Randy Rylids with his bottle cap eyelids
Needs a bottle opener to blink

Invisible Friend

I took my invisible friend to school
"Get out!" said the teacher, Ms. Blee
But I guess it was school for invisible kids
‘Cause the teacher was pointing to me

Rapunzel, Rapunzel


Rapunzel, Rapunzel let down your long hair
The witch is vacationing somewhere, I swear
I heard her tell someone she’d be gone two weeks
Now let me climb up there and smooch your sweet cheeks

Prince Charming, Prince Charming, is that you down there?
Of course, I will let you ascend my long hair
Start climbing at once! There’s no need to think twice
And while you’re at it, please pick out the lice.

Ms. Brady the Lunch Lady


I don’t know why, and I don’t know how
But I’ve developed a very strong crush
On Ms. Brady the lunch lady; she’s sixty-two
And she makes the most mouth-watering mush
I see her each day at eleven past noon
And as soon as I pick out a tray
I run to the very front of the line
And ask, "What's the special today?"
Her three chins wobble when she says, “FISH SOUP”
And I go shakey-weak in the knees
She asks, “YOU WANT A SIDE OF MUSH?”
And I shyly say, “Yes, please.”
I devour my soup and go back for more
Always eager to visit my crush
And I can't be certain, but I think she winks
When she serves me seconds of mush

Friday, December 23, 2011

The Werewolf and the Wereman


Every full moon, the handsome wereman Jack
Would have to sneak off and leave the wolf pack
‘Cause he knew that he’d be shunned from his clan
If they ever found out that he was sometimes a man
Well, in a nearby town lived the werewolf Bruce
And every full moon, he had to make some excuse
To leave his family—just like Jack
So as not to give his wife a heart attack
Well, it happened one night in a moonlit glade
That Jack saw Bruce, but he wasn’t afraid
“You’re not a wolf,” he said, “I can tell…
You’ve got a distinctive human smell.”
“You’re right!” said Bruce, “and you must not be a man!
You smelled me out the way that only wolves can.”
Well, Jack and Bruce began to chat about their lives
About their illness, their sadness and their wives
They agreed that their full moon nights were bleak
They hated sneaking off, and they felt like freaks
“And besides, every full moon I make some excuse…
I think my wife’s getting suspicious,” said Bruce.
“Mine too!” agreed Jack. “She doesn’t understand…
And I can’t bring myself to tell her that I’m a wereman.”
They had so much in common, it felt good to confess
They agreed their diseases were causing them stress
They also noticed that they looked a lot like one another
Bruce’s wolf self could have easily been Jack’s twin brother
So by the time morning came, with the sun’s first gleam
They’d hatched up a rather clever scheme
A plan they would follow until they grew old
So they’d never have to spend the night lonely and cold
Which explains why Bruce's wife occasionally said:
“Goodness, Bruce! On certain evenings, you’re an animal in bed.”

Half Cocoons


I once spotted three half-cocoons on a leaf
While I was out cleaning the gutter
But as they were only half-cocoons
The only thing they hatched was butter

Little Miss Cabbage Hands


Little Miss Cabbage Hands ought to be pitied
Wherever she goes, the smell of cabbage lingers
But she’s lucky no one likes the taste of cabbage very much
Poor Miss Cookie Hands is missing seven fingers

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

The Procrastination Demon

i procrastinate and wait too long
wait 'til noon just to make breakfast tea
and i have no excuses, except for the demon
who comes in the night to me

he's the procrastination demon; he's got two demon tits
and he beckons to me, calling "suckle please!"
i can't help but gorge on procrastination milk
until i'm stuffed and woozy, wobbly in the knees

the next morning i pile trash on top of the trash
i watch as the laundry pile grows
i tuck away bills, let my inbox grow fat
don't trim the long nails on my toes

my boss calls, says: "haven't you done such and such?"
i say i'm sick, needing my rest
i want to say, you'd understand if at night
you were faced with those horrible breasts

i procrastinate shopping, my pantry is bare
i eat spoonfuls of white enriched flour
i lie in bed hungry, procrastinate sleep
'til the clock strikes the demon breast hour

and then, just as always, the devil appears
he bangs on my window panes
i let him in, drink from his fat, ugly breasts
feel procrastination seep into my veins

i was useless, at his mercy, and i couldn't do a thing
my Christmas lights were up and it was May
i lost my job, didn't apply for a new one
i watched re-runs of Rugrats all day

it had to stop, so i bought a silver pistol
and the next time the demon arrived
i put the weapon to his head and said, "suckle yourself
if you've any desire to survive!"

he whimpered as he drank from his own fat breast
when he begged i stop, i didn't reply
a milk mustache formed above his fat lips
i said, "drink your own mammaries dry!"

i showed no mercy; didn't let him stop
made him gorge himself 'til he could only cough
and he hasn't been back to visit since then
i think he's been putting it off

Friday, December 16, 2011

I Don't Believe Any of This

There are not many places we can walk without being afraid of something. It’s a dark, twisty road through a spooky forest, this life is. And hasn’t anybody ever tried to teach you that life is grim?
The sun is just a common hallucination. Those initiated into life’s grimness rarely see it. Tell me: what are we defined by, if not our hallucinations?
We are like turtles: our heads in our shells when the sun is shining and our heads out of our shells in the dead of night. Don’t you know that turtles see the sun when they have their heads tucked in? The sun, like all mysteries, exists on the inside canvases of our eyes. We cannot help but create art in our minds—we do it instinctively, and see it at night while we snore.
And how can we really tell that we’re not just dreaming all the time? It could be that the times we’re “dreaming” are just the times that we’re dreaming that we’re dreaming. Yes, that’s right, we’re dreaming all the time and we won’t know until one day when we wake up. And the day we wake up could be our death, isn’t that funny? For all we know, death could just be a shift in consciousness. In fact, many people believe just that.
And to step ever so briefly away from anthropocentrism: do other animals fall in love? Because perhaps the beasts’ tongues are 20,000 leagues deeper than we ever expected.
But moving on: if life is a dark place, and the sun is a hallucination, how do we bring true brightness into our minds? Is it through love? Is it through dreaming about love?
This could be our fourth or fifth or six hundred thousandth life. It could be that we just experience amnesia of our past life each time we die. Maybe we had to live a lot of simpler lives before we could become complex.
When we dream, we step through an intangible sensory world, bloomed into being by our marvelous, super-processing brains. We are computer brains, and we are sometimes whimpering dogs at the mercy of our computer brains. We are computers in clumsy, hairy bodies; we have bowels, bones, intestines—even breasts.
Violence seems to come to us naturally. If, as a species, we are a small child, then bloodshed is our pull-duck, following us everywhere, wobbling and grinning. It’s a vicious world: a kaleidoscope of murders all across the globe. Wouldn’t we feel a bit unnerved if we really did see a girl with kaleidoscope eyes?
People do funny things. In an epoch we don’t remember we were put in People Wheels. These days, hamsters are considerably tinier and less despotic.
And if there are times that glimmer, they are the moments when we speak of magic, and when we entertain, just for a brief second, the possibility that magic might really exist.
Of course, I'm no witch trial judge or voodoo man. I don’t really believe in magic.
I only want to point out that as we grow older, we spend less and less time entertaining wild possibilities. When we are young, it comes to us as naturally as suckling from our mother’s breast. And what good, nutritious milk it was, too!
These days—and it’s a pity to say it—what we eat is mostly strange chemicals. We live packed together in cities, in cells, on top of each other, with fire escape ladders that no one ever thinks to use. Instead of escaping, we pay the rent and keep on living on top of each other, day after day, with window shades by Ikea.
It bears repeating that people do funny things. They flock to their own prisons. And what is so bad about real prison, where you can just sit and have your thoughts to yourself all day? It might offer a person some time for self-reflection, and that’s more than a lot of people seem to have time for.
When we think of prisoners, we think of “bad people.” We think of people who sell crack and steal cars and have unexplained bags of human feet in their freezer. But we would do these things too, if we had been born with different genes and circumstances. We develop an awful lot of pride about random lucky things that we weren't in the least bit responsible for.
And will we learn to cultivate humility to Life and Fate? We can do this while still creating our own futures. After all, it’s not the easiest thing in the world, but most people can rub their tummies and pat their heads at the same time.
As a warning, like a green “Mr. Yuck” sticker on a bottle of Drain-O: we may be subjected to pain in this life. In fact, pain is completely inescapable. But remember when we would get hurt as children? Countless skinned knees from all our misadventures. We shrugged them off—ate them, practically, like a dog eats his own fleas.
Not that I think there's any point in idealizing childhood. Perhaps in shrugging off our wounds as children, we only drove them deeper into our psyches, so that they bubble up years later at precisely the wrong moments, like when we’re forty and have two kids and a dog and suddenly read Nietzsche and run off to Peru.
And what does it mean to quit on life?
I think it means to live without wonder.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

No Bones About It

I get creeped out by skeletons
I’m terrified of skulls
I hate to see those bare-bone teeth
And cavernous eyeholes
I can’t stand to see a rib cage
And I always loathed the day
In Health class when I had to look
At knobby vertebrae
Yes, the thought of all those boney bits
Stuck inside me, out of sight
Made my poor patellas knock
With unalleviated fright
So I found a chiropractor
Dr. Fink Cornelius Grout
And said, “Owning bones is scary!
Kindly take the buggers out!”
So he did! Now I’m a sack of skin
Stuffed with blood and guts and gall
It’s great! I just sit in a clump on the floor
And I don’t feel creepy at all

Room of Silence

I made a Room of Silence
To block out honks and bells
And squeaks and squawks and screeches
And car alarms and yells
I blocked out sirens squalling
And the buzzing of the bees
I even blocked the sound of wind
A-whistlin’ through the trees
Yes, my walls were truly soundproof
Not a whisper could get in
I was totally protected
From the world’s obnoxious din
And as I was relaxing, finally,
In my silent den
I heard a very soft whoosh out
And a very soft whoosh in
“Drat! I have been foiled!” I thought
The sound was my own breath!
And I cried ‘cause my Room of Silence
Wouldn’t be silent ‘til my death.

I Didn't Get Enough Hugs Growing Up

I didn’t get enough hugs growing up
No, there weren’t enough hugs for me
And that’s truly shaped the person
That I’ve turned out to be
I don’t wipe my feet on doormats
Even if I’ve stepped in puddles
And I litter everywhere I go
‘Cause no one gave me cuddles
I make fun of all those bleeding hearts
Who care ‘bout human rights
‘Cause when I was a tyke nobody
Tucked me in at night
I’ll never say, “God bless you”
Or "Gesundheit" if you sneeze
That's how infrequently
I'd get a bear hug or a squeeze
I’ll point and laugh and mock
If someone trips on their shoelaces
I don’t open doors for people
‘Cause I never got embraces
I don’t tip waiters, don’t participate
In canned food drives
If only I had gotten
Friendly back-pats or high-fives
But I didn’t, so I’ll say to you
GIVE OUT MORE HUGS! THEY’RE FREE!
Or the world will overflow
With dirtbag meanies just like me

Meditation

They say meditation is really quite pleasant
It allows you to focus--look! half-off sale!--on the present
They say that this focus is really relaxin'
That you learn to avoid--look! a billboard!--distraction
To be generous and patient, to admit when you’re wrong
To maintain—argh, this drive-through is taking too long!
To observe the world gently, with calm, alert eyes
To—No you can’t taste them! They're my cheesy fries!
You'll learn to plunge past the rational mind
To respect the earth's creatures--hey, pass the pork rinds!
To see infinite truth in each grain of sand
To live simply--check out my new tanning booth tan!
They say that deep breathing brings purification
That--rats, out of cigarettes! where's a gas station?
They say your mind's a locked door, and meditation's the key
But who needs it? Sounds boring. Let's go watch T.V.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Coconut Milk

Lee’s mother made coconut curry
With coconut milk from a can
He asked, “Where’s that stuff come from?”
She said, “It’s from Thailand.”
He asked, “Th-that’s milk, that stuff is?”
She nodded and added, “Don’t stutter”
And Lee thought of Thailand: a magical place
Where each coconut sports its own udder

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

The Holidays


How dull the calendar would be without our holidays
They’re the days we keep traditions, and traditions should be praised.
Oh, I do so love Thanksgiving, with its hidden eggs to find
And I love to watch the fireworks and wave flags on Valentine’s.
For Labor Day, I like to pinch the fools who don’t wear green
And it’s fun to watch the groundhog on T.V. each Halloween
On Columbus Day I look for pots of gold and leprechauns
And there’s nothing like a round of “Rudolph” during Ramadan.
Then lastly there is Kwanzaa, when we all eat latkes—yummy!
But Christmas’s tough, ‘cause I don’t have enough
toilet paper to dress as a mummy.

Writin' Poems

Now writin' poems is easy
I can churn 'em out lickety-split
But gettin' people to read 'em...
Well, that's the part I don't get.

Stolen Tomato Sauce

I snuck into a vampire's house
The vampire's name was Pidge
And I found Tupperwares of tomato sauce
Stacked up in Pidge's fridge
Well, I took some home and made pasta
My favorite kind--bowtie
But the tomato sauce was too salty
And not very thick. I wonder why?

The Right Writing Utensil

I had to write an essay, so I went to the zoo
To see Antarctic Birds in Exhibit 2
And when I write essays, I like to revise
So I looked for a pencilguin out on the ice
But I only saw penguins, and that made me blue
'Cause penguins don't erase, only pencilguins do

Itchy Tag

A size 5 tag on a little boy's shirt
Would pout, day out and day in:
"The back of this neck itches worse than heck!
I wish he'd cut off his skin."

Monday, December 5, 2011

Cindy and Lou

Cindy and Lou had bought new shoes
Heels for Cindy, and sneakers for Lou
“Those aren’t stylish,” said Cindy. “They’re worse than Uggs.”
But Lou didn’t mind; she simply shrugged
And as the girls walked down the narrow street
A zoo-escaped tiger was prowling for meat
So which one of the girls did he catch for his meal?
Well, tell me—are you good at sprinting in heels?

Communication

No, I don't want to talk face to face
That requires that I give you attention
I prefer to check Facebook or drive while I talk
Or do other things that I won't mention
And the other advantage of phone calls
Is that I can hang up anytime
Then later say, "AT&T dropped my call!
Can you believe that? What a crime!"
So no, let's not meet up for coffee
Making eye contact gives me the sweats
I converse best alone, so just call up my phone
Or better yet, send me a text.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Limerick Woes

A limerick writer named Neville
Wrote poems at a very high level
But he’d sometimes blurt curses
While writing his verses
SKANK BOLLOCKS! Well, speak of the devil.

A Poem to Sylvia

Sylvia, how fast thy youth has flown!
Thou art, I am afraid, an ancient crone
Upon thy cheeks, the wrinkles time’s bestowed
Around thy eyes, the furrowed feet of crows
Thy mouth is pinched up tightly—suck’st thou limes?
Thy back, once straight, now hunches, arced like time
The worms of age have burrowed in thy brain
Thy eyes are glassy, senile, old and tame
Thy desiccated larynx thins thy voice
Thou eat’st mush, thy throat gives thee no choice
Alas, old dog! No tricks now canst thy learn!
Thy lifeline tapers, narrows, like a fern
Thy—wait, what say’st thou? That thou art ONE?
That thou hast lived just twelve small months of fun?
Well then the world’s thy oyster! Slurp it up!
You hold the world inside your sippy cup!
You’ll find great treasures, grand parades of joy!
Time sits before you like a wind-up toy!
And shame on me for starting out this verse
With lines not meant for high chair, but for hearse!
Although I sometimes get the two confused…
Since life and death so beautifully are fused.

Small Talk

Hello, how are you?
I’m fine, how are you?
Good! The weather’s nice.
That’s certainly true.
How’s work working out?
I’m a snorf-gobbling elf!
Sorry, what did you say?
I said: well, and yourself?

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Hidden

Around the creepy corner
Along the spooky road
Behind the scary dungeon
Nearby the one-eyed toad
Beneath the growing storm clouds
Just past the 'lectric chair
Is your birthday gift! A brand new bike!
Aren’t you glad I hid it there?

Hearing Voices

Doctor, I have this problem, see,
there’s voices in my head and I—what? You think I’m schizophrenic?
No, I just barely hear these voices, and I—what? You want to give me meds?
But that’s not the problem, it’s just that these voices—what?
You want to lock me up? You’re saying pack my stuff?
No, I don’t mind the voices, it’s just that they're so quiet I can barely hear them, can you tell me how to make them loud enough? I think I need a special type of hearing aid.

Objectified

I have freakishly hot shoulder blades
But please don't fry bananas on them
I have an unusually frigid womb
But please don't keep your frozen lima beans in it
I have vacuum-sealing lips
But can't you just buy one of those FreshLock doohickeys?
I have lightning-quick sewing toes
But hemming another pant leg? Really? Would it kill you to grow your legs just three quarters of a goddamn inch?
I have egg-beater fingertips
But I swear Ill take your chickens to the middle of the woods and pluck them and tie cement bags to their claws and drop them in a lake if you ask for one more omelette
I have toasty hot hip bones but...
Okay fine I'll make you one more piece of toast.

Useful Tools

I can't
Do math in my head
I use a calculator.
I can't
Tell which way is North in my head
I use a compass.
I can't
Know when the steak is done in my head
I use a meat thermometer.
I can't
Make up erotica in my head
I use a calculator.
I can't
Tell if you're angry in my head
I use a compass.
I can't
Know if I will die soggy and wrinkled in my head
I use a meat thermometer.

Beware of Shark

You may have a sign that says: "Beware of Dog"
But my sign says: "Beware of Shark"
My guard shark has nine rows of razor sharp teeth
While your Doberman mostly just barks
Yes, my shark is so vicious he'll rip off the head
Of a thief who comes near my pig bank
He'll sink his jaws fast in potential assassins
...Or he would, were he not in a tank

A Pirate's Parrot Postulates What Precipitated An Eyepatch

I once was a pirate's parrot
But one time, when we'd both had some rum
My pirate smeared peanut butter
On his eyelid with his thumb.
Well, I'm nuts for peanut butter
And I figured, "Down the hatch!"
But my pirate yelped and whacked me
I'm the reason he now wears a patch

Tea with a Plastic Surgeon

A flat-chested woman named Lou
Had tea with a surgeon named Stew
She said, "May I request
That you implant some breasts?"
He said, "Certainly. One lump or two?"

Friday, December 2, 2011

A Blind Fish Seeks External Validation

A little blind fish was feeling blue
“Am I gifted?” he asked his mother
“Is there anything only I can do?
Am I unlike any other?
Does my future look sunny?
Will my life be a lark?”
Then CHOMP! Ain’t it funny?
His “mother” was a shark.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

The Hocused Pocused Crocus

A witch hocus pocused my crocus
Through a hole in my garden wall
She aimed her old wand with great focus
And mumbled, “Kazamagarawl!”
Now my crocus appears in odd places
Like inside the drain of my sink
Or stuck through my brand-new ballpoint pen
Where I could’ve sworn there was ink
I found it again in the tool shed
With its stem tied around an old saw
And then again during Thanksgiving
It popped out of old Aunt Midge’s bra
It showed up once more in my wallet
Where six bucks and two dimes used to be
And then it showed up in my teapot
And again in a bag of split peas
When I put two red socks in the dryer
And left them to dry for an hour
I scowled to find when I checked it
Just one lonely sock and that flower
Then the crocus appeared in my pantry
And once, when I ate soup at noon
The crocus appeared in my fingers
Which a second ago held a spoon
I once, by mistake, smoked the crocus
Though I’d just packed the pipe with hashish
And POOF—while out walking my Schnauzer
The crocus appeared on the leash!
Then the crocus showed up on my clock face
And always points to the wrong hour
And once when I peered in the mirror
I saw not my own face, but the flower’s!
Now if I thought it might make a difference
I think I would probably shout:
“Witch! You un-hocus pocus my crocus!
You’ve succeeded in creeping me out.”

We Don't Fit In

We don’t fit in; none of us do
We’re like size six feet in a size twelve shoe
We’re like embryonic penguins in monkey wombs
We’re like Mayan corpses in Egyptian tombs
We’re like paperboys at the royal ball
We’re like swear words on a grandma’s shawl
We’re like onions in a chocolate cake
We’re like thick fur on a slippery snake
We’re like Happy Meal toys in caviar tins
We’re like banana peels in recycling bins
We’re like a Catholic vegan at a kosher deli
We’re like a navel ring on an old nun’s belly
We’re like a rape scene in a Disney flick
We’re like pudding made with arsenic
We’re like strippers at a Mormon wedding
We’re like jungle dwellers going sledding
We’re like a newborn baby in a hearse
We’re like a jock strap in a woman’s purse
We’re like pumpkins carved at Christmastime
We’re like silent parrots and blabbering mimes
We want to be sexy, but we can’t say our R’s
We want to be Ferraris, but we’re beater cars
We’ll just never fit in, though it may be our goal
We’re all square pegs and the world’s a round hole.

A Bear and a Bee Shop for Underwear

A bear-sized bee and a bee-sized bear
Went shopping for some underwear
Well, the bear-sized bee chose a size 23
But the bee-sized bear's size wasn't there

The Fearsome Mustard Rat

I am the fearsome mustard rat
And when I see a hungry cat
Approach me with his drooly chops
I squeeze my bottle and kersplop!

Life vs. Afterlife

Of the Heaven’s Gate cult we ask, “Why?
Did those poor brainwashed souls have to die?”
But while they're out in space
On a wild comet chase
We’re stuck here working dull nine-to-fives

Societally Frowned Upon Alternatives to Salt and Pepper

While at home, a young fellow named Jude
Would use ashes to season his food
But at parties he learned
Not to reach for the urn
‘Cause the hosts seemed to think it quite rude