Wish You’d Come Help Me–

Wish You’d Come Help Me–

They call me a summer,
so I’ll probably meet you in winter
because that’s just who I am,
but hopefully you know that already.
***
They say you’ll be wrapped in golden twine,
like the kind that ties our lives together
and roughly translates heart to head
or lends magic to my dreams of your smile.

Yes, the twine we both wear in those dreams of mine,
when we spelunk into stars and laugh at life,
and when you help me believe in everything again,
even those times we lived planets apart.

These shimmery strings chafe music on my memories,
the futures and pasts of my past and future lives,
and the violin’s bow is yours now, as it’s always been,
the stranger who snows soft music into my lives.
***
Snow falls from my coat, splashing drab bookshelves–
wait, have I heard this song before?
My heart stops and I see gold, then hear it and taste it.
“Can I help you with anything today, sir?”

Those eyes look so familiar.


If you’re currently struggling to find something to believe in, let me offer you some heartfelt advice: eye-contact will help.

Love always,

your Mister

You Say You Love Me,

You Say You Love Me,

“Love the sinner, hate the sin”
still proudly preaches hate within,
so please don’t say you love me
if you think my love is sin.

For when you say you love me,
and I make to say it back,
my peaceful heart will meet with hate
from understanding that you lack.

You shouldn’t say you love me
when fear and hatred lie below,
for what you’re feeling isn’t love,
just a word you think you know.

I hate none of what you do,
and even less of who you are,
therefore it masks insanity
to hate me from afar.


You are not capable of both hatred and spiritual Love.

Love always,

your Mister

Miss Lonelyhearts Embraces the Cripple

Miss Lonelyhearts Embraces the Cripple

Such an ancient and evolutionary magic, Love, so often invoked and so rarely successfully. You are the spellbook, as we are all spellbooks, so you must study it. “It” means your Self and the quality of its relationships to other Selves with other spellbooks, who are just as ancient and evolutionary as you.

If you spent more time studying this Book of Self, you would no longer fear being alone; loneliness is the best lighting by which to read, and the content of your own book assures you that loneliness will never be anything to fear, so long as it is embraced and cooperated. You are whole; you are reminded of the Thing that entered your body and never left, that immensely yearning throb to believe in the best of yourself and all selves.

As you read yourself more, you will be able to imagine things you never dreamt possible. Your mind and soul will be filled with the vocabulary to create a world of miracles, with every child fed, loved, and educated about the most effective ways they can contribute. You will someday understand that people are born racial, uniquely sexual and gendered, but nobody is born saying things like, “Oh, I don’t think I could ever marry a black guy.”


I know a lot of people have a “type,” as in, a typical appearance to which they’re sexually attracted. But please keep two things in mind: 1.) it’s dangerously easy to mistake socially programmed responses for genuine personal attraction, and 2.) you miss out on most of what life offers when you judge your experiences by appearance alone.

Love always,

your Mister

P.S. – The title of this poem comes from Chapter 11 (“Miss Lonelyhearts and the Cripple”) of Nathanael West’s Miss Lonelyhearts, the novella upon which this entire project is based.

My First Heart-to-Heart

I’ve been grappling with what exactly to write about here, but after I realized that today is World Mental Health Day, I decided to share something I wrote “last night” as I struggled to fall asleep at 4 a.m. I was still reeling from the presidential debate, and I was painfully trying to stomach a Truth that I can never quite seem to internalize: the ABSOLUTE BEST we can hope for is a lifetime of baby-steps toward a better world. I grabbed my phone and typed something I needed to get out of me:

I struggle daily with an immense self-loathing. It starts on the outside but it penetrates me so deeply, to the very core of who I am. It pierces every molecule of every synapse behind all my thoughts and actions. I rarely act upon this loathing anymore, but for most of my life it was my main motivating force. And still, it’s always there. Maybe it always will be. I write to document this war within myself, to remember the beauty and goodness that has fallen in defense of the beauty and goodness that still exists. I describe these battles in as great of detail as I can manage, fueled by the Hope that these stories can help you in the fight against your own demon. We all have one. I actually think everyone’s demon is the same. But I have faith that you’re stronger than I’ve been, even stronger than YOU’VE been. You’ll probably even vanquish your demon for good. Someday. Until then, maybe you can help me with mine, or someone else with theirs. We all need all the help we can get.”

I’d been feeling rather blocked and uninspired lately, but the clouds parted a bit once I confessed this to myself. In my writings recently, I’ve felt a tremendous pressure to only express my positive thoughts, but that one-sided pursuit actually caused the goodness in me to weaken–because I wasn’t honoring its struggle. The unhealthy thoughts were actually growing stronger because I hadn’t paid attention to them in so long; they were exacerbated by election-season madness . . . you know, the feeling that you’re never doing enough to help but also that you could never do enough to really help anyway. . .

Let me know if there’s anything I can do to help!

Love always,

Mister L.

Miss Lonelyhearts Always Returns

Miss Lonelyhearts Always Returns

Sometimes my soul grows tired,
tired as the twilit sky,
tired of this body it calls home:
this body that needs washed,
fed each day and put to sleep,
this body that will die a baby,
having never outgrown its constant need.
This body must always come or leave,
and it walks the same hallways,
climbs to descend the same stairs
and get to the same places;
they say a third of life is spent asleep,
but what fraction expresses the time
spent walking to and from the same bed?
Everything done again feels wasteful.

I avoid mirrors on these tired days,
because it’s hard to look myself in the eyes
and say I love me, even the least important part:
this hairy, wrinkled, blushing thing
that hosts a soul you think you’ve seen,
baked in clay and covered with pieces
and marks we must learn to love or die unloved;
they say the body is a temple or garden, and I know
those are meant to look different in different light,
cast uneven shadows and move clumsily through time,
then disappear altogether, making room for new things.
So maybe I, like they, will teach people
how to be immortal in transience, by existing after I exist,
in stories and paintings, or in unspoken memories of how
I gave the world goodness by letting it happen in and around me.

Another tired night, bombarded by Death
of people, youth, and opportunity. I close the door,
turn off the lights and face the lifeless, lightless mirror;
I stare into the blackness and pray, searching the invisibility,
alone, to find a trace of goodness in the universe inside.
I allow myself to forget that I’m meat and bone
enslaved to needs, reliance, and vanity. In the abyss
I hear an echo; it’s me, quoting Dostoevsky to a friend:

“I think the devil doesn’t exist, but man has created him . . . in his own image and likeness.” “Beauty is mysterious as well as terrible.
God and the devil are fighting there, and the battlefield is the heart of man.” “To love someone is to see him as God intended him.”

Having seen my soul in the voice with no sound, I turn on the lights,
illuminating my body and the truth that I’m free
to love again, without feeling wasteful.


This poem was inspired by one of Artur Deus Dionísio’s Instagram photos, in which he stands before a mirror; he wrote this caption for it: “‘Mirror, is it true, you don’t even have a true color?’ None at all, you know, I’m not the one you seek when you see me: I’m your mirage, but you’re my slave #cage #mirror.” As someone who’s struggled with body image issues for most of my life, this caption struck a chord with me. I challenged myself to play a lovely little serenade to myself in that chord, and this poem is the result. I hope it resonates with someone out there, so we can keep this beautiful music going.

I became acquainted with Artur after I downloaded an amazing app called DailyArt, which provides me with a daily dose of inspiration. Every day, the app displays a new work of art, along with a descriptive discussion of the artist and theme. His discussions are always my favorite, so I cyber-stalked him and the rest is history. I highly recommend this app to anyone with even the slightest creative sensibilities; actually, I just recommend this app to EVERYONE. I promise it will inspire you by reminding you that Life is Art and that nobody is ever alone.

Love always,

your Mister

P.S. – The title of this poem comes from Chapter 10 (“Miss Lonelyhearts Returns”) of Nathanael West’s Miss Lonelyhearts, the novella upon which this entire project is based.

I Make Vows for You

I Make Vows for You

I want so many things, and so few of them seem to make sense.

I want to feel the raindrops tapdancing their short lives
against windows and rooftops and soil,
unleashing an ancient, pregnant fragrance,
but I don’t want my skin to get wet;
I want to hear the ice and wind singing their frantic, timeless duet,
the song that’s been perfect since its first harmony
when they performed for an empty theater,
but I don’t want my skin to freeze.

I want to write a book, and then I want to marry that book
or marry the thing that I used to write it;
I want everyone in the world to feel married to themselves
or not married at all.
I want Love to feel warm and sacred and whole,
not sticky and salty and wiped-away;
I want people not to laugh at Love
like they laugh at things they don’t want to be afraid of anymore.

I want to be a man who is pregnant with the Child of god,
and I want the Child of god to be an idea,
some arrangement of words or music or things
that people can think about and repeat whenever they feel sad or angry
so they won’t feel so sad or angry anymore.
I want to birth this Child through some creative miracle,
so I can die fulfilled and ascend to the heavens as a virgin-of-sorts,
warm and sacred and whole, and One with the raindrops, the ice and the wind.

I’m not sure what these things are, these abstractions that I want,
these ideas in a dimension of metal and blood.
All I know is this: whenever I need hope that they exist in a mattering way,
I journey to a place within myself; sometimes this place is an island,
sometimes it’s a mountaintop, and sometimes it’s a refreshing oasis,
forty-days deep within a desert cursed with tempting mirages.
But I know it when I find it
because I always unearth an ageless holy relic there,
The Truth of the First Conscious Breath;
it’s a tablet of stone and wood and steel and light,
emblazoned with a tenfold commitment:

I shall never seek revenge;
I shall forgive without forgetting;
I shall be honest about emotions;
I shall see opportunities in disappointment;
I shall question fear;
I shall amend misunderstanding;
I shall act to defend, not to offend;
I shall admire instead of envy;
I shall love, never hate;
I shall recognize myself in everyone;

and I commit myself to this concerted kindness
of bettering the world by bettering myself.


This dreamy poem uses matrimonial references to introduce my Ten Commitments.

Love always,

your Mister

my last drink

November 21, 2021
1492 days ago.

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