Friday night (mine) (it’s a poem).

Alight with all the essences

 

I call this Rain Diego, rain for one minute in San Diego

 

The only thing a Fanta and a persimmon have in common is color

 

On the bus Scott looks gorgeous with the night moving black behind him

 

The martinis have back-up olives & back-up gin

 

You know him in the biblical sense

 

HIPSTERS*HIPSTERS*HIPSTERSATTHEARTGALLERY

 

There’s something about knowing someone in the biblical sense that makes it okay to take sips from their drink

 

I should’ve stolen that tiny tiny decanter when I had the chance

 

There’s no such thing as practice floral arrangements. You don’t waste flowers!

 

An empty Dr. Pepper bottle in my greenleather pocket

 

Green leather red leather three friends in leather would be better

 

I feel like such a GIRL when I’m with you

 

This tiny red can of champagne. This tiny red can at the Tin Can Alehouse

 

That girl’s got a wind machine

 

That tiny dog just pooped on the bar room floor

 

-We just danced in circles around thrown-off shoes, you missed it

-Oh I didn’t miss it/I was just waiting/for you to finish doing your thing

 

You’re doing something wrong, without a doubt, but it’s not that you’re wrong

 

I’m goin’ down to the bus station baby with a suitcase in my hand

 

In circles on the bar room floor

 

Walking up 5th is not nearly as hard as Main Street in Pittsburgh

 

If you know someone in the Biblical sense you can lean on them and whisper (the music’s loud)

 

If you know someone in the Biblical sense they might be asleep in your bed against the floor near the ground that will be rained on

 

I’m goin’ down to the bus station baby with a suitcase in my hand

 

Those girls are too skinny for girls

 

Those girls are too SKINNY for boys!

 

A chile relleno burrito/

and sauce/

Hot sauce

Damn it feels good to have a sideyard.

 

The sideyard was better than ever before

The sideyard, according  to a new neighbor-friend named Neil “felt like the 60s again.”

The sideyard had around 70 people attend which is record-breaking for the sideyard

The sideyard had a tiki torch

The sideyard had such good loud music that the police came

The sideyard thanks “Tendrils,” the new house band, who will perform acoustically from here on out so that we don’t get evicted

According to a girl I met, the sideyard was “the most fun event I’ve ever been to.” EVER!

Neighbor and friend Jed said about the sideyard, “Don’t ever let me miss this again.”

The sideyard offered free wine and decaffeinated coffee

The morning after the sideyard I had both a real hangover as well as a happiness hangover

 

Thank you to everyone who came to the sideyard

Thank you to everyone who let themselves enjoy something so analog

Thank you to everyone for coming out to hear poetry; we poets need you, we poets are you, we are all poets

 

(photos by misha marston johnson)

I sideyard, you sideyard, we all go to the SIDEYARD

 

featuring the debut of the house band!

featuring flowers by ellie!

featuring “friends of the sideyard,” a group of loosely or not-at-all affiliated people who always come over to the sideyard!

featuring beer and wine if you bring it!

featuring foods also if you bring them!

featuring handmade arts for sale!

featuring poems spoken out loud!

be there or be square or be one of those people I love who lives very far away and can’t be there!

I agree with you, James Schuyler (quotations, photo).

from Schuyler’s dairies, which I spent last Thursday rifling through at the UCSD archives. Each day a new page in the typewriter.

 

“Most people don’t know how much time even a very short poem takes, even one just dashed down–trying to get it right. And the rest of us forget.” -January 4, 1968

 

“The visit to Darragh and Bridgehampton awakened a great longing for country living: I like the city, but I like to see things growing, to see blue and trembling skies, walk on the winter shore: the whole bag of tricks.” -October 15, 1984

Poem with boobs in it (mine).

The day I did not end up swimming

I have my bikini on, it makes me look like I have

some boobs. Yesterday at the market I held

up a big white peach and said to Annie, This is the size

boob I used to want, and she said it was a little big,

she shook her head at me, it was a B-maybe-a-C,

and she’s got As and I’ve got As and anyway what would we do

with that much more flesh? Annie’s a fruit

farmer and she’s got minor boobs but surplus

plums. She liked that yesterday’s market band was made

of dykes and so did I—girls on instruments is much

too rare. But back to the bikini—it’s made of blues

I love and I chose it to impersonate another girl,

that water type, eyes coppered by the sun with hair

blonde and knotted from the sand. I’m not that girl

at all; the ocean bullies me. I come up spitting

with my top and bottom moved and showing way

too much. I’m not the girl who owns a scooter either,

or the one who bakes to ease her stress. I’m usually

the one undressing or undressed, who looks alright

in layered clothes or none at all, not this bra

and undie set pretending to be outerwear for swimming.

I can’t accessorize or alter it, can’t make it somehow

not a brand’s idea of beach. Like Caity’s said, I hate to look

like anybody else and especially like everybody.

But Caity-all-the-way-in-Georgia: I’ll wear a bridesmaid’s

dress for you. I’ll wear whatever color that you choose

for us even if it’s closest to the color pink, a hue that

pukes atop me. I’ll wear it loud and proudly and will

only alter it as much as you allow or disallow me, just

one feather on the collar or pinned into the side. Because

on the day of someone else’s marriage, I’m really just

a woman in a dress like everybody else, there to swoon

and cry about some love performed, and for that role

any boobs at all will do, any outfit that you choose.

What I Learned in California.

 

A poor man’s carwash

means washing your entire vehicle

with the gas station squeegee

**

Eating a fig in public

is a sexual act

**

What’s your sign?

is never an inappropriate question

**

When it rains

it rains only very little

but it is good to talk about it as much as you can stand

**

I’ve never met a succulent

I didn’t like

**

Where have all the cowboys gone?

***

“I like brown beverages and…” (poem) (mine).

I like brown beverages and

stripping coriander with a friend

on the hot September stoop.

I like four books in a pile

with biggest on the bottom

and making spicy beans

and maybe even Loretta Lynn.

I like it when someone comes back

from a trip and they look a little

better than when they left.

I like the way one hand on my chest

and one on my back bookends

my heart and keeps it in.