
They really want you.
They really do.
You gotta believe in something,
in this,
in that,
and the other thing,
in anything really.
Mind as well go with this.
It’s easy.
It’s here.
It takes no effort.
It demands nothing of you,
and you’re not alone.

They really want you.
They really do.
You gotta believe in something,
in this,
in that,
and the other thing,
in anything really.
Mind as well go with this.
It’s easy.
It’s here.
It takes no effort.
It demands nothing of you,
and you’re not alone.

There are unseen forces that oppose
motivation and seek to douse
the flames of inspiration.
Sirens sound,
waking up the dead;
thieves are on the run,
self-deprivation seems
both a cosmic effect
and an ethical imperative.
Memories are fragile; they
invariably slip away,
are easily destroyed,
and as you know,
motivation can be elusive,
absorbing the potency
of the cosmic shift.
When you add information,
it becomes ambiguous;
an odious atmosphere of tobacco, earthly morality,
and pickles,
connoting nothing pejorative.
The difference between knowingness
and knowledge is only
the echo of its source;
this deliquescence into a
comprehensive resonance
is, like the slow
beating of a giant’s heart,
a declaration of ignorance.
Inhabiting a world of their own
the waitress grabs the old coot,
and with some music
and bogus spiritualism
she licks the last of
the whipped cream
off her fingers.

Recruited to this stage,
this time,
along the itinerary
of unfolding existence;
blown senseless by
the whoosh of traffic;
others speeding towards their own
uncertain destinations,
that’s their business.
You shake it off;
your stage awaits.
Climbing the steps of intuition
you come to your own rescue,
with a joke, a song, or
a tall tale.
Your confidence rests in knowing that
nobody is paying attention.

Antique habits,
flaccid regrets,
dings and notches
of neglected days.