Life is Like “The Boston”

There’s more to a marathon than meets the eye

It’s a metaphor for living.
Like “The Boston,” life’s a race.
There are hills, downpours and shin splints.
There’s a stiff wind in your face.

While you run it flanked by others,
often times you feel alone.
You get winded and discouraged.
You’re exhausted to the bone.

Life is never like a cake walk.
It’s a marathon at best.
It’s a measure of endurance.
It’s a complicated test.

But a second wind awaits you
if you pace yourself each day.
Dropping out is not an option.
Finish strong! Go all the way!

You Don’t Know Jack

Ignorance to what Jackie Robinson did 60 years ago;
The Puss of Prejudice

You don’t know Jack
whose oiled bat
could swing with endless grace.

You don’t know Jack
who dodged much flack
like millions of his race.

You don’t know Jack
who freed the blacks
and steeled their walk toward home.

You don’t know Jack
and looking back
you hardly are alone.

You don’t know Jack,
whose home run crack
in Brooklyn made him great.

You don’t know Jack.
Admit your lack
by being born too late.

The Puss of Prejudice
Why the Don Imus Show deserves to be gonged.

I must insist
Imus must go.
Those Rutgers girls
are hardly ‘ho’s.

Don’s oozing bias
(much like puss)
is quite revolting.
Can the cuss.

Unlike the grace
the Dodgers showed
to Jackie R
so long ago

Don Imus proves
we’ve not arrived.
His comments mean
racisim thrives.

The likes of him
cause hurt and fear.
So drain the puss.
He’s out of here!

His free speech rights
were rather wrong.
Chuck Barris please
go bang the gong.

Good Friday Now and Then

Looking at the past through the lens of the present

The calendar above my desk
announces that today is a good Friday.

But the headlines of my morning paper
counter that claim.
A river of crimson blood
flows through the parched dirt streets
of an ancient city.

It’s a pity really.
Innocent life snuffed out.
Victimized by fanatic fundamentalists.
Warring factions who fashion a wardrobe of power
cloaking the city in a sinister fog.

“Bag dad and bury him,”
a jaded widow doubled in grief
chides her frightened children.
“Hurry please, before your father is disposed
upon some garbage heap.”

This mother’s mourning
continues late into the night.

“I rock my babies to sleep
wishing them sweet dreams
all the while praying my own will come true.
Dreams that my sons and daughters will be able
to grow up without being blown up
never to wake again.”

The complaint of the ancient psalmist is voiced anew.
“Where is God anyway?”
“Why has He forsaken the helpless anyhow?”

The mother of Jesus knew a similar sorrow.
Hunched at the foot of a Roman cross,
Mary inched back in fear and revulsion.
Her swollen eyes looked through
tear-stained fingers at a lifeless body.
It was a body she knew only too well.

This dead man was once the baby
she had gently rocked to sleep.
This bloody corpse had once been the toddler
whose bloodied knees she had tenderly bandaged.
This object of her grief had (not so long ago)
been her twelve-year-old Bar Mitzvah boy.
You know.
The one who went missing for three days
only to eventually to be found in the Temple
talking with the elders.

And now that life
(which God had supernaturally given her)
was gone.

As she lived her own nightmare that day,
I doubt Mary dared to dream
she would again find her Son in three days time.

The injustice was just too blinding.
The pain too intense.
The reasons why the blood was flowing
not nearly clear enough.

Two women (separated by two millennia)
drank bitter dregs from a common cup.
One lost an Iraqi husband.
The other a Jewish son.
For neither was it a good Friday.
It was a bad news day all the way.

And in the midst of human agony
the likes of which few of us could possibly imagine,
God has a way of showing up unannounced and unexpected.

It’s called Easter.

The Bar Mitzvah boy did it again!

Take Me Out to the Ballgame (Revisited)

A needed diversion from a non-ending war

O please take me out to the ballgame.
I’m tired of bloodshed and war.
And though it’d be nice if the home team prevails,
I’m not that concerned with the score.

What I need is a break from the headlines.
Nine innings away from Iraq.
Just give me some strike outs and several home runs
before CNN brings me back.

Our bases in Bahgdad and elsewhere
are loaded with B-52s.
And though I am glad that those jets are on base,
I’m weary of watching the news.

Today I’ll choose four other bases
and offensive weapons called bats.
The non-ending toll in both dollars and lives
will give way to some happier stats.

This poem originally appeared on this website three years ago

The Road Less Traveled

A directionally-challenged poet’s Lenten reflections

Even though it’s Holy Week,
the road I seek
isn’t necessarily the cobblestone one
once carpeted with wilted palms
and stained by an innocent man’s blood.

Too often I’m guilty
of being directionally-challenged
(or simply disobedient).
My leather-bound Map Quest
indicates the ancient Via Dolorosa
is the road that leads
to my desired destination.

Still, it is not the path
on which I always find myself.
It is not the route of least resistance.
It is unpaved and steep.
It appears to be too narrow.

You see, I love the bright lights
of Broadway.
I’m captivated by the commotion
of Wall Street.
I’m preoccupied with the happenings
on Pennsylvania Avenue.
I’m drawn to the glitz and glamour
of Rodeo Drive.
I’m a sucker for the Penthouses
of Park Place that call out to me.

In spite of being convinced
there is One who knows me at my worst
yet loves me just the same,
I am somehow capable
of coming up with endless explanations
for why I am not satisfied
with my Lover’s lane.

Yet He whispers in my heart
that His street of dreams
is guaranteed to lead me to a good Friday
and an even better Sunday.

And so I have a choice.
I can persist on
on an all-too-familiar pathway
overgrown by great intentions
and not-so-wonderful results.

Or I can make my way to
an overlooked trail
on which the footprints
of a risen dead man
can still be traced.

One is a well-traveled road
that really goes nowhere.
The other is an unpopular trail
that leads beyond the cul-de-sac
of a bloodied cross and an empty tomb
to a desirable court where
justice resides with grace.

This week (compass in hand)
I have a decision to make.
Hopefully, come Easter morning,
Scott Peck won’t be the only one
with first-hand experience
taking a road less traveled.