nominal thought
nominal thought
Without forms, phones and Facebook,
there’s not much need to have a name when you’re dead.
— Zumwalt (2011)
nominal thought
Without forms, phones and Facebook,
there’s not much need to have a name when you’re dead.
— Zumwalt (2011)
Of Contrary Motion
The notes go 44 this way and 44 that.
You pick the upper half.
The low ones are much more attractive.
How can I boogie-woogie without the bass?
How do you manage staying sweet and serene?
It’s not melody I need, it’s the rumble of solid earth.
It’s not the airy fluff that keeps me filled, it’s the meat and potatoes of life.
As you go up, I go down.
To the right you go,
I am off to the left.
And yet on your rare descents
And my occasional rising up
We meet.
And in those moments,
past the awkward near-collisions,
we again are as one
and forsake our vows of yin and yang.
— zumwalt (2011)
Better than
The land and water is haunted with beasts.
Some are carnivorous;
Some are microscopic;
None are smart like us
or entitled to dine at a good restaurant.
They think, we think, but differently.
None speak Mandarin or Cape York Pidgin English.
They have offspring and some care for their young,
Some eat their young,
But not a one makes contributions to a college fund.
I can wear them as hats, or mount them on my wall
But I can’t suffer this idea that they deserve representation in Congress.
I can grill them on coals, or tie them to my sled
But I won’t consider giving them my email address.
Evolution is a dusty and poorly mapped path
Nonetheless, it does not cross upon itself
And head back many miles
So that one easily confuses the end with its beginning.
It doesn’t jump from amoebas to mudfish and then back down to insects
then jump up to chimpanzees, over to worms and across to chihuahuas.
It progresses steadily, more or less,
from moss to shrimp to clown fish
to red-legged frog to crocodile
and then on to penguin or duck,
next visiting the platypus,
on to rabbits and rats
and terriers and tigers,
or lemurs and monkeys
and gibbons, gorillas,
bonobos, and our friends next door,
the Millers.
At the top are we,
and granted certain privilege and priority.
We can extend our parking lots
and re-engineer the best sun-bathing spots.
At the peak are we
with our rhubarb pie and peach-ginger iced tea.
We have power of attorney to set fires to ancient trees
and reclaim land from the South China Sea.
The air and ocean is haunted with creatures.
Some are carniverous;
Some are microscopic;
None should have free trespass without our permission.
We should put up security gates
And start up detailed dossiers.
Every genus should have a dedicated database;
Every species captured in a redundant set of disk arrays.
They may think that we think they are not much different than we
But none speak Mandarin, Hindi, Hungarian or Burmese.
They have offspring so that their lineage continues on
But that’s up to us and little to do with them.
We may not hang on.
We are a destructive bunch
With a vicious knock-out punch.
We may not survive the dawn,
but if we do manage to last
and hold on as the entitled upper class
they need to take note
most carefully
that we not only own all we buy, lease or see
but in the end,
we can certainly ensure
that none of them,
aggressively,
or at their leisure,
pass us
on any given branch
of the post-Darwinian,
well groomed,
often pruned,
evolutionary
tree.
— Zumwalt (2011)
manic defensive
you increasingly tax yourself
draining resources
to protect against countries not yet on any map
increasing the deficit
inadvertently but effectively inhibiting productivity
you increasingly ask yourself
about potential dangers
unseen, unheard, and unimagined
escalating this monologue
extending your enclosure
inappropriately but efficiently prohibiting new activity
this enemy is inescapable
indefensible
inexhaustible
this enemy is indefinable
inexplainable
incomprehensible
indescribable
we watch where once was wonder
now
is preemptive concern
we watch where once was welcome
now
is just an overly aggressive strategy
to avoid getting irreparably burned
you build a war-head-woven, awkwardly weaponed wall that uses every available resource
to protect against inadvertent encroachment
or accidental contact
you endlessly engineer an increasingly entangled, enemy-engaging entrapment
that escalates every single skirmish into another world war.
this enemy is exactly
as you imagine
this enemy is kept alive
by every single missile that is manufactured for your future use
you say it’s time to end this all
either by self-destruction or surrender
you understand that victory is not a condition
only just the irreversible promise of more bloodshed yet to come
–Zumwalt (2011)
Time
Time is a concept
By which we can relate energy and space.
I’ll say it again,
Time is a concept
By which we can relate energy and space.
I don’t believe in time zones.
I don’t believe in time clocks.
I don’t believe in the World Time Server.
I don’t believe in timeshares.
I don’t believe in Daylight Savings Time.
I don’t believe in egg timers.
I don’t believe in timesheets.
I don’t believe in quality time.
I don’t believe in real time applications.
I don’t believe in Time Magazine.
I don’t believe in time outs.
I don’t believe in the New York Times.
I don’t believe in railway timetables.
I don’t believe in reunions in Times Square.
I don’t believe in triple overtimes.
I don’t believe in Time Travel.
I don’t believe in the end of time
I don’t beleive in the beginning of time
I don’t believe in Once Upon a Time!
I just believe in space,
space and energy.
And that’s reality.
The poem is over.
Not.
–Zumwalt
propulsive retraction
because he retreats she goes after
now convinced that he is more than worthy of her
and when he approaches she retreats
certain that she would be accepting
less
than what she can get
she is unaware of how she is
pulled
and
pushed back and forth like
moonlit
tide of some California beach
she
is only aware of some vague confusion
and exasperation
in this marketplace you look carefully at weight and shape, knowing that
it is impossible to judge
content
in this marketplace you try not to keep a total of cost or the number of
items
taken of the shelf
she momentarily searches to say something
that she can later withdraw
she has aleady forgotten that it always pulls her
hardest
and head first.
— Zumwalt (1991)
They’ve Stripped the Forest for Babble
Reams and reams
The black-ink symbols innundate
Flooding consciousness with printed words
that possess
Definitions but know no meaning
Tectonics,
Aardvarks,
political history of Byzantine hydraulics.
Dewey decimal has run rampant
Chasing, haunting, even lurking
in the restroom
Parasitically clinging to the walls
Stark and blatant waste or frivolous gaud
Venus dies --
--
-- nonsensical nausea
The ice-age is returning
— Zumwalt (1974)
Imperfect information
You and I face off
with battleships on secret squares
sequentially taking pot shots wherever we choose.
A thin board separates our lines of sight
A thick carpet, underneath.
This is a sequential game
even when I attack out of turn
each and every move
is built on the one before.
Round after round
we proudly announce
a target square.
Sometimes we hit
Sometimes we miss
But never fail to attack.
Salvo, my friend
When you are most relaxed
and think all is calm waters.
As long as there are ships afloat
There will be missiles launched
across these now choppy seas.
Salvo, my friend
All shots at once
against our better judgment.
As long as there are missiles to launch
There will be ships targeted
aggravating these now choppy seas.
But once it is clear
there is some chance at sinking even one ship
We pull back,
bend the rules,
re-arrange our positions,
midway,
put some ships
in reserve,
deny any cease fire
and secretly fill out our battle reports.
-zumwalt (2011)
the analysis of falling
when going down it pays to plan ahead
and calculate the moment of impact if there is going to be one at all.
It is not so good to remember how it started
or to speculate on how to stop.
the best thing to do is enjoy it.
and if you can’t enjoy it, make notes.
-zumwalt (1991)