Poetry Volumes

Yesterday's Makeup Poems

Home of the Lights on Friday

On a sunny day, you can feel the heat of the oil

Pulsing beneath a worldly, weather beaten desert.


To think they made a movie here.

Crowds of extras cheering in a stadium

Built like a monument to the Friday night lights.

People desperate for a paycheck

In a desolate economy.

Lining up at the local thrift shops buying

Costumes of the late eighties.


Not much here, but dust and concrete

Choking the air out of the imagination.

Still,

In the waves of heat floating above the roadway,

There is heart.

Heart for survival of the creative soul.

Heart for the common man or woman

Wandering the asphalt.


Trees growing only where they are planted

Much like the people.

That pine won't live long

Without the benefit of a water hose.

Terrain flat as ocean viewed by tourist on beach.

Occasional tornadoes, whisk the outskirts of town

Just to stir us all up and make us feel alive.


There is no autumn here.

Just a drop kick over the cliff from summer to winter.

Spring obscured by red dust rising on the horizon

Blasting the color from your cheeks.

Naturally occurring exfoliation of skin and creativity.

Dreaded winter, mostly sun, wind

And occasional ice-storm.

Fourth of July in triple digits

Burning hotter than the

Sparks on the arm of the idiot

With the hand held bottle rocket.


In boom or bust

The dust never quite settles between blowings.

Yet it clings to the comfort of our homes

And ceiling fans.

The smell of chemicals in the air called money.

Black gold for those who

Move away to more

Humid climates.


Haunted by the ghosts of dinosaurs and prohibition

In the howl of progress.

We live and love to find oasis in the eyes

Of our closest friends

Rejoicing when the gray sky turns to rain

To nourish the seed of dried up tumbleweeds

Hanging on the fences.