Thursday, August 16, 2012
Bats Right, Throws Left
I came down from the mountains
a devout S.F. Giants fan, thanks
to radio and the Sacramento Bee.
I came down from the mountains
never having played pee-wee,
Little League, Legion, or Babe Ruth ball.
I was a baseball immigrant.
I batted left because my brother
Sven, a leftie, taught me to hit. I'd
become what I'd learn was a
dead-pull-hitter. And
I had a glove from the Montgomery
Ward catalog. So in high school,
I could hit the cut-off man, catch
a fly, charge a base-hit, and bunt.
At bat I was afraid of the ball:
No, not quite right. Conceptually,
I hadn't found evidence that one
shouldn't be afraid of the ball,
especially after team-mate Eddie,
nicest guy but wild, drilled me twice
in the back. Still, I went three-
for-three one bright Spring day,
with a base-on-balls, runs scored.
But out in right field, a pasture
made for me, I often drifted
mentally, considered slipping
away ("Slip away, slip away ...").
Someone would hit a liner out
there. Manager, teammates,
and the sprinkling of fans would
say, Hey, where's the right-fielder?
And I'd be lying down with a brown
woman in a blonde meadow, or
taking a midnight train to Rome,
or writing this poem.
--Hans Ostrom 2012
a devout S.F. Giants fan, thanks
to radio and the Sacramento Bee.
I came down from the mountains
never having played pee-wee,
Little League, Legion, or Babe Ruth ball.
I was a baseball immigrant.
I batted left because my brother
Sven, a leftie, taught me to hit. I'd
become what I'd learn was a
dead-pull-hitter. And
I had a glove from the Montgomery
Ward catalog. So in high school,
I could hit the cut-off man, catch
a fly, charge a base-hit, and bunt.
At bat I was afraid of the ball:
No, not quite right. Conceptually,
I hadn't found evidence that one
shouldn't be afraid of the ball,
especially after team-mate Eddie,
nicest guy but wild, drilled me twice
in the back. Still, I went three-
for-three one bright Spring day,
with a base-on-balls, runs scored.
But out in right field, a pasture
made for me, I often drifted
mentally, considered slipping
away ("Slip away, slip away ...").
Someone would hit a liner out
there. Manager, teammates,
and the sprinkling of fans would
say, Hey, where's the right-fielder?
And I'd be lying down with a brown
woman in a blonde meadow, or
taking a midnight train to Rome,
or writing this poem.
--Hans Ostrom 2012
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Spam Found-Poem: "Hot Workplace Free"
Hot workplace free!
Workplace condition: your house
Years old: older
Pay schedule: pays for each hours
We are waiting for your reply.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
But It Does
I don't know
why the yellow-jacket
stands motionless
on a pale green
wrinkled new leaf
of lettuce in sunlight.
But it does.
I don't know
why the universe
keeps occurring.
But it does.
--Hans Ostrom, 2012
why the yellow-jacket
stands motionless
on a pale green
wrinkled new leaf
of lettuce in sunlight.
But it does.
I don't know
why the universe
keeps occurring.
But it does.
--Hans Ostrom, 2012
Monday, August 6, 2012
Sunday, August 5, 2012
Not Afraid of Zombies
I'm not afraid
of no zombies.
They walk too slow.
I'm not afraid
of no werewolves.
They're dogs, you know.
The monsters
to keep an eye on
are the people
who seem okay.
They'll mess you up
every which damn way.
--Hans Ostrom, 2012
of no zombies.
They walk too slow.
I'm not afraid
of no werewolves.
They're dogs, you know.
The monsters
to keep an eye on
are the people
who seem okay.
They'll mess you up
every which damn way.
--Hans Ostrom, 2012
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Every Revery
Every revery swells
the sails of one's invisible ship.
Thinking is traveling,
and the brain is wet and salty.
The mind it harbors
is bigger than the grandest
ocean we have ever mapped
and bigger than the biggest sea
we've ever dreamed.
--Hans Ostrom, 2012
the sails of one's invisible ship.
Thinking is traveling,
and the brain is wet and salty.
The mind it harbors
is bigger than the grandest
ocean we have ever mapped
and bigger than the biggest sea
we've ever dreamed.
--Hans Ostrom, 2012
Of Poverty
“What is harder for the nonpoor to see is poverty as
acute distress: The lunch that consists of Doritos or hot dog rolls,
leading to faintness before the end of the shift. The “home” that is
also a car or a van. The illness or injury that must be “worked
through,” with gritted teeth, because there’s no sick pay or health
insurance and the loss of one day’s pay will mean no groceries for the
next. These experiences are not part of a sustainable lifestyle, even a
lifestyle of chronic deprivation and relentless low-level punishment.
They are, by almost any standard of subsistence, emergency situations.
And that is how we should see the poverty of so many millions of
low-wage Americans—as a state of emergency.”
— | Barbara Ehrenreich, Nickel and Dimed |
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
The Checklist
reasonably healthy today? check
not in poverty? check
enough to eat? check
not in jail? check
got a job? check
have someone to love? check
memory intact? check
not in imminent danger of getting killed or raped or both? check
getting laid? check, check
benefiting from helping someone? check
access to clean water? check
indoor plumbing that works? check
lights and heat? check
roof over your head, and a bed? check
something to read? check
then count your fucking blessings and/or stop whining
--Hans Ostrom, 2012
not in poverty? check
enough to eat? check
not in jail? check
got a job? check
have someone to love? check
memory intact? check
not in imminent danger of getting killed or raped or both? check
getting laid? check, check
benefiting from helping someone? check
access to clean water? check
indoor plumbing that works? check
lights and heat? check
roof over your head, and a bed? check
something to read? check
then count your fucking blessings and/or stop whining
--Hans Ostrom, 2012
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)