Monday, June 15, 2026

Behind the Paint


There’s a poet with a lazy pen

who lives here deep inside of me

He sees the things that we all see

then questions just how can this be,

His logic sometimes sits askew

he sees the old as something new

he sees the new without its paint

then rhymes the things that good folks kaint

 

 

zc








 

 

  

Set Me At The Curb

 


Don’t deplete our savings
        to save the likes of me
        Morphine is expensive
        locked up as you can see
        Don’t hand out all our money
        when things are looking grim
        you needn’t even feed me
        I don’t mind being slim
        It’s not the bell that tolls for me
        it’s the trash truck that you hear
        set me out along the curb
        as soon as they are near
        They’ll take me to the landfill
        where I can go in peace
        the flock of lovely seagulls
        can surely have a feast.

 

 zc

Loose Translations

 

Stepping into the depths of a dark thought can sometimes leave imaginary gum on your shoe.
            Mahatma Koat

 

The gear ratio within a windmill mechanism is the same as that on an English Racer bicycle, but without the handbrake.

 

Spending too many years working with a microscope can accelerate your fear of touching any surface.

 

It was through the study of octogenarians that resulted in the refrigeration of cheese.  In Latin: Quo maior, eo frigidior fies. The older you get the colder you become.

 

 Give a man a fish and he'll eat for a day.  If he doesn't like fish he'll order take-out. 


Time travel is always 20-20.




 

 

 

Some of my Favorite Lyrics

 

In the chilly hours and minutes
of uncertainty
Donovan

 

Broken windows & empty hallways
        Randy Newman

 

Can’t you see
        what that woman’s been doing to me
        Marshall Tucker Band

 

 

 

 

Sunday, June 14, 2026

A Change of Habit

 

I would have to say it began with the snake.  Ever since that day I have not stepped into the garage without first looking down.  I don’t even think about it anymore, it has become a habit.  Look before stepping.  The day I opened the door looking down and saw the pair of shoes, looking up was too late.  The fist was already heading towards my face.  I was knocked back into the kitchen, landing flat on my back, my head striking the hard tile floor.  This looked to be a water delivery man gone off the rails.   

Looking up from the floor I could see that the hand that didn’t hit me was still supporting the large 5-gallon bottle of water on his shoulder.  He hadn’t bothered to set it down.  Of course, my first thought was that if I were going to pick a fight with someone, I’d want both hands free.  But that’s just me, I guess. 

My next thought, as I lay there on the floor, was that I was now on the same level as the snakes that get into my garage.  Not at all where I wanted to be.  I had to get to my feet and inform this delivery guy that I was not happy with his service and I wouldn’t be paying him.

While I was getting to my feet, he had walked over to the kitchen table and taken a seat on one of the chairs.  He put his head in his hand and began to cry, telling me in between his blubbering, that he was sorry, he was just having a bad day. 

The crying was unexpected. Not the punch—life has thrown worse at me than a man with a water jug and poor impulse control—but the crying. That part threw me off balance more than the tile floor had.

He sat there, shoulders shaking, the big blue bottle still perched on him like some kind of emotional parrot. I stood there rubbing my jaw, trying to decide if I should offer him a tissue or a stern lecture about customer service.

“Bad day,” he kept saying. “Bad day.” As if that explained the fist.

I glanced toward the garage door again, half-expecting a snake to slither in and offer its own apology. At this point, it wouldn’t have surprised me.

I finally pulled out a chair and sat across from him. Not because I wanted to, but because standing made me feel like I was looming over a wounded animal, and I’ve never been good at looming.

“Look,” I said, “I get it. We all have days where we want to punch someone. But usually we don’t actually do it.”

He nodded. “I know,” he said. “I know. I just… snapped.”

“Next time,” I said, “snap in the truck.”

He let out a wet, hiccupping laugh.

And then, because the universe enjoys timing, the garage made a sound. A soft, sliding, unmistakable sound.

We both froze.

I didn’t even have to look. I knew that sound.

“Snake?” he whispered.

“Snake,” I confirmed.

And for the first time since he hit me, we were on the same team.

 

 

 

 

 

 zc

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

No longer just sounds


 Even in daylight it comes around. 





Stepping into New Technology

 



with baby steps