Ask my clan’s best three to eat
And to a man they would repeat
We love breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Anything less, and we’d be thinner
Bryson Thomas
Ask my clan’s best three to eat
And to a man they would repeat
We love breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Anything less, and we’d be thinner
Bryson Thomas
A true optimist is flooded with worries
but still tries to float every day.
Bryson Thomas
You are my safe place
My worn words are best place
My skin-prickling storm place
My bread in the air place
My oh-here-we-go place
My juice in a peach place
My crunch of dry leaves place
My rain on tin roofs place
My cat with the cream place
My un-tell a lie place
My brine in the tears place
My chest out to fear place
My share of a scare place
My reword the past place
My new things to do place
My glimpse of the later place
My there goes my breath place
And let’s go to that place
And come back to my place
And then go to your place
This whole town is our place
Forever is now place
Bryson Thomas
Some people make the world go ’round.
Others just sit and spin.
Bryson Thomas
Someone taped hair to a rocket,
It’s zinging through the room,
Shattering the speed of sound,
Blam!
Whoosh!
Scruffle!
Boom!
Exit stage left,
Enter stage right,
It’s a three stage rocket,
Scooting out of sight.
Air.
Floor.
Couch.
Door.
This object is in MOTION
And it’s filling ALL of space.
But whats that Houston?
A pointed nose.
Frozen.
There.
In place.
A tongue extends.
A scent portends
Across the lunar seas.
A rump touch down.
A whimper sounds.
Wet eyes projecting pleas…
And, yes. Control [sniff]
We can confirm [sniff sniff]
The moon IS made of cheese!
GULP!!!
Bryson Thomas
Four foot and eleven inches of grit
Wearing violent red shoes.
Hijacking life
From the seat of a gold Honda Civic
Indigo boa held hostage for the ride.
Brahms plays on oblivious
From speakers
On the dash.
Old 33’s on BBC
As the browbeaten car blows one-twenty.
There is no rush of course.
But, of course
There’s a rush from rushing
You should know –
Short legs move faster
To keep up.
Bryson Thomas
Sweet shadow
Embrace me this night
Warm, in the under-sheet spaces
With comfort
And lover’s embraces.
Sweet shadow
Enstage me this night
Odeon to sandpaper dreams
That polish my mind
In unconscious streams.
Sweet shadow
Unchain me this night
Hide me from governing eyes
Data collectors
And ravening spies
Sweet shadow
Becalm me this night
Your dark trunk a rest for my back
As I find meditation
And calm in your black
Sweet shadow
Enthral me tonight
With sticky-cheeked monsters with candy in bags
And firework wonders
With ziggings and zags
Sweet shadow
Inspire me this night
Murked well of ideas when others abate
I draw from you deep
And from thence create.
Sweet shadow
I revere you this night
For all you have hidden beyond reach of sight
You amplify life
In overcast rite.
Bryson Thomas
They walk away
And yet, remain
With us imprisoned within,
And pain is our protection,
Loss, our consolation,
Sadness, our resource.
In our weakness,
We resent them
As we loved.
Bryson Thomas
Sitting front row at your funeral today, I imagine life without you. Imagine we never met that day on the grass by the cloisters – you in your white jeans with skin to match, me clothed in teenage doubt. The beige-faced pastor who never knew you gamely quotes from his list of platitudes, drawing the same affirming smiles as an astrology reading.
“It doesn’t matter,” you’d have said.
“People bring their own meaning to these things.”
My own list comes to mind. A list of how dull life would have been without you. How dull it could be now, because you’re done here. Clocked out. Expired.
Unbaked dough , scuffed waiting-room floors in public hospitals, conference lanyards on sweaty necks…
Your photo – showing off that wild, highland hair -sits atop the wooden box they put you in. Although you never fit in any box until a few days ago. Did you choose the rose mahogany, or was that your Mum’s choice? She always fell so far from the mark with her desperate Hallmark sensibilities. You always forgave her.
…Roadside astroturf lawns, slip-on shoes, hardwearing carpet, transit hub condos…
The others that love you congregate behind me, packed in orderly rows up to the mezzanine.
Tiers of tears. You’d have laughed at that. You humoured my stupid puns.
But you did always like a little cry, and those powder-blue eyes really shone in salt water. But I know you’d prefer they were laughing.
…Lank haired bureaucrats, policy memos, car parks, data collection…
This list is getting harder. Are there really so few boring things in the world? You’d have had more. We’d have competed. Like the night we drank that punitive white wine and spent hours inventing product names incorporating the word ‘bastard’. A spoon called a ‘soup bastard’, a glass called a ‘drink bastard’. You topped the list with the illegitimate child called a ‘bastard bastard’. Puerile, offensive, opaque to anyone else but us, but kids find entertainment anywhere.
Concrete car parks, yellow Mazdas, this black suit I’m wearing…
The priest is done. Wiping his wet mouth with whatever they call that strange flat scarf he’s got over his cassock. Not sure if that’s what it’s supposed to do, but you have to applaud the practicality.
It’s my time to speak now. He’s introduced me as your best friend, and I’m supposed to box up your meaning to me into a few minutes. I’ve spent hours writing words that usually splash thoughtlessly around friends.
Around you.
But you are not here. Not anymore.
Not any less either, but never any more.
You are gone and life is less.
Hello. My name is…
Bryson Thomas
Leave a comment