Starpoet by Lisa Jain Thompson
Newsflash:
The StarPoet Newsletter
Vol. X, No. XVIII (May 3, 2009 C.E.)
StarPoet Newsletter by Lisa Jain Thompson
God damn, it's May and we've gone and shot a hundred days.  Jack only had a thousand and Boddy never had a chance,  so may I suggest we'd better get a move on.   There's a big train coming and we're running out of time to get our fat asses off the tracks.
Tick Tock, Tick Tock, Tick Tock
(the snorkled pig reducked)

Nay, nay, snied the snorkled pig,
Nay nay, snark snark,
The marching ids, the marching ids,
The marching ids ' upon us.

One by land, two by sea,
Webby, webby, wonka free,
A million here, a thousand there,
A hundred more by internet.

Right, left, the dorsal masses,
Lickety lock step step,
Into the valley, the people sored
Canons above them, rockets below.

Bang Bang, Bang Bang!
Do wah diddy diddy lo,
News at eleven, film at twelve,
Nay nay, no no, nonee nonee.

— Lisa Jain Thompson c. 2009 CE

A type 4 biohazard containment suit would protect you from the swine flu and a lot of other things that go bump in the night --it's just such an extreme fashion statement that I don't know if it's for everyone.  Maybe some religious objections about thwarting god's will.  Probably some sort of "ism" that the academics will tell us we should be against..

destiny is a fickled bitch
The Luck of the Draw

My children have come along on this ride
Because, in the luck of the draw, they are mine,
The offspring of a poet warrior woman
Who seldom mentions them except in the passing,
The children who gave her a reason for staying
All those years when she wanted to run
To some Sierra cabin and leave all this behind
To pursue the dreams of a lifetime
And end all her misery: ao they all got drug along
With her which never was her intention.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (May 2009)

I do not trust any designation of "personality disorder." Descriptive criteria are always subject to the changing politics of psychotherapy.

-- Gene Weingarten

my father, my son, my wife and whole string of ancestors
Into the Chilly Winds

Rain falling,
Dripping off the limestone,
Fill the reflecting pools,
Wetting the benches.

A properly gray and soggy memorial
So unlike the bright fall day
When the building shook us
And the walls crashed down

Around our naivety and arrogance
And candy apple presidents
Who promised us everything,
Paid for nothing: we bought it all,
More than happy to be uninvolved.

A chilly wind blows over the Pentagon,
Down from Arlington and Custis-Lee;
Wars have been fought here,
Wars will be fought, our blood the price
Of our freedom and The Union.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (May 2009)
stirs unbidden
Jet Airliner

A jet airliner is echoing
Off the walls of the inner driveway:
It's location is up, it's direction unknown
In the concrete canyons of the Pentagon.

The plane sounds closer
That the one that crashed
-- Stirring memories I'd best forget --
Then it's gone and I'm still here,
Pretending I was never there.

Blood, pieces, burning jet fuel,
Black smoke curling inside a corridor,
Sirens twisting hopelessly down Columbia Pike,
The gaping hole where my friends once were.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (April 2009)
Flue Days
 
I'm a doc in a busy Peds ER in a state with one of the fastest growing Hispanic populations in the US. The vast majority of my patients immigrate from Mexico (as opposed to other central and south American countries). I wash my hands obsessively. And occasionally pick up something from a patient (not common, as I have a rockin' immune system). I haven't been asked yet by a parent to test their child for swine flu, but I know I will. Am I more likely to catch swine flu than the average American? Sure. Am I worried? Not really. I worry more about that nasty gastroenteritis that went around this winter and the possibility of Hep C than Flu.
 
Anonymous Doctor in a Washington Post Chat
for Mr. Stewart, wherever he may be
Beneath the Starry Heavens

Roll me down the starry heavens,
Roll me down tonight,
Roll me down beneath the starshine,
I need to be held tonight.

Wake me up when the sun has risen,
Wake me up in your arms,
Wake me up  with your passionate kisses,
I need to be loved tonight.

Come to me under the starlight,
Come to me tonight,
Come to me beneath the clear dark sky,
I need to make love tonight.

Rock me gentle 'neath the moonlight,
Rock me through the years,
Rock me, darlin', now and ever,
I need to be loved tonight..

— Lisa Jain Thompson (May 2009)
Frankie Manning
 
Frankie "Musclehead" Manning, 94, a Harlem dancer and Tony Award-winning choreographer widely celebrated as one of the pioneers of the Lindy Hop, a breathlessly acrobatic swing dance style of the 1930s and 1940s, died April 27 at New York City's Lenox Hill Hospital of complications from pneumonia.

The effortlessly nimble Mr. Manning was a star attraction of Harlem's Savoy Ballroom as a young man and brought to swing dance a flair for the theatrical that helped catapult the Lindy Hop from ballrooms to stage and screen. His nickname developed from the chants of dancers, "Go, Musclehead, go!" watching Mr. Manning's strong and closely cropped head glisten with sweat as he kicked and spun himself and his partners into human propellers.

Mr. Manning's chief innovation was popularizing the thrilling "air step" move, in which a female partner is tossed in the air and lands in time with the music. After introducing this choreographic accent, sometimes called an aerial, he and fellow Lindy hoppers developed dozens of others in which partners fling each other on pathways around, over and through various parts of the body
 
Now, if I could lindy like Melindy when she lindy hops,
Makes all cats in the ballroom stop;
Look at him throw her out and bring her in!
Now, the way them cats dance is a sin!
 
Lil Hardin Armstrong and Her Swing Orchestra
July 23, 1937
doing my poet thing, allusions running wild
New Morning

Another morning, another day
Blowing up some third world nation;
Traitors to the left, treason to the right,
What's a po' girl suppose t' do
Working for the middle,
Trying to make a living?

Can't you hear that rooster crowin'
As first light breaks through the dark;
Can't you see that river's runnin',
Carrying our sins to the ocean?
Can't you feel the new sun rising,
Brightly shining at the end of the road?

I'm a fifth daughter on a long twelfth night,
Never the first one, but never the last,
Runnin' that white line down Highway 61;
A high plains rider, discretely armed,
Racing the wind, howl after howl, outside of Kingman
Back through the Sierra down again past the Joshua Trees. 

— Lisa Jain Thompson (May 2009)
rock on, baby
Candy, Cough Drop, Hand Sanitizer?

Candy, cough drop, hand sanitizer?
Gee you don't look well.
Do you know where your children are
Or what sickly friend they might bring home?

God bless you.
Was that a sneeze or a cough?
How do you feel about wearing a mask
Or not not visiting me for a while?

Oh, and one last thing,
No matter what else you do,
Keep your dirty hands, damit,
Off my tamiflu!

— Lisa Jain Thompson (May 2009)
Why do I want a child? Does giving birth make me a real woman?  No, earning less than a man makes me a real woman..
 
-- Suzy Berger
the pentagon springs aeternal
Great White Bellows

April winds pushing summer thunder heads,
Great white billows and dark gray threats;
Tulips reaching toward scattered breaks,
Red and yellow against bright blue.

Up above, the fifth floor
Has a clear view of the horizon:
There, the rain is falling; over there, not so much.

Down below in the courtyard,
Women scurry, heads covered,
As a cool rain twists in from outside the walls;

The green suits walk slowly,
Un'brella'd and uncovered,
Way too Army to need any elemental protection

— Lisa Jain Thompson (May 2009)
americana
Until I sailed
At the end of The Prom,
After the turmoil of dress and dining
(Beginning with a morning
Well spent in a salon),
When both make-up and time
Were running equally late,
I would have pretended reluctance
Then gladly surrendered
To his fumbling efforts
If My Mom hadn't waited up
To see me safely back inside,
If only he had planned things better
Than a seventeen year old could
When the year is only
Nineteen Hundred and Sixty-six
And the porch light turns on.
— Lisa Jain Thompson (May 2009)
Total commitment to family and total commitment to career is possible, but fatiguing.

-- Muriel Fox
the wandering starpoet
Under the Sun's Fields

There was a time
When I thought I could do anything:
Walk on the sands of Mars,
Play centerfield in the Major Leagues,
Write the Great American Novel,
Become President of the United States
(The POTUS if you wish),
Explore the habital planets
Orbiting Alpha Centuari,
Be a wife, a mother,
And bluesy rock and roll singer,
All the while living forever,
An imortal in life and poetry.

Somewhere along the way,
I would discover the Grand Unified Theory
That would unite both time and space,
Large and small,  and allow us to delay
The slow entropic death of the Universe
For all Eternity, or at least until I grew
Thoroughly bored with the whole thing
And decided to try something new.

There are so many things
I wish to do, so many places
I would like to visit, so many books
I need to read, and all those poems
I still must write before I sleep,
If Sappho wills and the doctors' skill
Can keep me going, piece by piece,
Until I prove we've well run out
Of poets on Planet Earth.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (May 2009)
life in this here u. s. of a.
Our Computer

Her computer calling in ill with spring fever,
She sits at mine, working on an article;
We share both site and server
So why not a 'puter?

We share our food and our bodies
So why not a 'puter?
Did Christ preach against the true marriage
Of two people and  their computer?

It's our house now and we
Can do who we want,
A guy, a woman,
Or even a computer.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (May 2009)
I've never seen a Brink's trucking following a hearse to the cemetery.
 
-- Barbara Hutton
StarPoet Peace Logo
StarPoet Newsletter by Lisa Jain Thompson
 
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