No One’s Beat Samsara
You just can’t win vs. that Wheel of Birth & Death
when you have women, mojo and looks, something else
will be missing—your teeth haven’t all been accounted for and now
an ex is asking for help digging out her car—there’s poverty ahead
and in the rear those trees you felled with the toy hatchet Dad bought
at Woolworth’s just won’t go away—too many branches poke at you like
the burrs your cat leaves in your clean underwear drawer that scratch
reminding you thought you once had it all…squirrels had less nuts, your hair grew
fountains of broken hearts, you drove Miss Luxury around in her limo while she made
it rain green paper everywhere and each white powder was golden
on the other side of dawn…
You wanted more, took up divination for fun and profit but went broke investing
in yesterdays that no longer paid the long-shot odds so-called experts like Dad
went broke on, long before you had the scratch or the itch to get rid of.
In the Dungeon
In the dungeon of the Dominatrix are industrial tie-downs where men, mostly pay to be bound and spanked stretched on the Catherine Wheel winched aloft like trussed fowl secured in a stainless-steel Rottweiler cage left for hours at $350 per... Black walls and 7-day candles (Madonna of the Lottery Numbers, Satan Stoppers) flicker… * A client is forced by Mistress Cruella to cross-dress (she keeps a variety: French Maid, School Girl, Smart Business Suit) and go shopping at the downtown L.A. Ralph’s Super Market —then must answer her cell-call in front of stroller pushing matrons and hair-net cool Vatos: Oye! Mira, maricon! * Who does this? High priced lawyers, CEOs with too much power need to surrender, pay to be humiliated— a Popsicle up the pooper —then eat it. * Driving the nation’s oldest freeway in Pasadena, California Cruella the Dominatrix, behind the wheel of her restored jet black ’69 Cadillac, answers her cell phone: “Oh, that’s right…no, I forgot. Are you there now? Okay, I’ll meet you in half an hour,” she says flatly. (she has forgotten to meet her client) “It’s okay,” she laughs, “he needs to know how insignificant he is—forgetting our appointment is just what he needs. He’s been getting too dependent. This will show him.” * Cruella’s new colleague, conversant with medical terminology, dresses as Nurse, administers enemas to “bad boys” who are then sent home, bowels full wrapped in diapers —anxious about leather car seats. * In the gardens of the Self Realization Fellowship, high above the canyons and valleys of the City of Angels Cruella, dressed all in black, is shown the tree where Swami Yogananda gathered his disciples to meditate. The guide, middle aged pale yellow robed woman eagerly whispers, pointing out everything under the pure, gray smog. * At Jumbo’s Clown Room—the “cool” topless club near Hollywood where aging Brit Rockers stuff dollar bills In the g-strings of tired dancers —Cruella orders a drink, complains to the friendly waitress because it’s weak—black eyes dart ominously “That’s bull—they don’t have a computer that measures the alcohol, they’re just cheap!” One of the dancers a light skinned Black, intricate stretch marked thighs dances an intricate routine involving a book glasses and a song about school and teachers. The guy in front who can’t light his cigarette fumbles, stares into the space beyond her gyrating pelvis, beyond her red heart pasties. * Next door to the dungeon is a light airy room a cream colored stainless steel coffin on a stand, satin lined —exact same model as my own mother’s four months ago —shock of red white roses, carnations her waxy repose... “Would you care to climb inside?” Cruella politely offers. Outside patio door, the blue bright pool-eye glitters. ***
The way two mouths open to eat or kiss
The way it intrigues us, this opening in which tongues are not seen but felt, saliva working into ready working to inhale the other, to consume with sorrow all that is left and will be This desire dictates direction the way two mouths might hang, might hover over the other ready to open, ready to kiss lick or other the other in hopes of being swallowed whole, utterly gone in them… You never lose track, you never took it for granted when she inhaled you with her kiss and what sustains you through the pain of not having the pain of not being influenced, is like luck happened but didn’t and still carries on like a blessing in disguise because when there is no more her, without a word you open your mouth and put food in, open your mouth for burning balm open your mouth to yell or cry —either one is nourishing and sustains— the direction a mouth might fall open for the breath of another which gift we receive when young as a right when old is benediction.
–Peter Marti
Poetry
pretty damn good
Cruella is mother to the worst in us, the best, our mouths open, waiting for the silver wax coffin……
Strong words from Peter Marti. May more
Poems appear
These 3 poems about the hopelessness of desire by Peter Marti speak to one another in a way that goes deep into the body and illuminate us with his many decade Buddhist practice in the art of crazy wisdom. My condolences on the passing of the poet’s mother.
Finely observed poems in a neobeat mode.
Three poems that are not easy on the mind. They speak to the suffering of being human, the animal, the flesh of us all. Peter Marti continues to speak from a deep place, and we are better for it.
Lost myself in these works for a bit – such are the effect of the beat on my mind. Bravo!