Sunday, May 31, 2026

An Idiom in the Flesh

You’ll never believe this,

But truth you are owed –

This morning I noticed

A fork in the road.

 

Well, technically, just

The top half of a fork,

Yet still a strange sight

On a street in New York.

 

‘Twas made of white plastic,

Quite easy to break it.

Since I couldn’t use it,

I chose not to take it.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

That Blasted Name (to the tune of "The Ants Go Marching")

They’re taking down that blasted name – Hurrah, hurrah!

That only J.F.K. should claim – Hurrah! Hurrah!

Let’s hear it for that gutsy judge

To order removal of that smudge.

Maybe things will start to crumble and crack,

Helping life to go back…

Boom boom boom boom, boom boom boom boom

 

We’d need ten billion ants to march – Hurrah, hurrah!

To scale that planned horrendous arch – Hurrah, hurrah!

The public hates it; so do I

And even Abe Lincoln is heaving a sigh.

Maybe Dems will block it.

We do not need such a sham to proceed…

Boom boom boom boom, boom boom boom boom

 

And next the ballroom should be stopped – Hurrah, hurrah!

The funding from the Feds has flopped – Hurrah, hurrah!

The private donors, in cahoots,

Will chip in as they lick his boots

And the gilt will glisten,

Losing us class when the guests will amass…

Boom boom boom boom, boom boom boom boom

 

The bottom line is we are stuck – Hurrah, hurrah!

With a person in charge who’s run amok – Hurrah, hurrah!

And my fingers are crossed that his would-be crown

Will, along with his name, soon be taken down

And we’ll march and cheer and

Fill every street to applaud his defeat…

Boom boom boom boom, boom boom boom boom

Friday, May 29, 2026

In the Sun

The sun feels good;

It warms my skin

And gets me ready

To begin


To write some lines

Of rhyming verse.

I’m tired, but

It could be worse.


I’m at the age

When things slow down.

My hair is white;

It once was brown.


The years have flown 

And my career

Is over now,

But I’m still here.


I’m lucky that

I’m not alone.

I see some loved ones 

Or we phone.


My waning phase

I know’s begun,

Yet I’m at peace 

Out in the sun.


Thursday, May 28, 2026

A Thwack

On the bus we heard a thwack;

The driver kept on going.

I couldn’t really see out back,

But soon, the bus was slowing.

 

The driver stopped and went to check.

A vehicle, parked double,

Had had his mirror hit the deck;

Our ride could be in trouble.

 

One woman left the bus and yet,

The rest of us just waited.

No one began to moan or fret,

Our outcome not debated.

 

A minute passed and he returned

And shrugged, “That car skedaddled.”

If there’s a lesson to be learned:

New Yorkers don’t get rattled.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

My Sister's Birthday

Today’s my sister’s birthday.

We are 16 years apart

And very different, even if

We’d had a matching start.

 

There are 2 brothers in between;

Our family had been 5

For 10 years plus, before my sister

Even was alive.

 

And yet her smile gives her away –

It’s something we all share

And when we get together

There is laughter in the air.

 

Our tastes in many things don’t mesh –

In music, travel, food

And how we look – my hair’s gone white;

She’s blond and she’s tattooed.

 

She loves the heat and I do not;

We live in different climes.

She’s quite the chef and I don’t cook;

I spend my time on rhymes.

 

So on her birthday, I reflect

On traits we each can claim,

Though we both began our lives by sharing

Parents and a name.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

A Big Fat Groundhog

A big fat groundhog crossed the road,

While waddling, quite fast.

I watched him in surprise

At so much speed as he ran past.


Perhaps he found me threatening

Although I never knew

A person who’d attempted

To cook up some groundhog stew.


Still, every creature’s instincts 

Will kick in when danger’s nigh

And even big fat groundhogs

Waddle quickly to get by.



Monday, May 25, 2026

A’Twitter

The birds are a’twitter;

The leaves are a’flutter.

Some early moths flitter

And I am in utter


Contentment while sitting,

Absorbing the quiet,

Which seems only fitting

Since noise is my diet.


I live in the city 

With traffic and sirens.

Some think it’s a pity

To have those environs,


Yet mostly I love it - 

The hustle and bustle.

I hover above it,

Ignoring the tussle.


Though once in a while,

The country will beckon 

And I’ll change my style

To rural, I reckon…


Until I start craving

That urban alluring.

Then I’ll go back, braving

That citified roaring.