Thursday, July 9, 2026

My Zip Code

There’s an outbreak of a bad disease

Right in my neighborhood,

My zip code being one they’ve named

And that just isn’t good.

 

It’s spread when there’s bacteria

In cooling towers, where

They infiltrate and form a mist

That’s sent into the air.

 

If places are identified,

Which testing can decide,

A disinfecting protocol

Can peace of mind provide.

 

As numbers of the sick increase

(And treatment seems to work),

I glance at buildings, wondering

If that’s where germs may lurk.

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Comparing Craziness

When you’re down in the dumps

And life’s giving you lumps,

It’s so nice to have lunch with a friend;

For occasional slumps,

Like a log’s many bumps,

Make it hard with a smile to pretend

 

All is dandy and fine.

Sometimes problems combine

With the natural ways that you cope

And your pal throws a line,

Which you take as a sign

That you’re not at the end of your rope.

 

So you sit and you eat,

Which itself is a treat,

And compare what’s been driving you nuts.

Though you do not compete,

Each admits to defeat

By not climbing up out of your ruts.

 

Still, a heaviness lifts,

One of friendship’s best gifts,

(Which can also take place on the phone).

Though the stuff that resists

Cheering up still exists,

You, at least, feel a lot less alone.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

In Neutral

The days drift by at summer’s pace,

Too insubstantial to embrace.

Without a goal that I can chase,

In neutral I am stuck.

 

Though I am home, most any place

Would seem the same, with just a trace

Of novelty to help me face

A way out of the muck.

 

No matter what, in any case,

The passing time might grant some grace,

My lethargy conceding space

To welcome back some pluck.

Monday, July 6, 2026

On Centre Court

At Wimbledon, on Centre Court,

The players, dressed in white,

Run back and forth across the grass,

To spectators’ delight.

 

Of course, in the United States,

The court called Arthur Ashe,

In honor of a tennis great,

Is where opponents clash.

 

If it did not have Ashe’s name,

It might be Center Court,

But note the “e” and “r” reversed,

Which U.S. guides support.

 

The U.S. Open doesn’t mind

What color players wear,

Unlike Britain’s rules of “colour”

With a “u” that’s stuck in there.

 

I realize (yes, I use a “z,”

Not “s,” as do the Brits)

That language often changes after

Factions call it quits.

 

It’s fascinating, really,

How our long-ago “divorce”

Somehow took the centre of the land

And moved it off its course.

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Sprawled

Whenever I see someone

Sprawled on a bench,

Exposed to the elements,

Hands in a clench,

 

I wonder if long ago,

Curled in his crib

Or perched in his high chair,

With drips on his bib,

 

A mom or a dad,

With the tenderest gaze,

Saw their hopes for their son

Mapped in various ways.

 

They certainly never

Imagined him stuck

On a bench in a city park,

Down on his luck.

 

Few passersby stop,

(And yes, that includes me)

Rarely thinking about

How such things come to be.

Saturday, July 4, 2026

In the U.S. of A.

On this date, in the U.S. of A.

People celebrate in their own way.

There are hot dogs on grills

And the fireworks’ thrills

With the stars and stripes out on display.

 

Yet for many who feel as I do,

There’s no point to this hullabaloo,

For instead of delight

At the flag’s red and white,

All I see and I feel is the blue.

Friday, July 3, 2026

The Wedding You've Heard Of

I didn’t get married at Madison Square

And only immediate family was there.

We needed no permits nor one single guard,

For our wedding was held in my parents’ back yard.

 

There wasn’t a limo to ferry each guest

And a cousin took photographs at our request.

The food was whatever my mother did choose

And no, it did not make it into the news.

 

It’s been fifty years, though, so, begging your pardon,

The wedding you’ve heard of today, at the Garden,

May have all the world and the paparazzi

Pay attention, but what is important to me

 

Is that keeping it simple worked fine way back when

And if I had to do it all over again,

There’s just one little change I’d be certain to make –

Not a holiday weekend, a common mistake.