Saturday, May 9, 2026

Melting March 5, 2026

  

The rain comes, melting the world before my eyes, turning mountains into molehills, the black-encrusted curbside residue left from what once had been pure, a blessing to be rid of it, as if what we once welcomes has long since worn out its welcome, all the labor we took to pile it all so high, only to watch it shrink again, still dignified, still determined to survive, even now when it becomes all too clear that its season has come to an end, when such monuments can no longer endure the change as the chill that brought it is lost, and we are forced to bear witness to the flow at their feet, the stream gushing along the curb like blood, a painful scene, this noble thing transposed into rubble, leaving us to accept what is left, accept the loss as we embrace what comes next.


email to Al Sullivan

Round and round January 20, 2014

 

You hear it in the rafters

The creak of feet,

Of ghosts perhaps,

Quiet and yet also deafening

Since all your attention is fixed

On what you fear,

This whisper, a warning

Only her soul can understand,

Testimony to years of defeat,

And as hard as she’s tried

To be aware of the call

When it comes, she still miseses it,

Partly due to the drone of life

That drowns it out,

Making her deaf to the message

She is so desperate to hear,

What she wanted, what she still wants

For herself, a message, an opportunity

Lost because she lives

Her life in ear.

How does she go back

And make herself hear what

She failed to hear in the first place,

How does she change the course of her life

To get what she wanted, the gold ring

She can’t quite reach as the

Merry go round goes round

That prize she still hopes to reach

If she can overcome her fear

 


email to Al Sullivan

Looking like David Bowie May 9, 2026

 

 

“Hold still!” Paulie’s sister complained as she leaned in, trying to get the mascara and eyeliner she applied to him just right.

“Why am I doing this?” Paulie asked me, seeing me in the mirror, but unable to turn his head.

“The band wants you to look like David Bowie,” I said, half laughing, but a bit alarmed, too.

“This isn’t looking like David Bowie,” Paulie snapped, waving his hand at his made up face and at the rest of the attire his sister had provided for him.

“Hold still,” his sister growled, and then at me, “Stop provoking him. I’m almost done.”

That was the problem. Paulie didn’t look like David Bowie. He looked like any number of the girls the band’s two guitarist took out to the parking lot between sets.

I mumbled something about this to his sister, who seemed to be enjoying the whole thing way too much, even though she was startled when Paulie asked her to do this for him.

He did not see the look in her eyes, that odd spark, an odd thought his request inspired in her.

Paulie had grown up in a household of girls, sisters, mothers, an occasional aunt, and over the years, his sisters, even his mother complained about having to live with a boy in the house, telling him he should have kept life simple for all of them and been born a girl.

“Your worried way too much about this,” his sister assured him, as she finished up his face, stepping back to admire him as if an artwork. “You said the others are supposed to dress up like Bowie, too. So, nobody will notice you too much.”

“I told you, this isn’t Bowie,” Paulie said, his palms rising to almost cup the fake boobs his sister had installed under the bra Paulie did not want to wear.

“No one notice,” his sister said, then asked me to reassure Paulie, when I also had my doubts.

“Why did you make him use the hair remover?” I asked.

“Because his hairy legs would have ruined the pantyhose,” she said. “And his stubble would have ruined the look for his face.”

“But that’s not all the places you shaved,” Paul grumbled.

“Stop complaining,” his sister said. “I told you it will grow back. You wouldn’t want anybody to see the hair.”

“I’m sure they wouldn’t.”

“In the men’s room they would,” his sister said. “Which is why I told you you should use the ladies room when you have to go at the club.”

“Oh that would look fine!” Paul said. “The lead singer everybody knows going into the toilet with the girls.”

“Stop talking. I have to put your lipstick on.”

“Why do I have to wear lipstick and why that awful cherry red color?”

“To go with our nails, silly,” his sister said.

She had painted his nails first to give them time to dry.

“I don’t like this,” Paulie said.

“You’re the one that asked for it,” his sister said. “Just be quiet, I’m almost done, although you’re going to have to fix your lips later at the club, especially after you’ve given some guy a blow jog.”

“What kind of fucking remark is that?” Paul squealed.

“I’m only kidding,” his sister said.

I wasn’t sure she was. She had that same devious look in her eyes that I’d seen when Paulie first made the request.

‘Stand up,” she told Paulie. “Let me look at you.”

He stood; he wasn’t Paulie. He looked too good, too much like one of his older sisters, only a lot more slutty.

“Perfect,” his sister announced. “Now you’re better get going to the club. You wouldn’t want to be late.”

Then, with that same gleam in her eyes, she looked at me, “Don’t go hitting on him along the way. But if you do, remember what I said about his needing to fix up his lipstick.”


email to Al Sullivan

men·agerie Aug. 19, 2015

 

I want to be her.

Not sound like her, dress up like her,

I want the power she exudes with each sway of her hips, or the suggestive potency of her shimmering lips when she smiles.

I want what she has regardless of where she is or what she wears, here on the river or when she’s dressed to the teens, her long legs in jeans or sheer, unbelievable stockings.

I want what oozes out of her, and which drive’s men crazy, like a pack of horny hounds following her pheromone trail, begging to be given a bone.

I want to be able to snap my fingers the way she does and get them to give her anything she desires, begging her for the privilege.

I would even settle to become one of the men·ageriethat follows behind her heals, craving her attention, even when mean, letting her use our backs as stepping stones to get to the next level, where other men do the same, we all willing to be used and abused, and if we do our part, she will remember us fondly when she moves on without us.

 


email to Al Sullivan

Drowning in the cup she holds July 6, 2012

 

 

She holds the cup in two hands

as I recall it that sunny day

not so long ago,

 long fingers with polished nails

(not a usual thing when most times

I’ve seen them, she painted them clear),

 both hands balancing the cup

just below her lips,

not yet ready to sip,

poised to do so,

 a slow motion moment nearly as still

as a photograph, an image so perfect,

 so clear, it jumps into my mind

the minute I think of her,

those amazing eyes

looking over the diner’s table at me,

reflecting me,

a curious look that I am curious about,

unable to read her thoughts

even though these are a window to her soul,

the fingers, the mouth, the eyes, locking me in,

 making me ache now as I did then,

a foolish notion,

an irresistible urge,

those fingers gripping me,

as they do the cup, more so her mouth,

just slanted enough for a near perfect interaction,

 the table, the cup, the bright diner,

all too stark,

barriers that keep me in my seat,

 though I still tumble into those eyes,

drowning in depths way over my head.


email to Al Sullivan

Friday, May 8, 2026

Lions, tigers and bears March 4, 2026

 


We crawl up to the fence behind the high school for a glimpse of the wildlife there, not a Doe or Fox or even a groundhog, but lions, tigers and bears.

I’m Dorothy telling Joe this isn’t Kansas anymore, and he – aspiring one day to become a cop – is so scared, he’s as pale as a scarecrow, and as courageous as a cowardly lion, trying his best to play the role of tin man, we both know he has heart.

I keep hoping he won’t faint especially when we get a whiff of what we cannot yet see, but when we get to the top, we still can’t see

We cut class to do this, while other, wiser kids, hide out behind the gym smoking cigarettes

Even I wonder if we are crazy, and whether or not someday we might both regret this, if we live so long.

In the distance we hear the train, freight trains bound for the Greenville Yards, or passenger trains bound for Hoboken, I can’t tell, rides we intend to take, but need to do this first.

Something growls when our feet hit the ground on the wrong side of the fence, Joe suggesting we go back, me thinking its too late for that, moving ahead through the maze of buildings and cages, the sanctuary where authorities bring wild animals straight off the planes, animals we hear, but cannot see, and ache to, and I wonder if they feel safe here, or are they scared of what comes next, where they will be sent once their incubation period ends, and I’m tempted to set them free, Joe freaking out when I suggest it, telling me I’m crazy, and yet, hearing the stirring inside the cages, I think: what if it was me there, like them, not knowing what to expect next.

I don’t get the chance. Someone with a flashlight, maybe a gun, starts shouting at us. Joe runs. I hesitate, caught in the middle of wanting to do what I said, and fleeing before I wind up in a different cage, me and those poor creatures, those lions, tigers and bears.

The man shouts; I run, too, knowing I will never get the courage up to do this again, a regret I’ll regret for the rest of my life.


email to Al Sullivan

The reawakening April 2012

 


She says her friends saved her,

when she ceased interest in it

how she just wanted to be left alone,

 only didn't,

needed something even she

 didn't see she needed,

yet did,

her friends seeing it,

brought it to her, not love,

 not even lust, just fun,

playful banter in bed for two,

 he and she taking turns

sometimes together, saving her,

 making her remember

what that part of her life truly meant,

 spreading her out,

laying the ground work for

maybe something more one day,

fun times not love time,

 through she says she loved every moment of it,

 feeling that part of her come awake,

 the old ache, the need, the love,

 the feel of it in and around her,

 the fast breathing,

the wonderful sweat,

 hearing her moans at a distance

as if all this happened to someone else,

until finally she felt what if felt like to feel again

dripping with the pleasure of it,

making herself want this again,

possibly again and again and again.


email to Al Sullivan