Monday, May 25, 2026

No regrets? Sept. 23, 2013

 


 Yes, I regret it,

not going,

 not being there to witness it all,

 the court room drama,

the parade of people

 this one last glimpse of her

in all her finery,

 a queen bee floating

through the musty air,

 looking all so powerful

 while mortal men quake

 at the thought she might sting

yet, I don’t regret it,

 having already collected

 all those visions of her,

 pleasing or painful,

 the girl in the lobby

wearing a sun dress

and sunglasses,

 the stern professional

parading up the stairs

passed me,

the images she posted

 deep in the dark of night,

her face more angelic

than demonic,

though always just as tempting,

 it is not worth the risk,

 even for a last glimpse,

even knowing

 I may never see her in the flesh again.

 

 



email to Al Sullivan

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Kids like flocks of geese September 18, 2014


 Kids parade the streets like flocks of geese, the same sound, only unlike summer, their coming and going more predictable, tied to school buses rather than a change of season, their world changed dramatically from when I was their age, a strange alignment of planets, the advent of new technology, carrying cell phones the way Dick Tracy did his watch, familiar faces on the screens to whom they talk, school boys dressing up punk, school girls so utterly provocative as to make the nuns who taught me cringe, their lives dictated by a whole new code I’m still shocked by, coming together and pulling apart in ways that I never imagined at their age, bliss letting them paint whatever vision they want, while I’m stuck in the past, wishing I could go back or grow up, or to have known what they already know.


email to Al Sullivan

Throb dept 25, 2014

 Is throbs, just not always from the same place or for the same reason.

 I can cure with a few strokes.

 I don't always want to relieve it, needinh to feel it, needing to need it even though that is no longer possible with her, to keep on throbbing, to feel the need when I close my eyes and remember her

 I don't always want the pain to cease, feeling it making me realize I am still alive, this throbbing so entangle, so connected with visions of her, a few strokes and it vanishes, when I do not want it to vanish, embracing it just as I embrace her as a ghost, that throb reminding me of all I hope for, and will never get, and yet feel as if I have, each time it consumes me, my head filled with the fog of it , a need so desperate otherwise I would not be alive

Green fading March 24, 2026

 

A day after the parade the streets are still littered with bits of green, and high hopes for spring, glittering green, steamers and hats, empty glasses, the cheer mere echoes in the distance, as the real world regains its grip, and we all slip back into the day to day routines we can only momentarily forget, few others along this street taking notices, already forgotten, as are many of those of us who partook, this spring ritual lacking the maypoles around which to dance, and those who we would still dance with, given a chance

 


email to Al Sullivan

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Stirred up Aug. 18, 2015

 


Even now I’m tempted to touch it, when I think of her, just as I did on those dark nights, texting leading to touching, even when she could not see what I did on my end of the thing, unable to see what I saw, what I still see sometimes, what inspired me.

I ought to be over all this like an invalid that should have recovered as time moves on, Mostly I am, except on some nights when it all comes out again, like a ghost, and my fingers crawl across fabric and try to touch it again, and again I think of her, in the dark, in the dead of night, no texts to stir me up, only memories, and wishes that won’t ever come true, stirred up, while I can’t keep it down any more

 


email to Al Sullivan

Flowers in the flower shop window (2014)

The bloom of the flowers

In the flower shop window

Makes me think of you,

The memory of when

I saw your flower

Spread before me,

The way all these

Flowers are,

Exposed to the core,

Drips of dew clinging

To each fold,

Falling off only

When I touch

Each pedal with

My finger tips,

The memory of

A flower past

Stirring up

What was

And is not now,

And all that remains

Is the sweet scent

Yet even that

Barely recalled.

I see the flowers in

The flower shop window

Yawning pedals pated

To take into their hearts

The heat of the sun,

Each fold parting,

As if to welcome

Affection, and to

Inspire heat

These cannot get

Alone.


email to Al Sullivan

Double your pleasure

 

 

I’ve felt this way before, if not recently, then just acutely, living with the duel feelings that come watching (or thinking about) another man fucking the woman (women) I love.

This intense sense of helplessness, mingled with an odd sexual throb, like a fan at a sporting event getting off when other team scores.

Some men like me thrive on it, finding pleasure in watching or thinking of it happening, tied and gagged in the corner of the bedroom as this man, any man, friend, enemy or complete stranger takes the plunge, and she – the one we love, the one who once loved us, laps it all up, moaning as the bedposts pound the wall.

I got a twinge of this when she sent me that dark photo of her friends in her apartment, as if I knew one or more of them would be pounding the bedposts there, and my imagination filled in the pieces, maybe an illusion, maybe unreal, but stirring up the horror of and the pleasure of thinking she was being fucked.

This feel grew worse when I realized I had been replaced, a cuck forced to watch as she made time with my boss, and then later his boss, trickling her way up, when I ached to be the one hovering over her in the dark.

Pleasure and pain mingling in my blood, boiling up in me, making me cringe while at the same time pressing that spot inside me that brings that strange and pleasant pain, the only greater torture of my possibly being tied up in that room and forced to watch, gagged to keep me from interrupting their pleasure, and perhaps she loving the idea that I ached so much and could do so little – this same intensity that time I left her at the bar, when she – just a little drunk – flirted with the bartender, and I, the cuck that I am, sat on the barstool beside her, unable to do anything except, finally, desperately, perhaps wrongly, got up and left, later hearing her scream at me on the telephone asking “Why did you leave me?”

Maybe I should have accepted it, taken the pain, enjoyed the odd pleasure of watching her go home with him instead of me.

 


email to Al Sullivan