A Good Day

Do you think it will be a good one

The man leans in

To his friend

Hoping for a positive message back

That will be sent

On a cold day in New York City

What makes a good day

What makes a bad day

On the streets of Manhattan

Looking up at the tall buildings

While the people keep passing

I think it will be a good one

With sunshine and charity

Let’s hope for a good one

Today

A Head Start

I didn’t want to get going

It was a humid morning in house

Frigid out

The clatter of opening stores

With freight trucks whipping by

The cold has a different feel before

The sun

It settles a little deeper

As the day opens up

The world does as well

I have seen in my own eyes

These early New York City mornings

When all feels off

Yet it is perfectly right

 

Head Down

Hopes and dreams

Pretty distant things

As in one moment

Creeps away

With speedy wings

How should I proceed

When the headlines

Read

All is headed down

Across the world

A giant frown

I guess I will just

Keep a brisk pace

And keep my own head down

Kick Backs

Who received

The goal achieved

The investor sequestered

The average man forgotten

Kick-backs

Go all the way to the top

Not to the saved

But to the saving

Not to be returned

Kick backs stale

Kick backs burned

 

Survival in New York City – An Epidemic Begins

Ching

Ching

Ching

$40 gone

A snack split by two

$20

2 slices of pizza

$8

Ching

Laundry

$20

Time

Gone

Ching

Restaurants with higher prices

Meeting higher rents

Ching

Old apartment

Barely able to host guests

While the rent inflates

Uncontrollably

Ching

Instability

Toothpaste

Toilet paper

Ching

Ching

Falling hopes of reservations

How can the prices keep soaring

Questions now

In every situation

“What do you do for a living”

“How do we… live?”

Ching

Coffee $5

Parking

Free

Thank God

How can a city run so freely

Yet so dangerously

Close

To default

How do we survive

What do we do

The Questions

Are now being

Asked in every quadrant

Flee

Maybe

Ching

Let’s call it a night

Don’t Become It

Don’t become tired and angry

Don’t let the easy part

Get you

In our own reverb room

We are trapped

If we only look for what we want

We look

Please look

Beyond

Continue to be human

And understand

That is the only path

In these times

Stated in The Times

Humanity required

For future generations

We inspire

The Old Neighborhood

I know it will all change

Places

Hands

Roomates

Tiny specks will remain

Of the neighborhood I knew

For just a moment

I was late to the party

Closed it down

What seems meaningless

Will be much more important to me

Miles down

The road

So this one goes out to the neighborhood

It was short

But it was good

 

A Seat at The Cafe

What would it take

To get a seat in the cafe

In Williamsburg

Off 6th

Sunday

As the sunlight

Glistens I’m off

Frozen streets

Keeping an eye

For an opening

As the groups of people

Come and go

Bustle to and fro

A seat is precious on a Sunday

At best I can reminisce at how

We once had a seat at the cafe

On an easy Wednesday

But today now a seat was open

Not an empty chair

The sun continues to flow in the windows

Like streams of gold thistle

Through the trashed Christmas trees

Not a seat to be had today

So seats are to be envied

On a brisk Sunday in the cafe

On 6th Street