I think I heard
It first in your voice
So many years ago,
Father, those breakfast
Table conversations,
Your face hidden behind
The newspaper, so early
In the morning,
When I told you
My unfinished dreams
It was Rhett Butler who
Taught me the art
Of ridicule, my teenage years
I spent mastering his tone,
Learning to pick
The things closest
To my heart,
Friendships, poems, love
And mock them
Until I could mock myself
These days I try to suppress
My poetry, squeeze the words
Back where they came from,
To lie in bed and watch
A Woody Allen flick,
Reduce everything
To the level of absurd
And pointless, to laugh out
Air, only because I feel
A fist punch
A lack of meaning
Into my abdomen
It is so much easier
To believe that
There is no greatness
In this world