69 = LXIX
580,262,400 breaths taken
103,500 miles walked (average)
1
I Discovered
a rash on my left leg this morning,
a rather
large rash the size of a softball mitt thatdecorated the kneecap with thick, scarlet flowers which
quickly mutated into violent blooms of yellow puss.
And I thought to myself, “Fuck! That’s definitely
gonna leave a scar.”
2
And
the next morning, yes the very next morning
I
woke up with a start to find time was already busy torqueing my joints from ankle to wrist, delivering
a incapacitating knotted highway through my entire
body. Slowly and thoroughly I’m being transformed
into an aging flesh-pretzel.
3
The
House Sparrows hop about on the wet lawn,
their
tiny heads jerk about searching out shelter,
a bush, a porch. Some flutter up onto the roof
seeking an open vent, a stove pipe, anything,
any tiny crack in the eaves, any passage that might
lead to the warm, dusty crawl space where
the angry winds can’t find them. I have friends
that are a lot like those House Sparrows.
4
My
Facebook buddy raises my spirits with an
empathetic.
“You’re only as old as you feel.”Which if true means I’ll be celebrating
my three hundred sixty-third birthday.
5
Last night it rained; I mean, I meant to say,
early
this morning it rained. No, I mean, I meant to say . . . What the hell the hell does it matter?
When it’s dark, its night not morning, right?
6
Anyway,
it rained last night and I slept through
most
of it, I dreamed through it (or is it I dreamtthrough it? Fucking grammar.), until a subtle
roll of thunder opened my eyes.
I ran to the window, threw back the blinds . . .
the rain had already stormed passed leaving only
a saggy, soggy world for me to admire.
So fast things come and go these days. I barely
had time to close my bathrobe in respect
for Mother Nature’s moist gifts and the few
passersby who might not appreciate being exposed
to my almost sixty-nine year old naked body.
7
The
problem with living alone?
There's
no one here to wake me if I dream too loud.
8
Yes,
I’ll be sixty-nine years old in May.
Not
sure how I should feel about that.I confess that often enough I get up
in the middle of the night wondering
if I should be frightened by the fact
that everybody seems to be dying
around my body or pleased that it’s not me.
Some die old, some younger, some
linger longer than they should, while others
rumble through this existence so fast
It’s hard to tell if they were ever here at all.
9
Sixty-nine
looks to be an annoying year.Not that sixty-nine as a birth-age
is less remarkable as any other age.
It’s more about the sexual connotation
associated with the number 69.
“Woodie, how old will you be in May?”
“I’ll be exactly sixty-nine years old.”
“Sixty-nine!” they’ll say with a
Beavis and Butt-head chortle,
“Heh-heh! He said sixty-nine!
Heh-heh, heh-heh, heh!”
10
Raincoat
April,
nineteen sixty-nine, flying out of Okinawa
a pit
stop in Guam to refuel. I light up a cigarette with
the
Zippo the guys gave me right before I escaped ‘Nam.
Inscription
on the lighter’s silver body:
“From
the Boys in the Nasty”
A
faded map of Guam on a wall in the airport.
Next
to the map there’s a picture (piss-yellowed by age)
of
a local jungle hilltop. I look closer at the battered
photograph
and see something buried inside,
deep
behind all that thick, green jungle foliage . . .
a
dark-brick building, weathered, crumbling,
a
monastery, a church, maybe? In between drags
off
my Marlboro light, I make a solemn vow:
someday
I’ll come back to Gaum, find that hilltop
and
explore that monastery or church or whatever
the
fuck it is. But why, I mean, I just got the fuck
out
of a jungle! I wanna crawl back into another one?
It
makes no sense but I promise anyway and,
of
course, I never go back.
Two
years later, out of the Corps, sitting in a bar.
“Hey,
man?” A voice from behind my barstool,
“You
Woodie, right?” I turn ‘round . . . a
young guy
‘bout my age, a face full of shrapnel scars.
“Yeah?”
I’ve no idea who this Frankenstein
looking
motherfucker is, but he seems to know me.
“Come
over and sit with us.” He leads me
to
a corner in the back by the pool tables where
two
other dudes sit. Under the pool table lights
they
look more like ghosts than men. One guy,
burr
cut, his left hand’s missing the pinky and ring finger.
The
other guy looks squirrely, twitchy, unable to sit still,
never
looks me right in the eye. As I sit down
I remember
something.
Four years ago, my belovèd Corps
had
this enlistment program. Enlist on a certain day
and
you’ll go through boot camp with dudes
from
your home town. These three, Frankenstein,
Half-hand
and Squirrely-butt, where guys I went through
boot
camp with. But damn if I remember ‘em.
Anyway,
we start talking, drinking beer after beer,
and
suddenly Squirrely-butt starts babbling about . . .
“Hey,
remember that DI, that Gunnery Sergeant from
Porta
Rico?” we all nod and smile. “He mustered us onto
the
parade grounds the day of our graduation, Remember?
‘Men,
most of you are heading for Vietnam. Some of you
won’t
make it back . . . alive. So, I got some advice for you . . .
When
you have sex with them women over there in Vietnam,
always
wear a condom. I know, I know. What’s the point
of
takin’ a shower if you’re gonna wear a raincoat, right?
Well,
if you choose to go bareback on them girls,
your
dick will fall off! Men, don’t come home
without
your dick!’”
That
was the best life advice I’d ever gotten.
And
to this day, I never leave the house
without
a raincoat.
Written by Woodie
Written by Woodie
for his 69th B-day o5-23-17