Sunday, March 1, 2026

Honeycake and Tea - Feb 27 2026

 

Honeycake and Tea

Feb 27 2026



I sat discreetly in the back,

looking at the backs of heads

skullcaps

and men in black felt hats.

Mumbled along

as they recited passages

in a foreign tongue

that would hurt my throat to say.

And hummed under my breath

as the faithful joined in hymns

that were a dissonant mix

of the tone-deaf

 — not blessed by God, but enthusiasts nevertheless —

and a few gifted singers

whose voices carried the rest.


I was unsure 

when to rise and sit,

feeling spotlit

as I followed the backs of their heads

bob up-and-down

a beat behind.

Men with bald spots

fringed in grey,

and women

with fashionably coiffed hair

that strained the bounds of modesty,

in and out of their seats

with the knowing ease

of people born to it.


The davening fascinated me,

pious old men 

with long beards

reciting quietly

as they rocked back and forth;

communing with God 

one-on-one

as the spirit moved them.

 

I felt presumptuous being there,

uninitiated

in the customs and rituals

they learned as boys and girls

without even knowing it,

imbibed with mother’s milk

like thick absorbent paper.


My tribe, my people;

but I didn’t feel of them.

Perhaps more like an anthropologist

crouching behind a hedge

taking notes,

a documentarian

behind his camera lens.

Or even a voyeur

bound to be outed

like some peeping tom.

Where we all not only want to belong

but need to

I felt apart; 

an intruder

from the secular world,

as out of place

as a curse word in a sermon.


I’m not a man of faith

a ritualist

a joiner.

But a coreligionist, nevertheless;

by birth, that is

if not conviction.

But belonging is powerful

and identity hard to escape,

especially 

since the powers that be

won’t let you.


So I rose and sat

mumbled and hummed

held the prayer book in my hand,

trying to make sense

of the boxy-looking letters 

that run from right to left

I remembered just enough of

to pick up here and there.


The service seemed endless,

and in the over-heated sanctuary

I could feel a trickle of sweat

beneath the new black suit

I’d only planned to use

at weddings and funerals.


Afterward, there was honeycake and tea

and sweet kosher wine,

the timeless refreshments

even I could remember

from my unobservant youth.

Where I shook hands with strangers, nodding politely.

Listened to small talk

about sports and politics

I could have heard anywhere, 

the same celebrity gossip

as if among friends.

And watched the kids

with loosened ties and modest skirts,

tearing around

like captive animals

released into the wild.


But still felt I didn’t belong,

unsure

if I’d ever be back.

 

I wrote this after reading Nicholas Lemann’s New Yorker piece about growing up a highly assimilated Jew in New Orleans in the 60s and 70s. I grew up a highly assimilated Jew in Toronto around the same time.  https://www.newyorker.com/culture/the-weekend-essay/a-childhood-in-jewish-new-orleans

He talks about the tension between the established (and mostly German) Jews who desperately wanted to keep their heads below the parapet and fit in, and the more recently arrived Eastern European Jews who were less well-off, less self-conscious about their cultural differences, and more unapologetically tribal in their urban ghettos. To the established community, America represented security while Zionism seemed at best unnecessary, and at worst an unpatriotic and attention-getting expression of tribalism. During WW 2, their belief in Western enlightenment even made these highly assimilated Jews slow to accept the truth about the Holocaust. 

Later in life, Lemann returned to his roots. One of my older brothers did as well. I, on the other hand, am a diehard atheist; one of that surprisingly large but very heterogeneous and loosely affiliated group known as “Jewish Atheists”:  yes, somehow that tribal qualifier still sticks with us. And I also know that if another Hitler appeared, the “Jewish” part of that label is the only part that would count. When I say in the poem since the powers that be/won’t let you, this is what I meant: as much as we think we can self-determine, our identity is often defined by society at large. There is no escaping it.  …Nevertheless, I still count on liberalism and the intellectual legacy of the Enlightenment to prevail over time.

When Lemann refers to the first baffled dip of his toe into a Jewish religious observance, I identified. This is how I felt attending my nephews’ Bar Mitzvahs:  there was a sense of alienness and arcane knowledge in the whole affair, which I uncomfortably drifted through feeling I didn’t at all belong in that milieu. Lemann eventually became part of it. I didn’t. 

And belonging is essentially what Lemann’s piece is about:  the established Jews desperate to be accepted, to feel they belonged in New Orleans high society; and the newcomers, who commit themselves to the belonging offered by the Jewish nationalism of Zionism. Ultimately, the need to belong is one of the most powerful forces in human nature. And considering the tribalism it gives rise too, it’s an oddly unifying concept: everyone not only wants, but needs to belong  … in some way, to something. 

I took a few liberties in describing the service. In my brother’s Orthodox synagogue, the women don’t sit with the men, they are relegated to an upper gallery. I imagine their hair would in fact be modestly covered, or that they’d be wearing wigs. And the men would cover their heads with skullcaps (I ended up adding this after all), obscuring those shiny bald spots. Also, I’m not sure if “hymn” is the appropriate word.* 

But when I began the poem, this depiction of the congregation and that word were fine: I was going to make it more universal, so readers of all religious backgrounds could identify. (And it fits my memory of the High Holidays and Bar Mitzvahs at the Reform synagogue of my youth (also, coincidentally, called Temple Sinai) — the only services I ever attended.) As I continued to write, though, I realized the poem would be far more effective if I made it unapologetically personal. 


*Here’s what my AI helper turned up:

Jewish prayer and song use specific Hebrew and Yiddish words like zemirot (table hymns sung during Shabbat meals), piyyutim (liturgical poems), or pesukei dezimra (psalms in morning services), rather than “hymn,” which is primarily associated with Christian worship.


So What's With The Late Ones? - Feb 27 2026

 

So What’s With The Late Ones?

Feb 27 2026


So what’s with the late ones?

Because if it’s the early bird who catches the worm

why aren’t they all?


Perhaps they prefer sleeping in

after late nights

raiding the feeder.

Perhaps there are dilatory worms

who are partial to dusk,

and in the end catch their share.

Or could insects and berries

be just as good?


As a nocturnal person

I resent the implication

of the virtuous early riser,

and as a poet

resent the cheap rhyme.

After all

bird goes just as well dirgescourge, and spurned;

surely a clever poet

could come up with a more nuanced type

than this earnest avian

hard at work

in the dark before dawn.

 

In my version

the bird getting her beauty sleep

is the more interesting one.

She will wait for rain,

then gorge

on a buffet of worms

forced to the surface.

The sin of pride

and then of gluttony.

A Sunday morning bird

at the all-you-can-eat brunch,

hungover

from the night before.


While the early bird is at church,

installed

on the hard wooden seat

of her straight-backed pew.

And as the preacher drones on

in the soporific voice

of no-nonsense piety 

she shifts and squirms,

trying hard to think up sins

she can convincingly confess.


Another day in the mood to write, but nothing urgent to say.  Who knows why this dumb cliché crossed my mind as I cast around for a spark. But it did, and I thought it would be fun to noodle around with. Seemed especially suitable after having collapsed into an exhausted sleep the night before, only to end up being out for almost 12 hours! 

(Btw, there’s no need to be so early after all. Cursory research reveals that “earthworms are most likely to surface when it is dark, wet, and mild rather than dry, bright, or very cold.” So dusk is as good as dawn, and rain is well worth waiting for.)

Before the Thought Even Strikes - Feb 24 2026

 

Before the Thought Even Strikes

Feb 24 2026


I am staring at the wall

 — looking, but not really seeing —

waiting for an idea to come.

Which they do, try or not,

popping into your head out of the blue

light rogue lightning 

or fairy dust.

Something from nothing, just like that.

Which is how the universe began;

because such things just happen

don’t ask me how.


And don't ask from where.

All I know is some neuron sparks

a synapse fires

and a tiny part of my brain lights up

before the thought even strikes me.

It’s as if instead of mine

divine inspiration has struck,

or some muse has graced me with a great idea.

Which is hard to accept

if you’re not a believer

or an ancient Greek.


After the Big Bang

the universe expanded at the speed of light.

Not into anything, of course

because there was nowhere to go.

Which is something only physicists understand

and an average man like me

is baffled by.

I suppose things just got further apart,

change became possible,

and time started up

  — running down the clock

to nothingness once more.


On the other hand, I know where thoughts go;

onto the page

into print

and into someone else’s head.

A chain reaction

that generates — amidst all the heat and strife —

at least a little light.


And like the singularity

when nothingness tipped into something 

the creative genius 

takes credit for his gift.

As if it was original.

As if there was no mystery

to abstract thought.

As if the mind

didn’t have a mind of its own

physicists can’t solve

and even philosophers futilely mull.

Which is saying a lot

since philosophers don’t have to balance equations

or make observations

of inner space.

 

I’m still looking at the wall

with the unfocused gaze

of an open mind.

Still patiently waiting 

for something come.


There were some (admittedly controversial) neurophysiological experiments that showed electrical activity arising in a relevant part of the brain before any conscious awareness of the intention. (“Benjamin Libet’s readiness potential experiment (1983) tested the timing between unconscious brain activity and conscious intention to act, sparking debates on free will.” - Wikipedia) It’s as if the brain has a mind of its own.

But even if this is a misinterpretation of the evidence or bold inference, when it comes to the idea for a poem, an image to embellish it, or the perfect word to complete a line, I often have no idea where these thoughts come from. Instead of feeling like they’re mine, it feels like they’re simply given to me: than I’m a stenographer, taking dictation. No wonder the Greeks attributed this mental alchemy to the muses, or we talk about being divinely inspired. 

This poem really did start this way. I felt juiced up to write, but absolutely nothing came to me. So I just sat, eyes and mind unfocused but receptive:  and in trying to be creative, the mystery of creativity itself became my original idea. Or if not an original idea (since it hardly is!), then the analogy of the something/from/nothing Big Bang.

A Closely Held Shot - Feb 22 2026

 

A Closely Held Shot

Feb 22 2026


Even a bad actor

can cry for the camera

almost on command. 

It’s as if there is a deep well of sadness

we all carry within us

filled with salty tears.

That you can lean over a low stone wall

and peer down into the blackness,

drop a stone

and hear it splash 

too close to catch the echo.


Then those times

in a stiff wind

or when dust gets in your eye.

Or the trick of ersatz tears

as an actor’s last resort,

turning her face

and plucking a hair from her nose.

I wonder

are such tears different?

Lighter and more distilled

than tears of true distress?


When I said I don’t cry

I meant not in public.

When I said I can’t remember 

the last time I cried

you should have known it was a lie.


And unlike an actor reciting her lines 

there’s no script for this.

The tears well up, and can’t be stopped,

tears

begetting tears

until you rub your eyes raw,

the taste of salt

has turned to caustic brine.


On screen, a single tear will do,

a wetness welling up

in the corner of her eye

reflecting the light,

then running down her cheek

in a closely held shot.

Like a great poet

who has taken to heart that less is more,

a stoic

who lets a moment of self-pity show.


I was watching something on TV last night, and the beautifully measured restraint of this shot came to me:  a single tear, welling up sand running down her cheek.

I thought how hard it must be to cry on command:  reliving your greatest hurt, then being asked to go there again and again on extra takes and set-ups, especially considering that you’re surrounded by cameras, lights, and crew. Perhaps even harder than simulating sex on a cold stage with people looking on! Yet even kid actors do it.

The first few lines came out of the blue last night as I watched. When I remembered them the next day, I wrote the rest of it. 

Looking Out - Feb 20 2026

 

Looking Out

Feb 20 2026


I am not going to solve the problem of consciousness

in a few lines of a poem.


Won’t locate the voice in my head

or where he gets his ideas.

Will not peer into neurons

to see how memories are kept

and then retrieved.

Will not figure out

how my senses seamlessly meld

into one coherent whole,

or how I perceive the world

like no one else.


Because what’s the point of looking in

at how my 3 lbs of wobbly matter

conjure reality

and travel in time

when consciousness has given me the gift

of looking out?

Why not accept the fact 

unexamined

that I am who I am,

and simply be

my ineffable self?


Drinking in the universe 

until I overflow.

Immersed in the world

until my skin becomes permeable

and my boundaries dissolve.

Observing my thoughts

pass harmlessly by; 

as dispassionate

as a Zen master

who doesn’t question what or why.


Because who cares if reality

as I see it

isn’t really true?

After all, can’t an illusion be beautiful

in and of itself?

And who needs a solution

when the problem is me

and things can’t solve themselves?


Michael Pollan was interviewed by Terri Gross about his most recent book A World Appears, A Journey Into Consciousness

https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/fresh-air/id214089682?i=1000750537572


I’m also fascinated by the “hard problem” of consciousness:  where does this sense of self reside, and how does such an ineffable thing arise from something as substantive as the human brain? Does “subjective experience” adequately define consciousness? Self-awareness? Suffering? (That is, not just responding to pain as an aversive nociceptive input, but with emotional distress.) Or, as he paraphrases the philosopher Thomas Nagel when he wondered what’s it like to be a bat, “if it is like anything to be a creature, if it feels like something, then that creature is conscious.” (There’s a good word for this, one which explains why “what it’s like” is so hard for us to answer: umwelt,  the unique experience of an organism depending on its sensory bandwidth and particular exigencies of survival. After all, we don’t see in ultraviolet, hear infrasound, or sense smell as acutely as a dog.)

Fundamental questions that give rise to more. Does consciousness reside wholly in the brain? Where is the dividing line between consciousness and simple sentience? Are lower animals conscious? Plants? And will machines — that is, A.I. — ever attain consciousness? After all, what’s so special about organic matter?

But in the end, one insight he achieves is that it may not be as interesting or worthwhile pursuing the mechanisms of consciousness as its contents. We have somehow been given this astonishing gift, so why not explore it to its fullest? Which is where I take the poem: as the title emphasizes, looking out, not in.

Unfortunately, my temperament is not so attracted to consciousness expansion. I’m unadventurous,  mostly content in my restricted and conventional reality. It’s the puzzle of how — the nature and mechanism of consciousness — that intrigues me more. So contrary to my own poem, I am looking for solutions, not experience. I prefer solving, logic, and linear thought to ambiguity and transcendence. I would rather solve consciousness than explore it. Would rather take on the daunting task — to paraphrase the poem — of trying to solve myself!


Remains - Feb 20 2026

 

Remains

Feb 20 2026


The fire spared the graveyard.


But fires have no reverence.

They simply behave this way;

jumping and veering

and inexplicably sparing

a patch of unburned land,

then flaring up

from fires underground. 

  . . .  Until eventually

they consume themselves.


So our ancestors’ bones lie undisturbed,

their granite stones

unblemished by soot.

Such an irony

that while the dead have nothing to lose

we lost everything.

  . . . But mortality keeps us humble;

that born of ashes and dust

we return to them

when our brief lives are done.


The town has been razed,

the forest reduced

to bare ground and blackened stumps.

But next spring, fireweed will sprout,

and soon after 

a dense green mat

will cover the land we took for dead;

grasses, ferns, and forts

flourishing

free of shade.

Even blueberries

will come back bigger and better

on the scarred terrain,

fresh berries

like a bold proclamation 

of life defying death. 


And in the aftermath

some loving descendants will tend to the graves

despite their grief

or perhaps to allay it,

pulling weeds

cutting grass

and removing the dead bouquets

other mourners have left.


Some fresh graves have also been dug.

Covered in loose soil

they will be roped off

seeded and watered

and cleared of wind-blown brush,

until later this summer

be even greener and lusher

than the pre-existing plots.


While past the ornamental fence

you could have squatted down

on the barren ground

and seen some slender shoots poking-up

  — like wary scouts

eyeing the lay of the land

after the first good rain.

From seeds, released by heat

that flourish uncommonly well,

rooted in soil

cleansed by fire

and enriched by the burnt remains.


A Reassuring Sign - Feb 17 2026

 

A Reassuring Sign

Feb 17 2026


A random assortment of mismatched cans

plastic bins

and odd receptacles

 — some new

some vintage,

some battered, some split —

stand haphazardly by the curb

up and down the street.


Some have toppled

some lean,

and some are sinking into the snow

like tipsy drunks at closing time. 

A few are missing their tops,

lost in a move

or when they sailed off 

in that big wind last winter, 

and it wasn’t worth the trouble

to go looking after dark.


There are also some green garbage bags

slumped in the snow

the birds have got into

or neighbourhood dogs have trashed.


And someone’s old furniture

free for the taking

has also been dragged down their drive,

where it will be left behind

as the big yellow truck rattles noisily by.

Tired pieces

looking forlorn

with their cheap veneer and upholstery torn,

shivering 

in the cold winter light

like orphaned waifs

waiting for a good home.


They must be hoping some college kids

will borrow a pick-up

and harvest their treasures,

like gleaners

scouring the fields

after the grain’s been reaped

the fruit picked.


And I’ll feel gratified

to see them find a second life

instead of carted off to the dump:

clearly, my Depression era parents

who abhorred waste

taught me well.

So perhaps a broken-down sofa

with a wobbly leg

will complete the common room,

a child’s old desk

will help some freshman

do just enough to pass.


Every Thursday, regular as clockwork

the bins are dutifully placed

by the good neighbours

as well as the bad,

and at the usual time

the big yellow truck goes rumbling by,

stop/starting down the street

in a cloud of diesel exhaust. 

Even the scofflaws

who leave their bags unbinned

sort of comply.

Garbage day

with all the bins standing expectantly

like sentinels

where the driveways meet the road,

a reassuring sign

that something still works

in our small corner of a world

that seem increasingly out of control;

too big to comprehend,

too chaotic

to count on anymore. 


Who knows where the garbage goes

  — out of sight, out of mind

is good enough for me.

All I know is that every Friday it’s a clean start,

which I’ll gladly take

in a world of lapsed deadlines

and past mistakes,

  — once a week

a fresh beginnIng 

and definitive stop.


And later today,

the bins will all go back where they belong

in a dark garage or fetid box.

Waiting for another week

when a motley crew of bins and cans

in various colours and mismatched heights

will — as the schedule demands — be trundled out

in the early morning light

and left,

stacked haphazardly by the road.


Looking to me like stoner teens

skipping class.

Packs of slouching adolescents

who look like they don’t want to be there

 — or really, too worldly wise, be anywhere —

lounging by the curb

killing time.


A poem mostly about the bourgeois reassurance of municipal politics and city managers, who oversee things like potholes, snow clearing, and garbage pickup. Useful, measurable, and everyday down-to-earth stuff, so unlike national and international affairs, where high flown rhetoric, cross border tension, inefficiency, and corruption rule. Local government , where you can see your taxes at work, run into the mayor at the Walmart.

So when I see those bins dutifully put out on the appointed day and the garbage truck appear, I feel oddly reassured that things still work

And especially in our increasingly complex interdependent world, where disaster can so quickly cascade into apocalypse. 


Lights All Year Long - Feb 14 2026

 

Lights All Year Long

Feb 14 2026


The stubborn holdouts

and proud contrarians

have kept their Christmas lights up

for an extra few months

at least.


I’m not sure if this looks festive, neglectful, or sad.


Are they good citizens

 --  in the gloom of winter

lighting the way?


Are they hopeless nostalgics, 

clinging to a past 

they can’t let go?


Or are they inexcusably lazy;

indolent by nature,

procrastinators,

or simply overwhelmed?

 

——-


The string of dusty lights

drooping sadly

above the wedding chapel door

looks like an afterthought. 

They are the old fashioned kind —

clunky incandescents

on a scraggly black wire.

So they aren’t so much welcoming

as tired,

and unlikely to inspire faith

in the sacrament of marriage

or everlasting bliss. 


Nothing seems festive here.

The wedding march

is on an old cassette

plugged into a boombox.

The mementos are snapshots

on Polaroid.

And the officiant

is a suspicious looking character

in a shabby black robe

with an oleaginous smile.


——-


The neon lights flash, pulse, cascade.

They are blinding, frenetic, and light up the sky,

competing for attention

and, unlike our eyes

never needing any rest.


They are visual noise,

as deafening

as heavy metal,

and like any sound

there’s no turning away. 

As insidious

as tiny bits of glitter

that end up everywhere,

omnipresent

in the gambling mecca

where fortunes are made

and secrets stay

or so we’re told.


——-


It isn’t a long walk

out to desert 

on a dark and cool night.

No neon here,

just the stars

filling an ebony sky

out to the horizon.

And the longer I look

improbable as it is

even more keep appearing,

until, looking up

it seems more light than dark.


This may be the closest we get

to imagining infinity,

a notion

of no practical use

in our quotidian lives,

and that our ancestors

out on the savanna

never needed to survive

or tweaked their brains to master. 


——


Infinity

and permanence.


It’s as if Christmas was all year long,

and we always were as kind and giving

as the preachers insist.


As if marriage never ended

and we meant it when we said

until death do us part;

the constancy was expected

not just hoping for the best.


And as if there were sure things.

That you could gamble your way to success

when the vast majority lose. 

And that wealth equalled happiness,

and happily-ever-after

  — or really, any ever-after —

could actually come true.


——-


It gets cold in the desert after dark

so I reluctantly turned 

and headed back to the neon glare.

But there are still stars out there, as far as I know

filling the sky

whether I’m watching or not.

And I can’t help wondering

if I looked long and hard

could I count high enough?

Knowing

that even after the sun comes up

the stars are still there,

multiplying

beyond imagining

every minute that goes by.


I began this poem with an image of that one house on the street that still has its Christmas lights up. Seemed a promising thing to riff on.

But then this memory of a short podcast I recently listened to hovered over it. (Click on the link below.) My immediate impression of this wedding chapel in a pawn shop was of a sad place for losers. But then the genuine idealism of its proprietor and sole officiant made its unselfconscious modesty seem more legitimate than those big glitzy weddings that are all about showing off. The people who choose this odd place to get married are being totally sincere, not at all ironic.

And then another image of light came to me: a shot of the neon lights of Macau (which I initially took to be Las Vegas) from the movie Ballad of a Small Player.

So strings of lights led to more light, and the poem took shape as a rumination on both permanence and infinity:  from Christmas all year, indissoluble marriages, and supposed sure things; to stars that are always there whether we see them or not.  … And even more stars the longer we look.