The Questioning Way Blog is written by Dewey Dirks, author of The Questioning Way, a book about open mindedness, skepticism, the human spirit and creating your own beliefs. This blog showcases both Mr. Dirks' book and examples of work from twenty years of writing
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Monday, July 30, 2012
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Drug Culture
In order for humanity to
truly discover our nature we need to look at ourselves critically and
notice not only the height of our strengths but also the abyss of our
weaknesses. --- The Questioning Way
Friday, July 27, 2012
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Smarter than a Mouse?
Seems to me that if a
Parakeet and a Mouse can figure out how to befriend each other and
share, people ought to be able to figure out how to stop shooting at
each each other and settle differences peacefully. Aren't we supposed to
be smarter than birds and rodents?
Saturday, July 21, 2012
Rock Star
I Wanna Be A Rock
Star-------
Met
a young kid once
who
wanted to be a big time musician.
Wanted
to make wonderful sounds.
Wanted
all the money that goes along with it.
Wanted
all the fame.
I
told him, “Lotta people dream of the good life.
Lotta
people dream of money and fortune and fame.
Often
they are the ones who also like to say,
'If
only things were different
I'd
be happy
If
only I had the time to do what I want
If
only I had a little more talent
If
only I looked a bit different
If
only life smiled my way.'”
Told
him, “You are who you are.
Nothing
is going to change that.
And
everything can't be rosy at every turn
because
living is a challenge and that's a fact.
But
you've got all that you need
to
get what you want out of life.
You
gotta believe in yourself
enough
to try a few things.
You'll
be surprised to find
how
much of life turns your way.
The
secret to success
has
a lot to do with faith in yourself.
When
you look in the mirror
you
need to see a star shining bright
before
you can be a star to everyone else.
You
gotta find what is good in yourself
before
everyone else will see the good in you.”
Dewey
Dirks
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Four Views
Being
Agnostic, over the years I've thought quite a bit about God and so
have written quite a bit about the subject. Following are four poems
I've written about the matter of God that adopt a variety of
viewpoints. The first poem is quite optimistic, the second quite
cynical, the third skeptical, while the fourth imagines what a
conversation with God might be like. You certainly can't say my
views on the matter of God aren't well rounded :) Over the years, I've found you learn more by asking questions about God than by assuming you have answers. Perhaps the most insightful thing I've found over the years, is that regardless of whether or not there is a God, at the very least, there ought to be.
Words
Blind
Words
can blind you
Make
you think the word
is
the thing.
Drape
what you believe you see
in
preconceptions and assumptions.
Shade
what you and others experience
with
shadows of news bites
catchy
phrases
and
rhetorical spin.
Or
put cloth over your eyes
with
fossilized passages
whose
meaning
has
been lost to time.
Every
creature you ever see
just
by virtue of existing
is
a waking enigma clothed in a mystery
wrapped
in a dream.
If
someone as simple as a man
is
such a thing
how
then in the farthest reaches
of
our imagination
would
we ever expect to figure out
something
like the powers that be
that
made this place
by
blinding ourselves
with
words like “God?”
It's
true, a single word
can
mean everything to you
or
nothing at all
As
you so choose.
On
one hand, it's just the word
some
people use
for
the best thing they can imagine.
On
the other hand,
after
nine thousand years
it
carries
about
four train car loads of baggage.
So,
what do you call
something
so fair minded
that
it gives enough quickness to cheetahs
that
they can catch some food
while
giving enough speed to antelope
that
they can run away from trouble.
And
is so compassionate
that
it makes every single baby beautiful
can
forgive mistakes men have rarely forgiven
and
offer up chances in life over and over again.
With
wisdom so deep
it
can watch human hearts
mend
and break at the same time
without
going bat shit from time to time?
Personally,
I'll not give it a name that blinds
I'm
just some dude with a pen
and
a couple thoughts now and then
I
just ain't that smart.
Dewey
Dirks
My
God Spot
Walkin'
down the road blue & dejected
Found
an old oil can, rusty & hot
Took
it on home, named it Spot
Made
a place on the shelf
I
don't know, maybe I'm odd
Kinda
liked it there, called it God
Came
in a dream wondrous to see
Spot
said the Word & then there was light
Praise
Lord Spot, He made things right
Now
I'm his prophet & He's the Lord
I
was lost 'till Spot made me whole
Praise
Lord Spot, my life is full
He
spoke to me one stormy day
Got
some commandments, got a whole lot
Got
the low down straight from Spot
Got
some followers & some big green tanks
We're
Spottites you see, ten thousands & more
The
Spottites & me, are wagin' a holy war
In
a thousand years all over this land
They'll
still raise their voices in praise of Lord Spot
Just
an old oil can rusty & hot
Dewey
Dirks
Don't
call me collect --God
Perhaps
on some golden throne
alive
in the sky, you watch over each of us
--rain
warm love, bathing one by one
man
and sparrow with most tender care
Or,
like a child at play
did
you make the clock your grand experiment?
then,
called to dinner, you plan to be back at eight
wondering
if we'll still be tocking
Are
you a big ashen bearded daddy?
with
all the answers up there
will
you spank us forever if we don't believe?
Maybe
you're a cosmic hippie
you
say "Hey don't you remember?
ten
thousand years ago
we
all stood at Salisbury in ecstasy"
Then,
with hand to forehead you say
"Or
maybe it was nineteen seventy-one
you
know, all that acid still gets to me"
Are
you a wrinkled old man?
stuttering,
the very edge of senility
you
wait at the gate, white picket complacency
We
come home for a hug and obligatory visit
the
younger playing Grandfather for a free dime
Perhaps
you are a crone, ancient and wise
living
in rock, road, brook, and tree
You
made a hard, wondrous, magical land
where
stumbling, we acolytes slowly learn of beauty
With
fire on your finger tips
maybe
you throw lightning bolts
make
floods, cause the sky to darken
Perhaps
you'll let five thousand faithful in
"All
the rest be damned!" you say as the earth quakes
Perhaps
one time, some time, ever time
we'll
be sitting in the park, you and I
Muhammad,
Gautama and Einstein play dice across the way
cool
green grass, white daisies, blue sky, shade trees
I
say, "You know, I wondered always if you were a figment"
You
say, "Don't we all, my friend, begin and end in fantasy?"
Dewey
Dirks
Route
27
Late
one night
I
was out for a ride on the bike
On
a long desert road called State Route 27
The
moon was full and bright
Stars
peppered the warm August sky
The
road was empty
And
the night was asking
For
a high speed run
I
decided to open it on up
Let
her go right to the edge
Let
her really breath
I
brought her up to around one thirty-five
And
settled in for a ride long, fast and low
The
headlight shouted out brightly in front of me
And
the engine wound out in a high pitched yell
As
the white lines blinked quickly on by
silent
and oh so fast
My
senses were as alert
As
they could possibly get
And
in spite of the darkness
Every
detail of the passing road
Jumped
out at my eyes
I
swear I could see
The
gravel embedded in the rushing asphalt
And
the barbs on the wire fence
At
the side of the road
Like
so many times before
I
fell once again, in love with life
The
rapid beat of my heart
And
the quickness of my rolling breath
Just
then in my shimmering mirror
On
the horizon behind me
I
saw the headlight of another bike
Coming
up hard, coming up quick
Ten
seconds later
A
slender figure on a dark blue chopper
blew
by me like I was standing still
I
rolled the throttle wide open
Pretty
soon I was doing about one forty-three
But
I couldn't catch her
And
I watched her taillight
Quickly
become a distant dot on the road
Right
before it disappeared
It
looked like she pulled over
I
backed on down
Before
long I was coming up beside her
I
came to a stop
And
shut off my bike
--Figured
I'd rest for awhile
And
chat with the lady
Leaning
on on the seat of her ride
Having
a smoke
Was
a beautiful woman, maybe forty
With
deep blue eyes and long dark hair
She
and her bike had kind of a glow about them
Very
subtle but bright at the same time
Friendly
but kind of mysterious
Very
quiet, kind of peaceful
Unquestionably
kind
I
nodded hello, not knowing exactly what to say
She
nodded back and said
In
a voice like a love song by Dido,
“Evening.
Nice night for a drive.”
I
looked back at her
And
knew I had to wonder out loud
I
smiled as best I could and asked,
“Just
who are you?”
She
shrugged and said,
“Oh,
they call me by lots of names.
You
probably know me as 'I am,'
or
'Alpha and Omega,' “Allah or 'Brahman'
Or
some of that other useless stuff humans like to say.
You
all really need to learn
Any
word you want can mean everything
Or
nothing at all
As
you so choose.
Why
don't you call me 'Sparky,'
Or
'Wiggles,' or 'Effy?'
That
would suite me just fine.”
“You're
God? Or maybe an Alien?” I asked
She
chuckled and said,
“I'll
leave all that up to you.”
I
looked at her confused
“What
are you doing here?” I asked
“Like
you, I'm just out for a late night ride,” she smiled.
I
still didn't know exactly who she was
But
I did know she was someone very, very special
“I've
got so many questions...” I stammered,
“I
don't know where to begin.”
“One
of the really nice things about people” she said,
“Is
that they are very curious creatures.
Always
full of questions.”
“So
what's the right point of view?
We
have so many...” I asked.
“You
know all those religions and philosophies
That
people bicker over
and
fight about all the time?” she said,
“Well,
they all have a few good ideas,
every
one of them.
They
all carry around a bunch of bullshit too.
And
science is pretty much the same way.
People
really need to learn to think
In
a many-sided fashion
Instead
of just bivalently.
You
can put that in your pipe and smoke it,” she smiled.
I
thought about that for a minute
Then
I asked,
“So
what does the future hold?
People
seem so messed up a lot of the time.”
She
took a drag on her cigarette and said,
“You
know, some guy once said
That
the meek would inherit the earth.
Well,
I've got some news for you
---they
inherited it some time back.
But
humanity is kind of a fixer-upper species
And
change can happen only so fast
Without
making a big mess of everything.
Imagine
the best of the 20's and 60's
Imagine
the golden ages of music
And
the intellectual leaps forward
During
the Renaissance
These
are previews of things to come
But
humans have a ways to go
You've
got to get it through
Your
thick, Cro-Magnon heads
That
every time you disagree
It's
not good to start killing each other.
And
you've got to learn to make governments
That
don't attract power mongers quite so fast.
It's
also important to learn to make companies
That
have a conscience
And
a genuine sense of human decency
And
you humans really need to learn
To
share a lot better.
“I
said, “Geeze, we sound like bratty children.”
She
chuckled, “Well, Homo sapiens
Is
a pretty young species.
If
all humanity were a single person
You'd
be around twelve years old, by my reckoning.
So
you see, you're just starting to grow up a bit.
Far
in the future, when you're much older
You
humans will have great adventures
And
do great things, if you ask me.
She
took a drag on her smoke, then continued,
“I
have to tell you,
There
will always be some inequalities
Because
that's the only way to build a world
In
which you can strive
But
one day people will seek to better their spirit
With
the same enthusiasm
That
today they use to build better guns
And
make more money.
There
will also always be people better and worse
Because
that's the only way to make a world
Where
those who need to can learn to improve
But
one day the worst of men
Will
be as kind than the most generous human
Of
your time.
One
day men will fight their personal ignorance
And
fear of their own inner beauty
With
the same determination
They
use to fight each other today.
All
this might sound kind of strange
Considering
the way humans are right now
But
you can make this future
A
reality one day for all mankind
By
making it a reality for yourself today.
For
humans, improvement happens
From
the bottom up and from the inside out
One
person at a time.
Now,
don't think of being a good man
Like
it means you gotta be
All
pansy and syrupy sweet.
One
day humans will be kind of like
The
good-bad guys of the universe
They'll
have kind dispositions
And
big hearts
But
with a lot of edge
Like
a good rock and roll song
But
humans need to realize
The
most powerful things in life
Don't
always end up fighting each other
You
all have the bad habit
Of
often thinking the greatest tests in life
Involve
war and fighting and killing each other
When
the biggest challenge a human can face
Is
learning how to love better
Effy
took one last drag off her cigarette
She
glanced at it and said,
“Did
I bother to mention
You
really need to get off peoples asses
About
smoking these things.
It's
really not worse than overeating.”
Then
she smiled and said,
“Damn!
Enough talking. Lets take a ride.”
She
got on her bike and cranked it on up
I
could see the sky move a bit when it started
I
got on my bike
And
hit the button to light the tubes
Effy
waited as the ground shook
With
every thump of her engine
Then
we pulled out onto Route 27
And
pretty soon we were doing around one twenty-five
We
rode beside each other till almost dawn
Just
as the sun broke the skyline
I
felt kindness and compassion wash over me
Along
with a dose of 'fuck a fine mess' too
Then
Effy down shifted
And
gave me a thumbs-up
About
ten seconds later all I could see of her
Was
a tiny red taillight fading into the horizon
But
I'll tell you, as the night had rolled on
With
us riding side by side
I
knew what it was to feel joy
Dewey
Dirks
Monday, July 16, 2012
Bickering
Bickering
Christians you need
to get a clue!
Muslims
are not
going anyplace
anytime soon
Muslims, wake up!
Christians
are not
going to go away
anytime soon
Hindus get a clue!
Muslims and Christians
are going to be around
as long as you
People
who prefer science
wake up!
Religions have been
around a long, long time
they are not
going to go away
anytime soon
Religions of the world
Get a clue!
Science is here to stay
it ain't gonna disappear
just for you
The whole bunch
of you have been
bickering and fighting
for hundreds of years
Seems like you'd all get a clue
after this amount of time
none of you are going away
anytime soon
You all have a clear choice---
You can continue to fight
and bring down
our whole civilization
sooner or later
Or you can do what's
intelligent and wise
and learn
to live with each other
The choice is
up to you.
Dewey Dirks
Christians you need
to get a clue!
Muslims
are not
going anyplace
anytime soon
Muslims, wake up!
Christians
are not
going to go away
anytime soon
Hindus get a clue!
Muslims and Christians
are going to be around
as long as you
People
who prefer science
wake up!
Religions have been
around a long, long time
they are not
going to go away
anytime soon
Religions of the world
Get a clue!
Science is here to stay
it ain't gonna disappear
just for you
The whole bunch
of you have been
bickering and fighting
for hundreds of years
Seems like you'd all get a clue
after this amount of time
none of you are going away
anytime soon
You all have a clear choice---
You can continue to fight
and bring down
our whole civilization
sooner or later
Or you can do what's
intelligent and wise
and learn
to live with each other
The choice is
up to you.
Dewey Dirks
Friday, July 13, 2012
What Do We Know?
What Do We Know?
Whale song, whale wanders
Diving deep
Into endless blue seas
Journey far with tribal friends
Living three hundred years
With not much to do but think
What do they know?
What do they know?
Cougar wanders, pad softly
Two thousand miles
Across half a continent
At one with the land
Cougar ponders washing a paw
Living quietly, just him and the world
Not much to do but think
What does he know?
What does he know?
Dolphin swims deep
Jumping in joy beside a ship
Is dolphin play
Journey far across oceans
Happy with life,
Never fight each other
Not much to do but think
What do they know?
What do they know?
Albatross wanders, soars high
Living in the sky
For weeks at a time
With not much to do but think
Touch the sun
Talk with friends
What do they know?
What do they know?
Men wander, living large
Lotta desires each day
Lotta men
Need a whole lotta things
Live in big cities
Have big tribes
We call countries
We fight each other
Over scraps of green paper
And a square mile of land
Hoping endlessly
Always inventing
Forever wondering
What it will bring
What do we know?
What do we know?
Dewey Dirks
Whale song, whale wanders
Diving deep
Into endless blue seas
Journey far with tribal friends
Living three hundred years
With not much to do but think
What do they know?
What do they know?
Cougar wanders, pad softly
Two thousand miles
Across half a continent
At one with the land
Cougar ponders washing a paw
Living quietly, just him and the world
Not much to do but think
What does he know?
What does he know?
Dolphin swims deep
Jumping in joy beside a ship
Is dolphin play
Journey far across oceans
Happy with life,
Never fight each other
Not much to do but think
What do they know?
What do they know?
Albatross wanders, soars high
Living in the sky
For weeks at a time
With not much to do but think
Touch the sun
Talk with friends
What do they know?
What do they know?
Men wander, living large
Lotta desires each day
Lotta men
Need a whole lotta things
Live in big cities
Have big tribes
We call countries
We fight each other
Over scraps of green paper
And a square mile of land
Hoping endlessly
Always inventing
Forever wondering
What it will bring
What do we know?
What do we know?
Dewey Dirks
Attention
Attention
Attention, attention,
Everybody needs some,
wants some,
gotta gotta get some.
Most believe a little attention
will keep them from being lonely.
Most believe a little attention
will keep them from weeping.
Most believe a little attention
means they're an important person.
Most believe a little attention
will help them pass the time.
It can be an obsession.
Gotta get that attention.
Gotta get some now.
Some get attention by being good.
Some get attention by being bad.
Some get attention by being honest.
Some get attention by being authentic.
Some get attention by being dishonest.
Some get attention by trying to live a lie.
Some get attention by being dumb.
Some get attention by being smart.
Some get attention by stealing it from others.
Some get attention whether they want it or not.
Some just can't seem to get enough attention
no matter what they try.
The secret to attention
is learning that you're okay even without it.
The secret to attention
is that those who have too much
usually want less.
The secret to attention
is learning that sometimes when it seems
like you don't have any
is when you've got a lot.
The secret to attention
is learning that when you get too much
the attention you get
can become more important than you.
Dewey Dirks
Attention, attention,
Everybody needs some,
wants some,
gotta gotta get some.
Most believe a little attention
will keep them from being lonely.
Most believe a little attention
will keep them from weeping.
Most believe a little attention
means they're an important person.
Most believe a little attention
will help them pass the time.
It can be an obsession.
Gotta get that attention.
Gotta get some now.
Some get attention by being good.
Some get attention by being bad.
Some get attention by being honest.
Some get attention by being authentic.
Some get attention by being dishonest.
Some get attention by trying to live a lie.
Some get attention by being dumb.
Some get attention by being smart.
Some get attention by stealing it from others.
Some get attention whether they want it or not.
Some just can't seem to get enough attention
no matter what they try.
The secret to attention
is learning that you're okay even without it.
The secret to attention
is that those who have too much
usually want less.
The secret to attention
is learning that sometimes when it seems
like you don't have any
is when you've got a lot.
The secret to attention
is learning that when you get too much
the attention you get
can become more important than you.
Dewey Dirks
Monday, July 9, 2012
Three New Books....
Just a note to let everyone know, I've completed a new manuscript this year called “Journey” and I've got around forty pages left to go on another manuscript called “Fifteen Sides.” Right now I'm looking into publishing options for these two manuscripts and “Lullabies and Legends” as well. So much has changed about the publishing industry in the last few years, with the rise of e-books on Kindle and Nook and the bankruptcy of Borders Booksellers, it's really kinda confusing trying to decide what the best options are for bringing these manuscripts into publication.
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Good At Something
Good At Something
Paula tends bar down at the Corral
If ever you go down there
She's got a long, tall Miller, a sparkle in her eyes
A good ear, and a friendly smile
And if you've got a problem big or small
Paula will even give you a welcome conversation
She'd be surprised if she only knew
How far what she's happened to say has gone
With the desperate and lonely, and the forsaken
Who've walked through her doors
On a thousand slow Wednesday nights
And not wanted to leave her till dawn
There's a guy who comes in every day
Paula fell in love with him a long time ago
He's a blue collar man, down to earth
With a good, honest way about him
But he's already taken, and happy
She's never said anything
Hopes only the best for him
It's no matter, she tells herself
She gets to see him every day
And when she wants more company
There are many very willing
To give her all the time she wants with them
Two blocks south, and four blocks west lives Emily Blair
She's got a husband and three kid's
'tween the ages of ten and nineteen
Been married going on twenty-one years now
She works hard for her family each day
All she asks in return
Is that you pick up your own socks from the floor
Give her a kiss on the cheek when it's bedtime
And make sure you clean up all your food
Before you ever dare get up from the table
If Emily could jump forty years down the line
She'd be surprised to find
Three adult's always telling their children
“You know, your grandma always used to say...”
And, “Your grandma taught me this, now I'll teach you..”
She'd see her words and her love
Echoing the long years away
And though Emily doesn't realize
While he's at work or at play
Her man talks of nothing but her all day, every day
All the Earth is a single town
A small blue dot in a very big sky
Men are mostly good or bad or in between
We all are small town born
And each grow up to play a small town part
In a small town play
Sam is Emily's husband
He's been a welder since he was fifteen
Every day at five pm he stops by the Corral
Chats with Paula
Has a drink, says hi to a few friends
Then along about six-thirty
Emily stops whatever she is doing
And smiles when he walks in
He's grins back, and gives her a kiss
Says, “Hi babe, how was your day?”
If you live anywhere in the tri-state area
It's likely you've driven across a bridge or two
Held together with beads carefully crafted
Born of the blue arc in Sam's old welding rig
Sam doesn't know it
But a thousand times a day, Emily thinks about him
Hopes his job is going okay, wonders what he's up to just then
Find out what you ought to be doing
You have but to ask, life will give you a job
Everyone is good at something
Sudden and sweet or long and very slow
In ways you see and ways you don't,
All you say, all you do
Touch the ones standing next to you
Take care that you do what you should
Sam talks a lot down at the Corral
To the biker we all call Slim
From where he came, no one knows
Slim's fifty-five and never put down his colors
He's always got a good word
His laugh is big, his smile soulful and warm
He knows what it is to ride alone on a long, straight road
Knows what it is to walk the sharpest edges
Slim's got a story or two
Lord-God if you've got the time
If you look across the years, you'll find them peppered
With crossed-up kids bent straight by him
A hundred times he's been at parties
And talked cranked-out pairs of bikers
Out of knifing each other
Slim and Paula got a thing on the side
But he knows her eyes are forever on another
He says he doesn't mind
He knows the man, and he's a good guy
He tells himself it's an ideal arrangement
Slim says that love is just another tie that binds
And one of these days, he'll hop on his hog and ride
Paula and Slim, Sam and Emily
All good people without a single doubt
But every day down at the bar
Sam breaks Paula's heart
While Paula is busy breaking Slim's
Two blocks south, and four blocks west sits Emily
Never knowing her good love has caused so much mayhem
All the while, the four spread kind tidings
In ways that remain unknown and hidden to them
Paula and Slim, both so good
At handing out wise advice
Are flaming fools when it comes to their own love life
And Sam and Emily, who have a love that will never know death
Never tell how much each one means to the other
All of them make their own mess
All of them draw their own straight and crooked lines
I suppose it only goes to show
That even the luckiest and most astute
Can act like complete idiots some of the time
Do what you do best
And you'll do well as you can
Everyone in life can find a groove
Everyone teaches, everyone learns
Remember the ways that you act
Always have more than one side
Wise to know, we all tell two stories
The fable, good or bad
Of what we seem to do
And the secret tale
Of what life has put us up to
Quietly, and unnoticed
Dewey Dirks
Paula tends bar down at the Corral
If ever you go down there
She's got a long, tall Miller, a sparkle in her eyes
A good ear, and a friendly smile
And if you've got a problem big or small
Paula will even give you a welcome conversation
She'd be surprised if she only knew
How far what she's happened to say has gone
With the desperate and lonely, and the forsaken
Who've walked through her doors
On a thousand slow Wednesday nights
And not wanted to leave her till dawn
There's a guy who comes in every day
Paula fell in love with him a long time ago
He's a blue collar man, down to earth
With a good, honest way about him
But he's already taken, and happy
She's never said anything
Hopes only the best for him
It's no matter, she tells herself
She gets to see him every day
And when she wants more company
There are many very willing
To give her all the time she wants with them
Two blocks south, and four blocks west lives Emily Blair
She's got a husband and three kid's
'tween the ages of ten and nineteen
Been married going on twenty-one years now
She works hard for her family each day
All she asks in return
Is that you pick up your own socks from the floor
Give her a kiss on the cheek when it's bedtime
And make sure you clean up all your food
Before you ever dare get up from the table
If Emily could jump forty years down the line
She'd be surprised to find
Three adult's always telling their children
“You know, your grandma always used to say...”
And, “Your grandma taught me this, now I'll teach you..”
She'd see her words and her love
Echoing the long years away
And though Emily doesn't realize
While he's at work or at play
Her man talks of nothing but her all day, every day
All the Earth is a single town
A small blue dot in a very big sky
Men are mostly good or bad or in between
We all are small town born
And each grow up to play a small town part
In a small town play
Sam is Emily's husband
He's been a welder since he was fifteen
Every day at five pm he stops by the Corral
Chats with Paula
Has a drink, says hi to a few friends
Then along about six-thirty
Emily stops whatever she is doing
And smiles when he walks in
He's grins back, and gives her a kiss
Says, “Hi babe, how was your day?”
If you live anywhere in the tri-state area
It's likely you've driven across a bridge or two
Held together with beads carefully crafted
Born of the blue arc in Sam's old welding rig
Sam doesn't know it
But a thousand times a day, Emily thinks about him
Hopes his job is going okay, wonders what he's up to just then
Find out what you ought to be doing
You have but to ask, life will give you a job
Everyone is good at something
Sudden and sweet or long and very slow
In ways you see and ways you don't,
All you say, all you do
Touch the ones standing next to you
Take care that you do what you should
Sam talks a lot down at the Corral
To the biker we all call Slim
From where he came, no one knows
Slim's fifty-five and never put down his colors
He's always got a good word
His laugh is big, his smile soulful and warm
He knows what it is to ride alone on a long, straight road
Knows what it is to walk the sharpest edges
Slim's got a story or two
Lord-God if you've got the time
If you look across the years, you'll find them peppered
With crossed-up kids bent straight by him
A hundred times he's been at parties
And talked cranked-out pairs of bikers
Out of knifing each other
Slim and Paula got a thing on the side
But he knows her eyes are forever on another
He says he doesn't mind
He knows the man, and he's a good guy
He tells himself it's an ideal arrangement
Slim says that love is just another tie that binds
And one of these days, he'll hop on his hog and ride
Paula and Slim, Sam and Emily
All good people without a single doubt
But every day down at the bar
Sam breaks Paula's heart
While Paula is busy breaking Slim's
Two blocks south, and four blocks west sits Emily
Never knowing her good love has caused so much mayhem
All the while, the four spread kind tidings
In ways that remain unknown and hidden to them
Paula and Slim, both so good
At handing out wise advice
Are flaming fools when it comes to their own love life
And Sam and Emily, who have a love that will never know death
Never tell how much each one means to the other
All of them make their own mess
All of them draw their own straight and crooked lines
I suppose it only goes to show
That even the luckiest and most astute
Can act like complete idiots some of the time
Do what you do best
And you'll do well as you can
Everyone in life can find a groove
Everyone teaches, everyone learns
Remember the ways that you act
Always have more than one side
Wise to know, we all tell two stories
The fable, good or bad
Of what we seem to do
And the secret tale
Of what life has put us up to
Quietly, and unnoticed
Dewey Dirks
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Everyone Is
Everyone Is
Everyone is a fool
For at least
Five minutes a day
The trick
Is to try to keep it down
To just five minutes
Everyone can be as wise
As hope
And human wisdom
Know how to be
For at least
Five minutes a day
Consider yourself
A resounding success
If you can
Get it up to ten
Dewey Dirks
Everyone is a fool
For at least
Five minutes a day
The trick
Is to try to keep it down
To just five minutes
Everyone can be as wise
As hope
And human wisdom
Know how to be
For at least
Five minutes a day
Consider yourself
A resounding success
If you can
Get it up to ten
Dewey Dirks
King Of The World
King of the World
It was late one Thursday night
Down at the Blue Light Lounge
When I walked in no one was there
But Ted, my asshole bartender
And some old biker
With a snow white beard and long gray hair
I sat down beside him and ordered up a beer
I said, “I'm Slammed-Out Sal
And I run this neighborhood
Just who the hell are you
And what are you doin' in my bar
Drinkin' my booze and breathin' my air?”
He laughed and said, “Good to meet you Sal.
I'm Knife-Nose Frank
And I'm king of the world”
Ted winked at me
I took a drink and smiled
Figured I'd have some fun with this toad
“You're tellin' me you run the whole damn world?” I asked
“Hell yea” he said, “everyplace, everywhere”
I said “I bet you're old, maybe two-hundred or more”
Three-hundred five, and a few weeks” he grinned
I took a sip of coor's and said
“You don't run it very good.
Everyone's always fighting”
He said, “You know, I like everyone
But you gotta run things with an easy hand
And people are like kids, spoiled and scrappy
They're gonna do what they're gonna do
And they're gonna play rough
A time or two
Gonna get a bloody nose every once in awhile
What can you do?”
“How come there's so many countries?” I asked
Seems like it'd be better
If we was all had one government
“I like variety. Variety is good” he smiled
“What about all these different religions?” I asked
“People are gonna think what they want to think
There's something for everyone
Freedom of religion is good,” he smiled
So what's the hardest part
Of running the whole damned world, Frank?”
“Keepin' the proper mix
Of house cats and dog people” he said
“Just what ever do you mean, Frank?” I laughed
He took a drink and grinned back at me
“Well, house cat people are curious and playful
And lots of times they get into trouble
But you gotta have them
Or no books would be written
Paintings wouldn't get painted
Nothing would get invented
And songs would 't be sung
House cat people are a little chaotic
But they do a lot of good things too
Now, dog people don't like change
And they don't invent much of anything
But they follow their masters loyally
Keep life stable, work very hard
And help countries live a long, long time
But the house cats and the dogs
Don't understand each other sometimes
Some days each one looks down on the other
Keepin' the mix even
And keepin' one from stomping the other one out
Is the hardest thing I usually do”
Knife-nose Frank stood up and stretched
Said “It's been nice talkin' to you Sal
But I've got to go
See about some riots in Uzbekistan"
I stood up too
I figured I'd follow him outside
And kick the shit out of him in the parking lot
Then Frank pulled a thousand dollar bill out of his wallet
And slapped it on the bar
He winked at Ted
“Keep the change,” he said
I looked at the money
And followed him outside
Just then a black helicopter flew overhead
And Frank swung his leg over a pure platinum V-4 chopper
When he fired it up, my heart stopped for a second
And I swear the sky moved
He nodded at me and slipped it into gear
I don't remember him leaving
But as suddenly as he was there, he was gone
My eyes were wide when I walked back in the Blue Light Lounge
Ted must have noticed the look on my face
“Do you want to keep this money for yourself?” he asked
I figured it'd be better to be safe than sorry
“No, you take it” I said,
“I think we'd better do what he wanted”
Dewey Dirks
It was late one Thursday night
Down at the Blue Light Lounge
When I walked in no one was there
But Ted, my asshole bartender
And some old biker
With a snow white beard and long gray hair
I sat down beside him and ordered up a beer
I said, “I'm Slammed-Out Sal
And I run this neighborhood
Just who the hell are you
And what are you doin' in my bar
Drinkin' my booze and breathin' my air?”
He laughed and said, “Good to meet you Sal.
I'm Knife-Nose Frank
And I'm king of the world”
Ted winked at me
I took a drink and smiled
Figured I'd have some fun with this toad
“You're tellin' me you run the whole damn world?” I asked
“Hell yea” he said, “everyplace, everywhere”
I said “I bet you're old, maybe two-hundred or more”
Three-hundred five, and a few weeks” he grinned
I took a sip of coor's and said
“You don't run it very good.
Everyone's always fighting”
He said, “You know, I like everyone
But you gotta run things with an easy hand
And people are like kids, spoiled and scrappy
They're gonna do what they're gonna do
And they're gonna play rough
A time or two
Gonna get a bloody nose every once in awhile
What can you do?”
“How come there's so many countries?” I asked
Seems like it'd be better
If we was all had one government
“I like variety. Variety is good” he smiled
“What about all these different religions?” I asked
“People are gonna think what they want to think
There's something for everyone
Freedom of religion is good,” he smiled
So what's the hardest part
Of running the whole damned world, Frank?”
“Keepin' the proper mix
Of house cats and dog people” he said
“Just what ever do you mean, Frank?” I laughed
He took a drink and grinned back at me
“Well, house cat people are curious and playful
And lots of times they get into trouble
But you gotta have them
Or no books would be written
Paintings wouldn't get painted
Nothing would get invented
And songs would 't be sung
House cat people are a little chaotic
But they do a lot of good things too
Now, dog people don't like change
And they don't invent much of anything
But they follow their masters loyally
Keep life stable, work very hard
And help countries live a long, long time
But the house cats and the dogs
Don't understand each other sometimes
Some days each one looks down on the other
Keepin' the mix even
And keepin' one from stomping the other one out
Is the hardest thing I usually do”
Knife-nose Frank stood up and stretched
Said “It's been nice talkin' to you Sal
But I've got to go
See about some riots in Uzbekistan"
I stood up too
I figured I'd follow him outside
And kick the shit out of him in the parking lot
Then Frank pulled a thousand dollar bill out of his wallet
And slapped it on the bar
He winked at Ted
“Keep the change,” he said
I looked at the money
And followed him outside
Just then a black helicopter flew overhead
And Frank swung his leg over a pure platinum V-4 chopper
When he fired it up, my heart stopped for a second
And I swear the sky moved
He nodded at me and slipped it into gear
I don't remember him leaving
But as suddenly as he was there, he was gone
My eyes were wide when I walked back in the Blue Light Lounge
Ted must have noticed the look on my face
“Do you want to keep this money for yourself?” he asked
I figured it'd be better to be safe than sorry
“No, you take it” I said,
“I think we'd better do what he wanted”
Dewey Dirks
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Enjoy Your Life
Enjoy Your Life
Enjoy your life
care for all you encounter
remember your dreams
are something to strive for
and will help you in what you do
don't despair the times that are hard
because your dreams in life
will help you through
the times that are rough
Dewey Dirks
Enjoy your life
care for all you encounter
remember your dreams
are something to strive for
and will help you in what you do
don't despair the times that are hard
because your dreams in life
will help you through
the times that are rough
Dewey Dirks
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