Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 06/17/24

A Crisis Of Finite Channels

i.)

Radio? Radio!
News cast, a lure a hook,
whether I should or should not.

These days are cold; nights hot,
a conformity desert for the song
and the city, no end probable.
News may never stop but there is
control — pop news for pop people
with pop tastes — thought control…
Individual  termination,
a politics of fashion to be
worn, warned, or discarded…

All census and no report.

ii)

Have a pleasant evening?
… As I am ordered then to do.

A-ha! So clumsy.
A-ha! So deafened…
A night of firsts.

I know what I am doing:
not enough, no — not enough.
Everyone is beyond, out of range
of vision and “vulnerable” bites.

Everytime I see that wall
of brick, I see a wall of brick.
The window panes insult me
like  the bird.

… Please don’t kill what makes “me”.

iii)

Gasp from my tears, hide
in the blatant, safe in the open.
Every society needs their bastard
like in their stories I disbelieve.

I am forced to look behind all masks
because     they are there.
Most masks smile: those
who donned them deaden.

Lit with awe and wonderment
this night, a suspect am I.
All ways in ways no more I will
see what is left to be done.

Look beyond the rags on that fence.
I will say hello… And scare you.

The voice
on the radio
stutters.

iv.)

Us us, or them them?

Some point in argument,
all that sustains the pop plan
leads me lost, rules my ruin —
the propaganda of sticks!
All as one is strength is not
when one is one and knows,
when everyone is aware
as merely a one there can be
no bundling, no propaganda of sticks.

Too much is too little.
The majority are tight.
The societal common stagnates —
so many creative ways
to be imprisoned by the imprisoned.

v.)

Shown the starkness
of being, awareness creeps
that the average are sold the gain
of strength through conformity.
They are to aspire to be
a part, a piece, never a whole,
no self in a part, in a piece.

The powers devised a plan
that all should be unaware
in a swarm’s instinct.

Am not weak — am not apathetic.
They hate, so hate themselves,
fight and struggle — stare with eyes
growing weaker at such sights.

vi.)

“So, you think
you’re special, huh?”
… No. I just have
my differences.

“So is that what makes you
think you’re so special, then?”
… No. You just seem to have known
no one different than you
or your belief and ways.
I do not share your beliefs.
I do not share your ways.
I am no more;
I am no less.

“Not being too elitist are you?”

The voice
on the radio
changes.

vii.)

No clear patterns have emerged
as to who as a rule will succumb
to individuality or
of awareness nearly individual;
freedom is  myriad.

Conformists have died
on their coffee break.
Conformists have died
during coroner inquests.
Conformists have pulled
party lines too hardline.
Conformists have died
live and on the air.

They are they and I
am a man out of room.
They cannot break
what has been broken,
an attracted stare that will not
undress just any woman.

viii.)

Listen!
An underscored symphony.

A lot of time is spent
out of room.
Firsts are reluctant;
to fight for.
The thinker must fight to think
and to practice the thought.

If the room was my mind
I would arrange my thoughts
felt physically, to be the scene —
would be the centre of it intricate.

In this place
when one leaves
one leaves with them,
and everyone is there
as bereavement clashes.

ix.)

The place is bleak
cold and dark; most endangered
are the naked in the rain.
No security, no shelter.
Fear makes it darken, sends you
deeper, clutching the broken.

Be adrift
in the cinema of the soul.
Sordid corners,
eMpTyVision,
satisfaction is not mine;
performance is not yours.

Let go — all this time.
All this pain — too long.
Stay  not still.
Century     to century.
Fire. Murder. Wheel. Moon.

Channel love, my love.

©2024 David Alec Knight All rights reserved.

Brother Knight

David Alec Knight grew up in Chatham, Ontario, Canada. In 2021, David was recipient of The Ted Plantos Memorial Award for Poetry. His first book of poetry, The

Heart Is A Hollow Organ, soon followed. His second book of poetry, LEPER MOSH, was published by Cajun Mutt Press in 2022. It featured his artwork on the cover, combining his interest in art with his writing.

Recent works have appeared in Verse Afire, Night Owl Narrative, and Medusa’s Kitchen. Anthology appearances include Poets For Ukraine Volume 1 and Love Lies Bleeding.

David sees dark and light around him in equal measure and explores that in his poetry, whether exploring working class themes, neurodivergence, addiction, urban living in conflict with Nature, and the effects all
these things have on relationships.

He works full-time in Long Term Care.

Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 05/03/24

Easy Pill

I ain’t right in the head, that’s an easy pill
for me to swallow, but it’s choking my kids.

I’m a piece of shit, lost my cool again
for the hundredth, no, the thousandth time.

Time, it keeps on ticking. Mine’s running out
as I scream and shout over nothing.

The dog pissed on the floor.

Fuck it! Is that worth this argument?
Is it worth this divide?

I feel myself slowly creeping towards the edge
I’m ready to jump, the free fall, the wind.

I wish my mind didn’t work like this.

I’m trying to get help, but what about them?
What about the damage I leave behind?

When I lose my cool, when I’m outta my mind.

The dog pissed on the floor again.

I stepped in it as soon as I walked through the door
already in overload. Work always pushes me right to the edge.

Speaking of the edge, I’m past ready to jump.
I shut my eyes, trying to decompress.

I’m ready to cry, still no tears come.
I’m fucking crazy, long past insane.

She was right to say that I may need a 72 hr hold
I’m no easy pill for anyone to swallow.

Now, I’m even choking myself.

“Easy Pill”

Death’s Bed

On death’s bed, true love still says

“You are the greatest thing that ever happened to me”

“I will always find every chance to be silly and share it with you”

“I want to spend the rest of my life with you”

“Please, please, please, please be my Valentine”

“I promise to make the rest of your life as fun and exciting and as happy as I can”

“Every day I spend with you is an adventure and every moment apart is time I spend thinking about you”

“I’ll always be with you”

This is what true love says, on death’s bed.

“Death’s Bed”

©2024 Michael E. Duckwall All rights reserved.

Brother Duck

Michael E. Duckwall was born and raised in the Ohio Valley. A featured poet at the 10th and final Gonzofest in Louisville Ky. His poem “Making Messes” was included in the anthology Encore released in January 2023, and his first book of poetry The Ramblings of a Recovering Poet was published by Pure Sleeze Press in July 2023. Cajun Mutt Press recently published his collection of poetry and artwork titled 7.2 SkullQuake in February 2024. This is how he describes his poems: “I don’t write, I release. I’m not sure if I could hold any of this in, even if I wanted to. Poetry.. my therapy, my friend, my release.”

Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 04/22/24

Worker’s Lament

i feel
dizzy in my head
weak in my knees
got a twitch in my heart

but it ain’t love
no it ain’t love
it ain’t love i’m talking about

it’s the factory
it’s the factory
it’s the factory i’m working in!

i’ve got
nothing in my bank
debts to my neck
and a hole in my shoe
my eyes are turning red
and i’m losing my hair
got a buzz in my ear

i have
an ache in my head
a black and blue soul
and i feel down and out
but it ain’t work
no it ain’t work
it ain’t work i’m talking about!

it’s the woman i
it’s the woman i
it’s the woman i’m living with!

She got no class
She’s a pain in my ass
and she’s so crass…

Lust and Greed

Lust and greed

Intertwined

Greed asked

Where to?

And lust said

Just go!

And they left

Leaving love behind

©2024 Wilfred Hildonen All rights reserved.

Brother Hildonen

Wilfred Hildonen was born on March 15, 1953, in the Arctic part of Norway, as far north as you can go and still be on the European Continent. His ancestry is a mix of Finnish, Carelian, indigenous Sámi with a touch of Romani – the relatives of the Roma, or Gypsies. The first time he moved, he was just a few months old and since then he has not stopped moving. He lives in Sweden at the moment, but is about to move back to Portugal, where he has lived earlier. He has also lived several years in Finland and on the Åland Islands in the middle of the Baltic Ocean, aside from several shorter stays in Brazil, Spain and Greece. He has been working as an editorial cartoonist and illustrator as well as a free artist for several years and his works have been published in Norway, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Portugal, France, Germany, Luxembourg, U.K., USA, Turkey to name a few. He also writes and has published two books so far – one in Norwegian and one collection of poetry and prose in English (and Norwegian) – Seven Times Down, published by Cajun Mutt Press. He speaks Norwegian, English, Swedish and Portuguese and get by in German, Spanish and Danish as well. He is collaborating with Cajun Mutt Press to publish a collection of his comix in 2024.

Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 04/12/24

Fused in openness

When the window opens,
we’re knifed by the breaths awaited.
When we do fieldwork much,
metal seeds fall from a cockpit
of some unprecedented hearts.
Good to know, I grow in the sayings –
day and night and daylight and moonlight
grown in my body.
That’s how I hear one wanting another.
That’s how, those blues and browns
and reds and beiges, reach dismembered
from the dry, mouthy sands
fused from us.
One more phrase, and the levering novel
shows how we are successful because
we’re complete in the space.
Too short to run, but legs and length originally
born to reshape trilling lights all along.
Too long, because we walk through
only stars after stars after stars
through breathing of love.

In the quantum of love

In a paperpiece of nonchalance,
I write spot, spot, spot.
Untorn, it shows the curious bookmark’s
anomalous track-record.
A page re-returns after all the pages
turned over, a matter of thousands of beats
sharded through the notepad of your heart.
Do you call it a petition of a repetition?
Let’s say you’re lengthened to a baboonery, –
you better count for a reachable number, –
your award of being Mortal, Sexy, Apostle,
Committal, Epistemological – additionally,
what kept for you in the hidden lulu.
In a paperpiece found flipping, I found
a piece of readiness desperate to be nothing,
gabbling for a vacuous dome.
It’s only the absolute, flowering a convolution.
Only an abstractedness, meaning:
a spot turning a star as all the unknown
spaces are created and decimated
in the quantum of love.

©2024 Jayanta Bhaumik All rights reserved.

Brother Jayanta

Jayanta Bhaumik is from esoteric field and counselling, and works in India and Singapore. His past works can be found in Poetry Superhighway, Juked, Blue Lake Review, Madswirl (their contributing poet), Vita Brevis Press, Cajun Mutt Press, Bindweed Magazine (Online Back Issues Anthologies / March 2020), Streetcake Magazine, Acropolis Journal, Lothlorien Poetry Journal, and elsewhere. He is available @BhaumikJayanta

Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 03/25/24

A One-Trick Pony does the Moonwalk

Over the past sixty years I have loved,
in my own way and as best I could,
an assortment of girls followed by
a similar assortment of women.

As a boy I tended to love girls and
as a man I tended to love women.
While a man-boy there may have
been some overlap as woman-girls,
strangely enough, never caught on.

Naturally enough I assumed the love
I felt for girls would be the same love
I would later feel for women and then,
in time, old and even older women.

My problem was I only knew one way
to love and not everyone cares to be
loved that way. I used to imagine I was
bad at loving but the truth is love is
my moonwalk and, as party tricks go,

well, it gets old quick.

©2024 Jim Murdoch All rights reserved.

Brother Murdoch

Jim Murdoch grew up in the heart of Burns Country in Scotland. In fact, his first poem was in butchered Scots. Poetry, for him, was about irrelevances—daffodils, vagabonds and babbling brooks—until one day in secondary school the teacher read Larkin’s ‘Mr Bleaney’ and he felt as if the proverbial scales had fallen from my eyes. How could something so… so unpoetic as far as he could tell be poetry? He’s been trying to answer that question for the past fifty years.