What Shitwork Is
For a summer resort as a teen
my job was cleaning latrines,
three months at minimum wage.
Nobody said, “Good job, well done.”
But it was.
I’ve repaired septic tanks from within.
Mucked in mud laying pipe.
Scraped asbestos. Hot-mopped a roof.
Shoveled bat guano.
Nobody gave me a medal.
Just cash.
Be humble. Do your share.
Society will be better. Civilization more civil,
you a stronger you, it’s really true,
more worthy than those fat cats in their mansions
who I dare not mention by name
or they’d send legal thugs
to bury me in lawyer manure.
Forget latrines. Think billionaires.
They bought the networks. Bought Congress.
Bought the Supreme Court and filled it with muck.
Learn about salvage, about repair.
Learn to fix rot at the foundation,
then work toward the top.
Town council. Statehouse. Governor.
Step by step go higher.
Then ask what shitwork is.
And let’s get busy.
…..
First published in Rat’s Ass Review: Such an Ugly Time
Nominated Best of the Net
Image by Jean Francois Millet
Hear me:
Monday, July 6, 2026
What Shitwork Is
Sunday, June 28, 2026
That Photo Smudge
That photo smudge
Not an ancient
fingerprint
but the blur of ghostly
great-grandfather Lewis
on a rope swing, Missouri,
flying out over
Little Piney River
to drop into
clear water among
startled tiny fish.
Too fast for old tech
but captured in black, white, blur.
Now here this photo
my child Joshua
on a rope swing, California,
caught midair
frozen full color
swooping over Rocky Creek.
Twisted fibers extend upward.
We hold tight, swing
—jump.
Never let go.
…..
First published in Northampton Poetry Review
Tom Harding editor
Hear me:
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Trillium Spring
Trillium Spring
In Maryland we play Monopoly
by made-up California rules:
Earthquakes destroy hotels.
A single game lasts in sunshine forever,
Elaine’s rule because her dad
was killed in Korea.
Elaine delivers the Washington Star
with wildflowers plucked along the route
but never trillium which dies too fast.
Sometimes I help. She’s poor.
On leftover news she draws crayon faces,
men with golden halos.
One day she gives me a portrait of myself.
No halo. Stupidly I say: Nose like an Edsel.
She runs out in tears. I follow to the bathroom.
Elaine has eyelashes of wispy smoke.
I—I’m sorry—I meant—I—I kiss,
over the sink—above the scent of soap
like an exploding wildflower
and then with impish smile
she sticks out her tongue, the deepest richest red.
Earthquake, game resumes while I puzzle
over unexpected wetness of lip,
the strange surge down to my legs.
Too young or too bewildered we never
kiss again until her family moves to Ohio
when she pecks me goodbye.
Later half a century my nose
almost an Edsel. Each Spring
trillium bloom with burgundy tongue.
Come close, inhale the subtle musk
but don’t kiss—or you’ll touch pollen
that clings, a game without end.
…..
First published in Speckled Trout
Photo by Will Brown
Hear me:
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Second Growth Wood
Second Growth Wood
Blue wing dragonfly
With hairy legs — my oh my!
New tree growing where the old one stood
I took my first steps in the second growth wood.
A hole in the fence by the buckeye tree
Cross the creek at the gravel bar
Up the hill picking blackberries
To the shack on the hill with the junker car.
Shotgun lady lives in there
Her temper's always sore
Rotten apples all over the yard
Throw one at her front door.
Run run as fast as you can
She saw you throw, screen door slam
Down that hill where the sawmill stood
Just some rusty machines in the second growth wood.
Amy would go there to watch the birds
Woodpecker, quail and blue jay
She had an insie, I had an outsie
We checked them — every day.
Hooty owl — musical song
Sounds like Amy, then it's gone
We never knew we had it so good
She was my friend in the second growth wood.
I carved her name in a cedar tree
Never could say why
Her dad got transferred to Oregon
I cried that day she said good-bye.
Dragonfly, big as a bird
Sits on my shoulder - how absurd!
I'd go back if only I could
To that first autumn rain in the second growth wood
To my first broken heart in the second growth wood.
…..
Lyrics by Joe Cottonwood, music by Will Fourt
From the podcast of my novel Boone Barnaby. If you search Apple podcasts for “Boone Barnaby” you’ll find the podcasts, which include the music. It’s free.
Hear the song:
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Coyote Railway
Song: Coyote Railway
Coyote railway
Follow the tracks
Go out at sunset
Sunrise come back
Ow - ooo - ooo - eee
Coyote comedy
When you don't see
A big wet nose on
The back of your knee
Yip yip yip yip ow - ooo - ooo - eee
Coyote toothpick
Mouse tail in teeth
Pups on the hillside
Playin’ games hide and seek
Ow - ooo - ooo - eee
Coyote freight train
Rabbits in line
One day you're starvin’
Next day you're fine
Yip yip yip yip ow - ooo - ooo - eee
Coyote romance
Will you go with me?
We got no money
But we can live free
Ow - ooo - ooo - ooo - ooo - ooo - ooo - eee
…..
Lyrics by Joe Cottonwood, music by Will Fourt
Hear the song:
Coyote Railway
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Sweet Betsy
Sweet Betsy
Happened in a grocery store,
I was fondling a can labeled
Betsy’s Sweet Peas, reminded of
Oh do you remember
Sweet Betsy from Pike
Who crossed the wide prairie
with her lover Ike
which made me realize
Ike and Betsy were, like,
making whoopee out of wedlock
all over the wide prairie
before finally they marry
at the end of the song,
a song they taught us in
grade school for Pete’s sake
when a stranger with infant swaddled
to her chest blocks the Safeway aisle
and sings soprano:
With two yoke of oxen,
a big yellow dog,
A tall Shanghai rooster
and one spotted hog.
“Excuse me?” I say. “Was I singing? Out loud?”
“Better,” she says, “than the crap they’re playing.”
Harmony, you know, is intimacy. Instantly.
We, strangers pushing carts.
“My name’s Elizabeth” she says with a wink.
The baby wide-eyed, silent.
A minute later from the next aisle
I hear Elizabeth’s soprano:
One evening quite early
they camped on the Platte.
'Twas near by the road
on a green shady flat.
But she falters. Over the shelves I offer:
Where Betsy, sore-footed,
lay down to repose
With wonder Ike gazed
on that Pike County rose.
Ah, love, and the day is plenty.
The infant wails.
…..
First published in Storyteller Poetry Review
Thank you editor Sharon Waller Knutson
Painting by James Lewicki from Life magazine, 1960.
Hear me:
Sunday, May 31, 2026
When I’m crooked
When I’m crooked
I go to Doctor Ellen,
lie on my back.
She places a fist
under my spine,
leans over me
with ample breast
pressing mine,
tells me to take
a deep breath—
then bounces me
chest to chest.
Pistons groan, pulled
from rusty crankcase.
Gears mesh, engage.
Fog of my mind clears
as old Doctor Ellen,
suddenly gorgeous
in a bolt of sunshine, says
Bones control our brains.
It is therapy
not love
but not different.
…..
First published in Verse-Virtual. Thank you editor Jim Lewis
Image from NY Public Library via unsplash
Hear me:
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
I’d rather be a hound dog than a friend of Elvis
I’d rather be a hound dog than a friend of Elvis
My bow-legged mother had rickets as a child.
Rickets, she told me, caused the bandy legs.
A long time ago I read a hateful biography of Elvis
which said his mother Gladys had rickets
because she was an ignorant hillbilly.
What an asshole thing to say.
Rickets can be caused by exclusive breastfeeding,
by lack of sunshine. My mother loved sunlight.
My grandma had ample bosom
where I remember laying my head.
Don’t know if Gladys breast-fed Elvis
or if my mom breast-fed me. Mom died
when I was young, I never thought to ask.
I had a leg deformity called tibial torsion.
Elvis had a rocking pelvis.
Is breast milk destiny?
Mom could dance like a champ because,
she said, the legs. Nobody laughed at her.
In the beginning people laughed at Elvis,
how he danced, how he sang.
I was nine years old in 1956, a shirtless shortstop
when a stray beagle wandered onto the sandlot
and lay down between my bare feet
panting up at me like an old friend.
He was mine for a month.
One day he wandered off, made me cry.
Then Elvis sang You ain’t nothin’ but a hound dog.
Goddammit. A beagle is something, ain’t nothing.
Listen to your heart. Hear the echo
of your mother’s heart, your grandmother,
all the mothers straight from their bosoms
to the bones of your legs. Believe them.
Believe the wisdom of dogs. Just don’t
believe everybody, what they say,
what they sing. Not even Elvis.
…..
First published in Sheila-Na-Gig
Thank you editors Hayley & Jessica
Hear me:
Thursday, May 21, 2026
Dear Oregon Trail
Dear Oregon Trail
Did you feel the grind
when wagon wheels
with iron rims
rolled slowly
over sandstone
while oxen hooves
chipped this path
across Wyoming?
Do you feel this July day
a century gone by
the oncoming thunder
a wind rising as
across the ruts
one spry girl turns
cartwheel after cartwheel
toward our camper-van?
I am father
of that daughter.
So, dear trail, are you.
…..
First published in Hobo Camp Review
Thanks to James Duncan, editor
Photo by me of her
Hear me:
Saturday, May 16, 2026
NEXT 1 MILE
NEXT 1 MILE
Wooden wagon wheels rolled
through prairie grass and alkali dust,
over Sierra mountainside from Missouri
bringing Jeannie’s great grandpa as a baby
to Jeannie’s little ranch
in what is now Silicon Valley
which she bequeathed to her sister
who immediately sold for subdivision.
As Jeannie’s last wish she gave these funky
wheels to me, to my home under redwoods.
Moon followed moon.
Worm followed rot.
Wooden spokes detached, wooden felloes
collapsed—saved for kindling.
Rims remain—giant hoops of metal,
heavy as history.
So today I drive my Subaru
from the mountains to the Palo Alto clinic
and there’s a highway sign on Route 84
left over from road construction
as you enter the redwood canyon:
NEXT 1 MILE
That’s all.
I hitchhiked the American West,
summer 1968, hearing each next mile
like a gift among the yak-yak calls of magpies
a pop song played from every car and truck:
“Soul Coaxing.” Raymond LeFevre.
Lush violins. No words.
Then it vanished, as sounds do in the air,
never Number One so never replayed
by oldies radio but launched over light years
to bounce off galaxies and return by surprise
like a lost buffalo—right here, right now
on my drive to the clinic—tune of my memory,
of alkali and prairie grass
broken by fences and strip malls as I enter
the parking garage for physical therapy.
For balance training. For my internal
wobbly wheel.
In the fireplace I burn remnants of spokes,
of felloes for warmth launching white smoke
while balancing on one foot like a
blue heron in rehab as I hum a lost tune,
as the creaky old wagon rolls slowly
toward sunset along the space-warp trail.
May we find balance. At journey’s end,
soul rises like smoke. Each mile a gift.
Look ahead.
…..
First published in Sheila-Na-Gig. Thank you editor Hayley Mitchell Haugen
*felloes: the wooden outer circle of a wheel held
within the iron rim, to which the spokes are fixed.
Note: a year later the sign is still there, all alone among the redwoods and traffic. My balance is much improved. Physical therapists work miracles.
Hear me:
Hi folks
For a few years now I've been posting my poetry on Facebook (and made many friends in the process). Now I want to be more widely availa...
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Boy, Almost Six You are five or as you say, almost six. You have a toolbox like me. You read books in bed like me. You even make...
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Song: Coyote Railway Coyote railway Follow the tracks Go out at sunset Sunrise come back Ow - ooo - ooo - eee Coyote comedy When you don...
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Second Growth Wood Blue wing dragonfly With hairy legs — my oh my! New tree growing where the old one stood I took my first steps in the s...
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Trillium Spring In Maryland we play Monopoly by made-up California rules: Earthquakes destroy hotels. A single game lasts in sunshine ...
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When I’m crooked I go to Doctor Ellen, lie on my back. She places a fist under my spine, leans over me with ample breast pressing mine...
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Beauty is your death beheld This mountain in the rising sun, these waters home to loon, these pines pulsing with sap, this handful of be...
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That photo smudge Not an ancient fingerprint but the blur of ghostly great-grandfather Lewis on a rope swing, Missouri, flying out over ...
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The Diplomat's Daughter The diplomat’s daughter can recite the 23rd Psalm in Hindi, once drank Coca Cola with Martin Luther King, is 1...
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NEXT 1 MILE Wooden wagon wheels rolled through prairie grass and alkali dust, over Sierra mountainside from Missouri bringing Jeannie’s ...
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I’d rather be a hound dog than a friend of Elvis My bow-legged mother had rickets as a child. Rickets, she told me, caused the bandy legs...
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