There are times
There are times
When thinking is a pastime
They are less frequent
As the world gets older
There is a drudge about life
Even in the countryside
Where the mind has more freedom
To wander
Discovering rural idylls
Uncovering blissful language
Hidden beneath mounds
Of verbal garbage
Frolicking in a meadow of rustic charm
Wondering what to do with
A word such as bucolic
Bukowski would have spat it out
He was a bitter pill
Why waste a metaphor
On the man next door
Who wants to be a writer
When there is never enough
Cynicism to dispel a belief
That deep down
The hatred we feel is self-directed
Pour me a drink boys
A Macallan sherry oak
Will do me fine
How easy to rhyme with wine
What good would it do
When there are more pills
To swallow
Bitterness sullies the intensity
Of a life lived,
Waiting for the penny to drop
Before the truth dawns
Is less a pastime
More an escape
From critical thinking,
Pull out the discontent
Lean on the grudge
Adorn your prose with acrimony
It will not change the mood
But desolation
Should not be
The only agony
Of grieving, a life less lived
When acerbity can be a clever disguise
For the mundanity
Of resentment.