I Don’t Forgive You

I don’t forgive you
because you taught me
forgiveness erases the past.
It makes everything right,
and if it’s not,
it’s the fault of the forgiver,
who then becomes unworthy
of giving or receiving
forgiveness.

I don’t forgive you
because you taught me
forgiveness erases all boundaries
and if I want boundaries,
then I didn’t really forgive you,
and if I don’t forgive you,
then I don’t love God,
and if I don’t love God,
then I’m a sinner,
and if I am a sinner,
then I am just as wrong as you,
and therefore,
I am unworthy
of giving or receiving
forgiveness.

I don’t forgive you
because you don’t believe

you’ve done anything
that needs

forgiving.

Your Father the Devil

Your god
points to a mass grave
where tangled Palestinian bodies
gasp for breath,
a gospel
of bullets and bloodshed
brought to bear
upon the least of these.
He is a white AR-15
mowing down children
in the second grade
while fucking little girls
of the same age—
a coward
accusing queer communities
of crimes committed
by his pastors and priests.
Your god
is an idol,
created in the likeness
of your hate.

But Grace

is a headstone
bearing your names,
buried in a landfill
for which
none of us
mourn.

Ode to Calvary Chapel

The Moses model was established to give the pastor
complete control because Chuck Smith did not like
to hear the word ‘no.’ And so followed suit his cult of
imposter pastors who wielded power accountable ‘only
to the Lord.’ Such a strange interpretation falling outside
all models for the Church, but for them, it worked—to
keep the flock in line. Under-shepherds too quick to
identify with Jesus and not the Judas in themselves.
I condemn it. The bath, the water, the baby—all of it.

Strange were the men, never women, who assumed
the role of pastor. Charismatic, arrogant, filled with
all manner of pride, but—they say—holy, and to say
otherwise, was to Divide—division is the greatest sin you
can commit outside of being gay, or a woman who lost
her virginity before marriage; these men were always in
our pants. They were always in our lives pointing our
eyes to distant stars while picking our pockets for their
con—Jesus is coming, they still say, and every earthly
strife is a sign.

We waited. We watched. Jesus never showed up—to
a single Sunday service. Probably because they did
so little serving beyond themselves. Riding the coat
tails of every Evangelical pearl clutch, they stoked the
fears of the flock inside the lines drawn in the sand
between them and everyone else—us versus them.
Them, a euphemism for non-Calvary Chapel believers,
the unsaved, the unclean, the Black, the Brown, the
Other—and especially the misfits who were a misfit
for the cross-shaped coffins they’d stuff us into, like
Lonnie Frisbee who first brought the youth. Lonnie,
who gave Chuck his start. Lonnie, who they threw
away when he couldn’t stop being gay. Lonnie, who
Smith and Laurie claimed repented on his deathbed.
We know they are lying.

Chuck is gone now, I wish Laurie was, too, but his
legacy lives on in the broken bodies beaten down
by illiterate men who use the Bible as a weapon, God
as a scapegoat, and Love as reason to hate. And there
was so much hate.

I condemn it. The bath, the water, the baby—all of it.

We Are Yet Ghosts

We speak like ghosts to keep alive
the cemeteries buried in our throats
because, even after all this time,
there are still some things we are not
yet ready to let go—like the hatchet
we use to open up old wounds. We
confuse mausoleums for museums
where in place of paintings we hang
like criminals. Our skeletons are on
full display, broken and unclean. Both
of our hands are bloody.

While you’ve lingered in that old house,
haunting its halls like a presence known
only by trails of sunflower shells and
the phantom drones of imaginary flight
patterns, I have clawed my way through
the dirt to rise above the earth to find
my way from death to life. I do not yet
know if it is too late for you, but I have
exorcized your demon from my soul,
and one day, hopefully, I might finally
let go.

Horror-Things

I imagine horror-things. Not horrible things, those
I don’t have to imagine, but horror-things. Things
that skitter in deep shadows, or tap on the glass
of the window where the pane is reflective of
something deeper, or the late night shifting of
dishes in the kitchen–it should be frightful, but
instead, I just feel less alone.

This head is too full of ghosts. Not the movie kind,
but the you kind; the you and them I’ve tried and
failed to leave behind kind. The you and them
reminding me that the dead don’t rise, that there
are no clean getaways, and that none of us get
out of this alive.

So why

do I have to feel so prematurely dead inside?

A Tired Mom

God’s not dead,
She’s just tired
Of all this Hell
We put ourselves through.
It was never meant
To be like this,
The hurt.
But like so many new parents,
She’s still learning.
She’s still growing up,
So be gentle,
Because this
Is new for all of us.
We are all
Making this up.
So, please,
Let go of the guilt
Held hostage
Over your hearts,
Because someone
Has to teach God
How to let go of a grudge.

When This Veteran Came Home

I am young and old, here and now, then and yet to be. A 41-year-old husband and father, a 21-year-old kid upon the sea, and the child loved by his father’s fists. I am a convergence removed from time and space in temporary condition only to be returned to find former things replaced by new. The world did not wait for me, and in many ways, nor I it. And like myself, it was familiar in appearance but radically transformed.