CYNICISM 2.0

by | Issue #7, Issues, Poetry

Just as I was thinking I’d become  

a gollum,  

slinking over slick stones  

in the dank dark of a cavern  

deep beneath the rays  

of youth’s naivety;

 

just as I was thinking I’ve been decked  

in total shadow long enough  

that even moonlight might  

make red my skin or singe my eyes;

 

just as was I was thinking I was perched  

mere microns from the crumbling verge  

of void,  

peering into reaches  

so deep that even echoes  

of righteous, idealistic shouts  

from lungs unsullied by the tars of time  

are drowned;  

 

just as I was thinking that my  

cynicism, finally,  

had overtaken me,  

infiltrated me, and burrowed down  

into the marrow of my bones,  

 

I see my cynicism  

isn’t nearly cynical  

enough.  

 

***  

 

Often, I recall  

that newsman’s plea: 

 

these people are not used to this,  

their hair is blond, their eyes  

are blue,  

they look like me or you,  

they do not hail,  

from Planet Earth’s  

seedy neighborhood  

where such nasty things as these  

are casual, quotidian occurrences—  

like running out of butter,  

or the occasional hiccup bout—  

they need (deserve) our help.  

 

***

 

So when I heard  

about the seven  

whose passports had  

that special quality  

of vouching for humanity, 

 

whose vans had logos  

printed plainly on the roofs

that looked like bullseyes to

the bloodshot eyes  

that everywhere see bullseyes only,  

 

my cynicism told me:  

now that they who look like you

are numbered with dead,  

surely there will be some backlash

that, evidently, browner deaths

do not deserve.  

 

But like a devil on  

the devil on my shoulder’s shoulder,

a Cynicism Squared—  

a Cynicism Two-Point-O—

now rears its horned and ruddy head

and whispers through a sickly grin,  

 

even now  

they do not really care,  

they’re only fretting that  

their reservations at  

Jaleo  

may be in mortal jeopardy.  

 

I’m left to wonder:  

how high a stack of devils can

my weary shoulder hold?

 

J Kramer Hare is a native of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania where he lives and writes. When not reading or writing he enjoys rock climbing and listening to jazz. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Jerry Jazz Musician, Untenured, Quibble Lit, Autumn Sky Poetry Daily, Clackamas Literary Review, the Oakland Review, and elsewhere. He can be found at kramerpoetry.com.