When he was thirty-eight years old, he found himself
in a stranger’s basement confronted by a calendar
that had stopped dead on the day he was born.
He became the kind of man who bought snow
tires, rotated his wheels regularly, a man who
shopped around for the best deal on life insurance.
Many years ago, he climbed to the top
of an important Mexican pyramid on a date
with a woman who is now his ex-wife.
He had almost no interest in gods, thinking
their existence beside the point. Though he loved
the desert, he had no real plans to live there.
I say let’s keep wasting our lives and burn
our trash as we go. They say you don’t miss
your water until your well runs dry,
but I bet there’s always something else to drink,
even if it’s dust. All this chatter about how to be
a man, as if there were some alternative.
Everything we’ve done is for the best.
Consider the cosmology of Cracker Jack.
The corn was here before you were.
Damian Rogers is creative director of Poetry in Voice/Les voix de la poésie, a national bilingual recitation contest for high school students.
Canada & its place in the world. Published by
the non-profit charitable
Walrus Foundation
June 2012
The Walrus HOOPP Pension Debate
Be It Resolved That Canadians Are Incapable
of Saving for Their Retirement Needs Alone
12 pm, Wednesday, May 30 at
Hart House Debate Room, Toronto
The Walrus Glenbow Debate
Calgary’s Cowboy Culture:
Living Legacy or Just History?
6:30 pm, Thursday, June 7 at
Epcor Centre: Max Bell Theatre, Calgary