COYOTE BLOOD
poetry, art, mistakes, music, love, visions and everything...
Ghosts of a Good Time
Instagram is nothing but death and consumerism,
so I miss the optimistic vibe of 2010s’ Willytowne...
With music and mayhem and shared warehouse space,
Williamsburg had a moment that’s still being chased.
Once long-fertile ground for the strangest delights,
it changed over the decades…and again overnight.
We were just shy of what spells real adulthood—
which is tragedy or pregnancy—
living on craft beer, bad decisions, and borrowed rent,
believing the East River shimmered just for us,
between my Manhattan and her Brooklyn.
Now the streets feel curated, the chaos buffed clean,
and all that’s left is the residue of fine gone youth
lingering like her perfume in a thrift-store coat—
proof we were young once,
and stupid enough to think it would last.
Already on a Knife's Edge
12 Minutes with God
A Shell Station of a Man
Tradition: A Jukebox Musical
Dyker Heights
Sorry, I am having breakfast with ghosts...
Italicized the Other Way
I haven’t talked to my sister in years...
Every birthday is a bruise I pretend not to touch.
We shared so much, but not a present.
Playlist: A Nice Day in November
Liminal
Duvet
Good Grace
like someone late to her own legend—
hair flowing, heart glowing...
not for the way her voice rumbles
like it’s trying to escape
in another life,
one with even hotter summers
we are probably a reckless fire,
kissing behind bookstores,
burning through sheets and centuries.
we'd probably laugh too loud
she's just a fine gone friend
at her first reading,
radiant as a mistake I’d make again,
she doesn't notice my love,
How to Draw a Coyote
with the idea of a coyote—
lean, hungry, night-colored—
and already you’ve screwed it up.
the paper stares back
like it knows you haven't been wild
in a while.
you drag a line,
becomes a dog,
then a bad wolf,
then something that looks like regret
with legs.
the fear doesn’t help.
the cigarette ash falls
right where the heart should be.
so you try again,
thinking maybe this time
you’ll catch the ghost right—
but the truth is
some things refuse to be trapped
in graphite or good intentions.
the coyote keeps running
somewhere off the edge of the page,
laughing its archetypical laugh,
and all you’ve got
is another crooked sketch
of your own limitations.
hell,
maybe that’s the closest
you’ll ever get.
That That
THE WRATH OF TIME
We rip a hole in the November afternoon,
a sloppy time-warp in the stadium parking lot—
one minute we’re adults with Tums in our pockets,
the next we’re sixteen
screaming lyrics like we wrote ’em.
Warped Tour rises from the asphalt
like a sunburned ghost.
Hot vans, hotter merch tents,
plastic bracelets digging into our wrists—
God, we missed this stupid chaos.
We shove through the crowd
on creaky knees, old Vans,
mosh-pit warriors
with lower-back warranties expired.
Every jump feels like rebellion,
every landing feels like regret.
But we don’t care.
Not today.
Today the guitars are feral again,
the air tastes like sweat and freedom,
and time bows its ugly head
just long enough for us to spit in its face.
The chorus hits—
we howl it like a promise
we know we can’t keep:
We’ll never grow old!
Then our spines crack like snare drums
and we laugh,
because the wrath of time is real
but so is the rush
of going back
for one loud, perfect afternoon
to the place
where everything hurt—
and nothing mattered.
Anger makes us stupid.
Anger blinds us—
a sudden flash,
a hand over the eyes.
It makes us impulsive,
reckless,
hungry for a justice
that never tastes the way we think it will.
It fills me with old grievances,
warps the clean lines of reality,
whispers that revenge
is a kind of freedom.
But what sense is there
in kicking back at a mule,
in biting a dog
just because it hurt us first?
And yet—
don’t we do exactly that?
Hurt for hurt,
heat for heat,
as if burning ourselves
could cool the flame.
Life is already difficult,
the path already thorned.
We need every bit of clarity
we can carry.
We cannot afford to be foolish.
We cannot,
in our anger,
become the ones
who destroy ourselves.
In September of 2024, I was diagnosed with appendix cancer
(yeah, I didn’t know it was a thing either).
I did not announce it on socials, just put my head down and powered through with the invaluable help from family and close friends.
Through tons of tests, a gnarly surgery and months of chemo, I wrote this raw and raucous book of poetry about the whole experience.
I am grateful to be NED (No Evidence of Disease) but please buy the book to offset a little of these insurmountable medical bills.
Thank you!
I taste New York City on the backs of my bottom teeth
Selfish Portrait, Park Bench
The sun forgives me for sitting still—
for taking this hour as mine.
The trees hum softly,
but I do not answer.
Somewhere, someone waits
for a call I won’t make,
a promise I’ve left
cooling on the counter.
Here, I am the only witness
to my small, stubborn peace—
legs crossed, arms wide,
holding the world at a distance
just long enough to breathe.
















