A tradition in Modern American Poetry since 2005. Please visit my companion site, www.virtualpoetryreading.com and listen to some poetry.
Published on May 25, 2005 By Buddah Moskowitz In
I watch sitcom reruns
even past the point
where they're funny

I've memorized the set-ups
the pauses
the punchlines
even the music of
the canned laughter

I figure its because
they take me back to my
completely not responsible
childhood

I wasn't burning in the streets
collecting memories to write about
mostly I watched
and the sounds imprinted themselves

they were comforting
and they still are

when I hear the voices of Fred Sanford, Archie Bunker, and Green Acres I am
immediately taken back to my
parents' house

warm, safe and brimming
with cooking foods and my
parents were somewhere in the house
doing all the worrying
for me

So I liked the sitcoms
still do

but
maybe I learned too much:

I learned that I should try and be
funny all the time every few seconds
and I look
unrealistically for quick resolutions
as if most problems could be solved
in 28 minutes

I don't take things too seriously
but if the situation arises
and I must become an adult

I don't panic

I just become Alan Alda in M*A*S*H
and suddenly, I'm an adult
and everyone believes me.

Comments
on May 25, 2005
I love MASH.

Oh, and your poem was good too

Peace,

Beebes