http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
The old Chevy, rusted hulk of my early twenties,
        six shattered windows in all,
        gutted engine, popped trunk, ruptured seats
      front and back, all available for rat’s nests.
My first date with Sandra is in there somewhere,
        knotted fingers, stumbling tongue, 
        prolonging the embarrassment, 
        until it reddens my face even now. 
          
        Standing here, by the wire fence, 
        looking beyond the snarling Dobermans to that heap, 
        my confidence with women sure does rest
        on some mangled-metal foundations. 
Yet there’s a fascination to a time 
        when first car was a mobile church
        with me at the steering wheel altar
        and always on the lookout for worshipers. 
So what if my sisters were my usual congregation.
        There was always Sandra, 
        my blonde and blue-eyed proselyte.
        Too bad, she moved on to more impressive faiths.
Knocked about, scraped and dented,
        tires flat, bumper bars flattened,
        and yet it once got me around. 
        So what if I didn’t get anywhere.
I don’t know why I do this.
      This may have its reasons but it doesn’t tell me.
I just do it.
        Day after day after day, I do it.
I’m not even sure what it is. 
        Maybe it is not completely sure about me.
But here we are, me and this and it,
        together in the one swivel chair,
manipulating the same fingers,
        tapping equally on the keyboard,
making words appear on the screen.
        I know what a word is.
The text of a vocal composition.
        This figures it’s not that simple.
It agrees that it’s not simple.
        It wouldn’t be it otherwise.
They hold out for imagination,
        the power to form a mental image
of something that does not exist 
        in reality.
I do know what reality is.
        It’s where ideas go home to die.
It and this are always up for a little rhythm,
        that alternation of the strong and weak.
And they just love a metaphor.
        In their perfect world, everything is something else.
What I do know is that, without me,
        it and this would not exist.
Sometimes that gets in their craw and they just quit
        Like now. Like now.
The priest couldn’t be more certain
        than if he was talking from beyond the grave.
        Heaven or hell awaits us all
        and, by this, the congregation
        should know the grades required
      to get into one or the other.
I’m sitting in the sixth row from the altar.
        My wife is beside me.
        I wish I was as convinced as the man
        with the collar around his throat.
        Based on what I know, 
        once we die, that’s it.
        It’s over. Finis. 
        No lolling about in some visual version
        of the Pastoral Symphony.
        No sweating like a hippo 
        in eternal fire.  
        My wife is holding out for the former.
        She shuts down
        when the monsignor gets to the part 
        about damnation.
Even if there is a heaven and a hell,
        it’s lot to ask of us
        to believe in them.
        We’re limited by our senses.
        Faith is fine.
        I have faith in airplanes.
        I have faith in our soldiers 
        when they go to war.
        But airplanes crash.
        Soldiers die.
        So faith is not fine.
I say the prayers.
        I put money in the collection box.
        I do my part 
        but it’s like buying tickets 
        for the next AC/DC tour.
        You don’t even know if it will happen.
        And, if it does, 
        who’ll be the lead singer.
      I mention the AC/DC analogy to my wife.
      She says she doesn’t like heavy metal.
I shake hands with the priest
        at the top of the stairs.
  “God be with you,” he says.
        I so want to ask him 
        if he has more proof of 
        what lies beyond this mortal coil
        than he is letting on.
        But my wife is behind me
        and she wants a handshake too.
      And there’s others to the rear of her.
I’m in a hurry anyhow.
        I’ve a lawn to cut.
        A roof tile to fix.
        The afterlife must wait 
        for after life.
John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident. Recently published in Soundings East, Dalhousie Review and Qwerty with work upcoming in West Trade Review, Willard and Maple and Connecticut River Review. His work has appeared in several issues of this journal.