Poetry: Selections From George Gad Economou
Funereal Drinks
the rain fell on us as if the
sky was crying with us; of course, in
a country like Denmark, sunshine’s the rare
weather.
dark clouds hovered above our heads, almost
as dark as the mist encapsulating my
withering soul.
some final words from the priest, we carried
the
coffin to the hearse and off it went, heading
for the
crematorium.
it was her last wish, to be cremated and
buried in one
of the many nameless graves in Danish
cemeteries, where
urns are placed in the ground with no
tombstone or markings.
my Emily, she was soon going to be ashes in
the ground and my
hands were shaking, and not only because of
the booze or the junk sickness.
as the hearse drove away, I staggered away,
unwilling to
suffer through conversations with her parents
and the few family
friends that showed up.
I was rugged, clean of junk, rock, and blow
for
three days and buzzed on half a fifth of Evan
Williams.
people looked at me as I battled tears on my
way down to
the city center, and our bar, and I wished to
punch them all on the nose just to get back
to the
Devil that decided Emily was the one to join
His poker table.
“where’s Emily?” Jim asked when I slumbered
into the
bar and hoisted my carcass on my barstool.
“dead,” I said.
he asked what happened; told him she OD’ed
and that we had
just buried her.
“fuck,” he said. “everything you drink is on
the house.”
he handed me a bottle of Jim Beam and a
bottle of Jose Cuervo.
I started taking pulls out of both. there
wasn’t enough booze
in the world to drown the pain and it was the
only
time in my life free booze tasted like
horsepiss.
Health Issues
“you’re fat,” I was told recently, again.
“I know,” I responded. I suppose they wanted
me
to say I’ll change my diet, or start
exercising; that I’ll somehow
decide, at thirty-five, to care about
extending my life expectancy.
I don’t. I don’t care about my beer belly;
took me two decades of
boozing to build it.
I barely eat but I drink more than three
meals nightly; even
bourbon has calories, apparently. doesn’t
matter.
I’ve been on a death path since I turned
fifteen, yet
I’m still alive; survived an OD, a decade of
abusing every drug under the sun, drunken sex
(probably
rubberless in several occasions) with a lot
of strange women,
and a lot of stuff better left unmentioned.
I’m still alive, somehow, and I doubt some
extra weight
will be the reason I croak. one day, I’ll
kick the bucket (literally).
until then, I’ll just drink until my liver
gives birth to
a better one.
Omnipresent Muse
fifteen years ago I held
Emily in my arms, and it
was a fateful night I wish I could
not remember that she exhaled her very last
breath while resting her head on my shoulder.
I was high on junk, took me a few hours to
understand
what had happened; to fathom she’d burned too
much brown-tar heroin and intentionally shot
herself to the other side.
fifteen years later, and at least a hundred
algid embraces
later, she remains the only inspiration. my
Muse from
below, the Muse that’s playing poke with our
horned friend
and makes sure I’m kept alive so I can bang
out
hollow words on blank pages.
she’s there when I get drunk in bars,
she’s there when I drink tainted vodka in
shady whorehouses,
she’s there when strippers offer me free
lapdances,
she’s there when I down two fifths of Four
Roses on a Tuesday.
inspiration can exist anywhere, I only found
it
in a pair of glistening green eyes that have
haunted my life
and as I tumble down another rabbit hole,
breaking the last
intact vein in my body, I hear her gentle
laughter echo
in my dug up grave.
Drinking With Ghosts
raising my glass to the whispering ghosts
flooding my apartment.
some nights are made to be nostalgic and the
more
booze you pour down your throat, the louder
the ghosts become.
memories come back; you sit back and drink,
reliving
the best and worst moments of your life.
I’m taken back to different bars, to when I
met
Emily and Christine, the two women that took
a piece of my
stony, diseased heart.
I’m back to Park AllĂ© in Aarhus, when I
walked away from the bus
stop after Bircan climbed on the bus and I
thought it’d be the
last time I ever saw her.
I’m back in my underground strip joint, the
first time I
visited and realized Gina had gone into the
turbulent night.
I’m standing in front of my old dive,
visiting Aarhus after
several years, only to discover it’d
turned into a Vietnamese restaurant.
I’m suddenly eight years old, seeing my
grandfather dead on his armchair.
I’m sitting in a park in Aarhus, swilling
lukewarm beer with a methhead.
I’m in my old apartment, five in the morning
and I’m baking and shaking more ice.
I dig deep, yet can’t find memories of people
I used to call friends here in Athens.
I drink some more, the same memories keep
reappearing; blurry faces of
women pop up, nights of booze and coke that
were meant to be forgotten.
my biggest sins, my greatest triumphs. life
and death,
being nowhere and everywhere.
what’s important becomes clear when you’re
older,
when you’ve lived long enough, and
experienced more than enough.
I’m nineteen again, living in a dorm house
and using the shared microwave
to cut blow after Michelle, a 41-year-old
ex-prostitute, showed me how.
I still miss her. I don’t miss my “best
friends” from high school.
life would have been the same if I hadn’t met
them;
I’d be a different person if it wasn’t for
Michelle, or Bircan.
if I hadn’t stepped into Jim’s bar that one
lazy afternoon I just wanted a beer.
I’d be dead if I hadn’t met Christine.
I’d never have known love if I hadn’t met
Emily in a dirty bar.
I’d still be the same asshole if I had
different friends in school.
life’s all about choices; most of them don’t
matter, but some precious
few do and it’s best to be vigilant
because one wrong choice can
fuck shit up way beyond repair.
George Gad Economou resides in Greece and holds a Master’s degree in Philosophy of Science and supports his writing by doing freelance jobs whenever he can get them. He has published a novella, Letters to S. (Storylandia) and a poetry collection, Bourbon Bottles and Broken Beds (Adelaide Books) and his drunken words have also appeared in various literary magazines and outlets, such as Spillwords Press, Ariel Chart, Fixator Press, Piker’s Press, A Thin Slice of Anxiety, The Edge of Humanity Magazine, The Rye Whiskey Review, and Modern Drunkard Magazine.
Comments
Post a Comment