Money Ghazal

Easy new habits—gain weight, lose money.
Mamma said, Don’t wed for love. Choose money.
 
Life is suffering, Buddha taught. He’s right.
Which brings more comfort—a hug? Booze? Money?
 
Midnight. Lipstick on glasses, smoky air.
A blade shines. Someone sings the blues. Money
 
changes hands. A morning hike raises her
mood—so much beauty to peruse! Money
 
irrelevant. The landscape louder than
her thoughts. Today’s dose of bad news—money
 
denied to the Puerto Rican poor. Slick,
bloated corporate lawyers ooze money.
 
Grandpa’s waxy face stitched into a smile.
“Grieving” relatives argue—whose money?
 
The comedian struggles, wipes his brow.
When quips about sex don’t amuse, money
 
gets a wry chuckle. So does aging. Sticks
and stones is bullshit. Words can bruise. Money,
 
or lack of it, can cause death. Exhausted
from too-little fun, he hits snooze. Money’s
 
an abstraction, bills just ink on paper,
really. The YouTuber gets views, money.
 
Birds sing morning songs. The neighbors argue
or make loud love. My kitten mews. Money
 
talks, but what does it say? I open doors
to joy? Get to work? We accuse money
 
of our own vices. Top lip bitten in
concentration, my daughter glues money
 
to cardboard—one hundred pennies for school’s
hundredth day. I hope she learns—fuse money
 
and craft, abandon the myth of starving
creatives. A smart artist woos money.
 
Poet, if an altar and incense won’t
draw Her, why not offer your muse money?
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