“A Few Haiku (21)” published at Gobblers by Masticadores

Greetings, folks. Gobblers by Masticadores has published the latest installment of my short haiku/senryu collections titled “A Few Haiku (21).” These small collections consist of six haiku and/or senryu. Much appreciation goes to editor Manuela Timofte for her kindness in sharing these little ones with her readers. I hope you like them.

“A Few Haiku (21)”
© 2021 by Michael L. Utley

(#121)

old rain barrel
dark waters of
forgotten dreams

…..

(#122)

first snow
white kiku on
autumn’s casket

…..

(#123)

stone cairns
mark my future; stone heart
marks my past

You can read the rest of this mini-collection here:

Also, don’t forget to follow and subscribe to Gobblers by Masticadores, where you’ll find some wonderful writing and plenty of food for thought.

“Prudent; Rational”

“Prudent; Rational”
© 2025 by Michael L. Utley

“I think it’s worth to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment to protect our other God-given rights. That is a prudent deal. It is rational.”  Charlie Kirk, April 2023

…..

San Ysidro McDonald’s massacre, San Ysidro, CA, 1984 – 22 dead/9 injured
USPS shooting, Edmund, OK, 1986 – 15/6

prudent; rational

GMAC massacre, Jacksonville, FL, 1990 – 10/4
Luby’s massacre, Killeen, TX, 1991 – 24/20

prudent; rational

Columbine High School massacre, Littleton, CO, 1999 – 13/24
Red Lake massacre, Red Lake, MN, 2005 – 10/5

prudent; rational

Virginia Tech University massacre, Blacksburg, VA, 2007 – 32/23
Binghamton shootings, Binghamton, NY, 2009 – 14/4

prudent; rational

Fort Hood massacre, Fort Hood, TX, 2009 – 13/31
Aurora theater shooting, Aurora, CO, 2012 – 12/70

prudent; rational

Sandy Hook Elementary massacre, Newtown, CT, 2012 – 27/2
Washington Navy Yard shooting, Washington D.C., 2013 – 12/8

prudent; rational

San Bernardino mass shooting, San Bernardino, CA, 2015 – 14/21
Orlando night club massacre, Orlando, FL, 2016 – 49/53

prudent; rational

Las Vegas Strip massacre, Las Vegas, NV, 2017 – 60/546
Texas First Baptist Church massacre, Sutherland Springs, TX, 2017 – 26/20

prudent; rational

Marjory Stoneman Douglass High School massacre, Parkland, FL, 2018 – 17/17
Santa Fe High School shooting, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 2018 – 10/13

prudent; rational

Tree of Life synagogue shooting, Pittsburgh, PA, 2018 – 11/6
Thousand Oaks nightclub shooting, Thousand Oaks, CA, 2018 – 12/22

prudent; rational

Virginia Beach municipal building shooting, Virginia Beach, VA , 2019 – 12/4
El Paso Walmart mass shooting, El Paso, TX, 2019 – 22/26

prudent; rational

Boulder supermarket shooting, Boulder, CO, 2021 – 10/0
Buffalo supermarket massacre, Buffalo, NY, 2022 – 10/3

prudent; rational

Robb Elementary School shooting, Uvalde, TX, 2022 – 21/17
LA dance studio mass shooting, Monterey Park, CA, 2023 – 11/10

prudent; rational

Maine bowling alley & bar shootings, Lewiston, ME, 2023 – 18/13
Utah Valley University shooting, Orem, UT, 2025 – 1

prudent; rational

…..

This is only a partial compilation of mass shootings in the U.S between 1982-2024. These instances refer to shootings with double-digit fatalities (except for the final listing, which was not a mass shooting but notable nonetheless for its irony); there are many, many more shootings not included due to limited space. This list by Mother Jones was used in this piece.

Mass shootings are defined as events in which four or more fatalities occur (excluding the shooter). Recent data from Everytown for Gun Safety shows that since 2015, more than 19,000 people have been killed in mass shootings in the United States (all of them presumably prudent, rational sacrifices, according to the late CK), with more than 686 mass shootings in 2021 during the Covid-19 pandemic. The statistics for mass shootings with fewer than four fatalities between 2015-2022 represent 95% of all mass shootings, with 3,533 incidents. The US averages more mass shootings than days in the year.

Giffords Law Center reports that more than 46,000 Americans die annually as a result of gun violence. That’s 125/day on average, with more than 461,000 dead since 2015. The number of guns in the United States totals more than 400 MILLION (population ~345 million). This article by The Intercept show that politically red states exhibit much higher levels of gun violence than blue states, in large part due to political ideology and lax gun laws. And with all the dark money flowing into morally corrupt republican politicians’ coffers from the Gun Lobby, this is not surprising. The GOP has sold its soul to the NRA and repeatedly shoots down (pun intended) any attempts by Democrats to pass common-sense gun legislation to curb gun violence and deaths.

Will these deaths be enough to satisfy those who demand blood sacrifice to protect “god-given” rights to amass vast arsenals of weapons and ammunition to achieve some twisted ideal of alpha manhood? Can any gun death be considered “prudent” or “rational?” What have we become when we glorify violence and bloodshed and vilify those who seek to end the carnage of mass shootings and other types of gun violence?

“One death is a tragedy, a million deaths a statistic.” – Joseph Stalin

“A Tanka Trio (10)” published at Gobblers by Masticadores

Hi, everyone. The tenth installment of my tanka series titled “A Tanka Trio (10)” is now available at Gobblers by Masticadores. Each of these installments contains three tanka (be sure to click this link or the link below to read all of them). Thank you, Manuela Timofte, for sharing these tanka with your readers. You’re a wonderful editor and I appreciate all you do.

“A Tanka Trio (10)”
© 2021 by Michael L. Utley

(#28)

Sere crone winter sheds
Iced waraji at the door
Hangs her hiemal veil
On the windows, frigid laugh
Desecrates the sacred place

…..

(#29)

Shima-enaga
Silver-throated winter-borne
Yuki no tori
Huddle in Hokkaido chill
Little clouds alight on branch

You can read the rest of this tanka installment here:

Also, don’t forget to follow and subscribe to Gobblers by Masticadores, where you’ll find some wonderful writing and plenty of food for thought.

“The Grief of Winter” published at Hotel by Masticadores

Hello, everyone. My poem “The Grief of Winter” is now available for your perusal at Hotel by Masticadores. I’m grateful to editor Michelle Navajas for publishing this poem. Thank you so much for all you do, Michelle.

“The Grief of Winter”
(c) 2024 by Michael L. Utley

“In each flake
a brief eternity
the grief of winter
as December bleeds out
and January’s hell awaits

there shall be
no insensate oblivion
no benignant Lethe
no purgatorial reprieve
awaiting us on eternity’s cusp

only the purulent spoils
of our own wretchedness
a just reward for
embracing hate
and abandoning compassion…”

You can read the rest of my poem here:

Also, please consider following and subscribing to Hotel by Masticadores, where you’ll discover a world of wonderfully imaginative and profound writing.

Our Friend Maggie Watson Nominated for Author of the Month for August 2025 at Spillwords Press

A bit of exciting news, folks. My good friend and superb poet Maggie Watson has been nominated for Writer of the Month for August 2025 at Spillwords Press. Earlier this year, Maggie won the award for Publication of the Month for April 2025 at Spillwords Press, so she’s on a roll. I want to ask all of you to check out her latest offering at Spillwords Press, a magnificent piece titled “Holy Communion,” then give her a vote of support. She is absolutely deserving of this award.

Voting for Author of the Month for August 2025 ends August 28. You may cast your vote here:

Spillwords Press Author of the Month for August 2025

You can also experience Maggie’s sublime poetry on her blog, Ephemeral Encounters. Maggie’s writing is intense, at times brutal, always courageous, and deeply personal, and I admire her as both a writer and a person.

Help support our writing community by casting your vote for our friend Maggie, will you?

“A Few Haiku (20)” published at Gobblers by Masticadores

The latest installment of my short haiku/senryu collections titled “A Few Haiku (20)” is now available at Gobblers by Masticadores. These small collections consist of six haiku and/or senryu. Many thanks to editor Manuela Timofte for sharing this mini-collection. I hope you enjoy them.

“A Few Haiku (20)”
© 2021 by Michael L. Utley

(#115)

where once was laughter
now only bones
the burned forest

…..

(#116)

does the mantis pray
for long life and happiness
it receives neither

…..

(#117)

some live some die
I plant the seeds
anyway

You can read the rest of this mini-collection here:

Also, don’t forget to follow and subscribe to Gobblers by Masticadores, where you’ll find some wonderful writing and plenty of food for thought.

“The Graves of Saint Paul” published at Hotel by Masticadores

Hello, everyone. My new short creative nonfiction story titled  “The Graves of Saint Paul” is now live at Hotel by Masticadores. I’m truly grateful to editor Michelle Navajas for sharing this piece with her readers at Hotel. It’s a bit of an anomaly for me as I generally write poetry exclusively. Back in my younger days (prior to giving up writing for twenty years out of frustration), prose was my vehicle for expressing myself, and although none of my fictional pieces from my early years found a home at a publishing house, they still hold meaning for me. It was a thrill to actually complete a short story again after thirty-three years, and I hope this is only the beginning and that more will come. This piece is based on elements of fact, with a bit of creative license included. Thanks a bunch, Michelle, for this opportunity.

“The Graves of Saint Paul”
© 2025 by Michael L. Utley

“My mother lay in the ground at my feet beneath sun-bleached summer grass and faded plastic flowers and a headstone I hadn’t seen for nearly ten years. Her name, Victoria, clung to the gray stone above a bas-relief of pines and wild flowers and blue birds. She’d asked for a cross on her headstone—made it clear to everyone that she desired her faith to be front and center after she died—but my father, in his infinite malice and pettiness, had chosen some random wilderness picture rather than honor her wish. Just one more reason I hated him.

And now, his name sullied my mother’s headstone.

Ten years. Ten years of shame and regret. I hadn’t visited my mother since the headstone was erected shortly after her burial. For months after her death, I made excuses to avoid the trip to town, to the cemetery. At first, it was too raw, too soon. Maybe in a few weeks, a month or two, then I could do it. And then my life flipped upside-down again and I relocated out-of-state unexpectedly and that felt like a more legitimate reason, but I always intended to visit her grave like a good son should. Except…except maybe I wasn’t such a good son after all…”

You can read the rest of my story here:

Also, please consider following and subscribing to Hotel by Masticadores, where you’ll discover a world of wonderfully imaginative and profound writing.

“A Tanka Trio (9)” published at Gobblers by Masticadores

Hey, folks. The ninth installment of my tanka series titled “A Tanka Trio (9)” is now live at Gobblers by Masticadores. Each of these installments contains three tanka (be sure to click this link or the link below to read all of them). I’m grateful to editor Manuela Timofte for sharing this installment with her readers. Thank you kindly, Manuela.

“A Tanka Trio (9)”
© 2021 by Michael L. Utley

(#25)

Old stones squander heat
In the fire pit at night
After flames have died
Wrapped in fading embers’ arms
Love succumbs to apathy

…..

(#26)

I pick up the eggs
Fallen from a sparrow’s nest
Observing the cracks
There is silence as the earth
Contemplates what might have been

You can read the rest of this tanka installment here:

Also, don’t forget to follow and subscribe to Gobblers by Masticadores, where you’ll find some wonderful writing and plenty of food for thought.

“The Graves of Saint Paul”

“The Graves of Saint Paul”

© 2025 by Michael L. Utley

My mother lay in the ground at my feet beneath sun-bleached summer grass and faded plastic flowers and a headstone I hadn’t seen for nearly ten years. Her name, Victoria, clung to the gray stone above a bas-relief of pines and wild flowers and blue birds. She’d asked for a cross on her headstone—made it clear to everyone that she desired her faith to be front and center after she died—but my father, in his infinite malice and pettiness, had chosen some random wilderness picture rather than honor her wish. Just one more reason I hated him.

And now, his name sullied my mother’s headstone.

Ten years. Ten years of shame and regret. I hadn’t visited my mother since the headstone was erected shortly after her burial. For months after her death, I made excuses to avoid the trip to town, to the cemetery. At first, it was too raw, too soon. Maybe in a few weeks, a month or two, then I could do it. And then my life flipped upside-down again and I relocated out-of-state unexpectedly and that felt like a more legitimate reason, but I always intended to visit her grave like a good son should. Except…except maybe I wasn’t such a good son after all.

When my father died two years later, that settled the issue, and I knew I’d never be able to look at that headstone now that it was desecrated by his name.

David. Wife-beater. Monster.

And yet, here I was, standing at the foot of the grave that held my mother’s bones and my father’s ashes, the midday sun hidden behind a thick overcast sky, rivulets of sweat accumulating beneath my baseball cap and running down my back, the world almost completely silent in my deafness, the scent of grass clippings in the still air. Here they were, together again, this time for eternity. My mother could never escape my father in life, and in death he had finally ensnared her forever.

I stood there, motionless as the stones that rose from this small acreage of sorrow, my mind blank, my eyes dry (still no tears after all these years–what’s wrong with me?), and my dead heart buried in my chest. I don’t know how long I was lost in that moment—time flows differently in places of death; sometimes it doesn’t flow at all. Not knowing what else to do, I whispered, “I’m sorry, Mom…” and lowered my head. I couldn’t bear the thought of my mother witnessing my guilt-ridden face anymore.

A few moments later, I noticed an old fellow approaching, moving gingerly among rows of crosses not far from my parents’ plot. He wore dull green overalls and a sweat-stained cap, the name Pablo embroidered on the left side of his chest, grass-stained work gloves jammed in his pocket, the butt of a Marlboro between thin lips, eyes buried in a crevasse of wrinkles. He stood beside me for a long moment, studying my parents’ headstone, then glanced at me and spoke.

I motioned that I was deaf—a little finger-dance between my right ear and lips, and pulled a small tablet and pen from my pocket and mimed for him to write instead of speak. He smiled and nodded and wrote, “Your family?”

After a pause, “My parents.”

Another nod, and this time he scrawled, “Victoria is a beautiful name, amigo.”

I looked at him closely. He was old, perhaps my parents’ age (if they still lived), and I wondered why the town would allow a fellow who was obviously pushing his mid-80s to tend the cemetery.

As if reading my mind, the man wrote, “I come here every day. Tend the plots, cut a little grass, gather the broken flowers—the dead deserve better, yes?–and talk to my Maria.” He pointed a crooked finger toward a cluster of pines and crosses. His attention lingered there for a bit, then he looked at me, his expression indeterminate, as though he were in deep thought.

“Your father,” he wrote. “David. I knew him.”

A gust of wind kicked up a few plastic flowers from a nearby grave, scattering them across the walking path. The man took a drag on his cigarette and eyed me intensely, then put pen to paper.

“Yes, I knew your father. Ese malvado matón… That cruel bully…”

I felt a headache germinating inside my skull and closed my eyes. A memory—completely unbidden—flashed in my mind, startling in its vividness and urgency.

Michael.” My father calling me. I am twelve years old. My father sits on the sofa, an old photo album spread open on his lap. It is early evening, my mother cooking dinner in the kitchen, my sisters chattering at the table. Some random sitcom plays on the hulking console television, a comedy laugh track in the background. I go to my father, terrified. What have I done this time? I wonder. He is grinning. This frightens me even more. “Look here,” he says, pointing a grease-stained finger at an old black-and-white photograph. My father smells of diesel and sweat and cigarettes. I am wary of his every move. It is a school picture dated 1949. My father’s second-grade class photograph. A dozen children stand stiffly, awkwardly, at attention before a run-down one-room shack, an elderly woman with a severe expression hovering beside them. “That’s me, right there.” His dirty finger moves to a dark-haired, cowlicked boy in a soiled white t-shirt with a missing incisor on the left. On the television, a man is arguing with a woman about a dog. “Now, see this little Mexican kid here?” He points to a diminutive Latino boy huddling in a ball at the far right, a dull expression on his grainy round face. “I used to beat the hell out of that kid every day at school.” My father grins wider, shark-like, and laughs. On the television, canned applause explodes and a commercial break begins. I swallow. I stare at the small boy with tousled black hair and knee-patched trousers and striped shirt, and all I can say is, “What was his name?” And my father beams at me. “Who gives a shit?”

I began to speak, but the old man waved me off. “Ah…it was many years ago, do not worry,” he wrote. “Life is long and hard, and we learn much or we don’t learn anything. Who’s to say?”

“Pablo. Your name is Pablo…”

A nod, a flick of the pen. “Yes, little Pablo, el niño pequeño. I was small, but quick. And I survived.”

“My father tormented you, and all these years I wondered who you were, what your name was, and why.”

“Amigo,” he wrote, “sometimes there is no why. Sometimes, there are no answers. Sometimes we must endure until we can fight back or escape.” His eyes softened. “If you’re looking for logic or sense in this lifetime, you’re on a fool’s errand. Just live. Just let go and live.”

“I don’t think I can…”

The old man flipped the page over and scribbled, “Look out there at all these graves, all these lives. Years and decades and centuries, gone and forgotten. But not quite, for old Pablo remembers them, old Pablo cares for them. When we are remembered, we live, and when we are remembered fondly, we live gloriously! Your mother–” and the old man motioned toward her headstone, “she is not gone. She remains forever in your heart because you love her. And she knows this.” He looked at me firmly. “And no matter what your father has done, he will never change her love for you. Trust me on this, amigo. I am old and wise, although my Maria might disagree with the latter.” He winked.

I glanced again at my mother’s name. It looked beautiful on the headstone. I will remember you well, Mom, I said to myself. The old man penned one final note on the tablet then returned it to me, squeezed my shoulder, and headed back to his Maria beneath the pines.

Just live. Just let go and live.

..

“Koto no Yume” published at Gobblers by Masticadores

Hi, everyone. I want to let you know my poem “Koto no Yume” is now live at Gobblers by Masticadores. I really appreciate editor Manuela Timofte’s kindness and support in publishing my poetry. It means a lot to me, Manuela.

“Koto no Yume”
(c) 2021 by Michael L. Utley

“In dreamland forests of my soul I hear
What deafened ears in waking cannot know
A yearning in konara groves
That lilts in silent soft-edged shadows calls

The stream conversing with the hart has hushed
Its liquid-silver voice now mute
As herons ankle-deep in currents pause
And reverently bow in pious prayer

The insects cease their gossip in the ferns
And in anticipation preen their wings
As purple katakuri nod
At crimson higanbana through the leaves

And sly kitsune slinks from trunk to trunk
A flash of pale white-flickered tail
To find a seat ‘neath green-leafed momiji
Or ‘neath the needled kuromatsu boughs…”

You can read the rest of my poem here:

Also, don’t forget to follow and subscribe to Gobblers by Masticadores, where you’ll find some wonderful writing and plenty of food for thought.