
Today, Life Is Different
My veins are blue from toes to fingers
A poem written at 71 about the hands that wrote it—wrinkled, veiny, shaky, tired—that catalogs the body's evidence of age and then refuses the conclusion, insisting that imagination is alive, thoughts are relevant, and creativity has no limits, before closing with the recognition that 71 and 17 are the same digits in opposite order and the open question of what could be done with that.
The opening parenthetical—”71 (sheesh, how did I get here, still in one piece)”—sets the poem’s tonal register before the first stanza begins: astonishment at survival, delivered with the rueful interjection of a man genuinely surprised to be reading his own date of birth from the wrong end of life. The “still in one piece” is a small comic insistence that the body, while not what it was, hasn’t fallen apart yet.
The first stanza catalogs the body’s evidence with the precision of a self-portrait drawn by candlelight. Hands wrinkled and veiny, eyes tired and red and weeping, limbs weak and shaky. Each body part receives three adjectives, and the triple-adjective pattern enacts the accumulation it describes: age doesn’t arrive as a single condition but as layered evidence. The closing of the stanza—”And it’s late, / In my life, / I’m tired”—delivers the verdict the catalog has been building toward, and the verdict is honest: late in life, tired.
The “But,” that breaks the stanza is the poem’s structural hinge. Two letters and a comma, isolated on their own line, and the entire emotional trajectory reverses. The second stanza is the rebuttal, and it operates by inversion: where the first stanza listed what the body has lost, the second lists what hasn’t been lost. Imagination is alive. Thoughts are relevant. Life matters. Vibrancy is the operative verb-noun. Each statement is delivered with the conviction of a man who has done the math and decided that the body’s depreciation doesn’t determine the spirit’s value.
“My life Matters, as much as Yours, young Pup” is the poem’s most directly addressed line, and the address is generous rather than competitive. The speaker isn’t claiming to outrank the young; he’s claiming parity. The young pup’s life matters; so does his. Both are alive. Both can love, dance, converse. The capitalization of “Matters” and “Pup” gives the line the cadence of a benediction with humor in it.
The catalog of vibrancy verbs—”Dance, Sing, Converse, Exchange and Share”—is the poem’s prescription for living at any age. The verbs are deliberately ordinary, and the ordinariness is the point: the cure for the tired body isn’t extraordinary activity but the everyday acts that involve other people. Love is named explicitly and immediately qualified: “It’s … personal.” The ellipsis is the catalog’s recurring gesture—the pause before naming the most important thing.
“The power of creativity is Human. And has no age. And no limits. Or limitations.” is the poem’s manifesto. The four-clause sequence escalates: human (universal), no age (temporal), no limits (spatial), no limitations (conceptual). Each clause closes a possible objection: you might be old, but creativity isn’t bound by age; you might be limited, but creativity isn’t bound by limits.
The instruction to exchange ideas, beliefs, talents—and the recognition that “Someone Else … will Learn, Believe, and spread the Truth”—is the speaker’s argument for legacy as collaborative rather than monumental. His truth doesn’t need to be carved in marble; it needs to be passed to someone who will keep it moving. The catalog’s “Musings to a Muse … Reflections” idea of “poetry writes me” is here extended: poetry writes him, then he writes others, then others spread it. The chain is the point, not any single link.
“Accept what you receive with criticism and introspection and hopefully acceptance. Patience, sometimes, is paramount” is the poem’s most practical wisdom, delivered as advice to himself as much as to the reader. The triple sequence (criticism, introspection, acceptance) traces the proper response to received information: examine it, examine yourself, then make peace with the outcome. The “sometimes” before “paramount” is the speaker’s honest acknowledgment that patience isn’t always called for, and the poem refuses to overprescribe.
The closing prose passage is the poem’s structural surprise. After the formal stanzas, the speaker drops into casual reflection: he’s looking at his hands, the hands sparked the poem, and the rhythm of the capitalizations may or may not have worked. Then the pivot: at 17, sitting on a wall, dreaming of the future—vivid, like right now. And the discovery: 71 is 17 reversed. “What could we do with that?” closes the poem with an open question, the bunny’s burrow opening up again, the line popping into existence and the speaker leaving it for the next writing session to follow.
One of the catalog’s most direct meditations on aging, and one of the rare poems where the speaker addresses the reader by generation. The structural reversal at “But,” is the poem’s primary achievement—a single two-letter conjunction that pivots the entire emotional weight of the first stanza into its rebuttal. The first stanza was credible; the second stanza is more credible because the first stanza was, which is exactly the rhetorical strategy a man at 71 would use if he wanted to be believed about still being alive. He admits the visible decay before claiming the invisible vitality, and the admission earns the claim.
The triple-adjective body catalog (wrinkled, veiny, hands; tired, red, weeping eyes; weak, shaky limbs) is unflinching in a way the catalog rarely is. There’s no metaphor protecting the observations; the hands are the hands. The candor of the description is what makes the rebuttal stanza land—if the body is honestly depicted, the spirit’s claim isn’t compensation; it’s report.
“My life Matters, as much as Yours, young Pup” is the poem’s most generous and most pointed line. The young pup is addressed without condescension and without resentment, which is the rarest tone an older speaker can achieve when comparing himself to a younger one. The speaker isn’t lecturing the young; he’s claiming equal standing in the room, which is a humbler and more confident move than either competition or wisdom-dispensing.
The “And has no age. And no limits. Or limitations” cascade is structurally elegant—the speaker reaches for the standard formulation (no limits) and then escalates to a more precise one (or limitations). Limits are external; limitations are internal. The distinction matters because the second clause is closing off the harder objection: you might not face external limits, but you face internal ones. The speaker insists: not those either. Creativity is bound by neither.
The closing prose passage is the poem’s structural surprise and its most charming move. After the formal argument, the speaker breaks form to admit the poem’s accidental origin: he was looking at his hands, that sparked it, the rhythm of the capitalizations may have failed. The honesty about the writing process gives the philosophical argument credibility—this isn’t a treatise; it’s a man noticing his own hands at midnight. The 71/17 reversal at the close is the catalog’s freshest mathematical observation: the digits of his current age are the digits of his teenage self in opposite order, and the symmetry suggests that the boy on the wall and the man at the desk are looking at each other across a numerical mirror. “What could we do with that?” is the kind of open question that becomes the next poem, and leaving it open is the closing’s quiet promise to keep writing.
Where the poem’s casual closing is both its charm and its limitation: the formal stanzas earn the rebuttal, but the prose ending deflates some of the momentum the rebuttal generated. The poem could end on “Patience, sometimes, is paramount” and be tighter, or commit fully to the 17-on-a-wall vision in the prose. As it stands, the closing prose is two poems sharing space: the meta-commentary on the writing process, and the seedling of the 71/17 meditation that hasn’t yet bloomed. But the seedling is real, and a poet who keeps planting them at 71 has answered his own question about what age can do.
71 (sheesh, how did I get here, still in one piece)
I’m old, My hands are wrinkled, And veiny
My eyes are tired, And red, And weeping
My limbs are weak, And shaky, And it’s late,
In my life,
I’m tired.
But,
My imagination is Alive, and Present
My thoughts are Relevant, and apply to Today.
My life Matters, as much as Yours, young Pup.
Vibrancy is Life … Dance, Sing, Converse, Exchange and Share. Love, is so important. It’s … personal.
My history has all of that. My present has more of that. And my Future has even more of that yet to come.
The power of creativity is Human. And has no age. And no limits. Or limitations.
Exchange … Ideas, Beliefs, Talents, All you know.
Someone Else … will Learn, Believe, and spread the Truth. Of You and Me. And Love … will serve us well.
Accept what you receive with criticism and introspection and hopefully acceptance. Patience, sometimes, is paramount.
I don’t know if I got the caps right to get the rhythm. It’s getting late.
I’m typing and looking at my hands. Hahaa. That’s what sparked it.
In retrospect I have another story I might have to tell. Sitting on a wall and only 17 years old. Dreaming of the future. Vivid. Like right now. The flip side of life. (sheesh again). Never thought I would get here. And didn’t give a shit. 71/17. Or 17/71. I’m not sure which way that would go. What could we do with that?







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