Steven Schroeder | You don't need a weatherman


Oh my name it is nothin’
My age it means less
The country I come from
Is called the Midwest
          -Bob Dylan

Weather in Seattle leads conversation to the country
we come from, what a difference miles make
between Chicago and Waukesha in Winter, jobs.

That’s why the driver
is here. Bad times are worse
in the Midwest
, he says.

An African accent, but I can’t place it,
and we go no further than Wisconsin
before politics, the subject of my neighborhood

everywhere these days. You must be proud, he says.
Yes, I say, of course, and think not Kenyan. Not
happy with appointments, but proud, yes.

And we will see. He says everybody
cheats on their taxes
and I say
it’s not taxes. It’s war.

I’m a Muslim, he says, and I
think we need more men
.
I’m a pacifist, I say

(thinking, now, Nigerian, but also Sudan),
and I don’t think we need another war.
I’m a pacifist too, he says. And I,

then why another war?
It’s the only thing they
understand. The Taliban

is coming back and they
are selling drugs. There comes
a time. There comes a time. There

comes a time. And I,
there always comes a time,
and everyone in every war thinks

their time right. And I
recall the Russians, and I
recall the British, their

times. We don’t go as far
as Genghis Khan, but weather
in Seattle could get us there.

He has a student loan to pay,
a daughter six years old,
and he’s thinking he may

enlist. It’s either that or back to school.
School or the army, I laugh, a tough choice, but stay
out of the army
, thinking all the while how much alike they are,

how little separates Seattle weather from one more young man
in arms. The fare is lower than I expect, and I add something
extra. Stay out of the army. And then I add I guess

that’s not enough to keep you out, but consider
it my small contribution
. We laugh. And I
say I’ll be back

in two years to pick
this conversation up again
if some war someone thinks
good has not taken him by then.

Seattle
February 2009