Smoking an LFD Colorado Oscuro at Fidel Lebanon

Have a Cigar: La Flor Dominicana (LFD) Colorado Oscuro No. 5

Name: La Flor Dominicana Colorado Oscuro No. 5

Country: Dominican Republic

Shape: Parejo

Size: (5 3/4 inches x 60)

Strength: Full

Cigars give you the chance to turn long-lost friends into friends again. Old friends become new friends. And this happened to me more than once. It is almost unbelievable.

The other day, I sat down with someone who used to be my classmate. “How long has it been?” I asked. “It’s been more than a decade.” Can you believe it?

We sank in the leather armchairs of the cigar lounge and smoked cigars.

Who are you now?
Do you remember who we used to be?
Who are you planning to be?

One of the best things smoking cigars ever gave me is time with long-lost friends.

Smoking an AJ Fernandez New World Cigar with a friend.

Have a Cigar: AJ Fernandez New World Navegante Robusto

Name: AJ Fernandez New World Navegante Robusto

Country: Nicaragua

Shape: Box-Pressed

Size: Robusto (5 1/2 inches x 55)

Strength: Full

A masterfully crafted, good-looking, box-pressed, Nicaraguan cigar. Out of a friend’s humidor. I knew it was going to be something special even before I took it out of the cellophane. It had a perfect draw, and it produced a lot of thick, creamy smoke. I paired it with whisky after a heavy meal and got notes of dark chocolate, earth, espresso, prunes, and wood.

It was a good night filled with laughter, drinks, great conversations, and clouds of excellent smoke.

The Sidewalks

On the sidewalk, I’m smoking a cigarette.
The rain has stopped; now the street glitters under the moonlight
like a brand new street wrapped in cellophane.

I can hear the pounding of a hammer in the distance.
It’s the beat of an old song, the march of dead dreams.
Let me walk towards it…

Years ago, back when I was still a university student
unwisely majoring in English Literature,
when I was a head of garlic in apple cider vinegar
waiting to become torshi seer,
I used to write poems about the dirty sidewalks of Hamra Street.

“You keep writing about Hamra as if you owe it something,” a friend once said.
“There’s more to life than the dirty sidewalks,” another complained.
“You need aesthetics,” a poet recommended.
“Why don’t you try to write about something else for once?” the creative writing instructor asked. “Have you tried Stream of Consciousness?”

What?
Do I look like I care?

In a silence filled with resting melodies, sounds leak
like tears from a rusty faucet.
It’s their voices.
I see their words
dribbling down like embarrassed whispers
to form a pond
in the bathroom of an abandoned apartment
somewhere on Hamra Street.
Mosquitoes will lay their eggs there.
Cockroaches will drink from it
and die.

My beard is unkempt.
The grin on my face smells like sulfur.
I forgot my jacket in the office.
I’m cold.
My socks are wet.
I’m smoking another cigarette on the sidewalk.

It’s been more than a decade.
(Time, once the map of an adventurer, is now nothing
but a wall conquered by moss.)
Where are they all?
I still walk the same street,
on the same dirty sidewalks!
I have my coffee,
I have my beer,
I have my cigarettes…
I am
here.
Where are they?

There’s nothing but the dirty sidewalks.
Only dirty sidewalks.
Do you understand?
All those who said otherwise
are no more –
some died,
others escaped like rats out of a sinking ship,
most of them simply vanished.

And if you ask now, “What is all of this?”
The street will answer, “A recital.”

We were never poets.
The sidewalks were and still are
the poets.
We were always poems
meant to be forgotten.

Come here.

On the sidewalk, I’m smoking a cigarette.