Monday, 28 November 2016

Brotherhood II

  More Ugly Memories That Won’t Go Away
Before I terminated social interaction between us
more than two decades ago,
my sibling frequently
displayed huge enjoyment in flaunting
his bigotries,
his fascist ideologies,
his shittier values,
and his schadenfreude –
rejoicing in the anguish of people
he’d never met
and who’d done him no wrong –
aggressively in my face.
He could have had no healthy, brotherly
reason for doing this,
could he?


     Operant & Respondent Conditioning

I could be wrong about this,
but in regard to the difference
between operant and respondent conditioning,
I think this is about a bit of both.

Decades of being the recipient
of almost relentless
and joyfully malicious tormenting by way of
taunting, disparagement, ridicule,
mockery, derision, humiliation,
sneering, jeering,
belittling, bullying,
condescension, patronisation,
and general put-downs
by my elder sibling
at his every opportunity,
delivered as if each were hilariously funny,
not to mention his frequent and aggressively
smug, self-satisfied, self-righteous, pompous
projections of chauvinism and bigotry into my face,
did indeed condition me
by my early forties
to feel physically sick to my stomach
by the sound of his voice,
the sight of his face,
or the memory of either of them.


             A Different League
Displaying a predictable delight
in vexing and frustrating my attempt
to establish some semblance of fraternity,
my sibling obstructed all my efforts
to describe the differences between rugby and league
with inane interruptions and digressions
and prideful expressions of ignorance,
thereby refusing to allow me to experience
the bonding others feel with brotherhood,
and making my life-long hatred of him
discolour my enjoyment
of every league match I’ve seen on the telly
in the decades since.
Well, I’ve always enjoyed watching
rugby more than league, anyway.


                      Not Learning To Kick
I didn’t learn sport skills as a boy.
My daddy was always busy, and then died,
and my older brother preferred
to ridicule me for not already having them,
to gloat about his superiority over me in them,
or both,
so I made it into adolescence without many basic skills.

I grew up with American football
in an age when people kicked with their toes.
Then, when I was in my mid-teens,
all the big teams began to use
what was then called soccer-style kickers.
I thought that was real cool, and decided,
since I did have strong legs,
to teach myself how to do it.
The idea of asking anybody to teach me never occurred to me.
That would’ve left me open to ridicule
over and above what I’d received all my life from my family.

The major problem with teaching myself, though,
was that all I knew was what I’d seen on TV,
and I’d misunderstood that completely.
I knew that they struck it with their instep,
but I didn’t know what an instep is,
and since I’d watched them approach the ball from the side,
I thought that an instep was the inside of the foot,
rather than the top of it.
Never having had a coach tell me
to put my laces through it,
I spent many hours out in a field
alone
kicking a ball incorrectly,
and making no progress at all.


                        Busty Rusty
Barely keeping his sniggering under control,
Paul told me that he’d been to a strip joint in Boston
where the feature act had been called
Busty Rusty and Her Fabulous Fifties,
the “fabulous fifties” referring
to her bosom being 50 inches in circumference.
Fifty inches is 127 centimetres.
Giggling maniacally, he told me,
“She took her right tit,
wrapped it around her left shoulder,
and then kissed it over her right shoulder.”
Although I was only sixteen,
I really didn’t think that was either funny or sexy,
and I certainly don’t think so now.
I suppose they called her Rusty
because she had red hair.


                               Singing
In the back seat of my elder sibling’s ostentatious car,
my then-five-year-old daughter
began singing something somewhat tunelessly,
as five-year-olds are wont to do.
Sitting next to her, my early-stages-of-dementia mother
made complimentary grandmotherly noises,
and my sister-in-law, also in the back,
also made sounds of approval.
My sibling, behind the wheel,
asserted in a nastily ridiculing tone that she certainly hadn’t
inherited her singing ability from her father,
then glanced over toward me on the other front seat
with a stomach-churning smirk on his face.
My mother, changing the subject,
or maybe just wandering off at a tangent,
made some comment about my father’s musical talent.
My sibling, his smirk more pronounced
and his voice dripping with gleeful malice,
ploughed on as if she hadn’t spoken,
with something about my singing being
the most ugly sound possible.
Then my sister-in-law pointedly changed the subject
with a remark about the meal we’d just eaten, or something,
but without a pause my sibling, smirking and sneering,
claimed that hearing me sing made strong men vomit
and others leave the room to avoid doing so.
He bore relentlessly on in this manner,
enjoying himself enormously and
ignoring the back-seat efforts to change the topic,
for at least five minutes.

Thirteen years later I performed
in a musical production.
The audiences appreciated my vocal solo,
delivered in a strong blues growl,
and my bass harmonies
in the ensemble numbers
received praise from others in the cast.


  Oppressive Imaginary Conversations
For years they came up on me involuntarily,
imaginary conversations with my sibling
in which I always began,
“You know what I think, Paul?”,
followed by my describing him to his face
as the scummy lump of evil shit that he is.
Then, after my world fell apart and I shifted into neutral
in order to survive,
I became free of these for several months.
Too bad they started coming back.
Maybe I can make them go away again;
replace them with some variation, at least.


                    Fiduciary Responsibility
I should be,
as my Aunt Goldie put it a year or two before she died,
on Easy Street,
because my stepfather
had his own civil-engineering company
and a genius
for fitting the maximum number of units into a subdivision
whilst at the same time respecting
the contours of the land.
He therefore did all the subdivision design work
for the county’s two biggest developers
and heaps of others
at a time when it was
the third-fastest-developing county
in the United States.
He left most of it to my mother.
When she died I received an audited account,
and about half the estate
was in the confiscatory tax bracket.
In the three or four months after she died
my sibling,
as executor of the estate,
gambled away well over half of it
on the New York Stock Exchange –
he’d always fancied himself a whiz with the market –
and didn’t tell me about it.
I, meanwhile, made financial commitments
based on that audited statement from the lawyers.
When he finally told me about it
ten months later,
he just explained in a cavalier tone of voice,
that the kick in my guts wasn’t his responsibility.
It was the market.


Unprovoked Nastiness … For Pleasure?
I could only conclude
that granting each person
the minimal amount of basic respect
to which every decent human is entitled,
unless and until that person demonstrates
being unworthy of it,
was an approach
that he considered to be
deserving of his ridicule,
or had never truly considered at all.


Saturday, 26 November 2016

More Urban Life

          Three Walking Women at the Park

Except in high summer,
when we leave about six a.m.
to avoid the vicious sunshine,
my dog and I leave the house about nine
to avoid drive-time traffic
on our way to Day’s Park
for our morning exercise.
The park’s nine-to-ten population
includes many regulars, of course.

The oddest regulars, to my mind,
are the three walking women.
They don’t have a dog, for one thing.
One is what used to be called
Of A Certain Age,
and the other two seem to be in their twenties.
The older woman and the elder of the other two
have a decided family resemblance,
With round, reddish faces and statuesque figures,
flaunted with short shorts except on the coldest days.
The youngest one is short and dark and slender
and usually wears similarly slender, dark, midcalf-length trousers.

but the two older walking women
make an effort to avoid eye contact with me,
although once a few years ago they commented
on my downsizing after I’d downsized,
and they were stuck one morning when I passed by
and they were in conversation with
one of my dog-owner mates.
I seem to make them nervous for some reason.

They’re clearly affluent
and the younger two clearly don’t go to school.
Sometimes I wonder if the older one
is a high-class madam
for her girls,
or if they tie macramé pothangers
all day long.


                          Broken Beer

Although they make sense and are Good Things,
re-usable grocery bags do have one major drawback.
As is also the case with marriages, dogs, bottles of beer,
and pretty much everything else, including myself,
they don’t last forever.
So when the seam gave way just a bit
at the bottom of my super-duper,
four-separate-sleeves-for-wine-bottles
imitation-cloth re-usable grocery bag,
a 568 ml bottle of Mac’s Hop Rocker slipped through the hole
and smashed foamingly on the kerb of the Whitiora Bridge footpath.

Since it makes no sense to cry over spilt beer,
I shrugged inwardly, sublabialised a, ‘Well, that’s that,’
and continued on for the remaining fifteen-minute walk home.
A pity, to be sure.
I didn’t rue the $3.85 the bottle had cost, no point in that,
but I did feel sad that I had no beer to drink,
and I felt bad leaving all that broken glass just lying there,
but the situation had not been one to allow me,
reasonably,
to pick it up and dispose of it responsibly.

I was keeping my shopping bag close to the ground
in case anything else fell out
(nothing did),
and about five minutes after the mishap
an attractive woman of a Certain Age walking in the other direction
took her earbuds out, gestured toward my awkward posture, smiled,
and advised me to get a backpack,
as they make carrying heavy loads easier.
I responded by flexing the bicep of my free arm
and saying in a fake Russian accent,
‘Is strong. Is good.’


                         Goldstar Bakery


I used to go to the hot bread shop in Fairfield,
a bit closer to where I live,
but even though it’s a bit more expensive,
and I was more than a bit more poor,
I switched my allegiance
to the Goldstar Bakery
at Five Crossroads.

The sandwiches are bigger
and more to my liking,
and go to their twofer price
two hours earlier.

The plain buns and the French sticks
are bigger for the same price,
and their crusts are much more to my taste.

They set out the cut-price day-old tray
early in the day,
and when I’m feeling recklessly naughty
their hot dogs wrapped in pastry with melted cheese on top
just ring my bell, even when a day old,
although I always pay a silent tribute
to the suffering of the swine
before wrapping my laughing gear around them,
rationalising to myself that the amount of economic demand
that two hot dogs from a day-old tray
adds to the cruelty of New Zealand’s swine-meat industry
is negligible.

The best part of the Goldstar Bakery, though,
is the people who run it,
who are always helpful, cheerful,
and apparently genuinely friendly,
unlike those at some of their competitors’ shops.

This has been an unsolicited, unpaid endorsement.


           Dead Duck

After another
surrender to insomnia
I was driving my dog
to Day’s Park before dawn.
I took the left hairpin
from River Road to the drive
that goes downhill to the carpark
in third gear in the dark,
then shifted into neutral
to glide down the slope saving fuel
when a fat female duck
waddled into the headlights
just a metre or two in front of me.
I was slow to react
and went over the top.
I went on down and parked
without going back up to assess the carnage.
Now I like duck much more than I like ducks,
especially when it’s crispy or in a Thai curry,
although I’m not keen
on the greasy, on-the-bone, Hong-Kong-barbecue style.
I should have claimed my road kill
and then googled up a recipe when I got home,
because it’s wrong for people
to kill what we don’t eat,
but I told myself
that I don’t have the skill
and I didn’t have the time
to pluck and prepare it,
even though a weaver friend
would’ve loved to have had the feathers,
so I just left it there.
I tried not to look
when I left the park,
feeling sad and disgusted
at myself.



                  Yee-Hah!, Fairfield Style
Right after I’d eased myself out of the car
I saw two pitbulls
running at full tilt,
one right down the middle of Holland Road,
the other down the footpath
by my car.
It was only unsettling
for a flash.
They had no interest in me.
A small car
driven by a large man
appeared from up by Peachgrove,
rolling slowly, chasing them,
the man, head sticking out the window,
yelling at them incoherently.
My mind went back
to the cattle-drive cowboy movies
I’d seen when I’d been small.


       December Sock Adventure

I saw a hole in my sock
that was too big to ignore
one morning on a day
when I received my pension payment,
so I drove to the Chartwell Square mall,
which is the only place I know around here
where I can buy durable socks.

I’d neglected, however, to bear in mind
that it was the first week of December.

After finally finding a place to park
and actually entering the mall
I of course found myself assaulted
by cheesy Xmas bullshit from every direction.

A stumpy little dude in Santa Claus drag
even had the effrontery
to hit my grumpy-looking scrooge face
with a “Mehhh-ree Christmas!”
as we passed each other in the upstairs mall,
I suppose during his break
from cultivating consumerist acquisitiveness
in affluent suburban children.
I responded archly,
“Ho. Ho. Bloody ho,”
but at least I had new socks in my bag.


                         Holiday Cheer

Sunday morning
after New Year’s
morning walk
first to the child cancer clothing drop-off bin
with a pair of holy socks,
that I have since learnt they don’t want,
then through the Farmer’s Market
in the Sonning Carpark on River Road,
depopulated due to the summer holiday,
but still priced beyond my means.

Over the bridge and into the CBD,
where more homeless people than usual
were highly visible,
congregating on bus-stop benches;
panhandlers,
many more than usual,
one a pretty young woman
barely past adolescence, or still in it
(what horrors drove her from home?),
all asking for ‘a spare two dollars’.
I wished that I had
a pocket full of fives
to give away,
but I wasn’t making ends meet myself.

Computer problems.


        Virgin Inner Link Experience

Rin and Abbie said to take the Inner Link,
the green bus.
Mel at Marbecks
said I could catch it right out the back door,
so I did.
It was waitin there for me.
The one that was there
was going in the wrong direction,
but that was okay,
because I had time to kill,
and my old-fart’s card
let me ride for free.

I sat at the back,
where the seats are up high.
Going the wrong way
gave me a fine slow tour
of Auckland’s inner perimeter,
which pleased my eyes
and my imagination
at no cost.
The views of hills and gullies
and jagged horizon lines
and unique streetscapes
changed constantly.
The automated videos
telling the upcoming stops
delighted my hayseed consciousness.

The driver, of course,
was a scowling grouch.
Most of the passengers
called out ‘thank you’ to him
before stepping off,
but it just made him
scowl even more.



                         Polite Robots
The robots that scan the barcodes
on the stuff I buy
and take my money
at the supermarket self-checkout
have a particularly annoying and insistent recorded voice
that says the same thing every time
and repeats itself if a customer doesn’t move fast enough,
such as by taking the time
to put the eftpos card back into my wallet after swiping it.
Nagging bitch.
Fortunately, somebody showed me how to turn the voice off,
so now the only thing I have to hear it say,
after I take the last of my purchases
off of its sensitive little scale
is, ‘Thank you for using the fast lane.’
Such a polite robot.
I always answer, ‘You’re welcome,’
and sometimes think that The Polite Robots
would be a good name for a band.



              Claudelands Park Incident
Three teenagers were acting silly in the park,
following an ancient script:
a boy showing off for two girls.
The boy was tall, active, and radiated physicality;
The girls, unusual amongst the local Somalis,
were wearing long black niqabs.
As I walked by with my miniature schnauzer
the girls made a big fuss,
squealing and jumping back in fake fear.
Wearing a white cloth wrapped around his head
that made him look even bigger than he was,
the bloke, tall and imposing and almost smelling of testosterone,
advanced on me, swaggering with confident charm, oodles of it.
He reached into the pocket of his hoodie
and pulled out a package of what looked like shortbread biscuits
and asked with, again unlike most young Somali-Kiwis,
a thick East African accent if my dog would like a ‘biss-koo-eet’.
I checked that they weren’t chocolate and said, ‘Sure’.
The Little Fella okayed it, too.
Then the young blade boogied off to impress the two teen niqabs
with his courage with dogs, woofing at them,
and they screamed and giggled and lifted their niqabs’ hems
as he danced about them with more joy than artistic merit.

A couple of days later I saw him again,
from a hundred metres or so across the park.
He waved to me with both hands over his head,
then turned his attention to a seemingly playful girl
– just one this time – in a colourful hijab outfit.

I imagined that he was glad to be in Hamilton,
rather than Mogadishu.


     Unspecified Imaginary Fart Offence

Exercising my quadrupedal flatmate
along Claudelands Park’s southern footpath,
I observed a copmobile as it eased to a stop
in the carpark by the playground –
although not in any designated parking space.
A uniformed guardian of the public peace
climbed out and headed for the public toilets
at the side of the Grandstand Function Centre
to exercise, I suppose, his kidney-and-bladder functions.

Being in that sort of a mood,
I caught his eye and threw up my hands.
‘I confess, Constable!’ I shouted out.
He whipped his neck around to pierce me with his eyes,
uncertain and uneasy about the situation.
I pointed toward my adopted old schnauzer and shouted,
‘He did it!’
He shook his head and smiled sadly.
‘They always blame the dog,’ he said,
before turning back toward the loo to do his duty.