Chopping
Block Envy
Maybe the aspect of my
self
that disgusts me the most is my
timidity –
my ineffectual freezing in the
face of aggression,
my inability to slam my dick
onto the chopping block
in defence of what is both
right and important.
Courage, in my personal
context,
has turned out to be just
what it takes to make it through the day.
I envy people who have the
courage
to stand up to personal or
corporate bullies
who, in whatever context,
intend to do them harm unless
they watch their step,
and who have the power to carry
out these intentions.
I try not to back down, myself,
but I also try to avoid
putting myself into positions
of confrontation.
I admire enormously such people
as Malala Yousafzai, who got
shot,
Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Kailash
Satyarthi,
whose colleagues have been
murdered,
but have continued to flaunt
their principles, anyway,
and all those who have
sacrificed personal freedom,
their own comforts and
well-being, or their lives
for things that really matter –
because I lack that kind of courage.
I wonder what, if anything,
the plutocrats – or just one or
some of them –
will pay to take out Bernie,
or any other burrs under their
saddle,
when the time is ripe.
Incomprehensible
Razorwork
I am completely unable to
comprehend
why so many men shave their
faces,
or shave trendy shapes into
their beards.
The reasoning eludes my grasp.
Doing that just doesn’t
make sense
to me.
Ha Ha Ha
As far as I can recall,
in all my many decades of life
(and I have an amazing memory),
every time I’ve heard the phrase,
‘What’s the matter? Don’t you
have a sense a humour?’
the speaker has been somebody
who had said or done something
that wasn’t funny at all
and who either had a shit sense
of humour
or whom the great DNA-and-experience
lottery
had left without any trace of
funniness
anywhere within their being,
and I can’t recall ever once
hearing a person with a good
sense of humour,
wit, basic funniness, and
comedic timing
say it.
Except maybe as part of a joke.
The Time of the Year
Now,
I don’t want you to think that I’m a prude,
far
from it,
but
it deeply offends me
when
various members of the plant kingdom
insist
on having their nasty, disgusting sex lives
inside
my nose.
Black Sunday
One of the more oppressed minorities
to which I belong
is that of sun avoiders and shade worshippers.
For decades now
I’ve therefore referred to the first Sunday
of daylight savings time as Black Sunday.
It throws me off and my body clock never adjusts
until the blessed arrival of real time
some weeks after the onset
of the following autumn.
I think that
at least subconsciously
it’s the self-absorbed need to dominate
that makes that enjoying-the-sunshine mob
force the rest of us to adjust our lives
to their altered clocks
instead of just leaving for work
and returning home
an hour earlier
themselves.
Reciprocity
I’ve
always tried to be
as
generous as I can be
with
whatever my resources
have
been at the time,
but
I’ve received little
generosity
in return,
and have long
expected none.
I’ve
always tried to be
as
kind as I can be,
but
I’ve received little
kindness
in return,
and have long
expected none.
I’ve
always tried to be
as
considerate as I can be,
but
I’ve received little
consideration
in return,
and have long
expected none.
I’ve
always tried to be
as
helpful as I can be,
but
have received little
help
in return,
and have come to
expect none.
I’ve
always tried to be
as
respectful as I can be,
but
I’ve received little
respect
in return,
and have come to
expect none.
I’ve
always tried to be
as
friendly as I can be,
but
I’ve received little real
friendship
in return,
and have come to
expect none.
Well,
hard cheese, old boy
(I
say to myself),
what
do you expect
without
signed contracts?
Maturation
Babies are indeed beautiful,
and we’re genetically
programmed
to respond with intense,
positive emotions
to just the sight or even the
thought of one;
the trouble is that most of
them
grow up to be
adolescents and adults
who are hideous or pathetic
or both
in one way or another.
Disrespect
In
2010 I utilised my considerable research-based expertise,
not
to mention my talent and skill,
on
two copywriting projects that I didn’t finish,
one
commercial and one political.
The
commercial client decided
that
he felt – felt! – that it should be done otherwise
and
let me know this dismissively,
ignoring
my invitation to discuss it.
The
political client,
to
whom I was donating my services,
just
ignored me
and
made wholesale changes for the worse
without
ever getting back to me at all.
It
does not make me feel good
that
the political campaign lost the election
by
an embarrassing number of votes,
or
that the company’s monthly business
fell
by from fifty to seventy-five percent
after
launching its new website,
although
I’m not surprised.
All
I can do is wonder
with
my mind filled with pain
what
it is about me
that
inspires such disrespect.
Laws
He was one of those
nasty, brutish, and short
neo-fascist politicians
and media wankers.
What was particularly
evil and egocentric about him
was that he went beyond
the usual arrogance
of hectoring people
about what to think
to the egregious effrontery
of cold-heartedly
telling vulnerable families
suffering personal crisis and loss
how they should feel.
Keyboarding
I do love our language’s
marvellous flexibility,
but sometimes the survival of a
word
into new meanings in a changed
environment,
when newer, more purpose-coined
words are available
makes me involuntarily uncomfortable,
wanting to do right –
my life being, as it is, one of words.
In particular I find it
fascinating
that the word for what I do –
writing –
has stretched and extended to
mean
any form of non-spoken verbal
communication
in preference to such perfectly
good
and considerably more accurate
words
as keyboarding, keying,
screen-touching, printing, and composing.
I like language to be precise,
but usage always wins out in the end.
Imprecision, however, can
really frost my buns
when it’s done just to put on
airs.
Anyone who has had the
misfortune
to have read much of what
various media
have published about pop music
–
the term, ‘pop music
journalism’ being misleading –
may have noted that the
producers of such verbiage
like to fancify their sentences
with words with which they
intend to give the impression
that they’re kinda artistically
poetic and learnéd themselves,
but which actually come across,
to me at least,
as cliché and pretentious as
well as semantically inaccurate;
particularly irritating is
their tendency to say
that songwriters and such
‘pen’ the products of their
creativity,
as in, ‘he penned his most
recent album’,
rather than to ‘compose’ or,
well, just ‘write’ them.
I wonder who the last
songwriter or composer
who actually used a pen was.
I use one sometimes.
Personality
Some people –
and you know who you are –
seem to think that
aggressively and repeatedly expressing
excruciatingly conventional and banal
opinions and statements of taste –
“It’s such a beautiful day to enjoy the sunshine!”
“I’m so glad that winter’s
almost over!”
“I just love chocolate!”
or, alternatively,
“I’m a real chocoholic! Nom! Nom!” –
that they’re impressing others
with their insightful observations,
colourful personalities, and uniqueness.
Give me a break.




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