Showing posts with label 72. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 72. Show all posts

Friday, 4 May 2018

Stuff from April 2018; #120 in this series


                             Fanfare 

My Lotto slip matched up three numbers and the bonus,
putting me in division zed or something,
which meant that instead of losing outright, as usual,
I had $23 coming to me,
off a seven dollar output,
so my margin was actually plus $16.
Still, better than a kick up the bum.
Impersonal things can be like that.

When the lady scanned my ticket
the Lotto machine played
a brass fanfare,
or more precisely the recording of one,
and I wondered.

I wondered who composed that fanfare –
was it someone specially commissioned to compose it,
or some semi-famous composer
who wrote it long enough ago
for it to be in the public domain and therefore free?
I wondered who it was that decided on it,
and indeed on a brass fanfare at all –
was it somebody in Marketing,
or some tech geek who put together the software?
Is it supposed to make me feel special and important,
celebratory and giddy with excitement,
and therefore likely to buy more Lotto tickets?
Do they – whoever they are – think people are that stupid?
Are people that stupid, at least some of us?

The world is full of these mini-mysteries.
I wonder if discovering their answers
would ruin everything.


                  Grumpus

I don’t know if it’s just me,
but the grizzled old stereotype
of people becoming more conservative
as our years pile up
into grumpy-old-fart territory
clearly misses the boat.

The older I get the more that what passes
in the current lexicon as conservative
disgusts and repels me,
and the more that radical change
in global social and economic
concepts and attitudes and systems and values
seems attractive and plausible to me.

I also have become less conservative
in my day-to-day efforts
to cope with the general crap
of the world of humans
and my situation in it.

I don’t feel the craving to cling to things,
or to depend on individual people,
as much as I may feel the compulsion to do so;
my desperation’s lost all its urgency –
urgency ignores the cosmos –
death’s not all that far away any more,
and stamping my foot and having a hissy fit
won’t change that, or anything, really.

I take solace from my cosmic insignificance,
old age having released me
from the distracting illusion of love,
and freed me to feel almost nothing
without feeling guilty about it.


                Dehumanisation 

I can’t pinpoint
even the approximate age
at which I first became aware of it,
but since early childhood
my perception has increasingly been
that the more that a person knows me
the more likely that person will
behave toward me as if I were a thing
rather than a fellow human being.

As my self-awareness
increased and improved over time,
I became convinced that it was me,
that one or more of my unconstructive
concepts and default behaviours,
which I developed whilst my mind was forming
in a dangerously toxic family environment,
radiates subtle signals
to others that I am, indeed,
no better than a thing,
and deserve no better treatment,

but then it struck me
how triumphant capitalism
commodifies everything and everybody,
and that this objectification and dehumanisation
were probably widespread realities
throughout the system.

Still, deep down in the core of my personhood,
I can’t escape the stubborn conviction that,
Nah, it’s me.


    Taste Arbiters & My Sociability  

If a piece of music –
or of writing or painting
or sculpture or comedy
or anything else
someone has created –
does something for me – or to me –
somewhere deep inside my nervous system,
or if it definitely turns me off,
or fails to do anything in particular
and just leaves me cold,
that’s what happens,
and it doesn’t matter who tells me
that I should or shouldn’t think that it’s art,
or that it’s great, or just okay,
or that it’s crap,
no matter how knowledgeable and respected
or numerous
such taste arbiters may be.

Sometimes, I suppose,
it would be socially advantageous
for me to fake my response –
oh, definitely! –
but I can’t.


                         72  

When I was just a wee thing,
maybe four years old,
it somehow got into my mind,
I don’t know how,
that my ‘lucky number’ is 72.
It soon expanded
in my child’s consciousness
to being a magic number,
and I’ve never been able to shake that,
even though I’ve been basically anti-superstition
since about puberty,
and thoroughly so since the mid-1960s.

So, every time I’ve had to come up
with a random number for anything
I’ve always put down 72 –
or seven or two if it had to be one digit –
and of course that’s made fuckall difference to anything.

But maybe, I used to think,
it was a stroke of prescience or something,
if such things are possible,
which they almost certainly aren’t,
and something major –
from my perspective –
is going to happen when I’m 72 years old.
Maybe it’ll be my age when I die,
or get rich,
or find happiness and fulfilment at last.

Well, my seventy-second birthday
is now well in the past,
and I haven’t experienced anything remarkable
or life-changing or life-ending yet.
I don’t notice much change from being 71, actually.




                          Luck  

Only occasionally, but far too often,
I’ve heard people say,
almost inevitably with smugly assertive pride,
‘I don’t believe in luck.’

Now, I’ve learnt from all-too-tedious experience
that people who say that they don’t believe in luck
are egotists who probably mean either one of two things:

There’s the ‘it’s all part of a plan’ crowd
(God’s plan, Nature’s plan – it doesn’t matter.)
So what?
It’s just my luck that God’s plan
has screwed me over so badly.
It’s just blind luck that Nature’s done the planning,
and not some ancient aliens’ digital device.

Then we have the ‘We make our own luck’
and ‘It’s all choice, not chance’ evangelists.
Right.
That toddler chose to have abusive parents.
Those 12-year-old girls chose to have thugs in military gear
invade their villages and rape them.
That middle-aged nurse chose to win Lotto,
and two million others chose to lose.

‘I don’t believe in luck.’
So pick another word for effects
resulting from innumerable causative factors
beyond anybody’s control,
like why that one sperm out of hundreds of millions in that spurt
fertilised that egg to create you.

As if belief has anything to do with it.
It’s like saying,
‘I don’t believe in the direction “down”.’

 

         Wake Up Sheeple! 

I awakened from my siesta
with this sentence ringing in my head:
‘In less than two weeks you’ll be at my door,
chasing your witch-wives away
with their own mules.’

I have no idea what it means
and can’t remember the dream that spawned it.

I wonder if reading this
has enriched your life?
Not much, I expect.
Oh, well …