Showing posts with label eugeneodontida. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eugeneodontida. Show all posts

Monday, 26 November 2018

Stuff from September, October, & November 2018


       Intellectual Integrity 

I’ve known far too many people
who’ve been a certain kind
of shitty human
(Homo sapiens being a species
predisposed to shittiness
in myriad ways),
the ones who try,
and succeed too often,
to pass off confidence as competence
and substitute guesswork and bluffing
for knowledge and understanding –
aggressively.

You’ve probably known people like that.

Maybe you’re one of them,
and don’t think that’s shitty at all.


             Free Speech and the Gurgler  

To Hell with censoring offensive language and hate speech.
To Hell with denying dickheads any platform at all.
To Hell with censorship in all its forms.
Let the only fetters to freedom of expression
be laws against incitement to violence, defamation,
false advertising, and fraud,
laws permitting the use of provocation
as a defence in cases of simple assault
(‘Them’s fightin’ words!’),
and, voluntarily, kindness.

But …

I’ve come, in my old age,
to understand what I imagine might be behind
some social-justice warriors’ craving for censoring
people who advocate various forms of shittiness.
Unlike the promulgators of the Enlightenment,
they seem to assume that most people are shitty –
something that I won’t dispute –
and given a free choice between shittiness
and intelligently reasoned decency
they’re likely to flock to the shitty ideas
en masse.

We’ve evolved with capabilities beyond our capabilities,
with too wide a range of mental aptitudes among us,
so the widespread revulsion toward corporate capitalism
and the misuse of state power
having reached beyond the intellectual elite
into the consciousness of people sorely oppressed
has brought outrage into minds unreceptive
to the intellectual niceties of Enlightenment values.

I’m receptive to them, though,
and censorship frosts my balls,
but it’s beyond my power to turn the tide of evolution
and prevent my species from destroying itself.




                     Confession  

I once struck a woman.
I was eighteen,
unattractively drunk, of course,
unskilled with managing testosterone rushes,
insecure, clueless,
devoid of self-esteem and social skills
(I still have those two flaws),
and under the influence
of my acculturation.

We were at a large party;
she was my date,
although I’d just met her,
and she was dancing close
with someone else.
I slapped her,
weakly.

As soon as I did it
I felt instant guilt and regret,
which I still feel
unpleasantly often
fifty-four years later.
As soon as I did it
she told me to get away from her
and stay away from her,
and I did.

We encountered each other again
in a professional situation
about twenty-two years later
and half a world away.
Neither of us mentioned anything,
but her eyes told me she remembered.
I wonder if my eyes did the same.


           Our Short-Term Future  

The human species, it seems to me,
is deep in the throes of a bad case
of Ozymandias syndrome,
with no sense of proportion
when it comes to either time or importance.

The eugeneodontida, for one small example,
patrolled the Devonian-period seas
for more than 155 million years;
Homo sapiens have been around
for fewer than two million,
and I don’t think we’ve evolved
to survive all that much longer,
since we have developed
with a genetically embedded
penchant for shittiness,
along with a self-destructive streak
and the capacity to use it.

All those trees I’ve planted all my life
have provided me with enjoyment
just by planting them,
and maybe some will flourish
when no people are left
to enjoy them,
and will do their flourishing
without self-reflection
or delusions of lasting legacies,
as did the eugeneodontida.




                 Unhappy Internal Health  

The country with some of the unhealthiest
social, political, economic, and cultural systems in the world,
the USA,
is one whose institutions of violent coercion are obese,
but whose institutions of justice are anorexic.


     Getting To Know You 

I read people poorly
and my judgements
in regard to the character
of those people I meet
more often than not
turn out to be inaccurate.

Now, my overall opinion
of people in general,
y’know, as a species,
tends to be extraordinarily low,
yet I usually form too high
a first opinion
of those individuals
whom I get to know
superficially,
but of course
I usually discover,
in time,
that I’m mistaken,
thereby reinforcing
my negative assessment
of the phenomenon of
the human race.


          Yearning for Kudos 

To the best of my memory,
I’ve never spoken or written
the word ‘yearn’
or any form of it
in an effort to communicate
with anyone,
other than mentioning it in the abstract
without context,
as I just did here.

Since I first heard it as a child
it’s seemed to me to be
corny and affected,
if not downright unnatural.
It still does,
partly because I first heard it
in the lyrics of
corny and affected
pre-rock & roll popular songs,
and partly because
to my trauma-damaged mind
the whole concept of yearning
for someone or something
seemed to me then
and seems to me now
to be silly and overblown.

I’ve never been comfortable
with the word ‘kudos’, either,
for some reason;
I’m even uncertain
about how to pronounce it,
since I don’t go around
pronouncing it.


             Gypsies and Indians 

The Gypsy Fair had come to Claudelands Park,
encircling their caravans and house buses – 
right where the local Somali-Kiwis usually
play pick-a-side soccer football –
looking like pioneers in old Western movies
when the Indians attacked,
using tactics seen only in cinema.

This time, on a footpath outside the circled wagons,
the Indians were a medium-elderly couple,
the woman with a bindi between her eyes,
plus my dog, and me.
They both asked me, in their subcontinental lilt,
if those were gypsies,
and I told them that no, they’re not Romani,
but they try to live like them.

The woman asked me if they sell things,
I told them, ‘Well, they try to’,
and they both laughed.

Then the man asked me if they lived in their vehicles,
as the real gypsies do,
and I said that they did,
then he asked if they go to another city next,
and I confirmed this.

The man seemed to like this thought,
and looked as if he were considering
running away to join the gypsies himself,
breaking out from his set-in-concrete life,
but his wife steered him away.
Romance has its limits.



                              Imperatives

You can’t be thin-skinned.
You must respect other people’s religions.
You have to keep up with the latest digital technology.
You should only do what you love.
You can’t lose your enthusiasm.
You must always have self-belief.
You have to believe in something!
You should look people in the eye.
You should always face your fears.
You shouldn’t ever eat margarine.
You shouldn’t ever eat butter.

Well, why can’t I?
Why do I have to?
Why must I?,
Why should I?
Why shouldn’t I?
Or else what?
In order to achieve what?
Who says so?
Why should I pay them heed?
What’s their angle?

Imperatives without context,
without qualifiers,
without clear indication of why they’re imperative,
seem to pour out of a certain type of people.

Whether I shalt not or otherwise,
I wouldn’t covet my neighbour’s ass, anyhow,
but I’d understand it if my neighbour coveted mine.


              Male Art  

The curator explained
how a certain woman artist
had described her work
as a reaction against minimalism,
which she called Male Art.

Now, I can sorta see the connection,
politically if not artistically,
as minimalist paintings often appear
on the walls of the headquarters
of predatory, male-dominated corporations –
guilt by association, and all that –
but I fail to understand how
this makes the paintings themselves –
which, incidentally, tend to leave moi,
a confessed male,
generally unmoved but not repelled –
innately gendered.

I would associate the idea of Male Art
with blurry representations
of staunch and manly stockmen on horseback
wearing oilskins and leather hats,
and smoking rollies in the rain;
or of lushly coloured paintings
of dissolute Restoration roués
carousing licentiously with buxom libertine wenches
in thickly furnished bordello parlours,
their attire in debauched disarray,
or maybe a couple of muscular mates
making shirtless goo-goo eyes at each other,

but then, my imagination is limited.




          Wild Breakfast Animals  

They returned from the breakfast buffet
put on by the conference organisers
and ensconced themselves at a table to tuck in.
The bald man with the fleshy face smirked,
pointed vaguely at his table partner’s
bowl of muesli with berries and melon balls
and said,
‘What kind of breakfast is that?
Are you a monkey? Or a rabbit?’
The olive-skinned fruit-lover smiled,
then gestured toward baldie’s
eggs with bacon, sausage, and ham and said,
‘That’s me; then you must be a hyena,
scavenging meat from animals
that somebody else has killed,
as you do.’