Individualism
Moseying along the riverside footpath
underneath the summer tree canopy
keeping the old fox terrier company
shortly after dawn,
we came upon a flock of maybe a couple dozen ducks
who’d been up in some bush on a steep rise
between the footpath and River
Road ,
foraging for food, I suppose,
but maybe for
some other reason.
I’m no expert on
the Anatidae family’s species, after
all.
Detecting our approach, one let out five rapid quacks,
and they proceeded to decamp from the parkland
and retreat into the river.
Some took off flying immediately, flapping furiously,
some of these quacking frantically, some not.
Others waddled at top speed,
then flapped themselves into the air,
some quacking, some not.
Others started slowly, then sped
up, then flew,
some quacking, some not.
Others hustled on foot all the
way to the river,
some quacking, some not.
One insouciant female, however,
strolled at a leisurely waddle
all the way to the riverbank,
paused there, looked at us with
disdain,
or insouciance,
or so it seemed to me –
I don’t know if human language
can capture a waterfowl’s
attitude, anyway –
until we were almost upon her,
and then eased herself gracefully through
the air into the water.
They all looked about the same
to me,
but they obviously weren’t.
I wonder how we look to them?
River Rats
I’ve walked along the Waikato River often
since shifting to Hamilton from Otorohanga
in 1993 –
at first by myself and then
with my dog –
first along the western walkway
stretch
from across from either Radnor Street or
the archery range
to as far north as I had time
to go,
later over a loop on both sides
of the river
between the Fairfield and Claudelands bridges,
and then back and forth along it in Day’s
Park.
In all that time I never saw a
river rat
until July 2011, when I saw two
about a week apart.
It had been raining hard, on
and off, for several days,
and the river was high and
fast,
reaching almost to the
riverside footpath.
I saw the first rat scuttle
from the side of the footpath
into the river,
swim out to where a tree’s
branch dipped into the rising water,
and climb up it into the tree,
where I lost sight of it.
The second rat I saw also saw
us first and dove into the river,
but since it had no convenient
tree branch handy,
it dove under the surface.
I watched for a while but never saw it
resurface.
They must’ve floated down with
the flood from upriver,
because with so many dogs
almost always at that park,
most of them, unlike mine,
being water dogs,
it’d be no place for a river
rat
to call home.
Not Shaving
I decided in 1965 that I didn’t want to shave any more.
It just seemed to me to be
pointlessly stupid, physically irritating, and expensive.
In 2014 it amuses me to see
that full beards, not those idiotically narcissistic sculpted wanker
ones,
are coming increasingly into fashion
among professional athletes in a variety of sports.
It’s somewhere between bemusing and sad to me that,
being just a fashion and not an expression of underlying principle,
it will have its season and then be replaced
by some other trend.
Just
Blotted Out
A juvenile mantis
maybe two cm long
was climbing the woodwork
moulding
around the door
to one of my lounge’s
storage cupboards.
I squooshed it.
Then I thought about what it’d
be like
to have my own life similarly
squooshed.
It’d make no difference, I
concluded.
Endless sleep is endless sleep.
Natural Nature
It aint natural;
you’ve felt that.
Or maybe it is,
depending on who you are.
After all, everyone just knows
what’s natural and what aint.
Don’t we?
Nature is natural,
like a scene of a misty forest
snapped with a digital camera
and disseminated on facebook.
What aint natural, some say,
is stuff people think up and
make,
like artificial sweeteners
or pharmaceutical medicines,
or chemical fertilisers,
although even Natural Health
remedies
and organic fertilisers
are composed of chemicals,
as is everything else in the universe.
Fuck that!
We all just know, we can just tell
what’s natural and what aint.
But people are part of nature.
Our DNA is pretty much the same
stuff
as the DNA of a blue whale or a
beaver,
only ours, like the beavers’,
impels us to make things,
so everything we make must be
natural,
because everything in the universe is.
Our nature also impels us to
make things up,
to imagine and invent bullshit
along with pollution,
which means that even what’s
supernatural
is actually natural, too.
Ecological Repercussions?
Vegans mean well and are mostly good people,
but what environmental niche
and what environmental impact
would cattle have today
if set free and released into the wild
after more than ten millennia
of domestication?
I sure as shit don’t know.
Summertime!
It amazes me
and makes me feel hollowly lonely
that most of the people
whom I’ve heard mention it
deeply love summer
and consider it to be,
as the seasons go,
the mutt’s nuts,
and their favourite time of year.
Doctors
& Empathy
Not every doctor I’ve encountered
has been arrogant and domineering –
what they commonly call
having the God thing –
just most.
I’ve had three as close relatives,
and for the past few years
I’ve been picking up
the occasional lump of dosh
playing patients
in GP-registration practical exams
and in mock
exams they use for training.
A med-biz cliché maintains
that a GP sees a heart,
whilst a surgeon sees a pump.
Well, the two surgeons I’ve known intimately
have both been astonishingly insensitive people,
sure enough,
but I’d estimate that eight out of ten
of the GP-registration candidates
in whose training I’ve assisted
have had about as much of an
aptitude for empathy
as I have for diamond-cutting.
Academic
Prose
These people with
pee-aitch-dees
who either believe
that what they write
would lack credibility
if it isn’t as turgid and
impenetrable
as they can make it,
or who just don’t know or care
how boring they’re making
really interesting and even
important stuff
for others,
do no favours
for the advance
of the life of the mind
or the quality of civilisation.
It Could’ve Been Worse
On the subject of
superficialities,
since I was an adolescent
I’ve always wanted a striped
shirt
with a white collar and cuffs,
but have somehow managed to do
without one
throughout my long life
without suffering unduly
for that reason,
at least.
Tackiness and Suchlike
I thought that the courtroom
squabble
between some of BB King’s
children
and his manager and care-giver
over the ownership of some of
his jewellery
and other such things
while he was still fucking alive, for shit sake!,
was more than a bit on the
tacky side.
I hope that I’m saving my
daughters
from similar expeditions into
tastelessness
by not owning any jewellery or
suchlike
myself.



