Showing posts with label isolation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label isolation. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 February 2017

The Return of Personal Stuff

    The Illusion That Is Me

I know that I’m still handsome,
for an old bloke –
what a fucking joke –
and have wide shoulders,
a powerful voice,
and a strong presence,
but all this only gives
the people I meet
and even those I’ve known somewhat
for years
the wrong
impression.

I’m really
an insecure
nine-year-old boy
with no self-confidence,
low self esteem,
and no self-belief
who’s afraid of everybody,
and have been since 1955.


                      Vertigo

I don’t know if it’s all in my mind
or just in my middle ear,
but vertigo’s been a part of my life
for as long as I can remember.
It’s not that I’m afraid of heights –
I can enjoy the view
out of a twentieth-floor window or from an airplane –
but whenever I’m unsure of my underpinnings,
whether I’m walking across
the outside lane of a windy bridge
or changing a light bulb three steps up a ladder,
an icy sensation shoots back and forth
between my ankles and my knees,
I become dizzy, disoriented, or both,
my sense of balance seems to desert me,
and I have to fight to prevent myself
from lurching into a disastrous fall.



          I Am A Thing

Although some may find
things that I do
to be competently useful
or mildly entertaining,
I find it hard to believe
that anybody gives a shit
about what goes on in my mind
when I’m alone –
which is most of the time –
or about my feelings
or my pain.
My experience has been
that other people
and even my dog –
behave toward me
as if I were a thing,
rather than a human being,
and I long ago came to accept their judgement.


                   Motivations Obscure To Me

I’ve observed these people –
on TV and when I’m out and about –
who have full beards and shaved heads,
and it’s beyond my capacity for empathy
to understand in any meaningful way
why they do.
It’s the same with elaborately trimmed-and-shaped beards
that require high maintenance,
and trendy hairstyles
that require frequent barbering
and expensive product.
Words come to mind –
fashion, machismo, vanity, narcissism,
obsessive affectation –
and I know what all those words mean,
but I’m incapable of knowing
what those things feel like.

Although I did experiment once,
extremely briefly,
with a goatee when in my early twenties,
I stopped shaving,
or allowing barbers to shave,
any part of me when I was nineteen
because I didn’t like to do it,
didn’t like the way it felt,
either during or after the process,
and could find no compelling, rational reason
for doing it at all,
and that’s it.



               A Brief Assessment
I’m just a psychosocially deficient old man
who occasionally churns out amusing words.


                        I Don’t Feel Ethnic

I don’t feel ethnic
even though I was born into a definite ethnic group.
Ashkenazic.
Eastern European Jewish.
Two grandparents from what is now Poland
and two from what’s now the Ukraine.
Still, I love most of the ethnic food I grew up with –
chopped liver and sour green tomatoes and kasha knishes
and sable, which is smoked black cod, and,
although I haven’t had any in many years,
gefilte fish with hot horseradish – comfort food, all,
but I also derive comfort from stuff from the hot bread shops,
and just about every other kind of ethnic food,
and when I cook it’s more likely to be
some form of Mexican or Italian or Indian or something
I’ve improvised
than Ashkenazic.
I don’t deny my heritage,
but the religion part,
and most of the in-group cultural stuff of it never stuck.
I guess the thing is that although
I’m a member of the tribe for sure,
I just don’t dance with the rest of them
around some metaphoric campfire.
I don’t dig klezmer,
and I didn’t dig it when another member of the tribe
came up to me at a recent function
and told me an ethnocentric, ethnic-stereotype joke,
having lost my ability to appreciate
humour based on ethnic stereotypes – except Australians –
many decades ago.
I didn’t feel simpático with that landsmann,
to mix my Spanish with my Yiddish.
What I felt was alienated from my roots,
just as I do from the wider culture.



   My Own Confirmation Bias

When I don’t feel confident
about being able
to do something competently,
but have no choice but to do it anyway,
and it comes out okay,
this result has no effect
on my underlying lack of confidence
at all.


            I Come Last

One of the many things
that I internalised as child,
having learnt it within
the dynamic of my family,
that my life in general reinforced,
and that became solidified during the years
when I was primarily a spouse and parent
is that when I am involved or engaged
with one or more other people,
my interests, my preferences,
my feelings, my desires,
my needs, my time – my life,
definitely have less importance
than those of the others.
I accept this as natural and inevitable,
but I don’t like it.


         Early in the Morning

For a long time now,
the worst part of almost every day for me
has been that early-morning moment
when I grudgingly have to acknowledge
that I’ve awakened and am unable
to get back to sleep.

From time to time, however,
things become worse,
such as when I’m at my desk before dawn
and am unable to distract myself sufficiently
to maintain mental numbness.


       Without When Within

It got to the point
at which even whisky gave no comfort
from my rattlings about in my own absurdity;
I had no children, or old men like myself,
around to connect me
with card games or dominoes
and laughter about nothing.
I no longer had even pathetic congress
with the plants in my pots.
No new facebook notifications.
No new emails.
No phone calls or text messages,
as usual.
No hugs and cuddles.
No cosy time-passing.
No sharing of secrets.
No enthusiasm or expectations
that the courage required to hit the world
would result in reward.
Of all the music in the world,
much of it at my fingertips,
I didn’t know what to play –
something that would reach me
but not really touch me
would have been most appropriate for the situation,
but the situation seemed incurable, anyhow,
even with jazz fusion.


           Within When Without

Fear afflicts me
most of the time.
It afflicts me the worst
when I’m away from my hole.
All sorts of fears afflict all sorts of people,
but – except for vertigo –
most of the common ones,
such as the fear of death,
bother me little or not at all.
What terrorises me, of course,
is people.

Okay, most of the people who take my money
in the shops and so forth
are like balm.

But when I venture into
the world of people
who may give a shit
or should give a shit
or pretend to give a shit
or who I want to give a shit,
I’ve learnt to keep my defences up,
and let the performer hide the child,
being highly suspicious of what is actually there.
My form may be within your range of vision, y’see,
but I’m not there.

Tuesday, 7 February 2017

Getting Through

                     Happiness & Love Skills

I see people who are apparently happy,
I guess, or some of them say that they are;
they’re in the shops and on the footpaths
and all over the internet,
and it seems to me
that the main reason why
they’re happy
is that they know how to be,
and that they probably know how to be
because they learnt the skill
when they were children,
through plenty of practice as grown-ups,
or both.

The same goes with love.
People whose lives are filled with love,
it seems to me,
had plenty of experience with it as children
in the warm bosoms of their families,
reinforced by plenty of practice as grown-ups,
or both.
Lovability,
this ability to be loved,
is also a skill,
like the ability to be happy.
I never learnt either one of them
worth a shit.



Advice to Self

Don’t reflect on it.
Don’t analyse it.
Don’t dream it.
Just be it.


               Empty Days

Days like this one,
as I key this onto the screen,
when I have no jobs in my inbox,
are definitely hazardous to my wellbeing,
as if that makes any difference to anything
except me, and I don’t matter.
Although frequently maddening,
my work also has the advantages
of being distracting and fatiguing.

Days like this one
I write verses that I’ll never get to perform
because I’ve written too many,
having had too many
days like this one.

Days like this one
I read at whatever book I have
fitfully on and off,
play countless games of computer solitaire and hangman,
and check my inbox every few minutes,
even when I know my chief editor in Australia
must still be asleep.

Days like this one
I have to do my best
to concentrate on not thinking about myself
and my emptiness and sorrow.

Days like this one,
after ten or so hours of tedium,
I sometimes get offers of seven-hour rush jobs
just as I’m signing off
with visions of wine and whisky
dominating my mind.


  Coffee, Gluten, and Solitude
Whilst watching some bullshit
world cup football match
to the droning of vuvuzelas
at seven o’clock or so
in the morning,
I found myself crying
because no one was in the kitchen
making me coffee and scones,
or was sitting beside me
waiting for me
to make her coffee
and tortillas.



                          Fixing the Fan

My early conditioning
to lack self-confidence in general,
combined with no one ever teaching me
how to do bloke stuff,
has resulted in my default setting
when it comes to simple home repairs
being to forego even attempting them.

The pedestal fan in my home office
had been in serious decline for a few years,
needing to be jumpstarted first up in the morning
by spinning its blade like the prop of a Sopwith Camel.

I’d asked my son-in-law, who knows about such things,
what it would take to fix it.
He’d just laughed and said that it wasn’t worth fixing –
that I could get a crappy new fan at Bunnings for $30.

Capitulating like that to global corporate capitalism’s
efforts to manipulate consumers
into cooperation with its waste-increases-profit agenda,
would have gone against my grain, of course.

It finally got to the point
at which I had to spin the bloody thing
for ten minutes each morning to get it to work,
and then when it was on high it was still fairly slow.

I noticed that the price of fans at Bunnings had dropped to $20,
but I decided first to take the bull by the tail
and face the situation.
I removed the blades and the collar behind them
and injected a few squirts of all-purpose household lubricating oil.

It worked a treat.




An Unproductive Pastime

It really makes no sense
to sit in a comfortable chair
by myself,
swilling cheap red wine,
while memories of
a series of women
with whom I fucked up
thirty-five or so years before
dominate my brain.
No, not at all –
wallowing in
mistakes from which
whatever I’ve learnt
doesn’t help at all
really makes no sense.


                     Clean Sheets

One Wednesday I washed my bedclothes –
that’s my sheets and pillowslips –
for the first time in six or seven months.

As an aside,
even though the forecast was for clear weather –
I refuse to call clear weather ‘fine’ –
I removed them from the line
shortly before an unexpected lunchtime downpour.

Thursday morning I was surprised to notice
how radically better they felt,
having turned sour only gradually.


                    Downtown Lunchtime

Being without an editing job
for the third of the past five days –
and the two jobs I did have having been piddling –
at about a quarter to one I got tired
of checking my inbox every few minutes
and walked downtown
to go to the library,
to see if anything on Victoria Street
that might take on an old codger
had a Help Wanted sign up –
none did –
and to buy a lottery ticket.
It seemed as if every pebble on the footpath
found the holes in the soles of my shoes,
and the aroma from every lunchtime eatery
found its way to my nose,
reminding me of how little I had to eat.


                    Deferential Till It Matters

As long as it’s a whatever (with adolescent shrug) situation,
I’m perfectly willing to defer just about anything
to just about anybody,
as what there is of my ego
doesn’t demand that I be in control or otherwise be top dog,
and the older I get the better I get
at not sweating the small stuff.

Funny what people,
including me, of course,
consider to be
small stuff,
and what falls into
other categories.

The tricky part, of course,
is when we poke about
in areas that don’t qualify as small stuff
to me
at all.

I’ve noticed, upon rare occasion,
that some people have trouble
analysing the fresh data
coming forth from my behaviour
when they step over
the whatever line into serious shit
or I perceive that they’re
pushing me around
just because they think they can,
and I stop being eagerly deferential
and dig in my fucking heels.

Even if that means me going off the rails,
… and I don’t like being angry.


            The Final Fatigue

I’m tired of having to do everything for myself
and even more tired of everything I do,
with all-too-rare exceptions,
being only for myself.
Humans didn’t evolve to live this way.


          Your Aunt and Your Uncle
Whilst throwing sticks
for my dog
in the park
one morning,
the old nursery song,
‘Where have you been,
Billy Boy,
Billy boy?’
earwormed into my head
and wouldn’t leave.
I wish it hadn’t done that.