Young Earth People, part 1
Reality is hard to picture without imagination.
It seems to most people, understandably,
that things are the way they are – now,
and it follows that most people,
which are those who have little or no imagination
inadequate education, and a truncated ability to wonder,
think that with a few small wrinkles,
such as what telephones and pop music and fads are like,
things now are
more or less the way things’ve always been.
The Treaty of Waitangi
started what we call New
Zealand , more or less,
about 175 years ago,
and who knows anything much
about their great-great-great-great-great grandparents,
who lived back then, anyhow?
And then 30 or so generations
of Maori lived and died in Aotearoa
before the colonisers got things here under control,
more or less.
Sumerian civilisation lasted for about 2,500 years,
which was more than 100 generations,
much, much longer than the English language has been around,
but it ended about 4,000 years ago
(imagine how many ‘greats’ to put before ‘grandparents’ there),
about the time that Chinese written history began.
Without imagination it could seem like the 80s,
or an egalitarian New
Zealand culture.
All ancient history.
Reality is hard
to picture without imagination.
Young
Earth People, part 2
Reality is hard to picture without imagination.
It’s obvious why young-earth creationists think that way.
Who can imagine all the births and deaths
that went by before we could live?
We’re about 50,000 generations from being hominids,
compared to the young-earthers’ unchanging 250 or so.
Being simpletons, they simply cannot imagine
that much time and change,
or a universe
that isn’t centred on them.
And if that’s too much, imagine how impossible it is
for them to imagine, for example,
that a species of egg-laying mammals
lived in Victoria ,
Australia for
about 8½ million years,
but died out about 112½ million years ago,
far, far longer than people have been around in any form,
or than young-earthers claim that the whole universe has existed.
Minds that boggle at a thousand generations
must shut off
entirely when the numbers reach the millions.
The light from the trillion suns of the Andromeda Galaxy,
(Imagination Failure! Imagination Failure! Ha-Oooga!),
the most distant of the twinkling lights
that people can see in the night sky,
took about 2,250,000 years to get here,
(Imagination Failure! Imagination Failure! Ha-Oooga!),
but when the End of Days brings the Rapture,
all the stars will fall from the sky, and why not?
Stars, after all, look like little things
that you could almost reach out and touch.
Some might even
land in your back garden.
If you pray hard enough, though,
they just might land in your neighbours’ gardens
and leave yours alone.
The
Freedom Of The Ruling Class
They gleefully hoard more than they can ever need,
the rulers of the Earth,
but stay edgy,
all of them
slaves to the bottom line at the end of the day.
They revel in their smug sense of superiority,
the rulers of the Earth,
souls being problematic,
desperate
slaves to their inhuman business model’s needs.
They giggle like children as they befoul their playgrounds,
the rulers of the Earth;
consequences being for lesser people,
they themselves
being simpering slaves to maximisation.
They’re chortling in their
newly-grown beards,
the rulers of the Earth,
who can afford anything,
but are hopeless slaves to
fashion.
There’s A Word For This?
Walking into town along gracious George Street
the memory of a job I once had
whistled into my brain and filled it for a while –
the job was supervising the In-School Suspension program
at an extremely downmarket school in the 80s,
with an assortment of adolescents
coping with poverty and culture conflict and hormones
in an entertaining variety of ways –
especially the charming rogues,
and it struck me that it had been like living
in a Dickensian novel, only an Hispanic one,
but all this cranial tapestry was really just for me,
and this filled
me with wonder.
It’s not quite an emotion, I
don’t think,
but I was experiencing one of
those feelings
that we don’t have a word for
in English.
Maybe the Japanese have one
of their zinger words for it,
or the Germans one of their
words
that take up an entire line of
type,
or one that the Yaghan language of Tierra
del Fuego
has
encapsulated with pithy insight – I don’t know,
but the feeling was one of
being simultaneously
keenly conscious of what an
unlikely, magnificently amazing,
and beautiful phenomenon my
brain is
and of how utterly insignificant
all my neural activity
is to anything outside of my
body, anyway.
The Limits To Veracity
All my life, since I was a
little kid,
one of the bedrocks of my
self-respect
has been that I don’t lie.
Sometimes I may have had
to be a bit evasive, perhaps,
but when pinned down
I’ve always tried to tell the
truth.
That’s one of the basic reasons
that brazenly lying people of
power
disgust me as much as they do.
Oh judgemental me!
I do, however,
recognise an exception
to my no-porkies rule,
and that, of course,
is that it’s okay to lie to
cops
in certain situations.
Maybe that’s why
corrupt politicians lie all the
time –
they consider everybody –
you and me and reporters, let’s
say,
to be something like cops.
Nah, Key and Turnbull and Putin
and Trump
and their ilk have probably just been
psychopathic liars since they were little kids
and have some kind of a block in their brains
that prevents the truth from reaching their mouths.
Focused Passions
Robin scrubs each grape with a toothbrush
before popping it fastidiously into his
mouth.
‘Hygiene is very important,’ he says.
Erana scatters the clothes pegs about on
the ground
every time she removes her wash from the
line.
‘I have a random-romantic personality,’ she says.
and won’t permit anyone to even say
‘plunger’ in his house.
‘Coffee is something to take seriously,’ he says.
Leonid painted all of his dog’s toenails
in high-viz reflective metallic orange.
‘Her safety and stylishness mean everything to me,’ he says.
Sam learnt glassblowing just so she could
contrive
a water pipe that captures the smoke out
of the bowl
and re-routes it back to the mouthpiece.
‘It’s a sin to waste marijuana smoke,’ she
says.
Not
A Cliché
She was wizard
with warm, comfortable relationships,
and a repeated victim
with passionate ones,
but passion is what she craved
despite the torment it brought her,
her being a suffering, talented, sensitive genius.
It’s difficult being that different
in that way,
and to be thoroughly aware of it, too.
Force-Fed Buzzwords
It came up on my screen as my device
rebooted,
superimposed on some lame landscape photo
I can’t get rid of:
“Get the apps you need for an absolutely
awesome summer.”
and I thought:
‘Do people really need apps?
Like they need food and music and love?
Must people who don’t buy the correct toys
suffer through summers
that are less than absolutely awesome?
How have the lucky ones managed to
tolerate
every summer until now without them?’
And what the fuck does ‘absolutely
awesome’ mean, anyhow?
They could have just used the term
‘marketing-buzzword’ summer instead.
Same thing.
After all, how different is an absolutely
awesome summer
to an absolutely fabulous one, Sweetie?
Before I was born they would’ve been
pitching a top-drawer summer.
In the 70s and 80s it would’ve been an
ultimate one.
Anyone up for having a world-class summer
next year?
Or a fantastically inspirational one, or a
quality one?
What if I wanted my summer to be woke?
Or maybe a just can’t-complain, not-that-bad one?
I mulled this over as the summer faded
into autumn
without me buying any apps,
despite my screen nagging me multiple
times daily.
I don’t think the summer I did have was
absolutely awesome,
or even awesome without being absolutely
so.
Hell, I’m in awe that I just fucking
survived it,
but I rather think that no,
blowing my grog-and-weed money on apps
wouldn’t have helped it all that much
in the way of absolute awesomeness.
Family
Pride
If one of my daughters were
pregnant,
which neither of them is,
and asked for my input
in regard to naming the sprog,
which neither of them would do,
I’d point out my preference
for honouring ancestors
by naming their descendents after them.
Now, my much-loved Uncle Joe
was a helluva guy,
much warmer toward me
than was his sister, my mother.
A former barnstorming semipro
baseballer
and a World War Two hero,
he settled down as an interior decorator.
My father’s father was also
Joe,
but I don’t remember him;
the stories I’ve heard about
him, though,
portray him as something of a
hard case.
He was a devout Communist,
and even an admirer of Stalin.
I believe he worked as a
salesman.
In his photos he’s invariably
dapper
and smoking a long, thick cigar.
Therefore, a grandson of mine
could be Joseph,
or maybe Josef or Josephus or
Jozip
or even Yossi or Yusef or
Giuseppe or José.
A granddaughter could of course
be Josephine,
or maybe Josine or Josey or
Joelle or Joey or
Jolene, Jolene! JOLENE! JO-LEE-EE-EEN!
or maybe just plain Jo.
It’d be cruel to name anyone
JoMama, though.


