Saturday, 1 June 2019

Stuff from March, April, & May 2019


              These Things Must Exist

The images swim out of various parts
of the anglophone cultural miasma:

Hearts and floral arrangements
and darling crayon drawings by kindy kids
frame the tender depictions of present-day madonnas
and the warm, fuzzy paeans of purest love
that ooze out all over the place
on Mothers Day
and its commercial build-up …
I imagine that’s real for most people,
but it sure isn’t real for me;
I do struggle, badly, to be resilient, somehow.

A long table covered with home-made food
and surrounded by four generations, with in-laws,
of a large and safe and boisterous family;
kids of all sizes climbing on trees or fences or furniture,
more than a dozen lifetimes of interwoven experiences
inevitable disagreements tempered by shared values,
with love the prophylactic against distrust, or meanness,
or subtle challenges and psychological threats ...
I imagine that’s real for many people,
depending on their culture and situation,
but my family’s just not like that.

Two silver-haired Old Dears
looking lovingly into each other’s eyes,
holding hands in the park or by the sea,
or maybe on a shady front porch,
their mutual empathy and trust automatic,
their souls suffused with their shared nearly-everything …
I wonder how real that is in the city;
it sure isn’t real to me,
but I have coping mechanisms.




         The View From The Launch 

A certain tension pulsates beneath the surface
at buffets put on at minor events
between: (a) the people who brought
their signature snack delicacies
for the common board
and who want to see all of it eaten,
as much to feel rewarded for their efforts
as to avoid the trouble of disposing of it,
and (b) everybody else,
each of whom is all too aware
of the opprobrium and ridicule
and the sneering about gluttony –
sometimes via witty jokes or comments,
but often, more tastefully,
through visible-but-unspoken looks
that rain down on those people
whom our more judgemental friends
feel they have reason to accuse
of making a pig of themselves.

It only has to happen once.

When only a bit younger I didn’t give a shit
and tucked in heartily
when the goodies were good,
but now it just seems easier
to avoid risking that sort of tediousness.
Nobody actually needs yummy snacks.
It’s only pleasure, after all. 



                           Fresh Fruit For Breakfast 

The stars, the cosmos,
have no meaning for my dog.
Does this mean they have no meaning at all?
Well, yes and no.
If you know what I mean –
or even if you don’t.
It depends on what you mean
by meaning –
and what the stars
and galaxies
and other points of light
in the night sky
(when the city lights don’t interfere)
mean to you.
My dog has other things on his mind.
Me? I like fresh fruit for breakfast.


           Mutant Amoebas 

I happened to mention
that I like soy sauce on my brussels sprouts.

He snorted, ‘You can’t really like brussels sprouts;
they’re nasty-nasty-nasty, and I should know,
because I have Very Good Taste,
better than all those food snobs
and you sheeple who go ooh and ahh
over so-called food that you really can’t stand
because you lack confidence –
fakes, all of you.’

I said, sighing inwardly
because I didn’t want him to notice
(but he probably did),
‘No, your hatred for brussels sprouts
just means that your TAS2R38 gene
has mutated to make a protein
that misconstrues certain substances
in brussels sprouts and other brassicas
for a chemical called phenylthiocarbamide,
which is unpleasantly bitter.’

He smirked disdainfully at me, sneering,
‘Are you telling me that I’m a mutant?’

‘Every living thing,’
I told him with little hope that it’d get through,
‘from octopuses to oak trees
to pigeons to people,
including both of us,
is basically a mutant amoeba.’

He smiled at me with condescending loathing,
‘Not me, mate.
Speak for yourself.’


                   The Solution  

Human civilisation is a mess
That’s always been the case (the record’s clear),
only now its capacity to destroy itself
has become so sophisticated
and so powerful and so tempting
in so many different ways
that civilisational collapse
seems imminent and inescapable.
Of course, numerous individuals
and scattered clumps of people
have proposed numerous reasonable ways
to at least delay this self-destruction,
but without political wisdom,
these are likely to come to nought,
and political wisdom is in short supply,
as it always has been (the record’s clear).

Philosophers and statesmen
(note the gendered term)
have since ancient days
argued over what is the best way
to sort out people’s power relationships,
but no system or philosophy or ideology
has come close to being
what it needs to be.

I, however, have the best solution
for the best outcomes for everyone:
make me King of the World
(or Emperor or CEO).
The title doesn’t matter,
just that what I say, goes.
After all, I do have the optimal
values system, knowledge base,
higher-level cognitive abilities,
and acquired wisdom,
modest personal needs,
and just the right psychological disorders
for the job. 

           M.O.G. 

If the rain is, indeed,
the tears of the Virgin Mary
weeping for our sins,
a whole lot of sinning
must be going on.


                Fresh Grapes from Chile
  
The sun sucked up that little spludge of water,
no bigger then the last joint of my thumb,
sucked it up into a cloud from somewhere in the ocean,
or maybe from a lake or a swamp,
or the river two blocks from my house
into which my urine also flows,
and it wafted all the way across the Pacific
to the Atacama region of Chile,
where it fell in a shower, or maybe a thunderstorm,
onto a vineyard growing red globe table grapes,
then rose  up through roots to inhabit
a grape of exactly that size
in a bunch that some underpaid person picked,
before other underpaid workers packed it
into the hold of a climate-warping airplane,
in which it rode for more than 10,000 climate-warping kays,
ending up briefly at the Vege King in the Fairfield shops
before riding again, muscle-powered, inside my backpack
to my kitchen, where I popped it into my mouth,
and deeply enjoyed the moment
of that juicy grape-explosion
when my teeth crushed it.

Endless aeons of cosmic expansion, geological activity,
biological evolution – of both grapes and me –
and global human economic development 
created that one juicily worthwhile moment
before my species fucks things up for ourselves
more or less terminally,
and no more Chilean red globe grapes
fly pollutingly to New Zealand
for worthwhile moments and transcontinental recycling.


       A Cultural Phenomenon 

Heavy metal,
it seems to me,
is a musical, attitudinal, and sartorial expression
of a world-view
and cultural-values profile
that emphasises the grandness
of imperialism and conquest
and triumphalism and domination
and violence and cruelty
for people who may be benefiting
from the historical consequences
of such things,
but who feel cheated by the way
that those who still enjoy them to the full
– especially the domination stuff –
have eroded the metalheads’ enjoyment
into puffed-chest fantasies of long ago
– especially the domination stuff –
as their own life experiences of their civilisation,
born of violent conquest as it was,
and imbued with its rationale as it is,
has turned, inexplicably to them,
to shit.


      Just One Little Thing  

Most of my exes
(and I have too many of them
scattered about the globe)
would probably take me back
if only I were a different person,
which of course I’m not.



Thursday, 28 February 2019

Stuff from December 2018 + January & February 2019


     Interview With A Random Rhymester   

Just tell me what happened in your own words.

      He poured some vin ordinaire
      all over the can over there.

What happened next?

      He spit on a stick
      and shit on a brick,
      then said, ‘Go suck a wet one,’
      but the schmuck wouldn’t bet none,
      as the peccadillo’s housing a yellow pillow
      and an armadillo with a cigarillo,
      so he strode straight to the loo
      for his load to stay tickety-boo.

So, did he give her anything?

      Some dog eye gunk, gooey and gritty,
      plus a thigh hunk of cold, chewy schnitty
      and duplicated blistering detestable boils
      lubricated by glistening intestinal oils.

Well, did she thank him?

      She told him she preferred lasagne,
      which bowled him clean; he winked, ‘Good onya,’
      but flustered by a feather duster
      Mr Bluster didn’t trust her.


            One Big Lie 

Goebbels called the technique
the Big Lie,
noting that if someone tells a lie often enough
people will assume that it’s true.
Probably the most prominent Big Lie
propping up the mythology
of the United States of America
is that it’s a Free Country.
It’s not
and never has been,
having always been for sale
to anyone who has enough money.
If you’re reading this
the odds are overwhelming
that you don’t have enough dosh
to buy even a tiny bit of it.
Not even a small-town
city councillor.


               Ignorance 

I walked my dog
past the Claudelands Events Centre
that morning
against a flow of people
sauntering, mostly in pairs and groups,
in their special caps and capes,
some with their families in tow,
on their way to the ceremony
to get their ornamental certificates
(their real degree documents being
in the uni’s digital records).
They seemed like the assembly-line roll-out
from an ignorance factory.
At best.

Universities should be ignorance factories.
The most important thing a person can learn
from a university education,
except perhaps in engineering,
is that they don’t know everything
and never will.
If they don’t acquire the humility
to admit freely what they don’t know,
and the curiosity to want to find out more
and the ability to look for it honestly,
their bachelor’s degrees signify only
that they’ve been minimally trained
for jobs that are going to disappear soon.
Only acquiring knowledge of their own ignorance
makes the whole university thing worthwhile.




     Just Is, That’s All 

The universe, obviously,
doesn’t give a shit
about your needs or desires
or joys or suffering
or philosophies or beliefs
or reasons or motivations
for having the ideas about it
that you do.

You may indeed
most sincerely believe,
with elegant reasoning
to support your assertion
that it has to have
a reason to exist
that makes sense to you,
but that means nothing
to its overpoweringly
impersonal indifference,
you insignificant little
biological specimen.



  Gentleman of Fashion 

One of the heaps of reasons
that fashion,
as a vehicle
of corporate marketing,
sucks so badly
is its conscious creation
of rapid obsolescence.
Whenever I find
a type of clothing –
or anything else –
that works for me,
and it wears out,
I can’t replace it
with another just like it
(or at least highly similar)
because fashion has dictated
that I have to buy
something that costs more
and delivers less –
or else I can
just do without.


If You Can’t Say Anything Nice  

I do my best
to say nothing at all
about some people I know,
for to say anything
about these individuals
I’d have to be either
untruthful or unkind,
and I prefer
to be neither.


              Refuse Man 

I work at the transfer station, baby
I find heaps of funky stuff
I’m your refuse man, baby
I get to nick some funky stuff
If it’s bric-a-brac you want baby
I’ll bring you more than just enough

I work at the transfer station, baby
I drive a big ole forklift truck
I work at the transfer station, baby
I drive a big ole forklift truck
I can move big heaps of rubbish
and keep my shoes out of the muck

I found this hangi sack full of dildos
It’s yours if that’s how you like to play
I found this hangi sack full of dildos baby
All yours if that’s how you wanna play
I’ll even return my old used sex doll
I never loved her, anyway

I found a wedding ring for you baby
It’s only been used once or twice
I found a wedding ring for you baby
It’s only been used once or twice
And a chipped-glass tiara for your head
So we can get married looking nice

If you’re gonna dump me, baby
please don’t throw my heart away
If you’re gonna dump me, baby
please don’t throw my heart away
Just give it back; I’ll take it with me
when I go back to the tip the next day



               Willow Tree Sand  

No one proves he’s a man when he tries,
no matter how much he impresses The Guys,
who don’t even notice he’s there in the gym
unless he relapses into just being him –
and not some category that does exercise.
No one proves he’s a man when he tries.

He’s hungry, but his belly’s full;
what is he hungry for?
Hun-gree! Hung-ree!
What are you hungry for?

He doesn’t have to prove it that he’s tall
(elevator shoes fool nobody, after all)
and how tall is tall, anyhow?
Pontificating doesn’t prove that he’s wise
And no one proves he’s a man when he tries.

Take a walk, take a walk through the riverside shade
Climb twisted tree roots
exposed by a beautiful-day drought
The sand’s gone dry beneath the shifting willow leaves
that used to be close by where the river played.

No one proves he’s a man when he tries
By the willow tree sand’s where he cries.
He’s hungry, but his belly’s full;
what is he hungry for?
Hun-gree! Hung-ree!
What are you hungry for?



                   It Went 

It went
from wonderful-wonderful-wonderful
to better-than-nothing-I-suppose
to actually-not-better-than-nothing-after-all
and then
it went.