Monday, May 20, 2013

Meditations on Life - Post for May 20th, 2013


I never want to be misogynistic again.  I think that in many ways I have been misogynistic; I have blown up at my girlfriends.  Another thing is that I think I am unhappy.  I hate architecture so much, it makes me blow up so easily.  I have to be so strict with myself.  I hate that fact.  I never want to be misogynistic or force myself again.
I never want to smoke a cigarette again.  I smoked because I am inherently an introvert; smoking was a way to quell anxieties about socializing.  It became my social tool.  But not anymore. 
I want to do something that matters to me.  When I read and reread my writing I am narcissistic; I admire my own articulation, as though admiring the toning of my muscles in a mirror; except here there is a clarity of vision, a precision of language that demonstrates my own limits, and how I’ve surpassed them.  Sometimes things I did in the past impress me.  They inspire me to do it again, to push metaphors, reinvent them, dissolve understanding into a new substance, reformulating the image, fluidifying my lyrical carpentry.
I am tired of my father.  I love him but he does not understand me; in fact, his efforts, profound and sincere, have led him to deeply misunderstand me, in ways that sometimes I am even convinced of his misunderstanding.
I want beauty; I want to find it; I see it all the time in the patterns of letters and words.  If I can’t describe it, then it is beautiful, and so I try to unravel it into its constituent parts.  Then only the way the words are put together is the beauty reflected.  But I don’t even know.  The words themselves reveal how satisfied the attempts are at capturing such a thing.  Sometimes you loose instances forever in their attempted dissection.  That is why it is important to have some silence.
But the page provides the space, like a storage bin, for thoughts, anxieties, worries, memories, so that the mind can be clear; so that the mind can have some peace.  Like a babysitter, the page, and its words temporarily care for the born thoughts that obligate a responsibility to raise and nurture.  Now like a mother, my mind falls asleep, in the tatters of housework, hair pinned up into a bandana on the couch.  One arm folded over my eyes, the other limply hanging off the side of the couch, grasping a rag, I dream.

University Cafe


Time waits in a telephone.
     It maneuvers with
Magic through Beer brews
The coffee, will fixate
thoughts
Waiting with rhythm marks
And cigarettes shine
On smoke hair typing.
Computers perturb reality
      Made the sun wear
Glasses
Speak off
Lipstick distortions
In the curve of airplane jetlag