Wednesday, 26 June 2019

Rawer


Not sure what I'm doing here,
in between sweaty legs,
a heavy head on my chest.

Not sure what's happening here,
hands still clung to my hips,
a breathing I don't recognise.

Not sure what I've done here.
First time I sleep with someone
since you broke up with me.

Not sure what's happened here.
I feel caught in a bear trap
the hunter's breath on my neck.

Not sure what'll happen now.
Maybe waiting to be skinned,
more naked than I already am.

Not sure what I'll do now.
All I loved once is gone.
You are gone, never to return.

I should probably get up now,
get dressed and take my leave.
I should certainly flee the shame
and run away as fast as possible
to avoid seeing your eyes now,
your shaking head and tutting mouth.

I should go home and shower off
all these tears and emotions
and wait for the night to smother me.

I just wanted to taste
what it felt like to love,
to taste the freedom
off somebody else's lips.

I will carry you inside me forever
and watch your eyes as I do now
questioning my guilty conscience.

Not sure what could have happened
if you had stayed with me
but I know for certain
that I'd still love you.

Not sure where you are now
with whom you're sharing a bed
but I want to be this person
and efface what you think of me.

Not sure how I could do this now
but I think about it every day
every, single, day...certain now
that I can't find again the grain
of your skin on that of others
nor the shade of your green eyes
nor the sound of your smile

it's as if you were dead only to me
and not for the rest of the world

some thoughts are rawer
than a naked body
sharper than headlights
on a fox's face
more bitter than the salt
off your long-lost faded lips.

Tuesday, 25 June 2019

FOMO


I recently developed a condition
whereby I have a violent,
borderline jealous reaction
with practically everyone.
I gape, I stare, I fall silent.

Let me put before you a case I imagined.
Picture a seven year old skydiving
for the first time and becoming a legend.
My whole existence felt so much threatened
I was stabbed by the most excruciating pang

of jealousy at the pit of the stomach.
Now a ninety year old with Parkinson?
Stab to the heart. A sneer. Enough to choke.
Father of two, in a wheelchair? A mock.
Agony of the soul drilled by a tommy gun.

I think my fear of missing out
has gone to the next level
My soul wants to go all-out,
I want to make it all out,
I want to feel how they feel.

I want to feel every possible human emotion:
from the sharpest love to the dullest pain,
from dejected tenderness to tender rejection.
I would like to be everything and everyone.
I would like to die and to live and to die again.
 

Monday, 24 June 2019

The responsibility to be oneself


"Man is condemned to be free; because once thrown into the world, he is responsible for everything he does."

Jean-Paul Sartre, French philosopher, playwrigtht, novelist, essayist, political activist and literary critic (1905-1980) He refused the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1964.

I do believe this quote needs some contextualisation, especially to put the use of "condemned" into perspective. Here is the passage (first in French, English following right after):


"Dostoïevski avait écrit : " Si Dieu n'existait pas, tout serait permis ". C'est là le point de départ de l'existentialisme. En effet, tout est permis si Dieu n'existe pas, et par conséquent l'homme est délaissé, parce qu'il ne trouve ni en lui, ni hors de lui une possibilité de s'accrocher. Il ne trouve d'abord pas d'excuses. Si, en effet, l'existence précède l'essence, on ne pourra jamais expliquer par référence à une nature humaine donnée et figée ; autrement dit, il n'y a pas de déterminisme, l'homme est libre, l'homme est liberté. Si, d'autre part, Dieu n'existe pas, nous ne trouvons pas en face de nous des valeurs ou des ordres qui légitimeront notre conduite. Ainsi, nous n'avons ni derrière nous, ni devant nous, dans le domaine lumineux des valeurs, des justifications ou des excuses. Nous sommes seuls, sans excuses. C'est ce que j'exprimerai en disant que l'homme est condamné à être libre. Condamné, parce qu'il ne s'est pas créé lui-même, et par ailleurs cependant libre, parce qu'une fois jeté dans le monde il est responsable de tout ce qu'il fait. L'existentialiste ne croit pas à la puissance de la passion. Il ne pensera jamais qu'une belle passion est un torrent dévastateur qui conduit fatalement l'homme à certains actes, et qui, par conséquent, est une excuse. Il pense que l'homme est responsable de sa passion. L'existentialiste ne pensera pas non plus que l'homme peut trouver un secours dans un signe donné, sur terre, qui l'orientera ; car il pense que l'homme déchiffre lui- même le signe comme il lui plaît. Il pense donc que l'homme, sans aucun appui et sans aucun secours, est condamné à chaque instant à inventer l'homme." L'existentialisme est un humanisme, 1946.

"Dostoevsky once wrote "If God did not exist, everything would be permitted”; and that, for existentialism, is the starting point. Everything is indeed permitted if God does not exist, and man is in consequence forlorn, for he cannot find anything to depend upon either within or outside himself. He discovers forthwith, that he is without excuse. For if indeed existence precedes essence, one will never be able to explain one’s action by reference to a given and specific human nature; in other words, there is no determinism — man is free, man is freedom. Nor, on the other hand, if God does not exist, are we provided with any values or commands that could legitimise our behaviour. Thus we have neither behind us, nor before us in a luminous realm of values, any means of justification or excuse. — We are left alone, without excuse. That is what I mean when I say that man is condemned to be free. Condemned, because he did not create himself, yet is nevertheless at liberty, and from the moment that he is thrown into this world he is responsible for everything he does. The existentialist does not believe in the power of passion. He will never regard a grand passion as a destructive torrent upon which a man is swept into certain actions as by fate, and which, therefore, is an excuse for them. He thinks that man is responsible for his passion. Neither will an existentialist think that a man can find help through some sign being vouchsafed upon earth for his orientation: for he thinks that the man himself interprets the sign as he chooses. He thinks that every man, without any support or help whatsoever, is condemned at every instant to invent man." Existentialism is a Humanism, 1946.


I think the notion underlined in the quote I initially posted (and highlighted with Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov quote in which Ivan Karamazov claims that "if God does not exist, then everything is permitted") is that of accountability. We alone are responsible for our actions. We cannot make excuses other than that which we can connect directly to our thoughts, beliefs, values, actions. Condemned we are because we haven't made a conscious decision to be here on Earth, but as we do indeed live on it now we do have the freedome, the luxury, the luck, the moral obligation -- whatever you want to call it, and there's many more phrases which could be added -- to choose with our own conscience to vouch for our actions.
 

Sunday, 23 June 2019

On Summer Nights


The fallen sky was full of a humming song
fracturing into crimson shards on the horizon

a murmuration of starlings heaved
as if the night was now a surging sea,
now a whale, now a billowing cloud,
now a crouching dancer now suddenly
bursting high up like a head unbowed,
now a jellyfish, swelling, slumping,
now stretching like the thinnest of shrouds
and then ball up into the fist of a titan

dusk was a cooling, clement spectacle
made us forget the day's sizzling heat
and the intense emotional debacle
blanketing our heart like an iron sheet

the flesh regardless had that sort of urgency
whipping our pulse on like marching drums
the mind laden with memories of ardency
boiling in the womb like winged thrums

the brutal insistence of the summer blaze
warded off for the night being
next morning coating emotions like a glaze
made us wish for nights less fleeting
 

Underbelly of the Night

Click to enlarge

Thursday, 20 June 2019

Oh honey


Oh honey, you wreaked so much havoc.
None of this made any sense to me.
What sort of love was this? What sort?
Was it even love that we felt?
I worked three jobs, tore down walls on weekends
built them back up the next, painted them, planted hooks
for you to hang your favourite pictures.

I saw my ideas for our home slowly being scratched off
and I didn't care because I thought this was how love
was supposed to work. You were all I had.
I just wanted to see that smile upon your face
when you mouthed “I love you” across the dinner table.

Oh honey, sure I faltered on occasions
withdrew into my world because
I felt pulverised by your love
I didn't feel up to the task you had set
I didn't feel like I was good enough for you
yet I carried on for you, just for you
because you said you loved me still.

Oh honey, when I fell asleep at the wheel
lugging back from the hardware shop
you suggested a nap would do me good
then you said you'd love to see the bathroom done
because your parents were visiting next week.
I sure had to plough through this.
Who on earth loves like this?

Oh honey, I told you not to give up
that I had enough strength for the both of us.
I saw you drifting. You became silent.
You were coming home later and later.
You barely looked at my daily evening work
you no longer cared about the decoration
but still you said your love was intact.

Oh honey, I tried to save us from the wreck
but you wanted to collide against the rocks.
You steered our home full sail in the storm
and when it crashed you blamed me
and the rage you flew in I'd never seen.
But you raged in the name of love, you said.

Oh honey, what sort of woman are you?
You stabbed, shot and trampled my heart
and with one twist of your heel I was gone.
Oh honey, you carried my corpse down
the stairs, my limp head banging on each step
and you skidded off the trail of blood and laughed
rolled me up in that old carpet you hated
ditched me in the boot of my car.
And you texted me that you were doing this
and that was an undeniable proof of your love.

What sort of sick lover does this?

I wasn't ready to make any sacrifice
for I had done them all already.
Oh honey, you stripped me of my rights
you let the lawyers strip me of our house
which I had built from the ground up
and then you made sure I had no money left
so I couldn't sue you but I wouldn't have
I still loved you too much for that
for you said you never loved anyone
like you loved me.

Oh honey, I wonder if you ever loved me.
Perhaps I was all wrong and never knew true love
for when you drove through the night
to the seaside where we first dated
stopped right off the cliff
geared the car up, revved the engine
so it shot down and crashed on the rocks below.
Oh honey, you didn't even look back.

What sort of love drove you to do this?
Oh honey, you said you had your reasons
that I didn't look like I cared enough
that you didn't think I loved you enough.
So when I had no job, no money and no house
you saw fit to stab me again, and again,
you spun me around and slit my throat
and nonchalantly shoved me in the bathtub.

Oh honey, what sort of lover are you to let
my feet dangle at such an odd angle?
Where's the decency a dead body deserves?
As if everything we'd lived was forgotten
wiped out the instant you grabbed the knife.
As if I'd lost my humanity altogether.

You got away with all of these murders
only lovers of your kind can achieve this
and oh honey walk away in broad daylight
their hands, like the white bathroom tiles
spattered with blood, carefully cleaning them
waiting for the next prey because you feel
the need to love boiling in your veins.
 

Curated conscience


"The ability of so many people to live comfortably with the idea of capital punishment is perhaps a clue to how so many Europeans were able to live with the idea of the Holocaust: Once you accept the notion that the state has the right to kill someone and the right to define what is a capital crime, aren't you halfway there?"

Roger Ebert, film critic (1942-2013).

As per usual when a quote is taken from a larger text, it makes much more sense when this context is brought back to the surface. You can find the source for the quote in this here interesting film review. It's a fascinating read, even if you haven't watched the movie (Mr. Death: The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuchter, Jr.).

Tuesday, 18 June 2019

Leviathan


He didn't know what on earth to tell her –
what words will unparalyse the fearful?
She lay on the side, knees pressed to her chin,
the frail dinghy rocked by relentless swells.

Why they were here didn't really matter –
the fear, the fear only was crucial.
Each word, each gesture amplified the spin
of a churning stomach in a churning hell.

In the end he had no choice but to cover
her face with a jute sack, it was too awful
to see her thus. And much to his chagrin
he had to bind her hands and feet as well.

It took less than a minute to be over.
And because he didn't want to seem cruel
he wrapped her body in a tarpaulin,
and without ballast she sank in a short spell.

The reason why had long stopped to matter –
the guilt and the shame were his sole fuel –
the constant lies for him the ultimate sin
which kept the ghost alive in the shell.
 

Monday, 17 June 2019

All our sunsets


A few days ago, a friend of mine asked me if I remembered the most beautiful sunset I had ever seen, because she had just seen the one she thought would stay with her for the rest of her days, high up in a mountain range. My first instinct was not to ask her to send a picture, but to describe it for me. Interestingly, she hadn't taken any picture of that particular sunset anyway, just as I didn't take any of mine. And today serendipity had it that another friend sent me a picture of the sky from her house, not at sunset but the sun clearly sunk behind the clouds, illumining them from below. The trees and the rooftops already dark. Several different types of clouds clog the sky. I could picture it for you, or include the picture, but that's not my point.

I've always been interested in those moments when we choose not to immortalise them with a picture, but rather with our senses. I didn't write “eyes”, but “senses”, and I think the crux of the matter is precisely here. Those moments are infinitely more profound when we deliberately choose to live them through, and fix them in our memories, however flimsy and transient this repository might prove over time. We forget, we correct, we transform, but perhaps not as much as we think.

This is some sort of a wager against time which we do when we record the greatest sunset we'll ever get to capture with our senses. We choose what gets to stay with us, and rather than a still picture which will be marvellous and will invariably make people think of their greatest sunset, we can describe what it was for us, why it was the greatest, and how the reds, the oranges and the yellows were like a shimmering explosion of colours in the entire sky, as if the world had come to an end and this apocalypse was mesmerising. It was the most amazing spectacle and we felt something inside us being moved to tears, or serenity. Perhaps it even changed us, who knows. It will be marvellous to tell, wonderful to share and will invariably remind our friends of their greatest sunset, or sky, or moonscape.

A snapshot of what we saw may be a more potent trigger for our brains, but those long minutes, perhaps hours, we spent watching this sunset have changed us much more than a picture can ever tell. Because ultimately what my two friends wanted me to see is how happy or serene or nostalgic they were. The sunset, the sky, appealed to something within them, they struck a chord which reverberated and filled them with an overwhelming feeling. And we bonded even more over a sunset we could never see with our own eyes, but we sure felt that sunset running along our spine.

Sure, we can't share a mental sunset with our friends, can we. We have no physical proof of its existence, haven't we. Or perhaps I just did. Its effect on us is what we choose to narrate, because it was inscribed in time. This sunset happened at a particular moment in our life and we soaked up as much as our senses would allow us. The chill in the air, the hotness of the sun-beaten stones, the light breeze of the incoming tide, the sounds of seagulls, perhaps music coming muffled from a party nearby, or perhaps the warmth of the tea in our cold hands. All of these contributed to making this the grandest, most memorable sunset of our lives...till the next came, or not

I was about to wrap up this post when I thought of something. In some weird way, these sunsets are like last words. I was reminded recently of how it's important to always say something meaningful when we part with our friends, and family. We love them, we had a great time, we'll definitely call them soon, thanks so much for coming. I don't remember what my mom's last words were to me, but there's no doubt it was something trivial. Instead, I have the luxury of getting to choose what I remember of her, I deliberately chose which sunset is the greatest for me because I have the clearest of memories of that particular moment, which no amount of pictures could even come close to brush. This sunset, which no one will ever witness, sure vibrates with people when I tell them the story. This sunset, as with all our sunsets, deserve to be immortalised, because at one point who knows, we may want to share them.
 

Fragment #19


Why, in this long string of days,
this one mattered more than the rest?
She was gone beyond reach.
He felt he had failed the test.

He had gone on a long search,
nowhere, and in none, did he find her;
ten years and never even close:
never as smart, never kinder.
 

Silly little details

  You said it was the way I looked at you played with your fingertips drowned in your eyes starving your skin you felt happiness again your ...