Time to go

“Time to go,” she said she said

“time to leave and gain the shed.”

‘What’s in the shed’ I said I said

(I knew but felt a dart of dread.)

“Get up and see old uncle Ned.”

‘I fear the worst’ I said I said

‘That monster’s mean before he’s fed.’

“He’s sweet today,”she said she said,

“The time for fear’s when he is dead.” I said

‘I’ll stay right here if you don’t mind,

I’ve left all care in monsters behind.

Except for those that live within

I’ve no need for outside sin.

Monsters come and monsters go

That one I don’t need  to know.’

She left me then for that rotten shed,

I stayed behind and hid abed.

My monster’s played within my head,

‘Just keep it quiet’ I said I said.

 

The Ladder & The Bridge

Yuqi Portrait Dem (4)

For various reasons i get caught in the darkness.  I take up temporary residence in the last, ill-lighted house on the street.

I begin to live in the blackness of thought, of vision of hope.

The light fails to draw me.  It seems weak, foolish and unexciting.  Akin to the drama of a florescent light bulb or a the weak beam of a dying flashlight.

I respond to what fascinates me, the thing that will stimulate the gland or nerve to fire and makes me feel alive.

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It may be as innocuous as dead flowers in a bilge-water vase.  A dead bee or beetle on the sidewalk, a sleeping seed pod bursting prematurely.  These things are shadowy in a sense, and some may not want to look at them, but they contain a wholesome sense of the nature of the world.

But it can also violence, bestiality, blood, pain, soul wrenching savagery.

And when i become enmeshed in these worlds peering through the grimy windows, it  becomes harder to find a way out.  Everything in life takes on a sinister cast;  the evil of the dark is living at the center of me. I don’t want to leave.  I dwell in the mud of being.

When it gets this deep and dark, i look for a ladder despite myself to climb up to the light.  It no longer seems feeble but powerful, and desirable, and healthy and loving.  Living under the sun is the only place i ever really wanted to be!

As I climb those worlds recede.  Seeing and knowing from a distance isn’t as terrible.  Shall I dismantle the bridge that takes me there?  Destroy the ladder so once in, i can never leave?  I prefer now to occupy a place in between, a little more in the sun than the shade.

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Oh, when the creatures come

I have always been a devotee of water – more comfortable with my feet in it than not, more confidant with a bottle of it in my hand,  more serene when it is in my view.

One day I came to be afraid of it.  How this happened must have been gradual but it seemed to take place over night.  I remember arising from a deep sleep to refill my bedside glass and found the smell to be so over-powering I couldn’t drink it.  My morning showers grew shorter as the pelting water felt so painful and derogatory.  Pretty soon I was bird-bathing in the sink, then just scrubbing my skin with a dry washcloth.  I took my pills dry, boiled my pasta in rice milk.

The serenity I had progressively deteriorated.  When it rained I wore 6 plastic bags to strategically cover every bit of my body.

I feel betrayed by the onset of fear of something I used to cherish.  I am thinking seriously of moving to the desert.  I prefer to dry up in peace.

 

Was it really a mistake?

This is the post excerpt.

It started as a pseudo-scientific experiment we could exploit through film and photograph.

It involved two pig heads procured from the public market being exposed to different methods of trauma.  Which method would ravage the head faster than the other? What would the results be?

The first head: burned in a ceremonial pyre.  Results: Crispy black char, took a rather long time, held shape from skull which would not burn.  Smelled reluctantly of pork.

The second:  Boiled in water, soaked in acid.  The results: (Maybe I am confused here, maybe the first head was soaked in acid and burned in fire.)  But what of the boiled head?  Mushy, intact but gelatinous, very strong boiling meat smell pervading the kitchen.  I mean lab.

The charred head was posed and photographed and eventually buried, having nothing else to say that we could hear.  The boiled head, the watery head, was dissected by hand and studied intently; snout, ears, cheeks fatty and squishy.

At this time, the reality of dismemberment became oppressive.   What kind of appalling hipster lessons were we learning? Is abasement for pleasure cloaked in science any more palatable?  When one partner held the severed snout up to her face and snorted through it, I began to laugh hysterically, falling to the ground,  abandoning myself to the surreal horror of the image.

And the original plan, the plan before the science experiment, for securing a pig head was to feature it in a parade; by itself, exalted and proud, resting in wagon, pulled by and traveling amidst the freakish participants we knew ourselves to be.