Friday, 31 December 2010

Paris, Until Now

This is actually part of a lager unfinished piece but I liked it, so here it is!
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And so it hits me now. Finally removed from my desolate stupor with enough time to find this elusive piece; I love this place. The soft light, the tall trees, the endless love. Romance in volleying capitulations, undulating between and in-between the living. A cool smoked cigar on delicate lips, morsels and bushels of timely placed ice cream cones, elongated baguettes and fresh moist cheese. Broken but moving, this place keeps its own time and let's you know, as soon as you're not watching, that it is about to change hands again. This is fall completing itself, like late summer. How many years have I been waiting for a season like this! One that picks and pecks and peeks in at you and calmly, warmly and asks you how you've been. An old friend, a warm heart with a steady hand, both of you out there living an independent yet shared existence.

Paris je t'aime. Not just for what you pretend to be in all your pretentious indignation and apprehensions, but in your sprawling madness, to slip my hand inside you and my head around a new avenue. To be volleyed upwards to the heavens with cascading gratitude. To be ignored in your dim light. . .

I love the way you part for me like a setting sun. Only releasing the part of your charms you want me to see. The cartography notes of your beauty, tattooed behind my eyes from past lives. You are a sheltered proper women, content to be called, to be photographed and invited to all the best parties. But as for what what you really want, that is to remain completely misunderstood. And we share that much don't we? Our language-less communication is one of mutual respect and curiosity. You are not the people within you who want to be you, or those who have painted your ancient walls. You are my Paris. You are my sin. Your are my misery. You are my despair. And right now you're my only hope.

But you wear hope well, like a rising balloon. Up and upward the strings of twine and rolling ribbons gather together with all those released before and after me. You wear them well, your loft coloured inflation's, all that hope spinning in the passage of time you know too well. Paris je t'aime, je t'aime beaucoup. You silence me.

Friday, 26 November 2010

La Havre


Alone in the early morning on a cold train station floor I am waiting to go home. When suddenly a twitch, a thought, not exactly spontaneity but impulse urges me to my feet and ferrets me faster than my still groggy brain can defend to an electronic ticket terminal. Normandy, Ancourteville-sur-Héricourt, Bennetot, Cailleville, Bordeaux-Saint-Clair, La Havre. Next train. La Havre. Forty euros. Can't be that far? What time do the trains return? Two PM. Four PM. Six PM. No worries. No worries. All day. Card, pin, purchase – laugh.

Twenty minutes to wait, looking at a map I find where I am going. The west cost, province of Normandy, going to the beach. The cold Atlantic beach. And while this still doesn't seem to be getting any easier, the promise is that it might just get better. . . .

We depart with a sigh.

Shhhhhhhhhh....... Click-click. Click-click. Click-click.

I've always assumed that if you can work past the fear of making a decision you have conquered it. While usually taking action is enough to alleviate a fear there is also another type fear, one that persists past initiative and into being. One that tears away at your senses, dulling and diluting experience into pinhole visions of the back of the seat in front of you. A heightened anxiety that cages perception into a routine of check, check, double check, check. Waves of fear that something or someone will attack at any moment unless you are constantly aware of all the things that there are out there to be afraid of.

I came out here, thinking I would find a piece of the puzzle. I found more gaps. More holes looking for pieces to fill them and a big sign that says LET IT GO. You want it all and you want it now. You want to understand and to be understood. You want to have lived through, what you are living through to feel good for having lived through it already. Impetuous child. Little girl with dreams seen out of a corner of the rear view window. A sliver of blur; rocks, trees, mountains, melted crayons and a plastic snake you got at the Zoo. Driving head long, laying down, trying to touch it all without your seat-belt on.

Click-click. Click-click. Click-click.

We arrive with an inhale.

Le Havre is the end of the line, industrial and unfamiliar. Not particularly quaint. Not like Toulouse. Not like Nice. Not like the Loire valley or the Effiel Tower. Its is utility, created in grace. I sit in a park, large chestnut trees dropping woody rounds all around me and wonder what roasted chestnuts taste like and if you can buy them in the streets of Paris in the winter. I like this park. It looks fun, without being fun at all. Concave and enclosed, it feels particular and established.

My wondering takes me diagonally straight through the centre of town 

- shop, store, bakery, empty mall, empty parking spots, dogs walking owners, owners walking children, grey skies, opening up, lazy fountain, three signs L'Hotel Ville, more parks, empty allies, stretched dirty awnings, buttered dough, sweets, rainswept gravel, horns of quite a distance, strange looks, green coat, garbage bins always in the way, small sidewalks, smaller cars, salty air, ocean brine, humid, dank, huddled, open streets, closed houses, construction down main street, port city, large cranes, running trains, barge, bilge, a city begging, respect me - 

and finally the coast. On the way, fruit and a bottle of water, washing them in the bag. Quite ingenious if not abnormal. I've sat at two coasts now on two different oceans in the past two weeks and just like before something unbelievably soothing takes over me in the knowledge that I have reached the end. There is no going further.

Across the foreground kites start stutter and double over in the maritime wind and though I feel full in the company of strangers, I am still alone. Deliciously, deservedly alone. Beautiful arcane isolation. I love you and the thoughts you bring and the moments we share together. A deep leafy tree, looking up and under at great growing oaks of wood and fibre stretching strength over top of me. Mythical creatures, dining in the dirt with their heads in the heavens; too earthy too live to glorious to die. Ritual like tombstone stumps mark where all the good creatures have gone down.

Companionship alleviates the guilt associated with being alone. But I am not afraid to be alone. I am afraid when I am alone.

I don't have much more time. But I don't want to to go back. Want to press on. Goodlessons. Cooldays. Lightrain. Blurry skies marching slowly in the breeze. Pen bleeds in the droplets. I feel something refreshing, almost OK, though still sick like too many cigarettes or unwashed grapes, but happy to be here. Proud. . .

Now its not just time but my pen that is running its course. These words and thoughts and memories continue to click away unyielding to the outside world. I feel stronger somehow in the darkroom convalescences of this pen and novelty of it all. A small work of not much consequence, but mine all the same; and now yours. 


Wednesday, 10 November 2010

The Louvre


A stolen moment on display, two lovers making a pact between pursed lips - while I make love to this ice cream sundae. I feel sick. Here is all the beauty in the world. Here is the good, the bad, the wicked and the desperate. Here are my dreams, my hopes and fears. Here is Paris, spilling out before me and I can't even look up from my sundae.

I once swore that if there was only beauty before me, if only my purpose in this moment was meaningful, I would not want for any of the consumerist platitudes that distracted me; and so here I am, with all that is brilliant and golden in our age. All the resplendencies of class, wealth, intelligence, angst, struggle, poverty, and enjoyment lay at my feet  And I feel nothing.

All I can think about is the thick creamy mixture of dairy fat turning into broad protestations in my belly and how much my coat clashed and how much my feet hurt and how much money I had spent and how tired I was and how cold it was. . . and miserable. Miserable. Swimming in fog and chaos. It is my imbalance that brings forward my obsessions, my fears.  I can feel it. The temporary sense of well being, of being well, it overtakes me with every chocolaty bite. Bright pleasure secretions balancing out the darkness. Is this really what it means? The pointless suffering and the end-less-ness of it all? This factory line of work and sacrifice and emptiness?

NO ONE SAID THIS WAS GOING TO BE EASY.

Well isn't that just the point? No one says anything at all. You are just thrust here into the unwelcoming world and given some fridge magnet philosophy in which to get by.

SEE THE BEAUTY IN EVERY MOMENT. LIVE LIKE THIS MOMENT IS YOUR LAST. DANCE, LAUGH, SING LIKE NOBODY IS WATCHING. . . 

And what about the inbetween?

The one too many donuts and senseless bullying? The parents and the institutions and the friends who could give a shit about you and you know it. Because if you took off that Harvard grin and the cheap way you make them feel Oh! So! Good! about themselves and got down on your fucking knees and begged for money in the street, with the other gypsy's and hobos and pirates, they'd walk over you too. And right on into the nearest Tommy Hillfiger to buy themselves a pair of jeans and forget that no one really gives a shit about them either.

But I digress. I mean, after all, I am at the Louvre. . . 

Watching TV in The City

 I actually wrote these over the last summer. I am starting to revisit some of the books I have filled up and at least start some preliminary editing. Stuff I post here is never really `finished` I just like to share things as they are happening.



Watching TV

Watching TV
Won`t get those feelings out
Stupid drunk girl
Stupid saboteu.
I need to know who my mother is,
to find out,
What`s wrong with me.


The City

It Rains.
Heavily.
But I have already described the rain
- heaving, unyielding –
maybe it`s nostogia,
maybe it`s romanticism,
but I sit in it,
wet, uneven and exposed,
and dry in inside.

This City is a blister on my foot.
I live here – so I must navigate it.
The rain dulls my pen,
as these words dull my senses.

I want to look out and fear nothing,
see everything.
Apples and blues, demons with holes for eyes, pigs in drag.
I want to know them.
I want to love them.
Wholly.
Equally.
Brothers.
But I fear them.
My arrogance twists and steals my clarity.
Self satisfaction.

How many times down this shit hole? Do you think?
Before I get it right?
But alas,
these are just words.
Empty and common.
Just like me,
I suppose.
And as for them?


I am drained.
I feel the weight of a million un-lived lives in my gut,
and the taste of hope of my tongue.
I want life,
but it alludes me,
like consciousness alludes a dog.
Can you blame him?

Night rolls in quick,
colder now.
Rain splashing in aggressive pellets.
All the mediocrity of my life,
rolling through my mind,
and I wonder.

Is anything different understood,
In the rain,
out at night,
alone?

Alone.

I`m cold.
And that at least has to stand,
for something.

Sunday, 31 October 2010

Transvestites Make Me Philosophical



I exist; which is too say I have a series of experiences, experienced in a linear fashion, which are impossible to understand fully unless you experience them yourself. These include both internal and external experiences of emotion, time, maturity, intelligence and perception. But as my life begins to compound into a life lived I am left wondering if there really is any value in experience beyond the inherent developmental value to the experincer? 


What I am, in a convoluted way, trying to ask is a question about loneliness and a life lived in conjunction, or 'in experience' with another. Despite the fact that human beings are fundamentally unable to fully understand another existence as a personal experience, the question still remains; why do we all seem to innately have a desirous nature for companionship and how does a dualistic existence ( that is to say one that is both simultaneously introverted and extroverted, though necessarily more extroverted) change the experience of experience?


As a person confident in there ability not only to do things alone, but too be content doing so it still amazes me how persistently I call the value aloneness into question, generally through the following train of questioning:


Will anyone ever care that I know these things? That I have these passions? Does anyone else share these passions, ideas and desires? Where does this experience go, after it is finished being experienced? Does it still have value? Does it even have a value outside of me? Is there someone who will come to know me as I know myself?


In summary:


Will my experiences be understood and valued by another individual ?


I know that in many cases my exaggerated sense of self-importance and introverted nature preclude me from having copious and gregarious types of relationships, but I also have a suspicion that this fear, of being valued as an individual for our individuality, is not something I struggle with alone. 


So, I leave a question to the universe. If I wish to be independent, self reliant, self motivated, educated, successful, creative and productive, exclusive of whether I have companionship in which to celebrate and share these experiences, then why do I sense that there is something missing in the experience of experience experienced alone? And what do these feelings of loneliness, anxiety, fear, seclusion, paranoia, and depression mean? Are they an experience? Or a symptom?


Just a thought.

Friday, 29 October 2010

There is a Peace

Incomplete and perpetually restless I press on
for a morsel of the being of being,
that lives
that breaths
and moves outside
and within,
these footstep soaked streets
this foreign territory
this familiarity
and in these Dionysian entrails,
spilled onto the table,
between raw fish
and foamed beer,
and between syllables
of a conversation
I am all to desperate to have;

There is a peace.

There is a peace.

There
is
a
peace,

and it speaks.

Tuesday, 19 October 2010

Musings on Happiness

This isn't new, I actually just found this while I was looking for something else on my hard drive, but I thought it was worth posting.


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Sometimes we try too hard to have all the right answers. The pain and grief associated with the unexpected often comes from our own inability to accept that sometimes, we just don’t know. When unexpected crops up, we often have a habit of criticizing our lack of foresight or our mistakes. What we seem to be forgetting however is that it is these unexpected moments, these changes in the winds direction, that allow us to really heal from the things that bind us to the past and follow us in the present. It takes time to acknowledge and embrace moments of change but eventually, everything does. Eventually, everything you know and love and rely upon right now will change, grow, die or disappear. There is no certainty and there is no foresight when it comes to the utter complicated mess of existence.


If someone was to have said to me at thirteen, this is what your life will look like I would have been extremely disappointed. What I am trying to illustrate here is not that I feel that my life lacks something today, but about the expectations one has and how they constrict the capacity we have to be happy. Under my thirteen year old guidelines I could have and would have only been happy in a very specific set of circumstances., This idealism, this sense of right and wrong about how your life is 'supposed' to look worked to construct my interpretations my own happiness. How could I possibly be happy, if my life isn't exactly what it is supposed to be?


Its amazing then, that we even find any happiness at all, with the plethora of insane and impractical expectations and ideals floating around our minds. Constantly comparing this current reality with the one created in our imagination. Well, I think if I were to be completely honest I would have to admit that all those thoughts -the ideas and dreams of what does or doesn’t make me happy- change. They change and have been changing all along. They are in every way transient and unpredictable. As I reach back through my memories trying to coagulate some kind of meaningful consistency, I find none. If I am really honest what I remember loving the most as a child was drawing or crafts. Glitter and glues, mulch-coloured pens and a world of possibility. Then dance, merely by happenstance then somewhere in there writing, poetry, philosophy, academics, business, law, religion, marriage, children, materialism, travel. . . All these things and more crossed and crisscrossed my emotional and intellectual conceptions of what I thought would make me happy. And you know what? It is only in this moment of disillusionment, for all the things I have ever held dear, that I realize just how impractical these ‘ideas’ of what makes me happy really are.


I have lost time being miserable. I have lost beautiful, precious time wasting my thoughts and my feelings on how ‘incomplete’ my life is without one thing or another. If I had just had more stable parents, more money, more time, more freedom. The hours whittle away beside my failure to meet my own demands. The things that hurt will always hurt. Change will still come as a surprise and will still cause me to question my ability to govern my own life. I don’t know that I won’t look back through the past and try and divine some meaning . Still try to find some kind of linear evolution leading upwards towards. . . well anything. But I can’t hang on anymore to the belief that I know what happiness means, or that I am able to facilitate change in its favour.