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DADDY WAS A STREET CORNER お前は天才だ / 내가 제일 잘나가 Search * Home POST NAVIGATION ← Older posts SUBSCRIBE BELOW… Jan31 Tonight I watched a woman die on the internet. Surrounded by cameras and pudding, her upper lip curled under her teeth like it wouldn’t let her spirit take the bones. Her face sunk into her gaping mouth and with the snap of her tongue she made her sine wave finale and bid us all adieu. I did not subscribe to her channel. I find the future to be a not so pleasant place sometimes. SHARE THIS: * Facebook * X * Like Loading... Leave a comment Posted in Poems Tagged poetry THAT STRANGELY KNOTTED MEMORY Jan27 We shared a bed in Taipei and you told me you could never love a man with manicured hands so I manned a cure to this problem by way of auto-cannibalism and power tools. Faking a knuckle-dragging persona, I could now feel warm caves with my fingertips and ended up hurting you so many ways with these stinger lips. That salt’s not kosher so don’t rub it in my wounds, you wanted our love to grow in your womb but it was too soon like your brother, taken by a bus, it should have been just us but your heart only swooned. I was a doctor once and I can put you back together I know so many knots that I can tie your wounds shut with trefoils in my mind and weave your shoestring dreams into that forever-sweater that you promised I would find under the Christmas tree that one time. When did gravity become stronger than us? SHARE THIS: * Facebook * X * Like Loading... Leave a comment Posted in Uncategorized MEN ARE ALL LIKE THIS Jan26 You said my hands were like liquid gold which is why I never rub my eyes even though I think it would be amazing to see the world as perpetual sunrise I think it would be rather difficult to blink. These golden hands fill crevices like the space between embrace; inching closer to coagulation, wandering and whisping to a wanton oneness… that only liquids know how to fake. I force myself up to the wrist where I don’t belong, my mark is left on everything that I touch, my shimmer won’t dull under water or sun, so take my hand in yours, princess, be the container of my flow, princess, but bring a towel for fun. Men are all like this. SHARE THIS: * Facebook * X * Like Loading... Leave a comment Posted in Poems Tagged poetry CANINES AND GLASSWEAR Jan26 I passed by you every morning on my way to work I never gave a thought, nor a look beyond what I’d normally give a stranger. But you were more than a stranger; you were stranger than stranger, you were just strange. You and your ripped jeans, shaddy jacket broken boots and skinny ass dog. You’d sit there smiling. What the fuck do you have to smile about? You’ve got nothing, no home, no family, no friends, no ability to better yourself, and your dog’s gonna die and you’ll be alone and I couldn’t figure out why. So I sat one day and I bought you some fries at my lunch and offered half my Coke and I asked you, I said “man, please, I need to know how it is that you get by day to day without me ever seeing a frown on your face, dispair in your eyes, as you sit on the street corner watching people in their work outfits, suits, dresses, skirts, shoes that cost more than you earn in a month. How do you watch them walk by with a smile on your face as you sit and beg, you outstretch your arm, cup in hand, being chided, chastised. How do you sit there every morning and have hope, sit in the cold, in a Canadian winter, with a half a fucking jacket, your poor dog freezing beside you, no food, no water? How do you keep yourself positive? How is it that my coworkers and friends, my family and myself, we all get down, we all show our other side, we all have an other side? We all live our days working and making money, you sit here in ratty clothes begging for help with nothing to show for it but a chipped cup, yellowed teeth, glassed over eyes, a nappy beard, and a lifeless life. What is it that you have to offer, what is it that you can teach me, that you can offer as advice, that I can use to keep positive on those cold nights, those times when I miss my friends and family, when I feel alone and empty, when my life feels pointless? What is it that you know that I don’t? What has the road taught you? What do I need to learn?” And you looked me square in the eyes and said, “heroine and prostitutes” and got up and walked away. You died the week after, stabbed under a bridge by the water. You made the papers. You got famous that day. The city knew who you were, Facebook groups cropped up in your honor. A homeless man leaves only a cup and a dog. SHARE THIS: * Facebook * X * Like Loading... Leave a comment Posted in Poems Tagged poetry 女体盛り Jan25 I once ate sushi off a woman. She was my girlfriend but it wasn’t sexy. Not at first. But then I got To a Small Piece of Tuna that was Completely over Her clitoris and as I Grabbed it up with my Chopsticks she squirmed And I wasted a good piece of Sashimi. SHARE THIS: * Facebook * X * Like Loading... Leave a comment Posted in Poems Tagged poetry LITTLE LOVELY DARLING Jan25 Your sun-coloured eyes and diamond skin did the impossible and burned beauty into charcoal and roasted steel into hope, and your sing-song voice kept the fields growing thousands of poppy seed muffins in heart-shaped flower pots even when the wind was howling “don’t you dare” forget-me-nots. Your kitten paws and cinnamon hair, that jewel encrusted, teardrop smile with the unanswerable corners on either end pointing to heaven. My little lovely darling, if only gemstones knew how to swim. Even a pond knows the colour of the sky, burned on its skin every morning and worn like a fresh coat of catfished lies. Take the bandages off and wear the floaties because there are jeweled planets floating in a pond just above my skin, beautiful. So let me wear you in that special little pocket I sewed in every single shirt that I’ve ever owned because it’s sartorially improper to fill it with things that I’ve never known. Be the boutonnière that sees me down the aisle and whithers in my hands, and with your memory make me a better man. SHARE THIS: * Facebook * X * Like Loading... Leave a comment Posted in Poems Tagged poetry IT BIT Nov3 It bit back one day. One man breaking another at the knees, concrete shins shattered, patella split like pistachio shell. The public canings had to stop and so it bit back one day. It bit with the ferocity of fourteen years chained to a wall, first glimpse of its star, first scramblings up a dirt road. It bit with the might of a nation under siege, rocket teeth on apartment nailbeds, tearing the crossroads up at the white lines. It bit like capscaicin under the lids, bhut jolokia shavings stapled to the cornea and plastered over with Glad cling seal. If bit back like the man in Unit 731 strapped beside his vivisected brother, leather over his wrists and ankles. It bit like it knew nothing more than to bite. It bit through leather straps and gold chains. It bit through jade amulets and distance. Through age and a forgotten life, it bit through skin and bone, it bit through vein, it bit through a mother’s child. It bit with eyes shut and breath held. It clenched for a moment and then it bit harder. It shook and tore, it bit of spite, of revenge, of memory, of instinct, of indulgence, of forgetfulness, of nature. It bit for the others, it bit for itself, it bit for you, and then it bit for me. It bit, then ran, then built up an army, and then it hashed. One man breaking another at the knuckle, pane glass shattered, nowhere to run. Bitten by fourteen years then chained to a wall, lights turned out, and forgotten amongst the nutria skins, It bit because it had to. SHARE THIS: * Facebook * X * Like Loading... 6 Comments Posted in Poems Tagged poetry THE GIRL I LOST TO COCAINE Oct29 Lost in Hyperbolic Space The girl I lost to cocaine knew of hyperbolic space first hand, saw the world in graphite, and had calculator eyes. She wore her quadrennial pendant on a red, white, and blue ribbon around her neck, between her bust, just so I would see it when we spoke. There was something better about her. She was the proverbial Killing vector, curving space as she went along meandering, philandering, she was the ecumenical whore who knew how to compute cohomology groups and inserted them into her cervix. I tried desperately to get answers out of her but they were buried under layers of abstraction, splitting cells in her uterus, and so I took to reading books instead. She taught me QED, QCD, and QFT but when it came to the big and quick she only knew how to kill a buzz. So the girl I lost to cocaine became as far removed from reality as that conjecture by Hodge on algebraic varieties; shapes that have no shape not unlike she and I in bed. She rippled like time and shook like foam. She took hits of smack off the spine of my textbooks then ate the contents of the pages, and when she sank to that singularity in her mind she dreamt up such magnificent things, such beautiful poetry, mathematics of the purest variety, mathematics so symmetric that it couldn’t have been complete. And so that girl I lost to cocaine was the brightest thing in the night sky. We wrote papers together and ate poems about pi, we flew in airplanes every second thursday together and computed de Rham complexes in an imaginary anti-de Sitter space while licking the lead off our fingertips. She snorted everything, my jokes, my stories, her powder, her life, and differential forms. She is no longer complete. That girl I lost to cocaine is now buried under piles of abstraction herself and I’m learning as quick as I’m able so I can dig her out and crucify her on a binary operator. SHARE THIS: * Facebook * X * Like Loading... 5 Comments Posted in Poems Tagged poetry THERE IS STILL GOOD IN THIS WORLD Oct28 Dig Deeper There is still good in this world. Buried under decades of rock stuck between mud and bone. Held down by the weight of men, dug out again by their patience. There is still good in this world but it is not easily attained. It is not on the menu and you cannot buy it online in a store or have it delivered by hand on a whim. Some good was vaporized in the 40s, its shadow projected in carbon along stone walls. Some good was eaten by the machine and by fat cats with pen claws and gold teeth wearing Brioni and Kiton. Some good was swallowed whole by the Earth, tectonically demanded as a sacrifice so poems could be written. Some good was stored in the back pockets of forgotten children lost in the Amazon climbing trees, not knowing whether to climb or cry, fall or jump, fly or fail. Most good was vaccuum sealed and put in cryogenic freezers to be thawed out with Disney in one hundred years. Cameras: all-seeing. Good is spoiled in most parts of the world. Buried under the ocean floors, recycled into islands and bottom dwellers, eaten by the giants that roam there with their claws wagging behind turning up dust and mud and bone. There is still good in this world but we are not it. We search in the wrong places, hold the wrong hands, and you, you know this. You want to believe this technological falacy, this ecumenical calling of cloud dwelling pure, unadultered goodness but it is foresaken by men. There is still good in this world but it is not in the sky or beyond but instead lies buried between mud and bone. There is still good in this world so dig deeper. It’s down there, waiting. SHARE THIS: * Facebook * X * Like Loading... 19 Comments Posted in Poems Tagged poetry THE MURDERER UNDER THE RUBBLE Oct26 Then and Now Dead beside him, the murderer under the rubble lay quiet and still, buried under concrete and mud. Dead beside him, the legacy of a child soldier would be carved into the corpse of a man who couldn’t be tried. Beside him, the dead man who threw the grenade would have his crime transferred post-humus to a fifteen year old boy. He would be dragged from the rubble, legs tattered, blinded by shrapnel, a bag over his head, ears covered, dragged to a paradise-prison. And for eight years he would be forgotten and dismissed – the murderer under the rubble was the blind boy, not the dead man. The murderer under the rubble lay cast aside by his government, labeled ‘terrorist’ by a nation hungry for blood and its own brand of justice. He would be blindfolded have LEDs shone into his remaining eye, threatened with dogs, suffocated in water, and hung by his wrists. For he, the murderous child under the rubble would be painted with the brush of the simple-minded, Hell-bent on avenging the unprovable claim. Disowned by his country of birth, forgotten by his breathren, lost in the media to Britney Spears, he cried to go home. Now eight years later the farcical trial ends on a note: guilty. He pled guilty. You would too. A loaded courtroom in a foreign country hungry for vengeance and its false justice, documents have been tampered, hearsay trumped reality. Omar Khadr will spend eight more years in prison, lost in a non-functioning legal system of military personnel, leaning on his shoulders, shouting in his ears. Omar Khadr may survive but the murderer under the rubble, the one whose name we never knew, will have his ticket to Hell revoked. The blame game of American politics has chosen a new passenger for that trip, and to their own end, have managed to get the boy to board the plane. Congratulations you hateful demons, the first child soldier in half a century has been tried and convicted. You should be ashamed, Republica. SHARE THIS: * Facebook * X * Like Loading... 5 Comments Posted in Poems Tagged poetry POST NAVIGATION ← Older posts ARCHIVES * January 2014 * November 2010 * October 2010 SEARCH Search FOLLOW BLOG VIA EMAIL Email Address: Follow Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com. 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