Monday, December 3, 2012

After Molting, Eat Your Own Shucked Skin for Strength, Keep Changing the Subject in Hopes that the Subject Will Change You




Poem via Sasha. I am very serious in my begging - send me poems, songs, requests, playlists, I am happy to share. Meanwhile, busy (the stories I can't tell you about asshole brother-in-law and asshole step-family-in-laws, hoo-wee, would be my favorite blog-posts ever), not even time for me to type out an Ishiguro paragraph (the Ishiguro is working, my head is rebooting) cause I didn't have time to read past where I'd stopped, have songs, a few links, a poem, back soon.











HOW TO BE A SURREALIST

Dean Young

Sleep well. A gland in the command
center releases its yellow hornet
to tell you you're missing the point,
the point being that getting smacked
by a board, gored by umbrellas, tongue-
lashed by cardiologists, bush-wacked
by push-up bras is a learning experience.
Sure, you're about learned up. Weren't
we promised the thieves would be punished?
Promised jet-packs and fleshy gardenias
and wine to get the dust out of our mouths?
And endless forgiveness? A floral rot
comes out of the closet, the old teacher's
voice comes out of the ravine, red-wings
in rushes never forget their rusty-hinged
song. Moon-song, dread-song, hardly-a-song
at all song. Let's ignore that call,
let someone else stop Mary from herself
for the 80th time. It's never really dark
anyway, not even inside the skull. Take
my hand, fellow figment. Every spring
we'll meet, definite as swarms of stars,
insects over glazed puddles, your eyes
green even though your driver's license
says otherwise. And yes, mortal knells
in sleepless hours, hollow knocks of empty
boats against a dock but still the mind
is a meadow, the heart an ocean even though
it burns. As long as there's a sky, someone
will be falling from it. After molting,
eat your own shucked skin for strength,
keep changing the subject in hopes
that the subject will change you.



4 comments:

  1. May I please just say how very much I LOVE reading Arthur's Power of Narrative--every word, every time. One of the great GREATS of the blogosphere.

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  2. I subjectively prefer my objects to taste like bacon.

    Lisa: But your ad says 'no money down.'
    Lionel Hutz: No, money down!

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  3. Hey Man, thanks for the latest snowstorm!

    Yes, Arthur's always worth reading. Everyone who enjoys his stuff, throw him the coins in your pocket now and then.

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  4. Right, I'd noticed the same thing about ::wood s lot:: myself, and had been wondering the same thing for a while, now. :/

    ReplyDelete