Saturday, October 30, 2021

Just N from Universe Z [short fiction]

Where articles are one cent and up it goes from there.

 

         Hyacinth Stellars lives in Universe Z. Not lacking in quirky exceptions, Hyacinth’s world is almost identical to ours. For Universe Z the majority of colloquial words in written form were patented in every language by giant international monoliths. Along with pen and paper, the writer must buy her words at the market.

         Articles are the cheapest of course, but otherwise the prices follow the rules of demand and supply. Common words and multi-syllable words are the most expensive. Consequently, whatever is common is esoteric and the abstruse is made prosaic.

         Syllables come in and out of vogue. For example, post war anti-finialists refused more than three syllable words. Anything worth expressing by writing, they argued, should infuse the reader with its intended message efficiently without flourish. Anti-capitalists boycotted all punctuation, especially apostrophes who epitomized the obliquity of intellectual property and were owned by Monsanto (now called Bayer).  If a text had many long words hanging about it, they were probably counterfeit compounds like ‘cottonswab’ and ‘delimeat.’

           

         Hyacinth Stellars, a burgeoning poet, bought a wheelbarrow’s worth of verbiage each week. Two-thirds articles and conjunctions, one-third nouns and adjectives, and then if she could afford it, three or four lovely words. Last Saturday she was beaming all day long from purchasing coruscate on sale. Onomatopoeias were once on a tremendous discount and words like tintinnabulation still dribble out of her desk drawers. Only one of the twenty odd onomatopoeias made it into her first book “Pronouncing.” 

         Some months ago, she was so broke she could only afford a child’s handful of articles, one preposition, and a heavily discounted noun and verb. The clerk wouldn’t sell her a period half-price but gave her three other punctuations for free. Hyacinth composed the following poem for her lover (title added later):

 

“28 Cent Love Poem”

 

Of

of the

The

spilled into

a

The A,

the a

to be an

For of,

Of the being for—

Of—

An!

 

         “I like it better this way,” her girlfriend told her when she’d received it. “It’s like when you pick flowers from all over the neighborhood instead of buying a flower arrangement.”

 

         Magazine and newspaper advertisements claiming to help you “write your own words!” sat in columns next to ads for cures of baldness, untenable erections, and psychics. Hyacinth finally gave into her curiosity one Sunday and walked to a wordsmith’s address from one of these ads. It was, predictably, a complete sham. Citing presidents, philosophers, and others, they taught that you could simply “manifest your own words.”

         An hour and half-a-sham later she slinked away with a trio of complementary terms in her pocket. Moments later saw her emerging from the street into WORD, a crisp air-conditioned department store that smelled like a post office. Hyacinth Stellars handed the cashier Parlouse, maneyefold, and snickerly.

“Misprints,” she stated with a hint of curt expectation and looked away feigning the dispassion of a career journalist. Receipts were rare for a trivial purchase since the words equal the cost or more than the items bought.

 

Five folded bills came home with her that day. It was the most she’d ever made from words. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Sunday, October 24, 2021

Pandemic Poems

a photo I snapped over a decade ago in Genève


“Grief is subversive, undermining the quiet agreement to behave and be in control of our emotions. It is an act of protest that declares our refusal to live numb and small. There is something feral about grief, something essentially outside the ordained and sanctioned behaviors of our culture. Because of that, grief is necessary to the vitality of the soul. Contrary to our fears, grief is suffused with life-force.... It is not a state of deadness or emotional flatness. Grief is alive, wild, untamed and cannot be domesticated. It resists the demands to remain passive and still. We move in jangled, unsettled, and riotous ways when grief takes hold of us. It is truly an emotion that rises from the soul.”

― Francis Weller


Sometimes I feel I owe people an explanation. Whether people want to know or care is dubious but if you've landed here maybe you'll find out. In the last ten years I've lost almost my entire family. I am a third generation only child and I was raised by the people I've lost. My grandparents were like my parents. The three people I was closest to in my family are gone, plus a few others. Relationships have come and gone too. Now a pandemic while living alone. To say I know grief would be an understatement. 

The reasons I choose to live change over time. It used to be art or because my father/grandparents/girlfriend loved me, but now they're gone so it's my work, my cats, and my friends. One day those too will be gone and I'll define my life by others. I'm not trying to be dramatic--it merely is the case that everything you love you will one day lose. "It is a holy thing to love what Death can touch." 

My Spotify Playlist Grieve

"Art is why I get up in the morning, 
but it doesn't seem fair, ya know 
I'm living for something 
I can't even define and 
there you are 
right there
 in the meantime."

FOR THOSE WHO HAVE DIED

‘Tis a fearful thing
To love
What death can touch.
To love, to hope, to dream,
And oh, to lose.
A thing for fools, this,
Love,
But a holy thing,
To love what death can touch.
For your life has lived in me;
Your laugh once lifted me;
Your word was a gift to me.
To remember this brings painful joy.
‘Tis a human thing, love,
A holy thing,
To love
What death can touch.
ELEH EZKERAH – These We Remember

Thursday, August 27, 2020

2020 Poems and Incompletes

 Since I'm in graduate school my creative writing is mostly done while procrastinating or "warming up" for writing dull academic things. But poems never really stop. This year I'm not even going to horde them on my computer so that I can edit them for two years and then get rejected by a few lit. journals. Nope, their all going HERE sans meticulous edits. (True bravery). 


A Song from Her Songs


Sang her once the sighing 

bow. immersed in one another

she had her in hers, and she— 

She had her arrow. Play 

an archer her wind. Her fingers

caution against whim, her lips simper

a teasing melody of Sophrosyne  


Sun kissed indigo humidity 

flown in by golden winged Iris

Her caduceus, the song of women—

finally Hers found in her

a thread the feather

a needle the shaft

and mending on high

voices together unfettered


Gloriously laughing through

shudder after shudder

never a quiver exhausted 

her oak carved bow, her spine

two forked tongued serpents intertwine 

Until low did drop a singular 

shade, Her new feather fletched arrow

this girl, Her girl

Her little fletcher

caught by sight her flying 

into her own marrow


Wept her once the needling 

sorrow. Submerged yet 

not lost to Her, bleeding

all over Her bed


She is cleansed 

without baptism, the Archer

she sings herself 

Still of Her


----------------------------------------------------------------------------


Ancient Pornography 


Saturday:


The molten Rock knew

too much 

straddling repulsed

emptiness

took utthita tadasana

devoid

remonstrance 

of dance

a torus queue


before the first salmon

a negative salmon 

divided by reeves

equaled an imaginary

square salmon

and the eggs were of a squared 

two sandy little phalanxes 

crawled to consume the sacred

carrot of desire


Sunday:


the vessel 

predates 

the spear 

deleted invertebrate 

memories


did the stars appreciate

their biographies 

chiseled into stones 

as tiny squiggles

while the river deities gulp 

their offerings

their celestial blue dances

deluged graphite stone mounds

erected temples topped with wells

invented the fountain


a season of eating well

a priest’s con-

firming the plumbing:

blood poured through rock tunnels 

Guarantee 

offerings become bribes

ancestor forgotten vessel


Wind-ing sails across, 

a ribbon, a stripe

invention of string:

of lingual and lutes 

Aeolic lyrics 


Monday:


Assembly, a semblance

of an organizing 

Body in the Closet

hauled into the noonday sun

upside-down satchel

Winged Nike and sitting men

Men, man, Age of Dirges

String knotting 

tied up bundles of spices

and chewing ginseng root


Crown fever: 

offers of ore to Blaze

castings test malleability 

Of forced Amalgamation— 

the extinction of certain

uncertainties. Kudzu 

strangles an oak dead


Tuesday:


illiterate, kid, pregnant, and dead

the females of one ancient world;

cattle and sheep

an obsession with accounting

the semen, a Colony survives  


Purity departing from truth:

a maiden pregnant with integers

Horus reincarnated 

the vessel itself

mistaken for the meal

decapitated, nude, and forgotten

Goddesses bleed their marble in ruins

somewhere back in the motherlands


verdant moss conquers a tomb

a virus conquers a people

Closets full of bones’ dust 

sleepy on the edges 

without eye-glasses

soldiers of prophets

march down blind 

the spines of old cities

and checkered farmlands

chessboards of Empires


Wednesday:


Bread verses potato, rice wins 

aristocracy of free samples

Time becomes a piece 

a piece becomes forked:

New Dynasty—“progress”

Child labor force and vast lands

of trees is to lumber

as gods are to saints


An ecosystem receives a guest:

invention of “Aliens” 

the Other made un-human

enslaved by short diseased men

wearing fancy headgear


Snake people perform Jedi trainings

in caves under lakes:

for the Buddha

an inconceivable dampness

pale caved-aged Gruyère

settles a violent dispute

between Gumby and Pokey


Hats become as varied as

 fungi in a southern grove

bloom into a golden song

Resonance mastered through the rust

colored cherry and walnut  


Music finds new loudness

inspiring the (re)birth of Panic 

so white even the spiders’ webs

cast shadows of their crisp geometry


the fleets of messengers and 

Armadas chase the sunset because

All day we thought it was Friday


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------






“The Reason Why I Shot Him: A Clown’s Perspective”


“Yet each man kills the thing he loves” 
— Oscar Wilde



At the height of my tower built upon the flimsy gold bridge leveraged over my treasure chest and piled high with white-faced bozos in their little red and blue flivvers, I stood triumphant as an elephant. The crowded tent shuttered with the rallied cries of my audience. I managed to silence them with a wave of my assistant’s hand. My sloppy checkered bowtie lifted now and then. The air up this high in a tent this huge is fresh from the upper vent. Looking down at the dirty stagnation all quiet with anticipation, I took a breath of pure whist and raising the oversized blue pistol high above my head, I pulled the trigger. The crowd wailed like souls trapped in the Lake of Fire and a tiny neon checkered flag sprang from the end of my pistol barrel. This was after the cleavage crested quiz show, the circus parade in which I mount and ride each animal in a faux selection process, and my conquering the evil sorcerers with their black gowns and gavels. 



I’ll start from the beginning. “Slap stick is funny because people need a break from the predictable. And they need to feel superior. Most of all people need to see you fail over and over. To be unpredictably absurd in the extreme is your ultimate goal.” These were the words of my mentor on my first day. At the time I was one of ten siblings and one of twenty others vying to run off with the circus. I never thought I’d become a ringmaster or anything, I just wanted to get away from Kentucky. Honestly, I figured the clowning thing wouldn’t work out and eventually I’d have to do the gross but responsible thing: join the army. 


Traditionally the Ring Master is an eloquent male authority. He is half magician, half businessman, and for me, half fool. My logic is that if a maestro is an accomplished musician, likewise a Ring Mistress or Master is an accomplished interdisciplinary circus performer. At first I was the clown car—we didn’t have a real car so I drove a sheet with some cardboard cutouts around and the clowns came in one side and exited out the other. Then I started training in rigging after one the riggers fell in love and left us. 


The rigs in those days for our production were very basic, then Saul was hired on. He had worked for Wriggly and introduced us to more sophisticated methods and props for trapeze and staging. On the side I had been working on a short clown act in which I birthed doves or rabbits from my big pink trousers. When this became a regular act I devised more of them and started including others. If your act had a good audience reaction more and more people want to be involved until it morphs into a full scene. Other circuses had more hierarchy and gatekeeping perhaps, but ours seemed to work off whatever brought the people back the second night. My success was due in part to this openness and the fact that I was willing to do whatever it took. If an audience loved seeing me in a leotard with high heels then I’d do it. If they wanted sexy women riding donkeys, then I’d find the women and the donkeys. 


The circus was my family and the big top was my home. But as I write from my dingy prison cell, those days are long gone. It wasn’t the people who left me—I had new assistants and dancers every year. It wasn’t the fading red stripes of the big top, or the fact we couldn’t use real animals anymore—it was him. 


Let me be clear: If he had kept his blue business man get-up on, I would still be adorned with brightly colored wigs and face paint shooting blanks from my pastel blue pistol—but in Vegas. I was on my way, or so I thought. Admittedly, the last few decades have been difficult for clowns.  


Where in Ireland the fae were once thought divine creatures of extraordinary beauty, when the monolithic religion came the fae were suddenly cast as wretched creatures with hair growing in all the wrong places and wisdom supplanted with dark mysteries. People have been asking me lately if I miss my customers—the children, they mean. The truth is that the number children afraid of clowns has been steadily increasing since the invention of the television. Once only hinted at by shadows and stage scenes, the small screens have been a boom for monsters of all kinds. The florid striped suites and would-be comical facial paintings contrasted in the dimly lit big tops, but in the sunlight they appear ghastly. It has been the depressed and overworked adult that has been my bread and butter. Children are fed softer things now, teletubbies or cute animals. Humans—born sinners—are too much for those little developing minds. 


People came to see our show with their children as an excuse, then one day they didn’t need the excuse anymore. There is no shame in enjoying a shimmering nearly-nude nymphet slide down a life size glass fish bowl. Entertainment used to be entertaining that which we know to be impossible or unlikely as a real life for someone out there. A clown is an unlikely hero but with enough magic anyone can be a hero—that is until now. One day the tide will reverse but in my short lifetime I may not see it. What I have witnessed is the rise and domination of Reality as entertainment. People lacking any magic in their lives seek their reflection, and in their ignorance of magic they value money and fame over mystery, power over transcendence. 


The first time I saw Cheeto I loved him. The orange tan complimented a bulging gut blue business suit and like me he was unapologetically everything everyone hated. The Boss Man, The Creepy Hands Stage Man, the Sinister Sally, The Lonely Rich Boy who buys a Russian Wife, Tiny Tim whose actually giant, not disabled and rich. You get the grimy picture. He was even more me than I could ever be. 


Of course every clown votes and I was no exception. I voted for Cheeto like a queen bowing to Cher, but something started itching in the back of mind. 


After he won that son of a Billionaire Bob was everywhere. The same way I’d start off a Thursday show singing through a bubble kazoo as I juggled on my unicycle, he start tweeting before six am about North Korea. By Sunday I’d have a whole chorus of kazoos on unicycles trying to fix my skirt and brush my frizzy rainbow wig while I was talking on my fake cell phone and ogling a girl offstage. The Sarah Huckabee would stand off to the side and assure everyone I was actually just fixing my tie and not drinking from a rubber boot and not waving my balloon wiener dog around and certainly not calling up my buddies on unicycles to go to the Ukraine post office to pick me up a whole suit case of bitcoin. 


Monday I was done but Cheeto kept going. He was on round three of the slippery weener dog balloon act with all his bitcoins falling everywhere, and I was sleeping in. 


A year went by and the son a shitty shot sheriff was holding G3 summit on his golf course and sending everyone home with engraved wine glasses reading “Best Ever G3 Summit and Don’t Forget to Hack the DNC and Import 35K Ballot Incinerators 4 USPS.” The idea stuck me, what if there’s four more years of this? Then a lopsided jumper cable connection caught my ear: what if there’s not? 



Monday, June 24, 2019

     
I write stuff and sometimes it ends up here. What am I doing? Lately:

Currently, I am a Master's of Divinity candidate at one of the few Buddhist universities in the U.S.--Naropa University. 

Reading stuff: Last summer 2020 I read: (NO Buddhist texts! :)
"Irish Fairy Tales" by James Stephens--great read and listen on audible! Beautiful prose. "Norse Mythology" by Neil Gaiman--decent selection of the Norse myths written in a fun light style. I have a new appreciation for Loki. 

Books from the Old and New Testament: Job, Psalms, Song of Solomon, John--I've never read the Bible before and previous attempts ended quickly. The New Oxford Annotated Bible gave me a lot of context clues that I lacked. It was interesting only in that I've been hearing about these stories all my life and but just couldn't quite bring myself to read them. It was like finally watching Game of Thrones after listening to people talk about it for thirty years. Morbid, gory, terrible ending, bad character development, etc. But now I know. 

"The Morrigan: Meeting the Great Queens" by Morgan Daimler. A small but densely packed text exploring the Celtic myths involving the triple Goddess of war, death, prophecy, ravens, etc. Really loved this book for it's info and insight.

The Colorado State Constitution and a bunch of interesting history on classism, racism, and zoning laws in the U.S. and some court cases on occupancy laws over the years. It turns out the fight to live in a co-op or non-nuclear family/alternative household has been going on for decades and essentially has been squashed in various places over and over. As a person without family, not trying to procreate or even live with a lover (I prefer to live separately so far) and someone who likes living with others--well it's not the future yet. 

A bunch of other random texts that I can't remember. A lot of books on Boundaries, the tarot, part of War and Peace, part of a Celtic Mythology book, and a failed attempt at "Gravity's Rainbow," and some short stories by Carmen Machado.  


          I have three unpublished fictional short stories and a slew of poetry. If you would like to read them, publish them, give me money for them, please contact me. Unless you're creepy, then don't.

Published works:

Poetry: Rex Dies"
The Examined Life Journal
University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine
2018/19 Forthcoming Issue

Short Fiction: Tortoise Meta Stone"
Fugue: a journal of prose and poetry.
University of Idaho MFA Journal
2018 Winter print issue # 53

Non-Fiction: “A Dozen Years in Boulder”
Shakti Yoga Journal, 1st Place in Winter Writing Contest. 12/2014

Poetry: “The Moon Also Rises”
Elephant Journal, 4/2014

Non-Fiction Gender Fun: Ten Reasons You Should Try Cross-Dressing"
Elephant journal 3/2014

Philosophy: The Non-Identity Problem, Overpopulation and the Quality of Life" *
Accepted and Published, Fourth Annual Cross-disciplinary Consortium. 12/2011


Unpublished works:

~Most of the material on this blog.

Not on this Blog:

Short Fiction: The Misconception" is tale about a poly-amorous lesbian living communally who suddenly becomes pregnant by immaculate conception. Magical realism. 7K word count.

Short Fiction: Three of Swords" utilizes the pronoun "zhe/zir" for the main character to illustrate the metaphysical dimensions of being outside but bearing witness to perfunctory coupling and its predictable demise. This is a story about the inevitable tragedies of love and relationship. Philosophical Horror. 1500K word count.

Short Fiction: Found: A Trans-lation of an Animated World" is a three-chapter novella employing five different gender neutral pronouns. This is a world in which every living being is conscious and given a point of view, even moths, fleas, and fungi.

Poetry: Several titles, too many to name. This year's honorable mentions (because I spent months editing them): Moonfire" and Santa Barbara Rough Villanelle for the Death of my Father"