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Love is God

A god that needs my defense has lost my belief, while I will advocate the Devil and not abdicate my seat so long as I strike at his head and he at my feet.

A saint is one who can fight for rectitude, disdain the sin, and still accept the two.

Photo by Diana Simumpande on Unsplash

Testimony carried on a woman’s voice rejoiced. She became a Christian when her fiance proposed, for which she prayed of him. And now with praise for Him she swears to her God by love’s own seal that He is real.

Sooner would I swear on the waning moon than would I on waxing love, for the former will remain and loom, while the action of the latter’s not the same at noon as it is at one.

Love is always certain and often wrong and while the lover is lost in song love becomes lust and longs to feel in touch what’s turned to dust but was once was felt within like gust in lungs.

Your paramour was not the one. And if not then your proof you’ve got is gone. For gods are like the faithful, many are called, and you choose but one. Even false gods seem graceful, shining like gold under a ruthless sun and later are culled by the truth and shunned.

Your paradigm was not the one. And if not then the ruse of God is done.

Or is it only just begun?

If there is no soul mate? Would it sow hate if there’s no fate and it’s all for show sake? Does that diminish love or the lover?

I think that love remains enough. Love does not need a name. It feels the same whether it heals or reveals a pain. The force of falling fills the veins with a coursing rush of will that isn’t ever all in vain.

Love does not exist for the lover. The lover exists for love.

Love empowers our lover. Our lover is the one. Our lover is the only. Our lover rules our heart. Our lover commands us. Our lover can do no wrong. Our lover is always with us. Our lover is worth defending. Our lover is better than your lover. Our lover is a lot more like God than God.

What is it we fall in at all with our gods that powers God? If lovers are only lovers though love, does falling into it place God above?

The woman was wrong. Her love did not prove God. Her God proved love.

Love does not need my defense. Love can be sensed and perceived. Love earns its belief.

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    National Poetry Month 2019

    I designate myself a poet reluctantly, as I know while I often write work that isn’t prose, I’m still unsure if it is true poetry. My dissonance is reconciled when I tell myself that poetry is art and that art is a process. So long as I earnestly attempt or practice poetry, I am a poet regardless of if I’ve ever successfully written an actual poem.

    Having said that, I qualify myself to participate in National Poetry Month by submitting 30 poems for 30 days over the month of April. And now being an official participant, I as an emissary extend the invitation for you to also join along. I’m not actually sure if there are “rules,” but what I’m doing is simple. Start writing a poem every day, finish that poem by end of the day. No overthinking or harsh judgment. Whatever state it is in by end of the day it will be considered “done” and will be posted and shared. All styles of poetry are valid and welcome, though I will focus on narrative, lyric, and imagery.

    30 Poems for 30 Days

    • Love is God (4/1/2019) - A god that needs my defense has lost my belief, while I will advocate the Devil and not abdicate my seat so long as I strike at his head and he at my feet.
    • Groupie (4/2/2019) - I need a minor second of your time Because if we don't have harmony, You're no friend of mine Because me and my friends align At least three-quarters of the time So we ought to be just fine.
    • She Called Me a Poet (4/3/2019) - She called me a poet To what do I owe this Because when I speak other's notice? That my verbs stray to wordplay? That I've recited what you've heard me say?
    • Running From my Fear (4/4/2019) - Again I have been running from my fear And for a minute there, I lost my self From darkness did the terror swiftly near Unsettling as night, my path engulfs A stumbling escape on weary legs A chariot by motored wheel brings death The road before obscured both dark and vague And panicked air left hanging on my breath
    • Held (4/5/2019) - An embrace is a tragic reminder That I can hold on to love But never possess it. Phantom limbs leave a numb tingle where they used to surround me And I chuckle when it occurs to me I can no longer juggle your emotions Without your arms.
    • A Toast (4/6/2019) - Climbed a straight ladder Just to place my mind over my grey matter Stay scatter brained prattle lines lame chatter "Cheers!" Look away, glass of champagne shattered
    • You’ll get it in the end (4/7/2019) - Everyone's ex is crazy Including your ex's ex. And maybe your next. She has received harsh names But Karma is nothing but elegant
    • “Why”s Make the Wise (4/8/2019) - The question resembles the answer Like the lock resembles key Necessity is the silhouette of a solution And as the Chasm is also the shape of what is yet to fill it
    • Rise, Phoenix, Rise (4/9/2019) - Rise, phoenix, rise To the zenith in the skies You're the freest as you fly You're surprised But you survived
    • Mote of Dust (4/10/2019) - Cosmic existential woes Pour with the torrential flow Venture toward the center And I enter elemental glow
    • Bathe in Night-Sun (4/11/2019) - The sleepy sun releases her grip from Where she hangs in the sky Floating slowly and gently to the ground Like a child blown bubble Made of match flame and filled with joyful breath
    • Where there’s smoke (4/12/2019) - It can take less than a minute for a fire to take your life As it swallows the oxygen from the air around you When you are near me Is this how you take my breath away?
    • Excuse Me, Can I Help You? (4/13/2019) - Excuse me, can I help you? Am I the card that life has dealt you? If so you can shuffle again There's been enough of you men And your solicitation
    • Bitch, I am Fabulous (4/14/2019) - You may need to call an ambulance for the awesomeness avalanche. It would be to your advantage to advance with caution Because each portion of my power quotient is potent.
    • Office Gossip (4/15/2019) - We all come here to earn our bread But really, it's a rumor mill instead Grinding grains of truth into flowery Half baked stories
    • It Looked Good on Paper (4/16/2019) - A day reads as a passage read aloud That more resembles hallways looked up close And leads to tiny, cluttered chambers cramped With verbose mind and punctuation thoughts.
    • I Have The Best Words (4/17/2019) - I know words No words leave me stumped I need more words. Twitter. Donald Trump.
    • I Struggle With Words (4/18/2019) - I struggle with words Like I struggle with bowling balls Once I send them off They never seem to hit quite right
    • Love the way you love yourself (4/19/2019) - Love the way you love yourself If you find you don't Love yourself differently Until you do
    • Prince of Lies (4/20/2019) - You may paint me a villain Once I was your prince But now Machiavellian Caught with my hands stained in vermillion
    • Affection Confection (4/21/2019) - My love is a confection mixed with bitter herbs Tubes of sour lemon icing, disguised in pink and blue Milk white filling leaks from parted lips again Half baked emotions don't contain the recipe flavors
    • Diamond Jacket Button (4/22/2019) - Conversations hung in the air suspended on rising warmth from an active street Billowing syllables soup into a moist ether
    • Stretch (4/23/2019) - I always remember to stretch in the morning.In a therapy session, I was once askedwhy I looked so uncomfortable.I replied that it was because I was in a therapy session.The therapist told me to relax,and for the first time in my lifeI was prompted to stretch. “Never be too afraid of formalityto give yourself the […]
    • A Triolet on a Valley Near Banner Elk (4/24/2019) - Billowing Earth and voluptuous hill Sonorous hum of the deep valley creek Cavernous mouth that no supper could fill Billowing Earth and voluptuous hill
    • Familiar and Distant (4/25/2019) - It's ironic, when asked to recall my family's voice my first thought is a threat to literally put words in my head.
    • Allow me not to introduce myself (4/26/2019) - An introduction is the act of colliding my ego against social expectation. Whichever is most brittle determines how awkward I feel
    • If I lost my name (4/27/2019) - If I lost my name How would I be called? Would it be by my calling? I would like that to be How I am known To mold my spirit to My purpose
    • He Realized He Had Forgotten His Wallet (4/28/2019) - He didn't make it far before he realized he had forgotten his wallet but he already decided it wasn't worth continuing on.
    • This is the location where I’d like for us to meet (4/29/2019) - Cobblestone and brickwork from an alleyway emerged At an intersection where two narrow roads converged Opening a pathway to a seldom traveled street This is the location where I'd like for us to meet
    • I struggle with the code (4/30/2019) - My face is worn by a million men With a mouth that speaks for a multitude Each word must be beaded On a narrow thread
    National poetry month is both freeing and frightening as the empty page invites both types of vastness.
    There will definitely be an overflowing wastebasket by the 10th of the month.

    My goal is to improve as a writer by using National Poetry Month as a period of practice and refinement. I also hope to help further discover and develop my own personal voice. In short, this will be a playful experiment. Hopefully, it will also be fun, insightful, entertaining, interesting, and meaningful.

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      Trees and tea houses

      Despite the mess that my life represents, I’m bound fairly consistently to a series of daily and weekly rituals. Sundays specifically for me are set aside to pursue some form or another of self-knowledge. Generally I read a self-help book, watch any number of spiritual guru videos on YouTube, or torment my family by reading something arcane and possibly Roman to my daughters and asking their thoughts. Simple, predictable Sunday morning exercises.

      I intended today to be such a Sunday, but not all days are as cooperative as they are desired to be. My youngest daughter requested a change of pace to take a drive, and when toddlers make requests they do so tenaciously. There was some parental push-back at first to stay in, but she had all but buckled her car-seat belt by the time my wife and I were convinced to start the engine. What the heck, there was no good reason to deny enjoying some time on the road.

      Before leaving the driveway my wife set the local arboretum as a destination and drove us straight there. Once we arrived, it struck me how excellent a decision that turned out to be. First of all, our daughter was tickled. She really enjoys walking through the curated flowers, vegetation, and structures. Secondly was the value of spending a morning focused on self knowledge in a quiet garden. Rather than reading or listening to someone else’s internal journey, this semi-natural and fully beautiful environment offered time to practice 2 valuable things.

      1. Appreciation

      I’m not an expert on aesthetics, but one thing I love about beauty is that you don’t really need to process it. Yes, it can be considered or questioned, but it is certainly no requirement. This is especially true where one learns to appreciate something for it’s sake alone without comparison. I might not necessarily be able to do this, but I can certainly allow beauty to soak it in. Today at the arboretum I took the time to absorb my surroundings. Now somewhat ironically, I did this by and large through a phone camera lens, but it’s 2019.

      Another thing I have learned about appreciation is that, at least for me, noting what I show appreciation for provides an indicator of my values and my state-of-mind. What I notice is what I care about. How I regard it is how I think. When for just a moment I reflect on my appreciation, it allows me to remember what qualities I hold dear. For instance, I became particularly fond of little paths that simply ended nowhere. They didn’t lead back to the main path or stop in a remarkable area. They simply led to where they led, a generally quiet nowhere with a stone bench. This gave me the quality chance to think about how I, in contrast, force my life paths to go somewhere “relevant” or “important”. I rarely give myself the chance to simply take a direction that goes nowhere and, yes, just appreciate it.

      2. Play

      Work has quotas, games have rules, but play has no limitations. Taking time to be playful allows you to express yourself without the external guidelines we often become so accustomed to we cease to notice them. However, when you take the time to dance like no one is watching you are expressing yourself in a much more raw form. What good is self-knowledge if we never allow ourselves to be ourselves. What’s interesting about play is that there’s a form of play that reveals massive authenticity even though it is inherently dishonest. My daughter partook in this particular type of play this morning while I walked the garden walkways.

      She played make-believe. She invited me into her magical country manor. She camped in her private woodland cabin. She “fished” at the edge of a koi pond with a magnificent sea serpent living in it. She mixed water and leaves in a stone cauldron and made, I’m not sure what, but she looked like she was doing actual magic. If you ever find yourself forgetting how to play, then you’ve found your problem. There is no “how” to play, you simply act freely and according to your self satisfying whimsy. There’s no “where” to go and no “thing” to do. If you ever need to be reminded of what play looks like, though, find a toddler.

      Lessons Learned

      I’ve been neglecting the power of appreciation and play on my journey for self-knowledge, mastery, and understanding. Appreciation offers the chance to observe the subconscious values that command the most respect and attention from me for the easy-to-pay price of being around beauty. Further, the rule, rote, and rigor of ritual are valuable but only inasmuch as they do the spring cleaning necessary for us to just let go and play when we are allowed. You could easily argue that being appreciative and playful is the epitome of self-knowledge. Confident, free, natural, and unabashedly honest. For myself, I feel these adjectives accurately describe how I want to exist as often as possible.

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      TEDxAirlie 2

      Yesterday I had the opportunity to hear the speakers at the second occurence of TEDxAirlie. There were several great topics by various speakers from all realms of business and social action. Inclusion across race, gender, and physical ability; cognition and empathy; sustainability and agriculture; and entrepreneurship and art. Being an alumni speaker of the event I’m easily proud of each of the speakers, knowing what is required for them in regards to writing, memorization, practice, rehearsal, and delivery. I’m also easily proud because a couple speakers were friends of mine.

      While I haven’t had the chance to work with either of these gentlemen yet, I’m familiar with their causes and support them strongly. Cedric Harrison is the Asst. Coordinator of Community College Minority Male Leaders Center and founded Support the Port, a cause driven non-profit focused on lifting the state of the community’s neglected, particularly in the African American districts. Evan Folds has run businesses serving organic and niche gardeners including Progressive Farms, runs agricultural consulting company BeAgriculture, supports local traditional and urban organic farming and is the county Soil and Water Conservation Supervisor. Both of them delivered messages of a future that is inspiring and attainable for our city.

      Speaking of our city, I want to take a moment to discuss this guy.

      Jason Graham | MOsely WOtta
      Jason Graham aka MOsely WOtta

      Previous to the program release for the TEDx event, I didn’t know of Jason Graham. Jason, who performs under the name MOsely WOtta was the opening performance for the speakers. Hailing from the city of Bend in Oregon, Jason is an active member of his town’s poetry, slam, hiphop, art, and education communities both as a performer and a leader. His presentation included a vulnerable speech and written poem about the metaphorical building of bridges, or rather, the act of being a bridge and representing two simultaneous and sometimes opposing states.

      Jason represented two simultaneous states in another sense as well. For one, coming from Oregon and appearing for a North Carolina event, he created a bridge between two separate communities. Hold on to this thought, it will be minorly important shortly. Secondly, he inhabited the shallow creek that sits between spoken word and public speaking. This is very dear to me as I am a member of my local spoken word and writing groups as well as being a presenter and TEDx speaker. There’s a gap here that needs to be navigated.

      TEDxAirlie is a fairly important event with non-arbitrary consequences. Preparing for the event brings the university, businesses, several industries, and otherwise unconnected individuals into cooperation. It allows a platform for local leaders to enter a national stage with their work, message, and insights. Further, it allows us to frame what we respect or care about as a city in regards to technology, entertainment, and design, TED’s acronym. Yesterday the city demonstrated that it respects spoken word. That is huge for local poets.

      I had the opportunity to speak briefly with Jason after he was on stage and chat about our respective communities, which didn’t seem too different from one another. Well, except in a certain regard. Here in Wilmington, North Carolina we still subscribe to good-ol’-boy society. There’s a special knock to get into every door, and you are nearly always shown the door by invitation only. No matter how present our poetry sector community leaders are, they are still only obvious and visible to people in the sector. Jason was visible from the outside of his home in Bend, and in being visible he did us a huge favor.

      Yesterday several people live streamed, watch partied, and paid tickets to view a spoken word artist open for a major speaking event. We Wilmington performance poets should be paying attention. Being very present in the social and entrepreneurial culture clubs around here I know there are several opportunities for poets to open and lead off events. There simply needs to be a push to take advantage of the expectation and normalization provided to us by Jason Graham.

      I look forward to watching our artists make and ride the wave created by the meaningful ripples from this TEDx, and to see them build a bridge between the worlds of spoken word and public speaking. It could mean a lot to the growth, cohesion, and identity of Wilmington. If nothing else, I think it would be extremely nifty.

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      Salad

      I love taco and salad bars because they allow me to make my own mistakes. A restaurant structure that allows me to push aside the needless skill and mastery of culinary training so I can pair chick-peas with imitation crab meat on a whim.

      It entertains the idea that if I like something and I like something else, I will undoubtedly love them both together. No where else in life, except in a place where I will both go out to eat and still do my own cooking, can I consider contradictions, peruse paradoxes, or dance the dance of dissonance so viscerally.

      Photo by Dan Gold on Unsplash
      Photo by Dan Gold on Unsplash

      Visually, it is a Jackson Pollock potluck. Strings of color, dots of flavor, explosions of edible artwork on a leafy green canvas or a potential experiential installation waiting to be painted on my tongue from off of a cornflour easel.

      And it is never good. I mean, it’s not bad. I mean, it’s adequate to satisfy my hunger and fulfill my tongue’s addiction to the taste of salt and fat, but not good.

      Mediocre.

      Meat and okra.

      That sounds like a real thing, doesn’t it? And while I may never plate, pair, or proportion it quite as well as an Iron Chef challenger, I still feel accomplished. I made this! Well, I put them in the same styrofoam container, but does having a simple recipe alone make for poor food?

      And why should it matter? This is an expression of myself meant only for myself! I wasn’t planning on sharing, anyway. Not any more than we all share ingredients from the same trough of roughage and bacon bits.

      I love taco and salad bars because they remind me of life. My un-tossed tray of greens and beans exactly like being. An unorganized, somewhat intentional intelligence at work. Never good, but almost always better than bad.

      Mediocre.

      Me, the over ambitious designer of my experience, trying to pair sleeping in with excellent fitness on the same tray. In life it doesn’t work that way. Not really. Life is not as perfect as a salad. Or a taco.

      How could it be?

      I mean, when there are employees at the bar, they don’t even judge me for what I ask them to add on. Yes, I said sprinkle cinnamon on my chili, thank you.

      I love taco and salad bars because they give me the creative freedom and control to enjoy whatever I like, even if I don’t enjoy it, without consequence.

      To know that no matter the mess I make it is never so unpalatable that I might want to quit the salad bar forever.

      To make mistakes I honestly won’t make twice.

      To feel like I’m healthy even if I drizzle extra ranch over my greens because I’m eating the greens.

      When do we forget how to congratulate ourselves for just living like we congratulate ourselves for just being at the salad bar? When do we forget how to take the good with the bad? To pair them together? To eat our messes like we own them? To still believe our lives are worthy even when they are a mess, just like how no matter how much nonsense we throw on it a salad only becomes more and more like a salad?

      I love taco and salad bars because they remind me of Eden.

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      Wear

      Today I retired a pair of jeans. They weren’t too old yet, but, regardless, a hole at my bottom-left buttocks rang the death knoll for the faithful black garment. I noticed it only a few minutes ago. It’s a pity, honestly. A few inches could have made all the difference. A hole at my thigh might have been acceptable.

      Yesterday I retired three pair of shoes. The reason was quite the same. Each had a hole burrowed straight through the soles or toe. Unlike my jeans, the holes were not a new discovery. They had been Swiss cheese clods of rubber and canvas for months, yet still I kept them. What’s more I wore them. Often. For quite some time they were my only shoes.

      I have an intimate relationship with decay, or at least it feels that way. Chaoskampf, or battle against chaos, is the theme of my conscious narrative. Far too familiar is the sensation and even realization that rot and wear are actively taking what I have from me. This ranges from my material possessions like clothing, to more abstract things like my sense of organization and (at times) my reputation. At some point I began to identify with the concept.

      Over time my loved ones grew a bit concerned at the thought and sight of me doing business, delivering speeches, and performing in my Sunday worst. As these shoes were very obviously past their prime they saw it fit to purchase me three new pair for Christmas. It is now the end of March and I’ve finally separated from my more unfortunate footwear. Why did it take so long?

      Part of me was also fed up with walking the streets of my town looking poor (though I am at present impoverished) and wanted to put on the nicer, newer, warmer, drier shoes my family bought me. Another much louder and dominant part, however, convinced me certainly that the moment I put them on they would fall apart to sawdust.

      I had some good reason to get this sense, honestly. I’m not kind to my shoes. Currently I don’t own a car, so I walk and cycle often. This puts a fair amount of stress on my shoes. Further, I’m active in my idle time. See me with my children at the park jumping, climbing, running, rolling, and skipping along with them and you won’t be far off from how I generally spend my time away from work. The mere fitting of a shoe on my foot is a death sentence to it.

      But isn’t it supposed to be?

      I’ve grown fearful, and if there’s anything I have learned it is that nothing good comes from fearful action (or inaction). I had grown afraid to wear my own clothing, which was designed to be worn, lest it become worn. Somehow I managed to internalize the most inevitable tendency in the universe: entropy. In science, the natural movement of everything toward disorder. I felt I was an agent of wear and tear. Even feeling responsible for its presence in my life. No small responsibility. And in being afraid of losing something new, I clung to something old to protect a possession I never allowed myself to actually possess.

      Let’s talk about possessions a moment.

      The realization has made me rethink something else I have embodied pretty holistically in my life: minimalism. The culture of minimalism is vast and varied, as is the definition of the same. It should perhaps be made clear what I mean when I use this term. I refer to it as the reduction to and maintenance of practical essential items for the ease of effort. It is to have less stuff so I have room for more purpose. Let me note that “purpose” holds the most important place in my view of the world and my self image.

      Having been raised in a Catholic school and being an avid watcher of David Carradine in Kung-Fu and Kung-Fu the Legend Continues I had many flattering impressions of monks. Their piety. Their discipline. Their aversion to possession. It was romantic to me that one’s dedication and purpose could be enough to stave off material and sensory desire. So, pretty naturally I was shown and therefore I felt that these were qualities attached to one who was truly devoted to a cause or mission, which is what I wanted for myself. This became the impetus for something that didn’t yet have a name and that I encountered as a type of minimalist lifestyle.

      It was cute and even noble at first. At this moment, with my shoes and pants lying in the trash, I am now aware that minimalism became a validation for both my poverty and my fear of having and destroying new things. I wasn’t a minimalist so much as I was desperately trying to salvage the old while constantly denying the new. This became my piety and an outward symbol of my devotion to something lofty. Further, fulfilling my innate desire to “save” something or someone, salvaging the broken became part of my purpose. I held on to the worn and broken until it could no longer be loved, and only then did I reluctantly purchase the new, thereby damning it to a death without dignity as it fell apart upon my body.

      Now, here’s the conflict this all presents and why any of this really matters for my life. I am a person quick to announce my love of philosophy, and at least of rational thinking. A rational thinker in my opinion should reassess his premises and do so often to ensure they are not carrying false beliefs, disproven truths, or faulty mental models. Here the metaphor starts to thicken like cooling grease. This event is a call-to-action to look through all the worn ideas I continue to wear and not replace because I believe I’m “saving” them.

      This. Is. Important. One of my hobbies is the casual study of antiquity. Few series of ideas and philosophies are more rightfully on the chopping block now than our ancient views of the world, influenced by government-run religions, scienceless tribes, and outdated world scenarios. Even without this fact, I am very much human, and a first generation American at that, inheriting old-world knowledge from habits, rituals, and wives tales that I grew up coming to know as sooth. I think it’s time to look for where there may be holes and to discard old concepts. First and foremost should probably be my ideas of minimalism, purpose, and what to do with all of these holey turtlenecks. Happy Spring Cleaning.

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      “Wiccan Bonfire Seance”

      In response to a writing prompt by my friend Michael Jenkins:

      I couldn’t tell what time it was. Honestly, time didn’t seem to be a thing that mattered anymore. Did it ever? Mist and tree moss became like air to me. It was all around me and in plentiful quantity. My eyes were desperately peeled for anything that differentiated itself from the earthy smell or sound of leaves crunching over topsoil. No grazing deer, no shooting star across the rustling canopy. Just nothing but the same. I never imagined it could feel so empty in a place so full. I never imagined I could feel so alone anywhere. Alone for what seems like eternity. Where was I before I was lost here?

      Who was I before…?

      A sudden tingle ran down my spine. I felt nauseated when it passed along my loins and hipbones. What was that? It fell like the wind carried an answer to my question. When I asked it I felt immediately both foolish and frightened. I couldn’t seem to remember myself, but shuddered to almost hear my forgotten name being called from across the distance. I knew I couldn’t survive the sudden shattering of my isolation, so I turned around slowly in case someone was actually there. Was anybody there? Dear God, please somebody be there.

      A bit more than a quarter turn of my body and I was able to see a flickering orange spark. Again, a wave of reminiscence washed over me from that direction. As if I was being called by a name that had escaped me. What could one do when being called but to follow and answer? Anything to escape the solitude. To get help.

      It was less walking toward the light, more like being drawn. Like falling sideways, facilitated by unwitting legs. The sound was louder now, but still indistinguishable over what seemed to be a howling wind. It pushed away as strongly as the urge to move toward the glow pulled.

      Closer and closer now. I’d grown so accustomed to the chill of night air I’d forgotten what warmth feels like. It felt like life. How had I forgotten what life feels like? Life. There was something moving around the light. Shadows flitting about, eclipsing it briefly every so often. Sun and Moon. Solar and lunar occultation. It was a fire.

      The shadows must be people. Even as I watched them I still couldn’t see them. Tall wisps of veiled motion. The wind was strongest here. The call was loudest here. I could almost make out syllables. Consonance. Meaning. Even faces began to draw themselves on the indecipherable figures. I could see their faces. It only then occurred to me that they had stopped dancing. That they were all looking at me. That they could see me. They were waiting for me. Calling me.

      Who was I before I was here? How could I have forgotten what life feels like? Here I am. Why have you called me? The fire grows.

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      Flame

      Flickering in the corner of my eye
      Sparks of red and waves of heat
      Surrounded the vision of a dancing flame
      Which warmed me to be near
      Though who’s blaze
      Behooved me to stay my distance
      I could not touch for sake of it
      Nor approach for her brightness
      Yet in glancing I found her more-so lovely
      As it seemed to fuel the pyre
      Encouraging her vibrant glow
      And enlivening her
      With tumbling dark wisps above
      I am allured by her
      To receive baptismal benediction in fire
      As she stirs my spirit
      Dance,
      And engulf me with your tongue of flame
      Smother away my breath
      In your smoky plume
      Envelop me within you
      Let me learn your temperature
      And as my body too ignites
      I will then scorch you in kind

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        A Who Gets a Clue

        A young Who in Whoville was feeling quite down
        He moped and he moped and he moped around town
        He moped until in an old tavern he found
        A wealthy old Who who was buying a round.

        He sat by the bar, ordered drink and a chaser
        The wealthier Who asked him, “Why the long face, sir”
        And then did that sad Who look at him sadly
        “I need lots of money, I need it quite badly!

        My medical bills come to such an amount
        I grow even sicker each time that I count
        I need need a new Huvulu hovering car
        So I can make sales, for I travel quite far

        My mother is aging, my daughter needs clothes
        My wife needs her hobbyist tools, so it goes
        I’ve built up my debts in attempt to make due
        So my life is quite hard, but sir, tell me of you.”

        That affluent Who sat himself rather tall
        He cleared his old throat and began with a drawl
        “I’m Finneas Flavius Finkle the Fourth
        Son of the Mogul Sir Finkle of Gorth

        I’m visiting now to review my investments
        To see which will fail, and see which are destined
        To 10X my money, and those I will choose
        To spend some more on, the others, set loose.”

        Now this caught the ear of the sadder of two
        For never before did he meet such a Who.
        “For handouts I’d never request on a whim
        But Finneas, sir, my outlook’s quite grim

        I have a small savings, enough for a month
        A greater amount I used to have once
        But now it is spent, the rainy day’s here
        Sir how should I spend it, would you please share?”

        That Finneas smiled at the sad Who so kindly
        “What is it you do, sir, would you remind me?”
        That sad Who, he answered, with minor chagrin
        “I sell door to door, needles and pins”

        “That market’s no good,” said the wealthier fellow
        “To it say goodbye, to others say hello
        You best look around, pins and needles are dead
        When everyone has them, well now they need thread!”

        This marveled the Who to hear oh so wisely
        “Oh thank you, good sir, for what you advise me!”
        And so he ran home and took all his cash
        And ran to the Thread store, he ran with a dash

        He bought all the thread that he could at the time
        He bought every spool with his very last dime.
        Well sure enough soon as he made his investment
        Another who walked in with tears in this vestments

        “Sorry to run in here making a racket
        I’ve holes in my socks, in my pants, and my jacket
        Please sell me your thread so my clothes I’ll repair
        I’ll buy it then I’ll get out of your hair”

        Well now the sad Who had no sign of his sadness
        But now he was filled with threadly fueled madness
        “This store has no thread left” He said to the guy
        But I think I could find some, I think I could try.”

        “Oh please” said the Who, in his torn apart coat
        “I leave in an hour and travel by boat
        I must look my best for a meeting is soon
        And if I can impress it will mean quite the boon!”

        “And what could you pay” said Who 1 with a smile
        “Well, all that I have” said Who 2 in a while
        He reached in his pocket and pulled out a spool
        And made all of his money back on that poor fool!

        The Threadman behind his old counter amazed
        Immediately ran to his phone in a craze
        “Order me thread, for the price has now soared
        Get all the thread that the shop can afford!”

        Back at his home was a Who feeling glad
        With all of his savings and thread that he had
        He surely would soon be a millionaire
        Living in luxury without a care

        The next day he went to buy even more thread
        But the prices were risen by 10 to his dread
        He didn’t know if he could afford the price
        But he bought 10 more spools. He bought 10 more spools thrice!

        Now that old Threadman feeling quite keen
        Has more money than his thread shop’s ever has seen
        Soon was the word that thread was the thing
        That money and riches and power, would bring

        Soon every Who down in Whoville had spools
        They had spindles and reams, they had needle point tools
        Thread fever attacked and it did with a heat
        Buying and selling and trading elites

        Every color had its own unique market
        Prices would rise and would fall right on target
        And wasn’t that first Who once felt so small
        Well now he’s the richest Who here of them all!

        His car was a beauty, his daughter was dressed
        His wife lived in leisure, no sign of distress
        He quit his old job and now lived in a mansion
        With rooms filled with thread, so he built an expansion

        For months this continued but soon there was trouble
        This wasn’t a market, no sir, but a bubble!
        Soon thread speculation proved out a disaster
        The price of thread fell, well and then it fell faster!

        The Whos they all panicked, the rich and the rabble
        They built their whole town as a Tower of Babel
        And down fell the bricks, fell every last one
        Until poverty struck, now Whoville was done

        One day came the mogul, his venture to cash
        The only non-thread based new business, the last
        He sold it and closed it and nearly left town
        When he saw his old friend, and again he was down

        “Seems like your town’s in the midst of recession
        You ought to spend wisely instead of just guessin
        Well now all the money is vapor, you see
        Well maybe for you, but just not for me

        You see while your city’s a ghost town, quite dead
        I owned all the factories spinning the thread
        I closed them as soon as the price rose too high
        Knowing a bubbly busting was nigh.”

        “How could you lead us into this position
        Surely you saw this, you surely envisioned
        Once I was poor and that was enough
        But to be rich, then poor, well sir that’s quite tough!”

        “Now sir,” said the Who of a wealthier sort
        “It’s you who spent all of your cash,” with a snort
        “I told you, quite wisely, to trade in some spools
        But you sir went all in like a blind bumbling fool”

        With that the Who left, and Whoville was alone
        With the worthlessest thread, all money now blown
        Now if ever a deal seems to good to be true
        Well it probably is, don’t get strung along, too!

        Posted on

        Sensual Meeting

        Response to a free-write prompt

        Her curves were perfect from spine to sphincter
        God made miracles each joint he linked her
        A tincture
        No strings attached
        Love potion number nine, brew another batch
        Bring it by the glass and by the bottle
        Mind the throttle, pull the lever
        Let’s endeavor to explore
        Behind closed doors
        What’s in store
        In this room in Ibiza
        This woman is a trip
        Have to go renew my visa
        She’s a pleaser
        So am I
        She invites me
        So I try my luck
        And gamble with the slot machine
        She tells me that it’s hot
        Jackpot
        What a lovely scene