can’t find any

I Find Erasures

I can’t find the right words when you’re all “good-morning!” with the naps.

I listen to the wisp and the donkey.

I answer the phone to induce a “hello.”

I touch the wires of domesticity — dead cold.

I hear the monstrous pabulum of rusted weathervanes.

I, the compass diver.
I, the newscaster wherryman.

I continue to search for sense in this world.

I find artifacts, letterings and saleability.

I don’t find sense.

I find erasures.

What I’m Reading:

Then you realize the horror is existence itself.

— Dave Eggers / Your Fathers, Where Are They? And the Prophets, Do They Live Forever?

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dream this away

Erase Your Wattles

I’d forgotten the triangle jerk stylings that out you every so often. Disappear. Make them disappear. I want lightness. I want documentation. I don’t want the sun-tan. The color yellow. Thick farfisa strained and orange-like. Keep your sweaty bond paper-stripper brew away from me. 

Your candlelight reflexing bores me to the core. The love fades, awash in nonsense compliments.

Continue to obliterate modicum and nuance — this is how it is to be alive now. There are webs of worlds moving beyond our perception — how little we know. 

And how brusquely you move in your mantelshelf hair. Profoundly obvious. Uniquely abominable. 

We would like to erase your wattles. We would like to dream you away.

What I’m Reading:

IT IS THE FLAWED, ODDBALL, THE BROKEN, that is magnificent. The perfect doesn’t interest me. It has no personality.

— Elizabeth McCracken / A Long Game: Notes on Writing 

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and castings aside

Windowsill Anhedonias

Listen to the muzungus and you’ll hear windowsill anhedonias. That doggedness that does not aid the weak or the needy. This disease is legion. This contagion a russian roulette of overloud artifacts. Full of dissipation and castings aside. Benevolence greater in its absence than its the abundance. 

I hear the starlings in their murmurations — the sibilance in their wings.

The moisture of fear unwicked in the strongman’s pancake makeup. The splutters of concupiscence denied. He cannot get through the inhumanity and gloves the nation’s cheek. A duel to bury the dead faster than the last guy. 

Rest in Peculiarity.

What I’m Reading:

Colonial logic gaslights us to believe that it is our shortcomings, not colonialism itself, that stand between us and liberation. 

— Mohammed El-Kurd / Perfect Victims and the Politics of Appeal

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boot to use

Goodly Godly Determinism

The miserable mizzle speckled his glints to the point that he took them off, wiped them, and replaced them with blinders. Daft mischief his. He tramped the Spanish plantations by feelies.

Nowhere but here. Actually not here, but on the plains beyond the western ridge there. It rains there all the time. Mainly does. Manly he. A man moving drizzle by touch. Arms all zombie-like and such. What gives?

His lack of documentation. Lamentable. His will. Insurmountable. At the decanter of Franco — where he laid paternalistic hands on the sign prohibiting access to the tomb — hands like missed exhortations to national unity and sacrifice. Really, more like a soliloquy of the soft white underbelly pinned by a jackboot. He pined for the days of Conquistadors. The vapors of dichotomies. The nights of haves and have nots. The age of MEN.

Oh, the grand days of Tordesillas — halcyon ecstasy. One might say erotic. He thought so, anyway, stumbling and bumbling blind through the country. The days of take what you want ‘cause you can. Come back!

These are just a bunch of lollygaggers not using what was granted to the strong and audacious. So we take it by force and indenture — the hoi polloi can’t do a thing to change the outcome. This was goodly godly determinism. 

He trudged, woebegone and misbegotten — a wanktankerous lech (you should have seen him) — waiting for the boat to a new world made by the strongman reprised. There he waited by the riotous poppies, still blinkered, for the clarion call to put his boot to use. 

What I’m Reading:

There will be no curiosity, no enjoyment of the process of life. All competing pleasures will be destroyed. But always— do not forget this, Winston— always there will be the intoxication of power, constantly increasing and constantly growing subtler. Always, at every moment, there will be the thrill of victory, the sensation of trampling on an enemy who is helpless.

If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face— forever.

— George Orwell / 1984

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the fib incarnate

bully pulpit puppetry 

crispr your genes to oblate perfection
involve no one in your self abuse

life goes sideways as long as it’s going
damburst dumb and long

open the flue and shut your mouth
don’t get your super ego too eager

your id pilfers your farewell drugs
a mad sacker to hack your genome

you want to want to be blue
youre full of inertia and anonymities

youre a vervet of the monticules
a slag to the molecules errant

youve been warned and now youre on notice
to be sacked and attacked and occupied

malpractice petards all about the palace guards
the bully pulpit molders and molts

we be the fib incarnate
we scalpel your epaulets

you puppet them both
you get the fist

and we gotta pay our taxes for this?

What I’m Reading:

The Monroe Doctrine’s ignoble history is well known today. Over the course of two centuries, the United States would cite the doctrine as a self-issued warrant to intervene against its southern neighbors, from the taking of Texas to more recent efforts at regime change in Venezuela and Nicaragua. Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking Americans, even before they had started to regularly use the word imperialismo, would in the early twentieth century coin the phrase Monroismo to describe the arrogance of a great power that claimed a writ to police the hemisphere. 

— Greg Grandin / America, América: A New History of the New World

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into psychic automatism

nestor pestles

nestor pestles saffron bulbs indivisible
ferries the legumes their twisted fate
logic subsumed logic of verdigris

he macerates your dreams into molds
shapes of innards and insoles
pronates your victuals

into alien forms
animals lifeformed as lifeless
daddy long legs

he dont make your ears hurt
he lickspittles the sacristy
and hums the words in your dreams

a nightmare journal of crushed iguanas
and taut intestines tined
twine the plaits of your day

into psychic automatism
or a fork deal creel meal
your fish be fallin thru the gaps

image: p. remer

What I’m Reading:

Trump thrives on the ineffectiveness of his opponents. The military operation in Venezuela is a warning that Trump’s imperial ambitions are growing. He’s building himself a triumphal arch in Washington. He craves gaudy acts to justify his monument to himself. He announced his operation first on his own wacky social-media platform, then on a phone call to Fox—as if his fan base were the only part of the nation to whom the president owed an explanation for his actions. Trump’s ego poses clear and present dangers to American democracy and American world leadership. An ineffective anti-Trump movement is an indulgence American democracy cannot afford or accept.

— David Frum / “Trumps Critics are Falling into an Obvious Trap” / The Atlantic

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the blackest hole

Memorable Stuff I Read This Week

Because the Trump movement is a cult of personality, with no consistent principles and no concern for truth, many of its boosters don’t care whether the success is real or phony. They don’t care whether the advertised “success” actually happened the way Trump says it did. They don’t care whether the so-called success achieves anything important or lasting. They don’t care if there later turns out to be a corrupt underside. They celebrate peace plans that don’t bring peace, trade deals that don’t enhance trade. The Trump movement exists to glorify Trump, in all his erratic mania. Results in the real world don’t matter.

— David Frum / “Trumps Critics are Falling into an Obvious Trap” / The Atlantic


People talk and talk more
about black holes.

I believe the blackest hole
is the one we inhabit . . .

— Eugenio Montale / “People talk and talk more . . .”


Nobody wants to be where they are, I think. So would it really matter so much if the earth swallows us all?

— Emma Pattee / Tilt 


Why does Trump hate solar and wind energy so passionately? It’s because they’re somewhat outside his or anyone else’s control. A nation that builds its prosperity on oil makes itself a target; a nation that depends on imported oil to survive makes itself a vassal. A nation (say, China) that rapidly builds out its own supply of energy from the sun—energy that can’t be embargoed or effectively attacked, energy that is by its nature decentralized, energy so spread out that no particular bit of it is all that valuable—is a nation that can go its own way. 

America is, by any definition, a rogue nation this morning.

— Bill McKibben / “Just possibly it’s the oil?” / The Crucial Years, on Substack


Our enemy always possesses probable cause.

— Mohammed El-Kurd / Perfect Victims and the Politics of Appeal


Ambition in fiction is merely the willingness to make mistakes. Mistakes are essential.

— Elizabeth McCracken / A Long Game: Notes on Writing Fiction


Military action in Venezuela today without allies may prefigure action tomorrow against allies—for example, to invade and annex Greenland. The big strategic idea of the second Trump administration is that major powers are entitled to dominate their neighbors: Russia to dominate Ukraine, China to dominate its neighborhood, and the U.S. to rule over Venezuela, Greenland, Panama, and ultimately Canada—Trump’s desired “51 st state.”

— David Frum / “Trumps Critics are Falling into an Obvious Trap” / The Atlantic

What I’m Listening To: 

Take a look at these hands
The hand speaks
The hand of a government man
Well, I’m a tumbler
Born under punches

— Talking Heads / “Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On”

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burden sinks us

here comes sickness

rise and face the day

if you are at the wrist with this sickness
and often find yourself asking: wtf are we doing?
who do we think we are?
who died and made us lord-king-god boofoo?

we are sick
and infecting everyone us
we, the jacked-up jack-boot landlord out to dispatch “offensive” neighbors in the dark of night
who says we be bully boys no more?

this obscenity we’re saddled with breeds
a pestilence bone deep
this burden sinks us
this is done in our names
this is our handiwork
this is what we chose
this is us

this abomination is our abomination
maybe someone will return the favor one day
and set us free

from ourselves

What I’m Reading:

Violence is woven too deeply in the history and practice of American culture to be ignored.

— Joe Jackson / Splendid Liberators: Heroism, Betrayal, Resistance, and the Birth of American Empire

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of eggshell showdowns

ramen

/ the malice of introspection charts • the grainy horizon haunting • the constant flux • from the kills • the claustrophobe • immortalities & materializations • kill the lobe to save the head • cast a haunting memo into the great rift • that vast despatch of freak visual distortion • we gain a certain vantage • a certain grace • a certain ratio • a golden mean which means nothing much to see here • see here • be here now • embody your dysphoric self • clean up your act and fritter your knickers • the kippers are at the door • they want their clean ocean back • troubled progeny will trouble themselves now more with the trivia of freedom • they’ll storyboard their delusions in VistaVision and CinemaScope • tawdry silicate tales of eggshell showdowns and philistine psychological duels requiring telekinesis • oh, stop this loss • oh, please increase it • plunge us into a world of varying delights of the oysters and paradigm of the clams • speak to me in cracking electric locutions • speak your truth • bare your soulless doubloon heart in wheatgrass stereo • lead us not into a quill tipped-blood nibbed slab of tempeh in the curvature age • deliver us from out-of-house productions • ramen

What I’m Reading:

TERRIBLE THINGS NEED NOT HAPPEN TO YOU, IN order to be a writer.

Terrible things will happen to you, if you are a human. You needn’t write about these things on purpose. You will probably write about them eventually, one way or the other.

— Elizabeth McCracken / A Long Game: Notes on Writing Fiction

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try to improve

better

astride of hope
let’s start anew

try it again
try to improve

make lives better
happy new year

What I’m Reading:

Today I want   
to resolve nothing.

I only want to walk
a little longer in the cold . . .

— Kim Addonizio / “New Year’s Day”

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