Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Alexander the Great


Alexander the Great hung his head. He had conquered everything, and there was nothing left to conquer. “What about this area over here?” he said, pointing to an unshaded part of the map.

“You conquered that last week,” his top general said. “We haven’t had time to color it in yet.”

When Alexander started out, the world was fresh and new, begging to be conquered. At the age of ten, he conquered all of Greece, clad only in his underpants. He went on to vanquish the vast empire of Persia while totally nude and drunk. He woke up from sleepwalking one morning to discover that he had conquered Egypt. Once, he laid siege to a fortress all by himself, sneaking from bush to bush and popping up behind each one, pretending to be a different soldier.

There had been difficulties, to be sure. At a raucous victory dinner, a chicken bone became stuck in his throat. As he reached for a glass of water, he touched off a mousetrap, then another, and another. He began to flail about, and his foot got stuck in a bucket. Even like this, he conquered India.

On and on he went, conquering kingdom after kingdom. His generals would plead with him to stop, but he’d say, “Come on, just one more,” and they’d say, “Well, O.K.”

His empire became so large that, even today, if you meet a woman in a bar and invite her up to your apartment to see a map of Alexander’s empire, when she gets there and you show it to her she always says the same thing: “You’ve got to be kidding.”

Alexander smashed every army sent against him, slaughtering thousands. Those who fled the battlefield were hunted down and killed. Women and children were sold into slavery. But the happy times could not last. Eventually, there were no more people left to conquer.

“What about the Assyrians?” Alexander asked his generals.

“We conquered them,” one of them replied.

“O.K., how about the Bactrians?”

“Con-quered,” several generals said, in singsong.

Alexander was getting desperate. “What if we gave countries their freedom, then conquered them again?” The generals looked down at their feet. One coughed.

“Very well, then, I shall conquer the birds of the sky,” he said, but he was reminded that he had already done so, and also that he had been given an eloquent tribute speech by a parrot.

“What about the ants? Can’t we conquer them?” Reluctantly, one general unfurled a tiny document of surrender.

Seeking to console Alexander, the wisest of his counselors said, “Perhaps, master, what you truly seek is not to conquer but to be conquered.”

Alexander picked up a spear and ran him through.

Rallying his troops, Alexander had them build a primitive rocket ship. He traveled to the moon with thirty hand-chosen men, holding their breath. They utterly surprised the moon men and laid waste to their planet.

In what was perhaps his greatest victory, Alexander conquered half the Kingdom of Heaven. Using sappers to undermine the pearly gates, he and his army poured in, riding captured war elephants, trampling angels and saints. But Heaven, as he realized, “is mostly clouds,” and he wisely withdrew.

Alexander was preparing to journey to another universe, which he hoped to burn down, when he died. At first, his generals didn't believe it, but then his body was brought out, still clutching his sword and wearing his newly fashioned “space suit.”

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Well, we all think philosophy is just fun and games.  Semiotics, deconstruction, Lacanian post-Freudian psychoanalysis, it all seems like good, clean fun. But when the heart gets involved, all our painfully acquired metaphysical insights go right out the window, and we’re reduced to battling it out like rutting chimpanzees. It’s not pretty. If you’re in a relationship, and differences over the fundamental principles of your respective subjectivities are making things difficult, maybe it’s time to move on.  Find someone new, someone who will accept you and the way your laughably limited human intelligence chooses to codify and rationalize the chaos of existence.  After all, in the absence of a clear, unquestionable revelation from God, that’s all we’re all doing anyway. 

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

fingers to my hands





now you are then and i am now(my love), and we are
a miracle which will never happen again,
a mystery which has never happened before--
and shining us our now must come to then

until the earth reopens my breath upon your spine

then shall be some darkness during which
fingers are without hands;and i have no
you, and you have no me:and all the trees are

(any more than each leafless one)
in its silent forevering winters

Monday, December 17, 2012

It's good not to believe in anything
The days alone are more pleasant
The nights alone are more pleasant

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Pages of Me


My Boredom

I wafted through my adult-youth philandering around for a longing sense of purpose; seeking magic to explain my own existence, I carved opportunities for myself to live through the eyes of other people. For instance, I never had the impulse to try a single drug, but I did, because doing so exposed a truth to me I would have never known; whether I could emerge from the ashes of consequence or not was not my concern, it only ever made me more  audacious to see what change would occur. 

Too long was it unveiled to me that my life was too boorish and prosaic and the same, and knowing this, and knowing how discontent I can be, they agitated the life I lived and destroyed my sense of purpose; I hated that these people invented the universe--my universe--and I hated the possibility of living in this a mundane life. I admitted more times than I wanted that I was being too fixated with finding truths; every time I'd uncover a path, I'd quickly bury myself in another, with hope I'd find something that would anesthetize my curious impulses and subdue me to settle.

I've always hung onto sincere hope in the belief that life offered a love far more inordinate than the humdrum of a mechanical existence. What I knew, made me writhe in the hollowfication of my soul. Crackling within me like an inferno of contempt, I condemned myself to hedonistic rituals for the manically perished who lived in a dystopia.  I willingly allowed sociopathic behaviourisms with drugs into me, to drown me, because I needed to feel like I could drown no more. 

What I always felt was that I had control over my destony, but that’s the thing about destiny, I challenged it my whole life, but I was never able to undo an action after it occurred. I had secretly always hoped that creatures made of nothing but light would whisper me secrets and tell me that something, or someone out there would give me a sense of directional purpose--that something I knew would mean more to me than anything else in the entire universe. 

Then, it's as if the gods begged me, and like the sounds of clashing lightning they roared, "PLEASE DANIEL, DO NOT LET LOOSE YOUR FIERY CHARISMA!"

And, as if I were a kraken--I rather enjoyed my attention to the snare and listened to see if there was something of promise. “Come on,” I appealed silently to myself in a split-second prayer. "Universe, don’t fail me now."

I felt displaced when I met her, like when you do acid and resist its mercurial pull. I knew the planet so well, but I did not know her. I needed her to understand me, more than I needed to understand her. What I wish I had known was that the key to understanding her was to respect that she was fragile, brilliant and mercurial--a complex and challenging creature--sensitive, but ultimately rewarding.

I lived with a self-destructive core that's the only thing I'm certain about me to be malign. Within me exists the blood of divine madness that sometimes allows me to be really funny and eccentrically wild, but other times turns against me with such rage and creates a chaos that smolders like hell. I get this gurgling discontent in my belly, a sense that everything is pointless and that nothing, nobody is worthwhile, and that maybe it’d be better to slip off under a blanket or a drug and never face the light again. I think it’s fear, dread, or the terrible inevitability that one day, I will die with the knowledge of never to have loved a single thing. 



1
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My Disappointment


Gravity’s hard to dispute, and breathing, but a lot of things people instinctively obey confuses the hell out of me. I never understood why people loved one another, and I toiled to understand. I'd lament on the situations which alienated me from those seemingly normal senses. I realized that the outer surface of what I thought was my unique, individual identity was just a set of routines I had adopted to fit in. We all have an essential self, but if you spend every day chopping up meat on a slab, and selling it by the pound, soon you’ll find you've become a butcher. And if you don’t want to become a butcher (and why would you?), you’re going to have to cut right through to the bare bones of your own character in hope of finding out who you really are--which fucking hurts.

In the foray of finding love, I explored the physical, more bona-fide process. My first time was with an aesthetic girl who I met at a random house-party. Interesting. She was like me, only with the crave for sexual deviance. I listened to her introduction, mellifluous in flirtations, uninhibited and wild. I listened as she entertained me with buoyant honesty. I talked more than she could process, hoping I might intimidate her to go away. She'd quip back with an answer to everything I could produce with every sentence designed to ensnare me. She invited me back to her room where I knew she'd use me for her ends, or for pity’s sake at least let me know the ends of love. As she closed the door, she pulled me into her room, making me feel like the only person who had ever done so (though I was wiser).



I was 19 years old, she was 21. I knew sex was about to happen, mainly because she said it was. But I didn't know why it should happen, so I asked her, "But, what if we don't work out in the end?" She laughed at me as she pet my head, she said, "We will always be in love with ourselves." It was then that I trusted her more than I trusted myself. I secretly hoped that we we'd resort to loving one another; I would have done anything she'd ask if it were for love. After having had sex, I didn't feel a stir of emotion, not a thing. She quickly became someone I loathed. I blamed that she had taken away my hopes. I hated the disappointment of having sex with someone I did not love or care for. I really just hated myself.

2

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My World

All of us, I think, have a vague idea that we’re missing something. Some say that thing is God; that all the longing we feel--be it for a lover, or a home, or a drug--is merely an inappropriate substitute for the longing we’re supposed to feel for love, for oneness, for truth. And what heroin does really successfully is objectify that need. It makes you feel lovely and warm and cozy. It gives you a great, big, smacky cuddle, and from then on the idea of need is no longer an abstract thing, but a longing in your belly and a kicking in your legs and a shivering in your arms and sweat on your forehead and a dull pallor on your face. At this point you’re no longer under any misapprehension about what it is that you need: you don’t think, “Nice to have someone who understands me, read a poem or write a song,” you think, “Fuck, I need heroin.” During the time I was addicted, I told myself every day that I would quit. But I would always irrationally ask myself, "Why should I?". When it started to become a challenge to quit, I felt even more compelled to quit. I wanted to be the one who decided whether I wanted something or not. I needed to control my fate.



I found that sex was unimportant, drugs did not satisfy me, when these things that obfuscated my life were gone, I found that I was okay with being miserably content with having no heart for things. I didn't need a thing. I had stopped needing to feel as if anything else mattered; I had stopped yearning, I was okay with being without hope. I wanted a love that was more than cuddling, but I questioned whether that could ever be for me. I really doubted if anyone else could be like me and who wanted a love more real than real, like me. For me, love occurred arbitrarily, like feeling at ease simply because trees exist, or while people watching with someone I loved. What I wanted was to find someone I'd love so deeply that I could cry if they were gone. 

When I met Eugenie, there was no trying to be a certain way, I didn't try to be someone who entertained her, I was only myself and so was she. It was like I already knew her and she already knew me, and we knew we had something magical. Because I was so desensitized by then, Eugenie gave me a hope I wish I had had all my life. I didn't know why, nor did I questioned it, but I loved her the first day I met her. It's as if I was only born into this world when I met her. I was a creature born to be hers. I feared constantly that my mind would betray me; of course my mind will not shut up and let me enjoy the moment, there is an endless incessant narrative throughout it.



I always found myself much more comfortable talking to women than I did men. I understood women, I was raised by women; I had the sensitivities a woman, but had the roaring heterosexuality of a man's. It was an arbitrary zone of comfort that I had allowed myself to familiarize myself with, with women. But Eugenie, she was an otherworldly spirit of beauty. She was not a Viktoria's Secret model, nor did I consider her a model at all--she didn't have to be. To me, she could have been hideous and I would have still loved her. 



She made me nervous, she made me afraid, she made me want to change everything about myself so I would be more suitable for her. There are 7.057 billion people on Earth and for me, it would be enough if only she existed. I never felt inadequate for anyone before I met her. She was more important to me than I was to myself. I never treasured a single thing, she devastatingly made me realize that I would lose my purpose if she were gone. 


What I loved about her weren't her breasts, it wasn't her perfection, or the way we communicated to one another as if we spoke in a language only meant for us. It was the way she stripped me away from the securities that made me tolerate being alone. I loved her because she made me feel like I belonged to her. I would live a world blindly, sitting in a room with no light and be happy just knowing I was hers and she was mine. 



3

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My Solitude





“There is nothing so cruel in this world as the desolation of having nothing to hope for.” - Haruki Murakami





The need to find out what will happen if I don't relent or moderate my actions has always been a unrelenting source of difficulty and discomfort in my life. She endeared my wiles as I did hers, we existed as a pair that was complimentary to one another. But I was much more hesitant, much more untrusting, much more afraid than I imagined I would be, and she was too. Perhaps we became that way after we realized we had so much to lose. Any idea we had, we made manifest. Perhaps she was as lost as I was.













Thursday, December 6, 2012

Somewhere over the rainbow, way up high
There's a land that I've heard of once in a lullaby.
Somewhere over the rainbow, skies are blue
And the dreams that you dare to dream,
Really do come true.

Someday I'll wish upon a star
And wake up where the clouds are far behind me.
Where troubles melt like lemon drops,
High above the chimney tops,
That's where you'll find me.

Somewhere over the rainbow, blue birds fly
Birds fly over the rainbow
Why then, oh why can't I?
If happy little bluebirds fly beyond the rainbow
Why, oh why can't I?

Somewhere over the rainbow, way up high
There's a land that I've heard of once in a lullaby.
Somewhere over the rainbow, skies are blue
And the dreams that you dare to dream,
Really do come true.

Someday I'll wish upon a star
And wake up where the clouds are far behind me.
Where troubles melt like lemon drops,
High above the chimney tops,
That's where you'll find me.

Somewhere over the rainbow, blue birds fly
Birds fly over the rainbow
Why then, oh why can't I?
If happy little bluebirds fly beyond the rainbow
Why, oh why can't I?

Sunday, December 2, 2012

/think

new post: *click* *clatter* /drink

/think
/think/think
/think/think
/think

it nears the date where eugenie speaks to end your thoughts.
The dread in my heart

how does that feel? 
It feels apprehending

you used to worry about having nothing to worry about, but this isn't nothing, it's everything--right?
Yeah, but more

she means the best things to you. how could you hope for anyone more than someone who's the most?
I don't have that hope, she took that, too

if your life were a book, she would be the punctuation to the ends of your every sentence.
But more, i wanted to write more

what would you write of? 
Her. i'd highlight paragraphs of her

so tuesday, what happens?
It's not in my control

what do you want to happen?
For her to treasure me as I do her, for an answer to my love

and if that doesn't happen?
I would have to let go of someone who means the world to me

would that make you happy?
no

do you think it would make her happy?
no

then why?
Because I tried my very best

how would you feel after?
I wont feel