guy-g:
I read somewhere that post-truth happened as soon as language was invented.
It makes a lot...

guy-g:


I read somewhere that post-truth happened as soon as language was invented.


It makes a lot of sense to me; I’m wanting to get away in a big way.


Maybe become a tide, allow my embarrassing consciousness to take on a less spherical shape.


I assume language, used in that context, means signs of any kind. The movement of the human hand, the shift of a human eye’s gaze from near to far, a wiggle of lips, human scratching, inconsistent human breathing, furrowing, gestural signs.


I think of how human babies look before their wiggling appears to be the slightest bit intentional. They’re rolling and squeezing and flipping through time and space.


That baby in my mind’s eye is really feeling it. I sniff.


How cool, I think: when we’re at our coolest we’re organized around the gentlest thing in the room.


My observations come with swallows, they feel like dead weight. I crack, I think, ok, there’s that humming in my body again, I think: occassionally people with political power will perform the organization of their interests around the gentlest thing in the room.


I haven’t prepared myself for humor. I want miracles to be funny but my desire seems stuck in the present. I chatter my crooked teeth.


Ok, I’m thinking, it doesn’t have to be a baby—no—it can be some easily forgotten thing. I fidget, I wonder if it can be language. I picture a circular room, high ceilings, with hundreds of humans bowing toward, say, a beetle, its head down, poking at the microscopic plane. I twist the spine. Language needs references.


So no longer a baby myself, I’m thinking. I’m thinking that when I feel calm or aroused, positively or negatively, I use language. Self-talk, self-adjustment. I depend on time for this.


I stop moving and post-truth.


I struggle with its origins, baked by my own psychology.


Just think of that baby, feeling it, I’m telling myself. The buzz and the ache are more like company now, neither arousal nor calm. Organization can be a painful word. Performance looms. I look toward the end of the day, what words exist there, and how they must sleep. Language can be the gentlest thing, I’m telling myself. Then I open it up:


The world doesn’t work


the world is habited


it is Sunday


and a friend speaks up


Agnes, she has never been encouraged


not enough


its infuriating


and it takes daybreak


a walk to the bus alone


not every thought added


but a single one held close


to remind the world


that it isn’t some broken thing


like angels in america


the pageant reminding us


that if we hallucinate together


we may forgive each other but not ourselves


when the other eventually disappears


and its a strike to changes of season


our sleepy love


cooling the house


settling into the closest thing to touch


so we can stay with the farthest


when it arrives


a silly beetle


a silliness that becomes habit


as its amongst us


our cheeks heated


our eyes a close up


open for long enough


they begin to drip a bit


for the sake of seeing together


a focal point that provides us


no protection


no power


no performance


no voice


no sense


for the sake of seeing together


a silly sacred wandering


that allows our organization


its time to rest


a circular room


high ceilings


but it doesn’t take hundreds


just two in need


I read somewhere that post-truth happened as soon as language was invented.


It makes a lot of sense to me; I’m wanting to get away in a big way.


Maybe become a tide, allow my embarrassing consciousness to take on a less spherical shape.


I assume language, used in that context, means you don’t feel comfortable lying anymore. It’s not February anymore. She arrives late, so its late. She arrives with an army of lovers, so its an army of lovers. She tells you to dive on the ankles of strangers. Squeeze at them with your little muscles. Baby muscles. And close your eyes. Agnes gardens Agnes. She does it through wiggles, daybreak, rolling and squeezing, light. To let a warmth in. To feel Agnes nearby now relax let it go and feel the warmth begin to move into your hips, buttocks, back, and into your abdomen, up your chest, and through your throat, to your hands with their palms and each finger, wrists and forearms, to your shoulders, into your neck, jaw, nose and ears.


Agnes is finding language so she can guide you away from all the power.


Clumsy bodies going first, Agnes needing less.  


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Published on January 05, 2018 07:59
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