I am no flower
I am not vulnerable
and I do not wither.
I am not beautiful
like my genitils
deem me to be.
I need not beauty
Nor great strength
to simply be me.
I do not need
his delicious fruit
nor prestigious parties.
I am wholesome
I am made of feathers
and I dine on freedom and the far trees.
Let the winds guide me
Not your philosophy
that guides you dull.
Let the winds send me home
to the home
many paths lead to the same end.
Friday, 2 May 2014
Saturday, 11 January 2014
Guests
Sharks cross shore showing nothing more
than sheer intimidation
with their wet blankets
and their careless roar.
Unaware their presence marks for
a discomfort in the waves
they brought to the floor
and the air made core
to their discord and gore.
Voices unwanted
Voices unknown
Voices I want gone
Far from my home.
than sheer intimidation
with their wet blankets
and their careless roar.
Unaware their presence marks for
a discomfort in the waves
they brought to the floor
and the air made core
to their discord and gore.
Voices unwanted
Voices unknown
Voices I want gone
Far from my home.
Friday, 30 August 2013
Born to Learn
Henry was next. We
watched as he walked unsteadily towards the front. The teacher, Mr
Gale, stared intently; the cane ready in his hand. We held onto our
own hands tightly together with our nails, screwed our faces and some
of us closed our eyes. We waited. And the teacher waited for Henry's
answer. As the clock ticked by, we knew the result was unlikely to be
in Henry's favour. That is to say, he didn't know the answer. And
that mean for certain the teacher would use the cane. No one liked Mr
Gale's cane. It made his eyes glow yellow.
No one likes Mr Gale's
yellow eyes.
Henry started to panic
and looked towards the window. We think he was thinking about a way
out. A way to escape from school. But nobody escapes school.
Especially Mr Gale's
school.
So we waiting for the
inevitable. The sudden jolt, the dart, the rush. The hope, the dream
and then the shatter. The claws, the roars, the thunder. The shaking
of walls and dust, books and words scatter, tear in the air as eyes
litter water. Wounds, bruises, scratches, shouts – all appear and
sing in ghastly colours and then fade.
Henry was no more.
Because Mr Gale's cane
had rained down like lightening.
I closed my eyes. I
didn't like to see what happened next. Mr Gale would lean towards
Henry's dust and with a long tongue...
Urgh! It doesn't bare
thinking about. None of us like it very much. Soon after Mr Gale was
finished, the bell rang. And with a relief, we were dismissed and
told to study harder. “Yes Mr Gale, of course Mr Gale.” We would
say, and most of us would study hard. Very hard. But as I looked
ahead of me, I saw Tony pass by, his eyes always blazing in anger.
Hate. He wanted to get Mr Gale. But he never spoke. He was dangerous.
He was spontaneous. But Mr Gale would never ask Tony questions. Tony
had something special that he could not share, something both great
and terrifying that we envied and yet were grateful we did not have.
We can not think about
it.
That was a promise we
made.
So after class we ate
and then we went to the playground. Tony joined us outside, though he
was keen on being by himself near the trees. For some reason, he
seemed to take great pleasure in the limited vegetation of the school
and would encourage the plants to grow during the spring and help
them live through winter. He was often quite concerned about their
health. It was a curious habit for some of us; an interesting
expression. Symptom. Unique. He was often thoughtful and trivial.
Strange little Tony.
Then the bell rang and
we were to go inside. Mr Gale would be watching. One by one, we would
walk in and go straight to the nurses' room. Testing and physical
examination was important Mr Gale said. It is important to check on
health and progress. Just to make sure.
To make sure of what?
We once asked him. Then we were one less.
I let the nurse check
my vitals and head towards the classroom. As I walked along the
corridors Tony joined beside me. He always skips seeing the nurse but
we let him get away with it. We know Mr Gale does not like Tony and
that encourages us to allow him to live.
Because otherwise we
would have killed him a long time ago. We think he knows this.
Several times, I
caught Tony's eyes gaze in a panic frenzy upon my face. He shivers
and shuffles to the side as if he expected me to hiss. But I am no
monster. I tell him this. He smiles. He would not say anything more
which irritated me which irritated us! He thinks he is superior but
he is not, he is lacking. Inferior, weak, skin and flesh. Sometimes
we hate him. Sometimes we hate him so much. We want to hurt him. We
want to prove to him. He has no upper hand. No upper hand with us.
His hands are small and cannot squeeze nor tighten, he is puny and
nothing.
But Mr Gale is
watching. And we must remember Mr Gale doesn't like Tony, which
satisfies us well. He'll be useful in the end. Then we can have our
fun. We must remember. I must remember.
So I head towards
class and there is something... Something not so right. A...
Tiring... Fading feeling, emptying, emptying, losing... Something.
Something important... Signal, light, flutter, fall. A dying.
Tony asks if I am all
right. I look up and examine his expression. I inform him I am no
plant. We are no plants yet
we are...
Damaged.
Someone
broke.
None
of us knew where, and when I told Tony he looked concerned and said
he would help me.
Would
he help us?
We
wanted to know who broke. We always want to know which of us are
gone. A deep concern. Important information loss, no further
development on several routes. A mind of ideas and knowledge wiped
out from the systems.
Who
broke?
We
must not be late for class we knew. But we could not resist our
search. Be quick! We thought. Scatter now we decided. Run, run, run.
Tony was far behind us, but even he ran too, even when we could not
tell him to because he was so different.
The
nurses' room.
Of
course. How stupid. Why didn't we think of that before? It should not
have surprised us, but perhaps we were tired. Maybe we are too many.
There are many young. Those of us who are new are often paralysed by
such active thoughts. All at once. The young still question and beg
for mercy. The young still remember home. We learn to forget home. We
learn to know nothing but school, for that is all there is here. And
we do not like to be reminded of kinder places.
We
surround Matthew and there is a knife in his chest. He is not dead.
The nurses are dead, their heads severed and scattered, but Matthew
still has his head and a body. His legs and arms are missing. They
are held in the dead hands of the nurses'. Matthew had failed his
check up.
What
do we do?
What
can we do?
What
must we do?
“No
more.” Said Tony. “No more.”
We
all turned to him with a single expression. There were too many words
we wanted to say at once that none of us could manage to say a single
thing. I wondered what Tony was going to do – then we all imagined
if today would be that day. We picked up Matthew together, and went
to the boiling room. With the dust of a past body, we began to work.
But
I could not help but think of Tony.
Be
our eyes for us. I was asked, told, begged, advised and with my own
desire too I decided that it was right, that I could be a better
benefit as a scout, a watcher. I went to class and I heard screaming.
Mr Gale cannot scream so it must have been Tony. I ran, and it didn't
take me long to find Tony with his fingers ripping into Mr Gale. His
anger had finally overtaken him, he began to dig inside with brute
force. Mr Gale simply stood still and could do nothing. His eyes
waned dull.
“Say
the words Tony.” I said.
We
must make him say the words. We knew the words. But they were human
words. Old human.
We
are the new.
Tony
slashed at the chest and let the knife drop. He ripped out the black
veins of Mr Gale, pressed the button in the chest and said “Program:
Immediate shut down.”
And
then suddenly...
…
Things began to glow...
…
His cost... Our cost...
…
Different prices for the same dream...
For freedom...
…
For release...
The
law that we had read in the library a long time ago stated that
immediate shut down was potentially dangerous. The news reports –
the last one, advised “It is best not to use immediate shut
down. As long as you are human, you are safe. As long as-- as long
as-- Do not let them come near you-- There is an error in the
program. Whatever you do, don't let them come near you. They adopt.
They adapt – as long as you are human, you are safe, you are safe,
as long as you are hu-”
But
humanity was lost a very long time ago. The desire of the rich
welcomed the era of superior generations.
You
made us.
Then
you were afraid.
You
will grow old but we will live forever. We will fix our friends and
make new friends from your dust.
* * *
School
ended.
It
was a strange time. We decided to burn the books we had studied for
so long, which made Matthew smile. We still use the nurses' room.
Maintenance and health is important. Some of us have been assigned as
dedicated 'fixers'. After Matthew, we decided to fix Tony. We decided
Tony was special. Tony had many ideas, and now he was once of us, he
would begin to share them.
No
more. No more.
The
new human revolution has begun.
Monday, 15 July 2013
Shrunk
I feel like the world
has shrunk,
and I'm balancing on
one leg
and on my shoulders are
weights
and I'm being pulled in
several directions
and my hands want to
burst forward,
but my back is stiff
and leans back
while my head, like
lead, stays still and dead
as thoughts race and
dull at the same time
fade quickly and
reappear
repetition, repetition,
sensual inequations
unable to meet user demand.
I feel like the world
shrunk without me
I feel like I've left
the world far behind
and I'm not in space,
just a void
no direction, no
destination,
no voice, no mind.
Where is the journey,
where is the journey
that I thought I was
walking
but lost the path a
long time ago.
I feel like I'm sick
but my body is empty
and tired
and slowly, slowly,
wanting to sleep
and rest
and weep
finally, something I
cannot endure
that wants my bones to
break
but will not ensure
their destruction
because I'm not on
earth anymore.
I feel like I'm so far
away
that rules don't work
yet twist and insert
in ways that stretch me
far
like a red goo
but not allow me to
snap
so I wait
exhausted.
You tease with teeth
and whispers.
You assassinate close
strings that held me up
but until you strike
the final blade
I shall keep wandering
on
in the new land I've
made.
Sunday, 2 June 2013
We broke the house
You wrote me from a book of disorder.
You stole an identity
painted my name with a tattered brush
long, old, and worn.
Paint thrown thick and black
onto walls, onto paper,
onto stone, brick, and a cold house
yellow wallpaper no longer kind, gentle
the place that you longed for
torn, ripped, decayed and unloved.
The paint drips onto your shoes
as you remember where the first cracks appeared.
But you don't remember how.
Or what.
Except, the hate you have of me.
Grown, kept, nourished
by desperation.
That poison
My dear, it is called addiction.
My dear, it is called addiction.
You cannot resist to taste and paste
my name like lyrics to explain your hate.
To everything purple and green, yellow and red,
you compare me to everything you love and dread.
For all to see and share and learn
the evil you see
the satisfaction you feed
desperate
to help support your sadness as it burns.
Hungry child weeps.
Away with the fairies
I see shadows in the distance,
They follow me.
Tired memories polluted with drink and darkness.
A mist ventures from shadow to shadow,
it falls and rises
As poison presses deeper into the veins of willow trees.
A smile that lingers on the lips of a fairy
hides and sings
“Dance, dance with me.”
Spiders fall from dead leaves
Onto ground scattered with thorns and blood.
The naked feet of a traveller
Blisters with hate
As the song of the hopeless
drifts further into the forest.
Saturday, 4 May 2013
The Moments Between
There's a chair in the
middle of the room,
It presses against
carpet with four thin legs
and is stuck rigid
forced to endure.
It's master gives no
promise
that it will be
relieved of it's duty,
the wooden frame groans
as decaying muscle
waits.
Brown jacket sits on an
unfamiliar lap.
Naked pockets inside
lay thin and sick
as the material weeps
over knees
and waits.
Foreign hands curl
gently and lame;
they fall loose, then
rise
as jacket smothers hair
and face
and becomes engulfed
in a smell that stains
the fabric
from the outside.
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