Tuesday, February 24, 2009

"Can we just flash forward..."

Can we just flash forward
to the petty, sweaty, fumbling,
tumbling grope and grab
presaged by your first breathy
grunt of "You're so hot" in my ear,
warm moist exhalation and chin stubble
just as irritating as this untoward advance?

I know myself all too well-
I have lived this night
too many times and
I am so fucking tired
of swallowing my nausea
of subsuming my pride
of sacrificing my self
to testosterone's
hair-trigger
and of being repulsed
by any touch the morning after.
My cup runneth over.
Old news.
I quit.
Who's next?

(copyright a(scetic)verse, February 24, 2009)

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Toward Iconoclasm

This first legitimate taste of truth,
a scant sip from nectar's vein,
sates not, but stings.

You, who are lotus of flesh,
who are nectar of blood,
blood of aubergine hue,
you, in your giving of gifts,
play Siren, Scylla, and saint.

Yon Doppelganger:
     as Lazarus, in your solitude sleep;
     as Midas, ruin whatever you may touch;
     as Pilate, cruciate pain bestow;
     and as Eros, let your arrow go.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, February 5th, 2009)

Someday Morning

Mine eyes arise
to the Someday morning light.
I do not know when I am
and his arm
across my chest subsumes
any sense I may have had of where.
I am tightly wrapped in my head,
my sheets, and some ephemeral worldview.
Someday is the atheist's sabbath,
no one day any more holy than the rest.

The first experience of each day
is rebirth by radiation piercing
past the thin flesh
which hides one sixth of oneself.
That I am changed is evident.
With each breath I exhale some
dead part of myself, an exhausted
vestige of yesterday's person. I have had
enough of that body. I am happy to
pass it on, not because I must but because
one man's trash is another's life-sustaining
treasure. And this is why I am never afraid
to take the next breath. No death is so
life-affirming as my own.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, February 7th, 2009)

Monday, February 2, 2009

In-Class Prompt beginnings

None of us knew the colour of the sky, the delicate blend of post-storm hues, though that there had been a heavy storm we were fully aware. We had marched through this desolate cityscape for days, wrists bound tight with thick kudzu vines torn from this skyscraper or that. Our blindfolds began to itch and stink following the torrential rains, the strips of leather rancid with sweat and stormwater. Our eyes glanced level; there was nowhere else for an eye to drift, no reason to cast looks in any direction.

Slavers were far too common now. The city police were more concerned with feeding their families than upholding the laws of a dead institution. What justice can there be when a man must watch his infant simultaneously shrivel and swell from the ravages of malnutrition? These changing times brought on waves of change. And so some had to adapt, to respond to the pressures of an irresponsible anarchy.

Project Mayhem had been so thorough in its execution that Durden was practically deified. The day he burned the original copy of the Constitution had been the tipping point, the inception of a new religion in this poor excuse for a nation, a faith in chaos that birthed a future of

(written from the perspective of a great-great(whatevergreats)-granddaughter of Marla Singer. Fight Club woooo! more to come very soon. i'm intrigued by myself)
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