No Such Thing
As fair
and
Square.
Time contends
Duality
Over
Blunt equality—
The Loved
And
The Beloved
Rarely take
The same
Seat.
As fair
and
Square.
Time contends
Duality
Over
Blunt equality—
The Loved
And
The Beloved
Rarely take
The same
Seat.
“I wish to preach, not the doctrine of ignoble ease, but the doctrine of the strenuous life, the life of toil and effort, of labor and strife; to preach that the highest form of success which comes, not to the man who desires mere easy peace, but to the man who does not shrink from danger, from hardship, or from bitter toil, and who out of these wins the splendid ultimate triumph.”
—T.R.
.
.
Having been very much of a slave lately, I couldn’t help but to have found some affirmation from this very true—albeit a little theatrical speech excerpt.
“However strong Dylan Lokensgard’s yearning to fit in, to win acceptance, to love and to be loved, he could not defeat the unseen forces which direct behavior.
In the struggle between our desire to determine who and what we will be, and the identity which biology defines for us, there can only be one outcome.
But even in victory, there are forces biology cannot defeat—the stirrings of the soul; the mysteries of desire; the simple truth that the heart wants, what the heart wants.”
— Scully’s Monologue, Lord of the Flies, X Files.
“Perhaps you thought you were in love—that was a long time ago.”
—Bond speaking to Severine.
The clockworks of the underworld
Are easy to know—
Fuel all doubts with
Adrenaline and ecstasy,
Place an elusive smirk
Across the cheeks,
And be prepared to do anything—
Beneath its apparent safety,
There lies the devil
Of doggy dog
Full of animal instincts;
Play nonchalant,
Relax the shoulders,
And enjoy the circus.
But keep your eyes
Peeled;
Ready two-plus ways out
Lest it begins to prowl.
.
.
.
The cheap tricks;
The toxified glee;
Milieus of afraid and dangerous
Deadbeats.
You know your ways around it,
Have seen the poor bastards
Who were forced to bleed.
You were never one of them,
But never were you
One among the survival creatures
Of the suicidal, daily Races.
After my first formal attempt—after years of desiring after it, to give myself a full haircut, this is how the person in the mirror responded:
Realizations:
1) There will never be a shortage of barbers.
2) For those who dared themselves time after time to cut their own hair, you have my deepest respect: the trials and tribulations are unfathomable to me, personally.
3) My barber and I do not speak the same language; it used to agitate me greatly; yet, at the end of the day, I cannot live without her (Vanity? No. Loyalty.)
4) If you are new to cutting your own hair, make sure you do not have to get up early for work the next morning.
In the face of defeat and adversity, have you falsely convinced yourself much too stern?
Turning a blind eye to sentimentality, are you truly the strong, or merely the broken and the lost, disguising themselves behind the bloated exterior of strict functionality? Mixed in with a few splashes of angst and fury?
Are you sick to death, of having tenderness, your mighty strength, mistaken for cowardice & gullibility? So much so, that in effort to avert it, that you have lost yourself in rigidness?
What are you really afraid of, feeling constantly exposed, or eventually turning irrevocably numb?
.
.
.
In the light of recent events, I have perhaps appealed too much to stiffness, and forgot that tears, during special occasions, are necessary. The rain comes down with all its inconveniences, but it causes the desert to bloom again.