Memories of a gallery

Making meaning. Can that be a calling?

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conduit

fingers blindly falling

vomiting poetry

verse coming out of my ears

words from my hands

words made of fears

that nothing ever will ever be

enough

we know it’s tough

we know

below

and to the left

of the main figure

the artist has hidden a self-portrait

reflected upside down in the bowl of that one spoon

laid beside the sugar

painted so well you expect to see yourself

(2022)

[Working through some personal goals in a journal, I wrote the first four lines unconsciously. Once I noticed, the rest became inevitable.]

Why I say I’m ‘ruined’

an overhead view of the night sky through a twisting rocky canyon

Never not new. Never not the stranger. The kid from overseas who looks normal but speaks weird.  The unbaptized kid at the Catholic school, mouthing liturgy at morning mass because I’ve never heard it before (and imagine the brass of my parents to have straight up lied to the superintendent to get me a placement.) The one with weird hair. The nerd. The suck-up (I never, because if you’re a clever and quiet student, the teachers will suck up to you.) 

The drop-out.

But it’s not a bad thing. None of these are bad things. I don’t put much faith in categories like bad/good, which seem firm and logical but are wholly subjective. It is, as one says, as it is.  This is what happened, and it cannot be changed.

So then why do I say these events I describe ‘ruined’ me?  Ruining implies a pristine state that can be defiled. To say a woman is ‘ruined’ used to (and in many cases still does) mean that she fucked before her wedding day.  Ruined cities litter the earth, relics of human ambition, testaments to mortality’s deft hand and the way that all things end.  Was I ever whole? Pristine? Or was that bit about Original Sin saying something else? 

We are all stardust, strung together in fragile molecular webs that break and heal and break and heal and break until they cannot heal.  No wonder we die, for surely it becomes too much, this being alive, this always being given things to touch and lose and want and find.  We die and become stardust again. Is that the ruin?  My too clear seeing of these webs, my fervent need to say “look, do you see the glory woven through it all?”

I believed in other worlds.  All these things were proof.  These moments, these shifts, these odd exposures I call the things that ruined me.  Evidence that other worlds were real and that you could go to them. That nothing I saw around me had to be the way it was. That the future was full of more than the present could hold.

Is it the future yet?

WHAT RUINED ME Episode 6: A pack of Chippendales playing cards

a muscular man's bare torso reflected in a shadowy mirror

Not only because it was fifty-two images of nearly naked men, but because I stole it from my mother’s sock drawer and brought it to school to show my schoolmates.  If I could have only stayed that popular when I changed schools the following year…I might not be writing this sardonic internet commentary about the fleetingness of fame and my propensity for causing trouble.

I got away with it that time, and returned the cards to my mother’s drawer.  It’s so long ago, but there are faint memories of creeping into her room to revisit the cards.  Much of a muchness, fifty-two oiled torsos, numerous thighs, and in the centre of each, a satin or leather-clad implication of what men were really like.   

I knew so few men in those days. My parents had separated and my father lived overseas. My mother didn’t date and had a modest social circle, and so my interactions with adult men were limited to teachers.  Growing up, attraction and response were a muddle.  I was almost always surprised when someone kissed me. I almost always chose to kiss them back.  

There’s a specific absence in my upbringing.  When others were being warned off sex, being taught it was vile, evil, degrading, dangerous, I learned nothing.  This hasn’t harmed me over the long term, though I have made some spectacularly bad decisions.  People who learn to fear sex also make bad decisions, and hate themselves while doing so.  Between the two, I know what I’d choose.

In case of emergency, fill glass

If you have a rich inner dialog , one of those voices is probably the bartender.  Allow them to delight your many selves with one of the following recipes, crafted to unpick the neural knots of decades of compulsive overstimulation.  Choose from:

The Civil Service

Black tea with a side of buttered toast.  May be served continually and at any time throughout the day as required to maintain decorum

The Ersatz

Steamed milk with instant decaf to provide the experience of a latte made with high-grade espresso, but without interfering with your meds

The Sidestep

Literally any drink that will effectively distract you from craving alcohol

(All recipes by The Fixer, some fairly insignificant rights reserved)

seo

a fluffy Pomeranian dog in glasses and a sweater works hard at his computer like a good doggo!!

the algorithm told me to post poems on a Thursday

the algorithm thinks that poems rhyme

the algorithm doesn’t think

it’s only code

two digits

what happens if I don’t fi

WHAT RUINED ME Episode 5: A copy of Fetish Times

closeup of a woman's back, tied with hemp shibari ropes

There was that time I was coming down after a semi-licit rave at a downtown ballet studio.  I’d only just met the woman whose apartment we were in, though she knew some of my friends. It must have been spring, for the room was full of sunlight.

The woman was a dominatrix. Messily beautiful, twice my age. I am quite sure that if she tried to fuck me I would have said yes. Instead I read the magazine Fetish Times.

It was 1994. The internet was barely a word. No smartphones, no cameras, no 3.5 million search results and nothing to Google it from (sorry Netscape, you did your best.) We still called it cyberpunk, for fuck’s sake.  Then adolescent me picked up one of western culture’s strangest artefacts and the bottom dropped out of the world. Thanks to the imprinting effects of psychedelics, there was no coming back.

I was appalled. I read it cover to cover. No one noticed. They talked about San Francisco in the 1980s, about tweakers on roller-skates and failed revolutions. I read about…stuff.

Why do we want it so weird? Who told me to ask my first lover to pour hot wax on me, the third time I ever had sex?  That was before I’d seen the magazine. He asked what I wanted and that’s what I wanted.  We were barely dating. I just went to his house to fuck. To smoke hash. To read his mind-bendingly seditious books and fantasise about changing the world.

Am I ready?

Are you?

Hardwired

it was always an experiment.  for the first time it wasn’t a journal, and that had always been the problem.  too much churning, mucky pointlessness in those, a daily spilling of mud on a porcelain floor that had to be mopped up again and again. 

this was to be a handprint in wet concrete, a tiny, temporary thing that never went away, disrupting an impervious façade, a reminder of the beauty in incompleteness.  Humans disrupt.  We are hardwired to want.

Days of the Weak

Wednesday is the Friday of the soul

Thursday is the Friday of the heart

Friday is the Friday of the loins

Saturday is the suspension of disbelief

Sunday is the apology

Monday is

Tuesday is the Wednesday of the mind

Wednesday is the Friday of the soul

23 02 2022

Not For Trade

or

“Do you ever get the feeling you’ve been cheated?”

I don’t align with all of Brian Eno’s public opinions, but I can’t find fault with him on the subject of NFTs.  Like him, I can’t say that I’ve ever understood why they need to exist.  How does making something owned make it better?  “A person claims exclusive ownership of this.”  So fucking what?  If anything, the thing owned has lost value, because now it is removed from public meaning-making. 

Putting your art on the NFT marketplace fees like fighting other artists for the coins some rich idiot tossed from the upper deck of the RMS Titanic. We’re all going to die in about an hour, but by all means, let’s fight for that silver. Something to grip in our teeth on the way down. Something to pay the ferryman.

Crypto-bros like to think they’re anarchists, but the point of anarchism (not anarchy, but capital-A Anarchism, as in the political philosophy of localized self-governance, with special emphasis on governance) isn’t to “fuck the system” but to create a system that is incapable of fucking us.  There’s still going to have to be A System. None of the comforts of the modern world exist without a cohesive society with ample financial resources. If we burn the world, the internet goes too. Oops.

The more we do what crypto-bros think is best, the less livable the world becomes. Right down to, where do they think their microwaveable pizza crust comes from?  Their own ingenuity?  Or hundreds of workers in a supply chain that will collapse if we keep burning the world by mining cryptocurrency. There will be no pizza. No Soylent, no poké bowl delivered by an Ubereats driver whose take won’t cover the cost of the gas to get it to your house.  If push comes to shove, the crypto-bros can always eat each other.  Looks like they’ve already begun.