They might not easily apprehend, but they can do,
and doing’s the battle I get them to attend.
To send them out with grocery lists and day-to-days;
milk, bread, whatever I yen for between bread, they’ll even
plate it carefully so I can keep on teasing out this stuff.
Parties, several at once, they drink like cops
filling late-month quotas, engage the feckless
literati with The Phaedrus while I seduce their wives.
That means course enrolment. Tuition. Tough;
I learn to play guitar unburdened during
their job interviews. Finally fangle origami.
It’s a bit like being God, seeing myself from behind,
askance in the way you can’t but want to. The sum
of our actions define me while they live my lives
as though committing crimes. Lately we don’t look
each other in the eye. They’re not reading dictionaries
in the off hours. Unfashionably late, on the skive
at the local, making fools of me. Unviable.
Soon and earlier than they think, with such retrograde
expectancy, they’ll drown in the last air left them.
So it’s a waiting game. Time for a fresh start; tonight
I’ll hit the town and rake the coals they’ve left. I am
going to wear my favourite shirt, the brown one. Or am I.
Cyclops
There are envelopes with plastic windows,
they won’t stop searching for you. Feeling owed,
when the last shopper’s off the streets in bed,
your late carnations on the kitchen table fed
with 7-Up for perk, the kids asleep unwashed,
each blind eye will throw another unabashed
glance, and find nobody but the television left on
long after the collector had rung the bell and waited,
his watch face, and his own, unmoving, wan.
Not that there was much else he anticipated.
Dialectic Concerning the Deity’s Benevolence
The bus is moving awfully slowly. Has it slowed down?
You know, of course, if it continues to move this slowly
we’ll have to get off and take a cab. I feel that the bus driver
indicated through his body language that we’d arrive at
the route 12 connection, though he never did verbalize this.
Jonathan, you have to stop focusing on the bus,
it’s something you can’t control, and you’re causing
yourself unnecessary stress because of it. Try to
think of something else.
I know, it’s just very difficult to stop, when I can’t tell
whether the bus driver understands that the bus needs
to be at the connection to bus 12 at 4:00 p.m.
Jonathan, please try to think of something else. The bus
and the bus driver are beyond your control. He needs to rest
at the main stops in order to keep to his schedule, so that
people who are expecting him at a specific time
don’t miss the bus because he’s gone too quickly.
I know, but it’s very hard. It’s difficult to stop. At least
my obsession will stop in, oh, six weeks or so. Maybe
he’s prone to slowing down through this section of his route.
He may be inclined to do that.
Jonathan, please stop thinking about the bus.
Why not try to think about more constructive things,
or more pleasant things, like the sunshine?
Yes, the sunshine is all around me. The sunshine is blah.
Every time I look up, the sun is there. But this bus is still waiting
at a stop, and while the bus driver may be inclined to do that,
we will very likely miss our connection to bus 12,
unless we get off now and get a cab.
Jonathan, stop it right now. You have to stop
obsessing about these things beyond your control.
Yes, I know, but it’s very difficult for me to stop
once I’ve begun thinking about how we need
to get to the connection for bus 12. I know
I’ll stop when … perhaps the bus only appears to be
going more slowly than it once was, though in fact
it’s travelling at exactly the speed it needs to be travelling.
Jonathan, the more you say it’s difficult for you
to stop thinking about something, the more difficult
it becomes for you to stop thinking about it.
But we have to connect with the 12 at 4:00 p.m,
and it’s 4:00 p.m. now, and he’s been idling here
at a minor stop for an inordinate amount of time.
In all likelihood the bus driver has stopped here
at this minor stop rather than the main stop up ahead.
Perhaps he’s stopped here to wait rather than the next stop.
You don’t think he’ll stop up ahead to wait again, do you?
We’ve been waiting at this stop for quite a long time now.
Excuse me. Excuse me, bus driver.
Jonathan! Stop that immediately. You are not going to start
questioning the bus driver about his decisions and the job
he’s doing. It embarrasses me and insults him.
But I just want to discover why he’s waiting
at this minor stop. For all of the waiting we’ve done
we could have been downtown by now, and we
wouldn’t have missed our connection with bus 12.
He’s doing everything he does for a reason, and it is not
necessarily all related to our needs specifically. Do you think
you know his job better than he does?
Well, I don’t know …
Have you ever driven a bus before?
Do you think you could do a better job?
I don’t know. I mean, did you get a look at him?
First, myself. Then her, for it will always end with her, no matter how I may deviate in the telling. Where better to begin than the ergo sum, that essential component of so simple yet decisive a formula. For you see, in order to clarify the sordid, cloudy motives of my actions you must understand the me-ness of them. Le moi. The my. The mind. Did I say mind?