Tuesday, March 23, 2010

HOW TO WRITE A POEM


Friday, March 26, 2010

HOW TO WRITE A POEM

By Philip Cairns

Copyright 2010 by Philip Cairns

Never use the word “I” in a poem:
“I”, as in, "I am so deliciously happy."
It's too personal.
Not intellectual enough.

Your audience only wants to hear obscure, abstract concepts,
Like love and romance
And things that even you, the writer, can’t comprehend.
People don’t want to hear your fears and secrets.
They like to hear about inanimate things,
Like daffodils or starfish or sunsets.

If your audience doesn’t understand your poem,
They will be ecstatic.
People with University degrees can sit around at Starbucks
Discussing what you really meant when you wrote,
“Epiphanies of pink sunsets
Dithered by sheltering orange umbrellas
In dire juxtapositions.”

Of course, they will be totally wrong in their interpretations.
They’ll never know that you were being devious.
You deliberately wrote some silly nonsense,
To confuse and stimulate them.

Get out your Thesaurus, writers.
Open the dictionary.
Find words that no one has heard of,
Like “genitive”.
Stick that in your poem.
That’ll thrill your audience.

Don’t write:
“I felt so desperately lonely when I was young.”
Mix it up to confound them.
Write: “Young felt desperately I,
When confound them lonely was.”
You will be helping teachers all over the world.

In English class when they study your poem,
And of course they will,
It will give teachers a chance to include an essay question
Asking students what the poet really meant
When he, or she, wrote those lines.

“Gibbering giblets glopping glockenspiels
In tethered tinkling tantrums over tittering tetracycline.”
What is the poet getting at?
I don’t have a clue.
But that’s what it’s all about, people.

Of course, there’s no need to mention the “f” word
In your poetry, either.
People have been known to mess their pants
When they hear that word at poetry readings.
Perhaps you, the poet, could sell “Depends” diapers,
As well as your chapbooks,
At the merchandise table.
You will become even richer.

Yes, keep them guessing.
Don’t write:
“I attempted suicide when I was 16”.
That’s too simple and concise.
Reality will shock them.
Try this, instead:
“Suicide was a silly anachronism,
When 16 was a bricklayer’s paradigm.”

What does it mean?
Who knows?!
Let the audience figure it out.
That’s their job.
Or give it to your professor.
Get her to explain it to you.

Well, that’s it for today.
Thank you.
Boy, I really fucking enjoyed that.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

AMETHYST AND EMERALDS


Wednesday, March 24, 2010

AMETHYST AND EMERALDS

By Philip Cairns

Copyright 2010 by Philip Cairns

I placed a hunk of amethyst inside my mouth.
I thought it could cure me of Tourette’s syndrome.
It felt cool and delicious,
Like orchids in a crimson crystal vase.

I’m in love with amethyst.
The deeper the purple, the better.
I buy it by the truck-load.
Brooches, rings, pendants, uncut chunks.

I long for a really good tumble in the hay.
Sweaty, passionate, messy, sweet.
Devouring my partner like a rich bar of dark chocolate.
Slurping, gobbling and rolling around.

Diamonds cascaded from the ceiling of my bachelor apartment, one magical night.
They dazzled and blinded me, as they fell to the floor.
I almost choked, there were so many.
I know they won’t accept them at the grocery store.

Tumbled semi-precious stones, every colour of the rainbow,
Sit inside 2 glass pyramids on my kitchen table.
My psychotic ex-lover might get coked up and smash them to bits.
Thank God I only see him once a year.

Art covers the walls of the actor’s tiny co-op.
Watercolours, coloured pencil drawings, acrylic paintings, photographs.
If he were rich, it would be works by Monet, Renoir, Dali.
No matter: it’s great to support Canadian artists.

Richard Burton loved to buy exquisite jewels for Elizabeth Taylor.
A king’s ransom for every stone imaginable.
Emeralds, rubies, citrine, jade.
Diamonds drip from her like a waterfall.

Most artists struggle and starve.
Working boring shit jobs, on Welfare, teaching.
Still, they churn out their magnificent art.
Nothing stands in their way: only the inner critic tearing things to shreds.

I’m an ass man.
I adore a hard bubble-butt.
Silky and smooth as a baby.
It’s like eating watermelon on a hot, stifling summer day.

If I commit suicide,
I might come back as a diseased baby in Africa,
Dying of malnutrition.
Better to stick around here and face the daily battle.

My beautiful piece of finely cut amethyst
Sits in a delicate, carved gold setting.
Wish I knew when or where the brooch was made.
My heart quickens every time I look at it.

As you get older, you get to know your doll frame body so well.
What it likes, doesn’t like.
What it needs, can live without.
If you could read my mind, you’d slap my face.

Bury me in a coffin full of chunks of raw amethyst.
Throw in some sapphires and quartz crystals.
Burn me on a funeral pyre in Varanasi.
Then scatter my ashes to the sea in Hawaii.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

It's your last night...


On Tuesday, I watched one of my favourite films with my regular movie posse.  It's "Last Night" which came out around the time when Armageddon and Deep Impact and all those end of the world films were coming out for the year 2000.

"Last Night" is a Canadian take on it starring Don McKeller and Sandra Oh (LOVE HER!).  It's the last night - there's no ifs, ands, or buts about it.  So how would you spend it?  Would you finally put on that concert that you dreamed of?  Would you fulfill every sex fantasy?  Would you have one final Christmas with the fam?  Would you blow your brains out prior to the end?  Or would you simply want to be alone?

Post film chatter brought me to no conclusion.  I don't know how I would want to spend my final night.  I'd like to see my family, I'd like to spend it with my partner, I'd love to see parts of the world that I've never experienced, and the list goes on.

If you knew with 100% certainly that tonight would be your last...how would you spend it?

Monday, March 15, 2010

CHILD SEXUALITY


Thursday, June 12, 2008/March 15, 2010

CHILD SEXUALITY

By Philip Cairns

Copyright 2010 by Philip Cairns

Once, when I was a teenager,
In the last century,
I was walking down Yonge Street,
Near the Eaton Centre,
On a clear, spring day.
I had probably just seen a movie
Since I went to a lot of films, in those days.

I came upon a drunken bum following a blonde woman and her young son,
Down the street.
(I want to call her Verna.)
Verna looked in her early 30s, I recall.
The little boy was maybe 7 or 8.
(I’ll call him Bobby
And the wino, Rabbit.)
Verna was holding Bobby’s hand and fleeing from Rabbit,
Who was saying lewd and obscene things to Bobby.
Rabbit was describing sexual things he wanted to do to Bobby,
And chuckling, fiendishly.
Verna was aghast, needless to say, and speechless.
“Oh, oh, you’re a horrible man,” I think she said,
As she rushed up the street in broad daylight.

I was truly shocked, I must admit.
I, myself, was maybe 16 or 17
And had certainly fantasized
About doing these naughty, sexual activities
With boys my own age and young, handsome men,
But had not had much experience,
Except for a few furtive, sleazy gropings
In dirty cinema washrooms,
The kind that used to play a triple bill
Of second run movies,
Like “Paranoia” starring Carroll Baker
And “Hang ‘Em High” with Clint Eastwood and Inger Stevens.

Never, before or since,
Have I seen such a shocking, incredible incident on the street,
Such as the one with Verna and Bobby and Rabbit.
Verna is probably 70, by now.
Rabbit has been dead for several decades.
Verna sent Bobby to a child psychiatrist
To try to cure him of his nightmares.
Now, Bobby drinks at home in his empty house
And sends child support payments
To his bitter and angry ex-wife.

What repercussions did this incident have,
Which happened way back around 1970?
I imagine Bobby didn’t know what Rabbit was talking about,
And Verna maybe only liked the missionary position
When she and her husband made love twice a month.

Five years later,
When I was fully grown, and skinny and beautiful
And miserable and fucked-up,
I used to cut the hair of a pretty,
Mediterranean-looking woman named Marie.
She lived in a perfectly located house in downtown Toronto
With her 3 year old, curly-haired son, who was totally adorable.
I would pick him up and hold him
And we would talk because I really liked him
And I think the feeling was mutual.

One day, Timmy,
(I can’t remember his real name)
Told me about something that had happened in the park.
I didn’t understand what he was talking about,
So I just said, “Isn’t that nice!”
And let him blather on.

Marie rented out rooms, in the house,
And wore tons of silver bangles on her wrists,
And always looked like she was ready
To take a walk on trendy Queen Street West.

As I cut her black, gorgeous hair,
Marie was upset and freaking out about Timmy.
Some older boys had forced him to suck their cocks
In the park, the day before.
“I don’t care if he turns out to by gay,” she said.
“I just don’t want him to be forced to suck dick, now.”

There was another woman in the room.
We tried to reassure Marie
That no permanent damage had been done to Timmy.
But nothing we said seemed to calm her down,
Not even the joint that was passed around.
A year or so, later,
Marie was arrested for running numbers, over the phone, for a bookie.
She stopped being my client, sometime after that,
And I never saw her again.

I have no interest in having sex with children.
Children, however, are sexual beings.

I remember being 5 years old, at the old house.
My best friend was Johnny,
Who lived across the street and was pretty and blond
And also 5 years old.
We were in his basement, one day,
Before I started going to school,
(I always hated school),
While his mother was vacuuming.
We were lying on the floor,
On the soft broadloom,
In the 69 position,
Fondling each other and fingering each other’s butt holes.
His mother asked us, later, what we’d been doing,
But I’m not sure if we were caught in the act.
I can’t remember.
After all, it was over 50 years ago.
We were 2 innocent 5 year olds
Exploring each other’s bodies.

When I was a teenager,
I sold Fuller Brush items, door to door, one summer.
I went to one house and this bleach blonde woman
Opened the door and said my name.
It was the butt-hole boy’s mother.
She invited me in and I met her 2 grown children,
The ones I hadn’t seen in 12 years.
Johnny was very cute
And I would have enjoyed fingering his butt-hole,
One more time.
But, of course, I couldn’t say that.
I was still in the closet,
So I probably wouldn’t have admitted such a thing to myself,
Let alone him.

Sex is such a simple and complicated thing.
One sticks an organ in a wet orifice
And one or the other person, hopefully, has an orgasm.
It’s very cut and dried.
Child sexuality is a whole other kettle of fish.
It pushes people’s buttons, that’s for sure.
Most people don’t even want to talk,
Or even think about it.
But it happens.

Johnny is probably bald now and pays hookers to finger him,
Because his wife, long ago, said, “No more sex,”
Before she got hooked on pills and booze and depression.
His mother probably has a drool-cup resting under her chin
And a pair of dirty diapers under her soiled house dress.
Johnny visits once a month,
Hiding his baldness under a baseball cap,
And his paunch under a baggy t-shirt.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Reward Points - Let's Save!


I hate to shop, but I love to earn reward points.  It's something about knowing that my data is going through several processors and can predict what I'll buy and when in the future that causes me to get a little bit wet. ;)  What causes a waterfall of wetness is the actual earning of the points for such purchases.

As such, I'm on the hunt for what reward programs that you belong to and your thoughts on them.  

As for me, I belong to 3.

#1 - President Choice Points (aka PC points)

These are by far my favourite reward points to collect.  Why?  Cuz you can use them to buy groceries and receive 1% cash back on all your purchases used with their credit card.  Put everything on your credit card, earn points, and then buy groceries. Loblaws has gift cards for everybody at their stores, so you can use your points for essentially anything.  In the many years that I've been with this program, I've earned back thousands of dollars.  Join up with their banking and earn even more points and never pay a cent for deposits, cheques, etc.  

#2 - Air Miles

 I only joined a few weeks ago.  I know, I know...what an idiot!!!  I could've been earning points on so many purchases over the last many a years.  But I joined this one as I've installed a tool bar onto my browser and now can earn up to 30 points a month.  Woohoo!!!  No more 1 point per $20 purchase.  I just use the internet and get 30 points!!!  Hooray!!!  Google it, it's real and actually comes from Air Miles own website. 

Also, a great tip from my bf.  Go to the LCBO, look through the aisles and find the highest point getters. Yesterday, I got 7 points purchasing a pretty good 6 pack.  

#3 - Shopper's Drug Mart Points (aka Optimum Points)

I don't understand these points whatsoever.  I've had this stupid Optimum card for years and have never received anything back.  I've heard that you have to go on 50x points days, but how does one know when these are?  I only purchased stuff at this store once a month and I feel it's total rip.

Those are my 3 reward programs, which one's do you belong to?  What are your likes and hates about them?


Thursday, March 11, 2010

Can we still be queer radicals?


Is it possible to be a ‘queer radical’ despite of being in a monogamous, long-term gay relationship? One of the prominent feminists who has criticized the institution of marriage and ended up getting married herself is Gloria Steinem. She met a lot of condemnation from her fellow feminists due to her choice or decision to get married. How are we to judge this as queer theorists and/or feminists? One of the foundational principles of queer theory and feminism is choice. We conceive choice as being fundamental to the exercise of freedom. If we ended up judging people because of their choices, we end up devaluing their right to freedom. Being a queer individual who identifies as ‘radical’, I am deeply critical of same-sex marriage as a form of assimilation to the heteronormative ideologies of the society. How do we remain non-heteronormative despite of the fact that we are in a monogamous, almost heteronormative relationship? This is more of an intellectual exercise and I don’t attempt to provide an answer to this question. Being queers, I think it is fundamental for us to reject the heteronormative assumptions about sex, gender, and sexuality. We can still be ‘radical’ queers, I think, despite of the fact that we are in monogamous relationships, by emphasizing and concentrating on the ‘pleasure’ aspect of sex, rather than reproduction. Queer sex after all is about pleasure and not about reproduction. Further, we could also reject gender roles in our relationships; after all we’re not heterosexual to begin with. Some couples also choose to spice things up by adding one (or more) people in their sexual activities. This does not mean that they are breaking up the monogamous aspect of their relationship, as long as both parties consent to a three-some and not just one. I think that the biggest challenge for us queer folks in the midst of being judged by our married gay counterparts (or by our respectable same-sex couple counterparts), is to assert the fact that we still have to reject heteronormative ideas about sex, gender, and sexuality, and not judge our ‘other’ brothers and sisters who have made their own choice of not being in monogamous relationships. We should rather actively support their lifestyle choices and ours as constitutive and equal amongst other forms of non-heteronormative relationships. We should also not forget to connect our oppressions and struggles with other groups and also issues that haunt the more marginalized members within the gay community.

Friday, March 5, 2010

I love my iTouch!!!

If you don't have one, I'm sorry but you'll have to invest in one.  I freakin' love my iTouch, it's seriously my favourite gift that I've received in the longest time.

It's one of those gifts that I could've purchased myself, but I wanted to wait and see if I really wanted it.  Then I decided to let it become an x-mas gift from the fam and so I had to wait even longer.

I've had it now for over 2 months and it has yet to lose its lustre.

Seriously, here's why it's the best thing...

1) I have no patience. I had waiting in lines, etc.  Now I don't even notice.  I just whip out the iTouch and the hours just pass right by. 

2) Free stuff.  You can d/l so many free games/apps for this toy and LEGALLY!  There's just a ton of free content available at the iTunes store.  If you want to buy something, the most it'll cost is $2.99. 

3) Combines your mp3 player & gaming handheld into one.  If I really want to splurge, I could've got the iPhone, but I didn't want that.

4) Wifi - yes, you can find/steal someone's wifi and now you've got the ability to use the internet.

I love my iTouch and will continue to do so.  I'm not looking forward to the iPad.  I can't fit that into my pocket and I can read books on my iTouch.  Don't wait for the iPad, get yourself an iTouch.