Thursday 24 August 2017

Spiral Staircase

It’s a staircase for sure.
There are steps one after the other and they’re decreasing (or increasing) in height at equal decrements (or increments).
It’s definitely a spiral. I’m quite dizzy from all the circular walking.
I’ve been on this spiral staircase for a while now. A long while.
I walk endlessly, taking the odd short break.
Time is an irrelevant factor, as is direction. As variables, I have no idea of either of their values.

Sometimes I can tell. The direction I mean. Whether I’m going up or down. Most days it doesn’t matter; I just keep walking aimlessly in that same direction without being able to figure if it’s up or down. Maybe I just don’t care enough to figure if it’s up or down. Then there are those few days when it’s absolutely certain which way I’m headed. And it’s almost always most likely to be downwards.

Of course it also depends on how you look at the entire setup. In all honesty I’m the only one with the key to the giant room. Sometimes, if I’m willing, I’ll let someone else do some poking around, although it never ends well. I always end up in tears and it doesn’t look or feel like anyone cleaned the place up. It’s as though they took a pile of the mess from one side of the room to the other. I would’ve done the same anyway, just alone, with no one else’s help.

Getting back to the setup. There’s the aforementioned giant room with one key. Within it is a small room (to which the someone elses are invited for a good poke and clean up) with a view to the setup that occupies the greater remainder of the giant room. When I say giant I mean giant to the power of unimaginable vastness. A never-ending spiral staircase (the entire setup; no really that is the entire setup) floats in this interstice of a space, contorting itself, unravelling slightly, nonetheless staying a spiral, filling up the space in entirety, almost as if consuming itself.

I, but a puny little pawn, walk along this staircase, climbing step after step.
One step, two step.
Go ahead a step.
Back-up a step.
Skip a step.
Fall off the step.
Step-by-step.
Step after step.
Step, step, step.
Step, step, step, step.
Step. Step. Step.
Step.

Unfortunately when I installed the Pay-per-view, I put on a permanent zoom lens. So now if I invite someone in, they can only see a close-up of where I am standing, instead of a breath-taking whole view, of which I have no patience in describing to others. A painting is only as beautiful if it has been viewed upon carefully, as a whole and as smaller parts that have come together.

While the viewing room that saw different people invited in had only that one lens to offer, the giant room itself had two tiny windows, which couldn’t really be seen even when inside the room. But if anyone did find them and gaze into either, they’d see a lot more than through the Pay-per-view. I can’t say many have dared to opt for that option. I also can’t say that I’ve given them that option. It’s more or less a discovery on each individual’s part.

Just as walking on the spiral was a discovery for me. I hadn’t noticed it until much after feelings of love towards staircases had consumed me enough to make me want to consciously ignore the elevator. Such disdain for an elevator I’ve never felt before. Now, even though I yearn for the elevator, I can’t seem to get off the staircase. Ever since I got on, I’ve been looking for the end so I may step off.

There are days I run around, under the impression that I’ve reached the end, having apparently seen it in the distance. An illusory glance. Sometimes I turn around and walk back, having forgotten a piece of the eternal candy that I would’ve left behind on a lonesome step. That candy is the only source of energy to keep me climbing those stairs.
On more days than is usual, I slide on the banister, whooshing past. These are the days I usually fall off as well and I have to pick myself up and trudge all the way back to pick up whatever might have fallen out of my pockets (all of them being pieces of eternal candy). The picking-up-after-myself part is super hard, but I like keeping things clean and so it’s more or less a necessity. And because I like cleaning, most of the time I’m glad I picked up all the pieces till the very step I slid off of.

Sometimes, I find myself going around in circles on the same step. When I suddenly realise this and stop, I sit down to regain my bearings, but by this time I’m so confused about which direction I must’ve come from (and there are only two to choose from) I just turn around some more, slowly this time, and whichever way I’m facing I walk in the opposite direction. I don’t walk backwards. I tried it once, it didn’t end well.

But there are some days I take my time on each step and walk slowly, step by step by step. These are the days I look out at the vastness. At the nothing that surrounds the staircase. At the tiny speck of a viewing room. At the someones inside the viewing room. At the two tiny pinholes of a windows. At the multitude of anyones outside the windows. It overwhelms me. And calms me. It makes me wonder if there are more staircases out there to climb. And if I’ll ever get to climb them.

I wonder if they are all spiral.

Teeth

White teeth.
Glowing pearly white teeth.
Not encased in metal, glowing pearly white teeth.
Freed of dental structures, not encased in metal, glowing pearly white teeth.
Not tied down by rubberbands, freed of dental structures, not encased in metal, glowing pearly white teeth.
Able to bite into an apple, not tied down by rubberbands, freed of dental structures, not encased in metal, glowing pearly white teeth.
Saved from inner-lip lacerations, able to bite into an apple, not tied down by rubberbands, freed of dental structures, not encased in metal, glowing pearly white teeth.
Corrected crooked misalignments, saved from inner-lip lacerations, able to bite into an apple, not tied down by rubberbands, freed of dental structures, not encased in metal, glowing pearly white teeth.
Artificially-altered smile, corrected crooked misalignments, saved from inner-lip lacerations, able to bite into an apple, not tied down by rubberbands, freed of dental structures, not encased in metal, glowing pearly white teeth.

Antarctica

Last summer I went to Antarctica.
It was covered in ice.
White ice
Cold white ice
Cold melting white ice
Global warming was taking over.
He was blowtorching the polar ice caps.
At Antarctica, I saw pink penguins.
It was warm so they’d taken off their feathery jackets.
They were nude penguins.
Nude and pink like people who’d just sunbathed.
Penguins are cooler black and white.

Thursday 17 August 2017

The Thing

A poem from last year

Nightmare. It’s only a nightmare.
The-there’s a thing.
An odious object sitting at the foot of my bed.
An article so astronomical I can’t see behind it.
The terrifying tool sits still, while I lie quaking under the covers.
Immobile, the item seems innocuous enough.
But could I trust it?
The artefact had appeared quite abruptly, and I definitely hadn’t put it there.
Did you?
Did you dump this dubious device on my duvet?
Is it a gift?
Is this great gadget a glorious gift?
Now this is interesting.
What is this curious commodity so covered in cotton cloth?
This extremely endearing entity that draws me closer as I crawl across to the contrivance.
I opened it to find a glossy glass gizmo.
With polished planes and cool curves,
The instrument has intricacies etched on every exterior.
The insides of the implement were equally elaborate with
Serpentine strokes scratched on the surface.
This breath-taking body, manufactured of manual muscle work, how could I ever use this utensil?
I can’t.
It’s too phenomenal a form to be flawed.
This piece of work, perfect from every perspective, I plan to preserve perpetually.
So storing the stupendous stuff, I go back to sleep.

I wake to warm water, sprinkled on my idle eyes.
Fragmented figures flash from the previous night.
Dashing to the drawer I find that forged form was a
REFRIGERATOR?!