



Visa Office
He’s in Colombo
Trying to renew
His tourist visa
One more time
He knows
What comes next
And there’s nothing
He can do to stop it
He’s the main character
In the novel
That Saramago
Was unable to write.
Taylor Dibbert is a writer, journalist, and poet in Washington, DC. He’s author of, most recently, the poetry collection “Takoma.”
An Overcomer Pauses, Momentarily, To Reflect
It is the rising back up
not the falling down
which determines
your character…
make yourself proud.
I SHINE out brightly
‘Creativity’…
an equal b-a-l-a-n-c-e
of positive and negative
… for such is life.
I want nothing,
nor no-one… I cannot
achieve honestly,
and adds to my Flow.
I’m coming at success
from a disadvantage…
a position I helped
construct from disaster.
Yet, I’m pleased with
the man I am today…
and even happier with
the one I am becoming.
Different, Now… No Hand Of God, I Sculpt Myself
I refuse to accept relationship retreads
… Winter is warmed
by logs once planted in Spring…
seesaw ‘Effort’ or lose ‘Balance’
… carrying someone else’s share
is either ‘Temporary’ or a BURDEN.
Empathy will only help ‘Support’
but will not FIX any Shadow Work
… Healing Thyself stops you
reaching outwards
and (Instead) finding Adult Solutions.
Each time you’ve got an Opportunity
to be ‘Mean’ and you turn away
… you GROW, and are Rewarded
with Elevation, and (Healthy) ‘Pride’.
I used to consider myself a Mirror,
giving/dishing out exactly what I got
… now, I am not even in the room,
a Ghost, you are lucky to be even near.
It Ends Here
No Jamboree awarded
… frown-wrinkled…
the gulf between
a narcissist’s REAL
SELF and its ‘mask’
is phenomenally wide.
Bang your pots,
make a loud noise…
you only ‘intimidate’
weak people… coward.
Learning To Grow Where There’s No Light But Hope
Replacing ‘Binge’ and ‘Moodswing’
with consistent productivity…
to not be ‘Triggered’
requires the wearing of less Armour.
I’m not arguing with you
because you’re ‘Angry’…
I’m not ‘Angry’, I’m ‘Smiling’
and taking the scenic route to Calm.
My ambition requires solo journeys
… with occasional handshakes
with mutually respectful individuals
where ‘Deals’ are made
towards ‘Advancement’ not ‘Snake’.
I do not predict ‘Trouble’,
I’m merely aware of its presence…
along the Pathway to Success which
‘Intertwines’ with that Road to Ruin.
The Spell Is Broken
Just watch her ‘Composure’
absolutely do one…
the moment he walks in,
and completely ignores her.
There are 3 of them,
foolishly and egotistically
playing ‘Musical Chairs’
in his Energy and Attention.
He’s after ‘Clemence’…
but, she’s not here, is she
… no, she’s not interested
in ‘Playas’… she’s decent.
We’ve BLOCKED them
out completely…
took us months to do it
… we lost Natalie, Sarah,
Bridget and Lorraine
in the complicated process.
And now, the Predators
are ‘Optionless’ (at least
in our circle)… so have
fallen back to swordfight
amongst their wicked selves.
Seating Arrangements
‘Wending’… only whilst
up to no good,
otherwise on a mission
marching direct/focused.
You’re complaining
about the ‘inconsistency’
of an inconsistent person
… that’s why I stopped
bothering with you…
I’m not offended, at all
… you can make
no sense all by yourself.
I do not ‘approach’
nor ‘close the distance’
… I decide, fixedly,
upon whom to let sit
down upon the handful
of valuable ‘Chairs’
which I am entertaining
at the changeable moment.
Unconscious Soul-Prisons Be Damned
I sat listening as you kept referring
to her as your ‘Rock’
… whilst, observing her
Basting your ‘Misery’ moist
with a delicate, calculated Cruelty.
Each time you… reached…
to do something ‘Independent’
she was there to Intervene
with a “Let me, dearest,”
and you’d (unthinkingly) SHRink
back down to ‘Pet Size’ again.
Whenever your contagious,
brilliant Enthusiasm and Passion
… reared their beautiful heads,
they were met with “Be careful
that you don’t excite yourself
too much, and have another turn.”
‘I can’t watch anymore’ I thought,
rising up onto my feet to leave…
“Don’t you ever get lonely?”
you asked at the front door step
as we said our last ever goodbye.
“… I couldn’t do it, myself,
I just don’t know what I’d do with
-out her in my life, I really don’t.”
“Become ‘Yourself’ again,”
I answered sincerely, walking away.
Paul Tristram is a Welsh ‘Street’ Writer who has poems, short stories & flash fiction published in hundreds of different publications all around the world. He yearns to tattoo porcelain bridesmaids instead of digging empty graves for innocence at midnight, this too may pass, yet.
His novel “Crazy Like Emotion”, shorter fiction collection “Kicking Back Drunk ‘Round The Candletree Graves” and full-length poetry collections “The Dark Side Of British Poetry: Book 1 of Urban, Cinematic, Degeneration” and “It Is Big And It Is Clever: Book 1 Of A Punk Rock Hostile Takeover” are available from Close To The Bone Publishing.
MY LIFE IN TORNADO ALLEY --came screaming through my home upending it all in an instant and then left my tattered vacuum behind, forever-- :the wind and the women BENEFICE At my baptism feast I was immersed adorned in gown and turban. The host, swollen with yeast and drunk with thirst, cavorted like a merman. I thrust my jolly priest into your church and delivered my sermon. Hallelujah! BIRTH-GROWTH-DEATH We wear our trinity within: Birth Growth Death. We place our lots between these dots: Birth Growth Death. Expand the beginning, then end. Though by zeroes we are enclosed --Birth Growth Death-- we still contain infinities. Birth Growth Death. I, BIBLIOPHILE One wife memorized Solomon to reminisce our marriage. And another remembered Spenser in bequest to our sons. And my mistress archived Milton to remind me of my sin. If only I’d had more lovers I’d have read more libraries. O FORMER LOVERS What did you do n my life? Were you the butcher or the bride? My savior? A suicide? O countess, accountant, or clown: the one who talked all my airplanes down? Forgotten parents, let's make amends. (Or is my asking a form of revenge?) You wanted straighten, I wanted bend. The times I broke out, where were you then? hi ho rally ree, hi ho rally ree hi ho hi ho hi ho rally ree O life, you're a fife that plays out of tune.I plug my ears shut but still hear your song. Hi ho hi ho rally ree O former lovers can't we be friends? So many starting lines only dead ends. Snippets of love songs lost to the winds. O former loved ones, why not be friends? hi ho rally ree, hi ho rally ree hi ho hi ho hi hom rally ree Life is a wife who's made out of tongue, Who talks while I fuck— just on on and on,,, hi ho hi ho rally ree O unborn bastards, shall we pretend? Could we have saved some instead of just spend? Why can't the onces becomee once agains? Quit filling rivers with corpses and cans. Hi ho hi ho hi ho rally ree O — life is a knife and it's nine feet long. We're stuck in the gut And then we are gone. hi ho hi ho rally ree In your life, what was I? Just one more endless hammer on the anvil of your nights? Rusty dull umbilical scissors? Unspooled string to your puffed up kite?
The philosophy of life through mathematics
Some people say that mathematics is a difficult subject, while others find it boring. However, in reality, mathematics gives us hope that there are solutions to problems in life, just like the examples in mathematics. I also have to say that mathematics is the greatest motivator for people because the numbers in mathematics start from 0 and go to infinity.
To those who say mathematics is difficult, I would recommend that they try to engage with this subject a little more sincerely. Some young children may struggle to learn mathematics because of textbooks. For example, in elementary school, it is taught that a smaller number cannot be subtracted from a large one. However, in higher grades, it is taught that a smaller number can be subtracted from a large one, but the result will be negative.
Moreover, we can say that some current textbooks are also becoming complex. I find that some mathematical topics and examples reflect human interpretations. Parallel lines never intersect, and in this, I see people who, no matter how many hours, months, or years pass, will never be together. Tangent curves, on the other hand, intersect only once and then part ways for life paths as if nothing had happened. In solving trigonometric equations and inequations, we are given an interval, within that range and discard the unnecessary ones. I compare this to making decisions in life.
However, our faces, fingers, hands, feet, and body structure -all of these are based on the “golden ratio”. The golden ratio is not typically covered in textbooks, but I will explain it briefly and simply. If you pay attention, you`ll notice that people tend to sit not in the exact center or the very edge of a bench, but somewhere between the center and the edge. This is the first example of the golden ratio. Another example is your face: if you observe closely, the distance between your nose and eyes your eyebrows and eyes, and the length between your two eyes, and the length between your two eyes are all proportional to the golden ratio. In general, I can say that life is mathematics, and even the simple things in our lives are mathematics.
A Simpler Past
A respite from our Postmodern anxiety, occasionally I require a few recollections from a simpler past, anecdotes like these inherited from my grandparents, Ray and Louise, at the Arnholt Place, down in the Danville holler, sometime in the 30s.
Through a hole cut in the floor for heat, three brothers, my father, Dan, and uncles, Stanton and Wayne, scrawny little boys all in one bed and quarantined for measles, took turns peering from the upstairs to the downstairs. After a great commotion, Grandma Frye called up, “Meet your new baby sister.” Aunt Jane, red-faced, more from first breaths than bashfulness, looked up to them.
A few years earlier or later, Blubaugh cousins from Canton stopped by the farm on a Sunday drive. Finding no one home, all in good fun, they switched all the upstairs beds and dressers with all the downstairs chairs and tables. It didn’t take long as Ray and Louise owned nothing but each other, hard work, back taxes and a few sticks of furniture.
Downstairs in the kitchen, on most Saturday nights, Ray and Louise played Euchre with Ed and Sally Styers, hour after hour, for “Drink or Smell.” If you won a hand, you drank Granddad’s hard cider. If you lost, you only smelled the glass. Too much winning and cider would ensure your losing again.
Badminton
Reality collided with fantasy when I was five or six or seven. I was the oldest and for a while the only grandchild. In this account, do consider that there was a new cousin, Jimmy, on the scene who seemed to be getting far too much attention for a tedious baby. The transgression occurred at a picnic on the Gambier farm, maybe Mothers’ Day, between Sunday dinner, home-churned ice cream and the evening milking chores. Grandma, the center of all my love (And, of course, I was the object of all her doting.), sat on the front stoop watching the young couples play badminton.
With a racquet, I thwacked her on her head. (There it is; there’s no denying it now.) At the time, this seemed a perfectly reasonable attempt at play. On our new color TV, in Saturday morning cartoons, this violence was customary etiquette, a harmless greeting set to zany music. “Hello there! Good day to you, sir. A pleasure to meet you, Miss.” The racquet would be demolished; however, magically, not the noggin. Occasionally, lumps appeared, but these were efficiently tapped down with a mallet that all the characters carried for just such events. Each recipient got right back up again with a witty retort. Animated conversations continued unabated and without consequence.
Uncles helped Grandma to the couch. I recall an excessive amount of unnecessary yelling. I presume, at some point, I cried, though I was puzzled, confused over inquiries as to the why. In my first formal apology, even so small, I was acutely aware that my future within the family hinged upon an Act of Contrition. (I was new to the confessional, but I realized what transpired also had the potential of sin and so demanded a detailed explanation for Father Fortkamp as well an inordinate assignment of Our Fathers or Hail Marys. I had not fully memorized the longer Apostles Creed and dreaded this possibility.) Years later, an aunt informed me: apparently, there was a trip to Mercy Hospital and thirteen stitches.