Lao Tzu
Monday, 16 May 2016
TWO HEARTBEATS, ONE BODY
Lao Tzu
Saturday, 14 May 2016
MANCHESTER UNITED CIVIL WAR -Pt. 2
Friday, 13 May 2016
MANCHESTER UNITED CIVIL WAR
Old Trafford stood watchful over a new team, and that team did not rever old trafford. Indeed that team spat in its face as in the grass. The team had lost its heart, all it was now was a bunch of limbs, effective, but souless.
After the games there was no more goofing around in the locker room. No bubbling conversations and unaffected guffaws. There was just the pants and the grunts, and the growls. He realised they were now always on the offence, even after the game was over. They weren't a pack of wolves. They were just wolves, feral and hungry for goals.
Rooney didn't remember the last time he had a casual conversation with his team mates.
It was a goal.
Van Der Sar was taken aback. What's going on here? He wondered out loud.
Friday, 6 May 2016
Matt Murdock in DEVIL MAY CRY
Wednesday, 4 May 2016
DRAKE~THE SCORCH TRIALS
I just want some h--d in a comfortable bed, it could all be so simple. Well I've got a 5 ft 9 brunette on a 5 by 4 king size. There's some Don Perion champagne in a cauldron of ice; compliments of the hotel manager. My top floor room has a sky line of the better half of New York and if I squint a little, I can see the streets below, everything and everyone that is beneath me; that's a lot of people.
The brunette stirs. She's prettier than I remember, with high cheekbones and legs for days. For a second or two I consider going in for a second helping, but then, it's the morning after a one night stand, no need to ruin things.
So far it's a slow morning and I'm winging it. For the first time in a while I don't know what I want to do next. Not that there aren't events and schedules-I've got things to do, but nothing I want to do. Perhaps the brunette will make for some fine conversation.
Hey, I say and panic for a bit. What if she doesn't speak English?
Hey, she says back with a wry smile, like she had read my mind.
How'd you sleep? I ask.
Like a baby, you?
Nightmares.
Gangsters have nightmares too? She says, shocked. A moment passes and then there's a paroxysm of laughter.
You're funny. I say.
Funnier than you. She quips. So what was the dream about?
It's weird.
Spill.
Well I was standing over this pond, a real big pond. A pond that has all these twists and turns like one of them water park rides, only it's flat not vertical.
Interesting she says. Pretending not to be amused, all the while making it obvious that she is
No, the interesting thing is what was inside the pond.
Pray tell.
Sharks. Big ones and little ones and some medium sized ones.
Fascinating!
No, what's fascinating is it felt like I was rearing them. Like they were pets or something, and the ironic thing is, I hate sharks! Literally AND figuratively. I mean, their survival is based on hunting after the weak. So one minute your swimming side by side, fin to fin in perfect harmony, next thing you're injured and just when you need help the most they turn on you.
Wow, what did sharks ever do to you?
Let's just say I've known some walking, talking sharks in my time.
Hm.A dangerous game...
What? I ask, snapped out of my reveriè.
A dangerous game. She gets off the bed then, and prances off to the bathroom.
When she returns I ask her. What's a dangerous game?
She gets back under the covers, swinging one unending leg after the other till she's swallowed in a river of white. Well, she begins, I spent the first dozen years of my life growing up on a quaint little street in Russia.
Russia? I didn't spot an accent.
Shut up. As I was saying. There was an old woman who lived a couple houses down from us. One of those really old sagacious types that read palms and can tell a witch from a cat.
I see.
Shut up. She was really nice and sweet and I used to go over to her place a lot. On one of those days she sits me down and tells me a story about some old slavers who used to live up north. They sold and bought women until one day, the girls formed a union and rebelled.
Awn, that's a nice human rights story. I say half mocking. What's it got to do with my dream though?
I wasn't finished. When the girls got liberated, they made a good life for themselves, and it was legal too. They thrived for so long and they kept in touch.
Sweet, sweet, sweet. Still looking for relevance.
Have you no chill? One day they had a full scale reunion. And after the drinks, and the laughs and the tears. You know what these middle aged upper middle class women decided?
What?
To open a brothel.
Wow. Why?
That's the same thing I asked her, and she said sometimes we exorcise our demons, only to become them.
I don't get it.
She called it the scorch trials. You get exposed to some fire, you flinch, you recoil, but even though you're scalded a part of you liked the warmth, and it's a trial in that you must decide whether to stay away, or to return...
Like a moth to a flame. I interject.
Yes, like a moth to a flame. She concurs.
So you're saying I've become a shark.
I'm saying just because you got away from something, doesn't mean you got over it and it's a beautiful thing to go from being tormented by a thing to becoming master of it, despite the consequences.
At this I turn aside and a silence creeps upon us.
Get out, I say gravelly, finally.
What? She's shocked. She sits up on the bed, but only a little.
I said, please leave. I turn back to her now. She looks in my eyes and determines I'm serious. She gets up and slowly starts to pick her things off of the ground-trails of clothing that lead away from the bed and towards the door. After she's done she begins dressing up, till finally she's clutching her matching bag and heels to her chest and boring a hole in the back of my head.
Why? She asks after she's done glaring.
Because I still really hate sharks.
"When a defiling evil spirit is expelled from someone, it drifts along through the desert looking for an oasis, some unsuspecting soul it can bedevil. When it doesn't find anyone, it says, 'I'll go back to my old haunt.' On return it finds the person spotlessly clean, but vacant. It then runs out and rounds up seven other spirits more evil than itself and they all move in, whooping it up. That person ends up far worse off than if he'd never gotten cleaned up in the first place."- Jesus Christ.
Tuesday, 3 May 2016
Taylor Swift-Two Words Too Soon
In the dream I'm floating through a garden of lush flowers, with petals that gleam and radiate a soft glow. My gown barely touches the ground as I glide over light stems. The trunks bow at my passing then resume their stature of pristine beauty. Sometime in the dream, I sit somewhere in the garden, and my being encircles you.
My knees rest in a tent created by my gown and I hold you in my hands, like a little bird with broken wings. But in the dream you are no bird, you are a flower. With blade like petals that couldn't cut butter and yet, administer the deepest wound, in the dream. In the dream I play 'I love you, I love you not', and with each petal of yours that I strip away to ask those two silly questions, you die. But only in the dream.
Morning, New York. I'm at least a couple of miles away from the train station but I feel like I can hear it. The city is alive with activity, like veins during a panic attack.
I'm not panicked, not even a little, but Fluffy doesn't like the noise, or the feet. She furrows deeper into my chest. We've got to catch a cab. But as my eyes dart back and forth, they catch you instead. I don't know it's you till the tinted windows slide down and you smile up at me.
You're going my way so I hop in.
It's awkward.
I know its awkward because the smell of leather is heavy on my nose and the seat is warm beneath me. You just got the car and dropped someone off before you happened upon me. I know these things because my mind is working overtime trying to dustract me. I can feel you squirm and grope for something solid enough to break the ice, if it merely thaws you know we would probably never speak again, because old friends seldom ever make reacquaintance if they fail at the first attempt.
You see Fluffy and a smile breaks out like dawn on your face, you reach over and pet her. She purs. I suddenly speak feline and know she's ratting me out. Snitching about my sleepless nights and our pillow talks. You ask me how old she is now and after that the awkwardness passes quickly and we play catch up with a flourish of characters and events and moments that we should've shared, but the latter goes without mentioning. Because it's the elephant in the room, it announces itself.
You drop me off and I promise to call, there's sadness in your eye because you know, like I do, that I never will, I almost do, but never.
As I watch you speed tentatively off, I think of that day. The day that haunts my dreams with allegories.
On that day we were in your apartment, not a garden. You'd paused mid sentence and begun looking past me, staring down my soul.
"What's wrong?" I asked. Stupid question, because nothing was wrong, the vein in your neck, the moist on your lips the song on the radio all pointed to the fact that everything was terribly perfect. Maybe that's what scared me. It was all too good to be true.
"I love you." You said and my fear became horror. I swallowed, I staggered and found myself on the edge of your couch. My head dipped into my hands and made as if to cry, but instead they floated back up again.
You ran to me as though sensing I was on the brink of flight, you landed on your knees and said it again. "I swear to god that I love you. And I know that you love me too."
"I don't." I said, and I had spoken too soon.
"Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but when the desire is fulfilled, it is a tree of life."-King David.
Monday, 2 May 2016
The Weekend-ShadowLands
There's music, and noise, and bodies. More bodies than belong in such little space. VIP is different though, like a new planet. It has more suns and more stars that boom bright in the darkness that surrounds. I fit right in here.
A nod here, a smile there, a squint and I've more or less acknowledged the presence of the noteworthy. The rest will have to acknowledge me, fawn at my feet, oogle at my coiffure, the same old song.
They smell different though, the girls. It's spring and they've got on the new scents, that Mariah Carey Dream, that Dior Passion. It's nice. I can close my eyes and maybe they'll feel different. I doubt it though. It's always the same old song.
The waiter brings drinks, the usual. It's red, it stings, I ask for another. About six shots in I no longer feel separate from the atmosphere. I'm spinning with the lights, I'm jumping with the feet. The only thing I'm not doing is wafting through the air like the smoke.
The following morning I deal with one of my easier hangovers, there's two girls lying where my memory used to be and as I kick myself mentally for not taking them to a hotel instead. A call comes in on my phone.
It's Chris, my manager. He wants to know if I took home a short Asian chick with a tattoo on her left thigh. A quick glance back tells us both I didn't.
Good he says. She was underage and her dad-some enterprising billionaire-is rousing up a storm.
I feel a little saddened at this. Such unprecedented conflict might have been fun.
The rest of the day is more of the same, except my mind keeps going back to the Asian chick with the tattoo on her left thigh. What did he mean by underage?
This is Toronto, so that would mean she's anything between 15 and 20. The higher end of that wasn't a problem to me. Maybe I ought to find her, I thought. Do her pops a solid.
I call one of the bouncers and I find her. She's not at a guys place, she's with her girls.
45 minutes later I'm standing at their hotel door like it's Christmas and I'm Santa, they've gotta love what I'm carrying.
A blonde model type opens the door, all wide eyed and wide mouthed-this should be fun.
There's at least six of them, all aware of all the possibilities of all of this. Six wouldn't be my max, but it wasn't me on a bad day either.
They're creative enough. It's all slow and sensual like D'Angelos beats. But I wasn't in there tryna make music. I was tryna make a memory.
The groping, the fondling, it all felt like golf to me. Each swing looking like the last, each stroke to the same end, inevitably getting some ball, into some hole. It was all par the course, some woods, alot of ponds, but my double entendres were wearing thin though, I needed life, not lyrics. Maybe like the filmakers, they'd saved the best for last.
The Asian.
She danced and she giggled and she let down her hair, but when everything came off there was little more than more of the same there.
Two nights later I found myself back at the same club. Sitting in my cadillac for a bit, bracing myself. There was a super pissed father somewhere wanting my head on a stake. A part of me wished he could have it. I stepped out of the car, the entire club is waiting for me, it seems.





