BELIEF & TECHNIQUE FOR
TELEPATHIC PROSE
Lee
Sharks & Jack Feistfrom Pearl and Other Poems
1.
Compose real poems telepathically, with mind control powers,
inside your glorious brain.
2.
You are your own best advocate. Insist the world acknowledge
your poems as artifacts of tiny doom. Accept nothing less. Threaten to smash
yourself in the face with gasoline and set your hair on fire. Leap over the
seats to aggressively stand inside the world’s personal space and get up in its
grill. Take this container of Tic-Tacs and smash it on your forehead. Crush
each Tic-Tac individually into your eyeballs and ask the world if it likes your
poem, and if it likes your poem, then eat your poem: “Do you like my poem? Then
eat it.”
3.
Always seek constant approval, then punch your cat in the
face.
4.
Arrive alive. Don’t text and drive.
5.
Always write poems all the time.
6.
Never professionalize writing. Professionalism is the last
refuge of responsible people looking for work.
7.
Your life is your poem. Take care to write it
biographically. Failing that, invent false biographies and post them on
Wikipedia.
8.
Get as much education as you can, then murder your education
in the face to save it from sloppy education. Get enough education to respect
your contempt for education.
9.
Give it all that you have, as deep as it goes, as desperate
and total as taking a breath.
10. Also be
pedantic mundane pig-critic of precise punctuation juggling and ruthless
crossed-out darling murdering of your own puny sentences. Save every draft and
revert to original after enormous work, then drown yrself in the bathtub.
Remember: editing is organization.
11. Be long-sighted
prodigy of skeptically believing in nothing, but also believe in destiny, but
quietly, and hit yourself in the face for naivety’s sake.
12. You are a
seamstress of words—place each stitch carefully, deliberately. Develop a series
of rituals and perform them, without variation, prior to placing each word.
Allow the frequency and intensity of these rituals to grow until you spend
hours, each day, touching and retouching your left index finger to the tip of your
nose in a rhythmic, counter-clockwise motion, in sets of thirty revolutions, in
order to place a single character. Spend years of your life shut away from the
world, wasting away into an awkward, unhygienic shadow of your former self, and
have, to show for it, a two-syllable word of Germanic origins on an otherwise
clean, white page. This word will be redoubtable, the bedrock of your writing
career. Go on to spend vast sums of personal wealth and total dedication,
alienating the remaining handful of long-suffering friends who continue,
despite all odds, to solicit the memory of your humanity, in order to learn the
arts of metalworking, Medieval alchemy, and font design, recreating a
metal-cast, alpha-numeric set of Times New Roman font, from scratch, going
broke long before “numeric,” and with only the half-formed germs of the
characters W, N, and sometimes-vowel Y.
hat are such retrictio s to
ou? ou are a poet, ot a mathematicia . ou are a creature of steel. ou
ill rite a e and
better orld, a orld
ithout the letter , forgi g it,
o e smoki g husk of a ord at a
time.
13. Turn over a new
leaf. You’re not getting much done like this, anyways, let’s face it. Break the
chains of your censoring, conscious mind; tap into the spontaneous well of unconscious
human brilliance that springs from the source of dreams. Thwart the
stick-in-ass tyranny of your internal editor by making a commitment to write
constantly, without ceasing, editing, or even thinking, no matter what,
ignoring the anally retentive quips your brain will no doubt make. Make a
further commitment: you will not only write, irrespective of internal
censorship, but in a way that is unconscionably terrible, on purpose. Your
writing will be, by turns, embarrassing, infantile, automatic, and marmaduke
poppers—or shall we say, antagonistic to the indoctrination in repressive
concepts such as “sentence” and “word” of your reader, who is always, and only,
you. Let your writing be a spiritual discipline of Bat-a-rang pancakes and
lightly alarm clock, ding—your toast
is done.
14. Always Alka-Seltzer
eyelids all the time.
15. At last, you
are ready to make it new, to murder your darlings, to first thought, best
thought, to your heart’s content. Your adverb will be the enemy of your verb,
the difference between your almost-right word and your right word will be the
difference between your lightning bug and your lightning. You are ready to have
a spontaneous overflow of powerful feeling, then censor the s**t out of it. You
are ready to turn your extremes against each other: Unlearn your apple pancakes
and burst through the mental barriers; then slow the flood, let the lovely
trickle out & edit, edit, edit. Capture spontaneous gem of native human
genius, then marshal vast armies of technical knowledge & self-discipline
to ensure it glimmers and cuts.
16. Believe in
things like destiny. No really—the path will shatter you so many times your
shards will have splinters, your bombshells, shrapnel. By the time you get
there—which you probably won’t—even your exhaustion will be tired. Exhaustion
of mind and body will have passed so far beyond the physical, and through
malaise of spirit, that it will emerge on the other side, as physical
exhaustion again. In the face of this, nothing but a little Big Purpose will
do. Besides, a little ideology never hurt anyone. Feel free to be all Voltaire
with your bad self, in public—but don’t give up.
17. After all of
this, when your will is finally broken (again), and you have given up for the
final time (again), start over. The former model wasn’t working. Refashion
yourself and your writing. Lather, rinse, usurp your noble half-brother, and
repeat, until you get somewhere, or die in the trying.
18. Achieve
consistency of voice; it is the signature by which you will be known. Your
“you” should ring out clearly from each individual letter. In this, the writer
is like the salesman. Like a new car, neither the writing’s merits, nor the
reader’s needs, will be the final, deciding factor. Ultimately, the deciding
factor is you.
19. Unlike a new
car, it is difficult to drive a poem, to use it to get to school or work.
Unlike a car salesman, a writer does not wear enormous ties.
20. Be so
consistent that your writing consists in composing the same words, in the same
order, creating the some overall voice and style, consistently, over and over,
an eternal return of the same. Maintain this disciplined drudgery over the
course of years. Let years become decades, and decades, an entire life: You
will have “found your voice.” Variety is the spice of life, but consistency is
its signature.
20. Be so
consistent that your writing consists in composing the same words, in the same
order, creating the some overall voice and style, consistently, over and over,
an eternal return of the same. Maintain this disciplined drudgery over the
course of years. Let years become decades, and decades, an entire life: You
will have “found your voice.” Variety is the spice of life, but consistency is
its signature.
21. Then again,
consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds. Throw things up a little bit. One
day, put on your hobgoblin hat, the next day, your small mind.
22. On second
thought, re: #16-17: Stop here. You don’t look like much of a writer. Save
yourself the trouble of a deep investment that is sure to yield no returns. The
prize is big, and not many take it. The Iliad
showed us that the prize of writing is life eternal, and taught us to long for
that promise; but the Odyssey taught
us not to bother. There are many suitors, a single Odysseus. While the husband
wends arduously homeward, Penelope weaves impending glory, an evaporating
glamour, enchanting them, until he arrives. We are in for a bad end, if we
chase another man’s wife, or a prize not rightfully ours. There are many
suitors, a crowd of them. They begin as a chittering swarm of bats and end in
the very same manner. You cannot have what is not yours. What is yours, no man
can take. So, like Emily says,
I smile when you suggest that I delay
‘to publish’—that being foreign to my thought as Firmament to Fin. If fame
belonged to me, I could not escape her—if she did not, the longest day would
pass me on the chase—and the approbation of my Dog would forsake me—then—My
Barefoot Rank is better—
23. Therefore, take
these Sturm und Drang commandments to
the trash heap. Return to step 1, as the only useful piece of advice: Compose
real poems telepathically, with mind control powers, inside your glorious
brain.
(c) 2014 lee sharks & jack feist
from Pearl and Other Poems:
http://www.amazon.com/Pearl-Other-Poems-Crimson-Hexagon/dp/0692313079/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1429895012&sr=8-1&keywords=lee+sharks+pearl
(c) 2014 lee sharks & jack feist
from Pearl and Other Poems:
http://www.amazon.com/Pearl-Other-Poems-Crimson-Hexagon/dp/0692313079/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1429895012&sr=8-1&keywords=lee+sharks+pearl
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