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jeff-dingler
jeff-dingler
War War War! Roar Roar   Roar! No more No more   No.      More.
0
Mar 22, 2015
Mar 22, 2015 at 9:27 AM UTC
War
“Lord knows Gods come and go so quick it’s like lightning, and lord knows I’ve received my slings and arrows all in silence. Don’t quote me about love being nat’ral or rent being heaven-sent; they isn’t and looord no I ain’t gonna preach the almighty’s reliance. The friendless creep of hours into centuries can be frightening; I’m just enlightened enough to know there’s no such thing as enlightenment.”
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Mar 5, 2015
Mar 5, 2015 at 5:49 PM UTC
What the old church lady taught me of Englightenment
read from bottom to top down us bring to try they when smoke like rise We'll
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Mar 3, 2015
Mar 3, 2015 at 1:53 PM UTC
Smoke
The shells are singing holy songs now—oceans whistle through their concert holes. ‘Holes drilled by predators,’ the seashore sings to me. And I’m reminded there’s so much more ancient than man. So much that can never be written down, for words are the limitations of our knowledge —not its end. And there should be something more but really, how does one write what happened with the seashells whistling by the seashore?
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Mar 3, 2015
Mar 3, 2015 at 12:50 PM UTC
Seashells by seashore
That soft jingly music of snow hitting water— my birthday
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Mar 1, 2015
Mar 1, 2015 at 12:32 PM UTC
That soft jingly music
There’s that smell of smoke again my neighbor burning leaves across the lot,      brown leaves worthy of being burned simply because they fell (and because they’ll rot his idea of a yard). And it’s brown to black and then gray      as all things fall. And there is the sound of smoke, too wheezing over the t.v. and radio. Smoke and sirens (both mythical and mechanical)     as if humanity’s a ribbon caught in a blaze. Half the globe is burning to be free         waking to turn the light of the sun into the sugar of their lives. And the other half is snoring through the haze.      Generations snoring for generations fanning the flames   as they wonder why they burn.      Looking up I see with a Mover’s clarity this smoke that blinds the sky        stings our lives.   And maybe that’s why they burn, (this smoke that rises from the hillsides of history)     to block out the sun, to make men crazy with a human eclipse with carbon    because the fire inside them won’t let those free blue eyes drift by without this little scarification of smoke. A gray river flowing toward the sky               for the live and let die.           This smoke that fills my mouth, that leaves its bitterness in me,     does it burn dreams as it burns through flesh? Will it burn all the way to the seed? We wonder whether dreams shrivel or if they explode     like something thawed on its way to the sun.             Or do they, as the expression goes, simply go up in smoke? like some slippery eel disappeared in the deep deep dark.    Do we smoke our dreams from two ends like a hapless fiend or sip them with precious small breaths to drag out our sunsets?       When the smoke is all gone do we see the hoax of hoaxes?   Or do we choke to death?
0
Feb 24, 2015
Feb 24, 2015 at 11:27 AM UTC
Why they burn
There’s that smell of smoke again my neighbor burning leaves across the lot,      brown leaves worthy of being burned simply because they fell (and because they’ll rot his idea of a yard). And it’s brown to black and then gray      as all things fall. And there is the sound of smoke, too wheezing over the t.v. and radio. Smoke and sirens (both mythical and mechanical)     as if humanity’s a ribbon caught in a blaze. Half the globe is burning to be free         waking to turn the light of the sun into the sugar of their lives. And the other half is snoring through the haze.      Generations snoring for generations fanning the flames   as they wonder why they burn.      Looking up I see with a Mover’s clarity this smoke that blinds the sky        stings our lives.   And maybe that’s why they burn, (this smoke that rises from the hillsides of history)     to block out the sun, to make men crazy with a human eclipse with carbon    because the fire inside them won’t let those free blue eyes drift by without this little scarification of smoke. A gray river flowing toward the sky               for the live and let die.           This smoke that fills my mouth, that leaves its bitterness in me,     does it burn dreams as it burns through flesh? Will it burn all the way to the seed? We wonder whether dreams shrivel or if they explode     like something thawed on its way to the sun.             Or do they, as the expression goes, simply go up in smoke? like some slippery eel disappeared in the deep deep dark.    Do we smoke our dreams from two ends like a hapless fiend or sip them with precious small breaths to drag out our sunsets?       When the smoke is all gone do we see the hoax of hoaxes?   Or do we choke to death?
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41
Did you hear? The preacher met the mendicant who’s proselytizing the end of the world Saturday. They sat and had it out on the steps in front of the old Baptist church on Main St., each idolizing their poison with the wild green all around, the preacher high on the holy steps looking so divine above the hobo in multicolored rags, who scams and scams the plentiful from a gutter-pipe and who began the conversation like this: [snort]: “Go on father! Out with it, what’d you call me out here for?” “I hear you’re preaching the end of the world, Charlie—” he said putting a stick of gum to his lips, suddenly conscious of his stinking breath. “Well, you’re scaring some of the lambs from my flock, they’re frightened beyond their wits—and I’m sorry but this is outrageous I demand to know why, exactly why! Because it’s interfering with my plans, for Saturday I am preaching the End of Times.” “Well… I believe it for a number of reasons,” said the hobo shouldering his heavy sign of doom. “I mean things just keep getting worse, no one gives to the needy anymore, the poor are many, the golden skyscrapers high, those huddling in the streets from gloom are praying to die—not to be saved, and their numbers just keep growing— the most double blessing that a man can get used to anything…. So I thought why not take advantage of my situation— I gotta make a meal!— so I blew the crooked horn and said that all ye minutemen of sin and tradition are just killing by rules that no one believes in….” Just then a fat green fly went buzzing by, reminding Charlie of an old poem “But tell me father, why do you believe in the End of Times…?” And the preacher in his dress took a deep sigh wondering why it was everything had to die by Saturday: “Well…. there are a number of signs. But mostly I think it’s morals— nobody has any respect anymore, they open up your door for you and say: ‘Excuse you! That’ll be five dollars.’ How freewill turns and twists minds. The youthful free, starving wanting-to-be artists— they won’t tithe in my church anymore, they just throw me their books and say with a blithe look that it’s not about money anymore… But what are they saying? Meanwhile they put a ****** hex on all that is holy, have *** on all that’s white and pure. Say that I’m an old man in a dress and that we’re all blessed when really none of us are blessed— say that the light is muddy and the dark is clear, when really I’m as clean as I can be, no foul smelling intentions in me! And that is how the End of Times will be!” And before the stench of death could escape his breath, he put another stick of gum to his lips. “Agreed.” said the hobo hastily…. “But father, it doesn’t seem like our lambs are really that different, it seems more to me that we’ve been shepherding from the same flock and what we ought to do is take advantage of this unique situation. Let’s put up a big round shining tent on Main St. for Saturday and we’ll hold a dual End of Times— our lambs together, don’t you see? We’ll draw in twice the crowd twice the lot twice the loud, crying fervor believing in the burning streets.” “Yes….. yes!” said the preacher with a corvine grin and a turning coin in his eyes. “I get what you’re saying now. Yes, it’s genius—our preaching together, one way or another, we’ll rake it in—and after the ending, when it’s all through…. Uh… [ahem] tell me, just one more thing—you do believe in the End of Times?” “Sure, brother, sure… don’t you?”
0
Jan 27, 2015
Jan 27, 2015 at 1:47 PM UTC
End of Times
Did you hear? The preacher met the mendicant who’s proselytizing the end of the world Saturday. They sat and had it out on the steps in front of the old Baptist church on Main St., each idolizing their poison with the wild green all around, the preacher high on the holy steps looking so divine above the hobo in multicolored rags, who scams and scams the plentiful from a gutter-pipe and who began the conversation like this: [snort]: “Go on father! Out with it, what’d you call me out here for?” “I hear you’re preaching the end of the world, Charlie—” he said putting a stick of gum to his lips, suddenly conscious of his stinking breath. “Well, you’re scaring some of the lambs from my flock, they’re frightened beyond their wits—and I’m sorry but this is outrageous I demand to know why, exactly why! Because it’s interfering with my plans, for Saturday I am preaching the End of Times.” “Well… I believe it for a number of reasons,” said the hobo shouldering his heavy sign of doom. “I mean things just keep getting worse, no one gives to the needy anymore, the poor are many, the golden skyscrapers high, those huddling in the streets from gloom are praying to die—not to be saved, and their numbers just keep growing— the most double blessing that a man can get used to anything…. So I thought why not take advantage of my situation— I gotta make a meal!— so I blew the crooked horn and said that all ye minutemen of sin and tradition are just killing by rules that no one believes in….” Just then a fat green fly went buzzing by, reminding Charlie of an old poem “But tell me father, why do you believe in the End of Times…?” And the preacher in his dress took a deep sigh wondering why it was everything had to die by Saturday: “Well…. there are a number of signs. But mostly I think it’s morals— nobody has any respect anymore, they open up your door for you and say: ‘Excuse you! That’ll be five dollars.’ How freewill turns and twists minds. The youthful free, starving wanting-to-be artists— they won’t tithe in my church anymore, they just throw me their books and say with a blithe look that it’s not about money anymore… But what are they saying? Meanwhile they put a ****** hex on all that is holy, have *** on all that’s white and pure. Say that I’m an old man in a dress and that we’re all blessed when really none of us are blessed— say that the light is muddy and the dark is clear, when really I’m as clean as I can be, no foul smelling intentions in me! And that is how the End of Times will be!” And before the stench of death could escape his breath, he put another stick of gum to his lips. “Agreed.” said the hobo hastily…. “But father, it doesn’t seem like our lambs are really that different, it seems more to me that we’ve been shepherding from the same flock and what we ought to do is take advantage of this unique situation. Let’s put up a big round shining tent on Main St. for Saturday and we’ll hold a dual End of Times— our lambs together, don’t you see? We’ll draw in twice the crowd twice the lot twice the loud, crying fervor believing in the burning streets.” “Yes….. yes!” said the preacher with a corvine grin and a turning coin in his eyes. “I get what you’re saying now. Yes, it’s genius—our preaching together, one way or another, we’ll rake it in—and after the ending, when it’s all through…. Uh… [ahem] tell me, just one more thing—you do believe in the End of Times?” “Sure, brother, sure… don’t you?”
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104
Too Many Smiling People Blues Before I was a nobody slinking by, a real skink-body nobody. Now they give me handfulls of money and call me a genius. Thanks, thanks very much, I’ll take this. I’ll take your money that slithers to no ends but wait… my friends, where are my precious friends? There’s nothing but pink smiles all around…. I used to sing songs in the dark. Now they put a shiny guitar in my hands, and I make music to shiny coins, crank it out, and when it’s all over they say, “that’s good, now can you stand on your hands?” And there’s not even enough energy to frown. O’ ain’t it a bringdown, when everybody’s got a piece of you and there’s nothing but smiles all around. And it used to be the only one I could get to listen was you, baby blue….. You and me alone all those windy, sleepy years, and when I sang a tune you were the only one that got it. Now I look through the screaming crowd, who eat my energy, shouting, “We get it! We get it!” But your smile is nowhere to be found, and O’ ain’t it a bringdown when everybody’s got a piece of you and there’s nothing but smiles all around….
0
Jan 27, 2015
Jan 27, 2015 at 1:44 PM UTC
Too Many Smiling People Blues
What am I but a far noise amongst the crickets a passer in the stars a fog amidst thickets?
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Jan 15, 2015
Jan 15, 2015 at 2:02 PM UTC
Transcendence
Not long ago, if you could call a few years ‘not long’, when I was still gloomily drawn to that mysterious magnet known as the mighty Mississippi, I uncovered a nautilus fossil not far from the Tennessee-Arkansas border, where the land churns like red butter into the infinity of the Mississippi. A nautilus hundreds of miles from the closest deep water. (And only fifteen minutes from Graceland!) They say most of the Deep South used to belong to the floor Of some vast Jurassic swamp or sea or river—I forget which… In the grooves of this shell-rock nature keeps its own history. No stranger to change as the dust and mud reveal me. Think how much change you’ve witnessed in your life already. Today, tomorrow and yesterday change is a hot-traded commodity, up in the Dow, down in the Nasdaq, two day super-shipping in the fast lane. Change customizable, ordered up and hot and ready-to-go, the hobo on the street asking me for some change; I told him to change his ways, get a better rate, exchange those rags for a business suit and some britches. He just laughed and said: “Huh, are you kiddin me? In this day and age a man can have twenty lives in a lifetime. I’m just asking you for a little change…” It’s been done to death and back a million times this age. My friends are always telling me I need to change my ways. That I need to roam and range, that all wise wordsters roam and range. “Change you can believe in!” But let’s just change the channel. Onto something else, something new! Everything built for the times, none of it made to last. See how we age and distance so fast! Two million years in the making, we’re living proof of the past. Don’t be a stranger to change; sit back and enjoy it while it lasts. The boy in the park with pigeon eyes “What is the rake of human history?” he asks me. Cruelty and pathetic little bird-like people, all their seed spent carrying half-ton rocks up to the tippy-top of the Tower of Babble. If you possessed a machine of infinite light and speed would you go back to before change existed? Could you resist it? Or would the blackness then lead you back to now? Wondering how—how it all got started. Change is strange, only the rabbit knows how deep the rabbit hole will go. All our lying lives spent flying, and when we finish no one starts and no one goes. all of us pondering the unshareable experience. The world keeps winding on an invisible string but the weight of the wait in line is unbearable. A raindrop falls from the sky and hits the shell-rock in my hand And looking down at the nautilus fossil I get a chill, for it tells me there are creatures without words, without hearts, dreams or ears that have slithered through the dark untouched by change for millions and millions of years…
0
Jan 5, 2015
Jan 5, 2015 at 5:56 PM UTC
Change is Strange
Not long ago, if you could call a few years ‘not long’, when I was still gloomily drawn to that mysterious magnet known as the mighty Mississippi, I uncovered a nautilus fossil not far from the Tennessee-Arkansas border, where the land churns like red butter into the infinity of the Mississippi. A nautilus hundreds of miles from the closest deep water. (And only fifteen minutes from Graceland!) They say most of the Deep South used to belong to the floor Of some vast Jurassic swamp or sea or river—I forget which… In the grooves of this shell-rock nature keeps its own history. No stranger to change as the dust and mud reveal me. Think how much change you’ve witnessed in your life already. Today, tomorrow and yesterday change is a hot-traded commodity, up in the Dow, down in the Nasdaq, two day super-shipping in the fast lane. Change customizable, ordered up and hot and ready-to-go, the hobo on the street asking me for some change; I told him to change his ways, get a better rate, exchange those rags for a business suit and some britches. He just laughed and said: “Huh, are you kiddin me? In this day and age a man can have twenty lives in a lifetime. I’m just asking you for a little change…” It’s been done to death and back a million times this age. My friends are always telling me I need to change my ways. That I need to roam and range, that all wise wordsters roam and range. “Change you can believe in!” But let’s just change the channel. Onto something else, something new! Everything built for the times, none of it made to last. See how we age and distance so fast! Two million years in the making, we’re living proof of the past. Don’t be a stranger to change; sit back and enjoy it while it lasts. The boy in the park with pigeon eyes “What is the rake of human history?” he asks me. Cruelty and pathetic little bird-like people, all their seed spent carrying half-ton rocks up to the tippy-top of the Tower of Babble. If you possessed a machine of infinite light and speed would you go back to before change existed? Could you resist it? Or would the blackness then lead you back to now? Wondering how—how it all got started. Change is strange, only the rabbit knows how deep the rabbit hole will go. All our lying lives spent flying, and when we finish no one starts and no one goes. all of us pondering the unshareable experience. The world keeps winding on an invisible string but the weight of the wait in line is unbearable. A raindrop falls from the sky and hits the shell-rock in my hand And looking down at the nautilus fossil I get a chill, for it tells me there are creatures without words, without hearts, dreams or ears that have slithered through the dark untouched by change for millions and millions of years…
Continue reading...
52