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They ask me about words and I forget that they often don’t know the same words that I do. I forget that sometimes my words and their words are mysterious and often not as profane as they might be used to. Then, I remember that there are countless words, concepts, ideas, and beliefs that I am totally, sometimes shamefully, unaware of. (all of these based in vernaculars unfamiliar) None of us live the same type of life. None of us have earned passage through hardship any more or less than anyone else. Ours are circumstances, unshared. Not luck, not fate, not grace, not inherent anyway. No different than my last name being Claywell and my typing that very same name into the system of The Department of Corrections; seeing that name, the same as mine, unowned by me, belonging to faces of men and women that I have never and likely would not ever meet in our respective lives. What does it matter? It’s a name, no different or more or less special than Jones or Smith. The name is mine and theirs, as unique to us as we are to one another; poet or prisoner. Person first, second, and third. Like a story, a book, a treatment plan, sitting on a shelf or locked inside a mind until the proper moment providence or provisional, authored by the judiciary or just some guy. (like me) We live by words, are released by words, are transformed by words, frightening, fitful, fretful or foreign. Words give us our humanity, allow us to encourage or enrage, engaged so as to establish a renewal, reestablished ability to manifest, to actualize the abracadabra of our own magic act… our lives. *** -JBClaywell ©P&ZPublications 2021
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Jul 18, 2021
Jul 18, 2021 at 9:22 PM UTC
An Abracadabra of Our Very Own
They ask me about words and I forget that they often don’t know the same words that I do. I forget that sometimes my words and their words are mysterious and often not as profane as they might be used to. Then, I remember that there are countless words, concepts, ideas, and beliefs that I am totally, sometimes shamefully, unaware of. (all of these based in vernaculars unfamiliar) None of us live the same type of life. None of us have earned passage through hardship any more or less than anyone else. Ours are circumstances, unshared. Not luck, not fate, not grace, not inherent anyway. No different than my last name being Claywell and my typing that very same name into the system of The Department of Corrections; seeing that name, the same as mine, unowned by me, belonging to faces of men and women that I have never and likely would not ever meet in our respective lives. What does it matter? It’s a name, no different or more or less special than Jones or Smith. The name is mine and theirs, as unique to us as we are to one another; poet or prisoner. Person first, second, and third. Like a story, a book, a treatment plan, sitting on a shelf or locked inside a mind until the proper moment providence or provisional, authored by the judiciary or just some guy. (like me) We live by words, are released by words, are transformed by words, frightening, fitful, fretful or foreign. Words give us our humanity, allow us to encourage or enrage, engaged so as to establish a renewal, reestablished ability to manifest, to actualize the abracadabra of our own magic act… our lives. *** -JBClaywell ©P&ZPublications 2021
jay-claywell
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Jul 18, 2021
Jul 18, 2021 at 9:22 PM UTC
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