New feature: View Count

Just beside the “Print the Post below” link above each post is a new piece of into: “views (ignores bots)”. This feature starts taking stats today, so it shows zero views for all the posts, even though some have been viewed hundreds of times. Just thought I’d try it. I am still trying to get the wrinkles out of the widget that shows the most-viewed post. Another Lester Chan plugin. I still don’t know if looking at the front page adds to the stats for any posts on it; people may have to click on a post to move the counter. I’ll just have to wait and see . . .

Posted in blog mechanics, explanatory | Tagged | Leave a comment

Poets: the new novelists

The Internet is rewiring our brains, according to Nicholas Carr’s July/August 2008 Atlantic Monthly article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”—I agree with Carr.

Carr’s thesis is that hypertext links, like the one in the previous sentence, which give us instant access to source material, have made us impatient readers. We no longer have the patience to drill into material. We prefer to read the synopsis. We want our reading to be short, to the point, dense—in other words, poetry.

Poetry is pretty much all short, dense to the point. If it’s any good it is.

Of course there are always overblown, vapid verses masquerading as poetry. Most sweet, sentimental crap appearing in newspaper memoria or greeting cards qualifies under this definition.

You are thinking, “But I don’t care a fig about poetry!”

Oh yeah? What about all the words to all that music on your ipod?

But back to Nicholas Carr (sort of): an article and discussion in “Is Google Making Us Stoopid?” in Devtopics.com concludes that Carr’s article made its point by being too long to read.

How does this make poets the new novelists?

Because it makes poems the new novels.

I don’t know that I’d go so far are to say a haiku is a new novel; but on a certain level, it is.

If you have stayed with me this long, I know I have to conclude this extremely long essay now. Here it is:

Arbitrary

I decided to end it
but you locked my eyes
on all the arguments
when you smiled.

Posted in Essay, lotus eaters, Mild-mannered opinion, On the process of Writing, Poetry, serial, technology, thoughts below ground | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Sitting in a three-armed gown (fourth revision)

The technician in the aqua lab coat
summoned the balding guy
with the slightly bleeding
shunt in the crook of his arm,
with whom I had commiserated
about the insipid iodine cocktail
we were both sipping:
he departed clutching at
the back of his hospital gown.

Did I hear people in the corridor?
I added a three-armed gown
to my exhortations of the universe:
world peace, an end to global warming
a cure for cancer or whatever was growing
around the mystery shadows in my gut:
O, to depart for my CT scan
with my hairy ass inside the gown.

Primitive calm still held together
by shirt and hand-knit sweater
corduroy trousers, shoes and socks
and a thin glow of perspiration,
I focused on my paperback:
El Magnifico was about to face the bulls
and I my current task: two beakers
of iodine to swig.

A pair of women joined the party:
an elderly patient whose husband
died twenty-seven years ago,
and her friend whose husband
followed suit last year.

They related their mishaps with
dogs gifted by anxious relatives
who seemed to think furry distraction
was better than none.

Soon the elder’s beverage arrived,
and we gaily debated whether
the tepid, slightly metallic fluid
tasted more like dilute bad wine
or dilute bad pee. I ventured
El Magnifico would have us
suck lemons and salt and pretend
it was dilute bad tequila.
We subsided into our respective
waiting room meditations.

The technician handed me a loosely
folded pale green cloth something.
In that booth, take off everything
but your shoes, socks, and underpants.
Do you know how to put on
a three-armed gown?

Donning my three-armed suit of lights
was easy: shrug into the first two arms
as usual, then fling the remainder
across the front, turn and thrust
my arm into the third sleeve.

When I emerged from the cubicle
the older widow regarded the layers
of shirt, pants, undershirt
shelved on my forearms—
Your wife has you well-trained:
I could never get my husband to fold
anything—

she shuddered as if something cold
had arrived.

I sat facing her in my three-armed gown
pressing my hairy knees together.
The flat pile of clothes became a table
for my fists, which felt disconnected
from me: they should be holding burgers
or beer; they should be proffering a muleta
or thrusting an espada grande.

I wanted to notice her
fifty years ago across a crowded corrida,
her index finger tracing her full red lips
instead of worrying the rim of the empty
paper cup.

I was eating lunch at Jimmy’s place
and had finished my beef stew but
Jimmy’s mother
glared at her ration books
Jimmy hadn’t touched his
and she was going to open her mouth
and the comparison was going to come out
and drive an espada right down the table.

I don’t know, I just folded them
and
and her husband hadn’t finished his
and the damn three-armed gown
was making me keep my knees together.

Glossary:
corrida: a bull fight
muleta: red cloth on a stick, used in the final stages of a bull fight
espada: sword

Posted in aging, Poetry | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments