Hello, I'm ADWoodward and I think about things and write. The order of this may vary.
Friday, 25 January 2013
A conversation verbatim
Hello. I've been in a dark mood for about a week now, and earlier today a friend got me out of it. There is no rush like the sudden contrast of hating oneself versus being happy. I don't know whether this will give anyone but me a rush, but it was an important enough conversation that I want a record of it. There's some phrasing in the conversation that to my mind smacks like literature so I thought it might fit in here. It helped me and might help you, so I thought I'd share it with you.It goes thusly:
Monday, 21 January 2013
A Small Recommendation
Hello.
Have you ever been sat in the corner of a room filled to the
brim with emptiness of an unknown origin, trapped by a great black dog which
with drooling yellow fangs snaps off the words “you’re a cunt” in near-continuous,
rumbling litany to keep you immobile and scare off any visitors you might have?
I have.
I probably wouldn't recommend it to friends.
One hopes you're well,
yrs,
ADWoodward
Sunday, 30 December 2012
Prometheus
Hello. Prometheus was the immortal who in Greek myth stole fire from the gods and gave it to his favourite mortal, humans. His name means 'forethought' and fire was often used as a symbol for thought and knowledge. Zeus, king of the gods, punished Prometheus for this by chaining him to a rock in the Caucasus. He also punished humanity by sending them a woman called Pandora ('all gifts') and a box. Pandora, a curious person by nature was instructed not to open the box. She could not resist, of course. When she opened the box a great stream of plagues and sufferings and whatnot streamed out of the box to bedevil humanity.
I have written a thing inspired by this myth which I think I thought I'd share with you. It is a chained Prometheus addressing an exultant Zeus and it goes thusly:
One hopes you're well,
yrs,
ADWoodward
I have written a thing inspired by this myth which I think I thought I'd share with you. It is a chained Prometheus addressing an exultant Zeus and it goes thusly:
PROMETHEUS
They were cold. They were frightened, flinching at half-seen
phantasms in the dark. They were left wanting for even the most basic of
necessities; left wanting by you, the all-powerful Father. Abandoned. Wretched.
Hopeless. Forgotten in the dust by you whom they had been taught would protect them.
By you whom they had been taught to love. By you whom they had been taught only
became wroth with them when they deserved it. They believed themselves to be
less than they were; to be children, subjects to the inscrutable will of the
Father, slaves to the whims of the master. They were sad, scared, pathetic
creatures, these humans. I heard them crying out and it wrenched my heart. I
heard them say:
“Please, Father! I’m hungry!”
“Please, Father! I hurt and I don’t know why!”
“Please, Father! Some curse has fallen upon me! I’m weak,
and I’m dying and I’m scared!”
I heard this. Night after night I heard this. I heard the
panic, the wailing, the sobbing of these broken-hearted children. I heard it
echoing off the sky until the very stars wept at their inability to help. I heard
it, and I know you heard it – how could you not? You heard it and you did
nothing. Nothing! You left them in their futile misery because “their nature
makes them unsuitable for anything more!”
I pitied them in their pointless, helpless plight. How could
you not? How could you hear their pleas and see their terror at a world not
their own and not do everything in your power to soften their hardship? How
could anyone refuse to give them a little bit of warmth and light?
You did, though.
So I gave them a spark, a few embers to distract them from
their fears and how they marvelled. How they laughed to see that these demons
they feared were nothing more than branches flailing in the wind. They fed the
fire and it fed them and they started to stand a little taller.
Those few inches brought them too close to you, though,
didn’t they? Too close to Olympos’ lofty heights. Secure in your storm-walled
fortress you saw those scant few inches as an unacceptable threat to your
power. Uppity servants need to be put in their place, don’t they? They need to
be made small so they don’t think they have the power to rise further than the
walls of their confines. You had them in their cage for a reason, after all.
They weren’t good enough to try their hand at all the joys beyond the four
walls you so thoughtfully put around them for their own safety.
You, o most myopic of deities, not only could you not see
the wonders this little lump of liberty would make possible, but you actually
punished them for daring to reach for it!
Did you really think, foul and impotent godling, that she would be a punishment? Did you
really think she, this daughter of my heart, imbued with the self-same
curiosity and kindness that saturates my own ichor, would be a burden to these
mortals? She is a rock on which they can stand tall, a rocket to launch them to
such heights that your Olympos will seem a squalid anthill.
Send your plagues, she will cure them. Have your wars to
thin the ranks of men, she and those like her will compose epics on the joys of
coming home. Sow your jealousy amongst their hearts; she will drive her race to
seek pure and everlasting joys. She will light such fires in the hearts of
mortals that the fear on which you depend for your power will soon be nought but
ash, a poorly-remembered childhood nightmare.
So rattle the clouds with thunder, scrawl threats across the
sky with lightning-charged ink howl with rage from your little throne; it will
do you no good. My inquiring daughter will give them all the gifts you denied
them. She will forge for them all the tools you feared they might wield. She
will lead them to wonders that you in your arrogant ignorance never dreamed
possible. She will end your loathsome reign.
One hopes you're well,
yrs,
ADWoodward
Monday, 26 November 2012
On Civility
Hello. The other day I was irritated on a train. I have written a cathartic, and slightly childish, thing which I would like to share with you. It goes thusly:
One hopes you're well,
Yours,
ADWoodward
On Civility
If you can’t be
civil, don’t be near me.
Them’s the rules.
And, by the way,
I know I mutter,
Under my gin-stained
breath,
With monotonous
regularity,
For the most
arbitrary of reasons,
That some bloke’s a
dick.
And equally, I know,
And feel some remorse,
That, at times,
I don’t even bother
To have the good
grace to mutter.
But I still claim the
right
To lay down
This forceful
Unilateral regulation,
Because I’m a
hypocrite,
A poorly-evolved
primate
Who does not pretend
To be a moral
example,
So my bad behaviour
Does not absolve you
From the stern and
solemn duty
To be a halfway
decent human being.
So, please,
If you’d be so kind,
Abide by my rule,
And, no matter how
tempting it might be,
Don’t,
For example,
Stand with headphones
blaring,
And an elbow in the
small of my back,
And don’t
Spend an entire train
journey
Blatantly staring
Down my friend’s
blouse,
And don’t -
And this irritated me
most,
Which is saying
something –
Shove me and shout
“Come on, I need to
get off here!
And if you don’t
hurry
The doors will shut!”
When the way is
barred
By people refusing to
move,
And I’m trying
With equal fervour
To de-train as well,
You self-absorbed,
egotistical,
Myopic, fucking
prick!
One hopes you're well,
Yours,
ADWoodward
Saturday, 27 October 2012
The Peril of the Department
Hello. Looking for something else on my laptop I have discovered a thing about which I had entirely forgotten. Last year, my department was one of many under threat of debilitating cuts and restructuring from an over-paid and out-of-touch university management. I wrote the following out of anger at this. I wrote it before I had started this blog and so didn't post it then. Since last year the proposals were successfully fought by the department, so the piece is now out-of-date. That said, I think it's still quite good so I thought I'd share it with you. It is inspired by the Cyclops episode from Homer's Odyssey (IX.80-410) and goes thusly:
One hopes you're well,
yrs,
ADWoodward
The Peril of the Department
Striking
the white surf with their oar-blades, my valiant crew and I came to the land of
the University Managers, a fierce, suit-clad people who never raise a hand to
plant knowledge in young heads. All the aspirations and abilities that grow in
that green, red-bricked land spring up, as far as they know, unsown and
untilled. Thinkers and writers and groups of young people clustered with new
ways of approaching old problems that sprout with the aid of critical-thinking
and research skills all appear thanks to the providence of the immortal gods.
Not so
very far from the land of the university managers, and not so near either,
there lies a luxuriant island, covered with world-class academics buzzing
merrily away in their paper hives and happy, flourishing students sprouting
from the sun-splashed lawns. The University Managers have nothing like our
ability to see the soul of a thing, no sensitive minds to see the value of a
thing beyond the bottom line of a balance sheet. Such visionaries would make
the isle a fine colony for the university managers.
It is
by no means a poor country, capable of yielding any crop in due season.
However, unable to access its splendid meadows and friendly, intriguing caves,
the University Managers, unknowing of the Elysium they destroy, shroud the land
with clouds of external fees which they send up like a man with an
overly-focussed gaze clears out his attic, throwing away ancient treasures
glittering with jewels of the purest beauty. Ignorant of the benefits such
artefacts could bring to him and his family, he piles them on the bonfire as
though they were dust-covered, empty boxes of Fox’s Teatime Assortment. Such
was the pall hanging over this little isle. With such pressure from overhead
blocking out the sun, the natural beauty of the island faded and its crops,
delicious and useful, were already struggling to burst from the rich loam in
the quantities they had in recent years.
The
tide and the wind conspired without consulting us at this critical stage in our
journey, forbade us from landing on this still-happy little land that reminded
me so much of our homeland of peaceful, verdant Academia and drove us directly
to the land of the university managers.
Springing
from the ship, the tall and much-lauded Department, I and my companions landed
in this strange, foreboding land, pausing only to pick up a skin of fine,
purple-red wine to appease whoever might live in this land that they might
grant us the supplies we needed to continue our journey back home, back to
sacred, joyful Academia.
Trembling
with the fear the rumours of these monsters had instilled in us, we swallowed
our fear and made our way to the great, fearful residence. The bones of
previous adventurers driven to these shores by fickle providence crunched under
our feet, but we had no choice; our only hope of continuing our journey lay in
the mercy of whatever creature made its home in that awful, joyless place. Entering
the residence, a lofty cave hacked out of the living mountain by the sweat of
thankless slaves, we were appalled. Our hearts sank as we spied banners bearing
the ancient, terrible battle-cry of “Efficiency Savings.” Tears ran down our
cheeks as we spied the spreadsheets, terrible trophies of battles past. Vomit
rose in my throat and I sank to my knees as I saw a terrible sight. There on
the floor, mutilated by the strokes of an axe but still recognisable, was the
head of one whom I’d known in my boyhood back in Academia. Poor Sussex; hacked
to death and abandoned in the corner like the garbage at the end of a riotous
feast.
“What’s
this?” A terrible shadow fell across us as the voice boomed around the
corpse-stenched abode. We turned and saw for the terrible form of Polyagnosias,
King of the University Managers. One horrible eye, capable only of seeing one
horrible, lifeless vision of the world, gleamed like a pus-oozing boil from its
forehead. The bloated, barbarous creature wore a jacket fashioned the skins of
his victims, with patches on the elbows dyed with the heart-blood he
mercilessly drains from them. The sickening image stood in malignant mockery of
the garb and peaceful mindset of we Academics. The trousers bulged grotesquely
with the fetid, stinking masses of the creature’s half-finished meal of
“bonuses”, a sickly sweet fruit no honest man can hope to taste. We learned
this term from brave men who have faced these monstrosities and fled with their
lives weakened and trembling, they shamble about their native homes like the
pale shades that haunt the banks of the Styx, unable to continue with the work
that used to give them such due to their grief for slaughtered companions whose
absence they miss like a butchered limb.
With
the pallid, gaunt faces of these heroes-brought-low capering in their
nauseating dance before my eyes, I approached the dreadful creature and looked
into its gaze, into that terrifying window both flat and unloving. I proffered
the wine which we had brought from our ship and spake thusly:
“Sire,
noble king of this ancient, wooded land, I thank you for not instantly
devouring us and taking our meagre supplies for yourself. It shames us to have
to rely on another’s mercy to survive, but we have no other choice. We set out
with enough supplies on our great ship, The Department, to make it to our
destination, with a small amount left over as well. Woe befell us when those
being who shape events and control the smallest aspect of our lives placed upon
our shoulders a great and massive burden. Those supplies, which without this
would have been enough, are now under great pressure. We need your help so that
we might return to our homeland where our crops need tending and our young require
our experienced hands to set them on the right course for the future. Please
take this gift and let it warm your heart towards helping us in this time of
sudden uncertainty.”
The
beast seized the wine in its oversized paw and greedily drank it down. It did
not pause to enjoy the gift or express any thanks that it had received it. Such
thoughts of gratitude do not enter a mind that regards privilege as its due.
The beast turned its eye to me and smiled a terrible, grotesque approximation
of a grin. It’s mimicry of civility made what I feared seem all the more
terrible. With the half-rotten flecks of previous meals visible in its teeth,
the beast addressed me:
“Who
are you who rightfully honours me so?”
“I am
Nobody, Lord.”
“Then
as a reward I shall eat Nobody last.”
With
this the beast seized two of my companions and ate them whole and speedily,
their cries for mercy as redundant as their attempts to get away from that terrible,
reaching hand. Not sated by this first barbarous course, the beast seized
another two of my companions and dispatched them in the same way. Gross excess
of this sort warms the body and soothes the mind, and so the terrible beast
retired to its bed of piled-up treasure, unearned and unvalued, and began to
snore.
The
beast had left the entrance to its home unbarred, and left nothing to prevent
us escaping and evading a further confrontation which would surely end in us
sharing the same grisly fate. But what use would flight serve? Losing four of
my faithful companions had wounded me deeply. More than that, though, without
them we had no hope of properly steering the tall and well-built Department. We
would drift, unable to properly move the oaken planking and swift painted prow
through the surf, until some unseen future catastrophe from the gods ended our
adventures for good.
We were
resolved. Our only hope of being able to continue under the bright lamp of the
sun lay in this cave, lay in our own determination. Lying to one side of the
cave was a huge staff of green olive-wood which the beast had cut to carry with
it when it was out strolling to support its weight when circumstance, as it so
often did, left him with barely a leg on which to stand. Spying this pole, a
plan instantly formed in my mind. I called for my companions to aid me in this
new task before me. The pole was so large that it took the combined efforts of
all the crew-members of the Department to move it and so secure our freedom.
We
moved the pole over to the fire cheerfully blazing under the cavernous hearth
and held it in the flames. When the fierce glow from the olive stake warned me
it was about to catch alight in the flames, green as it was, I withdrew it from
the fire and my companions gathered around. A god now inspired them with
tremendous courage. Seizing the olive pole, they drove its sharpened end
directly into the beast’s flesh next to it monstrous, sleeping eye while I used
my weight from above to twist it home; like a man using a hole-punch to pierce
a stack of papers he’d spent years of painstaking research producing while his
colleagues work around him proof-reading and ensuring the piece is of the same
high quality that secures the reputation and future income of their college. In
much the same way we handled our pole with its red-hot point and twisted it
into the beast’s flesh until the blood boiled up and the stench of scorched flesh
rose up and stung our nostrils. We removed the pole and could see the unused
eye we’d released from its binding of healed-over skin, the second eye that
grants its owner perspective and which can fade if not used.
The
pain caused the beast to empty its stomach of its foul meal. My companions came
tumbling out in rush of wine and foul juices, shaken but ecstatic that what
they’d thought was their end was not so. The beast awoke with a yelp and
screamed in a voice that could be heard for miles around the following:
“Nobody
has opened my eyes! Nobody has helped me see the justice of using some of my
grand resources to help him and his Department continue on their journey
instead of keeping it selfishly for my own comfort!”
All
around him the other University Managers nodded approvingly at what seemed like
a fine decision which would do much to improve their people’s reputation in the
world and resolved to congratulate their king on his noble and praiseworthy
action. It didn’t matter to us that the king of the University Managers was now
seen as clement and wise, we were simply jubilant to have resolved this
dangerous situation. As dawn appeared, fresh and rosy-fingered, we were once
again striking the white surf with our oar-blades, back on course to our home
of peaceful Academia
One hopes you're well,
yrs,
ADWoodward
Saturday, 6 October 2012
Arts Degree
Hello. I wrote the first bit of this way back in January an the rest earlier this week. I enjoyed writing the first bit but when I came back to it after the first session I could not get back into the tone of it. On Tuesday I got sudden inspiration and finished it. I'm quite happy with how it has turned out, so I thought I'd share it with you. It goes thusly:
One hopes you're well,
yrs,
ADWoodward
Arts Degree
Or: Don’t Interrupt My Drinking
I was sat in the pub last week with a beer and a steak and
sat by my plate a stack - near collapse, on the verge - a pile of Latin verse. For
a while a man had been staring and with a smile he struck a bearing and spoke.
My reply, though terse, failed to unnerve him or move him, in fact he just
zoomed in and asked: “Can you tell me what the point is: all this toil up in
that joint with the purpose to anoint eight thousand more youths (less
dropouts) with certification?. They’re so impatient to fill the nation with
vagrants who are qualified to debate the neighbours on the literature of Plato
– they think they’re so smart but really they’re useless and vaypid.” His
fallacy’s quite flagrant. Not least because it’s vapid, the ‘a’ is short, like
my patience. I don’t retort because I want my steak and not confrontation. But
this paragon of tedious arrogance has had a rapid thought and continues as though
he’s not already bored me: “The problem with you – as in you lot, not just you here
before me – is that you all think what you learn will matter when you enter the
real world and scatter to earn your place in it. Why, that stack of notes right
there, I think you’ll just bin it. You’ll never use it again, and so, my
studious young friend, I ask: why do you do it? Why do you strive at these
tasks?” He then says something he shouldn’t, just one thing: “I think it’s
right that the Arts have lost all their funding.”
“Well sir,” I state, a little irate, “I don’t concur. In
fact, I believe your thoughts are both daft and actively damaging. And I’m not
being disparaging just to get you to leave- though that’s an event whose
failure to happen I honestly grieve. No, it’s not just that you bore me and
ignore me when I give you hints that your little stint in my presence isn’t a
thing that I like; it’s that you’re wrong. So get on your bike and go. But
first I’d like you to know the reasons you’re wrong. The list is quite long so
I’ll just give you a few. In fact, only two!”
I pick up my beer and soften my thirst. “Reason the first.
We ‘waste our time’ and taste the fine thought of minds from ages past to learn
how to think; really think not just muse on what we will drink. We do this
because – and I do hope you’re following – if we go through our lives just
merrily swallowing the things that are said and the words that are spread by
those in charge we’ll derail rather fast. Then, when we’re done, this all will
have led to a stark inability to speak with facility to see our goals won
without tanks, bombs, and guns: speaking is nicer than steel, lead, and fire.
“Reason the second, the more important, I reckon, is that
beauty - the wonders that you see and hear and know and feel – is hard to make
real. It’s a trophy that’s born from a half-dreamt phantasm. The true artist’s
job is in bridging this chasm and in making these joys a concrete reality. This
is why we need an Arts faculty. The Sciences constantly give us marvellous tools
to help us survive but if we’re really to thrive we need reasons to live. These
can only come if we all speak as one and support the Arts.”
Soundly chastised my opponent departs. I pause, then I grin
and order a gin. A double with lime and soda. As the young people say: that’s
better; rant over.
One hopes you're well,
yrs,
ADWoodward
Tuesday, 2 October 2012
"Sir," He Said
Hello. Yesterday I was irritated by a daft little man, so I wrote a thing for a spot of catharsis. Now I have it I thought I'd share it with you. It goes thusly:
One Hopes You're Well,
Yrs,
ADWoodward
“Sir,” He Said
“Sir,” He said, “I have a poorly thought-out opinion.”
“That’s nice,” Sir
replied.
“I’d like to pretend it’s a question-“
“Oh?”
“And use it to take up a full five minutes of the class.”
“Not just now.”
“But I think speaking and saying something of value are the
same thing!”
“I can’t really stop
you at this point, can I?”
“No, Sir.”
“I didn’t think so”
“So I’d like to ignore the irritated expressions of my
classmates,”
“Right.”
“And their mimes of eager suicide,”
“Good to know.”
“And proceed obliviously on my chosen path,”
“Okay.”
“Because their genuine desire to study this interesting
thing.”
“Uh-huh.”
“And their attempts to be educated in general,”
“Mmm.”
“Are less important than my belief that this sort of thing
makes me seem intelligent.”
And then Sir did not
hit him round the head with a shovel.
Not even a little.
Everyone was really
disappointed.
One Hopes You're Well,
Yrs,
ADWoodward
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)