It’s Complicated
No one ever
loved anyone the way that person
wanted to be
loved. – Mignon McLaughlin
I say I love you and I can
see you’re pleased.
It’s generally accepted
love is a good thing
and being loved is the best
kind of love.
What you do not know—what
you cannot know—is
how hard it is for me to
love,
how hard it is for me to be
sure what I feel for you
(and be assured I do have feelings for
you),
is indeed this thing people
call love.
Saying I love
you is easier than explaining all of this—
besides, I’m
sure any explanation I might attempt
would not
explain anything, since love is an emotion
and meaning
an intellectual construct,
and neither
really gets the other or gets on.
At the end of the day, just
assume I love you
the way you think you love
me and, yes, yes,
every question deserves an
answer
but not everything warrants
a question.
Happiness is a Pair of Glasses
Happiness cannot
be pursued, it must ensue.
– Dr. Viktor
Frankl
The thing about
metaphors
is we want to believe
them.
It’s the “is.” Has
to be the “is.”
We believe
life is a journey
and happiness is
always
three steps ahead
of us when,
really, it’s just
another word.
It doesn’t need to
get
run down or caught
up with.
It simply asks to
be defined:
THIS is what makes
me happy.
Not so hard
really.
A cliché, then, to
depict a metaphor:
A man looking for
his glasses when
his glasses are
perched on his head.
Purity
Theoretically total silence cannot exist. One can
still hear the random movement of microscopic particles suspended in liquids or
gases colliding with fast-moving atoms or molecules.
I’ve never been happy in my life.
Not completely.
I mean, I get the idea, I do.
I’ve also never seen red.
Not just red, red-red,
pure red.
I guess I might’ve seen red in passing.
In amongst the crimsons, the maroons,
the roses, rubies, rusts, burgundies,
vermilions and fire engine reds.
And it’s pretty much the same with anger
and joy and all the other core emotions.
I’ve been kinda happy, a kind of happy,
but there’s always a tinge of euphoria
or excitement or interest or pride or
any of forty others muddying the pool.
I guess it’s like silence that way.
It only truly exists in a dictionary.
Shrinkflation
To be honest
what passes for honesty these
days,
what we pass off as
honesty,
bears only a passing resemblance
to the great honesties of the
past.
It happened gradually,
insidiously, to be honest,
a few grains of truth here
a few grains of truth there.
You know how it goes:
a junior marketer learns the
now-obsolete collective noun
for a group of truths is a
dribble,
tells his boss, whose eyes go
kerching!
and, well, it was all downhill
from there.
Small Losses
[A]ll memories are to some
degree false. – Martin A.Conway, Catherine Loveday,
Consciousness and Cognition, Vol 33, May 2015, p.580
Once I realised memory was
comprised
of 90% imagination and 10%
experience
forgetting what I'd clearly
never actually
remembered in the first
place became
so much less of a burden,
almost a relief.
You cannot lose
what was never truly yours
in the first place.
Jim Murdoch has been writing poetry for
fifty years and has graced the pages of many now-defunct magazines and a few,
like Ink, Sweat and Tears and Poetry Scotland, that are still
hanging on in there. For ten years he ran the literary blog The Truth About Lies but now lives
quietly in Scotland with his wife and (increasingly) next door’s cat. He has
published two books of poetry, a short story collection and four novels.
These poems offer surprises on the old theme of love ... and I love them.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the feedback, Kathryn. I do appreciate it. Love, of course, is one of those subjects that we think’s been done to death and yet we keep finding more to say about it, at least I do especially now I’m getting on in years and have developed a bit of perspective. If you’re interested you can read another poem about love here: https://literaryyard.com/2023/07/06/sixth-times-the-charm-and-other-poems/
ReplyDeleteGreat stuff Jim. Love, happiness, purity, your old favourite honesty as distinct from lies, and all topped off with loss.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link, Jim. These Lothlorien poems are moodier and speak of love in a way that's different from the Literary Yard poems, less regret or taking stock and more mystery. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDelete