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		 (11-24-2016, 10:49 PM)Pdeathstar Wrote:  well, one time in high school one girl caught me giving poems I wrote for her to another girl, and, needlessly to say she wasn't happy about it... she wrote a four page break-up letter.
 Sadly those poems have been lost to time, but they must have been some good shit to inspire jealousy like that. ^_^
 
 The weren't good enough to get me laid though... guess the girls who are into poetry don't poke. Pfft.
 
 
 I also won first place in a writing contest once, so unlike Billy, i'm a pretty fly poet... and i even got picked for publishing that poem but my stupid mom wouldn't give me the $79.99 plus 13.50s/h for the administrative fees. >_<
 
my bold. Bad guess, maybe it was just you.    
billy wrote:welcome to the site. make it your own, wear it like a well loved slipper and wear it out. ella pleads:please click forum titles for posting guidelines, important threads. New poet? Try Poetic DevicesandWard's Tips
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Roses are red,violent are blue,
 i just want,
 to fuck you.
 
 
 I sent it to like 30 girls, she shouldn't have been surprised. @Lizzie, i have had no worth while thoughts in a long while now... i did write a few for pig pen write of fall or whatever...
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Maybe it was the misplaced comma after want.
	 
billy wrote:welcome to the site. make it your own, wear it like a well loved slipper and wear it out. ella pleads:please click forum titles for posting guidelines, important threads. New poet? Try Poetic DevicesandWard's Tips
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		11-25-2016, 01:36 PM 
(This post was last modified: 11-25-2016, 05:24 PM by billy.)
	
	 
		violent are blue   
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (11-25-2016, 01:36 PM)billy Wrote:  violent are blue  
Are you alluding to me? 
 
I was saying that I enjoy inflicting my terrible poetry on other people. That's all.    
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		no lizzie.
 to the 2nd line
 
 Roses are red,
 violent are blue,
 i just want,
 to fuck you.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Girls don't really fall for poetry, and women only rarely. But goddesses? God, grant me a Katharine Hepburn!
 I like to think all of what I do should eventually lead to a book, which itself should be practice for some sort of epic, which itself should be practice for some sort of poetic webcomic or animated television miniseries. I'm glad to choke on all this youthful optimism, especially while I'm young -- although maybe that's what "myself" forgets, to try her hand on something suicidally big? That way, even if it's terrible, the arrogance is justified -- for one, at some point someone big is gonna love it, and for another, making something that big is feat enough. Like, say, Henry Darger.
 
 It might be that at some point, writing for the self just won't cut it anymore*. Maybe art's a progression, and one moves from the broadly aesthetic, to the broadly social, to the broadly spiritual -- and, barring circumstance, the river feels blocked only because it's time for the salmon to leap.
 
 * -- but consider writing as separate from publishing. Henry Darger never published, Emily Dickinson rarely.
 
 ---- man, the call for trying my hand at love poetry again is growing louder.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (11-25-2016, 05:55 PM)RiverNotch Wrote:  Girls don't really fall for poetry, and women only rarely. But goddesses? God, grant me a Katharine Hepburn!
 I like to think all of what I do should eventually lead to a book, which itself should be practice for some sort of epic, which itself should be practice for some sort of poetic webcomic or animated television miniseries. I'm glad to choke on all this youthful optimism, especially while I'm young -- although maybe that's what "myself" forgets, to try her hand on something suicidally big? That way, even if it's terrible, the arrogance is justified -- for one, at some point someone big is gonna love it, and for another, making something that big is feat enough. Like, say, Henry Darger.
 
 It might be that at some point, writing for the self just won't cut it anymore*. Maybe art's a progression, and one moves from the broadly aesthetic, to the broadly social, to the broadly spiritual -- and, barring circumstance, the river feels blocked only because it's time for the salmon to leap.
 
 * -- but consider writing as separate from publishing. Henry Darger never published, Emily Dickinson rarely.
 
 ---- man, the call for trying my hand at love poetry again is growing louder.
 
I hold you in complete contempt, because you're not 30 as yet and because you claim to like Katherine Hepburn, who's about as attractive as a grandma. 
Fie on thee.
	 
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		 (11-25-2016, 01:36 PM)billy Wrote:  violent are blue  
maybe that's why. they thought i was alluding to domestic violence, but all this time it was just a typo....
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		I do like that line, though. Sheds a lot of light on the speaker....  (11-25-2016, 09:46 PM)Pdeathstar Wrote:   (11-25-2016, 01:36 PM)billy Wrote:  violent are blue  maybe that's why. they thought i was alluding to domestic violence, but all this time it was just a typo....
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (11-25-2016, 10:19 PM)RiverNotch Wrote:  I do like that line, though. Sheds a lot of light on the speaker....
  (11-25-2016, 09:46 PM)Pdeathstar Wrote:   (11-25-2016, 01:36 PM)billy Wrote:  violent are blue  maybe that's why. they thought i was alluding to domestic violence, but all this time it was just a typo....
  Violence...
 
                                                                                                                           a brightly colored fungus that grows in bark inclusions 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Does it matter what all the other people say?  Why write for a world that never knows what it wants?  I always thought a writer should write something simply for the joy of writing it, that one should write something because you can't NOT write it.  People can read passion between the lines.  I say write with passion anything that it gives you joy to write about, relevant or not, and come what may.  Then, even if the poem is not well received, it still wasn't a waste of time because you were doing something you love.  You have made something that pleases you, and spent happy hours doing it.  Play with the words, revel in them, adore them, and forget about the eyes on the other end of the adventure.  And who knows, maybe you were writing for a generation that has not yet been born.  That is my answer to the original conversation.    
The Soufflé isn’t the soufflé; the soufflé is the recipe. --Clara 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		It definitely matters what other people say. No one is posting on the critique forums because they don't care what people say. Most want positive feedback as well. People object to harsh negative feedback, they take it personally (I'm guilty).... People need to be loved.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Yes, after the thing is written, if you look at it and think it is actually something decent, it is nice to have others acknowledge it, and maybe help tweak it to make it palatable to others besides yourself.  But, the germ of the idea, the seed ... that should be pure passion for the game don't you think?   I mean, it's one thing if you sit down to write a text book or research paper.  No one expects passion there, and it has a completely different function.  But there is little to no money or glory in poetry, and when people read poetry they read it to breathe in someone else's exhilaration, to feel a momentary burst of someone else's pain or pleasure or fascination with something.  They can't read that feeling if you don't write the feeling into it.  The only reason I can see to write poetry it is for the love of it.
	 
The Soufflé isn’t the soufflé; the soufflé is the recipe. --Clara 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		11-27-2016, 04:11 AM 
(This post was last modified: 11-27-2016, 04:14 AM by Leanne.)
	
	 
		 (11-27-2016, 03:27 AM)Pdeathstar Wrote:  It definitely matters what other people say. No one is posting on the critique forums because they don't care what people say.  
You started out so well -- anyone who posts on a critique forum and then says they don't care what other people say is either entirely devoid of intelligence or a flaming hypocrite.
 
And then you go on to say this...
  (11-27-2016, 03:27 AM)Pdeathstar Wrote:  Most want positive feedback as well. People object to harsh negative feedback, they take it personally (I'm guilty).... People need to be loved. 
What a load of steaming horseturds.
	 
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		I'm a glutton for punishment, please critique away
	 
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		 (11-26-2016, 10:12 PM)Quixilated Wrote:  Does it matter what all the other people say?  Why write for a world that never knows what it wants?  I always thought a writer should write something simply for the joy of writing it, that one should write something because you can't NOT write it.  People can read passion between the lines.  I say write with passion anything that it gives you joy to write about, relevant or not, and come what may.  Then, even if the poem is not well received, it still wasn't a waste of time because you were doing something you love.  You have made something that pleases you, and spent happy hours doing it.  Play with the words, revel in them, adore them, and forget about the eyes on the other end of the adventure.  And who knows, maybe you were writing for a generation that has not yet been born.  That is my answer to the original conversation.   
i think what you said is true. we should definitely write because we want to write, us, ourselves, as individuals. self-indulgence is often criticised as a negative thing; but, i think, without it there really would be no innovations in art. . .  philosophically speaking, i cannot deny that we always write for the Other, but in the moment of creating, producing, the individual 'self' is spread out; until, the I/Other dualism is not appropriate or a useful concept. 
 
but, and i may have read Leanne's dialogue wrong, the problem is what to do when you have nothing left to say? do you stop, satisfied that you have written all you wanted? or do you seek out new pathways? is it forced? are you compromising your integrity? you know you have nothing left to say. now you're just waffling [yes, i am fully aware of the irony]. yet, you cannot be satisfied. you've got the habit of writing and thinking poetry. i think of it like the concept of the 'paranoid or hypochondriac body without organs'; that is, crudely stated, one makes oneself a body without organs [poetry], but nothing passes across the surface, no vibrations or sensations.
 
"So why these examples, why must we start there? Emptied bodies instead full ones. What happened? Is it really so sad and dangerous to be fed up with seeing with your eyes, breathing with your lungs, swallowing with your mouth, talking with your tongue, thinking with your brain, having an anus and larynx, head and legs? Why not walk on your head, sing with your sinuses, see through your skin, breathe with your belly: the simple Thing, the Entity, the full Body, the stationary Voyage, Anorexia, cutaneous Vision, Yoga, Krishna, Love, Experimentation. Where psychoanalysis says, "Stop, find your self again," we should say instead, "Let's go further still, we haven't found our BwO yet, we haven't sufficiently dismantled our self." Substitute forgetting for anamnesis, experimentation for interpretation. Find your body without organs. Find out how to make it. It's a question of life and death, youth and old age, sadness and joy. It is where everything is played out."
 
~Deleuze
 
  (11-27-2016, 03:44 AM)Quixilated Wrote:  Yes, after the thing is written, if you look at it and think it is actually something decent, it is nice to have others acknowledge it, and maybe help tweak it to make it palatable to others besides yourself.  But, the germ of the idea, the seed ... that should be pure passion for the game don't you think?   I mean, it's one thing if you sit down to write a text book or research paper.  No one expects passion there, and it has a completely different function.  But there is little to no money or glory in poetry, and when people read poetry they read it to breathe in someone else's exhilaration, to feel a momentary burst of someone else's pain or pleasure or fascination with something.  They can't read that feeling if you don't write the feeling into it.  The only reason I can see to write poetry it is for the love of it. 
i disagree that people read poetry purely as a kind of emotional vicariousness. there are all sorts of reasons people read poetry. and all it really comes down to is this: did they? did you want them to? also, and i have said it before, poetry is founded on a gregarious system. to write "for the love of poetry" is already to admit a 'love' for that particular system. but, it is complicated. in the "moment" we become a new multiplicity. others are involved necessarily, but it isn't a binary or trinary system, etc. there are no units. em. . . this is starting to sound like our friend Heidegger. we think in false dichotomies because we atomize everything into ontological units. I and Other. I/You. but, i do not write for  other people, i write before  other people, or with  them.
 
"You lose yourself, you reappear 
You suddenly find you got nothing to fear 
Alone you stand with nobody near 
When a trembling distant voice, unclear 
Startles your sleeping ears to hear 
That somebody thinks they really found you
 
A question in your nerves is lit 
Yet you know there is no answer fit to satisfy 
Insure you not to quit 
To keep it in your mind and not forget 
That it is not he or she or them or it 
That you belong to."
 
~Bob Dylan
	 
		
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