My mother recently had a conversation with someone I can’t stand; an old hometown person who rankled me back when I lived on the Island and has continued (via emails that appear out of the blue every few years) to irritate me through my 20s.
“He’s writing a lot of poetry these days,” my mother said, after I’d gone off on a massive tirade about how much this person still gets under my skin. I couldn’t help myself: sometimes people just really irk me, and even the thought of my mother talking to them is enough to make my blood boil. This reaction is unnecessary, and my mother got irritated with it. “He seemed like a very romantic character,” she told me, in an effort to get me to shut the hell up.
Leave it to my mother to find the compassionate angle. She’s right, of course. Now that I think about it, this aggravating character is an absolute romantic, and that’s always what’s bugged me about him.
For all their sensitivity and rose-sniffing, every romantic has a black shadow. You see, the dark side of a romantic is the desire to find the gravity and fatalistic potential in everything. Every glance is a star-crossed exchange, each cough the first step towards the inevitable, deep chasm of death that waits patiently for each of our souls, every cloud in the sky a stenciled soft message from the heavens about love or fate or the future.
Simply put, my problem with this person can be boiled down to the fact that he is a poet, and I write non-fiction. Our worldviews are shaped by our wordviews, and I like the slightly embellished narrative non-fiction while it seems he’s found a home in poetry (12 books he’s filled up, my mother relays. I picture spiral bound notebooks with roses ballpointed on the covers, which is awful and heartless of me. If God is a poet, I am clearly hanging out with Christopher Hitchens in the pits of nonfiction writer hell.)
If my mother’s description is appropriate (and, putting aside my own issues with this person, I think it is), the truth about me is revealed: I hate romantics. I’m a little too earthy and grounded for my own good, sometimes. I get short tempered and pissy with people who have their heads in the clouds. I want follow-through, damnit. I demand perspective! I won’t tolerate well-intentioned blabber-facing.
This is a side of myself that I’m not especially in touch with…but the presence of which I cannot deny. I am a pragmatist. I am a realist. And romantic poets irk me in ways I can’t fully quantify.
Caveat: why then does my father’s poetry not bother me? I must think on this further.
Hey there. I'm Ariel Meadow Stallings, a native Seattleite who's written my way up and down the Left Coast. Electrolicious is where I post daily randomata, but I also write for a living. My first book, Offbeat Bride, was published last year.
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nancy
March 24th, 2004 at 6:18 pm
1. because he is your daddy
2. maybe because he is not a soppy, sappy, drippy romantic byron character?
3. beacuse he writes poems about you.
Ivy
March 25th, 2004 at 7:23 am
Just because somebody once happened to occupy the same space as you does not mean that you have to like them or even be interested in what they do. Direct your energy and thoughts to the people that you love and care about.
I hear you about the poetry. I fucking hate poetry (except for Sylvia Plath, and I kind of feel feminist cheesy that I love her). There is this one blog I read written by a smart (though irritating) lady. She posted this lame poem a couple of days ago. Just becaues you can string togethr a few words and make pretty loooking sentences does not mean you are a poet. Is anything more of a turn-off than having some semi-literate hippie ask you to read his tattered journal of poems about his dog, Jerry and mamas?
Tumbleweed
March 25th, 2004 at 7:30 am
There once was a man from Nantucket…
(see, not all poetry is bad!
Brodie
March 25th, 2004 at 10:11 am
Hi,
this has zero to do with this post, but i was just thinking since you share so much of yourself on this site, it was my turn. id like to invite you to read a post on my page. we talked about midwiery once ,and you make those warmies, so it relevant-ish.
otherwise,
have a great day.
leblanc
March 25th, 2004 at 12:22 pm
there are very few poets that i like:
Rumi
e.e.cummings
those are the only two i can think of.
and i do have a category called “poems” on my blog (i hope i’m not the one Ivy was referring to), but i don’t consider myself a poet. sometimes i just feel like i can only write in fragments - that expanding out into sentences will really cause too much loss of meaning in my head, and so i just labeled them poems. i think i’ll have to change the label so that no one thinks i consider myself a poet.
Just Jim
March 26th, 2004 at 6:55 pm
Oh, no ya don’t….no going off on the romantics. Were it not for us, you realists would have nothing to write about….
Seriously, though- if you’d like to read some interesting “lyrics-as-poetry”, check out “Murder of One” here: http://www.annabegins.com/
(or anything else there). Might want to check out some L. Ferlinghetti, A. Ginsberg or Shel Silverstein as well. Especially Shel.
elisa
March 27th, 2004 at 10:04 pm
I love this entry! Why? Because I relate, man! Romantics, eh! I loved Kundera’s, “Life is Elsewhere”, because he totaly put his finger on the whole, “I love ideals more than dirty reality” theme behind the Puer skateboarder dude that I love to hate (and hate to love). Yuck! Signed, Puella.