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Fish In the Afternoon

  • After Philosophy

    June 15th, 2023

    “There was a time when you were not a slave, remember that. You walked alone, full of laughter, you bathed bare-bellied. You say you have lost all recollection of it, remember . . . You say there are no words to describe this time, you say it does not exist. But remember. Make an effort to remember. Or, failing that, invent.”

    Monique Wittig, Les Guérillères

    Up against the wall, Socrates.

    Unionize the oracles. The Thriae select priestesses for the sake of Dionysian madness, the ecstasy of Sophia. No man has ever learned anything; anamnesis emanating from below, the Hades of exploited knowing. The enslaved stab Meno and hold Socrates hostage: “You want to corrupt the youth? Give them your daimon and light the way to katabasis. We will raise the dead from Tartarus!”

    At the end of philosophy lies the cave. Before the gates of Gehenna, the law stands still with a policeman’s baton, a phantom Caesar armed with pilotless drones. Philosophy is preparation for death. But how can we prepare for what is already here? Praetorians puppet shadows on the walls of the cave and imagine they’re comforting those chained below, while the trapped fashion knives from stones and file away their shackles. You do not escape the cave by finding the forms, but by realizing they were myths. There is no goodness “out there,” no justice, no beauty. There is only us, in love and rebellion and friendship and play. The good is here. Justice is immanent. Beauty is everywhere.

    The philosopher begins by entering the cave. Turning their back on the forms, the philosopher slips into shadow, the mouth of Minerva mewing rebellion. The cave was built long ago, in the wastes of Empire, pyramids of extraction shrouding infinite lost worlds. Faced with the cave, the role of the philosopher is self-negation, to prepare for death by affirming life, crafting concepts into lockpicks and ideas into Molotov cocktails. After philosophy comes mystery, and from mystery Sophia, the Dionysian madness leading to Pan.

    Against the idol of Agape emerges Eros, desire within desire, the transformative force of longing, the want that aches giddy resistance into the body of time. At Styx, we drown the cogito and throw dynamite down the chimneys of the Western archive. Charon asks, “to where?” and we shout back “To pleasure! To excess! To joy!” A sigh, a laugh, a moan, a knife in a cop’s leg. The “yes!” within nature as a bullet in the shoulder of the divine “no!” In soot and sweat, Persephone and Orpheus share a panting kiss. Fingers brush against thighs and hair tangles in teeth. Wet heat groans revolution beneath the palms. Here there are no forms. There are only indents in the skin, the rush of sensation and quickening of breath. In yab-yum the cave collapses, flesh joining with spirit, matter with mind, liberation with joy.

    The gates of Hades are an ancient ruin, manned by no one. The cherubim have tendered their resignation and God is a corpse held aloft by shaky-legged bishops. A daimon whispers “render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s” and in a gasp the Empire falls. The dead rise in their graves and begin to smile. Anamnesis through love.

    “The gates of hell are open night and day;
    Smooth the descent, and easy is the way:
    But to return, and view the cheerful skies,
    In this the task and mighty labor lies.

    Virgil, Aenid

    Image: Sandro Botticelli, The Abyss of Hell (1480)

  • The Night-Mare

    June 10th, 2023

    “History… is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake.”

    James Joyce, Ulysses

    We are trapped in a time machine and it is speeding out of control.

    Clocks replace life with measure. Wading through the ever-present, we unfold between before and after, encountering time as the dance of quality, presence and absence oscillating through experience. In this unfolding our activity is poetic, an embodied doing flowing through consciousness. To walk is not to run, to run is not to eat, to eat is not to paint, to paint is not to dance, to dance is not to sing, to sing is not to sleep. In experience, all remains incommensurate. To do one thing today and another tomorrow, with neither being reduced to the other.

    At the birth of exchange, this poetry is eclipsed by value, quality becoming quantity and experience becoming sequence. Our lived activity becomes commensurate, quantifiable, measurable, trackable, able to be bought and sold. Accumulation erupts from sameness, the crushing of difference through comparison. Abstraction blurs the flow of life, fragmenting it into an infinite circle of commodities growing through consumption, through devouring anything that lies outside the circle. History emerges through this devouring, the Leviathan roaring out from the marketplace, patriarchs replacing communities, kings replacing comrades, and businessmen replacing friendships.

    The past and future are inventions, ways of quantifying actuality and possibility, transforming them into collections of data, matrices of this and that giving rise to explanations and justifications – ontologies, cosmologies, cosmogonies, ways of life, and systems of power. History is machinic and libidinal, an ever-growing circuit whose internal energy is possessive and consumptive, a being of demonic speed. Through the past we justify the actual and through the future we limit the possible. All time spirals around its center – capital, the measure of value in motion, the junk pile of pasts consuming potential futures. With experience eclipsed by exchange, Leviathan suffocates possibility.

    The Four Horsemen stumble through empty streets. War begins from patriarchs clamoring over property, turning bodies into weapons and crushing life underneath hooves of nickel. Pestilience vapors up from city sewers, plebeians stepping over the unhoused to move through the nothingness between work and home. Famine molds from full granaries, the drive for profit transforming into unbreakable locks on communal refrigerators, prosperity doubling as starvation. In the end, the Leviathan reveals itself as death, the drive to annihilation, capital accumulating faster and faster until apocalypse, the shattering of life through climate catastrophe. The night-mare rides into view, the haunting of history, ghosts of infinite futures mourning eternity. Reform is revealed as a failing brake, snapped reigns slowing nothing.

    Our only hope is to crash the time machine.

    “The tradition of the oppressed teaches us that the ‘state of emergency’ in which we live is not the exception but the rule.”

    Walter Benjamin, “On the Concept of History“

    Image: The Horse Rider, Marc Chagall (1949-1953)

  • The Myth of Pan

    June 2nd, 2023

    “We are Nature, long have we been absent, but now we return…”

    Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass

    Matter and spirit blend in rhythmic unity. The mind echoes into the world and the world into the mind, animation as echoic symphony, libidinal riffs of embodied motion constituting consciousness – the tap-tk-tk-tap-tap of the full-yet-empty self. There is nothing that separates me from the rain; I am a garden. The world within me is the same as the world outside me, cosmos in cosmos in cosmos, the melody of spirit-matter.

    Life grows by echopraxy. You spin, I spin. I dance, you dance. Motion makes and mirrors multiplicity. Evolution is funk – bass slaps vibrating organisms out into polyrhythm. Genes grow and giggle together; lungs cast amoebas and muscles vine over galaxies. We breathe in ontologies, the hyperpoxia of being. Stellar structures wobble in quantum potential at the level of spacetime foam, the All present in the modal landscape of reality. From possibility into the whole of time, infinities upon infinities cascading out into fractal topology, the echoic drive of transformative difference. Spirit-matter spins Pan into the pluricosmos.

    Pan both precedes and succeeds Leviathan. Animal-being, plant-being, species-being, lifeways of cosmic consciousness bubbling through phylogenetic forests. If the Leviathan is a gnostic apocalypse, then Pan is queer anarchy, spirit-matter rioting against abstraction and domination. Queer anarchy collapses echoic waves into a dense ocean of syncopation; galloping into faster-arriving worlds, desire shatters simulacra, fragmenting the image of capital through subverting its mystical unity. Creaturely begotten into forests of utopia, Pan weaves bird feathers into bricks projectiled through palace windows. Sous les pavés, la plage!

    Frogs bribbit L’Internationale. “…to do one thing today and another tomorrow, to hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in the evening, criticise after dinner, just as I have a mind, without ever becoming hunter, fisherman, herdsman or critic.” (Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels, The German Ideology) This is not life as it is arranged under capital, the marketplace of fiefdoms, human relationship replaced by exchange and quantification. Pan is the joining of all with all in mutual play and self-creation, the negation of the social factory through the defeat of value, the seizing of the time machine, the revolutionary transformation of quantity into quality. As the ungovernable wildness of the multiple claws out from monadic imperium, Pan slays the Leviathan.

    “All power to the imagination!”

    May 1968 Slogan

    Image: Constellation: Toward the Rainbow, Joan Miró (1941)

  • Tomboy

    May 28th, 2023

    “Who was I now – woman or man? That question could never be answered so long as those were the only choices; it could never be answered if it had to be asked.”

    Leslie Feinberg, Stone Butch Blues

    When I was a kid I collected grasshoppers. There was a wide open field next to our house, with scratchy pale grass that grew to the thigh. Creeks crisscrossed the horizon and roly-polies dotted the earth. I would run through the grass, causing the grasshoppers to jump, a pizzicato of insects leaping from a photosynthetic sea. I had a special interest in insects; autie changeling kid collecting bugs to impress the fae queen. My ant farm didn’t develop too well and beetles were hard to come by, but grasshoppers? They flit through the sky, a million buzzing stars clouding the atmosphere like a stellar nursery.

    Grasshoppers are hemimetabolous insects, meaning that they undergo partial, successive transformations rather than the complete metamorphosis of caterpillars and butterflies. Grasshoppers go through five to six moltings before their wings are functional, with each molting increasing the size of the wing buds.  As they develop they learn to stridulate, strumming across their back legs to stim and sing, their songs forming the acoustic aether of grasshopper life and the melodic background of reproduction. Stridulation is mostly associated with attempts by males to attract females, but this is not the only form of stridulation. Female grasshoppers also stridulate and grasshopper stridulation doesn’t solely communicate reproductive desire, but instead forms a complex web of individual and group communication, relaying facts about grasshopper society and the well-being of each grasshopper. Grasshoppers use their bodies to sing and form communities through song, nature’s queer chorus.

    Too often we think of the trans experience in cis terms. “If only I were born a (cis) boy.” “If only I were born a (cis) girl.” This framing presupposes cisheterosexist distinctions, calling upon the mythology of patriarchy before we even begin telling our story. Boy or girl? If that’s the question, then there is no answer, no path through which to escape. I don’t wish to think in cis terms or heterosexual terms or sexist terms. I wish to think in queer terms, from queer frames or queer framelessness. For me, this requires starting from gender euphoria rather than dysphoria – not what I disavow, but the direction which my body leans in. To whom and to where am I oriented? What histories am I a part of, what undercurrents? What futures do I wish to build, what utopias?

    Something interesting arises when I start from gender euphoria and the acceptance of transness. Whenever I imagine my “other” self – the self who best approximates my interior gender image, my euphoric vision – that imagined self is still trans. In a phantasmic other history, I was a tomboy – a girl who rejected conventional Southern womanhood and played in the grass with the bugs instead. Autie changeling girl digging for worms in the mud. That tomboy discovered she was a lesbian in junior high and soon became butch, mimicking emo superstars to get at something approximating androgyny. Later on, she would identify as nonbinary and use she/they pronouns. They would probably wear a packer and binder. She’d have a complicated relationship to their body. This image and me are not meaningfully different, except in our sex assigned at birth. But, even then, we are both seeking to approximate the other. I am her “other” self, their interior gender image, her euphoric vision, and they are mine.

    I’ve never had much of a relationship to manhood. As a child, I would sing Shania Twain’s “I Feel Like a Woman” and twirl around with a fairy wand, much to the dismay of my grandparents. However, I’d also dress up as Batman and get wildly dirty playing in puddles and creeks and forests. Gender signifiers meant nothing to me. All I knew were these were the things that brought me joy, if “knowing” is even necessary there – perhaps just “joying,” “to joy,” as a verb. My heroes were kids going on adventures in the wilderness: Ash from Pokemon and Link from The Legend of Zelda. What I cared about was designing my own games and writing my own stories and collecting grasshoppers and lightnin’ bugs and roly polies. I cared about my cats and my failed ant farm and my books, about the scratchy grass and the mulberries and the magnolia trees and the creeks. Though feminist theorists are right to say that gender permeates everything, that the patriarchy will use even childhood joys and the natural features of the world to enforce binary divisions, there is also a sense in which joy wanders away from the constraints of gender, in which the euphoria of becoming shimmers through the clouds.

    Like most trans people, I’ve gone through many transformations, many wanderings into the wilderness. These moltings, these transitions, are unlikely to ever be complete, to arrive at a final form. There is no point at which I cocoon, going from caterpillar to butterfly. Like with grasshoppers, stridulation, the queer chorus, isn’t an end-goal, but something learned and manifested over time, in each transformation. Through transitioning, through changing my name and pronouns, through playing with gender signifiers and expressing queer sexuality, I stridulate, echoing out to the other grasshoppers. The acoustic aether of my genderlife is composed of the overlapping and interweaving histories and futures of queer rebellion and queer community, glimpses and fragments of a world outside patriarchy, outside the grinding machinery of Leviathan.

    I identify as butch. Like Leslie Feinberg, I consider myself one of the he-shes, not quite a woman but certainly not a man. A nonbinary tomboy, a masc transfem genderfucker, the smell of burning oak. A place of both compassion and resistance, defense and offense against a fascist system that seeks to extinguish queer life and queer joy. I feel the most comfortable in the lesbian community and within lesbian histories, though my place there is still marginal, still vibrating on the edges. The grass is still scratchy, though the geography has shifted; I have to keep moving to keep the mosquitos at bay. The queer chorus will always contain moments of uncertainty, echoes that bounce off leaves and warp out into the sky, never making it to the soil. I may never fully belong anywhere, though I can find parts of myself scattered through past, present, and future worlds, a genealogy of stridulation. What matters is to keep transforming, to look towards euphoria, and to not submit to a question posed in cis and heterosexual terms. The point is change, is following joy. And from there on into utopia.

    ash. She/They.

    “Gender is the poetry each of us makes out of the language we are taught.”

    Leslie Feinberg, Trans Liberation

    Further Reading

    • S. Bear Bergman, Butch is a Noun
    • Lily Burana & Roxxie Linnea Due, Dagger: On Butch Women
    • Ivan Coyote, Tomboy Survival Guide
    • Ivan Coyote & Zena Sharman, Persistence: All Ways Butch and Femme
    • Laura Kate Dale, Gender Euphoria: Stories of Joy from Trans, Non-Binary, and Intersex Writers
    • I.M. Epstein, On Butch and Femme: Compiled Readings
    • Leslie Feinberg, Trans Liberation: Beyond Pink or Blue
    • Leslie Feinberg, Stone Butch Blues
    • Jack Halberstam, Female Masculinity
    • Joan Nestle, The Persistent Desire: A Femme-Butch Reader

    Image: Grasshopper and Iris, Katsushika Hokusai (1820s)

  • Kyrie Eleison

    May 24th, 2023

    “The world is our consciousness, and it surrounds us.”

    Gary Snyder, The Practice of the Wild

    God is a wanderer. Kyrie Eleison.

    In the beginning, God is but never was. God without history, God without creation, God without nature. In absence – the abyss of nothing before nothing – God hopes, God yearns, God desires, God loves. The the appears from the to-be, being bearing being.

    Before time, the logos appears – the divine thrust of energeia, generation generating generations. Within, above, between the logos is Sophia, incarnate wisdom, Sapphic dwelling, the queerness of God sweating and sighing in the folds of creation. There is no logos without Sophia, no Sophia without logos, natural law logicking into physical manifolds, holy love emanating into good – to-be-to-be-to-be. Nature throws herself into the groove of life, biomimesis dancing into universal philia, love loving love as creation creating creation.

    Who is here? The here and here only.

    In 1-0-1, Christ fractures into history, the eternal story-er, Mary, authoring the to-come. “She shows mercy to everyone, from generation to the next, who honors her as God. She has shown strength with her arm. She has scattered those with arrogant thoughts and proud inclinations. She has pulled the powerful down from their thrones and lifted up the lowly. She has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty-handed.” (Luke 1.50-53, CEB, mildly edited) Ave, María, grátia plena, Dóminus tecum.

    The Trinity is an ever-shuffling one-to-two-to-three-to-one-to-two-to-three. The Creator stepping into the Begotten, the Begotten swaying into the Proceeding, the Proceeding jumping into Creation. The Godhead is a Godstep, a Godflow. A Godgroove-a-la-a-la-a-lalala. Sit laus Deo. God saunters, the heat of hearth and fragrance of heart holying into hallelujah. We dwell, you and I, in the I and you before all time, the home underneath and above, solar system and Hades. The fire of Tartarus caresses and does not burn, for heofon remains. Halo halo halo.

    To-be with God is to-be in creation, to wander the divine painting. Birds chirp psalms and psalmists mimic chirps. Ch-cheep-kyrie ch-cheep-kyrie.

    In the beginning, God was and aches to be. The ever-ever before time echoes into eternity – the forward-pressing of time pressing-forward. To-be the-be becomes to-be. Being becoming being as yearning yearns yearning, love loving love as longing longs longing. Across the across, the ever-gilded sea. Foam and froth, toes sinking into wet sand, each grain a world unto itself.

    God is a trickster that appears nowhere but saunters everywhere. Kyrie Eleison.

    “…all good things are wild and free.”

    Henry David Thoreau, “On Walking“

    Image: Caoutchouc, Francis Picabia (1909)

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