Monday, 29 April 2013

An Old Poem (Shadowed Glass)

Shadowed Glass

Seeing without seeing,
Staring at the glass.
Multitudes of visions
Dancing right on past.
Seeing without seeing,
Does it have a meaning?
Sight without vision
Nothing ever lasts.
I've often wondered why
All the changes
Just are rearranging
Living till you die.
What once was
Is now past;
Seeing without seeing
Shadowed in the glass.
Silent voices
Fill the void
Reflected in my soul.
Empty mirrors
Stare right back;
Memories letting go.
Seeing without seeing
It will never end.
Seeing is 'not believing';
Lost souls never mend.
Seeing...

Sunday, 28 April 2013

Breaking the Code

On or Off
In or Out
Binary decisions
Rule my day
No shades of grey allowed
I even dream in Black and White

I have always wondered if this is part of my all or nothing addictive nature, the extremes of my bi-polar, or that I am simply wired this way to the point that it may have been the root of my addiction and bi-polar. My own personal chicken and the egg dilemma. I know from talking to my parents that I was this way from an early age - family game night wasn't as much fun as it could have been as I had to make sure that everyone followed the rules to a T. No room for interpretation or leeway to give someone a chance or to make things more enjoyable for everyone. The goal was to win and the rules were there to make sure that it happened. Somehow I thought that life would be the same.

This has caused me some confusion of perspective over the years. Early on, I thought everyone viewed the world in this clear cut manner. It only seemed logical that for every situation there were finite opposing choices and we followed their path like a flowchart - a well organized world was my reality. Unfortunately, I became confused and frustrated when I found that the other people in this world didn't view their reality the same way - not everything was clear-cut. So in typical fashion, I went from thinking that everyone shared my view to thinking that I was the only one who was logical enough to see the world in black and white, the only one intelligent enough to see that order depended on finite possibilities, not in the interpretation of what could be. This would most likely be the seeds of my issues dealing with people socially, especially those who were to be my peers, and my lack of ability in most artistic endeavors. I found more beauty in physics and mathematics than I did in attempting to draw or paint. Artistic pursuits required following your feelings, and my feelings at an early time were self-centered and Narcissistic - I truly believed that everyone around me was an idiot, and I couldn't wait to grow up and save humanity. When feelings did start creeping in, they were of despair and loneliness, even though I still found the most comfort in solitude.

It has taken me many years and many breakdowns to understand the importance of the grey area, the necessity of having some, if not all, things to be up for interpretation. It has only been through developing this that I have been able to form and maintain personal relationships with friends and others, to be be able to relate to people as equals even though we are different, to respect the value of others in general. It has been through the introduction of grey shading into my black and white world that I have been able to experience love and beauty and art and experince life in general, rather than just catalog a series of events.

A binary world
Fragments into random
Tangents
Breaking code
To explode
In a cacophony of chaos
Shades of grey
Planted the seeds
And now I can dream
In color.

Friday, 26 April 2013

If/When

If I fall
it's because
I'm standing.
Too long I have crawled
afraid
to try.

If I fall
it's because
I'm moving
Incrementally healing
not waiting
to die.

When I fall
it's because
I'm trying
Applaud my efforts
don't wait for me
to cry.

Treading Water

Sanity slips slowly
comforting caustic chaos
enters my thoughts
and trips
perception
falling
drifting
sliding
I plunge wantonly
into
waters filled with paranoia
tangents
my old haunts
have always been carried
inside
me
I cease to struggle
and lower myself
into
the warm welcome waters
of despair

Wednesday, 24 April 2013

An Old Poem (previous channel)

previous channel

Painted faces stare
While I peer at nothing.
Time ceases to exist.
I have found the void;
With well lit chinese restaurants,
Floral print men's rooms,
People with VCRs who watch no movies,
Street maps that randomly switch streets,
And it doesn't matter anymore.

A fly slowly creeps and crawls
Up a married woman's half-naked leg,
Toward the scanty leather
That so many
Have seen her without.
Towards the void
So different than the one I'm in.
Eliot's coffee spoons
Have lost the edge to the ashtray
As my cigarette butts pile
Towards the ceiling
Like corpses at Dachau.
Even the pimply faced waitress can't cope
As cars stream by on the boulevard.
Not one is silver with a broken headlight
It must come soon.
I have more mapless streets to see.
More movieless VCRs to talk to
Before I can spend the night
Staring at the bottom of a bottle.
Watching the ceiling fan whirl.

I switch voids like the little bedside box,
Switches channels.

Tuesday, 23 April 2013

I must be dreaming...

I find the topic of dreams to be a very interesting one - not because I put much faith into them having hidden meanings, or obvious ones for that matter, but because I don't often remember them myself. I have often gone complete years without so much as a fragment of a dream to remember upon waking. I have read that remembering your dreams is dependent upon what part of your sleep cycle you are in when you wake up, however, my own anecdotal evidence would suggest that this is only part of the story - as unlikely as I know it is, I choose to believe that I don't always dream.

My sleep schedule has run the gauntlet of options: going to bed every nite and waking up at the same time every morning, sleeping only when tired and letting my body wake itself up, only going to bed when exhausted but still setting the alarm for early to go to work, etc. I would think that with such a chaotic lack of true sleeping pattern over the years that I would be waking in the right cycle at some point to be remembering a dream, but that does not appear to be the case.

Strangely enough though, I did dream this morning - probably why I am so aware of the otherwise lack of dreaming that I experience. It also reminded me of something that I do find strange about the dreams I do have. The most common, if you can refer to something that happens every year or three as common, are dreams of everyday occurrences. These dreams take the form of going for coffee with a current friend and having a conversation just like we would have if we went for coffee. This can be quite confusing because sometimes I believe that they are not a dream, but rather a memory of going for coffee so I forget to update some friends with relevant news because I did so in a dream.

My other dreams strike me as equally strange because I am not in them - more like mini movies that I haven't seen before about other people's mundane lives - B-rated lighthearted dramas that go straight to video. Where are the dreams where I get to save the world? Or that I am being chased by aliens or monsters or bad people? Or that I have super powers? Or I'm a rockstar? I guess I should just be happy that it isn't like when I was young and (to borrow a line from Tears for Fears) "...the dreams in which I'm dying are the best I've ever had."

An Old Poem (untitled October 1989)

Shimmering
summer
sunsets
slide
away
as memories
do not
fade
but become
all
that I have
left.

I'm reminded of a childhood friend. Sweetheart. Told of my feelings, I had nothing to hide from her; yet received nothing back in return. Before we parted she told me of a poem she had written - "Who will offer me a rose." She thanked me for my 'rose', told me that it would be cherished always; a fragrant blossom dried in the pages of her mind, to be stumbled upon, from time to time. A memory of me.

Trees
undressing slowly
a rainbow
of outfits
discarded
to the earth
leaving
stark
bleak
skeletons.

Many years have passed since childhood innocence. Again I have offered a rose. Please don't let my rose die. Do not leave it to be a faded memory in a book, till time takes its toll and all that is left is dust. If time must be taken to decide the fate of the rose, let it be in hope. Let the rose have the chance to blossom again, to bring more and more joy with each passing season. With this rose I plant the seeds of my love. It is up to you to keep it nourished.

Winter
melts
like the covering
on my heart
and new growth
blossoms
everywhere.

Saturday, 20 April 2013

An Old Poem (Rock Church)

Rock Church

Winter wanes
into a tepid time
more reminiscent of autumn eves
than stone cold sonnets
composed with frost blanketing
our floor.
Priest ponder perchance
"This is our reward
for resisting the sins
that pull at our drawstrings,
to warm our blustering days."

Winter wanes
as satan sings
and priest's pleasures proliferate,
while heaven's gate
swings,
uncared for.
Bended knees lead not to prayers
but unnatural acts.
The people scream "We want the facts!"
and priests pray for their own souls
from death row.

Thursday, 18 April 2013

An Old Poem (memories)

memories

Dreams
Tears
Dripping
Imprisoned prisms
Spatial turnstiles.

One at a time please.

Longing to fly
Free
Alive in telling
Synapses sparkle
Shining
Yesterday's past
With tomorrow's present;
Enterprise
Is fantasy lived
With memory held.

Photos accentuate the extremes
Black and/or white
While today's future is held
Locked for you
In shades of grey.

Acceptance

Acceptance is one of the building blocks of my recovery, however, it does not exist in black and white. Not only does acceptance not paint everything in my life with broad brush strokes, what it does touch it covers to varying degrees.

Accepting that I am an addict is almost absolute - sure I have my moments that I question my addiction, or the severity of it, but they are fleeting and pass quickly in a logical remembrance of what it was like and what it is like now. For over five years, one day at a time, I have been able to remind myself of the fact that I can not safely use in any amount, and substance. For my recovery to continue to succeed as an addict I need this to be black and white - there can be no grey area, nothing up to interpretation, and thankfully that has been the case so far.

My mental health is another matter. Accepting that I am bi-polar was not easy. It was much easier to accept that I was an addict, than to admit that I had mental health issues. Once I had accepted that, I still had to work on accepting that I needed medication to deal with it. I still struggle with this on and off. Part of it is the nature of the medication cycle - I start to feel good for long periods of time so I naturally question whether I need to continue taking meds. Part of it is the experience of the illness itself - I MISS being unmedicated, I miss the rush of a full blown manic episode - for me it is the equivalent of an extended cocaine binge without the drugs. Complicating things further is that over time I have developed increasingly effective coping skills and tools, making the necessity of medication less important in some ways. I can do self feedback and monitor my moods and to some degree successfully steer them in a safer direction. It is a lot of work, requiring extreme self-awareness and a strong commitment that often leaves me physically and mentally drained by the end of the day. The end result for me is worth it though. I have managed to work with my doctor and get my medication down to the bare minimum - he worries about the possibility of a relapse if I am completely off meds, and given my lifelong history of long periods of functional mania followed by extreme suicidal drops, I would have to, and did, agree with him on this one.

Recently it occurred to me that I have to accept that I will probably not work again, that in essence I am retired. I have been off work for over a year now, and was only working part time for many years prior to that. I have had many successful years of working full time, however most of them in the past few decades have been while I was self-medicating and outright using. Recent events put me into a work-like environment for several hours, which put me into an eye-burning, almost trembling state of hypomania for a day. I loved it. What a rush. Unfortunately, it was followed by a two day crash and recovery period. It made it clear to me that without the benefit of drugs, I am not capable of maintaining this for long, and more medication simply saps my ambition and energy to be functional enough to work. The only logical alternative is to accept where I am right now, as the possible long term solution as well - that I function best with minimal medication as long as I don't add further stress to my life, such as employment.

It seems so simple looking at it written out on this page, but I laugh inside thinking about it. How many years it has taken me, how many different medication regimes, how many different doctors, psychiatrists and counselors, and how many jobs. I have fought this one for a long time before I came to the realization that I must accept what I cannot change - that to remain healthy I need to keep doing what is working and to keep NOT doing what doesn't add to the quality of my life. Today I accept this.

Monday, 15 April 2013

An Old Poem (Dust)

Dust

The life of a butterfly
measured in days
rolls like thunder across my screen
scrolling, rolling
for others to turn to
dust
to misinterpret
till I burst
from my cocoon
years from now
another life in hand.
Voices from the past will praise
what has become
fashionable
though they treated it with disdain
in this life of mine
spitting on the very screen that reflects my soul
kicking till i run and cringe
                                       in a corner
bleeding
crying
dyin'
though not this time again;
I'll be forced to live to hear more
of others,
of other's
while the dust settles
and there is nothing I can do
to remove it.
Mr. Hoover, where are you now?

Sunday, 14 April 2013

Consistency




"Well you are going to have to be consistent."

This was the comment I received from my wife Amanda when I mentioned that I had started a blog. It filled me instantly with a sense of dread. I wasn't sure exactly what she meant, but I didn't like the sounds of it. I mean, the only thing I seem to be consistent at is being inconsistent. At 45 years of age I have had about the same number of home addresses as well as jobs; consistency is not my forte.

Then I thought of content. I have friends who blog about what goes on in their lives, I have friends who blog about philosophical issues, and those who blog about their careers. What is my focus? Where will my consistency be? Well I thought I had covered my ass on that one in the blog title - IbManic's Monochrome Meanderings. IbManic is a simple screen name that I have used for years, a nod to my bi-polar and the usual state of hypomania that I enjoy (and enjoy is the right word most of the time). Monochrome an old school reference to writing as appearing in one color - hence the theme of the blog being in black and white, rather than decked out in vibrant oranges - my favorite color. Meandering - ahh there's the kicker - rolling back to the manic, I love to go off on tangents and wander around. I wander around where I live, where I work, when I talk or write. How the hell can I expect to be consistent when I embrace this aspect of my make-up? Why should I?

Turns out a simple question to my wife to explain what she means opens up another can of worms. Content is not the issue. Posting on a fairly consistent schedule is. People will expect to read something new every certain interval as I start to define this blog simply by the frequency of my posts. I hadn't really thought of the implications of that. I had decided to start writing again and the blogging idea seemed to be a solution to the writer's block that I have been experiencing these past years. However, people read blogs. I knew that. I really did - after all I did share this Facebook so that people knew about it, but I hadn't consciously considered this. For the first time my writings were public, to everyone and anyone. Not only were they public, the very nature of the medium I chose encourages me to want more people to read what I write. I am not writing just for myself for the first time in my life. I have an audience to consider. That may sound obvious to many, but for me, I wrote for release, or as some sort of poetic word therapy to try and figure out what I was feeling or experiencing. A lot of what I wrote spent years hidden in books without anyone ever reading it. The books and the contents didn't resemble a dairy or journal, but often they held the same sort of unspoken secrecy. Having someone else read my work was an intimate and personal affair - it required trust. A blog is different.

The original question was about frequency, but the implications for me are audience, content and motive. I have the honor of writing with other people in mind. In as much as this is an initially daunting task for a solitary writer like me, it is probably the first barrier that needs to come down if I am going to evolve as  a writer. How can I ever fulfill my dream, my goal, to write a book, if not without an audience in mind? With all that in mind, the consideration of the expectations of my potential readers for some consistency in how often I write does become important. I can't promise a tight schedule that every Sunday morning at 4:00 am that there will be a post, but I can commit to keeping the posts coming frequently enough to have the semblance of consistency. Committing to writing would be another hurdle that I need to work on - rather than just relying on the muse to impart divine words into my head that need to be released onto the page.

So thank you for being a part of this dear reader, and thank you Amanda for questioning my commitment to consistency as we start this journey of words together. I am learning new things already.

Friday, 12 April 2013

An old poem (Requests)

Requests

I don't do requests
the poet whispered
as time contorted itself
like Dali's clocks
not quite stopped.
My mind is alive with rivers,
waterfalls flowing.
What lies beneath the waves?
Who lives in this liquid grave?
Whistling through the trees unseen
the mind's eye
loses
sight of what once was
and that which will never be.
Whistling, whispering,
rustling through
now that's the key.
I've died a thousand times he said
every one is written down,
epitaths of a fringe existance.
I'll share them if you like
but I don't do existing memories
and I don't do requests.

I used to write.

I used to write. I used to write a lot. It was mainly poetry - mad, chaotic, cathartic poetry - but I was happy that I was writing. I even tried my hand at a bit of prose. Always wanted to do more but never had the drive to actually follow through with it. I think the state that I am usually in when the urge to write hits is when I am hypomanic or full blown manic and that just isn't conducive to long term prose writing - at least not for me. Filling a page though, I can handle that. Jump from subject to subject with each fresh new page.

So why am I writing here now? I'm not sure to tell you the truth. I know that I miss writing, but that when I grab one of my old books and my favorite pens that nothing comes out. Well not nothing - a line or two but nothing more than that. I get the germ of an idea that used to spawn pages of verse and now it just fizzles out at a line. It's been that way for years now. I'm sure it has had a lot to do with all the medications. I also think it has something to do with being happier overall. Writing was a release, not a celebration, for me. So being more at peace these days makes it harder to find my muse - as she was always buried in anger, draped in angst and those aren't the seeds of my everyday mood anymore.

But I want to write. I enjoy it. So I will try this and see if it sparks the creativity back into my life. If nothing else I can babble on, maybe re-visit some of my old work and see if anything new comes from it.

Hopefully I can change that first line in time.

I used to write.