to Hive being
welcome
What is Hive Being, and Why the Name?
You have likely heard talk of a hive mind, where one global mind finds more or less figurative expression in various local minds. Such talk is common enough in nature documentaries, especially ones concerning ants or bees, and in sci-fi programs. Take that notion, at least a loose version of it, and broaden its scope. That will be a decent first step in understanding the title I have chosen both for my Blog and for the first five-volume installment of my magnum opus Made For You and Me, a fragmentary collection of minimalist stanzas from 2016 to 2020.
In alignment with Spinoza (the 17th Century Rationalist to whom I devoted my doctoral studies), I view reality in its totality as a grand hive Being: all entities are but pulsating manifestations of the buckstopping fount of everything, an ultimate being we might call “God” or “Nature” (so long as, out of respect for the capital “G” and the capital “N,” we limit it neither to some anthropomorphic cloud father hurling lightning bolts nor to mere wilderness untouched by human smog). According to the hive-Being view (where reality is one lone superorganism, a monistic—and we might even say unividualist—conception I defend in both my creative and academic capacities), each non-foundational being (each being, that is, whose essence does not involve existence) is an utterly necessitated expression or eruption or exudation of this eternal source—each is, perhaps better put, a mode or manner of being, and so a focal point through which is disclosed, what classical theists sometimes call “being itself” (ipsum esse subsistens): the realness of the real, the being of whatever may be, the sheer activity of being, the very isness of whatever is. This Blog, which duplicates my Substack, throbs as but one among many literary unfurlings of this self-necessitated foundation, this supreme wellspring, of which we—like black holes and broken beliefs, like fractal ferns and flickering flames—are the inevitable stylings.
My Journey
I am an academic who found himself pressured into early retirement by the rising tides of cancel culture. The illiberal scourge of censoring, silencing, and shaming—although always with us throughout our evolution—reached a local peak around 2021. That was the turbulent year my creative pursuits, which the old left once encouraged as a healthy outlet for the stresses of a childhood steeped in poverty and illiteracy, drew the ire of the new safe-space left. A small cadre of self-proclaimed victims and their allies, several of whom continue to berate me years later under pseudonyms as see through as their sexual infatuation, sought to erase me and my heterodoxy. They found support from a wannabe-woke dean, covered in the grand inquisitor robes of our decadent modernity (full-body tattoos) and just itching to signal his commitment to protecting “vulnerable populations” from triggering material (even if just, as it was in my case, off-duty poems “unbecoming for someone calling himself a teacher”). Although I eventually won my due-process case with the help of The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, I slunk away from a college that turned its back on protecting freedom of expression and from an institution increasingly intolerant of intellectual diversity.
The wrecking ball to my too-comfy office in the windowless ivory tower came with a silver lining. From the ashes of my professional aspirations rose a phoenix of increased freedom to fulfill the literary calling I have pursued for decades. Reputation concerns never stopped me, even within academia’s sterile halls of conformity. Indeed, my unapologetic defiance, which has long baffled friends and family, no doubt chummed even safe waters—almost as if I were asking for it all along—until the cancel shiver grew too frenzied to hold back its blind thrashings. But now, now I piston the most forbidden territories of human thought with no longer even a twinge of conscience. The newfound freedom means extra time to hone my craft. When not assisting special-needs communities (a day job far more rewarding than freeway-flyer drudgeries), I pursue my literary mission with Dionysian fervor.
Call for Co-Conspirators
This space, my digital sanctuary, showcases the fruits of my mission. Think of my posts, even those linking to my publications, as works in progress. I want your input, unflinching brutality included. Each post begins with an invitation to action: “Let’s workshop this [draft about x, y, z].” Your contributions, whether through public comments or my contact page, help hammer scraps of ore into polished blades fit for magazine publication.
Your input is valuable, even if you are neither a writer nor a reader of literature—twin disciplines dying by the cyber nanosecond. Sometimes—even if at the risk of uttering banalities—an outsider’s fresh vantage can pierce the veils of convention to reveal what insiders miss. It often takes an outsider to make us even think to question our ingrained presuppositions and attitudes. I stand by the hygienic value of contagion. That is one reason I advocate so strongly for intellectual diversity and freedom of expression. And that is also one reason I was so harrowed by the anti-diversity swell of cancel culture in academia (an institution that should be the utmost caretaker of such values)—harrowed especially insofar as that swell masqueraded under the gaslighting guise of “diversity”).
You will witness the breathing evolution of my writings over time. To track these changes, I label each revision by round: “ROUND 2,” ROUND 3,” and so forth. Each piece undergoes continuous refinement based on your feedback and my own revisitations. Sometimes changes will mar the work. That is the risk of creative tinkering as a finite creature. I hope you will alert me to missteps. After many semesters of university writing workshops, one rule has impressed itself upon me: when someone senses a flaw, something almost always needs to change—even if, yes, the proposed solution misses the mark (which often it does). From a quick look into the archives, accessible here, you can see how much I have benefited from your feedback so far.
My Hope
Sharing drafts can be daunting. But showing you the ravaged and unperfumed real deal unfiltered by makeup (stuttering starts and falsities, awkward line breaks and clumsy word choices, grammatical errors and misspellings)—that not only makes my work more relatable, but helps me refine things through your input. I hope the unfiltered look at the raw process of fumbling, rather than just the polished product, also helps other writers develop their craft. Imperfect works often instruct more than perfect ones: whereas the perfect ones tend to have a grace by which they slip inside us without activating our scrutiny, the imperfect ones—especially the near perfect ones—show us glaringly what not to do.
People laugh at me, seeing—in my tilting at the windmills of literary excellence—a Don Quixote clunking around in Arthurian armor in a post-knight era. I am not naïve. I am well aware of the diminishing ability to read, let alone well: slowly and deeply, with gratitude. I am also aware that my style, which often nests subpoints within larger points, never waters down virtuosity for the sake of mass appeal. I watch readers stumble over my sentences, unable to unlock even just the music of the envelope let alone the semantic meat within, which—given my tendency to flashlight through the darker facets of human nature (the addicts, the miscreants, the abusers among us)—only adds an additional alienating layer of difficulty). Beholding these depressive scenes of even supportive family members getting bucked off my syntactic bronco makes me feel like a dinosaur who should get a hint and, if not succumb to the brain rot of skibidi-toilet speak, just hang himself already. Even though the decline in linguistic background and grammatical voltage makes my compositions seem quixotic in a world binging Netflix and TikTok, I persist—raging against the dying of the light—by some internal compulsion to celebrate the richness of language and thought.
My hope is that, despite social media’s unparalleled power to farm our attention, people never forget the unique power of writing. Beyond unveiling hypocrisy, teasing out complex implications, and detailing the commonalities between even the most alien phenomena, writing offers something we need today—trapped in agoraphobic cyber bubbles only thickened by the Lyme dangers of forests and the COVID dangers of cities—perhaps more than ever. Granting us rich access to the first-person perspectives of others (to how things feel to them), writing serves as one of humanity’s best tools for combating loneliness. It allows us to linger, broadly and deeply and at high resolution, within the inner lives of others in a way that other arts can only suggest.
What to Expect
My work spans a broad spectrum: from metaphysical discourses on free will and determinism and the ontology of holes to the ephemera of western culture (whether the childhood impacts of the hypersexual mono-image of black woman as squirting twerkers or Terrence Howard’s sham revolution of mathematics). Some tight and minimal, others free-flowing sprawls; some heady and abstract, others emotional and imagistic—my inkwell musings, which often blend scholarly rigor with a dark humor from both high and low culture, aim to capture the visceral intensity of our personal and social and ultimately existential predicaments.
By no means can I deny that drug abuse, sexual assault, and the tales of the broken and the damned loom large in the tag cloud of my work. My writing will never be a paradise of easy truths and comforting lies. It will challenge you, provoke you, and at times even repulse you. I offer no apologies for the monsters I unleash. They are as much a part of us, at long root scared rodent mammals scurrying in the shadows of dinosaurs, as our noblest aspirations.
But make no mistake. It is not all downer darkness. The archives are my receipts. You will find pieces exploring the pursuit of authenticity in a media-saturated world, the search for meaning in an indifferent cosmos, and the celebration of beauty in both the sublime and the profane. I locate much of my inspiration, in fact, in novelists like Dostoevsky and poets like Ted Kooser—writers unafraid to pursue moral agendas or risk Hallmark sentimentality in an age that often sneers at sincerity.
Be they satirical dissections of modern social dynamics or poignant poems about addiction or academic articles on moral responsibility, my goal is to provoke thought, evoke emotion, and foster meaningful dialogue. Fear has not and will not stop me from challenging humanity’s fundamental taboos (like bestiality and cannibalism) or self-reflecting into the dark chaos of the subconscious, even if that means exposing the Jungian shadows—the inner Goebbels—lurking within us all!
Expect posts each day, no day missed. Donations are welcome, but I impose no paywall: it feels wrong to charge for art, especially given our date with obliteration. Feel free to explore what amounts to, at the time of writing this, close to a thousand pieces of poetry and prose here. That should give you a sense of what awaits.
Join me—specula holstered—on this literary odyssey into the public and private nooks of the hive Being. Let us navigate the labyrinth of creation together, confronting our demons and even slaying our darlings if we must. Let us dance on the razor’s edge between the sublime and the profane in pursuit of an elusive literary perfection never to be confused—as it has been confused in our declining civilization—with the pursuit of popularity or likeability over truth.
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Posts
Subway Restraint (ROUND 11)
"Subway Restraint" is a dramatic prose monologue of extraordinary formal ambition, structured around the prolonged management of violent desire and its ultimate release. Its deepest subject is neither race nor politics nor violence as such but the psychology of incubation — the process by which a mind cultivates rather than dissipates its own rage, converting restraint from a virtue into a technology of intensification. The piece presents itself formally as a practical guide to self-control — "Serve the long game," "Breathe," "Restrain yourself" — yet everything about its architecture reveals that these instructions function as instruments of concentration rather than reduction. The narrator does not calm himself. He refines himself. Rage is treated as a resource to be made more potent through delay, and the work's central irony — announced in its title — is that the restraint depicted here is genuine without being virtuous. It is deferred eruption.
The second-person address is the piece's most formally audacious and most disturbing choice. "You" implicates the reader not as observer but as agent — the narrator is not telling us about someone who committed this act but telling us, as we read, what to do next. This collapses the conventional distance between reader and character that literary violence typically maintains, placing the reader inside a deliberative process calibrated to feel reasonable, patient, and philosophically grounded. The effect is not identification in the usual sense but something more unsettling: the reader experiences radicalization not as retrospective confession but as live instruction, and the prose is designed to make each step feel like the natural consequence of the one before. The second person is not a gimmick but an argument — that the funnel from legitimate grievance to catastrophic action is wider at the top than we prefer to believe, and that the steps leading down it are comprehensible at each individual point even when their aggregate destination is not.
The piece's most original formal device is what might be called eroticized aggression. Throughout, violent impulse is rendered through the language of sexual edging — waiting, building pressure, postponing release, letting frustration accumulate into something richer and more satisfying. The language of libido and the language of violence become indistinguishable: aggression is sexualized, sexuality is weaponized, and the subway becomes less a political space than a pressure chamber in which psychic energy seeks an outlet. The edging metaphor extends to the prose itself, whose sentences are long, recursive, and clause-heavy, always deferring the syntactic resolution that a period would provide, enacting at the level of form the same economy of deferral and accumulation the narrator is practicing psychologically. The piece deploys "jouissance" — Lacan's term for a pleasure so intense it becomes indistinguishable from pain — to name the trajectory precisely: what the narrator is building toward is not satisfaction in any ordinary sense but a release that will destroy the conditions of its own possibility.
The repeated instructions to breathe are equally important and equally inverted. On the surface they resemble mindfulness exercises. Yet their actual function is the opposite of therapeutic regulation. The narrator explicitly treats calming techniques as instruments for preserving rage rather than dissipating it, converting the language of self-care into a technology of self-radicalization. What appears healthy is revealed as another mechanism of escalation — demonstrating that the most dangerous passions are often not the hottest but the most disciplined, and that a mind sufficiently committed to its own radicalization can recruit any available resource, including the resources designed to prevent it, into the project.
The sensory writing performs a parallel function at the level of environment. The opening olfactory barrage — the layered subway smells organized around contamination and infection — is not ornamental description but perceptual argument. Nearly every sensory impression arrives already infected, bodies bleeding into odors, odors into judgments, judgments into ideological conclusions. The environment itself seems diseased. This saturation of perception mirrors the narrator's mental state: he cannot encounter anything neutrally because every perception is immediately absorbed into an interpretive system already vibrating with grievance. The world has become fully legible to him — and crucially, the piece insists that this legibility is not entirely delusional.
This is the revision that the piece's architecture demands and that conventional radicalization narratives typically foreclose. The standard literary closed loop involves a protagonist whose interpretation of the world is sealed off from reality's corrections — paranoia mistaken for pattern recognition, delusion mistaken for diagnosis. "Subway Restraint" refuses this comfort. Jakim's reading of progressive institutional culture — its dependency economics, its performative allyship, its self-perpetuating grievance infrastructure — is rendered with sufficient intellectual force that the reader cannot simply locate a break with reality and file the violence there. The piece gestures toward real institutional entanglements: organizations presented as gold standards of anti-hate monitoring implicated in the very dynamics they claim to oppose, DEI frameworks that produce the outcomes they claim to prevent, progressive cultural machinery that profits from the persistence of the conditions it nominally addresses. Jakim's conspiracy-adjacent thinking is not pure paranoia. It is pattern recognition arriving at the right destination by a path that looks unhinged. The loop closes not because he is delusional but because the world keeps confirming his diagnosis.
This is what separates the piece from simpler radicalization portraits and gives it its most disturbing literary quality. The tragedy is not a man destroyed by delusion but a man whose accurate perception of real corruption has been captured by the daimonic voice and metabolized into something that destroys him and others anyway. Correct diagnosis, catastrophic prescription. Truth, in this piece, is not corrective. It is accelerant.
The piece becomes most formally interesting when the speaker is understood not as identical with the protagonist but as functioning in the role of a daimonic presence — a tutelary voice, a parasitic advisor whispering into the ear of its charge. The voice addressing "you" does not simply encourage violence; it trains attention, teaches interpretation, transforms every confirmation of Jakim's diagnosis into fuel rather than into actionable understanding. The daimon's most insidious quality is that it never disputes the accuracy of what Jakim sees. It disputes only what should be done with it. "Serve the long game." "Give your defense attorney at least a little to work with." This is not impulsive rage but strategic rage — and the daimon's power derives precisely from the fact that it never needs to lie to its host. It simply redirects what is true toward what is catastrophic.
The lead protester blocking the subway exit ceases early to function as an ordinary person and becomes instead a condensation figure — a single body onto which the narrator projects the entire apparatus of what he believes poisons Black flourishing. The subway scene accordingly acquires the dream logic of psychoanalysis: a single figure accumulates vast symbolic weight, carrying ideological, historical, and emotional burdens far exceeding her immediate presence. The shift from micro to macro is one of the piece's defining structural achievements — a blocked subway door expands into a grand historical argument, and the expansion feels, from inside the narrator's perspective, not like distortion but like accurate perception of connections that were always there. The piece neither fully endorses nor fully refutes this expansion. It holds the reader in the uncomfortable position of being unable to locate the precise moment where pattern recognition becomes pathology.
The racial ideology the narrator constructs demands serious engagement rather than dismissal. The narrator is a Black man who has arrived, through a specific intellectual and emotional history, at a position simultaneously anti-white-progressive and anti-victimhood — one that draws on genuine arguments about dependency culture, the paternalism embedded in certain forms of allyship, and the ways progressive racial frameworks can function to maintain Black people in a posture of permanent grievance. These arguments have intellectual genealogy and genuine advocates in serious academic discourse. What the piece traces is not the corruption of these arguments but their capture — the process by which legitimate diagnosis, denied every other outlet, is metabolized by the daimonic voice into mass violence. The narrator's logic is internally consistent throughout. Each escalation follows from the previous position by comprehensible steps. What transforms the sequence is not irrationality but the absence of any mechanism by which accurate perception can discharge into something other than destruction.
The Mike letter is the piece's most significant formal rupture. When the stylized daimonic second-person voice gives way to the narrator's own first-person address — "Man, what can I say?" — the register shifts entirely. The controlled, rhetorically sophisticated prose of the monologue is replaced by something rawer, more recursive, more colloquial, full of self-interruption and revision. This is the narrator speaking, not the daimon — and the distinction matters enormously. The letter shows us the ideology in its unpolished, genuinely felt form: the real grievances, the intellectual self-awareness, the moments of genuine doubt, the rhetorical self-justification, the acknowledgment of oversimplification. Most significantly, it shows a mind that can see its own contradictions and cannot stop anyway. The letter is not the raving of a man who has lost contact with reality. It is the raving of a man who has lost the ability to convert his contact with reality into anything other than this. The daimonic voice did not need to deceive him. It only needed to ensure that every accurate perception fed the same terminal conclusion.
By placing the letter inside the monologue — so that the reader has already experienced the ideology at its most perfected before encountering it in its raw state — the piece creates a double portrait: the finished product and the workshop simultaneously visible. The letter's power comes from its position. Moved to the end it becomes elegy. Where it sits now it is anatomy — and anatomy of a specific, disturbing kind: the anatomy of a mind that was right about the disease and wrong about the cure, and that had no way, given its capture by the daimonic voice, of arriving at any other conclusion.
The invocation of Ellison's "Invisible Man" — the narrator's stated favorite since college — is the piece's most significant literary self-placement. The Brotherhood's use of Black suffering as combustible material maps directly onto the narrator's analysis of progressive organizations, and the letter makes this connection explicit and personal. The tragedy is that the narrator's solution to being trapped inside a racial narrative is to perform the act that most completely confirms it. He becomes, in his resistance to the narrative, its most catastrophic validation. This is not a failure of the piece's logic but its tragic center — and it is a tragedy of a specific kind: not hubris, not delusion, but accurate vision captured by a voice that knew exactly what to do with it.
What "Subway Restraint" ultimately achieves is a portrait of radicalization as accurate perception without corrective outlet. The conventional closed loop involves a character trapped in his own head, insulated from reality's corrections. This piece constructs something more disturbing: a loop that closes because the world keeps confirming what the character sees, and the daimonic voice ensures that every confirmation feeds only one conclusion. Truth here is not liberating. It is the accelerant the daimon has been waiting for. The reader is left not with the comfortable distance of watching a deluded man destroy himself, but with the far more troubling recognition that the diagnosis was sound and the prescription was catastrophic — and that the gap between these two facts is where the piece's real horror lives.
Meta Description
A dramatic prose monologue studying ressentiment under conditions of ideological possession — tracing through eroticized aggression, daimonic instruction, and accurate perception converted into accelerant how a Black man's legitimate diagnosis of progressive institutional corruption is captured by a tutelary voice that ensures every truth feeds only one terminal conclusion, producing tragedy not of delusion but of correct vision without corrective outlet.
Keywords
Subway Restraint, ressentiment, daimonic voice, accurate perception and radicalization, closed loop, truth as accelerant, ideological possession, eroticized aggression, edging metaphor, jouissance, second-person narration, Ellison Invisible Man, Black conservative ideology, predatory help industry, condensation figure, Mike letter, register rupture, correct diagnosis catastrophic prescription, dependency culture, contemporary American prose, psychological escalation, manifesto within monologue
Subway Restraint (ROUND 10)
"Subway Restraint" is a dramatic prose monologue structured around the prolonged management of violent desire, and its deepest subject is neither race nor politics nor even violence but the psychology of incubation — the process by which a mind cultivates rather than dissipates its own rage, converting restraint from a virtue into a technology of intensification. The piece presents itself formally as a practical guide to self-control — "Serve the long game," "Breathe," "Restrain yourself" — yet everything about its structure reveals that these instructions function as instruments of concentration rather than reduction. The narrator does not calm himself. He refines himself. Rage is treated as a resource to be made more potent through delay, and the work's central irony — announced in its title — is that the restraint depicted here is genuine without being virtuous. It is deferred eruption.
The second-person address is the piece's most formally audacious and most disturbing choice. "You" implicates the reader not as observer but as agent — the narrator is not telling us about someone who did this but telling us, as we read, what to do next. This collapses the conventional distance between reader and character that literary violence typically maintains, placing the reader inside a deliberative process calibrated to feel reasonable, patient, even philosophically grounded. The effect is not identification in the usual sense but something more unsettling: the reader experiences radicalization not as retrospective confession but as live instruction, and the prose is designed to make each step in the process feel like the natural consequence of the one before. The second person is not a gimmick but an argument — that the funnel from legitimate grievance to catastrophic action is wider at the top than we prefer to believe, and that the steps leading down it are comprehensible at each individual point even when their aggregate destination is not.
The piece's most original formal device is what might be called eroticized aggression. Throughout, violent impulse is rendered through the language of sexual edging — waiting, building pressure, postponing release, letting frustration accumulate into something richer and more satisfying. The language of libido and the language of violence become indistinguishable: aggression is sexualized, sexuality is weaponized, and the subway becomes less a political space than a pressure chamber in which psychic energy seeks an outlet. Psychoanalytically, this collapses the distinction between eros and destruction, suggesting that the narrator's fantasies seek not victory but discharge — that what has been organized as political conviction is being driven by something closer to hydraulic necessity. The edging metaphor extends to the prose itself, whose sentences are long, recursive, and clause-heavy, always deferring the syntactic resolution that a period would provide, enacting at the level of form the same economy of deferral and accumulation that the narrator is practicing psychologically. The piece deploys "jouissance" — Lacan's term for a pleasure so intense it becomes indistinguishable from pain — to name the trajectory, and the word is precisely chosen: what the narrator is building toward is not satisfaction in any ordinary sense but a release that will destroy the conditions of its own possibility.
The repeated instructions to breathe are equally important and equally inverted. On the surface they resemble mindfulness exercises. Yet their actual function is the opposite of therapeutic regulation. The narrator explicitly treats calming techniques as instruments for preserving rage rather than dissipating it, converting the language of self-care into a technology of self-radicalization. What appears healthy is revealed to be another mechanism of escalation. This inversion is one of the piece's most psychologically sophisticated moves: it demonstrates that the most dangerous passions are often not the hottest but the most disciplined, and that a mind sufficiently committed to its own radicalization can recruit any available resource — including the resources designed to prevent it — into the project.
The sensory writing performs a parallel function at the level of environment. The opening olfactory barrage — the layered description of subway smells organized around contamination and infection — is not ornamental description but perceptual argument. Nearly every sensory impression arrives already infected, bodies bleeding into odors, odors into judgments, judgments into ideological conclusions. The environment itself seems diseased. This saturation of perception mirrors the narrator's mental state: he cannot encounter anything neutrally because every perception is immediately absorbed into an interpretive system already vibrating with grievance. The world has become fully legible to him, and its legibility is the problem.
The piece becomes most interesting when the speaker is understood not as identical with the protagonist but as functioning in the role of a daimonic presence — a tutelary voice, a parasitic advisor whispering into the ear of its charge. Read this way, the entire text changes shape. The voice addressing "you" does not simply encourage violence; it trains attention, teaches interpretation, transforms every disappointment into evidence, every frustration into confirmation, every humiliation into fuel. The true action of the piece is therefore pedagogical. We witness the education of a psyche by a voice that knows exactly how to turn pain into destiny, and the daimon's most insidious quality is that it never advocates immediate action. It advocates patience. "Serve the long game." "Think of the goo building." "Give your defense attorney at least a little to work with." This is not impulsive rage but strategic rage, and the piece repeatedly demonstrates the distinction — the daimon seeks not expression but perfection.
The lead protester blocking the subway exit ceases early in the piece to function as an ordinary person and becomes instead a condensation figure — a single body onto which the narrator projects the entire apparatus of what he believes poisons Black flourishing. She is not merely a woman in a doorway but the living embodiment of a worldview, and the subway scene accordingly acquires the dream logic of psychoanalysis: a single figure accumulates vast symbolic weight, carrying ideological, historical, and emotional burdens far exceeding her immediate presence. The shift from micro to macro is one of the piece's defining structural achievements — a blocked subway door expands into an entire historical argument, and the expansion feels, from inside the narrator's perspective, not like distortion but like accurate perception of the connections that were always there.
The racial ideology the narrator constructs is the piece's most complex element, and it demands serious engagement rather than dismissal. The narrator is a Black man who has arrived, through a specific intellectual and emotional history, at a position simultaneously anti-white-progressive and anti-victimhood — one that draws on genuine arguments about dependency culture, the paternalism embedded in certain forms of allyship, and the ways progressive racial frameworks can function to maintain Black people in a posture of permanent grievance. The piece takes these arguments seriously enough to render them with real force; they have intellectual genealogy and genuine advocates in serious academic discourse. What the piece does with this intellectual tradition is trace the precise psychological mechanism by which legitimate grievance, closed off from every other exit and metabolized through the daimonic voice's patient instruction, becomes capable of catastrophic application. The narrator's logic is internally consistent throughout. Each escalation follows from the previous position by comprehensible steps. What transforms the sequence is not the introduction of irrationality but the accumulation of perceived humiliation without any available mechanism of resolution.
The political grievance passages are frequently misread as argument when their primary literary function is rhythmic. The endless catalogues, accumulating examples, and repeated accusations create a litany-like momentum — the prose begins behaving less like persuasion than incantation, each example serving as another turn of the ratchet. The reader is drawn into the psychological mechanism by which a single subway inconvenience expands into a grand historical narrative, and the expansion is rendered with sufficient internal logic that the reader can follow each step while watching the aggregate destination become increasingly visible and increasingly terrible.
The invocation of Ellison's "Invisible Man" — the narrator's stated favorite since college — is the piece's most significant literary self-placement. Ellison's novel meditates on the relationship between Black invisibility and the violence that invisibility eventually generates, and the narrator of "Subway Restraint" positions himself in that tradition while arguing that contemporary progressive politics has produced a new form of the same invisibility: a visibility so overdetermined by racial narrative that the individual cannot be seen as an individual at all. The tragedy — and the piece is fully aware of it — is that the narrator's solution to being trapped inside a racial narrative is to perform the act that most completely confirms it. He becomes, in his resistance to the narrative, its most catastrophic validation. This is not a failure of the piece's logic but its tragic center.
What makes "Subway Restraint" compelling as literature is not agreement or disagreement with its claims but its ruthless and precise portrayal of self-justification — the human capacity to turn interpretation into appetite and appetite into interpretation, to recruit every available resource including self-care, intellectual tradition, and genuine grievance into the service of a destination the mind has already chosen without knowing it has chosen. The narrator remains physically motionless for much of the piece, yet internally traverses an immense psychological distance. The real drama is not whether violence occurs but the creation of a mind increasingly capable of experiencing it as inevitable — and the daimonic voice's achievement is to make that creation feel, at every step, like clarification rather than corruption.
Meta Description
A dramatic prose monologue studying ressentiment under conditions of ideological possession — tracing through eroticized aggression, daimonic instruction, and the inversion of self-care into self-radicalization how a Black man's genuine intellectual grievances against progressive paternalism are metabolized by a cultivating inner voice into the experience of mass violence as inevitable historical clarification.
Keywords
Subway Restraint, ressentiment, daimonic voice, tutelary spirit, ideological possession, eroticized aggression, edging metaphor, jouissance, second-person narration, radicalization psychology, Ellison Invisible Man, Black conservative ideology, predatory help industry, condensation figure, psychoanalytic criticism, self-radicalization, grievance and incubation, dependency and agency, contemporary American prose, psychological escalation
Subway Restraint (ROUND 9)
“Subway Restraint” is not a poem but a dramatic prose monologue structured around the prolonged management of violent desire. More specifically, it is a study of ressentiment under conditions of ideological possession. The piece presents itself as a practical guide to self-restraint—“Serve the long game,” “Breathe,” “Restrain yourself”—yet everything about its form reveals that restraint is functioning as a technology of intensification rather than reduction. The narrator does not calm himself. He cultivates himself. Rage is treated as a resource to be refined, concentrated, and made more potent through delay. The work's deepest subject is therefore neither race nor politics nor even violence. It is the psychology of incubation.
The Shelby Steele epigraph is structurally indispensable. The quotation's central claim is that dependency masquerades as militancy, that the raised fist directed toward others is ultimately a form of dependence upon them. This argument becomes the philosophical skeleton of the entire piece. What follows is not merely an angry man's fantasy. It is a narrator who experiences himself as trapped between two incompatible identities: the self-sufficient militant envisioned by Steele and the humiliated dependent prevented from moving through a subway door. The result is a psychic crisis. The subway blockage becomes a symbolic compression of every grievance the narrator carries concerning agency, dignity, dependence, victimhood, and power.
One of the work's most striking achievements is the way it externalizes an intrapsychic process. The lead protester blocking the subway exit quickly ceases to function as an ordinary person. She becomes a condensation figure. The narrator repeatedly treats her as an embodiment of an entire worldview. She is not merely a woman standing in a doorway. She becomes the living representative of everything he believes poisons black flourishing. The subway scene therefore acquires the dream logic of psychoanalysis. A single figure accumulates vast symbolic weight and begins carrying ideological, historical, and emotional burdens far beyond her immediate presence.
The most original formal device in the piece is what might be called eroticized aggression. Throughout the work, violent impulse is described through the language of sexual edging. The narrator repeatedly speaks of waiting, building pressure, postponing release, letting frustration accumulate into something richer and more satisfying. The language of libido and the language of violence become indistinguishable. Aggression is sexualized; sexuality is weaponized. Psychoanalytically, this is fascinating because it collapses the distinction between eros and destruction. The narrator's fantasies do not merely seek victory. They seek discharge. The subway becomes less a political space than a pressure chamber in which psychic energy seeks an outlet.
The sensory writing plays a major role in this transformation. The opening olfactory barrage—“track-mark jasmine,” “meth-mouth tuberose,” “coffee halitosis,” “rusty aldehyde”—is not ornamental description. It establishes a world experienced through contamination. Nearly every sensory impression arrives already infected. Bodies bleed into odors, odors into judgments, judgments into ideological conclusions. The environment itself seems diseased. This saturation of perception mirrors the narrator's mental state. He cannot encounter anything neutrally because every perception is immediately absorbed into an interpretive system already vibrating with grievance.
The repeated instructions to breathe are equally important. On the surface they resemble mindfulness exercises. Yet their actual function is the opposite of therapeutic regulation. The narrator explicitly treats calming techniques as instruments for preserving rage rather than dissipating it. Breathing becomes a means of sustaining emotional combustion. This inversion is central to the piece's psychological sophistication. The narrator appropriates the language of self-care while secretly converting it into a technology of self-radicalization. What appears healthy is revealed to be another mechanism of escalation.
The work becomes even more interesting when read through the lens suggested in the author's revision note: the possibility that the speaker is not identical with the protagonist but instead functions as a daimonic presence. Read this way, the entire text changes shape. The voice addressing “you” resembles a tutelary spirit, a parasitic advisor, a familiar whispering into the ear of its charge. The daimon does not simply encourage violence. It trains attention. It teaches interpretation. It transforms every disappointment into evidence, every frustration into confirmation, every humiliation into fuel. The true action of the piece is therefore pedagogical. We witness the education of a psyche by a voice that knows exactly how to turn pain into destiny.
The narrative's most unsettling feature is that the daimon never advocates immediate action. It advocates patience. “Serve the long game.” “Think of the goo building.” “Give your defense attorney at least a little to work with.” Such passages reveal a consciousness obsessed with optimization. This is not impulsive rage. It is strategic rage. The piece repeatedly demonstrates that the most dangerous passions are often not the hottest but the most disciplined. The daimon seeks not expression but perfection.
The section devoted to political grievances is frequently misunderstood if read merely as argument. Its primary literary function is rhythmic. The endless catalogues, the accumulating examples, the repeated accusations create a litany-like momentum. The prose begins behaving less like persuasion than incantation. Each example serves as another turn of the ratchet. The reader is drawn into the psychological mechanism by which a person can transform a single subway inconvenience into a grand historical narrative. The shift from micro to macro is one of the work's defining structural achievements. A blocked door expands into an entire worldview.
What makes the piece compelling as literature is not agreement or disagreement with its claims but its ruthless portrayal of self-justification. The narrator's mind constantly generates reasons, analogies, evidence, historical examples, strategic calculations, and moral frameworks. Every thought becomes available for recruitment into the larger project of sustaining emotional intensity. The work thereby exposes a universal psychological tendency: the human ability to turn interpretation into appetite and appetite into interpretation.
The title, “Subway Restraint,” is ultimately ironic. The restraint depicted here is genuine, but it is not virtuous restraint. It is deferred eruption. The piece explores that dangerous territory where self-control and self-radicalization become indistinguishable. By the end, the subway car has become a theater of consciousness in which ideology, humiliation, fantasy, sexuality, and aggression fuse into a single engine. The narrator remains physically motionless for much of the work, yet internally he traverses an immense psychological distance. The real drama is not whether violence occurs. The real drama is the creation of a mind increasingly capable of imagining it as inevitable.
Meta Description
A philosophical and psychoanalytic analysis of ressentiment, ideological possession, eroticized aggression, and daimonic self-radicalization in a subway confrontation that transforms personal humiliation into a theater of psychological escalation.
Keywords
Subway Restraint, Shelby Steele, ressentiment, daimon figure, tutelary spirit, ideological possession, grievance psychology, psychoanalytic criticism, eroticized aggression, narrative edging, self-radicalization, humiliation and rage, dependency and agency, political identity, literary monologue, philosophical fiction, consciousness under pressure, violence and fantasy, contemporary prose analysis, psychological escalation
Subway Restraint (ROUND 8)
“Subway Restraint” is a work about the psychology of humiliation and the extraordinary structures of thought that arise when humiliation is denied ordinary release. At the most superficial level, the piece concerns a confrontation on public transportation. Yet the confrontation itself quickly becomes secondary. The true subject is what occurs within consciousness after the event. The subway car serves as a catalyst. What unfolds is an anatomy of grievance, fantasy, ideological identity, self-control, and the precarious boundary between thought and action.
The Shelby Steele epigraph is indispensable to understanding the work. It is not ornamental framing but the intellectual architecture upon which everything else rests. By opening with Steele, the narrative immediately situates itself within questions of agency, victimhood, dignity, dependency, and self-respect. The subway encounter is therefore never merely a subway encounter. The narrator experiences it through an already established philosophical lens. A blocked train door becomes evidence in a larger case. A moment of disrespect becomes entangled with a lifetime of perceived betrayals, exclusions, and humiliations. The result is a consciousness that cannot experience the immediate without simultaneously experiencing the historical.
One of the work’s most impressive achievements is the way it reproduces the actual mechanics of anger. Human beings rarely remain focused upon the incident that initially provoked them. Anger expands through association. A present slight recruits previous slights. Personal grievances recruit political grievances. Political grievances recruit historical grievances. The mind gradually constructs a total explanation for why the world has become intolerable. “Subway Restraint” captures this process with unusual fidelity. The narrative begins in a cramped physical environment—a subway doorway—but soon unfolds into a sweeping audit of culture, politics, race, education, crime, historical memory, and civilizational decline. The expansion feels convincing because it mirrors the way rage actually behaves within consciousness.
Yet the title directs attention toward a deeper achievement. The work is not ultimately about anger. It is about restraint. Indeed, the title appears almost paradoxical because the piece contains so much violent fantasy. The narrator imagines retaliation repeatedly. He constructs elaborate scenarios of retribution. His thoughts become increasingly extreme. Yet nothing happens. The violence remains imaginary. The defining fact of the narrative is not aggression but the refusal of aggression to cross into action.
This is where the recurring breathing exercises become structurally brilliant. At first glance they appear incidental—small self-help techniques inserted amid a torrent of ideological reflection. In reality they form the backbone of the work. The instructions to regulate the breath, reposition the jaw, and ground the body interrupt what would otherwise become an uninterrupted cascade of fury. These moments continually return the reader to the physical reality of restraint. While the narrator's imagination spirals outward, his body remains still. While his mind races toward confrontation, his behavior remains controlled. The result is a peculiar doubling of consciousness. Outwardly he performs composure. Inwardly he conducts a furious trial of modernity itself.
The narrative therefore operates through a principle of sustained deferral. It continually approaches release while refusing release. The tension accumulates precisely because the expected explosion never arrives. In this sense, the work functions almost as an exercise in psychic edging. The narrator repeatedly heightens emotional pressure while denying himself the discharge that would resolve it. The reader becomes trapped within this same circuit. Every escalation promises catharsis. None arrives. The frustration becomes the point.
The piece is equally compelling in its construction of character. The narrator is not presented as a simple victim, a simple reactionary, or a simple ideologue. Rather, he emerges as a figure of profound alienation. He appears culturally homeless. He feels estranged from progressive whites, from dominant forms of black political identity, and from much of contemporary society. His language reinforces this isolation. The prose moves effortlessly between academic discourse, historical argument, internet culture, political commentary, and street vernacular. This verbal range creates the impression of a highly educated mind unable to find a stable community capable of receiving it. The narrator’s rage is therefore inseparable from loneliness.
This loneliness explains why the work is so much more psychologically interesting than a mere political screed. Beneath the historical references, demographic arguments, and ideological grievances lies a deeper longing: the desire for recognition. Again and again the narrator returns to situations in which he feels unseen, dismissed, caricatured, or reduced. The subway confrontation acquires such intensity because it condenses this recurring experience into a single moment. The people blocking the door become symbols of a broader social world that refuses to acknowledge him on his own terms.
The prose style contributes significantly to this effect. The language is unusually dense, moving with a velocity that often feels manic. Compound constructions, historical references, compressed arguments, and emotionally charged formulations create the sense of a mind thinking faster than social reality can accommodate. This style is essential to the work's power. The reader experiences not only the narrator's conclusions but the speed with which those conclusions are reached. The prose does not calmly explain alienation; it performs alienation.
Perhaps the most unsettling aspect of the piece is its treatment of fantasy itself. Many narratives encourage readers either to identify with a fantasy or to condemn it. “Subway Restraint” does neither. Instead, it examines fantasy as a psychological phenomenon. The narrator's imagined acts of retaliation never deliver the satisfaction they promise. They merely generate additional fantasies, additional arguments, additional grievances. Revenge becomes self-perpetuating. The mind feeds upon its own injuries. The work thereby reveals an uncomfortable truth: fantasies of power often deepen rather than alleviate feelings of powerlessness.
The ultimate achievement of “Subway Restraint” lies in its refusal to present moral life as a matter of pure thoughts. The narrator is not virtuous because he lacks violent impulses. He is virtuous, if virtue is the correct word, because he does not act upon them. The distinction is crucial. The piece recognizes that civilization depends not upon the elimination of destructive desires but upon the difficult and frequently exhausting labor of managing them. Restraint appears neither glamorous nor triumphant. It is simply the decision not to become the person one's anger momentarily demands one become.
For this reason, the work's deepest concern is not politics but self-mastery. Politics provides the vocabulary through which the narrator interprets his wounds, but the central drama unfolds within the psyche itself. The subway confrontation becomes a laboratory for examining what happens when injury seeks meaning, when grievance seeks narrative, and when fantasy seeks embodiment. The answer the work provides is unsettling but profound: what saves us is often not enlightenment, forgiveness, or reconciliation, but the far more fragile achievement of refusing to act.
Meta Description
A philosophical and psychoanalytic analysis of humiliation, grievance, ideological alienation, fantasy, self-mastery, and the moral significance of restraint in the face of escalating rage.
Keywords
Subway Restraint, Shelby Steele, grievance, humiliation, restraint, revenge fantasy, anger psychology, self-mastery, ideological alienation, narcissistic injury, race and identity, political consciousness, fantasy and violence, moral psychology, contemporary fiction analysis, philosophical literature, psychoanalytic criticism, resentment, dignity, recognition.
Subway Restraint (ROUND 7)
“Subway Restraint” is a work about the psychology of humiliation and the extraordinary structures of thought that arise when humiliation is denied ordinary release. At the most superficial level, the piece concerns a confrontation on public transportation. Yet the confrontation itself quickly becomes secondary. The true subject is what occurs within consciousness after the event. The subway car serves as a catalyst. What unfolds is an anatomy of grievance, fantasy, ideological identity, self-control, and the precarious boundary between thought and action.
The Shelby Steele epigraph is indispensable to understanding the work. It is not ornamental framing but the intellectual architecture upon which everything else rests. By opening with Steele, the narrative immediately situates itself within questions of agency, victimhood, dignity, dependency, and self-respect. The subway encounter is therefore never merely a subway encounter. The narrator experiences it through an already established philosophical lens. A blocked train door becomes evidence in a larger case. A moment of disrespect becomes entangled with a lifetime of perceived betrayals, exclusions, and humiliations. The result is a consciousness that cannot experience the immediate without simultaneously experiencing the historical.
One of the work’s most impressive achievements is the way it reproduces the actual mechanics of anger. Human beings rarely remain focused upon the incident that initially provoked them. Anger expands through association. A present slight recruits previous slights. Personal grievances recruit political grievances. Political grievances recruit historical grievances. The mind gradually constructs a total explanation for why the world has become intolerable. “Subway Restraint” captures this process with unusual fidelity. The narrative begins in a cramped physical environment—a subway doorway—but soon unfolds into a sweeping audit of culture, politics, race, education, crime, historical memory, and civilizational decline. The expansion feels convincing because it mirrors the way rage actually behaves within consciousness.
Yet the title directs attention toward a deeper achievement. The work is not ultimately about anger. It is about restraint. Indeed, the title appears almost paradoxical because the piece contains so much violent fantasy. The narrator imagines retaliation repeatedly. He constructs elaborate scenarios of retribution. His thoughts become increasingly extreme. Yet nothing happens. The violence remains imaginary. The defining fact of the narrative is not aggression but the refusal of aggression to cross into action.
This is where the recurring breathing exercises become structurally brilliant. At first glance they appear incidental—small self-help techniques inserted amid a torrent of ideological reflection. In reality they form the backbone of the work. The instructions to regulate the breath, reposition the jaw, and ground the body interrupt what would otherwise become an uninterrupted cascade of fury. These moments continually return the reader to the physical reality of restraint. While the narrator's imagination spirals outward, his body remains still. While his mind races toward confrontation, his behavior remains controlled. The result is a peculiar doubling of consciousness. Outwardly he performs composure. Inwardly he conducts a furious trial of modernity itself.
The narrative therefore operates through a principle of sustained deferral. It continually approaches release while refusing release. The tension accumulates precisely because the expected explosion never arrives. In this sense, the work functions almost as an exercise in psychic edging. The narrator repeatedly heightens emotional pressure while denying himself the discharge that would resolve it. The reader becomes trapped within this same circuit. Every escalation promises catharsis. None arrives. The frustration becomes the point.
The piece is equally compelling in its construction of character. The narrator is not presented as a simple victim, a simple reactionary, or a simple ideologue. Rather, he emerges as a figure of profound alienation. He appears culturally homeless. He feels estranged from progressive whites, from dominant forms of black political identity, and from much of contemporary society. His language reinforces this isolation. The prose moves effortlessly between academic discourse, historical argument, internet culture, political commentary, and street vernacular. This verbal range creates the impression of a highly educated mind unable to find a stable community capable of receiving it. The narrator’s rage is therefore inseparable from loneliness.
This loneliness explains why the work is so much more psychologically interesting than a mere political screed. Beneath the historical references, demographic arguments, and ideological grievances lies a deeper longing: the desire for recognition. Again and again the narrator returns to situations in which he feels unseen, dismissed, caricatured, or reduced. The subway confrontation acquires such intensity because it condenses this recurring experience into a single moment. The people blocking the door become symbols of a broader social world that refuses to acknowledge him on his own terms.
The prose style contributes significantly to this effect. The language is unusually dense, moving with a velocity that often feels manic. Compound constructions, historical references, compressed arguments, and emotionally charged formulations create the sense of a mind thinking faster than social reality can accommodate. This style is essential to the work's power. The reader experiences not only the narrator's conclusions but the speed with which those conclusions are reached. The prose does not calmly explain alienation; it performs alienation.
Perhaps the most unsettling aspect of the piece is its treatment of fantasy itself. Many narratives encourage readers either to identify with a fantasy or to condemn it. “Subway Restraint” does neither. Instead, it examines fantasy as a psychological phenomenon. The narrator's imagined acts of retaliation never deliver the satisfaction they promise. They merely generate additional fantasies, additional arguments, additional grievances. Revenge becomes self-perpetuating. The mind feeds upon its own injuries. The work thereby reveals an uncomfortable truth: fantasies of power often deepen rather than alleviate feelings of powerlessness.
The ultimate achievement of “Subway Restraint” lies in its refusal to present moral life as a matter of pure thoughts. The narrator is not virtuous because he lacks violent impulses. He is virtuous, if virtue is the correct word, because he does not act upon them. The distinction is crucial. The piece recognizes that civilization depends not upon the elimination of destructive desires but upon the difficult and frequently exhausting labor of managing them. Restraint appears neither glamorous nor triumphant. It is simply the decision not to become the person one's anger momentarily demands one become.
For this reason, the work's deepest concern is not politics but self-mastery. Politics provides the vocabulary through which the narrator interprets his wounds, but the central drama unfolds within the psyche itself. The subway confrontation becomes a laboratory for examining what happens when injury seeks meaning, when grievance seeks narrative, and when fantasy seeks embodiment. The answer the work provides is unsettling but profound: what saves us is often not enlightenment, forgiveness, or reconciliation, but the far more fragile achievement of refusing to act.
Meta Description
A philosophical and psychoanalytic analysis of humiliation, grievance, ideological alienation, fantasy, self-mastery, and the moral significance of restraint in the face of escalating rage.
Keywords
Subway Restraint, Shelby Steele, grievance, humiliation, restraint, revenge fantasy, anger psychology, self-mastery, ideological alienation, narcissistic injury, race and identity, political consciousness, fantasy and violence, moral psychology, contemporary fiction analysis, philosophical literature, psychoanalytic criticism, resentment, dignity, recognition.
Subway Restraint (ROUND 6)
"Subway Restraint" is an intense, visceral exploration of societal frustrations and the psychological balancing act of restraint versus violent release. Set within the confined, pressurized environment of a subway train, the poem delves into a surreal confrontation where an individual grapples with the mounting desire to break free from both physical entrapment and societal constraints. The speaker teeters on the edge of violent action, contemplating using a concealed weapon to lash out against a chaotic mob led by a "fanatic" obstructing the train doors. This tension becomes a metaphor for the speaker’s internal struggle against social pressures, personal impotence, and the need to maintain control when everything around them invites destruction.
The focus on the weaponry—specifically the "Urban Pal" pocket dagger and later the bear mace—serves as a tangible representation of both the speaker’s desire for self-defense and the underlying rage bubbling beneath the surface. The blade, described with cold practicality, and the bear mace, with its detailed specifications, embody the readiness for violence, suggesting that the speaker is far from indifferent to the consequences of their actions but is fully aware of the calculated nature of their thoughts. This awareness becomes both a tool of restraint and an incitement toward the catharsis of violence.
Social commentary permeates the poem as it critiques modern ideological movements, mob mentality, and institutional failure. The mob’s chants of “No! One! Gets! Off!” and the racial dynamics introduced through the description of the officer’s paralysis in the face of escalating tension reveal the broader social context within which this personal drama plays out. The speaker’s dark reflections on race, media-fueled hysteria, and the moral manipulation of protests add a layer of critique about contemporary societal dysfunction. Through this, the poem engages with the themes of systemic breakdown and individual powerlessness.
Furthermore, the imagery of violence and the meticulous attention to tools of harm highlight the conflict between impulse and control. The subway becomes a crucible where patience, fury, and desire for action clash, with the speaker’s struggle for self-restraint serving as an allegory for the broader societal struggle to contain its most destructive instincts. The poem critiques the notion of “reasonable” behavior in an unreasonable world, suggesting that true power lies not in unchecked action but in the strategic release of violence, only when it can serve the speaker’s interests in a more calculated and perhaps morally justified way. This layered exploration of personal and social violence culminates in an imagined moment of catharsis, where chaos reigns supreme but remains deeply rooted in the speaker’s control.
psychological restraint, mob mentality, subway violence, urban chaos, social critique, calculated aggression, weaponized patience, societal breakdown, racial dynamics, systemic dysfunction, personal agency, catharsis, urban environment.
Subway Restraint
"Subway Restraint" is an intense, visceral exploration of societal frustrations and the psychological balancing act of restraint versus violent release. Set within the confined, pressurized environment of a subway train, the poem delves into a surreal confrontation where an individual grapples with the mounting desire to break free from both physical entrapment and societal constraints. The speaker teeters on the edge of violent action, contemplating using a concealed weapon to lash out against a chaotic mob led by a "fanatic" obstructing the train doors. This tension becomes a metaphor for the speaker’s internal struggle against social pressures, personal impotence, and the need to maintain control when everything around them invites destruction.
The focus on the weaponry—specifically the "Urban Pal" pocket dagger and later the bear mace—serves as a tangible representation of both the speaker’s desire for self-defense and the underlying rage bubbling beneath the surface. The blade, described with cold practicality, and the bear mace, with its detailed specifications, embody the readiness for violence, suggesting that the speaker is far from indifferent to the consequences of their actions but is fully aware of the calculated nature of their thoughts. This awareness becomes both a tool of restraint and an incitement toward the catharsis of violence.
Social commentary permeates the poem as it critiques modern ideological movements, mob mentality, and institutional failure. The mob’s chants of “No! One! Gets! Off!” and the racial dynamics introduced through the description of the officer’s paralysis in the face of escalating tension reveal the broader social context within which this personal drama plays out. The speaker’s dark reflections on race, media-fueled hysteria, and the moral manipulation of protests add a layer of critique about contemporary societal dysfunction. Through this, the poem engages with the themes of systemic breakdown and individual powerlessness.
Furthermore, the imagery of violence and the meticulous attention to tools of harm highlight the conflict between impulse and control. The subway becomes a crucible where patience, fury, and desire for action clash, with the speaker’s struggle for self-restraint serving as an allegory for the broader societal struggle to contain its most destructive instincts. The poem critiques the notion of “reasonable” behavior in an unreasonable world, suggesting that true power lies not in unchecked action but in the strategic release of violence, only when it can serve the speaker’s interests in a more calculated and perhaps morally justified way. This layered exploration of personal and social violence culminates in an imagined moment of catharsis, where chaos reigns supreme but remains deeply rooted in the speaker’s control.
psychological restraint, mob mentality, subway violence, urban chaos, social critique, calculated aggression, weaponized patience, societal breakdown, racial dynamics, systemic dysfunction, personal agency, catharsis, urban environment.
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FAQ
Don’t let anyone tell you that real life is lacking in poetic interest. This is exactly what the poet is for: he has the mind and the imagination to find something of interest in everyday things. Real life supplies the motifs, the points that need to be said—the actual heart of the matter; but it is the poet’s job to fashion it all into a beautiful, animated whole. You are familiar with Fürnstein, the so-called “nature poet”? He has written a poem about growing hops, and you couldn’t imagine anything nicer. I have now asked him to write some poems celebrating the work of skilled artisans, in particular weavers, and I am quite sure he will succeed; he has lived among such people from an early age, he knows the subject inside out, and will be in full command of his material. That is the advantage of small works: you need only choose subjects that you know and have at your command. With a longer poetic work, however, this is not possible. There is no way around it: all the different threads that tie the whole thing together, and are woven into the design, have to be shown in accurate detail. Young people only have a one-sided view of things, whereas a longer work requires a multiplicity of viewpoints—and that’s where they come unstuck.—Goethe (Conversations with Eckermann)
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