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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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Sleep Fissures (ROUND 11)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Sleep Fissures (ROUND 11)

“Sleep Fissures” explores the absolute collapse of chronological time under the weight of severe childhood trauma. Rather than tracing a linear path of recovery or recollection, the poem maps out a psyche where developmental boundaries have been utterly pulverized. The title itself operates with clinical precision: “sleep” signals a state of profound childhood vulnerability and permeable dream-logic, while “fissures” points to the structural fault lines through which buried horrors erupt into the present. Across its three distinct movements, the text treats human consciousness not as a sequence of neat life stages, but as an open somatic wound where infancy, childhood violation, adult dissociation, and internalized aggression bleed into one another simultaneously.

The Misdirected Cleanse of the Domestic Space

The opening movement of the poem establishes a domestic universe that is catastrophically blind to its own internal rot. A mother is depicted as thoroughly baffled by a chronic childhood illness, her futile interventions marked by the running count of an amoxicillin bottle four that fails to prevent her toddler from doubling over in pain. The somatic language here turns aggressively visceral, detailing a foul olive discharge that is both frothy and fevered as her puke. This raw physical degradation demonstrates that the child's body is forced to articulate the reality of violation long before the mind has the vocabulary to name it.

In a frantic attempt to cure the symptom while missing the cause, the mother aggressively guts the home of all environmental culprits, scrutinizing mundane domestic items like scented soap, dryer sheets, junk food, and synthetic panties that are too tight. The devastating dramatic irony of the scene culminates in the line that spares only Mr. Malik from this exhaustive forensic purge. By focusing entirely on chemical and synthetic irritants, the domestic routine becomes a shield for the actual predator, illustrating how easily intimate human violence hides inside the very structures built to protect.

The Inscribed Body and the Lineage of the Aggressor

The second movement shifts abruptly into the explicit, transactional topography of the adult body, tracing how early violation is carried forward as a literal physical inscription. The speaker maps her own history directly onto her skin, describing a porn-pretzeled preschool self tatted below her tits. The use of a pretzel shape highlights a profound structural contortion, implying that childhood has been physically and psychically warped by premature sexualization. This initiates a graphic, overlapping anatomy where bald pussies converged and historical memories of being thumbed and candled at the ass directly pollute adult sexual function.

Within this dissociation, the cynical internal voice of the real “fuckin big girl” emerges to navigate an interchangeable, simulated sexual economy. The adult body becomes a site of compulsive reenactment where a self-bruised cervix is depicted as pigging out on an avatar’s load. This hyper-sexualized landscape is not an expression of adult desire, but a symptom of profound psychic overload. It is precisely through this state of somatic detachment that the poem delivers its most unsettling psychological insight: the sudden recognition of the mewling child in the perp. By forcing the reader to confront the damaged child embedded within the architecture of the monster, the text treats trauma as an intergenerational, self-replicating loop where the victim intimately recognizes the lineage of her own tormentor.

The Transmissible Script and the Assault on Futurity

The final movement completes this cycle of identification by illustrating how easily the roles of victim and predator collapse into one another. The language of maternal guardianship from the opening stanza is completely perverted as inked cheeks in her care are met with claws too deep to slip, transforming protective custody into absolute physical subjugation. The text introduces a rustic, culinary violence with the desire to spatchcock the butterfly, using the flattening and splitting of a symbol of transformation to mirror the destruction of developmental potential. This act of violence purples the exact spot where open vulnerability and splay mattered most.

Here, the speaker ceases to be a passive container for memory and instead becomes an active performer of the script once imposed upon her, choosing to hiss cruelties like commanding someone to spit on her cunt. The poem reaches its terrifying structural climax as subsequent lovers work up the balls to snatch the baton. This baton metaphor brilliantly reframes the entire trauma response as a horrific relay race, where the behavioral script is passed hand-to-hand down the ancestral line. The final, viciously quoted declaration that a little slut will never have a baby targets futurity itself, striking directly at the capacity for reproduction and emotional continuation, ensuring that chronological time remains permanently arrested.

Formal Mechanics and Diction

The structural momentum of “Sleep Fissures” relies on a dense, friction-heavy collision of highly disparate linguistic registers. Domestic, mundane elements like dryer sheets and junk food rub directly against a dry, metallic astringency, while raw pornographic syntax slams into the cold, clinical precision of terms like amoxicillin and cervix. This stylistic whiplash mirrors the poem’s deeper obsession with boundary failure. Human development is stripped of its progressive timeline and re-framed as a crowded, mammalian ecology where the adult biped remains permanently haunted by a territorial, predatory violence that refuses to remain buried in the past.

Metadata

Meta Description

A visceral triptych poem exploring the devastating impact of childhood sexual abuse, somatic memory, the intergenerational transmission of violence, and the absolute collapse of chronological time within a fractured psyche.

Keywords

Sleep Fissures, trauma poetics, contemporary poetry, childhood sexual abuse, developmental trauma, psychoanalytic poetry, repetition compulsion, identification with the aggressor, temporal collapse, dissociation, somatic memory, metallic astringency, steel-sour, mewling child, baton of trauma, victim-perpetrator dynamics, boundary collapse

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The Art of Subtraction (ROUND 6)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

The Art of Subtraction (ROUND 6)

“The Art of Subtraction” is a poem about the psychic crisis of succession. More specifically, it is about what happens when love for one's child collides with the recognition that the child's ascent necessarily coincides with one's own displacement. Countless works celebrate parenthood as continuity, legacy, or immortality through descendants. This poem is interested in a far more difficult question: how does one endure becoming secondary? How does one learn to welcome the flourishing of another person when that flourishing increasingly reveals that one's own season at the center of things is ending?

The title announces the poem's governing insight. Subtraction is not presented as catastrophe but as discipline. The speaker imagines the possibility that diminishment itself might be cultivated as an art. Yet the poem never romanticizes this prospect. The subtraction in question is not a serene spiritual exercise undertaken from a position of wisdom. It is experienced as resistance, shame, grief, and psychic strain. The poem's emotional power derives from the fact that the speaker understands what is being asked of him long before he knows whether he possesses the strength to comply.

The opening establishes this struggle through inheritance. The speaker's confession that it takes “everything inside me” to look directly at his son immediately links relational difficulty to his own father before him. This is one of the poem's first major insights: what is inherited is not merely temperament but posture toward intimacy itself. The father's “shifty eyes” become the son's shifty eyes. What once appeared from the perspective of childhood as indifference or evasiveness now appears as the visible symptom of a deeper burden. The speaker arrives at a painful sympathy for the dead. He discovers that the very behavior he once found frustrating may have emerged from pressures he only now understands.

That pressure centers on the child's gaze. The son appears throughout the poem as a figure of vitality, possibility, and presence. His eyes are “energized” and “hopeful.” His childhood eccentricities remain preserved in memory with extraordinary vividness. The little nose in the bathroom mirror, the “Bip it. Bop it.” refrain, the diapers whose numbered days seemed endless while they were occurring—all survive with greater intensity than entire years. The poem understands memory not as a rational archive but as a system governed by emotional force. What remains is often arbitrary, yet its persistence feels absolute.

Importantly, however, the speaker recognizes that nostalgia alone cannot explain his distress. The poem contains one of its most revealing moments when he acknowledges that reducing the problem to sentimental memories would constitute “vain evasion.” This self-correction is characteristic of the poem's intelligence. Again and again, it refuses explanations that are emotionally satisfying but incomplete. The son's childhood matters, but it is not the true source of the father's anguish.

The deeper source emerges as the son matures. One of the poem's most devastating observations concerns the child's gradual movement beyond self-absorption. The son's youthful “gab of vigor” has begun to soften into something “considerate.” He is becoming capable of empathy. Ordinarily such growth would be cause for celebration. Here it becomes painful. The speaker realizes that the child is approaching the age at which he will begin to see his father not as a center of gravity but as a vulnerable human being. The phrase “mercy for Dad” carries tremendous psychological weight. Rebellion would preserve hierarchy. Compassion reverses it. To be pitied by one's child is to confront the erosion of parental authority at its deepest level.

This is where the poem departs from more familiar narratives of aging. The crisis is not physical decline. Nor is it merely mortality. The true crisis is decentering. The son increasingly occupies the position once occupied by the father. What the speaker confronts is not death itself but the transfer of significance from one generation to another.

The bathroom mirror scene crystallizes this realization. Seeking a moment of solitude, the speaker looks at himself and experiences the act almost as a criminal arraignment. He appears “like an ankle-cuffed criminal ushered into court / for his disgrace.” The image is remarkable because it transforms self-awareness into self-prosecution. The speaker is not judged by society but by reality itself. Looking at his body becomes an encounter with evidence.

Yet the poem refuses simple self-loathing. What the speaker sees in the mirror is simultaneously degrading and exalted. He finds “Apollo's torso,” invoking Rilke's famous encounter with classical beauty and the imperative “You must change your life.” This allusion is central because the poem fundamentally revises Rilke's vision. In Rilke, transformation points toward expansion, growth, and greater realization of the self. Here the injunction is joined by a second command: “Face it. Your time is over.”

The genius of the poem lies in its recognition that both statements are true.

One must change one's life.

One's time is over.

The speaker discovers that genuine transformation at this stage of existence may consist not in becoming more but in learning how to become less. The traditional narrative of self-actualization reaches its limit. A new task emerges: the cultivation of graceful irrelevance.

The poem's final movement develops this insight into an ethical ideal. The speaker imagines becoming “he who can bear not being / the center,” and eventually “he who can sing / backstage.” These lines contain the poem's deepest wisdom. They propose a model of human flourishing radically opposed to contemporary assumptions. Modern life encourages endless self-expansion, visibility, and relevance. The poem suggests that maturity may instead require learning how to support the performance without demanding the spotlight.

The metaphor of apprenticeship is especially important. The speaker imagines training himself for erasure. Erasure is not avoided, denied, or conquered. It is practiced. The phrase “art of subtraction” therefore names a discipline of preparing oneself for the reality that awaits all living things. The poem does not seek immortality. It seeks dignity within impermanence.

Yet the poem remains psychologically honest enough to acknowledge how difficult this project is. The figure of the speaker's father returns near the end, head bowed over stacked beer cans, diminished beneath the brightness of youth. This image represents one possible response to succession: retreat, bitterness, and defeat. The speaker understands the appeal of that road because it preserves identification with the father. It offers continuity. To follow the father's path would be, in a sense, to remain connected to him.

This recognition gives the final lines their extraordinary emotional complexity. The speaker admits that if he fails, “at least I walk beside him.” The statement is neither surrender nor triumph. It is an acknowledgment that transcendence of inherited patterns is never complete. Love pulls in multiple directions at once. One wishes to surpass one's father, yet one also wishes to remain loyal to him. One wishes to celebrate the son's future, yet one mourns one's own fading centrality.

Ultimately, “The Art of Subtraction” is a poem about a transformation more difficult than self-improvement. It is about learning to inhabit a world in which one is no longer the protagonist. The speaker does not arrive at mastery. What he achieves instead is clarity. He recognizes that the highest demand placed upon him is not success, wisdom, or even happiness, but the ability to love another person enough to survive becoming secondary to them. The poem's greatness lies in its willingness to admit how painful—and how beautiful—that task can be.

Meta Description

A philosophical and psychoanalytic meditation on fatherhood, aging, succession, inherited masculine retreat, and the difficult art of surrendering centrality without surrendering love.

Keywords

The Art of Subtraction, fatherhood, generational succession, paternal psychology, aging and identity, Rilke, Apollo's Torso, ego decentering, narcissism and parenthood, masculine inheritance, father-son relationship, memory and aging, psychoanalytic poetry, mortality, self-erasure, humility, relational identity, contemporary poetry analysis, existential maturity, philosophical poetry criticism.

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A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes (ROUND 9)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes (ROUND 9)

“A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes” is a poem about inheritance: not genetic inheritance, nor merely familial inheritance, but the inheritance of imaginative habits, comic sensibilities, and ways of seeing the world. On its surface, the poem appears to concern Becky, an exhibitionistic woman whose obsessive use of the Gut Puncher™ has transformed her anatomy into an object of public fascination and private myth. Yet the poem's deeper subject is the conversion of vernacular obscenity into literature. It explores what happens when a tradition of bawdy folk humor is subjected to extraordinary imaginative pressure and elevated into a dense, allusive poetic form without sacrificing its vulgar roots.

The dedication to the speaker's grandmother is essential to understanding the poem's ambitions. Unlike elegies that memorialize the dead through reverence or solemnity, this poem honors its dedicatee through continuity of sensibility. The grandmother functions less as an individual character than as a representative of a familial comic tradition. The poem's obscenity is therefore not merely transgressive. It is affectionate. Its vulgarity operates as an inherited language of intimacy, remembrance, and belonging.

This dynamic helps explain one of the poem's most distinctive features: its refusal to recognize stable boundaries between high and low culture. Disney, cryptozoology, Hitchcock, Georgia O'Keeffe, marine ecology, carnival grotesquerie, and sexual slang coexist within the same imaginative field. The poem continually juxtaposes cultural registers that many readers would regard as incompatible. Yet the result is not randomness. Rather, the poem argues—through its very structure—that the distinction between refined and vulgar modes of imagination is far less substantial than cultural gatekeepers often suppose.

The title introduces this project immediately. “A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes,” borrowed from Cinderella, evokes innocence, fantasy, and sentimental aspiration. Yet the poem's central spectacle could hardly appear further removed from Disney's moral universe. This contrast is not simply ironic. Instead, it establishes a collision between two competing traditions of storytelling: one sanitized, commercialized, and respectable; the other earthy, bodily, excessive, and comic. Throughout the poem, the latter repeatedly overwhelms the former.

The opening movement introduces Becky through the perspective of spectators:

Any thumb-twiddler humming (“Mm hm-mm”) beneath Becky
on a mall escalator, let alone any hunter of Jones Beach Bigfoot

The Bigfoot comparison is revealing. Becky is not framed as merely erotic. She is framed as anomalous. Her anatomy has become so transformed by her devotion to the Gut Puncher™ that ordinary categories seem inadequate. The poem's imagination responds accordingly, recruiting increasingly elaborate analogies in an effort to account for what it encounters.

This process drives the poem's remarkable metaphorical proliferation. Anatomy becomes extraterrestrial:

alien slugs, ET undulants

It becomes botanical:

like a postdoc botanist before an uncatalogued jungle flower

It becomes artistic:

Georgia O'Queef herself

It becomes zoological, geological, and eventually ecological.

These comparisons are not attempts to obscure what is being described. On the contrary, the poem continually reminds the reader of the physical reality underlying the imagery. Becky is obsessively using an enormous dildo. Her body has been altered by that practice. The imagination does not flee from these facts. It circles them repeatedly, generating metaphor after metaphor in an effort to absorb their implications.

The result is a form of grotesque realism that recalls the tradition associated with figures such as Rabelais and Chaucer. Like those writers, the poem treats the body not as something shameful but as a site of comic revelation. Bodily excess becomes a source of knowledge. The grotesque becomes a means of enlarging rather than diminishing human experience.

The introduction of the Gut Puncher™ marks a crucial shift:

that suction-bottomed black Popeye fist

The object is simultaneously ridiculous and monumental. It functions as a comic artifact while also assuming mythological significance. Its exaggerated scale allows the poem to explore the relationship between desire and transformation. Becky is not simply using the toy. She is reorganizing herself around it.

This concern becomes especially visible in the description of the anus as:

that one surviving gullet

The phrase captures the poem's peculiar blend of humor and seriousness. It exaggerates anatomy into architecture, suggesting a body reshaped by repetition and obsession. What might have remained a crude joke becomes a meditation on how desire leaves material traces upon the self.

The poem repeatedly returns to this idea. Becky's fixation is not presented as a passing appetite but as a way of life. Her body has become an archive of her habits. Her anatomy records her history.

The exhibitionist dimension of the poem deepens this theme:

the crow's crazed cawing, its Hitchcockian head smashes
at the uncurtained window pane of her exhibitionist kink

Here the body becomes spectacle. Yet the spectacle is not passive. Becky appears almost to collaborate in her own mythologization. The exhibitionist impulse transforms private practice into public theater.

This theatricality helps explain the poem's recurring fascination with audiences. Again and again, the speaker imagines observers: escalator riders, cryptid hunters, crows, botanists, scavenging birds. The body becomes a stage upon which competing modes of interpretation play out.

The final image provides the poem's most expansive metaphor:

like a child gathering flopping fish ...
in the majestic drawback of a tsunami sea

The tsunami comparison transforms anatomy into landscape. What had begun as bodily comedy becomes a scene of revelation. The withdrawing sea exposes hidden terrain, making visible what is ordinarily concealed.

This image encapsulates the poem's central method. It continually uncovers hidden continuities between domains that culture tends to separate: obscenity and wonder, comedy and reverence, folk humor and literary art.

The author's note reinforces this interpretation. The speaker explicitly situates himself within a family tradition of bawdy storytelling while simultaneously acknowledging his distance from that tradition. He has carried its sensibility into literary territory his relatives themselves would never occupy. This tension between continuity and estrangement haunts the poem. It is an act of homage that also bears witness to social mobility, educational alienation, and cultural translation.

The references to Chaucer are especially revealing. The speaker recognizes in canonical literature the same impulses that animated the jokes of his family. The poem therefore rejects the assumption that sophisticated art and vulgar humor belong to separate worlds. Instead, it suggests that they are manifestations of the same imaginative energy.

What ultimately distinguishes “A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes” is its refusal to abandon either side of this inheritance. The poem is simultaneously learned and crude, literary and oral, affectionate and grotesque. Its achievement lies in showing that these apparent opposites need not be reconciled because they were never truly separate to begin with.

At its deepest level, the poem is a tribute to a familial worldview in which laughter survives embarrassment, where bodily absurdity becomes a source of connection, and where imagination refuses to recognize the boundaries that polite culture imposes upon it. Becky may occupy the center of the spectacle, but the poem's enduring subject is the transformation of inherited vernacular humor into a literary art capable of carrying memory, affection, and identity across generations.

Meta Description

A grotesque-comic poem that transforms familial bawdy humor into literary art, exploring inheritance, obsession, bodily transformation, class memory, and the porous boundary between folk obscenity and high culture.

Keywords

grotesque realism, familial inheritance, bawdy humor, literary vulgarity, class memory, Chaucerian comedy, Rabelaisian tradition, body and identity, obsession, bodily transformation, exhibitionism, vernacular culture, folk humor, high and low culture, literary maximalism, contemporary poetry analysis, comic excess, cultural translation, family memory, grotesque poetics

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The Art of Subtraction (ROUND 5)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

The Art of Subtraction (ROUND 5)

“The Art of Subtraction” is a poem about ego erosion under the pressure of paternity, memory, and inherited masculine failure. At its surface it reads as a meditation on parenting and generational continuity, but at a deeper psychoanalytic level it stages a confrontation between the narcissistic structure of the self and the destabilizing presence of the child as both mirror and future. The poem is not simply about a father observing his son; it is about a father discovering that the act of observation itself is a form of disintegration. To look at the child is to encounter both one’s origin and one’s obsolescence at once.

The title, “The Art of Subtraction,” frames this process in explicitly aesthetic and ethical terms. Subtraction is not loss but discipline: a cultivated reduction of self-importance, a trained withdrawal from centrality. Yet the poem immediately destabilizes the idea that this subtraction is voluntary or serene. Instead, it emerges as something closer to psychic attrition. The speaker does not gracefully renounce the self; he is worn down by the unbearable visibility of his son.

The opening declaration is crucial:

I isolate. Like my own father before me, it takes
everything inside me—no longer promising—
to look straight at my son.

The syntax already enacts strain. The phrase “I isolate” is blunt, almost clinical, but it is immediately followed by genealogical recursion: “Like my own father before me.” Isolation is not merely a personal disposition but an inherited pattern. This inheritance is not neutral; it is transmitted as affective damage. The father cannot simply see his son; he must overcome an internalized aversion to direct relational presence.

The phrase “no longer promising” is especially significant. It suggests the collapse of an earlier self-image in which paternal relation may have been imagined as generative, hopeful, or affirming. That promise has been withdrawn. What remains is effort without reward, attention without consolation.

From the beginning, then, the poem frames fatherhood as an encounter with difficulty in perception itself. The son is not only seen; he is almost too much to be seen.

The next movement introduces a key psychoanalytic motif: avoidance as inherited gesture.

I have inherited the need to twist talk away
from dreams, the shifty eyes that would bug me
enough to keep leaping into their line.

Here, avoidance is not simply behavioral but somatic: “shifty eyes,” bodily evasions, micro-gestures of disconnection. The father recognizes in himself the repetition of his own father’s evasiveness. What is inherited is not authority but incapacity for directness.

This produces a paradoxical structure: the speaker is hyper-aware of relational failure precisely at the moment he attempts relational presence. The more he tries to “look straight,” the more he experiences inherited distortion.

The child, meanwhile, appears as both vivid presence and destabilizing force:

From within
I see—in belated empathy for the dead—how
hard it is to face the gaze: energized, hopeful.

The gaze of the child is not neutral. It is “energized, hopeful”—qualities that are not merely emotional but existentially accusatory. The child’s vitality becomes a mirror that exposes the father’s depletion. This is where the poem begins to articulate its central psychic tension: the child is both object of love and agent of destabilization.

Memory intrudes in fragmented, sensory form:

How strange what persists in memory: my boy,
his little nose (“Bip it. Bop it.”) in the bathroom
mirror…

The detail is disarmingly domestic, almost comic in its specificity. Yet its affective function is complex. The child’s speech is not fully linguistic; it is playful distortion, pre-symbolic sound. The mirror introduces doubling, self-recognition, and developmental threshold. The bathroom—site of bodily maintenance—becomes the space where identity formation is observed in miniature.

The poem repeatedly insists that memory does not organize itself according to significance. Instead, it preserves arbitrary intensity. The father cannot control what remains vivid; the child’s presence persists as involuntary imprint.

This leads to one of the poem’s most important philosophical gestures:

To call that the full story—
that, if I am honest, would be more vain evasion.

Here, narrative itself is treated as a form of defense. To construct coherence would be to evade the truth of psychic fragmentation. The poem resists totalizing interpretation because totalization would falsify experience.

The second movement deepens the psychological entanglement by collapsing developmental time:

His claustrophobic gab of vigor, a wormhole back
to myself young…

The child is not only son but temporal conduit. The speaker experiences regression through observation. Fatherhood becomes a structure of recursive self-recovery: the child reactivates the father’s own childhood while simultaneously marking its irreversibility.

The phrase “wormhole” is particularly revealing. It suggests non-linear time, collapse of spatial-temporal separation, and involuntary transit between selves. Yet the movement is not liberating. It is claustrophobic. The past does not open; it closes in.

This culminates in the bathroom mirror scene, where the self becomes juridical object:

I look down, look at me,
like an ankle-cuffed criminal ushered into court
for his disgrace.

The mirror no longer reflects identity but judgment. The father becomes both defendant and witness. The body is no longer neutral; it is evidence.

The introduction of Apollo is the poem’s metaphysical pivot:

carved
there… is Apollo’s torso, marble and mirror,
hurling even more dazzle: “You must change your life”

The invocation of Rilke’s famous injunction transforms the bathroom into an aesthetic-theological space. Apollo represents idealized form, beauty, transcendence, and the demand for transformation. Yet the poem immediately fractures this authority:

“Face it. Your time is over.”

The Apollo image thus becomes double-edged: simultaneously exhortation and annihilation. Beauty demands transformation, but also declares obsolescence. The self is summoned toward improvement while being dismissed as structurally finished.

The poem’s central philosophical tension emerges here: is self-overcoming a form of liberation or a recognition of terminal decline?

The final movement resolves this tension not through synthesis but through ethical resignation:

“Become he who can bear not being
the center…”

This is the explicit formulation of subtraction. Ego is not abolished but decentered. The self is re-educated into marginality. Importantly, this is not presented as punishment but as apprenticeship: “train the spirit,” “apprentice oneself.”

The influence of Rilke is explicit, but the poem’s tone is more psychologically ambivalent than mystical. Subtraction is not transcendence; it is adaptation to diminished centrality.

The father’s own father returns as final haunting figure:

his head bowed
over beer cans stacked high…

Here inheritance becomes visual and affective rather than conceptual. Masculine failure is embodied in posture, accumulation, and exhaustion. The speaker recognizes continuity not only of behavior but of limitation.

The poem ends in a paradox:

if I fail, at least I walk beside him.

This final line refuses resolution between anxiety and consolation. Failure is not overcome. Instead, it is transformed into relational proximity. The father-child bond persists not through success but through shared vulnerability.

The deepest psychoanalytic insight of the poem is therefore this: subtraction of ego does not eliminate suffering, but it may redistribute it away from isolation. The self does not become smaller in a purely liberating sense; it becomes less defended. And in that reduction of defense, relational presence—however fragile—becomes possible.

“The Art of Subtraction” thus stages a transformation of subjectivity from centered authority to decentered accompaniment. It is not a poem about becoming less, but about becoming less alone in the experience of not being central.

Meta Description

A psychoanalytic and philosophical reading of paternal ego dissolution, generational inheritance, narcissistic decentering, and the tension between self-erasure and relational presence in father–son consciousness.

Keywords

paternal psychology, ego subtraction, Rilke influence, psychoanalytic poetry, generational inheritance, narcissism and decentering, father-son relationship, mirror stage, memory fragmentation, existential decline, subjectivity and authority, relational ontology, trauma and masculinity, contemporary lyric analysis, philosophical poetry criticism, identity dissolution, developmental temporality

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Sleep Fissures (ROUND 10)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Sleep Fissures (ROUND 10)

“Sleep Fissures” is a poem about temporal collapse under the pressure of sexual trauma. More specifically, it concerns the destruction of developmental boundaries: the inability to maintain distinctions between child and adult, victim and perpetrator, past and present, care and violation. The poem unfolds as a triptych, but the sections do not represent discrete moments in a linear narrative. Rather, they function as fissures through which different psychic strata become visible simultaneously. The result is a profoundly disturbing exploration of how abuse fractures chronology itself, producing a consciousness in which infancy, childhood violation, adult sexuality, and fantasies of domination coexist within the same psychic space.

The title is therefore extraordinarily precise. “Sleep” invokes both childhood vulnerability and dream logic. “Fissures” suggests cracks, ruptures, fault lines. Together, the phrase implies not restful unconsciousness but a fractured psychic terrain in which buried material erupts unpredictably into the present. The poem proceeds according to precisely such a logic. Memories, fantasies, bodily sensations, and roles leak into one another across damaged boundaries. Sleep is not refuge but permeability.

The first section appears, at first glance, almost mundane:

The mom—amoxicillin bottle
four, baffled by what could keep
doubling a toddler over

The image evokes a familiar scene of parental concern. A mother attempts to diagnose an illness in her child. The specificity of “amoxicillin bottle four” immediately establishes a history of failed interventions. The problem persists despite treatment. The mother's bafflement is genuine. She searches for causes, remedies, explanations.

Yet the section's emotional power derives from dramatic irony. The mother searches everywhere except where the poem directs the reader to look.

The symptomology becomes increasingly vivid:

foul olive discharge, frothy
and fevered as her puke

The bodily details are grotesque, even medical. Yet they also establish a crucial pattern. Throughout the poem, the body speaks before consciousness does. Symptoms appear before explanation. The child cannot articulate what is happening, and the adults cannot recognize it. The body therefore becomes the site where truth manifests without becoming legible.

This culminates in the devastating ending:

guts the home of all culprits:

scented soap, dryer sheets;
junk food, synthetic panties
too tight—all, save Mr. Malik.

The mother's investigation is exhaustive but misdirected. She suspects chemicals, fabrics, hygiene products, food. Everything is scrutinized except the actual source of harm. The final phrase functions as an indictment of interpretive failure itself. The poem is not interested in portraying the mother as malicious. Her error emerges from the ordinary assumptions that structure domestic life. Danger is imagined as environmental rather than intimate. The trusted adult remains beyond suspicion.

The section therefore dramatizes one of the most tragic features of childhood abuse: its ability to hide inside structures designed to protect. The mother is attentive, concerned, proactive, and still catastrophically wrong.

The second section introduces a radical temporal shift:

Porn-pretzeled preschool self
tatted below her tits

The phrase “porn-pretzeled” is especially striking. A pretzel is twisted into unnatural shapes. The adjective therefore transforms sexualization into deformation. Childhood has not merely been exposed to sexuality; it has been physically and psychically contorted by it.

What follows is among the poem's most unsettling insights. The adult body becomes a site where the abused child remains preserved:

now the real “Big Girl”

can feel—cervix pigging out
on every avatar's whimpering
load—the child in the perp.

The phrase “the child in the perp” is the section's conceptual center.

Many trauma narratives focus on the child within the victim—the wounded developmental self that survives into adulthood. This poem does something more disturbing. It directs attention toward the child within the perpetrator.

The move radically complicates the poem's moral and psychological landscape. It does not excuse abuse. Rather, it confronts an uncomfortable possibility: perpetrators themselves emerge from developmental histories. The adult offender contains prior versions of himself. The abused child, now grown, experiences not merely rage or fear but an uncanny recognition of psychic continuity across generations of injury.

This recognition is deeply psychoanalytic. Trauma is shown not as an isolated event but as a structure capable of reproducing itself across developmental time. The victim's adult sexuality becomes haunted not only by memories of victimhood but by awareness of the damaged child potentially embedded within the figure who harmed her.

The poem refuses the comfort of pure separation. It insists that monstrosity may possess a history.

Yet this recognition remains profoundly unstable. The surrounding imagery is aggressively pornographic, exaggerated, and grotesque. “Avatar's whimpering load” transforms sexuality into an almost digital economy of interchangeable bodies. The language suggests dissociation, repetition, compulsive reenactment. The insight into “the child in the perp” emerges not from serenity but from psychic overload.

The third section completes the poem's exploration of identification and repetition.

The opening lines establish a scene of domination:

Inked cheeks in her care, claws
too deep to slip

The phrase “in her care” is especially important because it invokes the language of guardianship and protection. Yet what follows immediately perverts that language. Care becomes custody. Nurture becomes control.

The butterfly image deepens this inversion:

she loves
to spatchcock the butterfly

Butterflies conventionally symbolize transformation, fragility, beauty, and emergence. “Spatchcock” refers to splitting and flattening an animal for cooking. The collision is horrifying. A symbol of metamorphosis becomes an object of preparation and consumption.

The image therefore encapsulates the poem's central concern: developmental possibility subjected to violence.

The subsequent cruelty intensifies this theme:

purpling that spot where splay
mattered most

The line fuses sexuality, injury, and memory into a single gesture. “Splay” invokes forced openness, exposure, vulnerability. The bruising of the site where openness mattered most suggests an assault upon developmental becoming itself.

The quoted commands that follow—

“Spit on her cunt!”

“Lil slut
ain't never havin no baby!”

—represent the culmination of the poem's logic of repetition.

These are not merely insults. They function as scripts. The speaker appears to reenact forms of humiliation once imposed upon her. Trauma returns not only as memory but as performance.

The final declaration is particularly revealing. “Lil slut ain't never havin no baby!” is not simply degradation. It targets futurity. Pregnancy, reproduction, motherhood, continuity—all become objects of attack. The violence is directed toward the possibility of developmental progression itself.

This concern with arrested development links the poem's three sections together. In the first, a child suffers while adults fail to understand. In the second, the child survives into adulthood but carries contamination forward. In the third, trauma threatens to reproduce itself through identification with the aggressor.

The poem's structure thus traces not a narrative but a psychic cycle.

Formally, “Sleep Fissures” achieves its power through radical compression. Each section feels simultaneously overdetermined and fragmentary. Exposition is absent. The reader receives flashes rather than explanations. This produces an effect analogous to traumatic memory itself: isolated images bearing far more emotional weight than their brevity would ordinarily permit.

The diction contributes significantly to this effect. Clinical language, pornographic language, domestic language, and surreal metaphor collide without warning. “Amoxicillin,” “dryer sheets,” “cervix,” “avatar,” “spatchcock,” and “butterfly” occupy the same textual universe. The resulting disorientation is not ornamental. It mirrors the poem's deeper concern with boundary collapse.

The poem's most distinctive achievement lies in its treatment of developmental time. Childhood is not presented as a completed stage left behind by adulthood. Nor is adulthood portrayed as a stable endpoint. Instead, every age remains active within every other age. The toddler, the preschooler, the adult sexual subject, and the perpetrator's own childhood coexist within the same psychic ecology.

“Sleep Fissures” ultimately portrays trauma as a force that destroys chronological containment. The past survives not as memory but as structure. Care becomes difficult to distinguish from domination, desire from reenactment, adulthood from childhood, victim from aggressor. The poem inhabits these collapses without resolving them. Its power derives from forcing the reader to confront a psyche in which developmental boundaries have cracked and where everything once buried continues to move beneath the surface.

Meta Description

A triptych exploring childhood sexual abuse, developmental rupture, traumatic repetition, temporal collapse, and the unstable boundaries between victimhood, perpetration, care, and desire.

Keywords

Sleep Fissures, trauma poetics, childhood sexual abuse, developmental trauma, psychoanalytic criticism, repetition compulsion, identification with the aggressor, temporal collapse, dissociation, traumatic memory, erotic reenactment, family trauma, victim-perpetrator dynamics, body memory, psychic fragmentation, abuse and development, contemporary poetry analysis, sexual violence, intergenerational trauma, trauma and temporality

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Fuckable Cheekbones (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Fuckable Cheekbones (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Fuckable Cheekbones,” is a compressed satire of selective empathy and the aesthetic criteria that covertly govern moral response. Its central claim is deeply uncomfortable: that even our most publicly virtuous displays of compassion may depend upon the same primal attractiveness biases we prefer to condemn in cruder contexts. The poem’s force lies in exposing the uneasy overlap between humanitarian feeling and eroticized perception.

The opening image is deliberately brutal. “Those who dunk seagulls / in oil sludge to snap that cha-ching” evokes the manufactured spectacle of suffering—the cynical production of pain for profit, likely invoking scandals around staged animal rescue imagery or, more broadly, the commodification of catastrophe. The phrase “that beach-scum struggle / to lift a wing” is effective precisely because it weaponizes pathos: the suffering creature becomes both pitiable and marketable. The poem begins by insisting that compassion can be engineered through aesthetic manipulation.

The central turn broadens this critique from animals to humanitarian media. “To stir telethon empathy into fury, / the starving kid must be / cute” is the poem’s blunt thesis. It suggests that public emotional response is not distributed according to suffering alone, but according to how legibly appealing the sufferer appears. “Cute” is intentionally jarring here because it collapses moral concern into the language of attraction and affective desirability. The poem’s accusation is not simply that media selects certain images strategically, but that those selections work because they align with latent viewer biases.

The final lines sharpen the critique by turning it back on the audience. “Close as possible… to what / we stone others for seeing” is the key revelation. The poem argues that the very qualities that provoke heightened empathy are uncomfortably adjacent to qualities we condemn when openly acknowledged in less sanctified contexts—namely, the role of attractiveness in shaping desire, attention, and valuation. “Self-deception” is crucial here: the poem is not accusing viewers of conscious hypocrisy so much as unconscious denial about what moves them.

The title, “Fuckable Cheekbones,” crystallizes the provocation. It deliberately collapses aesthetic desirability and moral responsiveness into a single offensive shorthand, forcing confrontation with the possibility that human empathy is less principled—and more biologically or aesthetically biased—than we like to admit. The poem’s satire lies not in denying compassion, but in questioning how selectively and aesthetically it is activated.

Formally, the poem’s compression strengthens its impact. It moves from staged animal suffering to humanitarian spectacle to psychological indictment in just a few lines, relying on juxtaposition rather than exposition. The result is a sharp critique of the hidden criteria governing who gets to be seen as worthy of rescue.

Meta Description:
A satirical poem examining selective empathy and the aesthetic biases that shape humanitarian compassion, exposing the uneasy overlap between moral concern and attractiveness.

Keywords:
Fuckable Cheekbones, satire, empathy, attractiveness bias, humanitarian media, selective compassion, moral psychology, poetic analysis

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Orphan Mechanics (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Orphan Mechanics (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Orphan Mechanics,” is a meditation on residual force after severance, on the persistence of momentum beyond belonging. The poem used the central figure of a rogue planet to explore how systems continue generating motion and heat even after expulsion from the structures that once gave them orientation. What gives the poem its unsettling power is its analogy between cosmic drift and the degraded, semi-autonomous reflexes of a dying human body.

The opening image situates us in astronomical exile. The “black silhouette” bending “the distant dots” evokes the indirect detection of a rogue planet, visible not through emitted light but through its effects on surrounding stars. Calling it “the ejected / planet” is crucial: this is not wandering by choice but forcible dislodgment from its native system. Yet despite that exile, it remains “still churning core heat,” preserving internal activity long after separation from its sustaining star. The poem’s first proposition is thus that expulsion does not mean immediate inertness.

The central metaphor radicalizes this idea by translating planetary persistence into bodily terms. The rogue planet’s retained heat becomes analogous to “hospice hips bucking / medulla inertia against each / downstroke of snug mercy.” If “snug mercy” is understood as the tight-handed manual stimulation of a dying man (a furious and tight pumping action, presumably by a nurse or a loved one, to mimic what such tightness tends to mimic whether we like to face it or not: holes perhaps so constructed they reach deep into prepubescent taboo), the image becomes one of profoundly diminished agency: the body responding through lower neurological circuitry, movement persisting where personhood is already receding. “Medulla inertia” is especially effective here, locating the action not in conscious erotic will but in primitive autonomic persistence. The body is still capable of patterned response, but only in a deeply reduced, almost post-personal sense.

“Spit / slick” intensifies the corporeal realism, preventing the analogy from becoming sterile abstraction. The detail makes the scene damp, physical, degrading, insistently biological. What might otherwise read as cosmic grandeur is forced through the humiliating intimacy of bodily decline. This is the poem’s central inversion: the majestic mechanics of astrophysical persistence are made legible through an image of human frailty and involuntary continuation.

The final lines widen the frame once more. The rogue planet “wanders as ours might / one day through zones / questionable in stellar allegiance.” “Allegiance” turns gravitational belonging into something quasi-political or tribal, implying that even our planetary home is contingent rather than guaranteed. Earth itself may someday become orphaned, driven onward by residual mechanics long after losing its proper place.

The title, “Orphan Mechanics,” now lands with greater force. “Orphan” names severance, abandonment, dislocation; “mechanics” names impersonal continuation. Together they suggest a universe in which systems—planetary or biological—can continue functioning in eerie diminished forms after the meaningful structures that once defined them have already fallen away.

Meta Description:
A philosophical poem using rogue planets and the involuntary reflexes of bodily decline to explore persistence, exile, and mechanical continuation after severance.

Keywords:
Orphan Mechanics, rogue planet, mortality, hospice, reflex, medulla, astrophysics, exile, embodiment, poetic analysis

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Munecas de Trapo (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Munecas de Trapo (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Muñecas de Trapo,” is a compact study in reciprocity corrupted by moral compromise, showing how generosity within tight-knit masculine economies can return not as gratitude but as temptation. The poem traces a chain of exchange—violence, restitution, reward—until the final “gift” exposes the ethical rot beneath the camaraderie.

The opening lines establish a rough but recognizable code of masculine honor. A tooth is knocked out in a backyard fight, yet the injury is immediately followed by beers and an offer to pay for the dental work. Violence and care are intertwined, governed by a social ethic in which responsibility matters more than innocence. The speaker’s payment is not sentimental but practical: a restoration of balance.

The middle lines deepen this exchange through details of class and migration. “Border grit still caked / into his denim” situates El Flete within a world of physical labor, precarity, and incomplete institutional access. The lack of insurance gives the speaker’s gesture additional weight; the payment becomes a form of solidarity operating outside formal systems.

The poem’s turn comes with the phrase “punishes your good deed / with taboo.” This is the crucial inversion. El Flete responds to generosity through another act of exchange, but one that implicates the speaker morally. The “punishment” lies in being offered something the speaker desires yet recognizes as wrong. The final line’s phrasing—“kids too damn young / to love it this much”—captures the disturbing collision between perceived mutual intensity and ethical prohibition. The danger is precisely that the affection appears real enough to complicate easy moral distance.

The title, “Muñecas de Trapo” (“rag dolls”), reinforces the poem’s concern with vulnerability and objectification. The young girls become part of a transactional economy moving between men, even if emotional attachment clouds the brutality of that fact. The poem’s power comes from refusing to simplify the situation into pure exploitation or pure tenderness. Instead, it examines how care, loyalty, desire, and corruption can become entangled within the same social structure.

Formally, the poem is remarkably compressed. In nine short lines, it moves from violence to fellowship to ethical contamination, revealing how quickly a gesture of decency can draw someone into a compromised world whose rules are already in motion before he arrives.

Meta Description:
A poem exploring how masculine reciprocity and loyalty can curdle into moral compromise, tracing the uneasy overlap between generosity, desire, and taboo.

Keywords:
Muñecas de Trapo, reciprocity, masculinity, taboo, moral compromise, migration, social codes, poetic analysis

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Not Even Angus (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Not Even Angus (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Not Even Angus,” is a compact elegy that frames death through the language of small decisions accumulating into irreversible consequence. Its emotional core lies in how an ordinary domestic act—separating frozen burger patties—becomes the site of fatal miscalculation, and how that moment is retrospectively understood as a chain of rationalizations rather than a single error.

The opening line, “Behold another death by burger,” carries a bitter irony. The casual, almost dismissive phrasing reduces tragedy to a category, suggesting both the banality of the setting and the recurrence of such accidents. The image of patties “fused in frost” introduces the physical resistance that initiates the sequence, while “the bloody combo” shifts the tone sharply from mundane inconvenience to violent outcome. The triad—“impatience / plus butcher knife plus / the promise”—frames the event not as random but as a convergence of factors, with “the promise” hinting at the internal assurances that enable risk.

The middle lines deepen this psychological dimension through the language of incremental self-bargaining. “Baby step by self-bargaining / baby step” captures the way one justifies proceeding despite danger, each small concession making the next easier. The metaphor of “one more / bend in the cave” is particularly effective: it evokes both exploration and entrapment, suggesting that the subject moves forward under the illusion of control while actually narrowing the path of escape.

The final line—“to slant / the force away from your heart”—introduces a tragic irony. It implies an awareness of danger and an attempt at precaution, yet the phrasing underscores the insufficiency of that adjustment. The effort to redirect harm becomes part of the sequence that leads to it, reinforcing the poem’s central insight: that fatal outcomes often arise not from ignorance but from misjudged confidence in one’s ability to manage risk.

The dedication “for my mom” reframes the entire piece, transforming what might read as a general meditation into a personal act of mourning. The restraint of the poem—its refusal to elaborate beyond the moment and its logic—heightens this effect. Rather than narrating the loss directly, it reconstructs the chain of thought that made the moment possible, allowing grief to emerge through analysis of the irreversible.

Formally, the poem mirrors its theme. The short lines and incremental phrasing enact the “baby steps” they describe, moving the reader through the sequence with controlled inevitability. The result is a piece that locates tragedy not in dramatic excess but in the quiet, cumulative logic of everyday action.

Meta Description:
A brief elegiac poem examining how small acts of impatience and self-bargaining can culminate in fatal consequence, turning a mundane moment into a study of irreversible loss.

Keywords:
Not Even Angus, elegy, accident, risk, self-bargaining, domestic tragedy, grief, poetic analysis

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Leak in the Attic (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Leak in the Attic (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Leak in the Attic,” is a meditation on recovered solitude and the belated recognition of one’s capacity to endure it. Its emotional force lies in how it reframes nostalgia: not as longing for a lost beloved, but for a past version of oneself living through the immediate aftermath of loss.

The opening image establishes a parallel between material decay and emotional reactivation. As the “browned / tape” cracks, so too does a sealed-off period of the speaker’s life. The letter does not simply recall the relationship; it reopens access to a specific temporal zone—one that had been archived and kept at a distance. The detail of the tea “long bitter” reinforces this sense of duration, suggesting time stretched out and inhabited rather than merely endured.

The poem’s central turn—“not for her / but for that dreaded stretch / right after”—reorients the entire emotional field. What was once feared (“dreaded”) becomes, in retrospect, an object of longing. The speaker does not miss the relationship but the period of aloneness that followed it, a time previously experienced as unbearable but now revalued. This inversion is the poem’s core insight: that states once resisted can later appear as sites of vitality, even possibility.

The final lines deepen this revaluation through the image of the car keys “in reach.” During that earlier period, the speaker lived with the means of action always nearby, even if unused. The keys symbolize latent agency, a life still open to movement and decision. The realization that he “thought [he] was too old” reveals a misjudgment: he had prematurely closed off the future, even as he was still fully within it.

The title, “Leak in the Attic,” frames this temporal reversal. The attic, a space of storage and forgetting, cannot fully contain what is placed there. The “leak” suggests that the past is not inert but active, seeping back into the present with altered meaning. What was once sealed as pain returns as a form of lost richness.

Ultimately, the poem captures a subtle but profound shift: the recognition that one has outlived not just a relationship, but also the fear of being alone, and in doing so, has lost access to a version of solitude that now appears charged with life. Nostalgia, here, is directed not toward love, but toward the time after love—when everything seemed over but was not.

Meta Description:
A reflective poem exploring nostalgia for post-breakup solitude, revealing how a once-dreaded period of loneliness can later be revalued as a time of vitality and possibility.

Keywords:
Leak in the Attic, solitude, nostalgia, breakup, aging, memory, emotional revaluation, poetic analysis

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Sleep Fissures (ROUND 9)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Sleep Fissures (ROUND 9)

“Sleep Fissures” is a triptych of misrecognition, inscription, and reenactment in which childhood sexual abuse first appears as baffling illness, then survives as literal body-art memory, and finally returns as adult sexual staging. The revised third section sharpens the poem’s architecture rather than changing its core logic: each part shows the same wound under a different regime of understanding. First the body is symptomatic and unreadable, then memorialized and anatomically doubled, and finally directed as if mastery could be won by restaging the old script from the commanding side.

The first section remains devastating because of how scrupulously it honors the mother’s practical love while exposing its tragic limit. “Amoxicillin bottle / four” tells us she has been trying, repeatedly, to solve what presents itself as recurrent pediatric illness. The toddler’s distress is rendered in repellently clinical terms—olive discharge, fever, vomit—so that the reader initially shares the mother’s frame: something in the domestic environment must be causing this. Her response is systematic. She “guts / the home of all culprits,” eliminating soaps, bubble baths, foods, underwear—every ordinary irritant a caring parent might suspect. The catastrophe is concentrated in the final words: “all, save Mr. Malik.” The true cause is the one cause she cannot yet imagine. The stanza is thus about epistemic failure under conditions of care: not neglect, but a world in which abuse remains less thinkable than detergent, diet, or fabric.

The second section reconfigures that hidden past as embodied archive. The adult survivor has tattooed her preschool self below her breasts in such a way that the tattooed child’s genital region converges with her own. This is not figurative overlap; it is deliberate physical design. The poem insists on this anatomical doubling because it wants to show that trauma has not merely been remembered but spatially built into the adult body. The child-self and the adult sexual self occupy one field. That convergence makes the torso a living palimpsest: the abused child is not behind the adult woman but beneath, within, and visibly continuous with her.

The Gumby reference remains one of the poem’s most brutal insights. The improvised object is childlike, pliable, cartoon-soft in cultural memory, yet here it becomes an instrument of violation. The line about “his improv butt plug— / her Gumby—and its plastic” matters because it shows how abuse colonizes the materials of childhood itself. It is not only the body that is altered; the child’s imaginative world, toys, and textures are conscripted into the event. The adult speaker’s memory is therefore not abstractly traumatic but materially exact: shape, substance, and logic of the abuse remain knowable.

The phrase “now the real ‘Big Girl’” remains bitterly double. In abuse discourse, “big girl” is often part of coercive grooming—premature adultification disguised as praise. In adulthood, she can now inhabit the phrase literally, but the poem makes clear that adulthood has not canceled the earlier corruption of it. Her sexuality is saturated with that history. When the poem says she can “feel—cervix pigging out / on every avatar’s whimpering / load—the child in the perp,” it presents adult sex as a site of repetition and belated cognition. “Avatar” suggests iteration: each new man becomes another instantiation through which the old structure reappears. The most important phrase here is “the child in the perp.” The adult survivor now perceives, without excusing, the arrestedness and prior damage inside the abuser. That recognition is not therapeutic uplift; it is one more contamination of the present by the past. Even her adult desire is forced to traffic in this knowledge.

The revised third section is especially strong because it clarifies the dynamics of control and transfer. “Inked cheeks in her care” is more exact than earlier versions because it emphasizes stewardship as much as possession: the adult woman now manages the body that once could not protect itself. “Claws too deep to slip” gives the moment a grim tactile precision. Control is not airy or symbolic; it is gripping, digging, desperate. The phrase suggests both command and fear of losing command. What follows—“she loves to spatchcock the butterfly”—is grotesque and exact in the best way. “Butterfly” evokes delicacy, spread, display; “spatchcock” adds force, preparation, manipulation. The body becomes at once eroticized and handled, beautiful and butchered. That doubleness is central to the poem’s understanding of traumatic reenactment.

The line “purpling that spot where splay / mattered most” narrows the reenactment to the exact locus of old injury. The body is not simply posed; it is pushed toward the point where openness once determined the event. The phrase “mattered most” is chilling because it sounds procedural, almost technical, as if the adult scene is unconsciously calibrated around the old criterion of violation. Then comes the hissed command: “Spit on her cunt!” The grammar is crucial. She does not say “on me” but “on her,” dividing herself in speech. The tattooed child and the adult body are grammatically split even while anatomically converged. This is one of the poem’s strongest insights: reenactment often requires dissociation. The survivor directs violence at herself by way of the earlier self she can neither abandon nor fully reinhabit.

The baton image in the final lines gives the stanza its full tragic force. She directs the scene until the men “work up enough balls / to snatch the baton.” That metaphor captures traumatic repetition perfectly. At first she appears to control the script, authorizing degradation and choosing its terms. But once the relay begins, others take over. The old economy of domination reasserts itself. The men do not remain passive executors of her fantasy; they inherit the scene’s logic and continue it. The quoted line—“Lil’ slut / ain’t never havin’ no baby!”—extends the abuse into reproductive futurity. The body is not only degraded in the present but cursed as permanently damaged, denied motherhood, denied continuity. That threat reaches all the way back to section one, where unexplained gynecological suffering first appeared in childhood, and forward into adulthood, where sex remains haunted by injury, punishment, and the imagined destruction of fertility.

What makes “Sleep Fissures” so formidable is that it refuses every consoling simplification. The mother is caring yet blind. The child is innocent yet altered by what was done to her. The adult survivor is agentive yet reenactive, directing harm while also reopening old channels of it. The perpetrator is monstrous yet legible as carrying prior damage. The poem’s title names the cracks through which time leaks: fissures between illness and abuse, child and adult, memory and present sensation, consent and compulsion, archive and performance. In this revised version, those fissures feel even more precise because the third section more clearly stages the transfer from self-command to communal degradation. The poem does not simply depict trauma remembered; it depicts trauma choreographed, inhabited, and handed off.

Meta Description:
“Sleep Fissures” is a three-part poem tracing childhood sexual abuse from a mother’s tragic misreading of symptoms, to the adult survivor’s literal tattoo of her preschool self anatomically aligned with her own body, to sexually charged reenactments in which command, dissociation, and degradation collide.

Keywords:
child sexual abuse, traumatic reenactment, tattooed memory, body as archive, maternal misrecognition, survivor sexuality, dissociation, anatomical convergence, repetition compulsion, abuse aftermath, poetic triptych, embodied trauma

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The Unbearable Whiteness of Hiking (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

The Unbearable Whiteness of Hiking (ROUND 1)

This poem, “The Unbearable Whiteness of Hiking,” is a concise philosophical meditation that uses a seemingly pointed cultural frame to arrive at a much broader claim about mortality, illusion, and shared significance across forms of life. The title primes the reader for a critique of a specific social posture—suggesting a certain insulated or aestheticized relationship to nature—but the body of the poem quickly deepens into an ontological reflection.

The opening question—“How deep must delusion run”—establishes the poem’s accusatory tone. The setting is simple: a forest marked by fallen trees, decay, and visible processes of breakdown. Yet this scene is not merely descriptive; it functions as a memento mori. The speaker challenges the observer who can stand within such an environment and fail to draw the obvious conclusion: that decay is not incidental but constitutive.

The middle lines introduce a key distinction between surface differentiation and underlying unity. “Differentiating details” and “causal ripples” acknowledge the complexity of individual forms and histories, but they are ultimately framed as secondary. The poem suggests that focusing on these particulars can obscure a more fundamental truth—that all entities are embedded in the same cycle of emergence and dissolution.

The final lines deliver the poem’s central claim: humans share not only the fate of the trees (“death”) but also their “ultimate significance.” This is the most provocative move. It collapses the hierarchy that often separates human meaning from natural processes, implying that whatever purpose or “point” trees have—growth, decay, reintegration into larger systems—applies equally to human existence. The word “point” here carries a double resonance: both purpose and endpoint, suggesting that meaning and termination are intertwined.

The title’s framing, then, can be read as ironic or critical. It gestures toward a mode of engaging with nature that aestheticizes or distances—perhaps treating hiking as a lifestyle marker—while missing the deeper existential lesson the environment offers. The poem’s critique is not limited to any one group; it targets a broader human tendency to abstract oneself from the very processes one is witnessing.

In its brevity, the poem achieves a stark compression: a single scene becomes a vehicle for confronting denial, dissolving perceived boundaries between human and nonhuman, and asserting a shared trajectory. The result is a piece that moves from cultural observation to existential leveling, leaving the reader with an unsettling but clarifying recognition of continuity between self and world.

Meta Description:
A philosophical poem using a forest scene to challenge human delusion about mortality and significance, collapsing distinctions between human life and natural decay.

Keywords:
The Unbearable Whiteness of Hiking, mortality, nature, existentialism, decay, unity, philosophical poetry, meaning

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Huxtable and Hyde (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Huxtable and Hyde (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Huxtable and Hyde,” is a compact study in self-exculpation under moral collapse, using the title’s split persona to frame a mind that toggles between social respectability and predatory impulse. The allusion evokes a dual identity—public decorum versus private transgression—suggesting that the violence here is not an aberration but something managed, narrated, and justified from within.

The opening image—“Shifting the blame to the dumpster / herself”—establishes the core mechanism: displacement of responsibility onto the victim. The grotesque phrasing is deliberate, collapsing person into refuse to show how language can degrade and thereby enable action. The intrusion of “dad tones” intensifies this dynamic. Authority is ventriloquized; the speaker borrows a disciplinary register (“nasty mess,” “fuckin shit / all over the place!”) to recast harm as disorder, and the victim as its source. This is not spontaneous anger but a scripted moral reframing.

The middle lines clarify the function of that script: it is “a method / tried-and-true to silence / that inner critic.” The poem identifies conscience as an obstacle that must be neutralized. What’s striking is the procedural language—“method,” “tried-and-true”—which treats ethical suppression as a practiced technique rather than a momentary lapse. The psyche here is organized around maintaining the ability to act without interruption.

The closing lines complete the circuit by tying this silencing to compulsion and depletion. The critic is “cockblocking the blood / for one last nut as the ludes wear thin,” linking desire, pharmacological numbing, and urgency. As the sedative fades, the need to act intensifies, and so the justificatory narrative must become more forceful. The result is a feedback loop: diminishing inhibition → heightened impulse → intensified rationalization.

Formally, the poem’s compression mirrors its theme. Each line performs a step in the process: degrade, justify, silence, act. There is no excess exposition—only the minimal language needed to show how a mind retools moral vocabulary into permission. The title’s bifurcation (“Huxtable and Hyde”) thus resolves not into two separate selves but into a single mechanism: respectability providing the rhetoric that enables transgression.

Meta Description:
A satirical poem exploring how a split persona uses authority and language to displace blame, silence conscience, and enable compulsive behavior.

Keywords:
Huxtable and Hyde, dual identity, self-justification, moral psychology, blame shifting, addiction, satire, poetic analysis

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Victimhood Privilege (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Victimhood Privilege (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Victimhood Privilege,” is a tightly compressed satire of a perceived contradiction in contemporary cultural discourse: groups that possess significant institutional amplification and cultural prestige yet continue to assert a narrative of marginalization. The poem’s central move is not to deny that marginalization can exist, but to highlight how privilege—particularly of the Hollywood and state-adjacent variety—can be used to sustain and circulate claims of victimhood. The title itself names this inversion: victimhood functioning as a form of capital rather than a condition of exclusion.

The opening phrase—“The lie of marginalization”—immediately establishes the poem’s polemical stance. This is not framed as exaggeration but as contradiction. The phrase “grant-cycle renewed” anchors that contradiction in material processes: funding structures, institutional incentives, and cycles of recognition that reward the continued assertion of grievance. The metaphor of roots growing “even deeper” suggests entrenchment, a system in which the narrative is not only preserved but strengthened by the very mechanisms that ostensibly exist to remedy marginalization.

The middle lines shift to imagery of elite cultural validation. “Disney fanfare” and “velvet-rope indulgence” evoke spectacle, access, and exclusivity—conditions that signal inclusion at the highest levels. These are juxtaposed with “tearful Oscar speeches,” where suffering is publicly performed and affirmed. The poem suggests that such performances do not merely reflect hardship but translate it into prestige, circulating it within a closed loop of recognition that reinforces the narrative regardless of external indicators of success or influence.

The repetition of “brave” becomes the poem’s linguistic fulcrum. Detached from concrete acts of risk or resistance, the term functions as an automatic accolade, a kind of ritualized affirmation. The closing image—invoking Neem Karoli Baba—depends on a specific cultural reference: a figure reputed (in accounts associated with Ram Dass) to remain unaffected even under extreme psychedelic exposure. Against that backdrop, the joke sharpens. It is not that an ascetic would easily be overwhelmed, but the opposite: even someone famously impervious to powerful intoxicants would be “floored” by the sheer saturation of empty praise—and at that, via something as trivial as a light-beer drinking game. The humor underscores the critique: language has been so overused that its cumulative effect exceeds substances far stronger than itself.

What emerges is a portrait of a cultural economy in which power and victimhood are not opposites but can operate in tandem. The poem’s force lies in exposing how platforms of influence can be used to perpetuate a narrative of exclusion, creating a form of insulation from contradiction. The satire does not resolve this tension; it sharpens it, leaving the reader to confront the uneasy coexistence of visibility, reward, and claims of marginalization.

Meta Description:
A satirical poem critiquing how institutional and cultural privilege can reinforce narratives of marginalization, highlighting the overuse of moral language and its diminishing meaning.

Keywords:
Victimhood Privilege, satire, marginalization, cultural critique, performative language, Hollywood, institutional power, Neem Karoli Baba, Ram Dass, poetic analysis

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Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy,” is a deliberately jarring study in resentment, fixation, and the collapse of desire into degradation. It takes what might begin as longing or frustration and drives it into a grotesque extreme, where the beloved figure is no longer desired as a person but reduced to an object of violated fantasy.

The opening phrase—“Vengeful blueballs curdled”—sets the emotional chemistry. Desire has not merely been denied; it has spoiled. The metaphor of curdling suggests stagnation over time, something once fluid and vital turning thick, sour, and unusable. The reference to “months of shovel-centric HITT” is both literal and symbolic: the speaker has been engaged in repetitive, physically intense labor, but that labor is also preparation—digging, building toward an eventual act. The body is disciplined, but the discipline feeds obsession rather than dissipating it.

The central action—digging up a casket—marks a decisive turn from frustrated desire to possession beyond consent, beyond life itself. The mechanical detail—“hex key clacking,” “vacuum hiss”—is crucial. It strips the moment of romance and replaces it with procedural coldness. The speaker becomes less a lover than a technician. This is where the poem’s title comes into play: invoking Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy—figures associated with intimate, dialogic romance (e.g., the Before trilogy)—creates a sharp contrast. What those films represent (mutual recognition, time, conversation) is inverted here into isolation, silence, and unilateral action.

The transformation “from laborer to jackhammer” intensifies this mechanization. The speaker’s identity shifts from someone exerting effort to someone embodying force—rhythmic, blunt, destructive. The metaphor collapses human and tool, suggesting that obsession has hollowed out subjectivity, leaving only function.

The final lines deliver the poem’s most disturbing move: the reduction of the woman to “a sour slurry of asking for it.” This phrase fuses misogyny, decay, and rationalization. “Asking for it” is a familiar trope of blame-shifting; here, it is grotesquely extended to a state where agency is impossible. The body is no longer a person but a substance—“slurry”—further emphasizing the erasure of individuality and the speaker’s complete dominance over the narrative.

What the poem ultimately exposes is the logic of resentment pushed past its limits. Desire, when combined with entitlement and prolonged frustration, mutates into something that no longer seeks connection but seeks to obliterate the distinction between self and other. The beloved is not just possessed but degraded, rewritten as complicit in her own violation.

The title’s ironic invocation of romantic cinema underscores the distance between idealized intimacy and pathological fixation. Where those films hinge on dialogue and mutual unfolding, this poem presents a closed circuit: a single consciousness amplifying itself until it no longer needs a living counterpart at all.

Meta Description:
A disturbing poem exploring how frustrated desire can curdle into obsession, mechanization, and dehumanization, contrasting romantic ideals with pathological fixation.

Keywords:
Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy, obsession, resentment, dehumanization, desire, fixation, grotesque imagery, poetic analysis

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Loving Ourselves Without Denial (ROUND 2)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Loving Ourselves Without Denial (ROUND 2)

This poem, “Loving Ourselves Without Denial,” is a meditation on self-regard grounded not in idealization but in the recognition of degraded, involuntary persistence. Its central image—a boxer unconscious on the mat yet still “ticking out vestigial bobs and weaves”—reorients the idea of love away from admiration of excellence and toward an acceptance of the body’s stubborn, often undignified continuance. The title’s injunction “without denial” is thus literalized: what is to be loved is not the perfected self, but the compromised organism that continues to act even when agency has collapsed.

The opening blessing—“Blessed be that nervous-system circuitry”—sets the philosophical tone. The object of reverence is not the conscious will, nor the victorious athlete, but the underlying mechanism that keeps motion going in the absence of intention. The boxer is “flatlined,” effectively removed from the sphere of deliberative control, yet his body persists in enacting the gestures of the sport. These movements are “vestigial,” remnants of training that survive the loss of awareness. The poem therefore distinguishes sharply between cortical intention and subcortical persistence, suggesting that much of what we take to be action is in fact residual programming.

The extended similes complicate this persistence by rendering it grotesque, comic, and tender all at once. The unconscious fighter is likened to an “obese bridesmaid” awkwardly rehearsing choreography at the edge of a dance floor, to a “whimpering dog in dream-conflict,” and to a jazz guitarist submerged in a stream. Each comparison strips away heroic framing. The boxer is no longer a figure of disciplined masculinity but a body caught in compromised motion—out of place, half-coordinated, driven by patterns that no longer match the present situation. Yet these images also humanize him. They place his movements within a broader spectrum of embodied life: rehearsal, dreaming, improvisation.

The poem’s language of degradation—“degraded combos,” “piss-ass digs, low blows”—is crucial. It resists any attempt to aestheticize the scene into pure beauty or transcendence. What persists is not excellence but its diminished echo. And yet, the poem insists that this is precisely what merits blessing. The nervous system continues to “work the body,” even if poorly, even if inappropriately. This persistence is not rational; it is structural.

The final lines introduce a key conceptual frame: the “liminal seam… between rehearsal and showtime.” The boxer’s movements occur in a threshold state, where the distinction between practice and performance collapses. Without consciousness to situate the action, the body continues as if still engaged in the fight, even though the fight, in any meaningful sense, is over. The phrase “cortical current / bleeding enough into jaw and tongue” suggests a minimal residual connection between higher and lower systems—just enough to produce “stupid gurning,” a final, involuntary expression.

What emerges is a vision of the self as layered and partially autonomous. The poem rejects the idea that selfhood is identical with conscious control. Instead, it locates something worthy of love in the continuity of embodied pattern, even when that pattern is maladaptive or absurd. To love oneself “without denial” is to accept not only one’s intentions and achievements but also these residual, often embarrassing forms of persistence.

In this way, the poem offers a corrective to more aspirational models of self-love. It does not ask the reader to affirm their best self, but to extend compassion to the parts that continue mechanically, imperfectly, beyond the reach of will. The boxer’s unconscious motions become emblematic of a broader human condition: we are, in significant measure, carried by circuits we did not choose, repeating forms we only partially understand. The poem’s blessing is directed precisely at that condition.

Meta Description:
A philosophical poem exploring self-love through involuntary bodily persistence, depicting an unconscious boxer whose residual movements reveal the limits of conscious control.

Keywords:
Loving Ourselves Without Denial, self-love, embodiment, unconscious action, nervous system, persistence, philosophy of self, poetic analysis

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Loving Ourselves Without Denial (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Loving Ourselves Without Denial (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Loving Ourselves Without Denial,” is a meditation on self-regard grounded not in idealization but in the recognition of degraded, involuntary persistence. Its central image—a boxer unconscious on the mat yet still “ticking out vestigial bobs and weaves”—reorients the idea of love away from admiration of excellence and toward an acceptance of the body’s stubborn, often undignified continuance. The title’s injunction “without denial” is thus literalized: what is to be loved is not the perfected self, but the compromised organism that continues to act even when agency has collapsed.

The opening blessing—“Blessed be that nervous-system circuitry”—sets the philosophical tone. The object of reverence is not the conscious will, nor the victorious athlete, but the underlying mechanism that keeps motion going in the absence of intention. The boxer is “flatlined,” effectively removed from the sphere of deliberative control, yet his body persists in enacting the gestures of the sport. These movements are “vestigial,” remnants of training that survive the loss of awareness. The poem therefore distinguishes sharply between cortical intention and subcortical persistence, suggesting that much of what we take to be action is in fact residual programming.

The extended similes complicate this persistence by rendering it grotesque, comic, and tender all at once. The unconscious fighter is likened to an “obese bridesmaid” awkwardly rehearsing choreography at the edge of a dance floor, to a “whimpering dog in dream-conflict,” and to a jazz guitarist submerged in a stream. Each comparison strips away heroic framing. The boxer is no longer a figure of disciplined masculinity but a body caught in compromised motion—out of place, half-coordinated, driven by patterns that no longer match the present situation. Yet these images also humanize him. They place his movements within a broader spectrum of embodied life: rehearsal, dreaming, improvisation.

The poem’s language of degradation—“degraded combos,” “piss-ass digs, low blows”—is crucial. It resists any attempt to aestheticize the scene into pure beauty or transcendence. What persists is not excellence but its diminished echo. And yet, the poem insists that this is precisely what merits blessing. The nervous system continues to “work the body,” even if poorly, even if inappropriately. This persistence is not rational; it is structural.

The final lines introduce a key conceptual frame: the “liminal seam… between rehearsal and showtime.” The boxer’s movements occur in a threshold state, where the distinction between practice and performance collapses. Without consciousness to situate the action, the body continues as if still engaged in the fight, even though the fight, in any meaningful sense, is over. The phrase “cortical current / bleeding enough into jaw and tongue” suggests a minimal residual connection between higher and lower systems—just enough to produce “stupid gurning,” a final, involuntary expression.

What emerges is a vision of the self as layered and partially autonomous. The poem rejects the idea that selfhood is identical with conscious control. Instead, it locates something worthy of love in the continuity of embodied pattern, even when that pattern is maladaptive or absurd. To love oneself “without denial” is to accept not only one’s intentions and achievements but also these residual, often embarrassing forms of persistence.

In this way, the poem offers a corrective to more aspirational models of self-love. It does not ask the reader to affirm their best self, but to extend compassion to the parts that continue mechanically, imperfectly, beyond the reach of will. The boxer’s unconscious motions become emblematic of a broader human condition: we are, in significant measure, carried by circuits we did not choose, repeating forms we only partially understand. The poem’s blessing is directed precisely at that condition.

Meta Description:
A philosophical poem exploring self-love through involuntary bodily persistence, depicting an unconscious boxer whose residual movements reveal the limits of conscious control.

Keywords:
Loving Ourselves Without Denial, self-love, embodiment, unconscious action, nervous system, persistence, philosophy of self, poetic analysis

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Muse Juice Dammed by the Lie of Moral Desert (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Muse Juice Dammed by the Lie of Moral Desert (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Muse Juice Dammed by the Lie of Moral Desert,” is a compact philosophical meditation on artistic humility, the opacity of inspiration, and the self-punishing error by which creators treat mystery as evidence of personal failure. Its central claim is that the artist’s inability to understand what has come through him is not a mark against him, yet he takes it as exactly that. The poem therefore dramatizes a familiar but rarely isolated creative pathology: the movement from not understanding one’s own work to feeling unworthy of having produced it.

The opening image is immediately paradoxical. The poet “scribbles out / the gift he put on the page.” The work is both something he “put” there and something figured as a “gift.” That doubleness is essential. It suggests that authorship contains both agency and receptivity, both making and receiving. The poet has participated in the poem’s arrival, but he has not generated it in the sovereign, fully transparent way he would like to believe. The tragedy is that, instead of dwelling in that ambiguity, he destroys the gift.

The next phrase sharpens the poem’s logic with unusual precision: “inability to grasp its meaning, / he thinks … indicts him as unworthy.” The grammar matters. The poem is not saying that the poet indicts himself in some general way, nor that the poem itself accuses him. Rather, he believes that his inability to grasp the meaning of what he has written is itself an indictment. He mistakes opacity for disqualification. What should appear as a sign that the work exceeds his conscious command is taken as proof that he does not deserve it.

The parenthetical clause identifies the deeper error behind this misreading: he is “denying / the not-up-to-me-ness his heart knows / humbles every human idea.” This is the poem’s philosophical center. “Not-up-to-me-ness” names a truth about creation but also about human life more broadly: much of what matters most is not fully subject to will, possession, or mastery. The heart already knows this. It knows that every idea, once real enough, is humbled by the fact that it arises within conditions larger than the self. Inspiration, language, meaning—these are not wholly manufactured commodities. They strike, arrive, pass through. The poet’s mistake is to reject this humbling truth in favor of a fantasy of authorship as total control.

That fantasy is what the title calls “the Lie of Moral Desert.” The poem suggests that the artist imagines creative legitimacy in moralized terms: if something worthy has appeared on the page, he must be worthy of it in a direct and transparent sense; if he cannot account for it, he must somehow have failed. This is the lie. It assumes that gifts correspond neatly to deserts, that inspiration belongs only to those who can comprehend and justify it. Against this, the poem insists on giftedness as something irreducibly excessive to the self.

The final lines distill the critique: the poet behaves “as if the buck must stop / in the artist, sovereign not struck.” “Sovereign” and “struck” form the poem’s decisive opposition. To be sovereign is to imagine oneself as origin, master, final authority. To be struck is to acknowledge that creation involves being visited, interrupted, or moved by something not entirely one’s own. The bound poet chooses sovereignty, and that choice binds him. Because he cannot accept having been struck, he treats the surplus meaning in his own work as a failure of self-possession. Thus he erases what should have humbled him into gratitude.

What makes the poem especially strong is its refusal to sentimentalize artistic mystery. It does not merely celebrate inspiration as magical. Instead, it shows how difficult it is for the ego to tolerate receiving something it cannot fully own. The poet would rather destroy the gift than let it stand as evidence that meaning exceeds merit, that art can arrive through a person without being proportionate to that person’s self-understanding. In this sense, the poem is not only about writing. It is about the human resistance to grace.

Meta Description:
A philosophical poem about artistic humility and inspiration, “Muse Juice Dammed by the Lie of Moral Desert” explores how a poet mistakes his inability to understand his own work for evidence of unworthiness, thereby rejecting the giftedness of creation.


Muse Juice Dammed by the Lie of Moral Desert, artistic humility, inspiration, authorship, moral desert, creativity, self-doubt, philosophy of art, giftedness, poetic analysis

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Dying Light 2: Stay Human (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

Dying Light 2: Stay Human (ROUND 1)

This poem, “Dying Light 2: Stay Human,” is a confrontational meditation on shifting moral codes, sexual norms, and the uneasy relationship between past brutality and present decadence. Its method is comparative shock: it juxtaposes a figure emblematic of overt historical evil—the Klansman—with a contemporary landscape of commodified sexuality and altered beauty, forcing the reader to confront not equivalence but disorientation.

The opening move is deliberately destabilizing. By asserting that “yesterday’s Klansman would have made / an honest lady of any black girl,” the poem does not redeem or soften the figure but reframes him within a different moral register: one governed by rigid, if abhorrent, codes of honor, hierarchy, and sexual conduct. The phrasing is jarring because it overlays an image of care or responsibility (“made an honest lady,” “piggybacking”) onto a figure otherwise associated with violence and dehumanization. This tension is the point. The poem forces the reader to reckon with the possibility that even within monstrous systems, certain behavioral constraints existed—constraints that may no longer operate in the same way.

The middle lines extend this reframing through grotesque historical imagery—“gator bait babies”—that recalls the brutality and objectification of Black bodies in the past. Yet even here, the poem insists on a kind of boundary: “before / putting his cock anywhere near” the contemporary figure described in the final lines. The implication is not moral rehabilitation but contrast. The past is presented as violently oppressive yet structured; the present, by contrast, is depicted as unmoored, driven by different forms of distortion.

The final image—“today’s Kardashian trout face: / zombie-eyed polymer calibrated / for friction, not fidelity”—shifts the poem’s target to contemporary aesthetics and sexual culture. The language is mechanistic and dehumanizing. Faces are “polymer,” eyes are “zombie,” and the body is “calibrated” like a device. This is a world in which human features have been reshaped into synthetic surfaces optimized for use rather than relationship. The phrase “for friction, not fidelity” crystallizes the poem’s critique: intimacy has been replaced by function, commitment by sensation.

The title, “Dying Light 2: Stay Human,” frames the entire piece as a commentary on degeneration. The “dying light” suggests a fading of something—perhaps moral coherence, perhaps human authenticity—while “Stay Human” reads as both instruction and irony. The poem questions whether humanity, understood as a balance of restraint, recognition, and relational depth, can persist under current conditions.

What emerges is not a simple argument that the past was better than the present. Rather, the poem exposes a paradox: a movement from overt, codified cruelty to a more diffuse, technologized, and aestheticized form of dehumanization. The shock lies in the comparison itself. By forcing these two modes into the same frame, the poem destabilizes easy narratives of progress and invites the reader to consider what has been lost even as certain forms of injustice have been challenged.

In its brevity, the poem operates as provocation rather than resolution. It leaves open the question of what it would mean, in such a landscape, to “stay human,” suggesting that the answer cannot be found in either past structures or present freedoms alone.

Meta Description:
A provocative poem contrasting historical brutality with modern synthetic aesthetics, exploring shifting moral codes, dehumanization, and the challenge of remaining human.

Keywords:
Dying Light 2 Stay Human, satire, moral comparison, historical vs modern, dehumanization, beauty standards, sexual culture, social critique, poetic analysis

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So Brave (ROUND 1)
Michael Anthony Istvan Junior Michael Anthony Istvan Junior

So Brave (ROUND 1)

This poem, “So Brave,” is a sharply compressed satire of contemporary moral performance, focusing on the uneasy relationship between ethical inclusion and aesthetic tolerance. Its central claim—that “morals have aesthetic criteria”—functions as both thesis and provocation. The poem suggests that what is publicly celebrated as moral progress is often quietly governed by limits of visual and emotional comfort.

The opening lines establish a domain of apparent advancement: the inclusion of actors with Down syndrome. This is framed as something “we now welcome,” but the phrasing is deliberately qualified—“some of us”—introducing distance between collective virtue and individual sincerity. The following image intensifies this ambiguity. The scene of tipsy spectators rising from a “love seat” to clap, offering “choked-up pieties,” captures a moment of self-congratulatory empathy. The emotional response is real, but it is also performative. The setting—domestic, relaxed, slightly inebriated—suggests that this moral affirmation is easy, even pleasurable.

The poem’s turn arrives in the final lines: “we still draw the line—comedy / aside—at excessive droolers.” Here, the earlier inclusion is exposed as conditional. The phrase “draw the line” is crucial. It reveals that acceptance is not absolute but bounded by thresholds of aesthetic tolerability. The reference to “comedy aside” further complicates the dynamic. It implies that certain forms of difference are permissible when framed as humor—when they can be consumed safely—but not when they disrupt comfort in more direct, visceral ways.

What the poem ultimately critiques is not inclusion itself but the selectivity underlying it. The willingness to embrace difference is shown to depend on how that difference presents—how it looks, how it feels, how easily it can be integrated into existing emotional and aesthetic frameworks. The discomfort with “excessive” bodily expression marks a limit where empathy falters. Moral commitment yields to sensory aversion.

The title, “So Brave,” operates ironically. It echoes the language often used to praise both performers and audiences in such contexts. Within the poem, however, bravery is recast as shallow or misplaced. The real challenge would be to extend acceptance beyond the boundaries of comfort, to confront forms of difference that resist aesthetic assimilation. Instead, the poem suggests, what is often celebrated as courage is merely the ability to affirm inclusion where it is already easy.

In its brevity, the poem exposes a tension at the heart of contemporary moral discourse: the gap between professed values and the unspoken criteria that shape their application. It leaves the reader with an unsettling question—how much of what we call ethical progress is contingent on what we can bear to see?

Meta Description:
A satirical poem examining the limits of moral inclusion, revealing how aesthetic comfort shapes who is accepted and who remains excluded.

Keywords:
So Brave, satire, morality and aesthetics, inclusion, disability representation, performative empathy, ethical limits, social critique, poetic analysis

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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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