December 29, 2006

writing

I am sooo bored!
is writing an act of erasing,
or is it a disclosure?
why is the angst in all writing?
what do I fear?
what do I long for?

where do I write from?
where does the script come from?

December 19, 2006

unutulanlar nereye gidiyor?
hatırlananlar nereden geliyor?

özdemir asaf

December 1, 2006

la main

La Main (S.), Pascal Renoux

Portrelerde kadınların kameraya bakarken pozlandırılmasından daha çok, modellerin izleyicinin farkında olmaları ve kendilerini bakan kişiye sunmaları ilgimi çekiyor.

Bunun kameranın varlığından, kameranın ardındaki kişinin beğenilerinden, eğilimlerinden ve dahası görsel alışkanlığından daha fazla bir şeye işaret ettiğini düşünüyorum. Bu, henüz ucunu yakalamaya çalıştığım bir sezgi, ipuçlarını topladığım. Bu soru (ve yanıtı) başkalarını ilgilendirir mi bilmiyorum, ama ipin ucundan görünmeye başlayan giderek daha ilginçleşiyor.


Un frais matin d'été 4Bir de gelişigüzel (?) iki şeyi (görsel, metin, nesne, şey) bir araya koyduğumda, yanyana, altalta, aynı çerçeve içinde koyduğumda her iki şeyin anlamlarının değişmesi, ve bir arada yeni anlamlar üretmelerine, zıtlıklar yaratmalarına bayılıyorum.
Fotoğrafçının diğer fotoğraflarını merak edenlere: Pascal Renoux

Un frais matin d'été 4

November 27, 2006

an amusing word play on "perfume" or whatever word you choose from it:
the virtual mind
is a kind of
ghost
perversion
père version
la version du
père
the version of
the father
the fuming
father
perfumiste
père-fumist
père-fume
lacan dot

November 20, 2006

izdüşüm

izdüşümlerin fotoğraflarını çekiyorum. yeniden görmek için, anımsamak için, düşleri, izleri düşenleri, düşen düşleri. unutmamak için. hayat dediğimiz şey hatırlamadan ve unutmadan ibaret.

hatırladıklarımız kadar hatırlamadıklarımız mıyız? hatırlamamayı seçebilir mi insan? seçerse unutabilir mi? ya hiç izi düşmeyenler? bir de, izsiz düşenler? hani, iz bırakmaksızın düşenler?

anlardan mı, insanlardan mı bahsediyorum? bellek için bir farkı yok. fotoğraf çekiyorum, anı dememek için.

November 15, 2006

blue box

I am thinking of the difference between night-dreams and day dreams
they should be called with different words
like in Turkish

also of the intrusive confrontation of learning another's night-dream
which is personal, always elusive, unintelligible
a net of unsignifying signs for me
ethics of confessions
I am no priest
nor an analyst
(neither you are)

since there is no two different words in English
for making clear which I mean
I play on their slippage

looking in through my blue box

November 7, 2006

dreaming father

Sigmund Freud, 1856-1939

the father of psychoanalysis, ouups! did I say "father"? Correcting: the genius who repudiated the legitimization of the "normal" upon human conduct, who by incorporating into human disposition explained away the "superstitious" and "irrational", and who, by this way, saved a place for the dreams on the stage by giving their worth. He was missing on this page from the beginning.

November 5, 2006

Barbara Kruger, Thinking of You

November 3, 2006

Barbara Kruger,
"Feel is something you do with your hands", 1985

October 30, 2006

"... we can know many things just by the look of the eyes when people are silent; ... their whole body is clear ... and each is like an eye, and nothing hidden or artificial, but before one speaks to another the other sees and knows." 

Plotinus, IV, 3 [27]

October 26, 2006

Love is a Sickness

LOVE is a sickness full of woes,
All remedies refusing;
A plant that with most cutting grows,
Most barren with best using.
Why so?

More we enjoy it, more it dies;
If not enjoy'd, it sighing cries—
Heigh ho!

Love is a torment of the mind,
A tempest everlasting;
And Jove hath made it of a kind
Not well, nor full nor fasting.
Why so?

More we enjoy it, more it dies;
If not enjoy'd, it sighing cries—
Heigh ho!
Samuel Daniel. 15621619

I wish I could post the song instead of the poem, because it is a song more than a poem for me, (I used to sing it), which portrays very well the perception of love as a sickness, but of the mind, on which a lot of Medieval scholars wrote treatises. They were trying to provide an analysis of its symptoms and suggest cures. And when they were calling it a sickness, they were not speaking metaphorically, No!; they were speaking of a sickness, just like any other sicknesses. For your enjoyment: "Questions on the Viaticum". The seriousness of their preoccupation and their explanations seem mostly funny from the point of view of our knowledge of medicine and human sciences. But I can't keep myself from asking: have we arrived at a better understanding? Have we moved any closer in explaining this feeling (or syndrome, depends on how you approach it)? Or, rather, have we gave up the effort of trying to give an account of it and left the concept (and the thing itself, I don't know what it is, this_thing_called_love) to be exhausted by the consumerism of advertisements and horoscopes? And, lastly, will there be an end to my rhetorical questions? And, loss of words, I sigh!

October 23, 2006

It has been only weeks since I wrote my autumn haiku, and now the time came for me to write one for the winter, for while I sit in my warm and softly lit room, it snows outside. But wait! The trees still have some green leaves. The trees still have green leaves.

These days I wonder which one is better: to dream during the sleep and be reminded of those left aside, swept under the rug in the light of the day; or better not to dream at all. But if everyone dreams, is it possible to choose not to remember? If dreams are gates to our hidden desires and fears, the things we would prefer not to be reminded, the judgments we flee to make, maybe the question is whether one wants to know or not. The curious thing with dreams is that one does not have the choice to decide on that. It is just there, right in one's face. What does it say? It says, "the more you run the more I'll come after you." It is like a psycho postman who is obsessed with getting his mails delivered to the right person by the hand. Ok. I got my mail. So what's next? I don't know.

October 2, 2006

"No, It's Not Fatigue"

No. Fatigue, why?
It's an abstract sensation
of concrete life
-something like a scream
to be screamed,
something like anxiety
to be suffered.
To be suffered completely
Or to be suffered as ...
Yes, to be suffered as ...
That's it: as ...
As what?
If I knew I wouldn't have this false fatigue within me.
F. Pessoa (Alvaro de Campos)

September 24, 2006

first breeze of autumn -
turning of the leaves, to soil,
I breathe in the air.

September 7, 2006




airport inversions, Munich

September 6, 2006

unuseful lists # 2

çalışma zamanı
az konuş, çok iş yap.
araştır
başvur
karar ver
arzula
heyecanlan
üzerine git
vazgeç
geri dön
yeniden başla
yeniden heyecanlan
geri durma
hata yap
yanıl
hatalarını affet
sahip olduğun tek şeyi kucakla

gözle
seyret
öğren
coşkuyla izle
akışa katıl
merak et
izinden git
müziğe uy
seviş

az konuş, çok şey söyle
gözlerini kapa
düşle
düşlerini anımsa
öğrendiklerini unut
benliğini yık
ve sonra
ötekinin imgesinde
yeniden kur
aşk dediğin nedir ki?

August 26, 2006

"Bu kuru söz kalabalığı, sana dokunamadığım için. Seni kollarıma alıp uyuyabilseydim, bunca mürekkep şişede de durabilirdi. Birlikteyken gene erdemli kalabilirdik. Ama bir süre ayrı olmamız gerekiyor, gerçekte böylesi de daha iyi. Ah, kesinlikle güvenebilsek geleceğe …"
D. H. Lawrence


August 20, 2006

laleye güzelleme

A flower am I, the tulip.
Rose and violet are my haloes;
I, the queen of all gardens.
Mehmet the Conqueror

Drink wine! long must you sleep within the tomb,
Without a friend, or wife to cheer your gloom;
Hear what I say, and tell it not again,
"Never again can withered tulips bloom."
Omar Khayyam

August 2, 2006

zifiri sıcak;
dumanın kıvrımında
asılı düşler

August 1, 2006

It is not power that corrupts but fear. Fear of losing power corrupts those who wield it and fear of the scourge of power corrupts those who are subject to it.
...
Fearlessness may be a gift but perhaps more precious is the courage acquired through endeavour, courage that comes from cultivating the habit of refusing to let fear dictate one's actions, courage that could be described as 'grace under pressure' - grace which is renewed repeatedly in the face of harsh, unremitting pressure.

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi

July 30, 2006

Death of Distance

Günün ilk ışıklarıyla şarkılarına başlayacak olanlara imreniyorum. Yaşlı bir kuş gibi yüreğim, suskun. Neşenin parıltıları düşmüş kanadından. Şarkının ilk dizesini unutmuş, sonrasını getiremiyor. Kimbilir hangi havai fişeklerinden ürkmüş, ürktüğü için seyrine varamadığı.

Hiçbir yere gitmeksizin yürüyorum. Sokaklar belirsizce birbirine bağlanıyorlar, ağaran gökyüzü gece lambalarından sızan ışığı körleştiriyor. Tepeden aşağıya yılan gibi kıvrılarak inen dar sokağın son dönemecinde ıhlamur karşılıyor uzaktan, tüm geçmiş baharlarımı yüklenmiş. Bu bahar da geçmekte, havada asılı ıhlamur kokusu gibi.

Yollar birbirine bağlanarak uzanıp gidiyorlar önümde, mesafeyi kısaltmaksızın.

Mesafenin ölümü, neyin ölümü?
Mesafenin ölümü, neyin başlangıcı?

July 18, 2006

An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.
Gandhi

July 9, 2006

inside - outside

"Pathology has made us acquainted with a great number of states in which the boundary lines between the ego and the external world become uncertain or in which they are actually drawn incorrectly. There are cases in which parts of a person's own body, even portions of his own mental life -his perceptions, thoughts and feelings-, appear alien to him and not belonging to his ego; there are cases in which he ascribes to the external world things that clearly originate in his own ego and that ought to be acknowledged by it."

Sigmund Freud, Civilization and Its Discontents, 1930.

July 1, 2006

the city I love

you teach me how to hate
everyday, once and again

from the incidental passions
to our mundane obsessions
I love to watch your cosmic feature
transform
everyday, inch by inch

I love to travel to your borders
crossing the limits
traversing your routes
watching you move, watching you groove
everyday, every hour of the day

I love to flow into your crowds
getting dispersed, becoming anonymous
your fragile texture, insecure encounters
I am learning to expect the unexpected
in your restless presence
everyday, anew

I love to miss you when I am here
the nostalgia I accumulate
before leaving
you, the city I love
the city I love to hate

bowl in the fishes

nothing more complicated than a full bowl of water and two fishes running away from each other. one fish is yellow, the other is blue. they turn their backs to one another and see the reflection of the other. the reflections are intimidating, they stand next to the image of the self two fishes in a bowl and their lunatic movements. the dull gaze of the outsiders. they don’t hear the music inside. they don’t hear the rhythm of the synchronic movements of the fishes’ tails. the bowl is just small, but it is full of water, blue water, blue as the sky above. and the rain falling from the sky, bounces back from the surface. it doesn’t move the water though, it doesn’t create any shivering. so the reflections stand still, though there is the sky falling, and the rain falling, and big drops falling. the bouncing rivers of water are running down around the bowl. the bowl full of water, and the bowl is water, inside is water, all water, and the outside is all water.

June 18, 2006

kediler

etcetera etcetera

if something interesting happens every day, it is generally a tiny, mundane, insignificant event, which can not even be called event. How miraculous they are! It is not the good things or happy coincidences, it is a bee visiting the newly blooming flower in pot, the shining sidewalks after a quick summer rain, and today, among many others, it is the baby seagulls beginning to practice timidly their unexperienced wings.
And how flat they become when they are told. However, most of the time it seems they are the things which count most; the etceteras we look down on, extraordinarily mundane, unadorned presences we disdain to share.

June 13, 2006

June 6, 2006

unuseful lists # 1 (titles)

there is a good reason to start making useless lists, since I am so tired of making to-do lists, shopping lists, books to be read lists, which after a certain amount of time proves to have not much bearing on the outcome. Maybe, this is just the point of making a to-do list: so that I can organize my mind while making it, and eventually having to make a new one again and again.

I want to make lists, which will have no pressure on me. And the first one goes for the titles of books and albums, songs or movies, whatever, the titles which I like very much, eventhough I may not like or be familiar with the works themselves. This is a titles list, as taken distinct from the work itself, its author, genres, whatever, some of which are enjoyed for the combination of sounds. Of course, as with all lists, this one will need to be enlarged, but since it is useless, not to be revised and revised and revised, over and over again... (Which all goes for not confessing that I am lazy :=)

The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
Way to Blue
Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics
Sanatçının Bir Genç Adam Olarak Portresi
The Book of Disquiet
Subterranean Homesick Blues
Clair de Lune
The Name of the Rose
I like Chopin
Farawaysoclose
Jude the Obscure
Kızarmış Yeşil Domatesler
Continuity of Parks
Some Like It Hot
Stories from the city, stories from the sea
Great Expectations
Saatleri Ayarlama Enstitüsü
Hiroshima Mon Amour
Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown

June 4, 2006

Alice speaks to Cheshire Cat

`Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?'
`That depends a good deal on where you want to get to,' said the Cat.
`I don't much care where--' said Alice.
`Then it doesn't matter which way you go,' said the Cat.
`--so long as I get somewhere,' Alice added as an explanation.
`Oh, you're sure to do that,' said the Cat, `if you only walk long enough.'
Alice felt that this could not be denied, so she tried another question. `What sort of people live about here?'
`In that direction,' the Cat said, waving its right paw round, `lives a Hatter: and in that direction,' waving the other paw, `lives a March Hare. Visit either you like: they're both mad.'
`But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
`Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad. You're mad.' ...

June 3, 2006

the vicious circle of Narcissus:

"A strong egoism is a protection against falling ill, but in the last resort we must begin to love in order not to fall ill, and we are bound to fall ill if, in consequence of frustation, we are unable to love."
Sigmund Freud,
On Narcissism

May 31, 2006

I want something but I do not know what
I want the world and I want it not
I may be a fool or I may be not
off my center am I and the center is not.
there is always something missing
or there may be not,
the eye of maelstrom
of an ambitious skeptic
am I not?

May 29, 2006

Bored by Dreams

Things are never what they seem
Play a part most of the time.

What is yours cannot be mine

And I'm bored by dreams.

Bored by dreams.


I can't say the words I mean

Make myself go through the line.

Does the payment fit the crime

If I'm bored by dreams ?


Take me through the steps my love,

Shall we dance again?

I was older then,

Now we are the same.


Lasse des rêves.


Rêve qui brille dans le noir

Brillera bien, tu peux le croire.

Toujours dire la vérité

Quand je suis lasse des rêves.


Take me through the steps, my love,

Shall we dance again?

Things were always brighter then,

Hear me call your name.


After a certain age

Every artist

Works with injury.


After a certain age

Every artist

Works with injury.


Take me through the steps my love,

Shall we dance again?

I was always older then,

Now we are the same.

Marianne Faithfull

May 22, 2006

abandoned spaces

those who fill in the blanks
spaces lined with dots,
with the most appropriate
from finite choices.
can you jump a little higher?

those who create blank spaces
marked around with crosses
drawn by white chalk
and a stick nailed on each.
can you reclaim your remainings?

those who move with the current
with no articulation to chart
traceless and immune,
using the void to be.
can you become null?

May 17, 2006

happy aviv

a late salutation to Nisan,
and its sunloving bahar/aviv/spring flowers
in the name of purple dreams

erguvan düşler

May 14, 2006

blue ghost

Hayalet öykümün parçaları kafamda bir novellaya doğru devşirilirken, iki ayrı anlatının paraleliğini tasarlamaya başladım. İki farklı anlatının koşutluğu fikri beni metinlerin koşutluğu, ve ordan da koşutluğun kendisi üzerine düşünmeye sürükledi. Aslında koşut akan iki metin ne kadar koşut (yani paralel) olabilir ve olmaları gerekir mi, dahası gerçekten çakışmayan iki metin niye yanyana dursunlar, ya da paralel metin lafı yalnızca çift dil basılmış metinler için mi kullanılır ve orda da bahsettiğimiz metinler ne kadar koşuttur...
Hikayelerin bir-aradalıklarını koşut olmalarıyla tanımlamam işe yaramıyor gibi görünüyor, nerede koşut, nerede benzer olduklarını, nerelerde çakıştıklarını (henüz) bilmiyorum. Üstelik bir tanesine hayalet hikayesi demek de zor, şimdilik öyle olduğunu varsaymak işime geliyor.
Yazma sürecine dair yazmanın, esas yazıya dair alınan notların (belki işte burda, esas yazı ile onun tasarlanmasına dair alınan notların en azından kronolojik bir koşutluğundan bahsedilebilir) ilginç bir yanı varsa, yazanın o notlardan ne kadar bağımsız kaldığını görebilmesidir belki de.

Ortaya çıkacak olmasını umduğum "şey"in, tanımlamalarıma ve benzetmelerime meydan okumasını umuyorum.

Bir yazma günlüğüne dönüşen bu yazıya, bir yazma-eşliği parçası (adı) eklemeli:
There is a ghost - Marianne Faithfull

ve elbette bir de fotoğraf


Fantome Bleu Fantôme bleu (koşut ad: Blue Ghost) Pascal Renoux

May 7, 2006

visible

"It is only shallow people who do not judge by appearances. The true mystery of the world is the visible, not the invisible ..."
 
Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

temptation to end a temptation

"The only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it."

Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

all influence is immoral

"All influence is immoral - immoral from the scientific point of view." "Why?"
"Because to influence a person is to give him one's own soul. He does not think his natural thoughts, or burn with his natural passions. His virtues are not real to him. His sins, if there is such things as sins, are borrowed. He becomes an echo of some one's else music, an actor of a part that has not been written for him. The aim of life is self-development. To realize one's nature perfectly -that is what each of us is here for. People are afraid of themselves, nowadays. They have forgotten the highest of all duties, the duty that one owes to one's self. Of course they are charitable. They feed the hungry, and clothe the beggar. But their own souls starve, and are naked. ..."

Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

May 5, 2006

sis

ship in fog

haklı haksız

allahın hakkı üçmüş, hak’lı mı hak’sız mı bilemem. şüphe etmek küfürmüş. hak ettiğini ileri süren aptalmış, hak yerini bulsun isteyen pek safmış. hak’lıselimin aklının yerinde seher yelleri esiyormuş, balıkçılar henüz dönmemiş. aklaziyan bir hezeyan yerini sessizliğe bırakmış. denemek hataymış, durmak düşmekmiş, bir şey yapmadan seyretmek şeytana uymakmış. beklemeksizin beklemeyi öğrenmeliymiş insan. denemeksizin yapmayı, istemeden istemeyi, istemeksizin almayı, hep gelmeyi, hep varmayı.
kollarını kocaman açmalıymış insan iki yana, balıkçıların denize attığı ağ gibi olmalıymış. ve beklemeksizin beklenen gelebilirmiş, vardığında sarmalıymış onu ağlara, sımsıkı tutmalıymış. balıkların pulları kayganmış, tutunca bırakmamalıymış. sormamalıymış hak’lı mı hak’sız mı diye, Hak kızarmış küfürbazlara. sormadan almalıymış; istemeksizin alabilen, almaksızın verebilen hak’lıymış.

moment

every moment is a historical one - a summation of a person's life

April 28, 2006

one hundred bones

In this poor body, composed of one hundred bones and nine openings, is something called spirit, a flimsy curtain swept this way and that by the slightest breeze. It is spirit, such as it is, which led me to poetry, at first little more than a pastime, then the full business of my life. There have been times when my spirit, so dejected, almost gave up the quest, other times when it was proud, triumphant. So it has been from the very start, never finding peace with itself, always doubting the worth of what it makes ... All who achieve greatness in art - Saigyo in traditional poetry, Sogi in linked verse, Sesshu in painting, Rikyu in tea ceremony - possess one thing in common: they are one with nature.

Basho, The Records of a Travel-Worn Satchel

April 21, 2006

into the green

trees or the eye

the poem of the enso

If that moon falls,
I'll give it to you.
Now try to take it.

The poem in "Enso with a Poem"

April 5, 2006

dreaming butterfly

You the butterfly -
I, Chuang Tzu's
dreaming heart

Basho Matsuo



"Once Chuang Tzu dreamt that he was a butterfly. He did not know that he had ever been anything but a butterfly and was content to hover from flower to flower. Suddenly he awoke and found to his astonishment that he was Chuang Tzu. But it was hard to be sure whether he really was Tzu and has only dreamt that he was a butterfly, or was really a butterfly, and was only dreaming that he was Tzu."

from the book of Chuang Tzu

April 4, 2006

March 30, 2006

a change in melody, a shift of rhythm happened and I consistently look out for the tunes which are not exhausted, in one way or another.

but here is a song which goes in every moment and place, which, I find, never loses its novelty. 


There was a boy...
A very strange enchanted boy.
They say he wandered very far, very far
Over land and sea,
A little shy and sad of eye
But very wise was he.

And then one day,
A magic day, he passed my way.
And while we spoke of many things,
Fools and kings,
This he said to me,
"The greatest thing you'll ever learn
Is just to love and be loved in return."

"The greatest thing you'll ever learn
Is just to love and be loved in return."

Nature Boy

March 26, 2006

It was the light
and it was the air
the miraculous

and while I write
it is already there,
writing is always about ending
'cause it is about naming

it came and passes through me
to an infinity

it is the time the melody changes
the bottom of the deep blue ocean
reverberates
it is tangible,
a deluge of divine response
I tune in

March 23, 2006

March 20, 2006

Sketches for A Personal Chronicle


In a world where time does not obey a universal (solar) order but rather passes according to things, a personal chronicle would have to devise a unique system for recording instances. In this way, an anniversary, for instance, would not be an annual recurrence, but would be celebrated (or commemorated) every single moment the event is recollected to the mind of the proprietor of the chronicle. However, since recording the time of the first occurence is the purpose of keeping a chronicle, it would be appropriate to write down the associations which would serve to the recollection. The following are some suggestions for a future chronicler of a private chronicle:
  • it was full moon 40º to the horizon, mid-summer, french balcony, dark green wall
  • just before I had this feeling of a punch on my stomach due to which I was unable to eat, and I starved
  • when I realized I was a butterfly fish and that I was not in the water
  • on the broken pavement where the sidewalk ends against the park
  • the world hushed and I gave ear to a shared silence
and on recording durations:
  • until the dogs barked
  • when the sky reddened
  • as long as a cat's sleep
  • seventy eight heartbeats in ... tempo
  • until the breeze which electrocuted every single hair on my skin left my body

March 17, 2006

optics

The camera introduces us to unconscious optics as does the psychoanalysis to unconscious impulses.

Walter Benjamin

March 14, 2006

The Angel

I dreamt a dream!
What can it mean?
And that I was a maiden Queen
Guarded by an Angel mild:
Witless woe was ne'er beguiled!

And I wept both night and day,
And he wiped my tears away;
And I wept both day and night,
And hid from him my heart's delight.

So he took his wings, and fled;
Then the morn blushed rosy red.
I dried my tears, and armed my fears
With ten thousand shields and spears.

Soon my Angel came again;
I was armed, he came in vain;
For the time of youth was fled,
And grey hairs were on my head.

William Blake, from Songs of Experience

March 10, 2006

the lost village

once upon a time, there was a village across the ocean on a hill, bending towards the other horn of the bull, before the earth was round like it is now. the village was called the Hollowland because every one in this village was born with a birthmark on the belly. The shape and the color of the mark was not at all similar in everyone, but once looked closely, it was not very hard to notice that the natal scar was in fact a hollow, inversed inside the body.

after the Flood, as can be imagined, the people of the village has dispersed through all directions on the planet, as they were few in numbers, they settled with others, raised families and hid their unique marks reminding them their homeland now submerged under the dark blue ocean. then winter came, and then the spring, and summer and then winter again. many winters passed, seasons followed one another and so the generations. the grandchildren of hollowpeople has lost their trace in their memories of a long forgotten village bending towards the edge of the earth. but once in a while, the hollow grows bigger, grips the body from within, burns the flesh like a concave volcano, leaving behind no visible scars, only the birthmark which looks like a dark mole.

March 6, 2006

soru

erguvanlar açtı mı?
sığırcıklar göçtü mü?
martı yavrusu kendini
çatıdan aşağıya bıraktı mı?

March 4, 2006

blue

March 03

castle made of words

I build a castle
made of words
pieces of sentences
delicately put on one another
it grows high
and high
thick brickets of sounds
with no holes or windows
to look out
from my castle made of words.

I have every reason to be mad
to be angry
to be whatever I am not
to be somehow solid
to be what I need not be

every one of us
will drown in our own loneliness
in our castles made of ice cubes.

February 26, 2006

Şubat



Ben bu içimin yankısıyla, ben bu içimin koruyla
bu narı daha fazla taşıyamam.
Düşecek ellerimden, dağılıp dökülecek odaları,
dayanamam.
Benden sana mevsimlerden anne, uykularımdan tüller,
ömrümden ağrılar sızmıştır.
Bu aşk bende bir imkânsızlık tasarımı gibi kaldı,
kaldıramam.
Adı Şubat olan bu şiirde kalbim
uzun bir nehir gibi ağrıyor. İnat yumağım çözüldü.
Sol omzundan siyah atımı, sana düştüğüm o eski şubattan
çukurumu alıyorum.
Benden kalan boşluğa kırmızı bir araf düşüncesini koy.
Nasıl hatırlanırsa bir yaprakta bir orman
bu kez o olsun beni sana hatırlatan.
Bir gün olur senin de düşerse elinden nar
Aşk bir gün seni de alır bir yerden bir yere koyar
Ne zaman ki kaplar gönül mülkünü kar
Çağır o zaman, anlatırım sana,
bir ömürden nasıl döne döne geçer turnalar.
Sanma ki inadımda sarı bir safra
dilimde uçuşan rüzgârlı bir sayfa
sözlerimde silinmiş şifre vardır.
Sökmedin beni çölden, yolum araftır.

Birhan Keskin, Ba

February 20, 2006

can sıkıntısı

Can sıkıntısı, iç kısmı en sıcak, en alacalı ipekle astarlanmış, sıcak, gri renkli bir kumaştır. Rüya gördüğümüzde, bu kumaşa sarınırız. Ondan sonra kendimizi, onun astarının arabeskleri arasında yuvamızda gibi hissederiz. Uyuyan kişi ise, bu kumaşın altında kasvetli ve canı sıkılmış gibi gözükür. Uyanıp ne rüya gördüğünü bize anlatmak istediğinde de, bize anlattığı çoğunlukla bu can sıkıntısı olur. Çünkü zamanın astarını bir çırpıda tersyüz etmeyi kim başarabilir ki? Oysa rüyaları anlatmak bundan başka bir şey değildir...

İlk Taslaklar, Pasajlar, Walter Benjamin

kalos estin ho bios

everyday is a new day, some days are newer and shiny. today I am so happy to receive a mail from a friend who lives far far away, and close by heart. how strange is this relativity of distance. and a dear friend is fortunately close no matter what.

when I was little, I was wondering why people were making space flights, landing on moon or sending an orbit to Mars. I am still puzzled: why on earth humankind try to reach outer planets while one of the most difficult things in life is to reach one who is right beside?

perhaps the most unbearable distance is the one which is physically the closer.

anyway, kalos estin ho bios!

Xaipe/ 65

I thank You God for most this amazing
day: for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky; and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes

(i who have died am alive again today,
and this is the sun's birthday; this is the birth
day of life and of love and wings: and of the gay
great happening illimitably earth)

how should tasting touching hearing seeing
breathing any-lifted from the no
of all nothing-human merely being
doubt unimaginable You?

(now the ears of my ears awake and
now the eyes of my eyes are opened)
e.e. cummings

February 13, 2006

Fragmentary Blue

WHY make so much of fragmentary blue
In here and there a bird, or butterfly,
Or flower, or wearing-stone, or open eye,
When heaven presents in sheets the solid hue?
Since earth is earth, perhaps, not heaven (as yet)—
Though some savants make earth include the sky;
And blue so far above us comes so high,
It only gives our wish for blue a whet.

Robert Frost

February 12, 2006

Takahama

I look at the river.
A banana skin
Falls from my hand.


* * *

I caught a petal fallen from cherry tree in my hand.
Opening the fist
I find nothing there.

Kyoshi Takahama

February 8, 2006

February 3, 2006

argumentum ex silentio

the politics of truth
no, let me correct
the policy of truthfulness
or better phrased:
honesty may come cheap and nasty
yet, not as much as dishonesty
and the conclusion is,
we are bound within our language
this very specific language
hence,
we are also confined in our silence
trapped into this limbo
between le langage and le silence
c’est la possibilité de la parole contre toi

could you please be more specific?
yes, I will be. I hope I would.
language is the limit of our existence
we dwell in our language
and sure,
language comes before our existence
we are born into it.
so, beyond this language is non-existence
we do not have a means to reach this other realm.
it is beyond our reach.
so, it logically follows from all these
that
what cannot be phrased,
that which cannot be put into words
does not exist.

February 2, 2006

dream cloud

A dream has landed
on a cloud above Taibu
curtaining the sun

January 28, 2006

difference

track maker

tracks

Introvert

Deep in my own green element
I met a friend—
my double, my dearest.

Others
pulled me out of the sea,
placed me

in this pan of water,
added salt, and taught me
to eat bread

Kate Greenstreet

January 25, 2006

the dream of the white rabbit

the hill under the heavy thunder was trembling and appearing once again while the little rabbit was running furiously to cover himself. zigzagging his way down toward the forest and up again to the rocks above, it was the end, the end to dreams, daydreams, mysterious dreams, sceptic dreams, overt and obscure dreams. because of the lightning, the jumping rabbit was appearing once white once gray, and once snow white again on his feet up in the air. the ground was dumpy, the soil was vomiting the water, the plants have drown already. will the ship of Noah pass by, will it come to rescue? or has it already passed, between two lightnings? or is there still time, time to suffer, until the rabbit can jump no more, soaked all in water, too heavy to move?

January 19, 2006

Bir Kadınlık Durumu

"O güne kadar kadının toplumsal varlığı, erkeğinkinden ayrı bir türe girerdi. Erkeğin varlığı, kişiliğinde simgelenen 'egemenlik vaadi'ne bağlıydı. Bu vaad büyük ve inandırıcıysa, erkeğin varlığı da çarpıcıydı. Ama zayıfsa, inandırıcı değilse, pek kayda değer sayılmazdı. Birtakım erkekler, hatta çoğu erkek, bu çeşit bir varlıktan hepten yoksundu. Vaadedilen egemenlik, töresel, fiziksel, ruhsal, ekonomik, toplumsal ya da cinsel olabilirdi -yalnız yöneldiği amaç, erkeğin dışındaydı hep. Erkeğin varlığı, size neler yapabileceğinin, sizin için neler yapabileceğinin göstergesiydi.
Kadının varlığıysa, tam tersine, onun kendine karşı tavrını açığa çıkarırdı, kendisine nelerin yapılabileceğini, nelerin yapılamayacağını tanımlardı. Varlıktan bütünüyle yoksun kadın yoktu. Varlığı, tavırlarında, sesinde, düşüncelerinde, sözlerinde, giysilerinde, seçtiği çevrede ve beğenilerinde beliriyordu - kısaca, varlığına katkıda bulunmadan bir adım atamazdı.
Kadın olarak doğmak, bağışlanmış, sınırlı bir ortama erkeğin gözetimi altında doğmak demekti. Kadının varlığı işte böyle bir vasiyet altında, kısıtlı bir hücrede yaşama becerisinin tortusu halinde gelişiyordu. Bu hücreyi varlığıyla donatırdı; kendisine daha keyifli gelmesi için değil, başkalarını da içeriye çelmek umuduyla.
Kadının varlığı, kişiliğinin ikiye bölünmesiyle, enerjisinin ve içe-dönüklüğünün bir sonucuydu. Yalnız kalabileceği anları saymazsak - sürekli olarak kendi imgesiyle birlikteydi kadın. Bir odada dolaşırken, babasının ölümüne ağlarken, kendini gezinir ve ağlar görmekten geri duramazdı. Çocukluk yıllarından başlayarak, benliğini sürekli göz altında tutması öğretilmişti ona, buna inandırılmıştı. Böylece, kişiliğindeki gözlemleyen ve gözlemlenen yanları, kadın kimliğinin tamamlayıcı ama apayrı iki ögesi sayagelmişti.
...
Bir kadın bardağını yere fırlatmışsa, öfkesini nasıl çıkardığına bir örnek veriyordu aslında, dolayısıyla başkalarının bu öfkeyle nasıl başedeceğini gösteriyordu. Oysa aynı şeyi bir erkek yapsa, yalnızca öfkesini göstermiş oluyordu. Bir kadın iyi yemek pişiriyorsa, kendisinin aşçı-yanının ne gözle değerlendiğini, aynı zamanda o aşçıya nasıl davranılması gerektiğini örnekliyordu. Salt yemek pişirmek adına yemek pişirmek, erkeğe özgüydü."
John Berger, G
"One might simplify this by saying: men act and women appear. Men look at women. Women watch themselves being looked at. This determines not only most relations between men and women but also the relation of women to themselves. The surveyor of woman in herself is male: the surveyed female. Thus she turns herself into an object - and most particularly an object of vision: a sight."

John Berger, Ways of Seeing

January 13, 2006

Dear Alice,

Dear Alice,
it was meant to be a letter I started writing to you, until suddenly I realized I did not know where you are now. I realized I did not know your address. So, I dropped the pen and posted this poem which reminded me of you, of your voyage, and of me thinking of watching you sleeping. I hope you are having the finest of dreams.

I would like to watch you sleeping,
which may not happen.
I would like to watch you,
sleeping. I would like to sleep
with you, to enter
your sleep as its smooth dark wave
slides over my head

and walk with you through that lucent
wavering forest of bluegreen leaves
with its watery sun & three moons
towards the cave where you must descend,
towards your worst fear

I would like to give you the silver
branch, the small white flower, the one
word that will protect you
from the grief at the center
of your dream, from the grief
at the center I would like to follow
you up the long stairway
again & become
the boat that would row you back
carefully, a flame
in two cupped hands
to where your body lies
beside me, and as you enter
it as easily as breathing in

I would like to be the air
that inhabits you for a moment
only. I would like to be that unnoticed;
that necessary.

Variation On The Word Sleep, Margaret Atwood

January 12, 2006

The Automat

The Automat, Edward Hopper, 1927

January 7, 2006

the absurd

"A world that can be explained with bad reasons is a familiar world. But, on the other hand, in a universe suddenly divested of illusions and lights, man feels an alien, a stranger. His exile is without remedy since he is deprived of the memory of a lost home or the hope of a promised land. This divorce between man and his life, the actor and his setting is properly the feeling of absurdity."
"Beginning to think is beginning to be undermined. Society has but little connection with such beginnings. The worm is in man's heart. That is where it must be sought. One must follow and understand this fatal game that leads from lucidity in the face of experience to flight from light."
Albert Camus, The Myth of Sisyphus


from 'ghosts of the city'

January 3, 2006

Simulacrum

"The copy is an image endowed with resemblance, the simulacrum is an image without resemblance. ... God made man in his image and resemblance. Through sin, however, man lost his resemblance while maintaining the image. We have become simulacra. We have forsaken moral existence in order to enter into aesthetic existence."

Gilles Deleuze, from The Logic of Sense