Can you get high
on a lie?
I don't know
but this web that I'm spinning's
beginning
to spiral
out of control.
It's not that I'm hallucinating
it's just that these untruths
are making me
paranoid
I'm afraid to answer my phone
I have to say I'm not home
when I've been there for hours
I'm developing a predilection
for the rush
of deception
And you know what's worrying me?
That I'm losing my facility
for honesty
that eventually
I'll open my mouth
and the words that'll come out
won't be blunt, hurtful or rude
but they also won't be true
'sometimes, even the lies we tell define us'
and it seems there's a fine line
between the things we say
and the things we mean to say
and I'm not sure it matters anyway
because once they've been spoken
the words aren't ours,
they're pieces of us that have been
broken off
shards of ourselves
that embed
deep
where they shatter.
The things we say
and do
(even if they are lies)
are like mirrors,
reflecting parts of us
that are true.
There's no conclusive evidence
to prove it's addictive
but I'll tell you this:
it's leaving me breathless
heart beating fast
hoping to be
caught out at last
to face facts
and finally
relax.
Showing posts with label Lies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lies. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Parity
We're writing letters
to past lovers
hers is sealed and stamped
and sent off hastily,
mine has five chords
and a chorus that
isn't quite right yet
I need to make it rhyme
without manipulating facts
to fit
form and rhythm.
We feel we can
be honest
here
where we can be naked
within the privacy of
these four walls
when lies are the most
common currency
in current public exchange
(because they'll buy you more
than truth, so everyone seems to think)
Is parity
ever likely?
Will the decimal places
that separate
honesty
and calculated deception
ever even out?
Is my truth
worth
more or less
than your lie?
And what value is lost in the
conversion
of one
to
another?
to past lovers
hers is sealed and stamped
and sent off hastily,
mine has five chords
and a chorus that
isn't quite right yet
I need to make it rhyme
without manipulating facts
to fit
form and rhythm.
We feel we can
be honest
here
where we can be naked
within the privacy of
these four walls
when lies are the most
common currency
in current public exchange
(because they'll buy you more
than truth, so everyone seems to think)
Is parity
ever likely?
Will the decimal places
that separate
honesty
and calculated deception
ever even out?
Is my truth
worth
more or less
than your lie?
And what value is lost in the
conversion
of one
to
another?
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
I'll Be Whoever You Want Me To Be, I'll Even Pretend I Like It
I met a man who changed my life.
I was waiting for a tram, and he pulled over to the curb in his late 90s model Holden Commodore and said,
'Get in Jane, I'll give you a lift to work.'
Now, you all know that my name is not Jane, and that I was not on my way to work, but somehow, without thinking for even a second, I decided to get into that Holden Commodore, with this man I'd never seen before in my life, and be driven off to a job I didn't know I had.
When I got to the office, everyone welcomed me, and knew my name (which, as we have established was not really my name, but one I had rather hastily assumed) and were happy to show me about the place, finding it comical that I suddenly couldn't remember where things were- for example the stationary cupboard, or the lunch room.
At the end of the day, the man with the Holden Commodore (whose name I had learned was Greg) kindly offered to give me a lift home, which I accepted- and when I got to the unfamiliar house somewhere up the top end of Lygon St (which could have been North Fitzroy or East Brunswick, it's always hard to tell) he was able to show me where I kept my spare key for emergencies and I was able to let myself in.
The house had all the things I would need for my new life as Jane- toiletries, clothes, a pantry full of food, and a little pot plant on the window sill that looked like it hadn't been watered in quite some time.
Years passed, and I began to enjoy my life as Jane- I even got promoted, and all the people at the office threw me a big party, at which we all got tipsy, and Greg (who still drove his late 90s model Holden Commodore) tried to kiss me by the photocopiers, which I wasn't sure I really liked, but I went along with it- probably because of the champagne, but maybe also because, in a round about way, it was because of him that I had got this promotion.
Some time later I was walking up Collins St in a pair of heels that said, 'I mean business' and someone stopped right in front of me and called me by a name I had all but forgotten.
I stared deep into their eyes, looking for the reflection of the person who belonged to the name they had called me, but I couldn't see her.
I said politely,
'I'm very sorry, but I think you have me confused with somebody else'.
And I walked purposefully away.
I didn't want to be late for my meeting.
I was waiting for a tram, and he pulled over to the curb in his late 90s model Holden Commodore and said,
'Get in Jane, I'll give you a lift to work.'
Now, you all know that my name is not Jane, and that I was not on my way to work, but somehow, without thinking for even a second, I decided to get into that Holden Commodore, with this man I'd never seen before in my life, and be driven off to a job I didn't know I had.
When I got to the office, everyone welcomed me, and knew my name (which, as we have established was not really my name, but one I had rather hastily assumed) and were happy to show me about the place, finding it comical that I suddenly couldn't remember where things were- for example the stationary cupboard, or the lunch room.
At the end of the day, the man with the Holden Commodore (whose name I had learned was Greg) kindly offered to give me a lift home, which I accepted- and when I got to the unfamiliar house somewhere up the top end of Lygon St (which could have been North Fitzroy or East Brunswick, it's always hard to tell) he was able to show me where I kept my spare key for emergencies and I was able to let myself in.
The house had all the things I would need for my new life as Jane- toiletries, clothes, a pantry full of food, and a little pot plant on the window sill that looked like it hadn't been watered in quite some time.
Years passed, and I began to enjoy my life as Jane- I even got promoted, and all the people at the office threw me a big party, at which we all got tipsy, and Greg (who still drove his late 90s model Holden Commodore) tried to kiss me by the photocopiers, which I wasn't sure I really liked, but I went along with it- probably because of the champagne, but maybe also because, in a round about way, it was because of him that I had got this promotion.
Some time later I was walking up Collins St in a pair of heels that said, 'I mean business' and someone stopped right in front of me and called me by a name I had all but forgotten.
I stared deep into their eyes, looking for the reflection of the person who belonged to the name they had called me, but I couldn't see her.
I said politely,
'I'm very sorry, but I think you have me confused with somebody else'.
And I walked purposefully away.
I didn't want to be late for my meeting.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
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