Twenty Shades of Grey - No. 9

May 27, 2006 04:49



I Learned Today
I learned today
that once I tortured.

But it was only silence.
I did not know.

I raked a claw of silence
across a face I loved
and left a mark
on cheeks as pale
and gently curved
and pure as drifting snow.

But it was only silence.
I did not know
that time would drag
it's rasping nails
across the itch and scar
those cheeks as ( Read more... )

tsg

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pantheia May 27 2006, 17:34:09 UTC
Aaaaaw WOW. That's sweet. I'm sure she appreciates it. Good old wibby. :)

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wibby May 27 2006, 18:53:02 UTC
I hope so. I've been out of touch with a lot of people for a long time now. I can understand how my silence seems like indifference, or even worse, but it's not so. Sometimes saying what I'm thinking without sending a wrong message is hard work for me, so I stay quiet. That's not an excuse for me not to try however.

Thank you.

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pantheia May 27 2006, 19:07:22 UTC
I did tell her not to take it personally, that in your own words yu sometimes prefer to 'hide and just observe' or something.

x x x x

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wibby May 28 2006, 19:19:51 UTC
Thank you. That's a fair summary, but sadly sometimes the lights are too bright and the crowd's too loud so I close my eyes and ears. That's just selfish of me and not a reflection on anyone else ( ... )

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ankle_grabber May 29 2006, 10:57:32 UTC
If you admire the work of Tracy Emmin, perhaps you should go into hiding.

JKJKDFHJGFSDF JUST A JOKE PLEASE DON'T TAKE IT SERIOUSLY and stay forever.
THANKS.

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wibby May 30 2006, 12:29:53 UTC
I'm not particularly exited by Tracy's art, But I admire her success. I've seen her interviewed on telly and decided she is thought provoking and intelligent. For a poor girl from thanet I think she deserves recognition. I would consider going to see her work out of curiosity about the person rather than to stare gobsmacked at masterpieces. I think she has stuff to say about social issues and relationships that challenges the mainstream. I feel no need to agree or disagree with what she has to say but it's refreshing just to absorb other peoples thoughts without judgement sometimes. I admire that she has found her own channel to reveal the workings of her mind.

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ankle_grabber May 30 2006, 17:20:34 UTC
My art teacher was an Emin fan, because he liked how she "broke taboos"... though that hardly makes her worthy of the fuss she's had, in my opinion. While it's good that she will write down what everyone else is thinking, or draws (poorly) what everyone else is afraid to... I still don't think she deserves much credit for it. It's frustrating when you take an A level in art and every day you are in a classroom where the ideas are so much fuller and the work is at such a more thought out and progressive level than the Damien Hirst and Tracy Emin's we're currently celebrating. Looking at her work, most of it seems accidental and clumsy and I'm struggling to believe that was intentionally, it's rushed out and blah blah blah poo weiner frog.

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wibby May 30 2006, 22:52:22 UTC
Haha. Now I have your thoughts to absorb without judgement. They seem to be full of poo, american willies and a french person served up in a vegan blah blah sauce. The poo seems to be a recurring theme. Maybe it's the way that it steams that appeals?

When you are famous you can write "POO!!!" in elephant dung on a stale pitta bread and sell it for ten thousand pounds.

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