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Title: Cowboy Reaper Mag Author: Spoon & Thingy Date: 11/21/2021 Language: en Topics: Nihilism, queer nihilism, love, fear, poetry, fiction, anarchism, anarchist analysis, anti-religion, anti-capitalism, anti-state, rewilding, situationist
We are Cowboy Reaper.
We are also delinquents, queers, drunks, psych ward escapees, and we are
dirty free. We are not theorists, academics, professionals - in fact, we
don't know a goddamned thing. We share no interest in the analytic
circlejerking or the coffin-jotting of academic theory about this
wasteland that gave us a name, number, and a push from behind. We share
an interest in the crying, the fucking, the fighting, the drugging, the
yelling, the hoping that this wasteland which has us up to our necks in
sludge, incites. This wasteland that is drowning in blood, blood, blood.
With a World That Makes Us Wish For Its End, Where Do We Begin?
The children of the 90s, born into the still circumventing dust from the
fall of the Berlin Wall, the birth of the all-expansive, tentacled reach
of liberal capitalismâs unending reign: the final stage of global,
socio-economic evolution, historyâs end. The children born to this
historical moment were sat tight in front of television sets and in the
back of motherâs car, eyes fixed on the passing billboards. To test the
strength of the new global systemâs reigns, mega corporations blasted
pseudo-counter-cultural material all across the airwaves, on television
networks, in magazines and through the cordial, humanizing public
gestures that they had the stone-cold politicians they owned perform.
MTV broadcasted Beavis and Butthead burning shit up, and sub-pop sent
Kurt Cobain to the Rolling Stone cover shoot with a shirt that read
âcorporate magazines still suckâ. These flimsy notions of subversiveness
that did jack-shit-nothing to the increasingly globalized socio-economic
system which made a monolith of our children and sucked the wildness,
the spontaneity, out of life were notions manufactured by the ruling
classes, corporate media, the political elite or whoever else we like to
blame these days. These were rebellious acts that would not fuck with
the paradigm, acts that would make kids feel like they were acting out
while really acting within a blueprint for insubordination, marketed to
them for the purpose of sterilizing their rebelliousness.
And about a decade or so after the turn of the millennium, it was clear
that their efforts of sterilization had worked. These children have
retired from their rebellion completely, though they would hate to admit
it. They have turned in their punk band pins for office name tags, their
40 ounces for eight-dollar IPAs, their skateboards for fixies, their
anger toward the social order for contempt.
We children of the current millennium, some of us children of those who
were subjected to the aforementioned media experiments present in the
end of the previous millennium, were passed down the notion that the
sickness which comes over us when walking the cities or in grocery
stores or in the backs of police cars, the sickness which says
temptingly âall this could be different, it really could be,â is a
hallucinogenic, youthful sickness. A wistful and ignorantly optimistic
sickness.
And to a generation born into cynicism, born to walk the city streets
towered over by rigid architectures beyond them, born, passing mild
mannered strip mall upon strip mall which incites in them a sorrow
beyond articulation, what is this hope for a better world, for a world
where âthings are differentâ, but a sickness? To a people who have
realized a malaise of mundanity, of unchanging landscapes as the
accepted reality, it is not their cynicism or their depressiveness which
deserves psychiatric treatment, inversely, it is those that still have
hope that do.
There is a sentiment understood amongst many radicals of the current
millenium that we do not want âanother worldâ or whatever that means, be
it sustainable, fair, classless, horizontal, diagonal or whatever the
fuck. All of it is merely subdued collapse. We want this world in all
its chaos, we want this world to come crumbling down in an array of
blinding explosions. This impulse that the desolate landscape of
modernity incites, this impulse that wishes for the destruction of
capital, of empire, not for the reinstitution of civilized life without
it, but for the sake of destruction itself, opens up a world of
questions.
Specifically it asks us, the troubled children of the current
millennium, who have thrown fits in psych wards and grinned getting
handcuffed: âWith a world that makes us wish for its end, where do we
begin?â
For we already know where it ends.
Gone Again, I See?
I
âLooks like war again this eveningâ
The announcer says behind the static.
I draw the shadesâŠ
It is night again and to forget
The creations it casts upon,
The sun starts to return to its resting position.
And in the dying light, with a new breath of inexhaustible life,
Regretfully,
The sleepers return,
Depriving the street of dreams, depriving dreams of hope.
I watch them roam,
Their pets,
Once dogfighters now rescued and domesticated with muzzle and leash,
Borrowing change to give to the hip but dirty looking,
not-really-homeless buskers,
The money adding another uptick in their already rising trust funds,
Discussing which local pub they will terrorize the regulars at tonight,
entering with their shirts tucked in, removing their prescription
sunglasses, their noses never dropping below the midway point on the
wall, their law, accounting, business degrees, their office internships,
their desk gigs never leaving their minds the entire outing.
I watch them.
Watching their sports games, beginning their mixers, prying beers out of
the ice.
Grunting and releasing celebratory cheers over jackshit nothing.
Opening the windows to let in the approaching night winds
And to let the hungry and the hopeless outside
Know how much of a ball theyâre having,
Pretending the testosterone fueled humidity of the room does not cause a
continual tent being pitched in their pants.
I watch them a whileâŠ
Depriving myself the last moments of light they got steppinâ so eagerly
to bask in,
I draw the shades.
II
I light the candle wick and condemn myself to the singular flame,
Like a pulsing womb the light inflates, deflates in an ovular shadow,
Breathing steadier than I.
And it was into this light I was swallowed, some time ago, as were my
shaky fingers, tangled up in the confusion of her clothes.
The coyness conquered by unsheathed flesh,
Removed and made into shirts, pants, socks, undergarments
All piled up on the carpet.
Our cold and bare vessels, trembling against one another.
She is with me still
And we still tremble but,
It is tonight,
Tonight, that I am alone,
Alone for miles, millenniums.
And she is a girl no longer and I am a boy no longer.
I plucked them clean, they plucked me clean
We are textureless, fluid, flattened, we are bipedal, featherless, we
are reborn,
we are new! we are new!
No identities now.
Between both our legs:
Smooth, barren, nothing
We venture there despite it.
III
I think of home now in clouded forms
Of bile smoke that no figures may be discerned through.
The woods and cul-de-sacs, the bedroom lights through windows, the
street names, names and faces, the heritage, all gone now, swallowed
into the gut of the ghosts in my trail.
Father called yesterday and it wasnât tillâ then
I noticed his accent. There is a silence between us now like no other.
It petrifies.
And for mother, I know sheâs out there on the stoop, smoking like a
chimney just how I left her, howling at the moon like a freak, trying to
summon Christ almighty. She is losing her marbles, becoming non-sentient
again. She is due for the loony bin damn soon, but Iâve left my sister
to make the call.
Sheâs got a furious step in those cowgirl boots of hers, my sister, a
certainty in our bloodline I was denied.
She wonât be a girl much longer either.
And for the sacrilege, the helpless flailing, the malnutrition, the
sodomy
I thought that since I had left, Iâd never see another rapture,
It was home, where the hate is, where I thought it resided
But it follows, it grapples onto my inners.
IV
11:14pm now,
And I take the train to the closest corner store that does not profit
enough to bother for ID.
I pick the cheapest, most bulbous bottle of wine off the shelf,
Warming my gut, downing the bottle out of the paper bag on the train
back,
I watch all the ugly, delicate angels, falling all over themselves,
Who had been forced into these ungodly hours by the sleepers I watched
through my window earlier.
Who were made into the sleepless, unwillingly.
The mothers, returning home, lugging heaps of groceries, hydrating
straight out of the OJ carton from the grocery bags,
Special ed kids, bleary eyed, alone, studying the train map in hopes of
getting home without trouble.
Their mothers probably somewhere on some other train with heaps of
groceries as well.
The street walkers and ladies and boys and in-betweens of the evening,
doing their eyeshadow in the reflection of the subway door.
And the workers silent, downtrodden with heads dropped until the name of
their stops are disgraced by the distortion of the loudspeakers.
When the sun comes up tomorrow
They will all be made into whispersâŠ
V
Returning home the bottle sucked clean and shattered on the sidewalk
behind me.
I lock myself back in my lonesome cell.
The wick still burning, with my private library of leather mags, libel,
holy litanies, surrounded by manuscripts and magnum opuses soon to be
put unto the fire.
Drunkenly, I stagger back and forth in my 20 by 7-foot room.
I wanted to overthrow the government
All alone.
I thought of the tools available:
Homemade bombs, black-market RPGs, gasoline, cybernetics, machetes, a
ball and chain.
All for those laden souls
Threatened with electro-shock, rehab, psych wards, gulags, boarding
school, the military, conversion therapy, prison,
Threatened with fists of stepfathers, secrets made public, or
abandonment.
All for trying to return through airport security with cheap wine
wrapped in bed sheets from overseas, for stripping down in public,
revealing their barren, scarred flesh to the wasteland of the night and
having a good fuck until the floodlights and handcuffs interrupted, for
distributing half-assedly stapled pamphlets calling for chaos,
insubordination, insurrection on school grounds, who were entranced in
their little performances for their friends, under stairwells and in
alleys and were taken in for public disturbance.
Before the beasts come to tame and lay this trembling, queer, brown
vessel of mine to rest
I wish to perish chewing on the ends of their rifles,
I wish to drown kindly in the kindling flame that burns them up first.
I wish to desecrate as a willful sacrifice for all my ugly, angel winged
siblings who are in the shits up to their necks!
For I am only waist deep.
VI
4:03am now,
I am naked, crouched over the toilet in the stall of a public restroom
The sterile pattern of the floor tiles sobering me.
And I puke up all my dreams of revolutions, of revenge, of a tomorrow
less full of shit for all my human siblings
Into the bowl.
It floats in the water.
Cloudy and blood red.
My bones ache now, and I have no hopes, no plans.
They have become diluted and faceless in the rivers I use to dull my
clenched fists and my contempt.
They rest for now for the sun is returning.
âTomorrow Iâll start, I am drearyâ
âItâll be warâ I think to myself
âItâll be warâ
Tomorrow, tomorrowâŠ
Heavy-lidded past life regressors are religious oppressors in
thoughtless disguise
Itâs difficult to have these sorts of conversations without devoting an
unearthly amount of time to the disproving and definition-debating of
such large, over-encompassing terms like âreligionâ and âsecularâ and
âtruthâ. Iâd like to avoid such deviations from The Point altogether,
bypass them, if you will, and instead just acknowledge the shortcomings
of these words and their associated definitions up front. Religion is a
one-word substitute for The Procrastination, The Great Delay, The
Absolute Suspension of Necessary Disbelief.
So instead of marveling at the overall uselessness of language like Iâm
fucking Noam Chomsky or something, let me phrase it this way instead:
why is Buddhism a religion? Or, if youâre picky, why is Buddhism
considered to be a religion? Well, I think that most people (but You
arenât most people, are You?) would say âWell, ya know, I consider
religion to have something to do with belief and ritual, as in the
belief in some sort of divinity and the ritualistic maintenance of said
belief, and Buddhists believe in a divinity which is larger than or at
least more important than they are, and they perform acts of ritual
maintenance of this belief, and so they must be religious or following a
religion. And it doesnât matter if that divinity comes from God or
Gods - they donât have those, you know - because whether it comes from
the nature of your surroundings or nature, itself or oneâs insides or
other peopleâs insides or the moon or anything else, it transcends oneâs
individual existence, and its power is believed in. And so, it is
divine. And so, it is a religion.â
To that I reply, well, there are little clipped voices in my head that
assure me of my own demise if I donât cross my fingers a certain number
of times a day, and I believe in their divinity above my own sanity, and
I maintain my belief in their importance as ritualistically as something
can get, and so what can you make of that, huh?
And even more importantly, if a religionâs components are belief in
divinity and its ritual maintenance, why do the heavy-lidded proponents
and practically slobbering followers of disingenuous New Age hippy-dippy
horseshit spirituality have such a kicking-difficult time admitting to
themselves and others that they are literally religious? And the common
retort to that would be âwell, gee, I donât even think that Buddhism is
a religion, and I donât think the parameters you set are even accurate,
and honestly I donât even think that religion is real or a useful or
accurate term,â or whatever else. Excuses, excuses.
And to that, I reply that the parameters I so graciously set for the
definition of religion are the loosest that they could be whilst still
maintaining what my mathematics professor would call a âusable degree of
accuracyâ. I reply that my parameters exist because religion is not a
useful term, that Iâm sorry if you donât understand how words work,
really, that if a word is too large and overbearing to describe a
concept anymore then the concept itself must be parametrized and
described through use of its definition. I reply that you may keep your
pens loosely threaded in your fingers and your eyes perennially
half-closed and your jaws loose and freeform and your opinions without
nuance, but you at some point must come to terms with the fact that the
only difference between your instantaneous religious beliefs and those
of a Christian or a Buddhist or a Jew are their rite specificities,
their laws, and, of course, your above-all-else need to feel special and
smart in a way no one else could ever understand. Your entitled
attitude, if you will.
On love
1.
There were theoretical mathematics professors more understanding. Land
mines more tender. Shattered glasses more intact. And yet--
As her eyes flitted over his (clothed well but not well clothed) body,
over its various and ill-maintained contours, its once-hardened ridges
and tremulous curves, she decided that what he could not make up for in
anger, he ripped wide open with beauty.
And who was it, anyways? Who was it that scanned so mercilessly but with
no ill intention? Who was it but her that so closely analyzed his
stagnating form? That instigated these cricket-ridden one-siders over
his very presence?
Who was it but the author to trace the outlines and insides of his ever
present, always missing self, always invariably coming to rest on the
sags and wet swallows of throat and face? It was me, blunt, brutish,
informal, unsophisticated, tired, naked to any shining notions of
deformity me who, nevertheless, in the final analysis, in the private
drawroom of her mindâs eye, came to the conclusion that one had to
regard his beauty as a hideous and deeply poignant dent in an otherwise
shining coat of armor. As though General Sherman had carried an
eyebrow-hair tweezer.
And what else was there but his face?
He had a moral compass like a spilled ink cartridge. His views of
mankind took the form of written musings so foul and innately
pessimistic that even the mere idea of their transcription causes a
little sourness to well up in the back of the authorâs throat.
What he - a man of unwashed trousers, of two shirts, of a torment worn
short and broad, of shitting and fucking and rusting fishing poles, of
highbrow, threadbare anguish - could want with me, with my kiddy socks
and bloody shoulders, my broken wrists and weak jaw, my bruised knees
and brutish nose, I do not know. I never thought to ask. I remained
unkempt by his gaze, busy watching the whites of his eyes yellow and
expand to the tune of a song short and sour.
I wrote him music impossible. Plays unperformable. He wanted me
desperately, and I desperately begged him not to.
(The author would like to butt in for a moment here and be very clear
that his affections did not go unreturned. Those crooked hugs and lippy
smiles, those nibbled necks and watery eyes, they did not go unresponded
to. Each kiss was sweeter than the last - except, of course, those
received in the dead of a night blue and hanged, rattled by the passing
train cars and coyote cries. Those reigned high, mighty, and supreme in
their wetness and bite, leaving each bottom lip red-rimmed and glossy
with its pooling of blood. Each quick squeeze of hand left a little
catch in the authorâs throat. A little sourness. A little despair. But
even in those blue-black nights, her hair was left soft, but uncurled,
unkempt, unbrushed. Maybe what she saw in him was his refusal to
question her methods, maybe it was as simple as his lack of hairbrush.)
2.
Once, the author made the simple mistake of rising from bed too early in
the morning to give a kitchen a light. Give a mouse a cookie, and the
whole world will go bananas. There was a little tripping, a little
wading in the toilet bowl, a little time spent plotting a later session
of sunrise-watching, one that would go unheeded and forgotten. Give a
cowgirl a sunset, and o just wait and see what she will renounce.
Through wading and water, an echo sounded. A crash, a hit, a shotgun
blast! If you will! Whatddya say, pardner? That such a loud noise could
sound from the blasted gray bathroom of a suburban house in a sprawling
neigh-bor-hood, much less in those warbled wee hours between clock-hand
three and four, was inconceivable to even the rowdiest of cowgirls. Even
the deepest cunt-plungers, the heaviest breathers, the most avid and
adept crackers of viper-skin whip could not have come up with a
herkier-jerkier noise.
The author cannot say she was not terrified of the repercussions. It may
not be suave to say so, but there was a fuddy-duddy cut on the right
thumb and a resounding crash, one whose hums and whimpers remained
fuzzed in the air for hours after the initial slip-up.
And that is what it was - a slip-up, a drop, a miscalculation in counter
space and sink depth, an o god o no, o jesus fucking christ!, a terrible
mistake ending in an f-d thumb cut and a piss-poor judgment call in the
efficacies of cracked marble countertops.
The author cracked her whip upon a similarly cracked telephone screen.
His affections did not go unresponded to.
âI like everything about you; I just broke a glass on my hand in the
bathroom sink.â
3.
To wish to be selfish is a terrible thing.
(There is no reasonable love, she whispers. Strokes a hair and cries.)
To wish for a cigarette is a terribly selfish thing.
(There is no reasonable love, and to this she licks his nose like an
upchucked third drink. Sprawls naked in his living room and thinks of
ungodly men and beautiful women.)
To need to be held is a wishful thinking.
(There is no reasonable love. It dawns on her, there, in the empty
corners of a house unloved that they were the first to teach her this.)
She may cry, but thinks herself sick, instead.
(Eureka, she whispers.)
4.
âWhat do you think about when you masturbate?â
â...â
A little time passes. She takes another bite of hamburger (the author
presumes, as she can never remember if it was the girl or her
left-hand-man who was the ostensibly responsible vegetarian-type that so
plagues the American collegiate campus, so blossoms like a barn-orchid
upon the lips and taints of women over the west coast) and wipes her
ketchupy lips on a barstool napkin. Hair of the dog.
I watch the red ribbon slip out of her hair and fall upon the floor,
where her panties already lay. She is walking towards me, steadily. The
showerhead turns, as if watching, and sprays the opposite wall with a
small stream of red-hot water.
âWhat?â she asks, eyes big and round like Crimean dinner plates. There
were IRS GS-9s in Peoria, Illinois who watched television programs of
cowgirls riding jellybean horses, whipping cotton candy lassoes. Their
eyes resembled hers. There was a coolness, a stillness, an overall gaze
of complicity and repression. A mark of cowardice, callousness, and
general stupidity.
There are no cowgirls to be found in Peoria. Only 1040s and W-2s and
miserable little men. Somewhere in the Dakotas, a horse rolls over and
licks its saddle.
A blink, a sigh, a mouthful of (perhaps faux) hamburger. âLike, when you
dig?â
âDig?â Her head bobs, not unlike how I imagined her to look whilst
fellating the left-hand-man, in all his bubble-bathed glory.
âLike, in your cunt.â
â...â
âPrincess? Are you listening, princess?â
There is an intense sigh, a shaking of the head (though side to side,
not at all like I imagined it), an exasperated eye roll. She is sick of
my shit, I think.
There are no cowgirls in Peoria, but there are paper-pushers and
cart-boys. There are GS-15s whose cocks are begging to be sucked,
practically throbbing with anticipation. A GS-10 pushes back the awry
bangs of her forehead with one hand and the hood of a 15âs you-know-what
with the other, simultaneously. In the coat-cloaked office of a man
unwed but not exactly lonely, she defies the first law of the Internal
Revenue Service - there is no such thing as true efficiency.
She sighs against my lips and threads her fingers through my hair, still
blonde and uncut. I think of England, of the Belgian Congo and the
Russian army. I think of Princess Diana and cell towers, of cowboys and
cowgirls. I think of ethics, of moral philosophy, of Sophocles and
Sappho. There are trains which run in a little neighborhood off the
schoolyard I have visited twice, and I think of their graffitied sides.
I think of their drivers, their wranglers, their confidants and
hitchhikers. The lips part, pucker, and her little sideways mouth moves
in one swift motion I would only later describe as âheavenlyâ. I am
afflicted, but pretend to not be.
âI donât think Iâd call it digging, frankly, and I wouldnât go so far as
to say I think of anything, I guess. I use my mind when I need to, I
do.â
A cocked head, a smorgasbord of pornographic thought. I wonder if she
knows what it is I think of, and then shake off the thought with a hard
shoo and a harder thrust. She is no wanton; she shows no inclination.
âYou are always so crude with observations. I can hardly stand it. And
what do you dig for, child, honestly. Thatâs what a man is for.â A
barely nondescript cringe ensues.
There is ketchup way above her top lip, almost close to her shadowed
under-eye. A tiny red dot, almost sensual in placement. She struggles to
remain soundly un-facetious; I can see this struggle play out on the
uptight un-sags of her cheeks.
Say my name, she whispers. I am not in a condition to say anything. I am
not in a condition, at all. I think of Camillaâs boyish hairdo, of
Socratesâ vapid circlejerk.
âI mean, honestly, child, do you think it is so out of the realm of
possibility that you may be harboring some sort of crimes of nature?
That you may be afflicted by more than a schoolgirlâs onslaught of
psychopathic thought? That maybe you are simply one of those-
5.
O raven. O monastery. O mother of milk, o winter of men.
She cradled this image in her barren throws of a womb, as though it is
the last such image she will ever, can ever hold.
She, woman of mercury-laden thermometers and fishing poles. Woman of
premarital amoeba training, of shitting and fucking and threadbare linen
throws. Woman of culture breathes in, and out again. Retains her vocal
capabilities. âO monasteryâ, she croaks. âO great navel. Umbilicus of my
desires, rope of fertility and all things unrequite, show me the wisdom
of your keyhole, unplugged.â
She awaits the arrival of something. Unaware of what, her stupidity
resonates. Permeates. Lifts, puckers. Her stomach quivers - much like
his did, once, in that train yard so many light-years and sound-scapes
away.
The aforementioned navel stretches its lint and sighs. It is tired; no
calls will be made today.
6.
âWhere is the beginning?â
What is, a cheat. A liar. A terrible, awful woman. A thief of things
unholy but unpaid for. A scarlet letter, inscribed with toe-trodden ink
on her neck.