Experience is a hand-me-down.
Some one else has these thoughts first
and now it is passed to me.
I handle them with attention.
Sometimes I buff them with inspection
then behold,
they have slipped away,
to someone else,
I am sure.
Certainly there must be
some new wrinkles added,
some corners cut,
sequences altered,
spins of positive
or negative energy applied,
orientations of religion or politics
or comedy overlaid,
all along in this
thought form journey way.
Dare I be holding
the map details in my hands?
You say then I say . . .
How many exchanges
constitute a cultural experience!
Do I need acting lessons,
or am I just miscast?
Should my contact with experience
conclusively be a dark comedy,
after running it through my brain?
Why are all the thoughts
in my script parenthesized?
It seems like my dialogues
are with myself within
and occasionally
someone is mistaken
to overhear them.
I make an excuse for that
but still go on.
Experience, for me, is like that.
It appears that I wear
my experiential reality
on and all around me.
I am one of those people
with handbills for remarks.
That conclusively proves
I have a misguided sense of service.
Most exchanges are abrupt,
as if you have been tagged,
and now I tag you back.
I am definitely co-sponsored
by idealism and whimsy
and I have not quite landed it
securely on the planet
in a thought form journey way.
I ask for tips
and people think I either need
a headhunter or a highlighter.
No, I mean what am I doing here?
These things
that come out of my mind
from experience
must be punch lines
from movies I didn’t see.
Responses from shared experiences
go like this,
there is a pregnant silence,
a slight redirection of the conversation,
like to end something
on a positive note.
That’s what usually happens.
Okay, it may be
a common sense collusion
or an, I’m-missing-essential-parts ruse,
though I am not equipped to tell.
I think I have
a conversational dance card.
I have thought form moves.
Next moments will come . . .
I guess I’ll just peruse these
as melodious thoughts for now
until more come . . .
That is, what one does
in a anecdotal pass-along
experiential hand-me-down world?
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