Showing posts with label Haibun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Haibun. Show all posts

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Ornery Poetry: For Wes #8Sunday #SnipSun

 


Genre: Poetry

Heat Level: Poetic

Blurb

Poetry; a unique and beautiful way to express feelings and ideas. Weaving words into perfect poetic prose, these authors remind you of your childhood, bring comfort from the hardships of life, fiercely spur emotions, and tell tales of old. All lovers of poetry will find a favorite here!

Featuring the following authors: Lee Clark Zumpe, Nick Armbrister, Anna Ross, Toastingfork, K.J. Watson, LindaAnn LoSchiavo, David J. Vowell, Roxana Negut, Vanessa Bane, Cassandra Jones, Andrea Tillmanns, Mathew Anderson, Fariel Shafee, Davion Moore, Afshan Q, Korede Badmus, Cara Hartley, Tanya Fillbrook, and J.E. Feldman.

Snippet

For Wes

It’s been 25 years since I saw you play. The rhythm of the music shook the audience to our bones. For a couple of hours, we were all friends.

I dreamed about you last night. I was backstage staring at your tattoo of yourself on your arm. I can’t remember if you have tattoos, but if you do, I’m certain you don’t have one of yourself. One of the reasons I had it so bad for you is because you don’t have a big ego.

I spent the rest of the dream unable to find a way into the show.

icy mountain roads

winter trees covered in snow

wind cuts through to bone

113 Words


Yes, my desk is in a storage area. Technically, it sits between my sleep area and storage. My bedroom is long and about the size of a studio apartment. To put it kindly, the guy who owned the house previously made some very unconventional remodeling choices. If I look to my left, I'm looking at the remnants of what used to be a wall dividing two rooms. I get the feeling a lot of beer and happy herb were involved in his creative architectural decisions. 

Buy Link

http://books2read.com/dspchaser

The e-book is currently available for pre-order. It will be released on June 23, 2025.

Pre-Order Price $1.99

About the Author

Ornery Owl is a wise old bird who seeks the truth behind the lies. She uses her observations to heal the wounded soul. In essence, she is the spirit of an odd little bird whose wings were clipped at a young age. She is at once a whimsical manifestation of poetic expression and a fierce protector of those targeted for derision by an angry and unsympathetic world. Depending on how you perceive her, she can be either a goddamned delight or your worst nightmare.

Follow Ornery Owl (AKA Cara Hartley)

Get your kicks on the Naughty Netherworld Press Start Page.

Ornery Owl is Outstanding in her Field
Free use image by Pexels on Pixabay




Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Ghost Stories #InsecureWritersSupportGroup #OctPoWriMo

  

Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay

October 2 question - Ghost stories fit right in during this month. What's your favorite classic ghostly tale? Tell us about it and why it sends chills up your spine.

I shall combine this question with the following prompt and create a Haibun for your reading displeasure. Imma call this one Ghost Stories.


My early memories include my father reading A Christmas Carol. Scrooge's ghosts have stuck with me throughout my life.

I was a precocious child and a bit of a Wednesday Addams. By the time I was six years old, I was reading Edgar Allan Poe and my father’s collection of EC and Warren comics. I loved the horror hosts who, despite their fearsome appearances (and Vampirella’s scanty attire), were actually quite wholesome.

In my first grade classroom, there was a book about a haunted house with an evil spirit in a jar. I’ve never found another copy of this treasure.

being forgotten

never being recognized

forgetting oneself

And now, it's picture time! The prompt is universal fear.

Image by Michal Jarmoluk from Pixabay



What if Death shows up looking like Jeeves rather than a robe-wearing skeleton with a scythe? Would that make him less scary? 
"Good evening, Ma'am. Would you care to follow me to meet your maker for a spot of tea?"
According to this picture, Death is a jellyfish-headed mothafucker with lobster claws for hands because I can't draw people. Or much of anything else, really.

As an added bonus, here's a text I received Monday morning.
Surely, there's no reason to suspect that it's phishing. Doesn't USPS always wish their customers a day filled with positivity and joy?

In other news, I've decided not to continue my attempts at building a subscription option on Ream. I've learned that Michael Evans, a genuinely good guy, was forced off the platform he founded. Instead, I intend to focus my subscription-building efforts on my Substack.  

I wish the person playing the loud music with the repetitive rhythm that's giving me a headache would fall into a sinkhole along with their device of annoyance. I'm not the least bit sorry for wishing this. 

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~

Image by Rashid Asgher from Pixabay
Ornery Owl is working on making peace with her inner owlet.






My creations are © 2024. This work is openly licensed via CC BY 4.0.



Enjoy some synthwave.




To follow this month's poetic adventures, visit my poetry blog.


Consider subscribing to my Substack. Most posts are free.


Visit my Start page.



Wednesday, November 1, 2023

November PAD Challenge 2023 Day 1: Wraiths of Debts Past

 

Image by Circe Denyer from Pixabay

Dear Ms. Owl,

The Ethereal Wraiths of Debts Past align with your never-expanding wallet to collect the far-from-towering pile of copper you have remaining in your coffers. This is an earnest attempt to fleece you of whatever paltry sum you may manage to manifest. Like enchanted spiders lurking in your empty bank account for any sign of activity, we welcome virtual payments of magic money.

Do not make the mistake of believing you can escape your obligations by dying. Our home office is located in the Ninth Circle.

after Halloween

the fright fest continues on

when money is owed.

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~

Image by Anja from Pixabay
Will the real Ornery Owl please stand up?

prompts used





Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Crime Spree

 

I don't imagine pirates broke into my car, but here's a picture of a pirate.

We’ve had a bit of a crime spree in our little town.

Thieves broke into my car last week.

Just what treasures do you imagine you’ll find in a twelve-year-old, hail-damaged beater?

Several people’s outbuildings were broken into as well.

It makes me wonder how stupid some people are.

What treasures do these criminals think they’ll find in sheds belonging to people dwelling in one of the poorest towns in the state?

A town consisting mostly of disabled and elderly citizens who can’t afford to live elsewhere.

Somehow, people always find a way to further reduce my faith in humanity.

dull-edged apathy

cruelty sharp like a knife 

ice blue like curdled blood

notes

https://experiencewriting.com/2023/10/18/oct-18-prompts-fear-of-the-living-dead-trespasser/

The prompt asked participants to write their poem in the language of a police report in which the burglar or attacker was supernatural.

I wasn't up to doing that. 

I wrote a good old Haibun about an incident that actually happened.

I used this prompt to inspire the Senryu at the end of the Haibun.

https://chevrefeuillescarpediem.blogspot.com/2012/11/carpe-diem-39-blue.html

I'm quite sure the idiots who broke into my car were garden-variety incarnate shitheads. I think a supernatural entity would be able to determine that nothing in my car is worth a damn.

If you'd like to read about tons of super-unnatural things, plus pirates, you need to check out C. L. Hart's Lovecraftian fantasy adventure, The Quest For Captain Sammy's Treasure.


http://books2read.com/PirateGold

The other stories in the anthology are good too. And contain pirates, of course.


Image by Mirko Toller from Pixabay

"I'm very glad you told me about Pirate Gold, Owl. The only problem is, I stayed up all night reading it, and now I'm tired!"

"That's no problem at all, Master Bookseller. Let me direct you to some fine coffee to put the pep back in your step."



Thursday, April 6, 2023

Poetry Prompts and Inspiration Day 6 April PAD Challenge and NaPoWriMo


Good morning, Poetry People. Or afternoon, evening, or whatever. I have an incredible video to share with you while discussing how I used today's prompts in my creation. This Roger Waters reboot of Comfortably Numb features a striking dystopian landscape complete with damaged buildings, bomb blasts, and crowds of displaced people. It is a stark reminder of the conditions some people have endured in the past and are currently facing now. Here is what Roger has to say about the video.

Before lockdown I had been working on a demo of a new version of ‘Comfortably Numb’ as an opener to our new show "This Is Not A Drill”. I pitched it a whole step down, in A Minor, to make it darker and arranged it with no solos, except over the outro, where there is a heartrendingly beautiful vocal solo from one of our new sisters Shanay Johnson.It’s intended as a wakeup call, and a bridge towards a kinder future with more talking to strangers, either in "The Bar” or just “Passing in the Street" and less slaughter “In Some Foreign Field.” Here it is. Love R. 

The video is by Sean Evans. The mix is by Gus Seyffert.

I think it is quite rude of ProWritingAid to tell Sean Evans that he should spell his name differently. Sean, you can be Stan, Dean, or Sian Evans or you can be Sean Evan. Your name cannot be Sean Evans, Boyo! At least not according to ProWritingAid.

I mean, what the hell?

I guess if I ever again have a moment to write a smackerel of fan fiction, I'll have Sam and Dean Winchester go incognito as Sam and Dean Evans. Yes, Grammarly and ProWritingAid, the word I intended to use is smackerel. I'm not writing about fish. 

Overall, I find programs such as Grammarly and ProWritingAid useful, but sometimes I find them ridiculous. Especially when they tell me a character or a real person can't be named the name I've just typed. That assertion is simply uncouth.

Thanks to Scottish Tommy for posting this and many other wonderful videos. Please be sure to check out his Odysee channel. The link for this video is above.

I wrote my poem prior to discovering this video, but I think they complement each other perfectly. I can't share the poem here because I am submitting it to Dragon Soul Press for potential inclusion in the forthcoming Soul Ink anthology. I will provide a synopsis of the work.

The poem is a Haibun. The theme is death. I focus on the differences between the kinds of deaths I've witnessed during my lifetime, including the passing of family members, patients, and pets as opposed to casualties of war. I have never had the firsthand experience of seeing people killed by an invading army. Such a thing seems unimaginable, and yet there are people living with this experience every day.

The Senryu at the end of the Haibun seems, on the surface, to compare a waterfall to experiences and memories.

I have encountered much disagreement about what a Haibun should encompass. There are those who say a Haibun should always be non-fiction. There are those who say that the Haiku or Senryu at the end should be unrelated to the subject in the prose portion. I say the poet should write their Haibun about whatever they wish to write it about and have the Haiku/Senryu relate to the prose portion or not as they see fit. 

I'm not a professor of poetic knowledge. I have no degree in poetry. I'm not even Japanese. I have loved Japanese poetry forms ever since my class studied Japan when I was in the fourth grade. I'm self-taught, and I'm not a stickler. I say Haibun away in whatever manner suits you.

If you're wondering how long a Haibun should be, I usually confine my prose portion to 100 words, but I have occasionally written longer Haibun.

Now for the prompts.

Today's NaPoWriMo prompt asks participants to:

Take a look around Poetry International for a poem in a language you don’t know. Now, read the poem to yourself, thinking about the sound and shape of the words, and the degree to which they remind you of words in your own language. Use those correspondences as the basis for a new poem.

I found the thought-provoking prose poem I Have Thought that I Thought of Death by Estonian poet Jaan Kaplinski. 


Trying to do the thing of comparing the sound and shape of Estonian words to English made my brain hurt, so I simply used the theme of the poem. 

I used the prompt word waterfall to create the Senryu portion of the Haibun. I found this prompt in one of the first posts from Chèvrefeuille's Carpe Diem blog.


Unfortunately, Chèvrefeuille has been unable to keep up with blogging during the past few years because of personal circumstances. He has left the blog up as an archive and it contains a wealth of prompts and poems for the seeker's enjoyment.



Here is the music I listened to while creating this post. I was pretty intensely "up in my feelings" about my poem and the new Comfortably Numb video. This powerful game soundtrack from Destiny 2 helped me become energized yet grounded so I could continue with my work. I find video game soundtracks very useful as background music while creating.

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~



Wednesday, November 9, 2022

November PAD Challenge 2022: Day 9: Life Under the Three of Swords

 

Image by Melissa G from Pixabay

My late father sometimes reminded me of a day when we traveled to the Happy Jack recreation area. My family lived in Laramie at the time. My father was attending the University of Wyoming and was also earning his keep as a teacher’s assistant. My father told me that I stood up on a ridge and shouted to the wind, “I’m happy!”

I may have been happy. I honestly don’t remember the incident or the place. I can recall moments from that year, 1968. I remember some of the dreams I had. I seemed to be nothing but trouble for my mother. I was an overly curious child who was always getting into things.

My lifetime has been spent beneath the shadow of the Three of Swords. To put this in poetic terms, I’ve always been melancholy in varying degrees. If I were to choose poetry to describe my life, the first poem I’d select would be Alone by Edgar Allan Poe. I was reading Poe’s works at six years old and I related to this poem. I also loved The Goblin Market by Christina Rossetti. What would it be like, I wondered, to have a sister who was such a dear friend that she would put herself in danger to rescue me from the goblins who were draining me of my joy?

I did not have a sister. I had friends here and there, now and then, but they always left. I loved creating, but it wouldn’t be until later in life that I reconciled myself to the fact that my stories were my constant companions. I was not destined to have lasting friendships or find happy ever after romantic love.

To put it in clinical terms (alas, how very dull!) I have always lived with varying degrees of depression. I’ve been told I should medicate away the Three of Swords. Attempts at doing so failed spectacularly. The Tower fractured beneath me, plunging me into madness.

I can exist beneath the shadow of the Three of Swords. When the swords increase to nine or ten, atmospheric conditions present danger not only to happiness but to my very corporeal existence.

directionless me

spinning twilight I wander

without any guide

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~

Image by 0fjd125gk87 from Pixabay
Some of us are destined to fly solo

prompts used


Prompt: The power of three. Any style, 369-word limit.


Prompt word: Directionless


For today's prompt, take the phrase "(blank) of the (blank)," replace the blanks with a word or phrase, make the new phrase the title of your poem, and then, write your poem.

I changed it up a little, as the title of the poem is Life Under the Three of Swords rather than, say Life Of the Three of Swords. I'm not submitting this one to the chapbook of 20 poems that won't be selected anyway. A long Haibun like this one is much to prose-y to be the right kind of rosy for a chapbook bouquet.

It may seem odd for me to request this, but past experiences dictate that I must. For the love of all that is holy and otherwise, do NOT give me advice about "changing my meds." I don't take psych meds, see "the tower fractured beneath me and I plunged into madness. Similarly, don't suggest that I seek out such meds. See "the tower fractured beneath me and I plunged into madness." 

Also, do not suggest that I "seek counseling." I've done so in the past and it hasn't done much for me. Plus I now live in the middle of nowhere and, yeah, I'm not driving a hundred-mile round trip for something that probably won't do me any favors, thanks anyway.

This is a prose poem, not a request for someone to come fix or rescue me. I'm not a damsel in distress, I'm a hideous swamp witch (okay, prairie witch) who writes poetry. If you can't be dark, dramatic, and hyperbolic in your poetry, I probably don't want to read your poetry. See Alone, by Poe, Edgar Allan. That's my kind of poem!


Maybe I should try to revive my poetry channel on Odysee. Or maybe I've already got too much on my plate. Eh, I'm rambling now.

I actually do know how to have fun. For instance, this collection of olde tyme Halloween-themed songs is my bag.


Here's the link in case you can't see the player.

Friday, September 30, 2022

30 Days of Haiga 2022: Seeds of Me

 


Most afternoons during those bad old golden rule days, I slipped off in my mind to an enchanted world beyond the walls of the prison posing as a school. Knowing I would never be accepted by my peers and that my father and mother would always chide me to be better organized, I furrowed my brow and clutched tight to a vital metaphysical symbiosis between me and a group of people I had never met.

Their world was filled with singing. Mine was filled with the pain of knowing I would forever be the outsider. I was scolded for daydreaming when I should be listening to the lecture, but I refused to stop. Given the choice, what would you do?

When I look now, it makes me sad and angry that my dreams were considered weeds rather than seeds.

such a stupid girl

she can't do anything right

she’s just so simple

152 words

notes

Thank you to Xenia Tran of D'Verse Poets for the Haibun Monday prompt. I didn't write a Haibun about September, but I did write a Haibun for the end of my 30 Days of Haiga in Sepbember.

https://dversepoets.com/2022/09/26/haibun-monday-september-song/

Thank you to Brendan of Earthweal for the Ekphrasis prompt. Granted, the image I used isn't nature-related unless you count the unfortunate nature of human beings to ostracize those who are mostly harmless but don't quite play by the rules.

https://earthweal.com/2022/09/26/earthweal-weekly-challenge-ekphrasis-earth/

Thank you to Sue at My Just So Story for the Words for Wednesday prompt.

https://myjustsostory.blogspot.com/2022/09/words-for-wednesday-2892022.html

Thank you to Gerd Altmann from Pixabay for the image I selected to use as the Haiga background.

https://pixabay.com/illustrations/bullying-stress-head-brain-think-2778163/

I created the Haiga using Pixlr.com

You are welcome to use the Haiga, but please credit Cara Hartley/Ornery Owl and provide a link back to this blog.

With that, the 30 Days of Haiga for 2022 marches away into the sunset, but I'll be back for OctPoWriMo. I'm a masochist like that.

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~


Image by Alexa from Pixabay
Yeah, I know, it's early. 
But when you have a face like mine, every day is Halloween.


"Did somebody say Halloween?"
(Free use image from Open Clipart Vectors)
Hangry Wyrm is only here for the candy, let's be real.




Tuesday, September 13, 2022

30 Days of Haiga 2022: Honey and Peace

 


For greedy corporations and corrupt governments, it will be business as usual until it’s business no more because the sea has risen too high and all the bees are dead.

I would like the world to switch from fossil fuels to green energy.

Let the sun and wind heat our homes and recharge electrical batteries for our vehicles.

Let us make trains a viable means of transportation again so there is less reliance on automobiles.

Before I depart this world, I’d like to see the watermelon snow.

I’d like to insure the safety of the seed vault in Svalbard.

I’d like to save the sea ice, preserving the life of polar bears and penguins.

I’d like, too, to plant the sweet alyssum that smells like honey and peace.

we guard what we love

why do we not love the world?

it's our only home.

144 Words

notes

I created the Haiga with Pixlr.com using a free image by Peter Fischer on Pixabay. 

https://pixabay.com/photos/icebear-penguin-arctic-antarctic-3277930/

You are welcome to use the Haiga, but please credit Cara Hartley/Ornery Owl and provide a link back to this blog.

I used the following prompts in creating the Haibun.

https://dversepoets.com/2022/09/12/prosery-when-it-comes-to-katherine-riegel/

Write a piece of flash fiction or other prose of up to or exactly 144 words, including the given line from the poem.

“I’d like, too, to plant the sweet alyssum that smells like honey and peace,” from the poem What I would like to grow in my Garden.

https://earthweal.com/2022/09/12/earthweal-weekly-challenge-a-celebration-of-life-for-ice/

For this week’s challenge, contribute to a celebration of life for ice. 

https://girlieontheedge1.wordpress.com/2022/09/11/sundays-six-sentence-story-word-prompt-229/

Prompt word: Guard

I hope my Haibun measures up to the challenges presented, more or less.

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~



Free use image from Open Clipart Vectors


Tuesday, April 26, 2022

April PAD Challenge/NaPoWriMo 2022 Day 25/26



The gal in the cover thumbnail for today's soundtrack is going surfing. I've only been to the ocean once, and that was 41 years ago. I never learned how to surf, but I developed an admiration not only for anyone who can surf but also for people who can keep their swimsuit bottoms up. 

I learned quickly that it was best for me to wear a one-piece when I rose from the ocean with sand in my drawers and my bikini bottom dropped, exposing my bottom to amused beachgoers. Never mind that horror show, let's double-dip into today's prompts.

My Own Aisling

Prompts used


Write a response poem.

The answer is in the title and the first two lines of the poem.


Write an aisling. An Aisling is an Irish poem that recounts a dream or vision featuring a woman who represents the land or country where the poet lives.

Vaudeville Reincarnated

prompts used


Write a poem using an epic simile. My simile involves a comparison between the birds that congregate in the tree outside my window and Vaudeville performers.


The prompt asks for a Haibun alluding to bird songs or a favorite songbird.

The April PAD Challenge prompt wasn't ready yet, so I'll have to crunch the prompts for the 26th and 27th tomorrow.

Once again, there is no rest for the wicked. I need to work on my story for The First Line, and I need to visit the other participants in the WEP Challenge. But first, I need something to eat. Later!

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~


Ornery Owl says "I'm hungry!"
Free use image from Open Clipart Vectors


Hangry Wyrm says "then let's eat!"
Free use image from Pixabay


Thursday, December 9, 2021

Cheeky History With Ornery Owl: Sympathy for Narcissus (WEP Challenge December 2021)

 

Narcissus, from a Pompeiian fresco

Tagline:
Greetings, Class. Fasten your seat belts! Professor Ornery Owl has a history lesson and a proposal for you. 

Genre: history, humor, politics

Cheeky History with Ornery Owl

Sympathy for Narcissus:

A Limerick Haibun Fusion Sandwich

 Tongue in Cheek Style

 

Narcissus got a bad rap

For being a stuck-up chap

He wasn’t malicious

Though he thought himself delicious

The poor guy was caught in a trap

 

There are variations on the myth of Narcissus, but the core story is as follows.

Narcissus was the son of the river god Cephissus and the nymph Liriope. When Narcissus was young, a seer named Tiresias told Liriope that Narcissus would live a long life as long as he never knew himself.

Narcissus grew up to be very handsome and had many admirers, but he was not interested in any of them. One day, after hunting, Narcissus lay beside a still pool of water. When he saw his own reflection, he fell deeply in love with himself. He tried to touch the figure in the water but could not. He was so enamored with his reflection that he would not leave the water's edge.

Fixating on his reflection to the exclusion of all else, Narcissus eventually succumbed to exhaustion and starvation. When the nymphs came to bury him, his body transformed into a beautiful white daffodil flower thereafter known as the Narcissus.

There are several variations on the Narcissus myth. The best-known variation was Metamorphoses, an epic poem written by Ovid. Metamorphoses explains the creation of various plants, animals, and natural phenomena through stories of transformation.

In Ovid’s poem, the nymph, Echo, told a story that was so long that Juno missed an opportunity to catch Jove while he flirted with the nymphs. Juno was angry with Echo, so she cursed the nymph to only repeat the words of others thenceforth.

One day in the woods, Echo saw Narcissus. She was captivated by his beauty and followed him. When Narcissus asked, "who is here?" Echo could only answer "here!"

Echo tried to embrace Narcissus, but he spurned her. Narcissus's rejection caused Echo to waste away until only her voice remained.

Narcissus stopped to rest by a clear pool of water, in which he beheld his reflection and was enchanted by its beauty. He sat staring at his reflection day and night, neither eating nor sleeping, eventually perishing from exhaustion and starvation. When the nymphs buried him, he transformed into a beautiful Narcissus flower.

In Pausanias' version of the story, Narcissus had a twin sister who looked exactly like him. He loved her very much. When she died, Narcissus found solace in looking at his reflection in the pond. This version of Narcissus does not fall in love with himself; instead, his reflection allows him to remember his sister.

The ancient Greek mythographer Konon's dark, homoerotic version of the myth of Narcissus takes place in the Greek city of Thespeia. In Konon's version, Narcissus scorns even Eros, the god of love himself.

A man named Ameinias falls deeply in love with Narcissus, but Narcissus spurns Ameinias and sends him a sword. Overcome with sorrow, Ameinias asks Eros to avenge him and commits suicide using the sword that Narcissus sent him.

Later, Narcissus falls in love with his own reflection in a pool of water. He becomes distraught because he is unable to touch the beautiful man that he sees in the pool. Eventually, Narcissus ends his own life, transforming into the lovely flower that now bears his name.

Free use image by John Hain on Pixabay

While the third version of Narcissus is arrogant and spiteful, the best-known version is self-absorbed but not malevolent. I feel that a more apt comparison than Narcissus for individuals such as Donald tRump is the infamous failed emperor Commodus, whose focus on his own glory touched off the downfall of Rome.

Commodus was the son of the highly regarded emperor Marcus Aurelius. After the death of his father, Commodus became increasingly dictatorial. Rather than acting as a leader, he focused on building a cult of personality by performing as a gladiator in rigged matches where he always came out the winner. He was assassinated in his bath on 31 December 192 by his personal trainer, a wrestler named Narcissus.

Roman statesman Dio Cassius described the reign of Commodus as marking the descent "from a kingdom of gold to one of iron and rust". When Donald tRump took office, he attempted to upend any programs created during the Obama era while building his cult of personality through continual campaigning.

Members of the Roman senate despised and feared Commodus, but his cult of personality thrived thanks to his showboating. Commodus was a megalomaniac, describing himself as having godlike prowess. Donald tRump described himself as “the chosen one” and a “very stable genius.”

Early in 192, Commodus, declared himself the new Romulus, renaming the city Colonia Lucia Annia Commodiana. All the months of the year were renamed to correspond with his twelve names: Lucius, Aelius, Aurelius, Commodus, Augustus, Herculeus, Romanus, Exsuperatorius, Amazonius, Invictus, Felix, and Pius. The legions were renamed Commodianae, the fleet which imported grain from Africa was termed Alexandria Commodiana Togata, the Senate was called the Commodian Fortunate Senate, his palace, and the Roman people themselves were given the name Commodianus, and the day on which these reforms were decreed was called Dies Commodianus.

Donald tRump jokingly said that he should be made pResident for life. Only he wasn’t joking.

In conclusion, while Narcissus may have been self-absorbed to his own detriment and the detriment of those who became enamored with him, his conceit did not have negative effects on an entire civilization. The conceit of Emperor Commodus was the beginning of the end for the Roman Empire. Commodus did not care about the Roman people, he cared about his own glory.

Therefore, I submit that the term narcissism is incorrectly applied to individuals such as Donald tRump. I believe that such megalomaniacs should be called Commodes to reflect the historical figure whose actions they mirror. Like them, commodes tend to be full of crap. 

  

Image by Craig Letourneau on Pixabay

https://pixabay.com/photos/daffodils-narcissus-nature-flower-455359/

 

narcissus heedless

learn nothing from growing pains

knowing only self

~cie~ 

978 words

I said I wouldn't do this again, but I'm giving it one more shot.

If you are capable of doing a proper critique rather than a tear-down, have at it. I'm not heavily invested in this piece. I wrote it as a lark.

Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Myths/Mortals/Narcissus/narcissus.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commodus

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narcissus_(mythology)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narcissus_(wrestler)

https://poetryofthenetherworld.blogspot.com/2020/10/narcissus.html

 Your Instructor



Ornery Owl
Free use image by Open Clipart Vectors



The Icky, Sticky, Nit-Picky Legalese If You Please (Or Don't Please)



Creative Commons License


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Quoting portions of the post for educational or review purposes is acceptable if proper credit is given.

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