A poetry: Me, Mine and More.

Jargon of an Organic Computer

Me, mine and more, reality with three shores;
Dredging for who am I; where am I;
Mirror on the wall lies to the pictures on the wall;
Truth and lies, relationships dead or alive;
Please tell me who am I, who am I;

Designs for living, traps of thought;
Running and chasing, enigma of thought;
Covering so beautiful, dressed as thought;
Enlightenment, moksha, nirvana and great thought;
Humanity, compassion, charity all tether of thought;
Who am I, where am I, craves the thought;

Names so many, called so many;
Titles so many, hid and fought so many;
Toys of thought, games and plays so many;
Tongue of thought, tasted and licked so many;
Spouse or sibling, uncle or aunt, lonely with relations so many;
Who am I, why have faces so many;

More to go, buy even more;
Possessions around crave for more;
More is less for the empty even more;
More to sniff and drink, eat even more;
Thirst is more, hunger even more;
More search of I, me is lost even more;

Pain ethereal, lurking in handsome cadaver;
Bantering the talk, wise yet palaver;
Torrent of lies, yet truth occasional shower;
Millions in journey, yet walks the loner;
Drunk in loop of thought, yet called sober;
Noise in action of thought, what to gather;
Scribbling the jargon, yet another organic computer.

6 thoughts on “A poetry: Me, Mine and More.

  1. Hey, that was good too! I like the notion of us being computers interacting according to some programmed script. And the abrupt, staccato style was a nice touch…almost like an old typewriter clacking.

    Like

  2. I have this picture in my mind of, let’s say, a wolf – always looking outward, never at itself. And I picture a fox with its leg caught in a trap. The trap has come loose and the fox is dragging it along, only half-aware that its leg is trapped – and that is like we humans, dragging our traps. We are pitiable, and we are wonderful and arouse a lot of compassion. And the only way out is to touch another human being, to connect and lift ones spirits for a while.

    Like

    • Very well said. But you said it better when you gave example of ‘head in marmalade jar’. I use that so often, of coure with your permission. But as you said, we must keep our eyes open to watch the movement of ‘wolf’. Regards for sharing.

      Like

Please share your views.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.