Sunday, March 14, 2010
Poetry That Wouldn't Pass a Breathalyzer: "Judgment Cometh To Ye"
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
11:16 p.m.
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Reconsidering The Object: AVATAR
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
1:19 p.m.
Monday, March 1, 2010
Poem: "I Love U2 Brother"
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
11:40 p.m.
Friday, February 26, 2010
An Education Backwards
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
10:22 a.m.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Too Many Writers, Too Few Storytellers
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
11:00 p.m.

Friday, February 19, 2010
NOW AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE: PAPERBACK.....
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
4:14 p.m.
So, beginning in 2009, I will be publishing an annual paperback series containing the year's worth of poems, blog entries and short stories found here on 'A Writer Under The Influence'.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Still on the 'Eve of Destruction'
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
7:18 p.m.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Perspective is Reality
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
10:40 a.m.
I think myself an artist, and, in so doing, hold my head steady, and with a subconscious commitment, thrust it so far up my ass that I no longer know myself different from an unripe melon. Now, I don't mean to say that I have nary a notion of who I believe I am. What I am implying is that who I believe I am can in no way be accurate. As I plummet further and further down into the rabbit hole of shadows, where creating feels realer than living, my own opinion of myself can no longer be trusted. Those around me, my family and peers, have an opinion of me, be it good or not, that could possibly be more precise than that of my own. And in this state of mind, I look to those around me for their perspectives of who I am, because they have better an idea than I.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Self Portrait Of A Man I Do Not Know: Part II
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
11:41 p.m.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Self Portrait Of A Man I Do Not Know: Part I
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
11:17 p.m.
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Poetry: "Never Titled" or "The Sugar Cube"
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
10:50 a.m.
written under the influence of 'La Fee Verte' by,
Saturday, January 9, 2010
SPECTACULAR ORACULAR: "The Machine Stops"
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
12:35 p.m.
Monday, January 4, 2010
Poetry: "Dum Vivis Ama"
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
10:00 p.m.
Monday, December 21, 2009
RERUN: My Obsession With Words and the Endless Search for a Muse
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
11:50 p.m.
I feel homeless, lost in the haze of empty words. Why must a muse be a woman? I have found love, but with it, didn't come my muse.
Let's start with my biting obsession with words, obviously of the English origin. It's a recent thing. Since I started actually reading to be specific. Until about four, maybe five months ago, I hadn't actually read a piece of fiction, front to back. Hard to believe? It is for me as well. Sure I fought through Bill Shakespear in high school in an out-loud class setting, and before that, even lied through many a book report in elementary school. I would read the first page, and the back cover. Then I would pick a few lucky pages from the middle, and with them, I would formulate the most asinine, but seemingly believable essay. After high school I would read a few self help books, which did little but manufacture a raging inferiority complex. Long after, I would fall into the blind oblivion of creative commitment and the art of story telling. So, I went right to the source. The Novel.
I picked up "Barbary Shore", Norman Mailer's second and relentlessly critically panned novel. I hadn't read "The Naked And The Dead", which separated me from the majority of those who had read Mailer. And thus, I had nothing to compare too. So, as a result of that naivety, I quite enjoyed "Barbary Shore". But, not for reasons one might imagine. In point of fact, I didn't even really comprehend the story, partly due to my limited knowledge of world politics, past and present. But, what I did enjoy were the words. I'll repeat; I enjoyed the words. The way he used words to explain things in such an eloquent, poetic and descriptive fashion. The way he manipulated the English language, as if it didn't own him, he owned it.
Since, I have been through other Mailer books, even read Faulkner and Dostoevsky. And let me tell you, I will never, ever, turn back. At this point, it isn't simply the words of authors that bite at my mind. It's everything. A traffic sign signaling construction, a salon advertising services, a radio personality pitching a new single or even the man behind the counter at the gas bar. Why did they choose the words they did? What drove them to do so? How did those words find themselves in their vocabulary. Do I know these words? Should I know these words? Could I use them better?
Most of the time, when this obsession with vowels and syllables strikes, it's due to, if not Mailer, a film. And not just crazy elusive works of John-Luc Godard or Andy Kaufman. It can be while watching pop like "Definitely Maybe" or "Enchanted". The words they use. It makes me want to use them too. It makes me want to create. I want to have the same fun and the same liberty with the English language that they had. I boil with desire.
And like many artists, I need a consistent vehicle to translate those very desires into works. Or do I? Do I really need a muse? Would Woody Allen survive with Scarlet Johanson? Would Lennon have written the things he did without the presence of Yoko? I have often yearned for a muse and never been given one. Often they are women but such is not the case for myself. I have found the love of my life, she is everything a man could want in this world, but perhaps not everything a writer could want. This has left me searching for a muse. And, in fact, I am infinitely relieved my love is not my muse, because as I migrate further and further down the rabbit hole, she would soon become more a muse than a love.
But, I am left with a sort of disconnect. Every minute of every day I am compelled to write. Not a dream of mine. In fact, I was always a very poor reader and writer, and, in my opinion, still am. I had tutors, special education and even extra curricular 'English-as-a-second-language' courses. But, it's a force I can't ignore, and until it leaves me, I will accept it. The disconnect being, a constant influx of inspiration and content but with no muse to transport it to the fleeting masses. Obsession is the gasoline to which I have no vehicle.
Forgive the grammar and spelling, I am into a few.
writing under the influence,
jeffc
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Poetry That Wouldn't Pass a Breathalyzer: "From The Mekong and On"
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
11:20 p.m.
Monday, December 14, 2009
Real Men Drive Stick
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
3:54 p.m.
Monday, December 7, 2009
Poetry That Wouldn't Pass a Breathalyzer: "Ballad Of A Heart So Full"
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
11:23 p.m.
"Ballad Of A Heart So Full"
Some men fear the thing they love,
By each let this be heard.
Not all know what they're scared of,
To know would be absurd.
But those men still do fear the same,
When fear itself says it's name.
Of those men some are kind,
And some men are too rash.
Of those rash all are blind,
And those blind will turn to ash.
For each man loves that thing he fears,
And for it spill the blood of tears.
The soldier loves war and fame,
The priest loves prayer and faith.
Yet each's heart feels the same,
Sure as ninth follows eighth.
And as sure as waves flow to the shore,
These things both would die for.
A man will spill blood and tears,
And not think twice or thrice,
And will not change through the years,
No matter payment's price.
And whether he does pray or not,
Won't the slow wheels of fate stop.
No man loved or ignored
Is safe from such fate as this,
Sometimes sealed with a sword,
And sometimes with true love's kiss.
But both the love and the hate,
Produce the seeds grown by fate.
Sealed are my lips, as with my fate,
As I now feel true love's kiss.
And as my love replaces hate,
There is no sweeter sound then this.
For each man fears what they adore,
For fear it will be one day no more.
Some love to dark, some to light,
Some love the person wrong.
But each falls for one that 's right
If they let time sing it's song.
I have fallen and would die for,
Whom it is that I adore.
When love shows it's ancient face,
Be it with a smile or frown,
It's time to forfeit time's ol' chase.
For a pleasure so renowned.
It's face is old, it's face is new,
In all cases, it's face it true.
Love is to be nurtured by all,
But is botched more times that not.
It's for one not to rise, but to fall.
For true love writes it's own plot.
The author to which all must bow,
And the bow by which all must vow.
Love makes hate but not reversed,
Behold the spot of our fruit;
By this hand the world is cursed,
And is rotted to the root.
You can cut the spot off the fruit,
But it won't stop hate's pursuit.
That hate is a wild dog at hunt,
It bounds with strides so wide,
It must be said, soft or blunt,
With shame or with pride,
That hate burns like a flame,
And like the dog, cannot be tamed.
Some men fear the thing they love,
By each let this be heard.
Even if of this they feel above,
Or digest every second word.
Half the words will serve the cause,
Of avoiding the dog's bloody jaws.
Not one man enjoys full control,
Or can say they have that power.
For when each man hits that pricy toll,
Each man's clock strikes the hour.
And when that hand hits that time,
The bells of fate do so chime.
Those bells did chime aloud for me,
And that toll my path did cross.
And to this day I must agree,
What I paid was not a loss.
If I had to pay more to keep that love,
Of fame and fortune it'd be above.
Love makes fame wilt in awe,
And fortune scour with shame.
Love the perfect picture does draw,
And us the perfect frame.
Hang that art with love and pride,
For all you need, love does provide.
I will also mention how love scorns,
And leaves some men behind.
They must wear that crown of thorns,
Until that bitter kiss dost rewind.
Just like the thorns beget the rose,
When love strikes again no-one knows.
I do not believe in Heaven nor God,
Instead I have faith in man's heart.
I shalt not praise a holy facade,
When what I feel in Love dost impart,
A sense of reason not to doubt,
That 'tis a warmth to live not without.
A mother's love is as strong as steel,
A lover's as tough as stone.
A father's love brings him to kneel,
Before love's golden throne.
All strive to be forever true,
And true love's pleasure they pursue.
A poet loves words, a painter his paint,
The writer his plot, the priest his saint.
A pet loves his master, a runner the track,
A general loves his plans for attack.
For each man loves that thing he fears
And for it will spill blood and tears.
Tears love fear and joy the same,
The way blood loves to be craved.
And like a moth loves his flame,
The helpless loved to be saved.
For each man fears what they adore,
For fear it will be soon no more.
If I could share with you one thing,
It would be to follow suit.
Hark! the music of love does ring,
Heed it's savory flute.
Feel it's churn, it's turn, it's mill.
Submit to it's every will.
Love is something to be feared,
And something to be craved.
Love is something to be cheered,
And something to be saved.
Love will seal all men's fate,
When man finds his true soul mate.
written under the influence by jeff campagna
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Fellow Scribbler and Good Friend etc....
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
10:28 a.m.
His ink-name is J.R. Vassallo but I know him simply as Jon. "The Kingstonians" is his first book and is a collection of short stories dealing with the human condition. I have had the good fortune of reading a few of these gems, but I'm waiting for the book to be delivered to my door step via Amazon.com so I can read it in all its paperback glory.
Sunday, November 22, 2009
A Tale Of Two Possibilities
Posted by
A Writer Under The Influence
6:52 p.m.
"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way..."
And so begins one of my favorite staples of classic English literature 'A Tale Of Two Cities', of course referring to the years leading up to the tumultuous French Revolution of 1789. Though it would be too bold for me to even dream of writing a paragraph so simple and yet so effective during the course of my squandered life; the good Charles Dickens has prompted me, nay; has inspired me, with the words aforementioned, with, well, with a singular thought. Applying his description to an all together different concept however very similar, in the machinery of contrast and the presence of two possible outcomes.
Dickens wrote that of the Reign of Terror, which erupted in 1789, seventy years later in 1859 when he could aptly compare the two social and political environments between his native England and that of France. I believe that the same comparison, by context alone, can be applied between Dickens' England and the current global state - some one-hundred and fifty years after 'Two Cities' was authored.
The year is 2009. It is the best of times, it is the worst of times. It is a time of technological enlightenment, it is a time of nuclear warfare, it is the time of political winds of change in the west, it is a time of diseased regime in the east, it is a time of social awareness, it is a time of environmental meltdown, we are at the height of organized religion's reach, we are at the depth of sin, the global village is more accessible than ever, alienation is at an all-time high. My point is, much like Dickens' was, that we are either on the brink of enlightenment or on the eve of destruction.
For every new set of hands that clenches together in prayer another set clenches the warm mag of a machine gun. The popularity and practice of arts is rising as is the popularity and abuse of drugs. The amount of people that believe in war equal those who believe in peace, but very few people, as compared to the past, stand in the middle. We are opening laboratories and creating life and we are opening fire in high schools and taking it - neither of which occurred fifty years ago. It almost seems as if somehow we manage to save ourselves from the crumbling ecosystem around us, we might actually live to see our technological progress usher in a season of hope. The world is so very fucked up and most of it's residents; working and playing and playing and working are in such splendid, self-induced ignorance. Will we still be working and playing and playing and working when the bombs come crashing down? Or when the sky begins to rain fire as it has at least once in the long and winding path of natural history? Will our oxygen one day refuse to come to work and leave us clutching our throats for air. Or will all our diligent working and playing and playing and working create such a dervish that we'll twirl ourselves out of harms way? Could that very same dervish not cause us to spin ourselves into an irreparable downward spiral faster and more vehement that ever before? Will you, or have you ever, taken the time to consider while you are working and playing and playing and working whether you are part of the problem or part of the solution? Where is the line between the two?
Something very monumental lies in the thick fog of time before us, and we cannot see it, nor predict it or even prepare for it - which unfortunately doesn't alter the looming fact that it's still there. That fog will lift and make visible to us the road ahead, however, whether it will be paved with years of peace and awakening or set a blaze with the fiery licks of penance and ruination is a question that even those that say they can indeed answer it; cant.
writing under the influence,
jeffc



