I come from
two contrasting generations of sperm cells;
a grandfather
whose poetry and politics
were equally loud and boisterous,
and a father
who chose subtlety
when it came to both words and wings:
so subtle
he could flip sides
without twitching eyebrows.
I was twelve
when I realised
the reason my grandfather
doesn’t speak to his brothers
is that they chose
a different flavour of communism.
Same tree.
Different branches.
And yet
that was enough
to make the roots of blood tremble.
I was twelve
when I realised
politics and petrol
should never be left out in the open;
give them oxygen
and they will burn down
entire civilisations.
Two decades later,
it is compulsory
to be political.
And being it
is not enough.
You must declare it.
Perform it.
Repeat it
until your politics
becomes tinnitus
in the ears of everyone around you.
Question one side
and you are accused
of being the other,
with assumptions
too starved
to scrape past elementary algebra.
Call yourself political
and they look at you
as if they are civilisation
and you are the jungle.
You see,
I have a persistent problem.
On one side,
a faith
that diagnoses change for cancer,
that worships the past
in the present
as the only future.
On the other,
a faith
that calls change the singular truth,
even when it abandons logic,
even when they can't quite add it up.
And I keep wondering,
why can sanity not live
on the fringes,
in the middle,
or beyond them?
Why must thought
always pick a uniform?
Why must disagreement
always declare allegiance?
In a world
that cannot stop
emptying itself
loudly, publicly, endlessly,
and every street
stinks of ideological diarrhoea,
I refuse to flow.
I choose
to be constipation.