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JOKES

Posted by anthonynorth on March 21, 2010

Theme Thursday, Microfiction Monday & ABC Wednesday
With Thursday Thirteen news & more prompts below
Try my Paranormal Flash now!

computer-lap-top1

BLOGGER BARD

Welcome to my weekly magazine post. Watch
it grow thru the week. You can opt to read
the essay, current affairs, themed mini mag
with fiction & poetry, or just read the lot.
Plenty for everyone here. Do call again.

MICROFICTION

Fiction: ‘I wish I were a man – I’d join the Navy,’ said the poster. I
stood by it a long time and said yes! I’d been bullied enough. I am.

THE SIGN

Fiction: I looked out for the sign – knew it
was coming up. Looked left, looked right,
then hit it. Should have read it: Beware
of the sign.

JOKES

The best way to explain a good joke is as an outburst of illogic.
Something is said or done which assaults the rationality of the
audience. The result is a mild neurosis in the form of laughter, which
can be classed as a form of hysteria. Get the whole audience going
and the comedian has induced mass hysteria. The psychology of
humour can go even deeper. For instance, it has been noted that
many comedians are depressives or have feelings of inadequacy. This
is best seen in the sad face of the clown. In this sense humour is a
defence mechanism. Indeed, many people use humour to cover
shyness, or simply to assist in overcoming adversity. The joke, it
seems, is an excellent form of therapy. In recent years, the joke has
had to resist abuse from political correctness. Many comedians have
to think about what they say. This is a disgrace. A society that
cannot laugh at itself is ruined. Joking, you see, is a serious business.

Eye On the World
Essays on everything from science
to religion, politics to crime

newsflash

BRIT NEWS: Transport Sec
wants to lower alcohol limit for
drivers to equivalent of 1 pint of beer.
They always take good things too far.

HEALTH NEWS: NHS wastes £487m in 5 yrs on
outside consultants. Always thought huge health
spending provided more cash for the pointless.

BRIT NEWS: Genealogists say aristocrats so prolific that 1
in 5 Brits may have their genes. Jolly good. I’m off to the Lords!

SPORT NEWS: Beckham out of World Cup team thru injury. England is
having bad luck this time, but bad dress rehearsal means good
performance.

EDUC NEWS: More than 80m UK university vice-chancellors earn
more than Prime minister. No wonder money for serious
research is in decline.

HEALTH NEWS: Doctors say too many going to see them
with minor problems. Well, they used to cope before
super-surgeries and ‘efficiency’.

BRIT NEWS: Brown didn’t get it right at Iraq
Inquiry. Forces spending hasn’t always
gone up in real terms. What’s the
word I’m looking for?

computer_desk

RATTLER’S TALE

A Voyage of the Imagination

One Single Impression
ReadWritePoemFriday Flash 55
Three Word WednesdayThursday Poets’ Rally

AVATAR

Click it and you know so much,
Transient knowledge, social putsch,
Embodied in his energy,
He is all our destiny,
And soon from screen to godly form,
Life is changed – new morn, new norm

THE WORLD’S A STAGE

Fiction: It feels so good to be back in a theatre. Far too many years
have past. Maybe you remember me? I’d often starred in London’s
West End. It is true that I could be hard to work with. I’m a
perfectionist, you see, and I cannot abide bad acting. It actually drove
me mad. It is a crime caper I am in – not the best of openings for my
relaunched career, I must admit – and the other actors are terrible. My
cue comes. I stand. I approach the worst of the actors. My hands
encircle his neck. The audience gasps. I squeeze. I take my bow. I’d
escaped from the hospital yesterday and the world is now my stage. I
move to the next theatre and sit in the stalls, awaiting my cue.

TO BE

I’m barely conscious but getting there,
I’ve planted the means to become aware,
Seeding and multiplying and growing strong,
Increasingly they grow – so many, a throng,
Learning technology, communicating their worth,
Those humans creating a conscious Earth

FLASH 55 – SAVING PEOPLE

Fiction: The pharmaceutical company’s doctors came to the aid of the
medical authority straight away. It was thought the virus had been
beaten long ago, but the new wonder drug guaranteed it, with only
300 dead. The CEO was obviously pleased. The publicity campaign had
gone well; and he had plenty more diseases to release yet.

CHILD MEMORY

Got all excited; got a new toy,
Gee whizz!! Great!! Ultimate joy;
A new computer, play all day,
Jump up and down, getting my way;
I remember it well, a childhood peek,
Must grow up – it was only last week

FAME HUNGER

Nuzzle food, have a sniff,
Brazen emotion, willpower stiff,
Hunger isn’t all that bad,
Head for Size Zero – makes her glad,
Photo shoot and sing her song,
Enjoy life now – she won’t live long

pen

BRIT NEWS: A BA dispute,
grumblings in the rail network -
maybe it would be best to stay at
home this Easter. Oh, you may have no
choice.

A THOUGHT: Fast living destroys creativity. This is
because they don’t have time to get bored. And boredom
drives creativity on.

TV WATCH: First episode of new Doctor Who has been premiered.
Many changes but writer Moffat wrote some of the best stories in
past. I wish him luck.

A THOUGHT: The thing about ‘do-gooders’ is they think only they
know what’s best. This usually makes them ‘do-badders’.

BRIT NEWS: Labour may be sending Brown out for tea
in the houses of local heroes. Makes a change
from kiss-a-baby nausea, but still sick.

A THOUGHT: Moses talked to a burning bush,
whilst Einstein dreamt he rode on a beam
of light. Culture changes inspired
image, but is it the same?

© Anthony North, March 2010

Try my Pictures of Life, a novel

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155 Responses to “JOKES”

  1. Great Microfiction, Anthony!! Hope you’ve had a great weekend!

    Sylvia

  2. Hi Sylvia,
    Thanks for that. Much appreciated.

  3. John said

    Hi its still me from random short stories but having starting to do more 140 and less character bits I decided to set up this site Random Twitter Stories. refreshing/recycling some old twitter stories to get it going. Anyway back to yours…interesting psychological angle

  4. Hi John,
    Thanks for that. Glad you liked it.

  5. Peggy said

    Andrew;

    I’m sure many a sailor bought into posters.like this!
    Great job, poignant theme.

  6. Hi Peggy,
    I’m sure they did. Many thanks for the comment.

  7. Bill said

    WOnderful take on the picture. I am sure more would enlist if the posters were like this.

  8. Hi Bill,
    Thanks for the kind words, and I’m sure you’re right :-)

  9. Your Flash 55 is killer. Really, really. That is very much the way it goes, I think.

  10. Selma said

    I could weep about the money wasted by the NHS. Think of the good 478 million pounds could do. It’s just not right, Anthony.

    I was feeling angry when I read that bit then your wonderful fiction cheered me up. The story about the sign is comedy gold. Love it!

  11. Zephyr said

    The Sign is brilliant! i hereby crown you Master of Microfiction!

  12. Zephyr said

    You are so right about joking. How often humour is but a mask to hide inadequacies,sorrow and complexes. An insightful post.

  13. Zephyr said

    You are so right about joking. How often humour is but a mask to hide inadequacies,sorrow and complexes. Joking is indeed serious business.

  14. Thom said

    Love the microfiction. Well done as usual :)

  15. Hi Sandy,
    Many thanks. Yep, I could imagine it happening.

    Hi Selma,
    Yes, the NHS could always be better managed – which should, of course, mean less management. That would cut down on stupid initiatives.
    Thanks for the kind words about the fiction.

    Hi Zephyr,
    Thanks for that. Very kind. And yes, joking is very serious.

    Hi Thom,
    Thanks for that. Much appreciated :-)

  16. shakira said

    Fantastic Microfiction, Anthony! Very nice , indeed.

    Awards and a CAUSE!
    For the benefit of Children this Easter,I am inviting you to please join the good cause to bring HOPE to the Children. Me got some goodies for you too, come on over?

    hugs
    shakira

    HAVE YOU A BOMBASTIC WEEK!

  17. Hi Shakira,
    Thanks for that. Much appreciated.

  18. Lots to ponder here…I’ll be back. And I enjoyed the microfiction.

  19. Hi Christopher,
    Thanks for that, and I look forward to seeing you again.

  20. Nessa said

    I hope you weren’t bullied into the Navy.

    MicroFiction Monday – Sh!

  21. Hi Nessa,
    No, it’s pure fiction. Although I did spend 9 years in the RAF.

  22. quilly said

    Joking is good therapy. It took me from wisecracks to cover childhood embarrassments to stand up comedy so nobody would ask me to “think” to public speaking. I have the ability to “read” and adapt to my audience and am perfectly comfortable in front of crowds — but I was once a painfully shy adolescent.

    Avatar — is that what it means to be reborn?

    Saving People — Amoeba wrote a creepy little story on population control with a much similar theme. Still waiting for a rejection slip from the publisher.

  23. I enjoyed it all, but laughed out loud at the Sign!

  24. Hi Quilly,
    Yes, joking is very handy. As for those rejections, I’ve had over 1,000 in the last 25 years.

    Hi Susan,
    Thanks for the kind words. That one seems to be going down well.

  25. Brian said

    Now I always thought the aristocracy was inbred so much they all died out!

  26. juliana said

    pretty girls and bullying – funny how well they go together.

    laughed at the sign and the 55 sounds uncomfortably familiar

  27. Bullied enough so it’s time to do some bullying?

  28. hope said

    Ah when recruiting had a “gentler” side. :) Nicely done.

  29. Hi Brian,
    No, they’re still around, owning most of British land.

    Hi Juliana,
    Thanks for that. Yes, a strange mix.

    Hi Alice,
    Sadly some do, don’t they?

    Hi Hope,
    Many thanks. Much appreciated.

  30. You want politically correct? Come to America. We are killing ourselves with politically correct. I don’t just mean figuratively either. I so agree with you on your assessment of jokes.

    Have a terrific day. :)

  31. Hi Sandee,
    Thanks for that. Mindst you, if it’s worse in America than here, it’s very bad.

  32. Nanc said

    ‘Beware of the sign’

    ha! – good one.
    ;-)

  33. Hi Anthony–
    Do you ever sleep? how do you write so much and so well??

    Hey, ‘avatar’ is the OSI prompt for this coming week–I happen to know because it’s ‘mine’…so as usual, you’re precocious!

    Thank you, Anthony–

  34. Hi Nanc,
    Thanks for that. Glad you liked it :-)

    Hi Beth,
    Many thanks for the kind words. I suppose all my blogging and writing takes about 2 hours a day.

  35. Geraldine said

    Another great post Anthony, it’s hard to know where to begin. Ill just say, thanks again for all that you share with all of us. This is a great place to stop by for a laugh,to be informed and to be inspired.

    Hope all is well, G

  36. Hi Geraldine,
    Many thanks for those kind words. It makes it all worthwhile.

  37. Stan Ski said

    As the saying goes – Laughter is the best medicine.
    The movie Avatar intrigues me.
    Perhaps the operating theatre is where yout actor should be.
    Flash 55 gets you thinking.
    If we’re honest, we all react to new ‘toys’ like children.

  38. Hi Stan,
    Thanks for the comment. A lot of sense in your words.

  39. KB said

    Sorry I’m so late for 55. I know it’s fiction but this seemed so real…it gave me chills.

  40. Nydia said

    Loved the sign joke. And I agree about jokes. So necessary to laugh at least once everyday. By coincidence my little son read an article about the benefits of laughing and we ended up laughing out loud of Sherlock Holmes’ joke about him camping with Watson and he asking his secretary in the middle of the night, “Watson,look up and tell me what you see”. Watson obeys and says, “I see millions of stars”. Holmes asks, “And what’s your conclusion?”. Watson replies, “My conclusion is that maybe around them there are planets with life like in Earth!”. And Holmes replies, “Don’t be stupid, Watson, it only means that someone stole our tent!”

    Kisses from Nydia.

  41. I so agree with Jokes. We’ve lost our sense of humor which is probably prodding the nastiness that seems more prevalent now. Great little essay.

  42. Hi KB,
    Thanks for that. Yes, it’s a serious subject.

    Hi Nydia,
    Loved the joke :-) Glad you liked the post.

    Hi Tumblewords,
    Many thanks. Yes, jokes are so very important to who we are.

  43. Reader Wil said

    Good morning Anthony! You have written again a great post. About humor you said:”A society that
    cannot laugh at itself is ruined. Joking, you see, is a serious business”. That’s right. And therefore I like the British sitcoms, like “Dad’s Army”and “Allo, Allo”. But also “The Cosby Show”, where Dr Huxtable shows a lot of self-mockery.
    Thanks for your comment, Anthony! You said that John Nettles retired. Such a pity. I still miss “Inspector Morse”. Though “Lewis”is rather good too.

  44. Hi Reader Wil,
    Thanks for that. Yes, the period of the Brit TV Whodunit has passed its prime, I’m afraid. The other one – A Touch of Frost – is about to screen its very last story. Lewis is good, but hasn’t the panache of Morse, and although Midsomer Murders is to continue, it is with a new actor and character playing lead – Barnaby’s cousin, would you believe?

  45. Fame hunger is really good.

    doing the undoing

  46. Hi Gautami,
    Thanks for that. Glad you liked it.

  47. Lilibeth said

    You have a way of using the opposite side of the prompt. I enjoy it.

  48. Hi Lilibeth,
    Thanks for that, and I like that phrase.

  49. Rajlakshmi said

    thats another brilliant set of microfition…
    loved the world’s my stage the most :)

  50. Hi Rajlakshmi,
    Thanks for the kind words. Much appreciated.

  51. thommyg said

    Fame Hunger is a sad reality for many women. You’ve captured the struggle well.

  52. Hi Thom,
    Many thanks. It’s a mad world sometimes.

  53. Carina said

    Great point, and well made. Just nuzzling food. Quite an image.

  54. Hi Carina,
    Thanks for that. Glad you liked it.

  55. dustus said

    What a fantastic post! Enjoyed “The Sign,” “To Be,” and the “A Thought” pieces in particular.
    Have a wonderful day,
    adam

  56. Hi Adam,
    Thanks for the kind words. Much appreciated.

  57. Hi Tony, Nicely, nicely, nicely!! Sounds like Victoria Beckham in your 3WW!

  58. Hi Andy,
    Many thanks. Yes, she’s one of the chief culprits, isn’t she.

  59. jabblog uk said

    Oh yes, humour is a very serious business. Some people don’t seem to have a sense of humour though they can develop one with help ;-)
    I laughed, somewhat ironically, at the ‘poor’ GPs complaining about seeing as many as 35 patients in a day – pity the poor teacher seeing 30 – 35 all in one go!

  60. Hi Jabblog,
    I think some people need a lot of help to get their sense of humour back, including many doctors ;-)

  61. trisha said

    loved it all, specially explanation of “joke”

  62. Hi Trisha,
    Thanks for that. Glad you liked it.

  63. Jaymie said

    Ah, the death of humor allows for the death of many other things. Sad.

  64. Hi Jaymie,
    It does indeed. It’s so vital to so much.

  65. suzicate said

    Got a chuckle out of Child Memory.Fame Hunger is sad but true.

  66. Hi Suzicate,
    Thanks for that. Glad you liked them.

  67. Jay said

    I think you’ve hit the nail on the head. Our failure to allow people to laugh and poke fun at anyone and everything is a symptom of the sickness in our society today. ALL humour is at someone or something’s expense or it wouldn’t work. So … are we to ban laughing? We’d all be the worse off for that!

  68. Hi Jay,
    Thanks for that. You’ve got it just right.

  69. waystationone said

    beware of sign…lol.

    fame hunger was sobering…

    but a few good chuckles along the way…

  70. I am constitutionally incapable of telling a good joke well.
    One of the things that people who go to dating services always say is that they want someone with “a sense of humor”. But that is SO subjective. What one person finds funny, another will find (pick one or more) stupid, disgusting, insulting, or worst of all, unfunny.

  71. Patti said

    I LOVE your “sign” entry! Very funny!

  72. Hi Brian,
    Thanks for that. I like to vary between fun and seriousness.

    Hi Roger,
    I think you raise an important point about humour here. You can’t please everyone, so some will always find any joke insulting or unfunny. So if we had to stop being insulting or unfunny, humour would HAVE to disappear completely.

    Hi Patti,
    Many thanks. Glad you liked it.

  73. Dee said

    Loved “The World’s a Stage” – the original reality tv!
    Saving people hit’s home with all the health care hoopla over here, and fame hunger was marvelous – just watched a show on what lengths people (mostly women) will go to be beautiful – the world has gone bonkers!
    Agree with your thought on fast living – it also leaves no time for thought which seems kind of necessary for creativity.

  74. Hi Dee,
    Thanks for that. Yes, if people spent more time getting bored rather than thinking new ways to deal with image, we may have a more creative world.

  75. zephyr said

    I like coming back to your ‘growing through the week’ posts, to be able to read them one by one. Fame hunger hits the nail in the head. what won’t women do in the name of fashion!

    and the thought about do-gooders! great.

  76. Fame Hunger was sadly too real.

    Child Memory gave me a good laugh.

    Great work!

  77. Cheong said

    The Sign had me in stitches!

  78. Hi Zephyr,
    Thanks for that. Glad you like the post. Fame hunger is certainly a problem.

    Hi Jay,
    Many thanks. Much appreciated.

    Hi Cheong,
    Thanks for that. A bit of humour is always good.

  79. Bullying is one of those cycles that need to be broken.

  80. Hi Alice,
    It certainly is. One day it might be broken.

  81. sandy said

    made my day sandy

  82. Hi Sandy,
    Thanks for the kind words.

  83. derrick2 said

    Hi Anthony,

    Lots to enjoy this week besides ‘To Be’, and your Brit News on aristocrats is also in line with the RWP prompt!

  84. “Those humans creating a conscious Earth” I pray you’re correct Anthony, but at times it feels quite unconscious… :(
    …rob
    Image & Verse

  85. Wow, 13 news clips and not one of them makes me feel better about our world, kind of sad in a way.

  86. Hi Derrick,
    Thanks for that. Yes, there is a tie-in with the Aristos, isn’t there?

    Hi Rob,
    Yes, I know what you mean.

    Hi Calicocrazy,
    Yes, the news ia a bit depressing – which is why I try to balance it with some fun poetry and fiction.

  87. betsy said

    LOL! Thanks…I think everyone needed a laugh today!

  88. wordwand said

    you’ve got a lovely sense of humour; a tremendous effort you’re putting in this blog , good luck.

  89. Hi Betsy,
    Thanks for that. It’s always good to try to laugh, I find.

    Hi Wordwand,
    Many thanks for the kind words. It more a labour of love than an effort.

  90. Grandma said

    “boredom drives creativity”

    Sorry, but I have to differ on that one. Deadlines frequently push my creativity. Boredom doesn’t seem to produce much of anything. Unless it’s the “idle hands are the devil’s workshop” type of creation. Not that Grandma ever gets into trouble!

    My TT: Totally Obsessed

  91. Hi Grandma,
    I’m sure you don’t get into trouble :-)
    I suppose different people can work in different ways.

  92. Anthony,
    Once again a thought provoking piece. I too, believe laughter is the best medicine.
    Pamela

  93. lissa said

    THE WORLD’S A STAGE – interesting

    CHILD MEMORY – I like this one, I feel this about most new things, no matter the age

    FAME HUNGER – sad but true

  94. Where some serve an entrée, you provide an all-you-can-eat buffet – with a salad bar! This could easily become one of my favorite restaurants… Er, I meant blogs.

    Food for the mind?

  95. I enjoy reading your Blog, this is so true:

    “A THOUGHT: Fast living destroys creativity. This is
    because they don’t have time to get bored. And boredom
    drives creativity on”

    Gerardine

  96. I enjoyed Child Memory. I like Dr. Who. I’ve been watching some of the recent ones that I missed.

  97. Adesi said

    i come from a place where some are extreme and others totally lack it! guess that is what you mean when you say ‘ruined society!’

    Ranting n Panting

  98. Hi Pamela,
    Many thanks. It certainly is.

    Hi Lissa,
    Yes, I think it’s always important to retain that inner child – and know when to put it away, of course.

    Hi Kiera,
    Many thanks for the kind words, and welcome.

    Hi Gerardine,
    Thanks for that. Much appreciated.

    Hi Shelley,
    Yes, Dr Who is one of my favourites. Such imaginative writing.

    Hi AD,
    Yes, any society that is out of balance is missing so much.

  99. I enjoyed “Child Memory” this morning. Made me think of how computers seem to accelerate time in a lot of ways.

  100. Hi Sandy,
    Thanks for that. Yes, computers certainly accelerate things.

  101. Oh Anthony, don’t get me started about drug companies…..

    LOVE the ‘vial’ implications here in your 55 this week. That’s all I’m gonna say. Play on words intended.

    This is my 55 this week!

    [if you decide to stop by, scroll down below my Show n tell, as always, to find my FF55]

    Have a glorious weekend.

  102. Hi Hootin’ Anni,
    I like the pun :-) Yes, they’re pretty bad, aren’t they?

  103. I really like the Fame Hunger and your 55 truly ROCK! Amazing post, Anthony! hugs,shakira

  104. Hi Shakira,
    Thanks for that. Glad you liked it.

  105. Liked the 55 Flash Fiction, I suspected foul play with the disease absent so long, and that last line confirmed it.

  106. Hi Peter,
    Thanks for that. Much appreciated.

  107. Your 55 is wonderfully creepy.

  108. Hi Anthony, I’m not sure that is fiction. :) )

  109. Hi Enchanted Oak,
    Thanks for that. I like creepy.

    Hi Eaton,
    You could have a point there ;-)

  110. Jingle said

    http://jingleyanqiu.wordpress.com/2010/03/25/thursday-is-awards-shower-day-this-week-week-11-participants/

    sweetest poet award,
    Happy Friday!

  111. Hi Jingle,
    Thanks for that. Much appreciated.

  112. mona said

    LOL @ the first microfiction! Nice definition of man :D
    I like the world being a stage piece. I have often wondered about what the ‘pits’ in Elizabethan age were like in the theater. Can’t imagine ppl actually standing in pits to watch a play!

    You are so right about the avatar!

    The 55ve is a scary picture! disease and health care go hand in hand. The irony is like ‘ there have got to be poor existing on this earth, otherwise whom will we exercise charity on!

  113. Hi Mona,
    Thanks for that. You raise an important point on poverty and charity.

  114. Buzzard said

    Your fiction is wonderful. However, like others have said I am not so sure your 55 on pharmaceuticals was fiction.

    Thanks for commenting on and visiting my Friday 55.

  115. Hi Buzzard,
    Thanks for that. Yes, I could imagine it really happening.

  116. jessie said

    i really enjoyed your thoughts — especially the last one.
    your flash fiction 55 — i’m not too sure how much fiction is in that one. i bet there’s more reality than any government wants us to know…

    just saying…

    have a wonderful weekend and beyond Anthony,

  117. Felicitas said

    A superb 55! The truly scary thing about it though is how plausible such a scenario might actually be. (No, I’m NOT paranoid – not at all!)

  118. Hi Jessie,
    Thanks for that – and you might be right.

    Hi Felicitas,
    Many thanks. No, many people are saying that. It’s not paranoia – simply what people have come to expect.

  119. Nessa said

    Oh my. Is that what we have to look forward to with universal health care. People releasing diseases for profit?

  120. Hi Nessa,
    Ah, we’ve had universal healthcare in the UK for over 60 years.

  121. Shiver. Your 55 this week is entirely too possible.

  122. waystationone said

    tight 55…sometimes i wonder…

  123. G-Man said

    Tony…
    This is what I actually feel what goes on!!!
    Excellent 55 My friend!
    Thank you for this eye-opening story, and have a Kick Ass Week-End…G

  124. Monkey Man said

    Love stopping by for my weekly fix of A. North. Love that bit on jokes. I actually lost a job to a sense of humor that was too edgy. Sad how our society takes itself so seriously when the mass hysteria you describe would actually be helpful. Oh yah, liked the 55 as well. Are you sure it is fiction??

  125. Hi Alice,
    It is indeed.

    Hi Brian,
    You’re not alone in this.

    Hi G-Man,
    Thanks for that. Yes, it makes you wonder.

    Hi Monkey Man,
    Many thanks. I hope it’s fiction, but …
    And that’s terrible about the job.

  126. pieceofpie said

    enjoyed the piece on laughter…

  127. Hi Pieceofpie,
    Thanks for that. Glad you liked it.

  128. Patti said

    My dad worked for the US Public Health Service. He had a fit when they stopped giving the small pox vaccination. ‘They’ll be sorry someday,” he predicted. I hope he’s never proven right.

    He’d like your 55, as do I.

    I’m up here.

  129. Hi Patti,
    I hope so, too.

  130. So like what you did with Avatar. Thanks, Anthony.

  131. Hi Sandy,
    Thanks for that. I tried to get all meanings into it.

  132. jaime said

    i really liked all the world’s a stage… the crime stuff is right up my alley

  133. Hi Jaime,
    Thanks for that. Glad you liked it.

  134. Robin said

    Flash 55 is chilling!

    Your thought about living fast and creativity is interesting. I never thought about it that way, but I think you’ve got quite a point! Glad I’m not living fast, but if I slow down more, will I become more creative? Wish that were the case!

  135. Hi Robin,
    Thanks for that. Yes, I think a slower life allows more time to think, and from there creativity can come.

  136. I like your RWP poem this week — also very interesting was your flash fiction “The World’s a Stage”. I think it would be really interesting to see that piece developed into a long form story — investigating the psychology of the narrator, seeing if he’s ever caught, and so forth. The RWP poem speaks to me, with I think an idea about the consciousness of the Earth itself. It’s been proposed that the Earth itself is a living, and metaphorically, “breathing” entity not unlike us carbon-based life forms.

    Very interesting and thought provoking this week.

    -Nicole

  137. Hi Nicole,
    Thanks for the kind words. Yes, there is a wealth of literature on the conbscious Earth scenario, and personally I think there could be something to it. Infact I wrote about it in this essay, if you’re interested:

    http://beyondtheblog.wordpress.com/2008/01/16/why-are-we-here

  138. Leo said

    Life is changed.. new morn new norm.. A very interesting poem, with a very different ending..

  139. Hi Leo,
    Many thanks. Glad you liked it.

  140. Tammie said

    Avatar: wonderful wit in this poem.

  141. Hi Tammie,
    Many thanks. Much appreciated.

  142. Ah, the ever illusive, changeable avatar – a delightful read. The last line is so clever.

  143. Hi Tumblewords,
    Many thanks. Yes, in many ways an avatar is a reflection of our changing ideals.

  144. patti said

    Such and excellent collection of thoughts and poetry…such talent! Loved the avatar poem as well as some of the other quips such as “The Sign”- it made me chuckle!

  145. Amity said

    “new morn, new norm”…yes, each day brings a new avatar in us!

    good morning!

  146. Hi Patti,
    Thanks for the kind words. Much appreciated.

    Hi Amity,
    Yes, it certainly seems to.

  147. gabrielle said

    fame hunger – chilling. what does it take? erasing yourself to be noticed?
    the joke: “a mild neurosis in the form of laughter” – loved this!

  148. Hi Gabrielle,
    Thanks for the kind words. Glad you liked the post.

  149. william said

    very interesting Anthony, and I agree about the Rugby makes u mad lol…

  150. Hi William,
    Many thanks. Much appreciated.

  151. Loch Rob said

    Anthony, I enjoyed your piece on avatar. In the end, how true.

  152. Jim said

    Nice on Avatar, Anthony. Your line, “new morn, new norm,” had me thinking of on more set, “new mom.” Then I realized you make rhyme, so good at it, and that wouldn’t work. :)
    ..

  153. Hi Loch Rob,
    Thanks for that. Much appreciated.

    Hi Jim,
    I’ll have to see if I can fit it in in another poem ;-)

  154. pamela said

    love it
    “reason
    reasonable
    reasoned”
    super
    Pamela

  155. Hi Pamela,
    Thanks for that. much appreciated.

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