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The lineāāMy shineās a guillotine, black diamonds gleam, / Timeās a corpse, no medics for the dream. / Custom death, I call the jeweller first, / Then the coronerāyour fateās been cursed. / My watch ticks doom, no mercy, no pause, / Your reflection kneels to my unholy lawsāāis a haunting exploration of power, mortality,…

The philosophical underpinning of this vivid, violent poetic imagery lies in the tension between purity and corruption, a recurring theme in existential and moral philosophy. The speakerās ābarbaric anticsā and katana-wielding poetry reflect a Nietzschean rejection of conventional morality, embracing a radical, destructive act to ācleanseā a world deemed inherently impure. This aligns with Nietzscheās…

Hedonism, as articulated by thinkers like Epicurus or modern utilitarian’s, prioritizes pleasure as the ultimate good, often encouraging the pursuit of immediate sensory gratification. In the poem, hook-up and porn culture embody this philosophy, reducing sex to a “fleeting minute of plight” driven by “impulsive pleasures and desires.” This relentless chase for instant gratification is…

The poem Vultures depict the hook-up and porn culture as reducing sex to a “fleeting minute of plight” resonates deeply with both philosophical and biblical critiques of objectification and alienation. Philosophically, this aligns with existentialist perspectives, such as those of Jean-Paul Sartre and Martin Buber, who argue that objectificationātreating others as mere objects for gratificationāalienates…

The concept of “broken soul ties” in the poem resonates with Martin Buberās I-Thou philosophy, which champions authentic, mutual relationships where individuals encounter each other as sacred subjects. When soul ties break, it signals a collapse of this I-Thou dynamic, reducing others to mere objects (I-It), fostering isolation and distrust. This erosion of trust, as…

The lineāāMy shineās a guillotine, black diamonds gleam, / Timeās a corpse, no medics for the dream. / Custom death, I call the jeweller first, / Then the coronerāyour fateās been cursed. / My watch ticks doom, no mercy, no pause, / Your reflection kneels to my unholy lawsāāis a haunting exploration of power, mortality,…

The philosophical underpinning of this vivid, violent poetic imagery lies in the tension between purity and corruption, a recurring theme in existential and moral philosophy. The speakerās ābarbaric anticsā and katana-wielding poetry reflect a Nietzschean rejection of conventional morality, embracing a radical, destructive act to ācleanseā a world deemed inherently impure. This aligns with Nietzscheās…

Hedonism, as articulated by thinkers like Epicurus or modern utilitarian’s, prioritizes pleasure as the ultimate good, often encouraging the pursuit of immediate sensory gratification. In the poem, hook-up and porn culture embody this philosophy, reducing sex to a “fleeting minute of plight” driven by “impulsive pleasures and desires.” This relentless chase for instant gratification is…

The poem Vultures depict the hook-up and porn culture as reducing sex to a “fleeting minute of plight” resonates deeply with both philosophical and biblical critiques of objectification and alienation. Philosophically, this aligns with existentialist perspectives, such as those of Jean-Paul Sartre and Martin Buber, who argue that objectificationātreating others as mere objects for gratificationāalienates…

The concept of “broken soul ties” in the poem resonates with Martin Buberās I-Thou philosophy, which champions authentic, mutual relationships where individuals encounter each other as sacred subjects. When soul ties break, it signals a collapse of this I-Thou dynamic, reducing others to mere objects (I-It), fostering isolation and distrust. This erosion of trust, as…
āDo not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moths and vermin destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven⦠For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.ā
ā Matthew 6:19-21 (NIV)As I reflect on the words of my own heart poured into verse, I find myself wrestling with a timeless tension: the allure of worldly success versus the quiet radiance of a soul refined by grace. My poem begins with a vivid image: āOnce it is said and done, / I will feel like J. Coleāwith the Roc-A-Fella chain / hanging politely around his neck.ā The Roc-A-Fella chain, a symbol of material triumph and cultural prestige, glistens with the promise of recognition, wealth, and power. In my mindās eye, I see J. Cole in 2014, at the height of his ascent, wearing that chain not as a burden but as a badge of success.
Itās a tempting visionāone that stirs pride and makes the flesh feel āboastful,ā as I write, āwhen my materialistic gains glisten with might.āYet, as I journey through this āturbulent life,ā I am confronted by a deeper truth, one echoed in Scripture and wrestled with by philosophers through the ages: no material gain, no matter how dazzling, can outshine the soul when it is freed from its vices. The Bible reminds us in Ecclesiastes 5:10, āWhoever loves money never has enough; whoever loves wealth is never satisfied with their income. This too is meaningless.ā The Roc-A-Fella chain may hang politely, but it cannot illuminate.

It may glisten, but it cannot endure .The Pride of the Flesh and the Humility of the Soul In the second stanza, I confess, āWith pride growing tense, / I feel boastful in the flesh / when my materialistic gains glisten with might.ā This pride is a familiar temptation, one that the Apostle Paul addresses in Galatians 6:14: āMay I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.ā Pride, born of material success, is a fleeting fireāit burns brightly but leaves ashes. The āturbulent lifeā I describe is not just a personal struggle but a universal one, where the pursuit of worldly acclaim often drowns out the still, small voice of the soul.Philosophically, this tension resonates with SĆøren Kierkegaardās concept of the āaestheticā versus the āethicalā or āreligiousā life. In Either/Or, Kierkegaard warns that a life devoted to external pleasures and achievementsāwhether fame, wealth, or even a Roc-A-Fella chaināleads to despair when it fails to anchor the self in something eternal. My poemās boastfulness in the flesh reflects this aesthetic stage, where the ego revels in what it can see and touch. But as Kierkegaard suggests, true fulfillment lies in transcending the self, aligning with a higher purpose.

For me, that purpose is found in the biblical call to āseek first his kingdom and his righteousnessā (Matthew 6:33), where the soul begins to shed its vices.Shedding Vices, Illuminating the SoulThe heart of the poemāand my own spiritual journeyālies in the lines: āNo material gains can outshine / my soul when it sheds its vices / I have consumed through my iris.ā Here, I acknowledge that the vices Iāve taken in through my eyesāenvy, greed, prideāhave clouded my soul. Yet, there is hope in the shedding. The verb āshedsā evokes a snake sloughing off its old skin, a process both painful and liberating. In biblical terms, this mirrors the process of sanctification, where we are ātransformed by the renewing of [our] mindā (Romans 12:2). The vices Iāve consumed are not permanent; they can be cast off through repentance and grace.Philosophically, this aligns with Platoās allegory of the cave, where the soul, initially captivated by shadows on the wall (material illusions), ascends toward the light of truth. The āirisā in my poem becomes a gatewayānot just for taking in the worldās temptations but for beholding the divine. When I write, āOn the stage of life, / my soul continues to shed and illuminate like stars at night,ā I envision a soul that, though still on the stage of an imperfect world, shines with a light that is not its own. Psalm 36:9 declares, āFor with you is the fountain of life; in your light we see light.ā My soulās illumination is not self-generated; it reflects the eternal light of God, just as stars reflect the sunās glow in the night sky.The Illusion of the Chain and the Reality of GraceThe poemās closing lines bring the imagery full circle: āFrom afar, you might think Iām wearing a Roc-A-Fella chain / like 2014 J. Cole / when my soul shines through this lifeās horrific episode.ā Here, I grapple with perception versus reality. From a distance, my life might look like J. Coleās in his 2014 Forest Hills Drive eraāsuccessful, polished, adorned with the trappings of achievement. But the true radiance comes not from a chain but from a soul refined by Godās grace, shining through the āhorrific episodeā of lifeās trials.This distinction echoes Jesusā teaching in Matthew 23:27-28, where he compares the Pharisees to āwhitewashed tombsā that appear beautiful outwardly but are āfull of dead peopleās bonesā within. The Roc-A-Fella chain, like the Phariseesā outward piety, is a facade if it lacks inner transformation. Philosophically, this resonates with Jean-Jacques Rousseauās critique of societal masks in The Social Contract, where he argues that humans often lose their authentic selves to the pressures of social status. My poem rejects this mask, choosing instead the authenticity of a soul that shines despite lifeās horrors.A Call to Eternal TreasureAs I reflect on my poem and its deeper meaning, I am reminded of 1 Peter 1:24-25: āAll people are like grass, and all their glory is like the flowers of the field; the grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of the Lord endures forever.ā The Roc-A-Fella chain, like all material gains, will fade. But the soul, when it sheds its vices and aligns with Godās truth, becomes a star in the eternal night skyāa light that endures.This journey is not mine alone. It is the human condition to wrestle with pride, to chase fleeting treasures, and to seek something greater. As I navigate this turbulent life, I hold fast to the promise of Philippians 1:6: āHe who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.ā My soulās illumination is not complete, but it is ongoing, a process of shedding and shining, of letting go of chains to embrace the eternal.In the end, I hope that when you see me from afar, you donāt see a Roc-A-Fella chain but a soul that, by Godās grace, reflects His light. For it is in that light, not in the glitter of worldly gains, that I find my true selfāand my true home.
Inspired By :

The lineāāMy shineās a guillotine, black diamonds gleam, / Timeās a corpse, no medics for the dream. / Custom death, I call the jeweller first, / Then the coronerāyour fateās been cursed. / My watch ticks doom, no mercy, no pause, / Your reflection kneels to my unholy lawsāāis a haunting exploration of power, mortality,…

The philosophical underpinning of this vivid, violent poetic imagery lies in the tension between purity and corruption, a recurring theme in existential and moral philosophy. The speakerās ābarbaric anticsā and katana-wielding poetry reflect a Nietzschean rejection of conventional morality, embracing a radical, destructive act to ācleanseā a world deemed inherently impure. This aligns with Nietzscheās…

Hedonism, as articulated by thinkers like Epicurus or modern utilitarian’s, prioritizes pleasure as the ultimate good, often encouraging the pursuit of immediate sensory gratification. In the poem, hook-up and porn culture embody this philosophy, reducing sex to a “fleeting minute of plight” driven by “impulsive pleasures and desires.” This relentless chase for instant gratification is…

The poem Vultures depict the hook-up and porn culture as reducing sex to a “fleeting minute of plight” resonates deeply with both philosophical and biblical critiques of objectification and alienation. Philosophically, this aligns with existentialist perspectives, such as those of Jean-Paul Sartre and Martin Buber, who argue that objectificationātreating others as mere objects for gratificationāalienates…

The concept of “broken soul ties” in the poem resonates with Martin Buberās I-Thou philosophy, which champions authentic, mutual relationships where individuals encounter each other as sacred subjects. When soul ties break, it signals a collapse of this I-Thou dynamic, reducing others to mere objects (I-It), fostering isolation and distrust. This erosion of trust, as…

The lineāāMy shineās a guillotine, black diamonds gleam, / Timeās a corpse, no medics for the dream. / Custom death, I call the jeweller first, / Then the coronerāyour fateās been cursed. / My watch ticks doom, no mercy, no pause, / Your reflection kneels to my unholy lawsāāis a haunting exploration of power, mortality,…

The philosophical underpinning of this vivid, violent poetic imagery lies in the tension between purity and corruption, a recurring theme in existential and moral philosophy. The speakerās ābarbaric anticsā and katana-wielding poetry reflect a Nietzschean rejection of conventional morality, embracing a radical, destructive act to ācleanseā a world deemed inherently impure. This aligns with Nietzscheās…

Hedonism, as articulated by thinkers like Epicurus or modern utilitarian’s, prioritizes pleasure as the ultimate good, often encouraging the pursuit of immediate sensory gratification. In the poem, hook-up and porn culture embody this philosophy, reducing sex to a “fleeting minute of plight” driven by “impulsive pleasures and desires.” This relentless chase for instant gratification is…

The poem Vultures depict the hook-up and porn culture as reducing sex to a “fleeting minute of plight” resonates deeply with both philosophical and biblical critiques of objectification and alienation. Philosophically, this aligns with existentialist perspectives, such as those of Jean-Paul Sartre and Martin Buber, who argue that objectificationātreating others as mere objects for gratificationāalienates…

The concept of “broken soul ties” in the poem resonates with Martin Buberās I-Thou philosophy, which champions authentic, mutual relationships where individuals encounter each other as sacred subjects. When soul ties break, it signals a collapse of this I-Thou dynamic, reducing others to mere objects (I-It), fostering isolation and distrust. This erosion of trust, as…
I woke to a shadow in my room, my own face staring back, twisted with a grin that wasnāt mine. It held my gun, accusing me: āYou thought you could embody the essence of wrathās?ā Its words cut deep, naming āfriendsā Iād killedālives Iād ended or betrayed in moments I canāt unmake. Jean-Paul Sartreās words haunt me: Iām condemned to be free, chained to every choice Iāve made. I tried to deny it, to flee this mirror of my guilt, but Sartreās ābad faithā mocks my escape. I canāt outrun myself.
The shadow is me, my truth, my past, demanding I face it. Running through Paris, the city warped into a nightmareāChamps-ĆlysĆ©es turned to āshadowed veins,ā ghosts whispering my sins. Martin Heideggerās Angst grips me; this is dread, not just of death, but of being. My āheart racing like a bullet train,ā my āeyes wide open and sharply aware like an eagleāāthese are my body screaming what Heidegger calls Being-toward-death. The world collapses into this moment, this chase, where Iām stripped bare, my existence raw and exposed. The streets screech, the wolf howls, and Iām alone with my finitude. Friedrich Nietzscheās voice echoes: āYou have not yet overcome your shadow.ā This doppelgƤnger is my shadow, the parts of me Iāve buriedārage, guilt, the blood on my hands. It threatens to ācageā my soul in a āpermanent curse,ā like Nietzscheās eternal recurrence, forcing me to relive my failures forever. I want to scream, to reject it, but itās me. Iām the accuser and the accused.SĆøren Kierkegaardās despair claws at me. My āstorm of anxietyā is his sickness unto deathāIām torn between fleeing who I am and fearing to become who I must be.
The shadowās gun at my head is my own refusal to reconcile with myself. It says, āThis is for all my friends you have killed,ā and I feel the weight of every wrong, every wound Iāve caused. Despair chokes me, but Kierkegaard whispers of a leapāto face myself, to choose authenticity. Then the trigger clicks, and I wake, āhorrifically sweating heavily.ā Albert Camusā absurdism floods in. The world is absurdābeauty in the āmoon beaming,ā terror in the āstreets screeching.ā Iām Sisyphus, waking to push the boulder again. The shadow hasnāt vanished; it lingers in my mirror, my conscience. But Camus urges me to rebel, to create meaning in this chaos. Iām alive, breathing, despite the dread. I must forge purpose, not find it, confronting my shadow not with fear but with defiance, building a life from the fragments of my broken self.
Poem Treads
Inspired By :

The lineāāMy shineās a guillotine, black diamonds gleam, / Timeās a corpse, no medics for the dream. / Custom death, I call the jeweller first, / Then the coronerāyour fateās been cursed. / My watch ticks doom, no mercy, no pause, / Your reflection kneels to my unholy lawsāāis a haunting exploration of power, mortality,…

The philosophical underpinning of this vivid, violent poetic imagery lies in the tension between purity and corruption, a recurring theme in existential and moral philosophy. The speakerās ābarbaric anticsā and katana-wielding poetry reflect a Nietzschean rejection of conventional morality, embracing a radical, destructive act to ācleanseā a world deemed inherently impure. This aligns with Nietzscheās…

Hedonism, as articulated by thinkers like Epicurus or modern utilitarian’s, prioritizes pleasure as the ultimate good, often encouraging the pursuit of immediate sensory gratification. In the poem, hook-up and porn culture embody this philosophy, reducing sex to a “fleeting minute of plight” driven by “impulsive pleasures and desires.” This relentless chase for instant gratification is…

The poem Vultures depict the hook-up and porn culture as reducing sex to a “fleeting minute of plight” resonates deeply with both philosophical and biblical critiques of objectification and alienation. Philosophically, this aligns with existentialist perspectives, such as those of Jean-Paul Sartre and Martin Buber, who argue that objectificationātreating others as mere objects for gratificationāalienates…

The concept of “broken soul ties” in the poem resonates with Martin Buberās I-Thou philosophy, which champions authentic, mutual relationships where individuals encounter each other as sacred subjects. When soul ties break, it signals a collapse of this I-Thou dynamic, reducing others to mere objects (I-It), fostering isolation and distrust. This erosion of trust, as…