I want to write an
honest sentence about exposition or, more accurately, about its lack.
Interpretation is a kind of exposure, like the time I peered down
from a cliff at a rocky pool and saw naked men and women sunning on
the rocks. There was also the sad parrot that destroyed his perch by
pecking at it. The sound interrupted our lunch, because nakedness
requires an obstacle to interpret its lack of cover. Fashion
statements are cover stories that we read over lunch, though I can't
imagine hovering like a drone over any of my recent meals. A drone
flew over us at the walk out of darkness, but drones don't kill
themselves so the point was lost on me. Drone operators do, for
reasons of alienation even from the killing that they do. Death in the age
of Dilbert, cubicle after cubicle inhabited by office chair soldiers;
I read that sitting kills us, so why not kill others while seated? Where do you find a cover story, when you never left your
chair? John says I should add question marks to my exposition on
exposition, but that would render too obvious the nakedness of my
punctuation. After a bag blew up in the Tube, dear leader wrote about
“terrorist losers.” I'm surprised he didn't spell it “loosers,”
as losers seems to be loosening over time, adding another vowel to
its slack elastic. John Lennon was a looser, but at least we could
sing along as if not to think about ourselves but about him. My
student who suffers from selective mutism says she likes to sing, but
not in public. That would be too much exposition, self- or otherwise.
I told my students that despite my hardened shell, seeing them write
over and over that haoles “lack breath” and are “foreigners”
started to hurt. The dull ache of being set apart. It's been a hard
year, Radhika writes on Instagram, but there aren't enough words to
explain. Her photograph seems divorced from any of that, exposure of
a different kind, an orange sun rising over surfers, because—as
she'd say—it's in the east. They seem to sit in the ocean, as if
divorced from gravity or balance, watching everything that's coming
up in its hunky glory.
--16 September 2017
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