Monthly Archives: October 2010

I try to do this.

I am by no means extreme, I don’t skip class for just about anything and I’m a perfectionist when it comes to a lot of things. Sure I like things neat and tidy, but that does not define me. I try not to do this exactly, but follow the underlying messages hidden here in my own ways. Be brave. Be Outrageous. Be True. Live for Today.

The people who believe that and electron is still a point…you are not allowed to return to class

Deakin

You could say there are a few geese around campus…

If you don’t agree with that, then pretend you do for the next four months.

Deakin

The S orbital is down here, havin’ probability. The p orbital is over here having a node; no problem… it’s not like they talk.

Deakin

Abyss

by Katrina Vandenberg

If the best love poems have a little darkness,
how far down can I go? Thousands of feet?
The coelecanth is near, but it’s too easy –
the metaphor nettable and clear, the lost
link found, the beginnings of our own bones
in its pelvic fins – and I want to write about love

with depth to hold the unverifiable, the oarfish
that survives with half its body gone.
I want it to hold the giant squid no one has seen
alive, strong enough to scar sperm whales;
sailors have claimed its tentacles unfurl
from the night’s water, taking down their mates.

But can such poems survive these confused witnesses?
Can they handle the scanty evidence that surfaces:
the mottled sick and dead, the night-feeding
viperfish impaling victims with fangs
at high speed, its first vertebra designed
to absorb the shock? And how much horror

can this poem sustain before you forbid me to say
some call this love, the hagfish that bores
into the unsuspecting body, rasping
its flesh from inside out? Am I making you
uncomfortable? The pressure at these depths
could crush a golf ball. Are you cold?

Or is it enough to be awed by the blue-
green photophores of the lantern fish, the brief
and brilliant light displays? What the lights say:
I want you. Not so close. I am moonlight;
I am not here. I would eat you raw –
tell me if you want me to stop.

If you’re good with calculus and okay with imaginary space, you’ll love these equations. For the rest of us, let’s skip it.

Deakin

This is where my favourite computer lab is housed ^^