Tag Archives: poems

Podcast Episode: Philosophy In Strange Forms

Pip: thenotsomightyom is out here asking the big questions — meaning of life, the nature of reality — and somehow landing on coffee.

Mara: That's actually a fair summary. The posts move through existential territory: ancient mysteries, ego, vanity, and what we choose to hold onto. Let's start with those big questions and where they lead.

Existential Questions

Pip: The frame here is deceptively simple — what is the meaning of life, what makes you question reality — but both poems treat those questions as something you live sideways into, not solve head-on.

Mara: "Ectoplasm" sets the terms early. After running through philosophy, justification, and fear, it lands here: "It all comes down to ectoplasm."

Pip: Which is either the most honest answer to the meaning of life or the most honest admission that there isn't one. Either way, the dog knows more than we do, apparently.

Mara: The poem does lean on that — the hound understands "ancient lore" while we're busy accumulating thoughts with lots of noughts. There's something genuinely deflating about that image, in a useful way.

Pip: It punctures the whole enterprise of grand explanation without being nihilistic about it.

Mara: "The coffee….." takes a similar angle but from the inside out. The question there is about a moment that made you question reality, and the poem works through ego, shame, crime, wealth, and vanity — not as a catalogue of disasters, but as things the speaker has genuinely moved past.

Pip: The lines "I've managed to crack that ego thing / After all it's just drug dealers bling" do a lot of work in very little space.

Mara: And then the poem pivots hard. After all that clearing away — the relationships, the possessions, the entitled faces on television — the moment of reality-questioning turns out to be a grapefruit rind and a cup of bland coffee at breakfast.

Pip: With a footnote admitting the coffee was actually fine.

Mara: Which is the point, really. The poem earns that landing because it did the philosophical work first. The mundane detail doesn't undercut the reflection — it's the destination of it. Presence over performance, breakfast over vanity.

Pip: Both poems use humor as a delivery mechanism for something that would be insufferable if it were sincere all the way through.

Mara: That balance — earnest question, wry answer — is consistent across both pieces. The small absurdity at the end is what makes the larger observation stick.


Mara: What stays with me is that both poems arrive somewhere grounded after starting somewhere vast.

Pip: Big questions, small landings. There's probably a philosophy in that. Next time, we'll see what other territory comes up.

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