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Today I Killed My Newspaper

Mary Atwood | 11.04.2003 05:24

I killed my newspaper. I had to do it. I had no choice in the matter. One of us had to go.

Poetry

Today I Killed My Newspaper

 

Today I killed my newspaper.

It really wasn?t its fault.

It was nothing if not faithful,

Showing up at my doorstep diligently,

Patiently anticipating my footsteps,

Obediently awaiting my grasp,

Revealing its secrets with my sleight of hand.

 

For decades, its arrival heralded the new day,

A loyal companion for a quiet interlude,

A pleasant tête-à-tête over coffee each morning,

Sharing a chuckle or a tear.

 

Through tempests, tragedies and travesties,

It was a bedrock, a constant in a fleeting life.

Willing to arrive at a reasonable rate,

And stacking cooperatively for recycling.

 

But, slowly, my old friend seemed to change.

Its formerly easygoing manner   `

Became increasingly annoying, grating, stress-producing.

Harping and harping on the same themes,

Spouting half-truths, mistruths, non-truths,

Its words stabbing into my core,

Darting into my being,

Jarring my senses.

 

First, I felt disbelief;

Perhaps it was I who had changed.

My old friend did indeed look the same,

Unassuming and neat, awaiting my nod.

 

But now what in the past used to be safe sections were off limits,

And even previously amusing columnists and features offered no respite.

 

I was forced to face the fact that I was living with a stranger,

Possessed with its own strange doctrine,

Saying things I knew couldn?t possibly be true,

Talking about a world that didn?t exist.

 

I tried to ignore it, hoping things would get better,

That we could return to our old, complacent relationship.

 

But no;

It was relentless,

Day after day,

Insisting with its delusions, omissions, exaggerations,

Every day more outlandish,

The letters in the headlines blaring larger and larger.

 

So, today, with great sadness, reluctance and a sense of loss,

 I killed my newspaper.

I had to do it. I had no choice in the matter. One of us had to go.

 

It really wasn?t its fault, though.

It was only doing its job.

 

-

Mary Atwood
- e-mail: citizenjoan@aol.com

Comments

Hide the following 7 comments

I did kill mine too

11.04.2003 05:49

No comment

avie


wat about gthe telly

11.04.2003 08:36

good poem, but it is the TV News that is the worst offender at the moment.

momo


yep, no more guardian

11.04.2003 09:40

The Observer and Guardian have come out so pro war, with their headlines and leaders that I can't buy the paper anymore. I used to buy it because the comment, analysis, letters and G2 were all a good read, but false information is just too much.

propadanda


anti-war papers

11.04.2003 10:23

There are two papers who've stayed anti-war:
The Daily Mirror, god bless em
and.. Socialist Worker!

kurious oranj
- Homepage: http://www.socialistworker.co.uk


hey don't forget the morning star

11.04.2003 12:05

THEY'VE STAYED FULLY ANTI-WAR TOO

GR


fair play

11.04.2003 14:06

You're right GR.. and not just the Morning Star but most other socialist/communist papers, The Socialist, Action for Solidarity etc etc. Thanks for reminder not to be sectarian!

kurious oranj


The news you need:

11.04.2003 20:11

Chevy