Tuesday, November 30, 2004

Gretchen

+ Gretchen
- Robert

+ What is the purpose of men?
- It is that which we find in silence.

- What is not ascribed monetary worth?
+ It is to be completely detached from the world.

+ What is it to experience personal change?
- It is the myopic view of eternal horizons.

- What is the past?
+ It is to be completely immersed in fog.

+ What is it to heal emotional wounds?
- It is a conduit through which ideals are transmitted to themselves.

- What is the affliction of those who are blind to fate?
+ It is anxiety of freedom.

+ What is it to walk away from the most significant things in one's life?
- It is the universal affectation brought on by unseen beauty.

- What is a good time? (timing-wise, not....you know!)
+ It is to walk the same path and not know where you are going.

+ What is it to be completely bare?
- It is still here, although very difficult to see.

- What is in the air when two people talk intimately?
+ It is to look in someone's eyes and see who he/she truly is.

+ What is it to gaze at someone from afar?
- It is finely gilded stucco on the ceiling of my mind.

- What is the brook which runs through my stream of consciousness?
+ It is to fall and never land.

+ What is it to say "I do?"
- It is the capturing of ideas through images.

- What is a flower doing on the ground?
+ It is to see inside oneself.

+ What is it to seek and not find?
- It is completed; it is completion

Exquisite Corpse

Here I have devoted a blog specifically to transcriptions of the results of 'games' of Exquisite Corpse.

What is Exquisite Corpse? Simple. One person starts with a blank sheet of paper and writes on the top a question in the form "What is ... ?" where '...' is whatever they want. They then fold the paper back so that this question cannot be seen. The paper is then passed to the next person (usually I only play with two people) and they write first a statement, or answer, in the form "It is ... ." and after that another question: "What is ... ?" They then fold the paper over again, and it continues until the page is filled and the last person writes only an answer. In this manner, a dialogue is constructed wherein questions are posed and answered, except that until the paper is unfurled each party does not know the questions they were answering, or how their questions were answered.

A 'good' game of Exquisite Corpse can take many forms...sometimes it's funny because it is nonsensical ("What is life?/It is peanuts.") but it can also be eerie in the amount of sense that it makes. There are also just bad games for whatever reason, the results of which are nonsensical and jilted, and it is clear that both parties had decidedly different ideas over how the game is to be played. That is to say that the purpose is not to only play with people with whom you have simpatico, although it can serve as an acid test for such a relationship, but that playing the game is a good way of examining the way two people interact non-verbally through writing. The two people have to inhabit the same space....you couldn't play over the telephone or internet, for instance, and have the same effect. I've found that it works really well in classes or other situations where the same external forces are being interpreted and processed by both parties....it sort of acts as a catalyst for the sympathetic question/answer pairs that make the game worthwhile.

All that being said, the real blog starts with a Corpse I did with Gretchen. Unless otherwise stated, I am a participant in Corpses posted here and the subject line will be the name(s) of the other person/people involved. I will always indicate who starts. Unlike the layout on the physical page, I condense the whole thing into question-answer couplets, but just remember that the question and answer were written by different people! Comments are more than welcome, and I myself will comment on every Corpse with a little 'analysis'.

I know I'm silly, but this kind of stuff makes me happy.....well, enjoy!