Wednesday, April 2, 2014

New interview by xxx, which got shelved and why - MY OPINION: The support of women should be a given, not a controversy.




Alright to get up to speed. Read the following in order







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So, I received permission to publish the below interview on my own and one thing I want to say about the publisher and interviewer:  They didn't want a controversy (Which is a huge long shot as I only talked about writing) or perhaps a lawsuit?? (Even longer shot--think winning the lottery ) Further proof is the joke I use at the end of the interview, I was asked to change because "some might find it offensive". Although I share a difference of opinion with the interviewer and implications on all of this, I will continue to be friends with that individual, as people in general do not agree with everything one another thinks at all times. The interview is a  good one, featuring great questions and is one which I am damn proud of. It is about writing and process. It makes no reference to anything in any of the above blogs.

MY OPINION:  Supporting women and the support of women should be a given! I stand behind any involvement in this case which I've had.

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Timothy Gager Interviewed by "Name Redacted".

Name Redacted:  What is it about doors that makes for such a compelling image/metaphor in art and literature? 

Timothy Gager: The characteristic about doors, which I was utilizing was that they can open or close. They can keep things out or close and lock, never to be opened again, unless unlocked. As far as the ability to be used as metaphor, doors can be made from different materials, be painted different colors, can become unhinged. Doors can protect or be blown wide open. They can be the entry way to a mansion or an escape route from a trailer. Doors or "a door" can be the perfect prompt to delve into a poem or a story. 



ND:  Right.  And as you say doors can become “unhinged”.  In your poem On the Phone, In the Middle of the Night there is a violent unhinging taking place:

“My hands ball the sheets, ringing their necks until / death do us part? Once, your father choked your brother, / lifted him until he nodded off the wall, / years collapsing out of him – he never came back. /” 

This reads as intensely personal, but for all we know it could be a scene your mind lifted from a movie and transformed into a poem.  Do you consider yourself a poet of the confessional school?

TG: Yes, I am and if it's not my confessions it might be someone else's.  Often, I hear or experience something and I write it. Sometimes after it's done I need to ask permission regarding the borrowed pieces of the shambles. These lines from this poem in particular, reflecting and reading them back now are kind of unfair that I used them, even though I asked the involved party and they said it was ok. I question that a lot now, more than ever before. I question what gives me the right...what gives me the fucking right.



ND:  If you have gotten permission (which most writers don't even bother to obtain!) but if it is granted to you, or anyone, then it's my belief that the words need to be put out there.  They have touched you in a deep place.  This is such a strong poem.  It would be a pity not to have written it.  Since you write about what you know, see, experience and hear in this lifetime,  as long as it's written from a sincere heart, you have every fucking right to write it. 

Which poem in this collection was the most difficult for you, and why? 

TG: There is still harm being done to others by putting it out there, so I try to weigh the honesty/harm ratio carefully.

As far as difficult poems for me, some of them are more difficult to read because they are so personal, I feel naked in front of people. "What Do Men Want for Kim A" is difficult to read because it is misunderstood. People do not know Kim A. is Kim Addonizio and the poem is a satirical answer to her "What Do Women Want". Without the frame of reference I can come off as a creep.

The poem, "The Last Time in the Woods” is extremely tough for me to wrap myself around because it deals with a suicide attempt. Life is incredibly hard for people.



ND:  Life is often incredibly hard.  Does poetry give you a respite?

TG: Poetry gives me quiet time in my head. Quiet time in my head gives me respite.



ND:  What does writing fiction do for you?  I get riled up writing fiction, I get very wired and usually go out afterward, and eat something or take a walk or whatever.  You?

TG: Fiction...a beginning, a middle, and an end. Poetry can have 1-3 of those. To me fiction is the twisting and twirling of the truth; the truth is in there as what you want the frame of reference to be, but fiction is a blank canvas that you can throw paint on and I mean hurl it.


ND:  Tell us a joke.

TG: Jesus Christ is dying on the cross, his disciples are gathered around, crying. Peter looks up and notices that Jesus seems to be calling him, "Peter, come hither!" Immediately Peter rushes over to the cross, only to be hit severely over the head by the Roman guard. He gets on his feet again and wants to return to the other disciples when he hears Jesus calling again, "Peter, come hither!" So, again Peter tries to climb the cross to get to his Lord, when the Roman soldier draws his sword and chops Peter's arm off. Peter is getting a little pissed and wants to go back to his buddies, but again Jesus summons. The Roman guard can't believe that Peter is trying yet AGAIN to climb to the cross, and chops off another arm. Peter is now covered in blood and demented from the blow to the head and wants to call it a day. Jesus croaks hoarsely, "Peter, please, come to me!" By now, the Roman guard is tired of chopping limbs, so he lets Peter be. The faithful disciple struggles to climb the cross (without arms mind you) and after a long while he finally arrives at his Lord's side. Hurting, suffering, bleeding, Peter looks into his Master's eyes and asks, "Yes, my Lord. What is it?" Jesus smiles lovingly and looks off into the distance, then a weak smile plays across his face, "Look Peter, I can see your house from here!"

NR:  And, I suspect that house had a door.

3 comments:

Susan Tepper said...

I was the editor who interviewed Tim Gager for my UNCOV/rd series at Flash Fiction Chronicles. His interview was 'pulled' because he signed a petition that 'accused' Gregory Sherl of abusing Kat Dixon. Tim Gager may be against kickstarters and whatever else he wrote here, but the fact remains that the petition was based on HEARSAY against Gregory Sherl and HEARSAY is inadmissible as evidence in any court of law. Ryan Bradley and others tried to push it through the Good Men Project. Then the GMP had the good sense to get rid of it. I doubt they want to be sued. So this is what happened. The interview I did (above) I told Tim Gager he could post to his site if he wished. I didn't expect him to use it as his platform for this controversy. The whole thing disgusts me on a deep level. I have been trashed, maligned and just tonight told to fuck off twice by Ms. Kat Dixon for finally standing up for myself in this matter. This type of behavior in social media has got to come to a halt.

ctgager37 said...

My blog is and always will be my platform of my opinion. The interview is a good one and you did a great job. I'm disappointed it didn't see the outside light of day.

As stated in Kat's blog "Having had the pleasure of reading the interview transcript myself, I can say for certain that Writer A used the space to discuss only his literary works, making no mention whatsoever of his ideas or feelings concerning the Good Men Project or of his general support of women, including those who have been victimized by men in the literary community. Nevertheless: at what point does the support of women become "too controversial" for literary magazines/journals to engage?"

Anonymous said...

From Sarah Certa, August 2014. Very sick stuff

" so Monday night I got an email through the contact form on my photography website from horsefeather@aol.com. It said:

'think real hard about child services coming and taking your daughter away. i heard you left her with a so called abuser. think real hard."

my photography website only had one visitor Monday and Google Analytics tells me that the visitor was visiting from SE Florida. I had someone trace the IP address and (surprise!) this email came from within a 15-minute area of my ex-fiancée's parents' address (where I've assumed he's been since I got him to leave my apartment).

I mean, coincidence much? (and the lowercase i -- for which he is notorious, I can HEAR him saying this to me, I can SEE him, his eyes all black and mean). and should I be surprised? this is how abusers function -- they try to control you with fear and then they use your vulnerabilities against you (one of my OCD-related fears just happens to be that child services will take my daughter away because I'm an awful mother or something).

so fucking cruel.

after all I did to try to help him.

I didn't even use his name in my essay because I knew it would hurt him. That's the only reason why. Like, I STILL FELT SYMPATHY FOR HIM. I STILL DO. I cannot say his name and I am angry with myself for that.

My last email to him included info on abuse and therapy for men who abuse and want to change. He's been doing this for a decade. He doesn't want to change. He's still trying to scare me into silence.

YOU ARE MESSING WITH THE WRONG WOMAN. YOU CAN'T CONTROL ME ANYMORE."