Spirals Downhill
For Gabriel Huizenga's Wonderful "Creative Endeavor Unofficial Poetry Challenge"
It all starts with the mistaken belief
(sorry Hank, but not that much)
that anyone wants to read anything I write.
The spirals downhill from there.
— useless hack, Paul Stewart
~
A mind unsettled.
A storyteller.
An iconoclast.
Gonzo gifted.
~
My process is simple.
Nothing is simple.
~
Every syllable counts —
but who really gives a fuck?
~
As I try to create art without a brush,
or moulding clay, or perhaps plaster of Paris,
the fight for relevancy and not giving a shit
wages in my head.
~
To be the best is always the goal,
to fill the big empty gaping hole.
~
Sometimes I work backwards, nonlinear.
Often percolation and semenisation takes place
before I’ve even taken pen to paper,
or finger to keys,
or maybe even touchscreen —
less tactile, more detached than the others.
~
Sometimes the ideas live a long life
before being thrown from my cerebral womb
into the light of the world.
~
But who gives a fuck
whether I succeed and outdo myself
and create something truly special
that has readers creaming in their pants
screaming, crying, laughing
or just plain confused
worst result for all involved
is if they actually think and feel
and question and query and look
I n w a r d
(I am not your mirror or your saviour, though)
~
But I do.
Of course I do.
~
Let’s take the story of Ada —
the dryad-type entity in my latest Through The Keyhole piece —
all brazen, sexually charged,
and full of feminine power beyond compare.
~
I knew from the outset
I wanted to top-load heavy
the metaphor of voyeurism,
of being consumed by desire,
the complacency in curiosity,
that giving into it,
so that when the poor fella was taken
by the lovely vaginal centrepiece of his new wooden door
that he picked up from a suspicious old woman
in a market or bazaar,
it felt fitting that he would eventually become
so besotted with lust and need for the entity
that he would be consumed by it whole.
~
Or you could just simply consider
that the challenge is to take
the loose and rapidly erraticising threads in my brain
and make cohesion —
where cohesion is a foreign body,
like a battery that has somehow ended up
in the stomach of some idiot,
quickly, coarsely wreaking havoc
on his stomach and all that it contains,
seeping the acid and everything
into the unprotected abyss
of the lower half of his musculoskeletal.
~
It will come as no surprise
that the first names on my list of inspirations
are not Dickens, but more Dickinson.
Old Charles Dickens has nothing
on the honesty of old Bukowski either.
~
Orwell stirs the pot
and reflects back better,
with more timelessness than Dickens.
~
Even Shakespeare proved
that Dickens was a hack before Dickens was a thing.
~
Really, why the focus on Dickens?
That’s lofty sights — the lofty heights — literal loft.
If my trajectory is a house,
Dickens is the basement.
I want the loft (or ceiling
for you cranky asses that live elsewhere).
~
No crawlspace,
though it’s a good place for inspiration.
~
I sit in the liminal space of a loft,
full of that horrible insulation
that provides a nice itch to scratch —
and no asbestos please, we’re British.
Though I am more Scottish and Italian than British.
~
The phrase is “no sex please, we’re British,”
but I digress.
~
Dickens is locked, gasping for air in my basement
along with Pip, the little proto-incel.
~
In the mid-section of the house
there’s space for Golding, Faulkner, Poe —
how I love Poe.
Poe can live wherever he wants,
along with Hemingway, Shelley and Thomas
for that Welsh twang and humour.
~
I need to read more Joyce and Doyle — but will.
Bukowski has my heart, the old man.
~
Bukowski, Thompson and F. Scott... ha,
don’t be so gullible.
~
RLS looks strange as a concept,
but Stevenson is the bookkeeper.
~
And in the loft is Hank, Emily D., Welsh (who is not dead)
and a host of other trailblazers and annihilators.
~
I recall a piece about a knife
in a crawlspace or basement
that had been left abandoned by its owner,
and how the knife pined for its owner —
pined to be one again,
pined to kill again with its owner.
~
Even my creations ache when I abandon them —
when I move on.
~
Because I must.
~
~
Forward motion.
~
~
Felt used up and abused,
shown a bright and beautiful crimson world
only to be dispatched
like the many victims they butchered in their time together.
~
Unreliable.
There’s nothing less unreliable
than an unreliable narrator.
~
We are all unreliable narrators
because our emotions,
our “feelings” and egos and humility
and fantasy and ecstasy and —
what was I saying?
~
Yes, we’re all unreliable in a sense.
~
~
Unreliability is only unreliable after the fact.
~
~
Like the unreliability of porn
actually making sense from a filmmaking point of view —
nonlinear? The linear is non-existent.
~
Not porn again,
not another lengthy complaint, confession —
I get it, we’re sick of it.
I’m sick of it.
~
Porn deludes, dilutes, poisons,
and firmly stamps out a path in my brain
that leads me down dark alleyways
where there is no big woman
with a big ass and big tits waiting
(you know the drill, pneumatic or otherwise allegorical analgesic, sorry again Hank, but not really that much)
Porn took from me, so now I take from porn.
Hoodwinkery and mockery, being so clever it hurts while being so humble it hurts while being so ferocious the biting will claim your flesh from beyond your reading apparatus.
~
I've never been a fan of spoon feeding, so the spoon is always in the room next door.
~
~
Unreliability is only unreliability after the fact.
~
~
It starts with the mistaken belief
that I actually have anything important to say.
Then I say it.
~
Cue applesauce.
Queue applause.
~
…
Très bien, le motherfucker.
*
Thanks for reading!
Author's Notes: This is for Gabriel Huizenga's "Creative Endeavor Unofficial Poetry Challenge." Chaos exists in my mind always, and no more so when I am writing. So this represents that chaos in my writing process and the thoughts that run through my head when creating something — anything. Below, I have included a link to his challenge and also the two pieces of mine referenced in the poem.
About the Creator
Paul Stewart
Award-Winning Writer, Poet, Scottish-Italian, Subversive.
The Accidental Poet - Poetry Collection out now!
Streams and Scratches in My Mind coming soon!


Comments (17)
Raw feelings and truth, especially about the creative process. I’m right there with you, mate. Such great work 🙂
Outstanding, Paul. You had me at "before being thrown from my cerebral womb into the light of the world."
Love this. Glad to know a fellow Dickens loather. I’ll come back to this tomorrow fir a close read with fresh eyes. Here’s a link to another of my Persephone pieces. Hades speaks in this one: https://shopping-feedback.today/poets/indian-summer-6tvfq02ej%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv class="css-w4qknv-Replies">
Sing it, shout it, throw it all in a pot with a few tears, a smile, and a pint of piss and vinegar and see what comes out not smelling like shit....or something like that. And btw, you always have something important to say. Here's your applesauce. 👏👏
Damn. Another. Masterpiece. This shall be my personal anthem. I feel like you wrote this in one sitting and didn't even bother to edit or change a thing. And I agree, Poe can live wherever he wants in the house (though I feel he'd choose the roof if there are others in the house, too).
Your poem captures raw, unfiltered creative thought with remarkable authenticity. The oscillation between self-doubt and literary ambition gives it a compelling, confessional energy.
This doesn't seem so.much like chaos as bounty.
I love Poe, and Joyce is coming up soon (a nice copy of Dubliners from the oldest bookstore in…well Dublin. I’m a romantic like that) But holy fuck I’ll have a hit piece on Dickens as part of my books of 2025 series coming in December
Oh Paul 😂😂😂That is exactly how it works! The creative mind is awash with random shit and patches of gold. The rest is a spinning wheel. Due to my attention span (lack of), I lost my way at times, but you seem to have catered for people like me too ha ha, bringing us right back on track with gems I can’t even repeat in comments without blushing. I think you wrung every possibility from this challenge! Well done 👏 (sorry I haven’t come up with any fluffy bunny tales for yours 🫣)
I mean, your mind is like a scattergun and yet, there are themes that appear and reappear bringing a sort of disjointed order to your musings.
Your chaos is beautiful, man.
I feel like I've taken a very long tour into your psyche...without a map or guardian. Interesting...
Good job for your chaos is organized.
Sheesh! Lots to absorb in this one! I took the time to check out Gabriel's challenge before commenting. I'd say you've created a solid entry here, not that it surprises me. Well done, my friend!
Paul, this piece nails the raw chaos of creating—starting from that nagging doubt and tumbling into the depths of inspiration. I especially appreciated the house metaphor for literary influences; it's a fresh way to map out how we build on (or rebel against) the greats, like shoving Dickens to the basement while chasing the loft's edge.
Way to capture the chaos that is the creative mind, Paul! And who knows if any of us have anything important to say, really? We just say what we want to say and see if it sticks. (And you had me laughing with some of these sexual references throughout, by the way--readers creaming their pants, haha...)
Wow your piece “Spirals Downhill” rests so poignantly between quiet reflection and raw emotion. The way you weave the spiral motif into both motion and inner turmoil really struck me. I’m an illustrator who loves transforming stories into visual moments, and your lines about spinning out of control yet finding truth in descent sparked a clear image in my mind. If you consider pairing it with a cover illustration or a art piece, I’d be honored to collaborate or sketch something inspired by it. Thank you for sharing such an honest voice.