Poetry I, Cyborg by Mark Tulin- Visual Verse by Mark TulinDecember 13, 2020 Comments 8 I, Cyborg – Visual Verse — Read on visualverse.org/submissions/i-cyborg/ Share this:FacebookLinkedInPocketMoreTwitterPinterestRedditTumblrLike this:Like Loading... 8 comments on “I, Cyborg by Mark Tulin- Visual Verse” Kritika December 13, 2020 Enjoyed the reality soon we will be entering. Reply Mark Tulin December 13, 2020 Thanks, Kritika. 🙂 Reply Liz Gauffreau December 13, 2020 I had to think about that last line. If the cyborg digests, duplicates, and proceeds, there will be no new knowledge and we will no longer advance. *shudder* The antidote is poetry, I would say. Reply Mark Tulin December 13, 2020 Good point, Liz. We need poetry to evolve or advance. And we have to do it in a humane and compassionate way, not just digesting information. Reply Liz Gauffreau December 13, 2020 Thanks, Mark. Mark Tulin December 13, 2020 You’re welcome. Rosaliene Bacchus December 13, 2020 Love your poem, Mark, but I found the accompanying image disconcerting. Reply Mark Tulin December 13, 2020 Yes, I agree. I found the woman somehow victimized and overwhelmed by the news. What was your take? Reply Leave a Reply Cancel reply Enter your comment here... Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in: Email (required) (Address never made public) Name (required) Website You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out / Change ) You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out / Change ) Cancel Connecting to %s Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. Δ Post navigation Previous Post Next Post
Enjoyed the reality soon we will be entering.
Thanks, Kritika. 🙂
I had to think about that last line. If the cyborg digests, duplicates, and proceeds, there will be no new knowledge and we will no longer advance. *shudder* The antidote is poetry, I would say.
Good point, Liz. We need poetry to evolve or advance. And we have to do it in a humane and compassionate way, not just digesting information.
Thanks, Mark.
You’re welcome.
Love your poem, Mark, but I found the accompanying image disconcerting.
Yes, I agree. I found the woman somehow victimized and overwhelmed by the news. What was your take?