Knife to a Gunfight of Conjunctions
AI image generated by the Bytesized Studio Knife to a Gunfight of Conjunctions I arrived armed with a semicolon; sleek, understated, the pocketknife of punctuation— and found myself in a back-alley brawl of and, but, therefore. They were packing clauses. Dependent ones. The kind that travel in packs and smell faintly of inevitability. I flicked my blade—clean, precise— ready to carve a sentence down to bone. But “however” cocked its eyebrow, “meanwhile” checked the exits, and “because” loaded a chamber full of reasons. I lunged at “and”—the repeat offender— only to discover it was hydra-headed, sprouting more logic every time I tried to cut it clean. I thought minimalism would save me— one clean line, a tidy point— but this was a war of accumulation. Bullets of nuance ricocheted off my tidy thesis. In the end, I lowered my little blade and holstered my pride. Turns out, sometimes you bring a knife to learn how not to cut. Next round, I’ll come armed with listening— and maybe a well-pla...




