Friday, January 30, 2015

I Sees Everything


I stood up from the edge of the stage and helped Sheila rise as well. I walked next to the microphone and motioned for Sheila to move in front of it. I looked her in the eye, the dead-black vacuum sockets present again. I feared nothing; her eyes were mine. She turned to the microphone and everyone in the warehouse came to attention. An unrecognizable voice emanated from her mouth, words flowing forth: "This is the time. Now is everything. You are all here. You will not be long. You are coming aware of your role and you will fulfill your tasks. These words have been spoken." Sheila stepped away from the microphone and bowed her head. She was old now, her hair gray, her body covered by a dark shroud, only long yellowed toenails protruding from beneath.

I stepped to the microphone and viewed myself on a giant LCD screen that now covered the back wall of the warehouse. I wore a multicolored robe, my hair and beard wild, bright red, smoke rings blowing from my nostrils. My eyes were pale green with soft pink where the whites typically were. "I know you, each of you devils in your own ways, bemoaning the plight of every other night, waiting for girls to leave the room, for the caviar to be served, worshiping the Great Whore in the Sky, a caricature of your memories before you forgot that I would find you, reunite you, align you with your purpose, bring you together before splitting you apart, scattering in the winds to the far reaches of the earth, each of you replacing those who have betrayed their station, each of you uniting from afar to create the world in my own image, an image cobbled together by each of you in body and action, not through ideas, not even emotions, but through the institutional structures guiding and ruling humanity, currently destroying the planet and everything worth loving."

I paused to look around the room, making eye contact with each person almost simultaneously, feeling their emotions, gauging their warmth, detecting the slightest fears, the leanest doubts. "Not all of you believe and some of you are frightened. That will pass as you come more fully into yourself." I knew the tabs worked at varying rates and that for some they didn't work at all. It was particularly for those who were too resistant to remember that I spoke to them, my words capable of penetrating the most resistant defenses. "I have my own roles to play and that is important to say for I am not the only one among you who will be playing a plethora of roles in this new world. Some of you will play just one role, have only a few tasks to accomplish, and then you will be able to rest in the fullness of yourself, watching not as spectators, but benefiting as beings from the changes taking place, benefiting in much the same way all of humanity will, from those like us who know to those who have never had a clue and may never in this lifetime. Still, even they will benefit."

I noticed a glass of water in my hand and I drank from it. When I was done the glass was gone. "Listen carefully as I speak to your souls instead of your minds, as I use words in orders you as persons are not familiar but nevertheless will serve you well when the time comes to perform your art in the world, to unsheath your masks, to display your glory, to dazzle the world with the gifts you have to give. These words that follow will change you now but only as a buzzing along your spine; later the buzzing will vibrate at such a high level that at first you will believe you will break apart but after that initial sensation and belief a calm will settle and you will be completely free to be yourself and change the world in your ways. I can see it even now and I am in awe of each of you. You think of me as your leader, but I am merely performing the role I had long ago agreed to play in the liberation game. I love this role; it's a fucking fun role to play. Only Sheila knows the role and, of course, she is playing a role now as well--her name is certainly not Sheila and while my name right now is Surprising it will not be for long. The memory of it will recede as quickly as your memories of your roles will recede when you become who you will become next."

I bowed my head in silence and then lifted it again, seeing on the giant screen that I now had no facial features whatsoever, no hair, nothing but a viscous, fleshy oval. Words and sounds cascaded from my being: "You're living in a fantasy world. This not your home. America is abstraction; justice pales in the light of ancient seasons; there's no hope in hope; nothing disgusting can be in existence without a belief in it; structures are delusional; movement is everpresent and nothing that resembles a noun has ever existed; don't give up on verbs, they are reliable: Act cut go jump hurl feel sting care forgive hunt erase gather weep gauge kill save nurture abandon bring offer give cast smile laugh regale divest illuminate eat drink sleep fall trust tangle quell roar delete vary create play tumble skate rake peel freeze heat drain collapse heave bundle juggle perform paint draw race find hide share wobble yell scream whisper ..." I continued reciting verbs for over an hour, each one of them a message for each person, a verb that would inform how to play each role in the world, how to accomplish tasks, how to become fully realized.

"Now it is time for us to go, to fill our roles. Please, hold hands with those next to you and close your eyes. Sheila grabbed hold of my hand and we closed our eyes. Not even a minute passed before I opened my eyes. Sheila and I were alone in the warehouse. I sighed and sat down on the stage. Sheila sat next to me and put her head on my shoulder. She said, quite softly, "It's hard to believe this is finally happening." I had no idea what she was talking about.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Somethingness


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Nothingness


The Boring Serial Killer



Did you kill all those people?

Yeah.

Oh. Did you like it?

Yeah.

What was it like?

Taking a shit.

How so?

Just something I did.

Will you kill again?

Yeah.

Why?

Because.

Oh. Well, you're honest about it.

Yeah.

That's something, I guess.

Yeah.

Do you wanna get a beer?

No.

What do you wanna do?

Cut your head off.

Oh. Do you wanna do anything that doesn't involve killing me or anyone else?

Maybe take a shit.

Okay. Do you have any hobbies?

Killing people.

Besides that?

Taking shits.

Anything else?

No.

I see. There's not much going on in your life is there?

I don't know.

Do you mean you can't fathom doing other things besides taking shits and killing people?

I don't know?

What did you do as a child?

I killed bugs and animals. I took shits.

I sense a pattern here.

Whatever.

You're not much of a conversationalist are you?

I don't know.

Language isn't all that important to you is it?

I don't know.

Have you ever had sex?

Yeah.

With anyone alive?

No.

Did you go to school?

I don't remember.

Did you ever have any friends?

I don't know.

Do you know what friendship is?

No.

Have you ever been happy?

I don't know?

Are you depressed or angry?

I don't know.

What do you know?

I kill people. I take shits.

Do you eat?

Yeah.

Do you eat anything that isn't human?

Sometimes.

What sorts of foods have you eaten that aren't human?

I don't know. Apples. Eggs.

Hey, that's something.

[no response]

What was your relationship like with your parents?

I don't know.

Did you live with your mother and father while growing up.

Yeah.

What were they like?

I don't remember.

Did you kill them?

Yeah.

How old were you when you killed them?

I don't know.

Did you have brothers or sisters?

No.

Pets?

A dog.

What kind of dog was it?

A dead dog.

You killed it?

Yeah.

Do you remember what color it was?

No.

How many people have you killed?

I don't know.

More than one hundred?

I don't remember.

More than ten?

Yeah.

What do you like about killing people?

Doing it.

Yes, but is there something specific about killing you like?

I don't know.

Do you like stabbing people?

Yeah.

Do you like strangling people?

Yeah.

Do you like shooting people?

Yeah.

Do you like torturing people?

Yeah.

Have you ever pulled anyone's fingernails off?

Yeah.

Have you ever gouged out anyone's eyes?

Yeah.

Have you raped anyone before you killed them?

No.

You only have sex with dead bodies?

Yeah.

Why?

I don't know.

Have you ever cut out someone's tongue?

Yeah.

While they were alive?

Yeah.

After they were dead?

Yeah.

Have you ever pushed someone off a building?

Yeah.

Have you ever castrated anyone?

Yeah.

Is there some way that you haven't killed a person that you would like to try?

I don't know.

Do you think of how you're going to kill people before you kill them?

Sometimes.

Can you give me example?

I'm going to stab her.

So it wasn't a complex thought process?

I don't know.

Have you ever thought about your own mortality, about dying?

No.

Do you think you'll live forever?

I don't know.

Are you aware that you will die some day?

[no response]

What would you do if someone tried to kill you?

Kill them.

What would you do if someone stabbed you and you knew you would bleed to death?

Kill them.

What if you couldn't kill them?

Take a shit.

What if you couldn't kill them or take a shit?

I don't know.

I have to say, if you didn't kill people you would probably be the most boring person on the planet.

[no response]

What are you thinking about right now?

I don't know.

You don't know what you're thinking?

No.

Do you know what 'thinking' means?

[no response]

Would you describe yourself as intelligent?

[no response]

I feel like I'm talking to a walnut. Is there anything you would like to say, to share with others about what it's like to be you?

I don't know.

Do you know anything?

I like to kill people and take shits.

And eat.

Yeah.

Do you sleep?

Sometimes.

You put on clothes, right?

Yeah, sometimes.

Do you bathe or shower?

Yeah.

Brush your teeth?

Sometimes.

Wear deodorant?

Sometimes.

Have you ever received a gift from someone, from anyone?

I don't know.

Have you ever bored anyone to death?

[no response]

If you could bore someone to death, would you do it?

Yeah.

I think it might be working. I barely feel alive talking with you.

[no response]

If you killed me by boring me to death do you think that you should be held responsible?

I don't know.

Fuck, man, there's gotta be something more to you than this shit! Eat, shit, sleep, get dressed, kill. That's your life.

[no response]

Do you buy knives for stabbing people or do you steal them?

Both.

So you shop and steal, too.

Yeah.

Do you know how to drive?

Yeah.

Do you have a car or do you steal cars?

Yeah.

You have a car?

Yeah.

You also steal cars?

Yeah.

This is fucking painful, man. Are you enjoying yourself at all?

I don't know.

Do you sometimes stare at walls?

Yeah.

What's that like?

I don't know.

See, I'm trying to figure out if you would be a good fit for our organization.

[no response]

Would you like to make money for killing people?

Yeah.

Do you mind traveling?

No.

If we hired you to kill someone would you prioritize it over your personal killing interests?

I don't know.

Fuck, man, I'm trying to work with you here.

[no response]

Excuse me for a moment. I have to call my supervisor [takes out phone]

[no response]

Hey, I'm talking with him right now--more like talking to him. Look, he's not a good fit with the organization. What's that? No. No, not at all. I'll explain later. What do you want me to do? Yeah, okay. [disconnects and puts phone away] Well, this has been one of the biggest wastes of time in my life.

[no response]

I would tell you never to mention this conversation to anyone else, but I don't think that will be a problem. I'm leaving. [stands and walks away]

[no response. blank stare. blank stare. blank stare. blank stare]

Monday, January 26, 2015

I sees


So I sees this quarter. So I seize this quarter. So I cease this quarter. So I cease to exist in order ...

I drive around the city. A hostile environment. I feel as if I am in constant danger. I see a Civic fly into traffic from a side street, making the turn at 45 mph ... at least. Impressive. It threatens to overcorrect and fly into a ditch, but manages to straighten out before passing four cars on a two lane street in a 35 mph zone, playing chicken with oncoming traffic before whipping back into its lane to run a red light, honking the whole way. Appropriately, the horn plays Freebird.

I see it speed off, out of sight, that rusted hunk of under-appreciated hurtling freedom. No, that is not what makes me feel I am in danger today. Not at all. That was uplifting. It gave me a sense of possibility, that in the heart of one driver at least there was a sense that life is play. Okay, maybe things got a little out of hand. But, damn, what an excellent way to say "I am." I feel an urge to pull to the side of the road, walk into the middle of the street, drop my pants, and publicly defecate. The feeling is a mixture of pride, indignation, and exultation.

I resist the impulse to pay homage to incivility and, instead, drive onward. I snake through side streets to the Southwest hills, no idea where I am. I see an old lady raking leaves in the lawn in front of a beautiful old Tudor. I stop to see if she knows the way to a decent hiking trail. I roll down my driver's-side window and say hello. The old woman straightens up and turns her head toward me. She's not an old woman at all. I'm not sure what the hell she is. She has white hair, Einstein-crazy, but a smooth-skinned face, luscious lips spread slightly in an alluring smile, a cute little button nose, and ... two dark caves instead of eyes. Empty sockets, lightless vacuums.

She opens and closes her lips. Again and again. Silence ... then a very light squeaking ... that grows louder ... and louder ... until it's a musical mingling of wind chimes, french horns, cellos, a bass, an electric guitar, and a tenor singing in Latin. The earth moves, an earthquake ... except it isn't. I interpret the experience as an earthquake, though. My vision is jagged and my body struggles to maintain its balance. The woman roils in every direction, the windows on the house shatter, branches of trees shake and creak, a crack opens in the road and runs up the driveway so far and wide the parked Mercedes tumbles into the earth and disappears from view. Seeing these events lead me to believe there is an earthquake even though I know the phenomena is not an earthquake.

In a matter of moments, though, everything calms. I sit in my car, unscathed. looking around then back at the woman. I see the same face, but now she has radiant green eyes and windswept bright orange hair. The day has been cloudy, but it's much lighter now. As I look to the sky, I see the last remnants of clouds dissipate. A uniformly light blue spreads between the tree tops, the sun hidden somewhere behind the trees giving the air a warmth that hasn't been felt in months. I look back at the woman ... or whatever she is.

She looks at me, purposefully, a mesmerizing glare. Her smile softens and the intensity in her eyes lessens. She walks over to my vehicle, extends her hand, and says, "Hi, Surprising. Thank you for coming by to pick me up."

"Excuse me?"

"Would you like some lemonade before we go?"

No. What I want to know is why you looked like an old woman raking leaves, then a young woman with sockets of nothingness for eyes, and now a pulsating expression of earth-shaking beauty with emerald green eyes.

"Stay put for a minute, okay?" She looks at me pleadingly, tilting her head to her right and raising her eyebrows just a little. Her lips part and she slowly blinks her eyes. As her eyelids open she fixes her gaze directly into mine. Her eyelids widen. The muscles in cheekbones pull back and the corners of her mouth distance themselves from one another as each makes progress toward the nearest ear.

I suppose I should be sucked in by this vixen, enthralled by her incredible smile, hypnotized by her eyes, melted by the tilt of her head, and lusting over the twists of her hips. Come on, I've seen horror movies. Waiting for her would be a dumb thing to do. I should drive away right now.

Unless doing so results in me hitting someone in the road, swerve to avoid an animal only to hit an oncoming car, or run off the side of the road down a ravine to die in an explosive, fiery death. So, really, what the hell? But she had eyes of death or ... something. There are other women in the world, other women giving away come-hither-and-fuck-me-glares. I can resist temptation. I tell myself to leave.

I sit still. She runs toward the house and looks back, smiling. She opens the door and flings herself inside. A minute or more passes. I listen to the radio. Rand Paul is hammering away on Social Security so I switch the channel and Rush Limbaugh is whining about immigrants so i switch the channel and hear the beginnings of a report on economic doom so I turn off the radio.

I should go. I put my CRV in gear, but as I do she comes bounding outside. She's changed her clothes. SHe's no longer wearing the frumpy navy blue hoodie or the baggy light blue sweatpants. Now she's dressed in tight-fitting jeans, pumps, and a skin-hugging long-sleeved stretchy something-or-other, violently green. Her hair is now white-blonde, ironed straight but with a slinky personality. She is bouncing toward my vehicle, hopping even, now a cartwheel followed by a backflip. She tosses her hair from side to side, leaps up and slides across the hood of the CRV, and glides off the other side. She smilingly opens the door and climbs inside. She is wearing white eye shadow, her cheeks have just a hint of color, and her lipstick is moist and glistening white with a subtle but perceptible winter-blue tint. She says, "Let's go."

Against my better judgment I say, "Uh, sure. Sheila, right?"

"And you're Surprising."

"No, but whatever."

"Yup. Whatever."

I put my foot on the gas and drive away from the house. "So, where are we going?" I ask.

"You were driving. How should I know?"

"I was stopping to ask where the nearest hiking path might be."

"Oh." She turns to me, grinning wildly. "I thought you stopped to hit on me, drive me off somewhere, fuck me, kill me, and chop up my body into little pieces. I thought I might be victim number 26. Or would it be 27?" I turn to look at her, feeling a mixture of shock, confusion, and horror. I can't imagine the look of my facial expression, but I feel the contraction and stretching of facial muscles I didn't even know I had. Sheila looked at me eagerly, excited to tell me more, "Either way, I wanted to freshen up. I just cut to the chase and eliminated all the chit-chat. Saves time. But I really did want to look nice for you before you kill me."

How does this happen to me? Why are there so many strange horny women with serial killer fetishes? I have to admit, though, she's the first I've met under such circumstances. Eyes of darkness then shape-shifting and age-transforming during what I believe was an earthquake but somehow know wasn't? I should be more frightened of her but she's so ... at ease in her excitement. She has an energy about her. I want her next to me. I don't care if she's death or if she really thinks I'm going to kill her.

Sheila asks, "Can we stop somewhere first?"

"Like I said, I don't know where I'm going so we can stop wherever you'd like."

"I think there's a convenience store or gas station down the hill if you make take the next left. Maybe a mile down the road. Just before the light."

"Okay."

I turn, drive down a windy road, and see it in short order I pull into the parking lot and wait as she runs inside. I see her walking up and down aisles, but I can't see what she is grabbing. She walks to the cash register, pays, and walks back outside with two bulging paper bags. She gets in the car and says, "Okay, let's go."

"Where?"

"You know the way."

"What did you buy?"

"Just go. I'll show you later."

I drive. Sheila reaches in her bag and grabs a rope of licorice. She offers me a bite. I decline. She bites off a stretch and chews. I drive up a winding residential street, now and then past views of downtown Portland framed by hillside trees and houses. Sheila speaks. "We're on the cusp of an age of open nihilism. There is going to be a growing widespread realization of the pointlessness of existence that will accompany the acknowledgment of the disconnect between the institutions of governance, legislation, and economics and the lives of individuals. What will happen when people come to understand that they've been voluntarily, if unwittingly, supporting authoritarianism? How will they live without the submission narratives they've believed represented autonomy? A dissonance could develop as public anarchy arises from private terror, but that will die out in moments after the smallest reaction from power resulting in the teeter-tottering between public fear and private helplessness."

"Whoa. That's disturbing."

"I know, but you'll figure something out. That's why you're here, Surprising!" Sheila laughs wildly as she puts up her feet on the dashboard. "I bought some last minute supplies before we see our friends. Here, guzzle a beer so you can loosen up. I know, you don't need it, but do it for me, huh baby?" I turn and she smiles pleadingly. "Here, I'll crack it open and hold for you."

Before I can say "No" Sheila is pouring a can of PBR down my throat. I can barely see the windy road in front of me, but I manage to finish the beer without crashing. My eyes water and I gasp before asking, "Did you say we're going to see our friends?" Is she mistaking me for someone else or have I forgotten who I am. Both seem possible.

"Yeah, our friends. You are so weird sometimes."

"Sheila?"

"Yeah?"

"When did we first meet?"

"Oh, come on, Surprising!" I look at her and she is looking ahead, pulling her legs down and squeezing them together. She's blushing. "You know how we met. Why do you always embarrass me like that?" She shakes her head about as if clearing the thoughts from her mind. "Never mind all that. Get us where we're going, okay. We'll have time to, uh, 'revisit' our first meeting later, babe."

"I hate to harp on this, but where are we going?"

"Why do you keep asking me that? Is this another one of your riddles? I don't get it. It's probably my felt. If I concentrate, focus my attention, I'll probably be able to figure out what you mean." She turned to me, her mouth wide and her eyes, well, surprised. "Oh my god! You're  a genius! We all know you are, but, my god, Surprising, that is huge! Fuuuuck." I look at her and she is shaking her head, trembling, and whispering in gasps, "Fuck, fuck, fuck ..."

Well, that didn't help at all. I just asked a question. I guess I'll just drive. I pass over the St. John's bridge. Sheila doesn't seem to mind. She rolls down the window and sticks her feet out, resting them on the side mirror. She casually laughs. "I knew you knew where you were going. Nice try, Surprising." I look over at her. She twirls her hair with a finger while taking another bite from the licorice rope she holds in her other hand. Holy shit, her eyes are shallow blue now, like pools of water from the Cote d'Azur. She winks at me and says, "Damn, cowboy, you wanna ride me hard right now, dontcha?" Squealing laughter.

I turn away, watching the road. Fuck, man, she is fucking hot. I gotta keep cool, stay focused. I think I know where we're going. How do I know that? Fuck. "When did you get to be so uptight, Surprising? You're the most carefree motherfuckerever. Shit, you taught me how to let go, but now you're as uptight as a Puritan witch hunter." Sheila's voice softened to a whisper. "Or are you just fucking with me in a whole new way?" Maniacal laughter. "That's it, ain't it? Fuck, you are one crazy motherfucker, Surprising. I never know what to expect with you."

What to expect with me? This from a woman with constant hair and eye color changes. I'm afraid to look at her right now. What the fuck will she look like if I do? She may be an old woman again or, worse, look at me with those dark, empty eye sockets and suck my soul into those black holes. Why the fuck didn't I take off before she got in the car? Who the fuck is she? Who the fuck am I?

I drive onward. I know when and where to turn. How do I know where I'm going. I don't, really, but I'm going somewhere I know. I can feel it in my bones; they're driving right now. It sure as hell isn't me, whether I'm Michael or Surprising or someone else. Does it matter? I thought so, but maybe not.

I turn down a side road. We're way past St. John's, on Lombard, in the farthest reaches of north Portland, an industrial district, the ports, not far from where the Willamette flows into the Columbia River. I turn onto a side road, possibly a private road, and drive past several warehouses as I wind around streets and through parking lots. I pull up near a side door to a relatively smallish warehouse--smallish in this area, anyway. I stop and turn off the ignition. Sheila turns to me and asks, "Is this the place?" I shrug my shoulders. She gets out of the car, her hair now auburn, and walks to the side door. As I get out to follow her I notice she is wearing faded bell bottom jeans and a loose-fitting frilly white blouse. On her feet are sandals. I think, fuck, but nothing else. I'm well past the point of thinking this is weird. If anything, this feels right. I know this place even if I can't remember it. I know Sheila, too, particularly this incarnation of her. I don't remember how or why, but I also know it doesn't matter.

I step inside behind her. The warehouse is mostly dark. It takes half a minute to adjust to the light, but when I do I see half a dozen men, all of them well over six feet tall, burly, broad shoulders, athletic, no fat, tight-fitting t-shirts, wavy mid-length hair from the 1970s, bell bottom jeans and a mix of sandals and old-school tennis shoes. Sheila is hugging them, one by one, all of them in their 20s it seems, late 20s, maybe even early 30s. Each man, after being hugged by Sheila, walks over to shake my hand and slap my back. Not one of them says a word and they all look extremely serious. Not a smile on any of their faces, though it's not entirely possible to tell as each of them has bushy mustaches and beards. I put my hand to my face, an automatic response to scratch my chin while internally wondering what is happening. My hand meets thick hair. I run my hand over my cheeks and upper lip. I have a full beard, too. Huh. I don't think I did earlier, but I realize that doesn't matter, either. There is a greater purpose at stake and the seriousness of these silent introductions is warranted. Something big is going down and something even bigger will follow.

The last guy nods for me to follow as we all walk through the door of this small reception-like space into the larger warehouse. The space is much better lit, the ceilings high, maybe forty feet at the apex, and at least thirty where the walls and roof meet on either side of the A-framed warehouse. There are iron rafters above and there are lights spaced along the center rafter, enough of them to provide the necessary light to see that the warehouse isn't small at all, but perhaps two hundred feet long and at least fifty feet wide. I can't tell if there is equipment anywhere because the floor of the warehouse is packed with people, men and women, hundreds of them, maybe over a thousand. It's not possible to tell as I follow the last guy who shook my hand through the throng.

Men and women surround me on all sides, all of them parting to make way for us. Not one of them is smiling but they seem deferential. The men and women are of all heights, body types, hair colors, and races, but they are dressed as if from the 1970s and their hair styles are as well. Not one of them is bald or balding, all of them in their 20s or 30s as far as I can tell. Hell, I must be the old man of the place, but as I conscientiously rub my head I don't feel finely thinned hair but a lush mop of it. I'm not just walking, either, but strutting. As I look down I see corduroy bell bottoms and sandals on my feet, a button-down shirt with a wild brown and red design of swirls and dots, and a wide, flapping collar. The top three buttons are undone and my chest hair, suddenly much thicker, is bursting outward.

When I look forward again I realize I'm wearing aviator sunglasses. I lost track of the guy I had been following, but still the crowd parts for me until I am just feet from a four-foot high stage. Several men and women lift me up onto the stage. There is a microphone in the middle of the stage. Sheila is standing there, her hair now strawberry blonde with a thin headband holding it in place even as the length of it drops down to her ass. She's freckled now and, for the first time since I entered the warehouse, I see a smile, her smile. Her smile warms my heart; she is someone I know and know well. I can't remember a bit, but I know I have a special connection with her. She is my right hand and I ... I look out at the crowd. It stretches from the stage all the way to the back of the warehouse. There are portable toilets along the walls and I see men and women everywhere passing flasks between them. The smell of burning cannabis fills the air.

They are waiting for me. I look behind me and there is a banner reaching from one of the rafters serving as a backdrop on the stage. The banner is a rainbow of colors, not patterned but fragmented, shards of color cutting and piercing, bleeding and dripping. There are huge columns of speakers on either side of the stage and, as I turn, I see two stacks of speakers in the corners at the back of the warehouse. I turn back to Sheila and she motions for me to come to the microphone. Everyone is here to listen to me speak. They believe I have something important to tell them, that I know something they don't, that I know things no one else knows. I know they are right, but I can't remember what it is that I know that they don't or why it's so important. I think of Sheila's words on the drive over, words about nihilism, economics, politics, and dissonance. She believes I know how to avoid the oncoming nihilism, that I know things no one else does, and that's why I'm here. More importantly, why I sought out each and every one of the persons present. Not one of them knew one another before I introduced them to each other. This is my group, my movement. They look to me as their leader, but I know they will become leaders. I don't know what that means, though.

I step up to the microphone and the crowd becomes completely silent. I open my mouth and I hear a voice. It is not my voice; it doesn't sound like me. But the words are mine even though it is just now that I am remembering them, that I always knew them, that they are the answers. The voice was deep but also exceedingly from the 1970s, a post-hippy voice of utter confidence and powerful knowing. "You are here because you chose to allow me to find you. You may think you know why you are here, but you are wrong. I know. I know. This is not the time to tell you. Now is the time to prepare for the moment when i do. All the doors have been locked. In moments we will communally join together. There are two paper bags that the Queen Bee brought with her. Even as I speak the contents of those bags are being distributed among you. I will pause now and when I speak again ... I will tell you what to do."

I step away from the microphone and close my eyes to clear all thought. The tiny part of me that thinks of itself as Michael watches with confusion, wondering what will happen next. I overwhelm Michael with silence; he is not asleep but aware, no longer capable of thinking or speaking with language. He is simply aware and though his awareness has expanded beyond what it was, he is still excruciatingly limited. It matters not, though. Stillness follows.

Time stops until I put it in motion and speak into the microphone: "Put the tab on your tongue." I watch as everyone tilts their head bag and places a dot on their tongues. "Now do what comes naturally. In a few minutes I speak again." I turn to Sheila, the Queen Bee, and she places a tab on my tongue. Music flows from the speakers, soft at first before rising slowly, an instrumental. Sheila and I turn to look out across the crowd. They are hugging, kissing, dancing, singing, shouting, playing. I take Sheila's hand and we sit on the edge of the stage, watching, waiting. Not long from now everything will change ... not just within the warehouse, but all over the world.

To Be Continued

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Republican Agenda

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Flies of the Lords



What? Yeah, so I'm naked with a giant sleeping fly tied to my back. Of course I'm bent over! Yes, I know walking this way isn't good for my back! Have you ever walked around with a giant sleeping fly tied to your back with ropes? No? Then shut the fuck up. If I walked upright the fucking thing would wake up. Have you ever had a giant fly buzzing its wings while tied to your back? No? Well, bully for you. I have and it hurts like the mother Bejeebus. Scary as all fuck out, too. The noise, dear God, the noise!

Why am I naked with a giant fly tied to my back? Would it surprise you if I told you that's not a question I want to answer? I know you want to know. I would, too. But if you knew what I knew you'd shut the fuck up about that and ask me if I wanted some water. Yes, damnit, some water! Do you know how long I've been walking like this? I don't know, either. Longer than you've been alive, I'll say that. Is it true? What the fuck kind of question is that?

Look, I am an American from the future. I've been sent back to let you know what's coming. Not so you'll be able to change the future, but so the rulers of the future can have the thrill of scaring you shitless. They've gotten bored scaring, imprisoning, humiliating, and torturing us. We've been scared so long it's not possible to scare us any more. But you, it's still easy to scare you so they sent me back to your time to let you know how bad it's going to be for you. Yes, all of you. They're not going to let you die. No one dies in the future. That's the hell of it.

These aren't my words. They are in the sense that I've been programmed to say them--I'm human, not a computer or a robot or an android. I've been programmed through techniques you will suffer through yourselves some day. I don't have a choice. Even when I say "I" the identification is meaningless except for storytelling purposes and to account for your naive beliefs in individuality and personhood. You are already part of the hive -- you always have been -- but you haven't been aware of it since the dawn of civilization. You were granted a dream life that, thus far, has lasted a few minutes. The past lives you believed you lived? Those were embedded thoughts from seconds ago. It's more complicated than you can imagine, especially since you are incapable of imagining anything -- none of your referents are real!

Let me tell you what's been happening and what will happen. I'll tell you in the form of a story, a third-person story. It's a story about me, insofar as there is a me, but it will make more sense to you if I tell it through a third-person narrative. You think a little better that way, most of you. Not all of you. Hell, those of you who are dyslexic understand it completely. Well, you would have if you hadn't been brain-washed to believe you were the ones reading things wrong by those who really are reading things wrong. That was by design; the rulers had to figure out how to keep those who could understand from, well, understanding.

See, everyone's been reading everything wrong. It's not Lord of the Flies; it's Flies of the Lords! What the hell do you think I'm carrying on my back! Why would I, a man, succumb willingly to carrying a giant sleeping fly on my back? Because I serve the Lords and this fly on my back is but one of the billions of flies of the Lords. There are billions of men and women like myself carrying flies like this, hunched over so as not to wake the violently buzzing giants. We cross deserts and mountains, swim lakes and walk across the hot ashes of fires, all to deliver flies from hills of dung to the Lords spread around the edges of the worlds, walking through portals that no man or woman was made to walk. We do not begin transporting flies when they are fully grown as the one on my back is; no, we tie the larvae to one another's backs then go on our way.

It's easy at first. The larvae squirm, yes, and it feels grotesque, sure, but it's okay to walk upright. But as they grow, feeding on our fat as we walk, they become adults. The first time I felt the stinging pain of the wings buzzing I fell to the ground. If the fly is tied on wrong then it will be face down, turned toward the back, and it will chew on the spine, the neck, the head. Death comes too slowly ... especially since there is no death. A thousand years could be spent with a giant fly gnawing on a man's body. Then, maybe, someone or something will discover the woman, escort the fly to the Lords and enslave him, use her to flavor soups or to hold down papers on a large desk to keep them from blowing away when the window is open.

Most of the time the maggots are fastened correctly, as mine has been. The giant flies sleep when upside down. That's why I walk this way, why we all walk this way. This, though, is not the story I will tell you. That is a third-person narrative. I will let you know when that story begins. First, I have to help you understand how fucked up you are. The dyslexia. That's one issue, but not the only issue. But there's more to it. I mentioned the Flies of the Lords. Yes, well, there are many other book titles you've mangled. The reason that is important is because you have gotten fiction and nonfiction backwards. You've been thinking a biography of Abraham Lincoln is somehow related to a real-world truth; no. It was Lincoln Abraham, anyway, but that's not all that important. You believed Lincoln was an important figure in history, the emancipator of slaves; no, he was the subject of a children's story about the enslavement of emancipators.

Literature contains everything that was, is, and will be. What you call science fiction is what has already happened; you've lived through those things. You don't remember because you've been living in the short dream you believe has been going on since the Big Bang (or God's creation of the universe or -- quite a lot of other bullshit). Now that is fiction. Realism is abstraction; abstraction is hyperreal. Surrealism is super-realism; absurdity is "things as they are." Reality is absurdity -- you would think that would be obvious! Ha! Dick Cheney? Clearly a fictional representation of the very real Darth Vader. The hobbits from Rings of the Lords -- oh, yes, you know it as Lord of the Rings -- they are you. Some of you.

But if you really want to find out how things are now -- beyond the dream life you've been living for only a matter of minutes -- read Kafka, Dostoevksy, Burroughs, Murakami, Garcia Marquez, Ellison, Cervantes, Huxley, Atwood, Angelou, LeGuin, Robbins, Boccaccio, Melville, Oates, Woolf, Dickinson, and so many more it's impossible to list them all. Go to your local library and look through the "fiction" section--poetry, too. Then you'll know the world as it is. Don't read Shakespeare, though. Those ideas are saturated in your dream world.

There is a reason you believe what you believe. Do you want to know why? Do you really want to know why? Because you've been programmed to think you live in "the twenty-first century" while in the real real world you're naked and bent over walking around with a giant fly tied to your back. Now that you are aware, move your ass because the Lords are waiting for their fucking flies!

Oh, the third-person story? Fuck you and keep walking.

Friday, January 23, 2015

Discursive Thought


My thoughts are of snow. How much? How little? These thoughts are not related to an immediacy of occurrences; rather, they are abstractions to distract me from what I would think if I wasn't thinking of snow. I could be thinking of how many waterfalls there are in the world, but even that is too precise. While there must be something tangible related to the thought--snow exists, certainly--there can't be any more information that might lead to another thought. "How much snow" can not be related to "where" or "when." If I made such an association I might follow thoughts down a winding path that might lead to thinking about something else besides snow. That would be a disaster.

Not thinking at all is even worse because all that surrounds me and all that is within me is suddenly there. The burden of such an awareness is unbearable; perceiving the chaos of sights, sounds, smells, and touches without accompanying thoughts is simply a different form of the cacophony of disorganized thought. And so I think of snow in a way in which there is, in a sense, nowhere to go. I grope with my eyes closed trying to feel flakes or perhaps handfulls from a bank, but there's no way for me to know whether I'm doing either of those things because they aren't happening. I ask, continually, "how much"; there is never an answer. When I shift to "how little" answers are just as elusive.

So I continue in this way as a way to occupy my mind so that rambling thoughts does not arise. The possibility of roaming endlessly down corridors of fears, doubts, wonderings, memories, reinventions of past outcomes, questions like "Did I set my alarm?" or "When was the last time I showered?", such an unending march of thoughts, not one of them meaningful, creating an emotional roller coaster ceaselessly accelerating into a blur of speeding images of strangers waiting in lines at department stores, bored men squeezing the nozzles from gas pumps, women tying their hair back with scrunchies, dogs taking craps on neighborhood lawns, and scenes from movies I didn't like, all of those images and more combining with misaligned sounds, the sounds of the thousands of different ringtones I've heard on buses, trains, airports, and elsewhere, the voices of checkout clerks at grocery stores, automated phone voices asking me to press "1" to confirm my appointment at the doctor's office next Tuesday, geese squawking, dogs barking, super-sized pickup truck engines roaring, and the incomprehensible mash of schoolyard children during recesses, the images and sounds combining even more incoherently with smells of dumpsters outside convenience stores, exhaust from diesel-fueled buses, and the aroma of coffee being made in the kitchen in the morning by a woman whose name I forgot since falling asleep the previous night--smells that have just that sense of time and place and circumstance--all of those images, sounds, and smells mingling like the ingredients in a madman's mixing bowl: Asphalt and milk and potato chips and marbles and iPhones and caulk and butter and crushed. What the fuck am I supposed to do with all that?

So, yes, I think of snow, how much, how little. There's sanity there. At first glance no one could see it, but after the contextual explanation it all makes sense. I can hear a woman's voice, she's talking on the phone, "Well, what else can he do? What would you do? I would think of snow, too, if it got that bad. What's that? Yes, yes he is cowering in the corner right now. Uh huh. Yeah. Oh, I see. Uh huh. No, no, I can't talk with him. I don't really exist."

Why would she say those things? I mean, I can hear her. It's not the first time she's squawked about me to someone else. I never know who she's talking with, though. It could be the same person, but I don't think so. There's too much variation in her tone of voice and the way she responds to unheard questions, questions that may not be, is too diverse. She usually talks with women, but occasionally men. The last conversation she had with a man started this way: "No. No, I'm not going to try that. He'll get upset. He doesn't respond well to that sort of thing. Oh, I'm sure that's you would do. Come on, it's far more complicated than that. Why do you always insist on a one-size-fits-all approach? *Sigh* Yes, I'm still listening. Now--wait a minute! Sure you might be able to do that, but I'm not that strong. Now you're just being rude. I have to go, he's weeping again."

The only time I ever hear her voice is when I am able to successfully think of snow and relax yet again after the run-on of thoughts ceases. She is adept at beginning the cycle again, of preventing me from thinking of snow. Her voice is so soothing, I think it can't possibly be bad, but by the time she hangs up the phone I'm in a state of terror. I don't know why. What I do know is that the bullet train of lightning thoughts comes screaming back into my mind with a rage that startles me. Was it this fast and chaotic before? I can't remember. It seems worse now than before the snow or maybe it's just that the snow was so peaceful that I forgot how rambling thoughts can be.

I had mastered discursive thought after shrooming for long stretches of time. For years after I could turn such thoughts on and off at will. Then the woman's voice came, always talking on the phone. Her voice is not a thought, not something I can control. She's simply there, waiting as far as I know, until I master my thought again. I don't know why she insists on disturbing my peace. I don't even know if that is her intention--and maybe she is not the cause. But the sequence has been wild run-on thoughts followed by willful mastery followed by an ease of being followed by the woman's voice followed by a belligerence of racing thoughts; the cycle begins again.

How do I escape from such a trap? I don't. I've come to accept that this particular cycle--it is not the only cycle in town--may be like that of the seasons. It is part of my rhythm, like it or not, so I may as well like it. Not that it's easy to do. I'm neither a sadist nor a masochist, but I certainly would rather inflict pain than have it inflicted on me so if I lean in a particular direction it would be toward sadism. Unfortunately, this pattern is suited for a masochist. Had I been born with a proclivity to enjoy my own misery this cycle would be heavenly. The big question facing me now is "Can masochism be learned?" I don't know, but I'm exploring the possibilities.

This isn't the cycle, though, certainly not one that is endless and always. Sometimes there is wonder and joy then directed thought followed by a whispered imagination slipping into a futility I can best whip out of through extroversion then, perhaps, there will be quiet or sequential dottings of "i's" or maybe adopted personas for role playing--though I sometimes forget for months and even years that the persona was adopted--as well as rest then excess mixed with comparative thinking or analytic reasoning broken up by magical musings. When I refuse to consider everything I hurt all over, but when I think of nothing I feel fine. That makes no sense to me, but I've come to accept that senselessness is not absurdity but simply the way things are. I have too often tried to apply the ideas of order created by others. This has always caused pain and a sense of failure.

One day quite some time ago I simply realized everyone was wrong--at least about me. There was no big flash or lightning bolt that resulted in me leaping into the air shouting "Aha!" No, I was painting and I saw a swirl of color and thought, "I think everyone else is wrong. Huh. That's something." Then I went back to painting as if nothing of significance had occurred. The reality is that the ways of others are not my ways. I've tried ways that are not my own; they just don't work. Now I simply say to the ideas of others that do not jibe with my experience of being, "Fuck you, you arrogant assholes. Your gibberish doesn't jibe with me."

On occasion, though, I've been locked in cages by bands of strict and narrow thinkers with more might than I could muster on my own. They interpreted my insistence on autonomy as insolence then forced my mouth open and shoved pills down my throat before tossing me into cold, dark cells in attempts to force me to think like they did--as if such a thing was possible. The conclusion I have so far drawn from such experiences is that my thoughts are far less absurd than the actions of those around me. But it does me no more good to rail at the absurdity of the world than it does for me to try to change my experience of being.

I could say I wasn't meant for this world, but that would only make sense if I believed the presumption that experiencing inexplicable pain arising from within and raining down from without is unjust. Justice is a concept that can only make me miserable because I've witnessed no evidence that such a thing exists. Love, too, is a concept of cruelty, no more likely to be experienced than to ride a unicorn over rainbows into a Land of Forever and Ever. There are emotional experiences that make me profoundly happy, though: tenderness, kindness, passionate kisses, painterly sunsets, affection, wonder, awe, and more.

Given that, I do without certain concepts as much as I can. All of which leads back to the problem of discursive thought. Those damn ideas of love and justice and equality and hope roll around in the swirl of my unchecked thoughts telling me lies about what should be, what could be, what would be, but never have been. I have to remind myself that most of the ideas I've encountered in life are lies--or maybe just wrong. It doesn't matter which; I'm not interested in assigning blame. Not at all. My thoughts are of snow. How much? How little?

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Alone Together



I live

in dreams and memories

reminiscing

about the city

I once lived

alone

I share with you

the city

I lived

forgetting

no one was with me

in dreams and memories

I have dreams

about the city

I once lived

I wake

I remember

no one was with me

in the city

I dreamt

I lived

The city

a memory from dreams

of memories in dreams

I have memories

in dreams

reminiscing

of dreams

in the city

I once lived

alone

In memories of dreams

I feel less

alone

I remember

the city

visiting

friends and family

in dreams and memories

alone

I tell stories

people and places

no one knows

I wonder why

no one remembers

we lived together

our hearts were full

we smiled together

we understood

I forget

no one was with me

in dreams and memories

alone

In dreams and memories

I believe

you were with me

Now I talk past

you

about the city

you never shared with me

in dreams and memories

I once lived

alone

I live

in dreams and memories

forgetting

you are alive

I feel

I am

grandfather

teacher

guru

talking with you

grandchildren

students

apprentices

I share

dreams and memories

I value

forgetting

you do not care

You are busy

not living

dreams and memories

I forget

you do not see

me

definitely not

the way

I am

You think

I am alive

maybe

you do not care

I share with you

dreams and memories

from the city

we lived

together

alone

You do not remember

you were

alone

together

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Extremely Short-Term Relationships



Over here.

Oh, yeah. Sorry, I didn't recognize you. Your hair is much shorter in your online profile.

Do you like it?

Well, I think I mentioned that I was only interested in going out with women with shorter hair so ...

You don't like it, do you?

No, it looks great. I think I need to put more change in the parking meter, though.

...

Hi, I'm Michael.

I'm Deborah.

This is my first time "speed dating." I don't really know the protocols.

Oh, I've been to dozens of these things. You just loosen up, relax, and have fun.

Just kinda let it all hang out, I guess, huh?

What do you mean?

Well, we've only got five minutes so I guess I should drop the big bombs right away.

Um, sure, if that's--I'm not sure I know what you mean.

Well, first of all, I think you're very attractive.

Thank you. That's sweet.

But I don't have a good feeling about this.

Why not?

How can I share anything substantial in a few minutes?

Substantial?

Yeah, like who I am, how I think, what I feel, anything.

I don't know. Just try to have fun.

Okay. If you could travel anywhere in the world with me tonight, no questions asked, no concerns about money, where would you like to go?

Oh, that's fun. Um, let's see ... Barstow!

Next!

...

Oh, this place is great!

Yeah, this is my coffee shop.

Yours?

It's where I go to drink espresso and write everyday.

I didn't realize you were a writer.

I'm not a writer. I write.

Same difference.

No, not at all. I'm sorry, but this isn't going to work. Shit, now I'll have to find a new coffee shop.

...

So, how much money do you make?

[cough] Excuse me?

You know, your income. Do you make six figures?

Um, I need to check the parking meter.

...

Do you find it difficult to find someone who is a good fit for you?

Oh, all the time. The last guy I saw was incredibly narcissistic. I listened to him drone on and on all night. For some stupid reason I went out with him for six months.

Six months? Why?

He was young, good looking, and a doctor! I had to give it a real shot.

Oh. Yeah, I can understand why you'd have trouble finding a good fit. Excuse me, I'm going to the restroom.

You're going the wrong way.

Yeah, that's okay.

...

We've been out for what, two hours now?

Something like that, yeah.

I can't tell you the last time a first date has lasted this long.

What do you mean?

Well, most of the women I've tried dating recently have been ... unappealing. Not just marginally, but significantly. I was beginning to wonder if there were any women of substance in the world. But you, I mean, you're intelligent, funny, insightful, relaxed, and at ease with yourself. It's refreshing.

Thank you.  You've had bad luck dating lately?

No luck at all.

I'm sorry to hear that.

That's okay. I wouldn't have met you if that hadn't been the case.

Um, yeah, well. You know, I should check the parking meter just in case. I'll be right back.

...

So, you're from Argentina, the country that welcomed the Nazis after World War II.

I ... I'm going to leave now.

...

You're so funny!

Excuse me.

What you just said was hilarious!

I said that this is a good chardonnay.

I know! Hysterical!

I, um, I may regret asking this but ... how is that funny?

Because you said that's a good chardonnay and it clearly isn't! You didn't really think it was good, did you?

You know, you're an incredibly beautiful woman and ... I think forgot to pay the parking meter.

There's no parking meter here.

Yeah, I'm going to check, anyway. 

...

You go to this club a lot?

Yeah.

Is it typical for the band to urinate on the crowd?

Nah. Usually bands cut themselves and bleed on the audience or throw shit on everyone. Tonight's kind of lame.

I see. I'm going to get another drink, do you want anything?

No, I'm cool. I just huffed some glue.

*sigh*

...

I don't know why I bothered tonight.

What do you mean?

I mean every date I've had in the last two months has been horrible. If things don't work out tonight I'm just going to give up, resign myself to being alone, and remain celibate.

Check!

...

Oh, excuse me! I'm sorry I didn't see you there. I should have looked where I was going.

Yeah, that would have been nice, douchebag.

[laughter] Sorry, that was funny. I haven't been called a douchebag for years.

That's hard to believe given the way you walk around like the world owes you.

Well, fuck you, too.

Douchebag.

Is that all you got? Douchebag?

Oh, no, I could rip into your woman-hating ass all night long, but I need to leave Powell's and go to a party with real men.

That's much better. I hope you run into many more douchebags tonight. Sincerely.

You're a fucking asshole.

You're a man-hating cunt.

Did you just call me a cunt?

Yeah, it took a little bit but you rose to the occasion. You should be proud. Not very many women scale the mountain of cunthood as quickly as you did. Impressive.

Were you raised by a mother who hated you? If she didn't, she should have.

You are so viciously horrifying, your heart is like a lump of dirty coal retrieved by emaciated miners with lung cancer, and I'm completely crazy about you.

You are completely devoid of any redeeming qualities and you ceaselessly project your self-loathing onto me. You want to go to the party?

I'm sure it will be a fuck-twat anarchic slacker gathering of unwashed suicidal depressives, so, yeah.

It sucks that you want to go because we'll probably fuck later.

I'm not looking forward to what is likely to be the most grotesque sexual experience of my life, but I'm so covered with the stink of your repulsion that it's impossible to say no.

This could be the beginning of a long and emotionally-draining dysfunctional relationship.

Since you're obviously incapable of love you're probably right.

Then let's go, you fucking douchebag.