Is it better to leave no trace...or to leave a footprint?
Wednesday, 23 January 2013
Sunday, 20 January 2013
Susan
“I should be putting in lines between
these thoughts, creating breaks and boundaries, managing the stream,
stop those collisions. I should but I cant. It seems like I just know
that it's in those mysterious and random collisions that all the
interesting chemicals change and processing occurs. These things are
wild and unlimited, their conclusions unpredictable, at times
unthinkable. You know how you have those pictures inside your head of
who you are. Then you look in a mirror and get a shock, you don't
look like the person you feel. That's disturbing but it's also the
truth. It's also a collision and a spur. Which person do you want to
be? The true reflection or the imagined and what's the difference
between the way those two look, think, behave and react?”
The professor closed the door on the
capsule. “She'll be fine in there but it is going to be a difficult
and a different journey.” The team retreated behind the screens and
into the control room. In the capsule Susan was still, serene almost.
The mind training allowed her to disembody, dislocate, get away. The
trip would be physical but on this voyage her mind and conscious self
would travelling separately.
“Look upon your body as a piece of
luggage, personal effects, things you'll need when you arrive. I
think that's the best way to look upon it. You are a pioneer, your
journey will blaze a trail for billion others, in all
directions...and I'm sure your luggage will catch up.” He allowed
himself a giggle and a smile as he switched off the microphone.
It was sundown when the countdown
ticked to zero. A happy coincidence and a extra effect. At zero there
was a flash, bright white and then the following on of loose
colours from all across the spectrum. The light was so bright that
you might have imagined it warranted some accompanying noise, the
sound of thrust or schism or energy releasing. There was none
however, just light and a vapour that ballooned out and then hung in
some kind of good imitation of an incandescent rain cloud. In a few
seconds the process was over and the capsule had gone. The team
checked the sensors and instruments to ensure it was safe for them to
emerge. For some reason it felt right to stand on the spot where the
capsule had been even though they had no sense of which direction to
look in order to catch a glimpse of it. It had not been a
conventional launch or departure.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” began the
Professor, “it may be sometime before we hear from our colleague,
as you understand our ability to communicate across these spaces is
unexplored and untested...but we will continue to listen and
to...hope.” They returned to the control room and cracked open the
champagne as each shared their thoughts and feelings on the
scientific triumph.
And so it was that they listened and
waited and listened and waited. Two months passed without a word. The
media, having been excited at the outset drifted back and looked
elsewhere. There were other better stories out there. Some team
members left, they had other projects to work upon and so the
personnel shrank to a two person shift, perpetually now in listening
mode only. They listened, dozed, read and researched. They reminded
themselves of the mission, occasionally they forgot the mission. Time
passed for them but not for Susan.
It was almost six months from the
launch that she returned. It was in the grey of some unexpected
morning, the listeners were diverted by their own fatigue. That was
about to change. As had happened when she launched there was light
and vapour but no sound, the CCTV caught it all. The light dimmed and
the capsule appeared, hot and glowing. They took out Susan's body,
they estimated she had been dead for about six months. By the time
the professor arrived she was laid up in the laboratory, the medical
services hovering and scribbling. One by one the shift members
arrived and gathered in the control room. The professor was silent
and grim. The triumph of the capsule's return eclipsed by the
discovery or the dead passenger. They sat there for a few hours
musing over the possible causes and the consequences. It was an
emotional rather than scientific time.
Just after midnight a burst of white
noise and static shocked everyone in the room as spluttered from the
loudspeaker. Then silence, then noise, then silence. Then a voice.
“Hi, Susan here, I'm OK, I've arrived, I can't seem to see the screen...I think
it's back light has failed...and I seem to have lost my luggage.”
The persistence of ideas
She's moving
the furniture around the room, all the time. Like some piece of
dancing animation where the couches, tables, lamps and variety of
soft furnishings waltz across the lounge as if choreographed by Busby
Berkeley. Sometimes they settle, as if to take breath, to review and
ponder their latest arrangement then of they go again. Responding
like the particles set into a kaleidoscope lens, never ending and
unreliable combatants that argue with themselves in terms of function
and aesthetic balance. She watches this in her head as if it was a
movie, light entertainment, a reality TV show that is only real in
her imagination. The thrum of the rolling table, the swish of the
twisting carpet, the clatter of chair and table legs and the jazzy
canvases that attach and move across the walls looking like a vista from passing by suburbia through a train carriage window.
Then, abruptly into the room steps her
future self. Older, respected, strange, as if seen in a dirty mirror
glass. All the moves are over now. The furniture is stock still, the
cushions are steady, the painting hang with no swinging. There she
is moving amongst the furniture like she was at a party. She's
holding a wine glass, giggling, perhaps flirting but there is no one
else there. Popping a canapé into her mouth and savouring it. She
looks confident and successful, she looks happy but she's had too
much to drink. So it seems. She has the hint of knowing smirk that
her younger self doesn't recognise. She comes across to her, she's
going to talk to her younger self.
“You do know that ghosts live before
death as well as after death.” She says. “Time for us isn't
fixed, we have our peculiar freedom, we have our ways, we have our
ideas.”
“I don't believe we've been
introduced.”
“I don't believe we need to do that
you stuck up, confused, bitch. You know fine well who I am.”
“Ahem, I'm not getting any of this,
you are clearly a figment of my imagination and you're interfering
with my plans and daydreams. Simple as that...and what's more if I'm
seeing you and therefore going mad I'll just simplify things and
swallow a few more pills and gins and...blot you out...and don't call
me a bitch you...ghost.”
“Your lazy mind can hardly blot out
something that doesn't exist. You can't even arrange furniture
without getting stuck in a loop and you can't even see that being
civil and communicating with me might actually help you...oh and I'm
enjoying myself because, well you can't see it but we are having a
party here. Right now.”
“You can't hold a party here without
my permission, particularly while I'm rearranging the house. I hereby
dismiss you. Please allow me to return to my own imagination.”
“I think you'll find that this is
your imagination. You're just so far up yourself you've forgotten how
to use it properly. You used to, God knows. Now all you do is fuck
about with this junk playing yourself, as if the position of a couch
or a lamp improved the quality of your life.”
“You can hardly talk about the
quality of life, you're a ghost.”
“I'm a ghost but I'm also you. How
does that sound? Perhaps you're seeing a bit of an opportunity here?
Some constructive dialogue, some advice from my angle, something from
outside of time itself, wouldn't that be attractive? I'm prepared to
dip out of the party for few moments.”
The two women sat on the couch and
faced one another. They talked for some time. To the viewer, had
there been one, all that they would have seen was a woman sitting on
a sofa, looking ahead and talking to herself. As the light failed the
conversation seemed to slow and then the woman flopped back onto the
couch and fell asleep. The sleep was a dark, cleansing and anonymous
one. An hour later she was woken by the room light coming on and a
man entering the room. “Hello darling” said her husband, “how's
your day been? Have you been having a nap?” “No, no, yes...but
I'm fine, I had a friend round.” “Anybody I know?” “She's an
old acquaintance from the past, she was in town and dropped by, a
nice surprise really.” He didn't answer but just nodded, kissed
her temple and went upstairs to change out of his business suit. She
patted her lap and stood up. She thought to herself that the room
arrangement looked rather good.
Later they ate together. It was a
simple meal, salad, some meats, a crisp cold white wine. They chatted
but he was tired and the conversation was wandered and aimless. She
also found concentration difficult, it had been an unusual afternoon.
As they cleared their plates she sat back. She looked at him, then
she seemed to look through him and she spoke but it was not really to
him. It was to nobody in particular or perhaps just herself. “You
know, I've just realised, death isn't an event in life at all.”
Sometimes you can get yourself so far
into things that it's just impossible to get yourself back out.
Saturday, 19 January 2013
My ISM problem
“A lump of chocolate now and then for
the cancer, a drop of red wine now and then for the heart, a suck on
a cigar occasionally for the inflamed nasal passages, a clove of
garlic for the prevention strokes, a little aspirin for the blood, a
brisk walk for the Alzheimer's, some regular sex for the endorphins,
a bit of red meat for the brain cells, a plate of stir fried kale for
the iron, a cup of tea for the early mornings and the regular check
of the intermediate shaft bearing on the Porsche 997/998 2.7 to 3.8
engine. The one fitted between 98 to 2004. That is except for the
3.6i unit fitted to the Turbo and GT3, they of course use the 993
bottom end so there's no IMS problem. Lucky bastards. No one knows
when or if the bearing will fail and Porsche don't seem to offer any
reason or explanation. I find it a bit disconcerting that the fault
can just occur without any warning. It's time bomb really, a cot
death, that's the thing with physical and mechanical health...and
well being. You just never really know. One day it goes 'click', one
day that thing in your brain just goes 'click'.”
“So intermediate shaft failure is
probable rather than inevitable, I don't know what's worse. It's like
cot death or spontaneous combustion or something. Lightning strikes
even. Some nights I don't sleep for thinking about it, I toss and
turn, get the sweats, losing my mind, cancer and health and that IMS
failure. I have nightmares about that pool of oil there under the
car, I don't notice it (or maybe I ignore it) and try to drive away
and there are all those costly consequences. Towed away by a yellow
truck. Cancer or shaft failure? I'm shaking thinking about it, I'm
disturbed, my eyes fill up and water, I get the shivers.”
“ There are solutions out there, they
say the revised shaft and seal, that's the WPOZZZ99Z (6)S**** bit
that works. I'm considering it but I've only clocked 46000 miles and
the expense is just too much to consider what with all my regular
medications and lifestyle costs. I'm keeping it together but it's a
challenge. There are no official statistics, you'd think that there
would be but no, it's all word of mouth and forum gossip. I don't
know about that, those guys are all in California and you just never
trust those things. Fly by night. I don't know if I want to set
myself anymore challenges, not now; like trying to write a story when
there's some other distraction, with a knife hanging over your head,
naked, out in the worst weather, dressed as a woman, drunk and
incapable, cornered by a mad dog, badly parked with people honking,
tied to a lamppost, waiting on that pool of oil forming. What did the
forum say again? The pencil keeps breaking and I keep trying to
sharpening but it's soft and the lead is broken and the sharpener is
blunt and I'm having ideas but I can't get them down, can't hold a
single one.”
“In the workshop a job is underway,
there is a flange bearing support bolted to the engine with three
bolts, the flange is removed and you can see the threaded holes for
the bolts. I wished someone could show me the bolt in the middle that
shears off. So I could just see it for real, put my finger tip in
that threaded hole. It's all in my imagination. What is the truth
about the cars? I hear that 20% of Boxters don't make it past 100k
without that catastrophic failure, then a £6k rebuild, a whole
engine eaten up and shredded. Then again 80% are ok, that's good
odds. Still it's those cursed bolts, the bolts fail and everything
just falls apart. What if I have them? Maybe if I just keep the revs
low, don't gun it, kid gloves and care, light right foot, tender
loving care. I could stay well under 4000 revs if I had to, I could
do it. Then consider the grip and gnaw of the tension that it would
create. That's no way to live.”
“There's an old theory that Porsche
know all about it. They build those engines on the cheap, or just
cheaper, entry level engineering, Eastern European or Indian bolts,
inferior alloy and so on. Wherever they source parts, who knows? Bet
they don't make them in Stuttgart. That shiny factory is like a
hospital. Beautiful but mean. Better than a hospital, hazy science
fiction. Cost cutting or efficiency or carelessness or a plot for the
benefit of the dealers. Decisions made in the board room, wood
panelled walls, whispers and fine china, maybe a brandy, maybe a
whisky, a nod in the right place, cool Germans, level headed,
clinical. Well it is a hospital. So times are tough and it's all
about pushing out the tin and money changing hands. Long term
survival or a quick buck. Just enough quality in there to get them
through the warranty period, after that you're on you own, living
with the risk and the cost.”
“That's the buzz out on the forums,
all the geeks and honest men, retelling their tales, posting
pictures, ground up oily metal and unsmiley faces pasted to the jpeg.
Their solutions, their after market additions, putting things right,
solving those design faults that the so-called designers missed. Men
in white coats looking through glasses, checking the bits against the
drawings and nodding at each other. Nobody ever won the Nobel Prize
for a reliable engine bearing, nobody. What were they all thinking?
Now it's all repeated and played out and frankly I'm at my wits end
and it's just a silly machine, a machine with a flaw. Like me, I
might get that cancer or blood disease or some STD. All liable to
breakdown, out of the blue, but I'm bombarded, all the time, tales of
woe, early deaths and failures, diets and quick fixes, cures and
snake oil, wrecks and wreckage on the highway. Plagues. No wonder I
can't sleep. We are all broadcasting, all the time, all across the
social networks and forums. We are all storytellers – that's how we
make sense of our lives, but still it makes no sense.”
(“You know, I have another theory.
Those blown engines, the intermediate shaft failure, the early and
untimely deaths. Well it is just possible that those cars were not
driven regularly, not exercised or stretched. Then you get deflection
in the shaft from just sitting there, idle. Thermal expansion and
cooling, it gets to the metal, gets into the metal. Slowly the
tolerances get out of balance. Out of balance is never good. These
cars were meant to be driven, their place isn't in showrooms or
languishing as trophies and garage queens. It's the open road,
whatever that means to you.”)
Thursday, 3 January 2013
Losin' my religion
“Yeah it was a few years ago, I was a
lot younger and I was a part of a cult down in Texas. They were all
grim Presbyterian types, kinda skewed in their beliefs. Extreme and
driven. They'd pick up and recruit homeless and vagabond types. They
kept me there about two years, they were clever cock-suckers, they
controlled my weight, held back food, kept us on a low protein diet.
They made me work out in the garden most days, other times I was in
the kitchen but they made sure none of us ate too much. They had
regular lessons for us, morning, noon and night, brought us together
for teaching and prayer. That was mostly them telling us what was
wrong with us and how we were unrighteous and in need of grace and
salvation. They used to speak from the Old Testament, they liked all
that conquest and battlefield shit. They wanted to cleanse the
country. They wanted a Old Testament solution I think. They seldom
mentioned love or Jesus but you couldn't comment or criticise 'cos
that wasn't on the programme. The programme was all about their
control over us, that bombast of bullying, how they were right, how
their reading of it was right and everybody else had it wrong.”
“I was pretty young and
impressionable, I'd had a few bad breaks, I didn't feel too good
about myself and so I was easy meat for these guys. I just didn't see
it. I didn't see how they were controlling me, expecting things from
me, the levels of obedience and what they liked to call grace. I just
kept my head down, didn't argue, just got on with my work. Day in day
out in that Texas heat. They fed us bread and vegetables, communal
meals but they (the leadership) never ate to much with us. They ate
later when they had their leaders meeting in the evening and we were
working pretty much dawn till dusk. They ground me down I can tell
you. I'm there, feeling like shit, they're telling me I need to
change, what the fuck was that about? I looked at myself and it was
true I wasn't much of a person, I had form and history but I couldn't
figure how I was supposed to change. I just kept working and eating
less stuff and I could feel myself withering away. They worked us
hard, kept us busy and we were just too tired some days to think.
There was no debate either. When they said bible study they meant
they'd read a bit and then they'd tell you what that meant. I was
usually that God was mad with us 'cos he loved us so much but we were
a disappointment and though Jesus had come to redeem us we were still
no making it. We had to work, to change (that word again).”
“I looked around and I looked at them
and they were all in pretty good shape. All those leaders had cute
wives, pickup trucks, clean blue jeans and leather boots, big black
bible books and they didn't do much in the fields. Their hands were
soft, they thumbed through those bibles and talked about it like that
in itself was hard and worthwhile work. They wore spectacles when
they read. They chose their words carefully, stressed service and
servitude and faithfulness and that shit and they kept a eye on us
all the time. They discouraged us forming little groups, they changed
the rotas. I was pretty confused all the time and I felt increasingly
disapproved of even though I was doing all the right things on the
programme and keeping up with my duties.”
“Then one day I was working out on
the Long Acre, we were nipping the tomato flowers and I was on a
break, a water break. I was there just blowing out and the contractor
who maintained the tractors (we had no mechanic for some time due to
another little dispute) was fixing something and he stopped up and
lit up a cigarette. Well I was there on the spot, hot and hungry and
just feeling all shrivelled up inside and I saw him light that
cigarette and I saw him suck in and blow out a big lungful of smoke.
It looked so good. I stopped over and asked him for one please and I
took the time of day. I was about halfway down that sweet smoke when
I heard the foreman elder comin' and he was shouting and pointing and
yellin' at me and the contractor. The contractor just looked and said
that he was all too holy with a real big bug up his ass and too big a
head for his hat but the foreman elder just came right up to me and
he punched that half cigarette right out of my mouth and knocked me
on my back in the dust. I stayed down there for about a minute. He
was quoting the bible at me and talking about my body being a temple
for the holy spirit. The contractor said this ain’t none of his
business but he didn't care for the atmosphere around here. Lying
there in that dust I had one sore chin and I had one or two crazy
thoughts there in my head. Now there wasn't quite enough sugar in my
blood to give me the speed of thought and action I once had but I
still had something in there and I was feeling just a bit angry.”
“Time was moving slowly and I got up
and looked at that guy. He was tall in his elder's jeans, clean and
bright blue and he was looking right down his nose at me. He said
something and referenced it all from Leviticus and nodded at me
looking for an acknowledgement and agreement. By my left against the
fence wire there was a loose piece of 2 by 4. I grabbed it and hit Mr
Clean Jeans square across the jaw. He went down then like a pile of
purple bricks. The contractor just said fuckin' good work boy and got
back to his repair work. I was trembling though 'cos I knew I'd have
hell to pay from those guys in the leadership. The foreman was
rolling on the ground, both hands holding his chin, he was sobbing
and writhing. I wanted to hit him again but I thought better of it. I
thought about the rest of the leaders and I could see some of the
gang heading cross to where I stood. I jumped the fence and ran
across the potato field and down behind the water tower. I was
struggling, this effort in the heat and in the state of shock I was
in was too much. I vaulted the inner fence and now I was back at the
compound.”
“I looked around and saw another of
the elders comin' out the ranch house doorway. I just started to walk
across to the cookhouse like everything was ok but I knew I was on
the way out big time. When I got in there I just lit up every gas
burner on the range and I threw towels and paper sacks and any shit I
could find at that cooker. It was all in flames in seconds and by
that I mean everything. I guess when he knocked that cigarette out of
my mouth I snapped. I saw all that cunning and control, the lack of
honesty and respect, all the cruelty and disregard embodied in that
single act and I, despite my weakness, struck back in my own clumsy
way. I was just standing up to the bullies and the hypocrites. I was
also running out of the burning cookhouse and headed for anywhere but
here.”
“There was a red pick up parked and
half loaded with goods to sell at the farmer's market, vegetables and
craft work. The keys were dangling in the ignition. I turned them,
the engine growled and I was gone. Behind me somebody was clanging on
the fire triangle as smoke billowed out all across the yard. People
were shouting and I heard women screaming. Right then I didn't care
nothin' for any of them, not even the other disciples like me and
certainly not the elders and their dumb wives. I just thought I
wanted those stupid bastards to learn a lesson and I hoped that even
just for a few seconds they might consider that the wrath of their
cruel and spiteful god was being wrung out all over them because of
their ways and their sins and the disrespectful and casual
indifference they showed towards their fellow man and people like me.
Whatever the hell that might mean.”
“I was driving fast down the track
towards the highway. I checked the mirror, the smoke was rising into
the sky but there was nobody following me. I drove a little faster
and the dust cloud grew and blew up behind the truck. When I finally
hit the highway there were blue lights headed out towards the ranch.
I couldn't see much expression behind their sunglasses but they
ignored me as they went went on about their business. An hour later I
was at the edge of town and I got my bearings. I stopped the pickup
in a superstore car park and finding fifty bucks in the glove box
took it and then threw the car keys down into a drain. Ten minutes
later I'm blowin' the froth from a cold beer and getting ready to
tuck into a double cheeseburger and fries. My head was clearer than
it had been in years and the words, the prayers and the cruel
controls of the cult were falling away from me like rotten fish
scales. When the cheeseburger arrived I just whispered to myself a
thank you Jesus for fuck all and bit into the juicy beef. I'd gotten
my appetite for life back.”
Saturday, 29 December 2012
Salt Peter
They called him “Salt Peter”
because it had been his job to salt and so preserve the herring. He'd
worked at the fish market up until it had closed a few years ago,
he'd become a character there, not a popular one either. Salt Peter
always had been a loner, his past was shady and once he'd settled in
the town from wherever he came, he made few friends, he just salted
fish and scared small children and stray cats and dogs. A short,
thick set man, balding and hunched up he avoided conversation and
socialising. He just cut and salted the fish and then packed them in
tight in the oak barrels for shipment. His constant exposure to fish
and salt had whitened and roughed up his skin, it was a peculiar and
condition, hardly easy on the eye. The salt had not just affected his
hands and arms but also the skin on his face and head, he was almost
salted himself with dried up tear ducts and skin like a lizard but
the whites of his eyes seemed extra glutinous and luminous, the
pupils more watery and any hair or eye brow that remained was ginger
crusted like the toasted skin of a kipper. Peter was slowly salting
himself into becoming the local bogey-man. A reputation he did not
deserve by any behaviour or action but had gained simply by his
deteriorating look and chosen profession.
“The most important of all movements
are your bowel movements,” said Mrs Macsween. She was taking in an
automatic stream of consciousness way to Peter. Peter was
concentrating on slitting the fish and rubbing salt. “If your bowel
movements are irregular or difficult then you need treatment, you
need freedom. It's all in the diet and of course the clothing. Your
bowels need space and relaxation of operate and if you fail to allow
them that then there can be dire consequences, almost too terrible to
consider. The bowel is the key to good help in fact if you think
about your system it's all like a long hollow tube running through
you with the bowel there, at the very end finally doing all that
last minute processing to keep you going. That's why it pays to be
regular and that's, as I say, down to good diet and relaxation. Are
you getting this Peter?” Mrs Macsween was a widow. Her late husband
had expired in a domestic episode when crushed under the cast iron
end of a Victorian bed frame, it had been a tragic accident that sent
shockwaves across the cobbles and through the small town. The drunken
funeral took place on a grey December day, the stormiest one anybody
could remember. Since that day she had formed a tempestuous on and
off relationship with the slow witted but compliant Peter. The local
gossips had a bean feast.
Peter looked down at his fish and
continued working. “I pride myself on my strenuous and robust
regime,” continued Mrs Macsween, “It's a combination of planning
and discipline and that’s key to keeping a balance, a regular
balance and don't be afraid to check yourself, don't ignore the
details, you need to be aware of what is right and normal in your
body, how it operates, look out for signs and of course regularity
and constituency are a large part of that. I'm not going to talk
about smell because that is quite unseemly but it's still worth
considering, it's a factor. You need to take all the factors into
account. That's important, know the normal and keep the rhythm, times
and things. You know you should follow my advice, a man your age,
there are health problems that you're storing up and your posture
wont be helping”. Peter grunted and looked away. Mrs Macsween was
talking automatically, like a expert at a symposium, lecturing and
describing, oblivious to the audience, their response, their
interest. She ploughed on through with her topic – taking the right
kind of care of the bowels. “Anyway”, she was almost finished
now, “ it'll soon be time for lunch, where will you be taking be?”
I'm not sure if Peter quite knew what he was doing but he quickly
drew out his knife and sliced into Mrs Macsween like she was a
wriggling fish. Then he applied the salt, then he put her into a
barrel and shipped her along with another prepared consignment. I
don't quite know where her final destination was and as for
Peter...well nobody ever knew. All they found was a small white pile
of Potassium Nitrate on the preserving room floor.
Repetition
Her hand was deep in the inside of the
handbag, the cold silk lining caressing her wrist on the way down but
she hardly noticed that. She was touching that single pearl earring,
rubbing it between her thumb and forefinger. The hard shining pearl,
there in the dark innards of her bag, hidden, known only by her. It
was a faintly erotic and compulsive act that, as the rhythm grew, she
could not stop. It fed some hunger and she did not want to stop.
there was this clockwork, inner compulsion, a deal she had made with
herself to carry on, to continue. She looked out there, across the
street, out into space, away from her immediate surroundings whilst
deep inside that bag she still rubbed on that pearl. Over and over
and warmer and warmer the finger tip heat grew though the pearl
stubbornly stayed as cold as it could, as if the bag was some icy
deep freeze impervious to her touch. She liked that thought and held
onto it as the pearl kept on rolling between her fingers. Like a
mantra for the sense of touch. The strange inner warmth and peaceful
assurance that comes with the comfort of repetition, the comfort of
repetition, hypnotic, like a pearl, rolling between the fingers.
You can say what you like about sex,
it's always on the human or animal mind in the same way that god is.
Sex is a silly, simple little word for a complex world of feelings
and circumstances, always on the loose, tasty sweet and sour, stewing
up nasty little storms, brewing up clouds and imagined outcomes. Set
and unset situations, holding tight and letting go. Functions and
looks and far away strangers, awkward and untouchable, rolling it all
between the fingers, rolling it and never quite letting it go. She
was thinking how in the city everyday she could rub against too many
to find that sense of sex but she had found that now and it was all
too big. It had to be reduced and distilled down to something much
smaller and easier to handle. Tight and private, like the pearl in
the handbag, a very personal pleasure, a very private moment, a point
of focus stretched to the limit and then enhanced by the applied
constant comfort in the repetition of that touch.
Wednesday, 26 December 2012
On the Silk Roadway
So this is pretty much as it was told
to me: “It seemed like a pretty stupid idea but he felt compelled
to carry it out. It was a growing, throbbing kind of obsession. A
feeling that he needed to capture, hold, sustain. Even if it was only
a temporary fix it would be better than doing nothing. That was the
thought and he was driven now to carry it out. He was uncomfortable
in the shop, that in itself was ironic considering that it was a
distinct discomfort that he wished upon himself. He braced himself
and awkwardly wandered into the lingerie department and there was
confronted by a baffling selection of ladies tummy and hips control
pants. The sizes were of course a foreign language as were the
shapes. He stared and tried to aid eye contact with the other
shoppers, all of whom were obviously female. He took a silent deep
breath, selected three odd sized pairs, all in black and headed to
the check out. Of course nobody really took any notice of him or his
choices of garment. Each female shopper remaining indifferent and
detached in their own personal bubble. The girl at the check out
hardly said anything but as he handed over the cash his heart was
pumping and his palms and forehead sweating with unfamiliar and
almost painful embarrassment. He relaxed visibly as the pants were
stuffed into a green bag and effectively disguised as ordinary and
insignificant shopping, as if anybody cared. Soon he would be home.
So what was the point? Why tight pants?
Why the obsession? Harry had asked himself those questions many times
and there never was a proper or sensible answer. That block of
feeling couldn't be shifted, that notion of not quite right, that
horrible sweated out heat and pressure, the gnawing and unfathomable
need, one that stood against all that's normal or acceptable. The
notion of being cursed. Harry wanted to be castrated and that was a
pretty tough little fact to share. Right now he couldn't figure how
that might happen but he just wanted to feel how it might feel. That
was why he was wearing the too tight control pants right now (one
pair had done the trick). They were tightly compressing his parts
right now and though it was not the real thing it felt
like...progress towards that imagined, elusive and unknowable state.
He thought of himself as gelding, a horse, cut to become more
manageable, more compliant, a better kind of horse all round. That
was a part of it but Harry couldn't really get to the core of what he
wanted or needed other than that he desperately had to have that big
cut done.
Here in Doncaster his ideas were safely
buried in the most private of places, his own churning head. Maybe in
California or Thailand it would've been different, there might have
been contacts , expressions, outlets, help lines and darkened rooms
where there was discussion. Here he was a plain call centre worker, a
voice and keyboard click, insurance advice and sales. On and off he
switched himself but then in the spare, hungry moments the obsession
arose again and again until it seemed like the only thing that
mattered. It seemed that until he'd been done, cut and mutilated he'd
feel incomplete, if that made any kind of sense. Like a man who
wanted to lose an arm or a leg or an ear, surgically removed or
pickled or buried at the bottom of the sea. How can a physically
complete man man feel incomplete until he is physically incomplete?
That paradox haunted him, troubled and tortured him and drove him.
The tight pants produced a feeling, a temporary fix, a stop but there
was no resolution here. Something else had to happen. Something that
was real.
So Harry kept himself lost himself in
daydreams and fantasy, he found cushions of comfort in here, worlds
where boundaries had blurred and possibilities were stretched. There
were days when it was all straight forward heterosexual sex that was
there, calm and predominant, possible without the balls and the spray
but all accepted just as a quirk. Mechanically smooth and easy, he
imagined. Clean and free from care for both the partners. Harry did
worry what any woman would really think, how would she react? Turn on
or turn off? There were lots of tastes out there. He stepped across
the deconstructed after sex small talk as if it was an alley covered
in broken glass. It was a bizarre conversation that he'd design and
savour. His justification, his longing, his past experience, the
tough road that had turned him this way, it could perhaps be
understood. There was maybe a tiny part of a female fascination to
exploit, an acceptance, a desire to try and experiment, to feel out
the freakish performance. It would be one time only and then never
again, so he thought, and there was a strange comfort in that.
Some fantasies went too far; overcome
and tied up by Amazons or the fanatical wives of Nazi officers, six
foot six, dark hair and eyes, wielding knives and razors, handcuffs
and silk scarves, determined to set the world straight on their
twisted man hating terms. He was overcome, bound and knocked
unconscious. They screamed themselves into a tribal, primitive and
hateful frenzy. All shadows and shapes and dancing around. Then at
the climax they ritually castrated him with their terrible razors and
threw his balls out of the cabin window where they were devoured by
hungry Alsation dogs. That played in his head in a endless loop
somedays, oddly Technicolored but bloodless and painless. He sensed
his own eyes spinning in his head as those images trolled on past.
Like a woozy alcoholic nightmare played out in slow motion that
turned back on itself in a loop of replay and time slip. Those
Amazon's had their revenge time and time again, on the top of a bus,
at the call centre desk, in queues and lines and checkouts, in a
quiet bar and in the darkest nights. Hot and dirty and played out to
the last reel but never truly consummated. It was a life, a kind of
life and maybe, most of the time no kind of life when a slow
uncontrollable torture runs on and on in the background all the time.
Harry grimaced, pressed himself to try
to catch the version of normal that he'd chosen for himself. His
daily rituals and compressed body parts mirroring his compressed
aspirations. He took to the internet, drew in garbage, digested it,
the faux researching was skimmed but kept disconnected. There were
others out there, crazy groupings, cults and madmen. It was
impossible to fathom it and Harry didn't trust anybody with his
secret. It was all to too crowded here in his head, too precious and
personal, too painful. Then there were the rare days of denial and
forgetfulness. The castration passed away like some grey cloud, his
head cleared and he functioned, for moments there were blue skies and
pedestrian thoughts. Sports or politics, colours and food and pretty
women. These days were few and fewer and Harry sensed a precipice
edge before him. Here he was again, sucked into the narrow neck at
the middle of the egg timer and then swamped and overcome and ready
to fall. He looked at the phone, he pondered mental health help
lines, doctor appointments, opening up to a stranger. Not possible,
too costly was all he could think.
He browsed knifes and surgical
implements on line, he looked at the procedures, medical reasonings,
illness and injury, it was all stretched pink flesh and gory detail.
That would all pass however as he journeyed through that pain and
some sense of pleasant grief (he imagined) until he was set right
into his own personal, ideal perfection. Existing in the secret
shadow as the conflicted yet vigorous rare human gelding. For
somebody special he would form up to be that desirable curiosity and
unique experience. He contrived more disguised and improbable
solutions and he began to build yet another more dangerous dream. He
cloaked himself in ideas and drew up the details, like planning a gym
or diet regime that built a perfect body. A one off, shit or bust
opportunity. All the risk was his but the outcome could give him his
desire. In fiction and in the red tops there always was a willing
German surgeon or scientist somewhere who would rescue the tortured
soul. He wondered if maybe somebody, somewhere had built a machine...
It was about a year after the pants
purchasing outing when the headline and newspaper story caught
Harry's eye. “Mystery man found dead on the street was a Mozambique
refugee who had fallen from an aircraft landing at Heathrow.” He
read the awful details and then noticed, down below that in a black
and white tab box his eye was led to another. “Ex-Soviet
scientists fix pervs with 'snap you later' ball burster technique”.
The article told how a Russian scientist now residing in Switzerland
was selling a tiny, self contained castration device to “clients”
in the Far East. This one-time use machine, no bigger than a two
cigarette packs apparently snapped on and then snapped off and
simultaneously stapled, cauterized and sanitized the wound. You then
disposed of the whole thing. It was soon to be available for sale on
line for use in wider veterinary applications, mainly goats and dogs.
Harry filled in the application form
very carefully, the delivery address and the price, 55 Euros plus
delivery. Of course he'd lied about most of his credentials and was
pretending to be a goat breeder curious to try the device. He clicked
the order button and off it went. A week later the carton arrived
complete with French, German and Flemish instructions only – no
English for some reason. Harry's fingers trembled as he handled the
small shiny surgical device. There was the red switch, two settings,
a battery compartment (three AAAs) and most tantalisingly of all the
opening. It was still all innocent enough looking, no obvious blades
or teeth or sharp edges, just an aperture about the size of a
cigarette pack and that red switch. Nervously Harry tried to read the
instructions. He studied the diagrams and he explored the details and
a film clip on their web site. It all seemed straightforward enough.”
Truly I don't quite know what happened
next. I was told that Harry did try to use the device and whatever
the out come lived to tell the tale...but simply chose not to tell. It
just might be that when he got to the point, all systems go, ready to
get that (?) thing, achieve that seemingly unattainable state, press the red button, something else kicked in, some other instinct. I don't know for sure.
I do know that Harry quit his job at the call centre and headed east,
back packing towards the Silk Road searching for a Buddhist teacher, or so some said. An odd thing for a guy his age to do but then again he was
pretty odd anyway.
Wednesday, 5 December 2012
Confused by God
Today there were many things I didn't
do. I could try to list them and examine the reasons why, in these
areas I failed to...well do anything. Missed opportunities, some with
good reasons, others down to laziness, forgetfulness, willfulness
maybe. So those things were not done and now they are now there in an
imaginary pile, somewhere close by. Of course that's only today's
pile, there's also yesterday's pile and the day before and so on.
There's a whole mountain of my undone things out there. Then there's
your pile and yours. And God sees them all.
So, anyway one day God was out walking, looking
around, checking on how things were going in the world. No big
surprises, lots of fucked up things. As usual his chosen people, the
Jews were whinging and playing up, the Christians and followers of
Islam were quite prickly, various other cults and types too, but so
were the Arabs, so were the European tribes, the Chinese, the
Africans and Asians were also at it. The USA and South America were a
confusing blur. It was all quite dispiriting. Then there were endless
media and political debates and disagreements, business deals and
trickery, downright criminality and here and there (and more
prevalent than you might think) pure evil. God tended to get annoyed
with the pure evil stuff. It operated and succeeded at all levels,
from the school playgrounds to boardrooms to torture cells and in
bedrooms and battlefields. There was a lot of it about.
The trouble was that God couldn't
really get to grips with all this stuff. A long time ago he'd cut a
deal and declared himself to be... well out of it. He'd agreed with
himself (a very powerful thing to do) that he wouldn't interfere.
He'd just observe from a distance and that observation would go on
for a while until (and he couldn't quite remember all the details) a
few significant events occurred and those, in the right order, would
act as a trigger for him to go into action and wind things up. So
every day he wondered around looking at all the major and petty wars,
all the crimes and accidents, all the sparks and fires and then did
sweet nothing about them.
At first he'd been indifferent, people
fought and quarrelled but that was about it. They believed in magic
and other things, they dabbled and did some bad things but it was all
on a small enough scales not to make much of a difference. Time
passed, he continued with his walks and every day, degree by degree,
as history unfolded and people got”clever” it all just became
close to intolerable.
“I'm just pissed with all of this,”
said God. “The world is an unholy mess, everybody does stupid
things, they don't learn from their mistakes and frankly all the
religious types are the worst. What are those people thinking and why
do they always have silly hats and ridiculous costumes and what's
with all the singing and chanting and praying? Do they really think I
get off on that and that I'm actually listening to all that drivel?
Just because I can be everywhere that doesn’t mean I'm open to
listen to every banal utterance, no matter how sincere and well meant
it may be. Give me a break!”
So there I was thinking of my pile of
ignored and outstanding things and how God might well regard it. A
complete set of royally troublesome thoughts really and I'm still
inadvertently bothering a beleaguered and confused God. Meanwhile
God's still out there, walking and observing, occasionally counting
up things, secretly wanting to swat the human flies that circle
around him screaming for attention like drunken beggars and, with a
patience that can only be described as divine or crazy still managing
to ignore the clamour.
“Those people think I really love
them, they think it's OK to do whatever, behave appallingly and that
in some magnanimous way I'll just forgive them all and they'll go to
heaven. I've no idea how that idea came about. They're all mortal,
they're human beings, they're one up from apes, they're all going to
croak sooner or later and then it's curtains but do they believe
that? They've bought into a myth and fairy tale that says they'll live
on in spirit someplace in the ether. Well I don't remember ever
saying anything about that...or did I? I forget sometimes and they
just never shut up.” God wheeled away from the clamour, hands
behind his back and began to whistle some Mozart, he whistled and
smiled. “That kid knew a thing or two, I'm actually quite proud of
him but as usual it all went wrong for him. Nice tunes though.” He
walked on and then stopped and thought a little, “I'm not really
happy with the three score and ten, I think I'll do something about
that...”
Tuesday, 27 November 2012
The Speaker
The speaker clenched his hands together
and summed up, “...It's all the time. I feel like I should be doing
something else, even when I first wake up I'm conscious of the fact
(?) that I'm not optimising myself, not making the most of all of my
energy. That sparks a crazy guilt, not squeezing enough out of the
lemon, holding back, failing to multi task. It manifests itself in
funny little ways; making coffee and a snack but supping the coffee
and biting into the biscuit before sitting down (to read a book),
worst case the biscuit is swallowed before I leave one room and get
into another. It's like I've lost sight of everything and at the same
time I can see everything and I'm deliberately trying to consume it,
there on that spot. A simple target achieved is not enough, I
question it's difficultly and it's validity. If there is spare time
left then I've miscalculated something, not taken enough on board,
not really tried. I don't want any of you to ever feel that same
way.”
The speaker then stepped back from the
microphone, got some distance between himself and the podium and open
up his palms to the audience and slowly raised his arms. A ruffle of
applause began and grew and built as his arms lifted. In the
auditorium some folks were on their feet, some shouting now, flashes
popped like silent machine guns, whistles blew off like stray
grenades, more applause, more shouting. The speaker stepped a little
further and began to turn away, ready to leave the stage. By now the
audience were generating a huge sound that was reverberating around
the hall. The evening appeared to have been a success.
The speaker gave a final wave and
acknowledgement of the wall of praise and wheeled away to the left
ready to depart the stage. In the flash of a strobe a single shot
rang out, the sound cut across the din of the crowd as if a bullet
had hit each individual, there was a stunned moment. People looked
around and then gasped as they caught the big screen image and then
translated that with the action of the stage. There was a whirl of
blurting activity. People running and reacting, lights turning from
stage lights to search lights, buzzing and gnawing into the
confusion.
The speaker had been hit. A steady head
shot. There was no miss or mistake, no time for reaction or recoil.
The man fell where he had stood seconds before, falling like a felled
tree and now spread across the stage floor. The big screen suddenly
blanked as the security people began their reaction. The audience
cried and surged forward. A stock message was broadcast but in the
fountain of noise no one heard or reacted, limp and impotent advice
that fell into a great chasm of enforced grim silence that was
roaring in from the exits. A life was over, the night was over, some
other dream was over.
The speaker lay where he fell. A crowd
of officials were now around. Police and security personnel were
swarming in the aisles, slowly building on their reactive template.
The crowd were overcome by the first act were now coming to terms
with the presence of a gunman in the theatre. A gunman who could be
anywhere, anyone. There was a panic as they laid siege to the exits.
The police tried to hold, aware of the haemorrhaging of witnesses,
evidence and suspects but it was all happening too fast. And there
may be more shooting. The commander quickly chose to evacuate and
they threw the doors wide, each body tense against the unseen bullet,
the shove, the finger on the shoulder. Heroes and villains blurred
into a surge of moving panic like hungry locusts crossing and
consuming a field.
The speaker was dead. His assistant was
lying across the warm body screaming, she saw his face as he fell,
she had been ready with the towel and the water. Another assistant
was talking loudly into her ear, she was oblivious in her fresh pain.
Now everything had changed. A hi-viz man who appeared to be a doctor
was holding the dead head, shaking and shouting but the speaker was
gone. Outside the limo engines were still running, the doors
unlocked, he was only a few steps away from the safety of the wide
open spaces of the outside world. A flurry of microphones cracked the
stage cordon, there were fist fights. Questions and anger. The gunman
was invisibly gone, nothing, it was too late for a lockdown now.
There never had been a plan for this. Frustrated police combed what
areas they could, reinforcements arrived, heavy duty detectives and
more from the press contingent. A few arrests were made, petty crimes
and silly violence, all on the fringes. About forty minutes after the
incident, the hall clear, the body photographed and moved a statement
was made.
“The Speaker was assassinated here
tonight at 2205, it is my sad and unfortunate duty to tell you this.
He was killed instantly by a single gunshot. It is believed that the
gunman is still somewhere in the area and our officers are actively
looking for that person or persons as I speak. I'm sure I speak for
all who were here tonight and all devotees of the Speaker when I say
that our search for his assailant will be vigorously pursued, a
simple target achieved is not enough, I question it's difficultly and
it's validity. If there is spare time left then I've miscalculated
something, not taken enough on board, not really tried. I don't want
any of you to ever feel that same way.” In the flash of a strobe a
single shot rang out.
There she was
There she was again, sitting in that
horrid mirror place, looking back and smirking over the top of a pair
of tortoiseshell reading glasses. She didn't say a word, she never
did. Apparently her style today was like some bubbly oyster coloured
flapper of a lost thing, the dress was almost inappropriate with it's
details and flounces, the cardigan shapeless and loose, the tights
were dark and glossy and the shoes were...all wrong really. She'd
been left behind after the party, shoulders exposed to a spotlight
and fingers still tapping to an internal jazz heartbeat. There was
this mish mash of jewellery, picked out in the dark and applied like
blind make up, by necessity without design but it created some chunky
special stay away effect. Maybe that buried smirk was really some
kind of a knowing smile, disguised, either way it was hard to hold
the ambiguous gaze for too long. Like putting your finger into a
candle flame or touching your forearm against the edge of a hot oven,
that inevitable sharp pain would come and then the scarring. It could
last for weeks. That was the effect she had; if you were weak enough
to acknowledge the coming of the pain. A lazy blond Medusa machine.
She was sitting back in the chair now,
maybe ready to suck a pen, touch a typewriter key or light some
illicit cigarette, perhaps she'd swig English gin and shake the noisy
ice cubes in your face, you never knew. Was that not the kind of
thing that modern writers did these days? Somehow her elbows seemed
extra important, as if grappling as alien metaphors for harvesting
machines or just pointing things that signed and threatened the
casual observer to stay out of the way. Some respectful space was
needed here or you'll get yourself poked. Her eyes still followed and
there was no easy escape. The drama stained and sticky pupils were
dark and beady with a muted centre, in behind those glasses,
unflattering but practical. At some point everything gets distilled
down to the unflattering and practical, it you let yourself go or get
that far down the road. Her hair was piled up and held against it's
will by two dark clips, like some forgotten hedge that had been
teased and tousled into temporary submission, she'd get round to
taming it some time, in some chrome and plastic parlour, maybe best
done with somebody else's hands. She was that ex-Southern Belle type,
spoiled, whatever that had come to mean. Her heart was anchored down
home on the dreary plantation, perhaps just down in the plantation
but if she was sweating for it in there you couldn't tell. She knew
how to hold in her own heat.
An informed observer might have said
that inside her, there was something stirring, a hungry itch, a big
dirty sensation, a struggling, writhing thing that wanted and waited
for the release factor of a public exposition. For a moment it wanted
to live and catapult a strange alter-author out across this dumb
universe into a sky full of fizzy fireworks and sparklers and
squeezed up and compressed feeling. Then when those feelings grew too
hot and out of control they could be pissed out back into a bucket
of ice cold water. That guilty freeze and the vivid torture held up
in a submissive cocktail of remorse and displayed in a polite state
of less than fully conscious and less than stone dead. That was the
ultimate goal, to meet up with those informed eyes, see through them
into a golden and unattainable life beyond, hold it all in the mouth,
swirl and then spit it all back out in a mess across the world. Not
pleasant or civilised really but then we are such complex, depraved
and forever suckling animals...and it just may be that she is the
queen.
Screwfix
For the first half of his life James
had collected screws and fasteners, from wherever they landed, half
used, pulled from some wall or fixing, James picked them up.
Sometimes they were the new, extra screws that came with products but
were superfluous and unnecessary. The screws were stored away in the
work boxes, sometimes roughly categorised, sometimes just thrown on
top of other materials and so left to find their own level in the
hotch potch of tools and redundant items. From time to time James
would search for one or two to fix a shelf or a door hinge or carry
out some other repair. More screws went into those boxes than ever
came out.
Then came the day that James had a
thought, in fact he had series of thoughts, one after the other. They
tumbled into his mind, crashing into each other, splintering like
glass or broken bottles. It wasn't painful nor shocking, just
unusual, an unusual event and it made James stop. James had come
across a screw, there, on the pavement outside of his house, he'd
picked it up and was about to put it into his pocket and then it
would be tossed into the tool boxes until, some day it was required.
James held back on putting it into his
pocket, he looked at the screw, he held it up between his thumb and
index finger. It was a wood screw, an inch and quarter, soft with a
cross countersunk head and made from some cheap almost but not quite
brass alloy. James had seen this type of screw many times before and
he knew he had many squirrelled away in his useful boxes. His
confused thoughts began to clear, like a Blackpool beach at six
o'clock. He looked at the screw and thought; “Along with all the
other screws, nails, fasteners and bits and bops I have, how or when
will I ever use you, you little inch and quarter screw?” The screw
didn't answer. James just rotated it between his thumb and finger,
looking at the thread and head and knowing, for the first time, that
it was unlikely that this screw would be put to any useful use by
him, ever.
Holding that thought James put the
screw into his pocket and went back inside the house. He took off his
shoes put on slippers and opened up the cupboard under the stair.
There were his DIY boxes of odd bits, he pulled them out into the
better daylight of the hall and looked at them. Their contents stared
back as dumb as just the random sweepings of an ironmonger's floor, a
life's flotsam and collected junk. Suddenly it seemed a sad and
pointless collection; odd brackets, packets of raw-plugs, bits of
wire, half used rolls of tape, misshaped pieces of doweling, washers,
panel pins, picture and cup hooks, dirty and slightly bent nails,
roofing bolts and nyloc nuts, torn strips of sandpaper and screws
(all shapes and sizes). James regarded them all, a big iron, timber
and plastic puddle of discarded and unused, never to be used useful
things. All useless in this current, slowly revolving version of
James' world.
James then had a pantomime script
thought, “maybe if I can't use all this clutter and crap somebody
else could.” He pondered the practicalities versus the
impracticalities. Nobody would really want this and surely almost
every household carried a similar amount of accumulated junk
somewhere in it's soft underbelly languishing there as everywhere
else. Mountains of screws, washers and panel pins, rising up in great
suburban heaps, waiting on a day of user fulfilment that would never
come. So there was that and then there was James' own life, running
down and useless, like the boxes of screws. Running down and useless.
James put the boxes away and closed the
cupboard door. It was early evening, the sunlight was a copper
glowing thing that played and strayed across blinds and furniture.
The room was warm and peaceful. James drew himself a large golden
glass of whisky and sat in the big chair. The sun made him squint for
a few seconds and then bathed him. He looked at the family
photographs on the mantlepiece. The light was good, just had God had
made it and thought and reflected on it, some time ago, they say.
James supped the whisky and allowed it to work it's earthy and
alcoholic magic, a soothing and a primal spirit, perhaps some
distilled rival to God's warm and deadly sunshine, for surely he had
not created alcohol; that was man's doing (or wrong doing). James
floated away, his life was more than halfway over, passed the marked
milestone towards some three score and ten. He was nearly sixty and
in those boxes there were at least another fifty years worth of
household repair materials. Time was being cruelly measured in the
mundane, in the consumable, in the petty and the irrelevant. No big
event, no bridge to build, no flood to recover from, no hurricane or
earthquake to rebuild after, just tinkering stuff, just stuff that
you tinker with, that's all that's left.
In the future everybody may be famous
for fifteen minutes but nobody will care how that picture was hung,
if that shelf was straight or how well the carpet edges were held
down. Details don't last. There will be none of that, maybe only a
great explosion or a meteor driven dust storm, then a long and fitful
sleep. The end, however unlikely will come from and inhabit someone's
imagination, it could even be James'. James thought that was
unlikely.
When you were a child did you watch and
remember all the people who'd pass by outside your house? The
important looking gents and ladies, the workers and labourers,
postmen, policemen or nearby neighbours, kids headed for school, dog
walkers and once in a while a mysterious stranger. People you saw
everyday but never knew. Today, through some wilful mist you can
still picture their faces, see their clothes and style of walking,
hear their voices, even though you never spoke. Where are they now?
James though hard about this and how he couldn't quite recapture the
view, it was a dull picture with muted sound, it was the past,
measured out in those trivial and nondescript events. It had meant
something then, now it was just a mental exercise in recalling a
travelogue that went to nowhere. James took another sip of his
whisky. “Getting old is just something that everybody does, it's
not an illness or a weakness. It's just a collection of things,
picked up, some used, some stored, some discarded and the judgements
you make on the usefulness of these things are all pretty much
meaningless – in the grand scheme of things.”
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