94 lines
6.5 KiB
Plaintext
94 lines
6.5 KiB
Plaintext
|
Feeling Good 5/26/87
|
|||
|
by Thomas Covenant 8:39pm
|
|||
|
An antidote to Silver Ghost's file, "One Wish".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I just realized today that I feel good.
|
|||
|
It came as a complete surprise, "surprisingly" enough. I got off work, took
|
|||
|
the bus downtown, cashed my paychecks, went to the bookstore, bought Stephen
|
|||
|
King's latest ("Misery" -- read it!), took the bus home, and sat down to watch
|
|||
|
TV for a while. Then it hit me. I feel good.
|
|||
|
That statement can't be taken just at face value. You have to think of it as
|
|||
|
meaning EVERYTHING is good. Not just the fact that I have almost enough saved
|
|||
|
up for a decent stereo, not just that I have a great relationship with a girl
|
|||
|
who I have been involved with for almost two years now, not just that I survived
|
|||
|
the hazards of moving and now live in a house with an outdoor swimming pool and
|
|||
|
whirlpool, bar, and pool table. Material possessions are fine, but they alone
|
|||
|
don't make you feel THIS good.
|
|||
|
I think one of the clues was a few days ago. I was walking home from my
|
|||
|
girlfriend's house, and everything looked different. I was seeing auras very
|
|||
|
easily, looking at all the living things. I picked up a nice sized stick as I
|
|||
|
walked, did a spread on it, and ended up making it into a full fledged staff
|
|||
|
later that night. It felt nice. I found myself humming, walking along, looking
|
|||
|
across the ponds at the way the sun reflected off the water, walking with an
|
|||
|
odd, off-step little gait that allowed me to whack dandelions every so often and
|
|||
|
watch the fluff spiral off. It made me feel good, knowing in a few weeks, those
|
|||
|
seeds would make more dandelions. Dandelions should be the anarchist's symbol,
|
|||
|
put on an anarchy flag. They're everywhere. They're prolific, they're hardy and
|
|||
|
mostly weather resistant, and a lot of people hate them but they're still cute,
|
|||
|
and have this odd sort of appeal. Looking a field full of them takes your breath
|
|||
|
away.
|
|||
|
I haven't gotten high for almost three weeks now. I felt good before then,
|
|||
|
and in the same kind of way, but it never lasted. I don't know whether to point
|
|||
|
a finger at my abstinence, or something else (but I can't think of anything else
|
|||
|
at the moment). I've still been drinking beer regularly, but that's different.
|
|||
|
Weed pulls you into yourself, even though it gives your vision that extra edge
|
|||
|
to see auras. Beer and other alcohol products make you open up. Some people call
|
|||
|
it loosening of inhibitions -- I call it Feeling Good. Anything else sounds sort
|
|||
|
of cliche-ish and smacks unpleasantly of hippies getting high and preaching
|
|||
|
universal love, to all people and most inanimate objects, like the way Aldous
|
|||
|
Huxley watched those bamboo chair legs on mescaline. I'll always party, but it's
|
|||
|
still nice to know I can feel this way without artificial aids.
|
|||
|
I'm looking out the window at the swimming pool. It should be working in two
|
|||
|
or three days; I'm having a housewarming party then and having over a bunch of
|
|||
|
friends. These friends aren't partyers -- I have two classes of friends (well,
|
|||
|
actually three, but I'll go into that later on). Type A are the hardcore party
|
|||
|
types, the kind that I say "Fuck" and "Man" around, that I don't usually tell
|
|||
|
anything really deep or emotional. Type B are the kind that a lot of people
|
|||
|
consider weirdos -- they're unclassifiable. They're not preps, they're not punks
|
|||
|
or metalheads, they're not druggies, they're not anything I know of. They have
|
|||
|
eclectic tastes, same as I do -- they can listen to Beethoven one minute and be
|
|||
|
jamming to Slapshot or Anthrax the next -- and they get off on both equally.
|
|||
|
They'll read Stephen King one minute and Christopher Morley the next. (In case
|
|||
|
you don't know who he is, he was a bookseller in the days of World War II who
|
|||
|
wrote a few books that I enjoy thoroughly. One was a two book series: "Parnassus
|
|||
|
On Wheels" and "The Haunted Bookshop". If you read these, you'll love 'em. Trust
|
|||
|
me.) Anyway, they're good people. The third type, Type C, are the friends that
|
|||
|
are kind of a cross between Types A and B. Figure it out yourself.
|
|||
|
My board, Thieve's World, is doing real well right now. It survived the house
|
|||
|
change (with a lot better grace than I did, I'll have to admit) and currently is
|
|||
|
getting somewhere on the order of 25-30 new posts a day. That's a conservative
|
|||
|
estimate, since I'm not sure of the exact number. It's getting a lot of new
|
|||
|
callers, LD (long distance) as well as local, and to my amazement, not all of
|
|||
|
them are jellyfish. They're posting. Truly, I am surprised. They even express
|
|||
|
their opinions intelligently. I haven't gotten any new textfiles for a while,
|
|||
|
but then again, I haven't really called any boards for a while. I think I'll
|
|||
|
start again, probably tomorrow since I have the day off.
|
|||
|
I'm going over to a friend's tonight. (He's a Type C.) We're planning on
|
|||
|
drinking a case of beer, maybe two, and watching "Animal House" on his bigscreen
|
|||
|
TV. I'll probably spend the night there, and he may have some other friends over
|
|||
|
with some weed. It'll be interesting to see how these three weeks of abstinence
|
|||
|
have affected my tolerance.
|
|||
|
I have the next day off, as well as tomorrow. I'll probably go to the school
|
|||
|
down the road and visit my girlfriend and assorted other friends, as well as one
|
|||
|
of the counselors there (she's the mother of another friend of mine, and a good
|
|||
|
friend of mine herself). I'll walk through the halls, noting how young all the
|
|||
|
freshmen are looking this year; listen to the seniors blab about how great it'll
|
|||
|
be to be out of school; go to my girlfriend's speech class and coach her from
|
|||
|
the back row as she holds up her notecards, forgetting that she drew all over
|
|||
|
the backs of them; do some outlining of a short story I'm writing. It'll be fun.
|
|||
|
When I leave, I'll go to the park across the street for a while. I'll walk
|
|||
|
around smiling at people, old and young alike. I'll walk barefoot through the
|
|||
|
grass with my Nikes tied together and slung over my shoulder, feeling it whisper
|
|||
|
things up through my toes and the soles of my feet. I'll splash through the
|
|||
|
stream with my jeans pushed up, feeling the slippery rocks underfoot, feeling
|
|||
|
the current push its way around my legs. I'll sit there on the bridge, dangling
|
|||
|
my feet in the water and thinking of nothing in particular, feeling the sunlight
|
|||
|
drift lazily across my bare chest. I'll sit there, and walk through the woods
|
|||
|
afterwards, crunching pine needles and smelling their scent. I'll come home,
|
|||
|
check out the board, and go to bed.
|
|||
|
Life is good, and I'm happy. That's all I ever want.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
their scent. I'll come home,
|
|||
|
check out the board, and go to bed.
|
|||
|
Life is good, and I'm happy. That's all I ever want
|