460 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
460 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
(- Trina Magna -)
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(- Volume One; Issue One -)
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(- Trina Magna: More Hip than AOL -)
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(- Slipstream of the Starlings (The Introduction) -) -------------------------
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Owen can no longer speak english, so I am going to translate what he is
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saying for all of you.
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(Owen speaking in Russian)
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"Hi! Welcome to Trina Magna, the zine about life, knowledge, and change.
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I would like to thank Pablo for translating this for me. I am very, very
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sorry for I can no longer speak English."
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(- Contents of Trina Magna; Volume One, Issue One -) -------------------------
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1) Introduction: Slipstream of the Starlings
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2) Contents of Trina Magna
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3) A Letter to Eylasis
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4) Oregon
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5) Peacefulness
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6) Everything and Nothing Else
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7) Everything Else
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8) Four
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7) Bye!
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( - A Letter to Eylasis -) ---------------------------------------------------
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3 April 1987
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Eylasis -
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I've come to the moment that you've waited for. Yup, I've seriously gone
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to the end of the road with this one. Last night I went and I talked to her.
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You never liked her very much but I wanted to talk to her anyway. She was
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always the most interesting person. She'll bring up the weirdest things, and
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she plays that damn Tori over and over. She really sounds like she's always
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having an orgasm when she's singing doesn't she? Scott was right. Oh, well.
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Anyway, like I was saying she brings up the weirdest things. Oh, this is a
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another Tori thing -- she always brings the weird things up when Tori is
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hitting the low notes on the piano making it seem like she's coordinating
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her words with the notes Tori plays to give her extra emphasis. I wouldn't
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doubt it actually, it seems like something she would do.
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I was never sure why you didn't like me talking to her, but sometimes I
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just gotta do things. So, anyway, as you can imagine -- it was really late.
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Like 3 or 4 in the morning and I was reading and eating some seafood and I
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began to think about the book I was reading (Time Must Have a Stop by
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Huxley, if you really must know) and I just got this feeling of a need for a
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deep, deep, deep conversation. Well, those are kind of hard to find at 3 or
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4 in the morning, but then I remembered seeing Saby a few hours earlier and
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her saying that she had been feeling kind of bad and probably would be up
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pretty late, kind of like I get sometimes. You know? Anyhow, I got up, left
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my seafood out (which turned out to not be the best thing in the world,
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because my place really smelled pretty bad when I back later), and took off.
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For some reason my car wouldn't start right away, and it was pretty cold
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that night, so that's probably why. After like 5 minutes I got it to start,
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but realizing that the car most have just been really cold I let it sit for
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another minute or two while I popped my new GSW tape in that I had just
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dubbed. When I was sitting there, I was thinking about that time we had when
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we were a little younger and had these kinds of talks. I'm not exactly sure
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why we don't anymore. Anyway, I finally took off. My car began to smell like
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seafood thanks to my late night snack. I love the food, but I hate the smell
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it can leave. The only thing that smells any worse is when someone doesn't
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do their dishes and leaves 2 week old food in the sink.
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Having to drive out on some of the country roads, it was quite dark and
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I had to use my brights. It must have rained earlier that night because the
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usual bumpy dirt roads were quite muddy and slippery. About 20 minutes later
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I got to Saby's place. I was right, she was still up. Her apartment was the
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brightest one there and was easily spotted. I have never actually been to
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her apartment before, but I knew where it was for some odd reason. I quietly
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rapped on the thin, wooden door to her place. I could hear her playing music
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in the back room, but I wasn't so sure she would still be awake. I tapped
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once and after about a minute she didn't answer. I figured she had fallen
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asleep watching TV or something, so I just left. Right when I got to my car,
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she opened the door to her place. Luckily she saw me before I drove off. She
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yelled at me and asked me what the hell I was doing so late at her place. I
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told her I just wanted to talk about nothing in particular and knew she
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would be awake. She smiled, laughed, and let me in. We ended up talking for
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a little while, enough to satisfy my need for a deep, deep discussion.
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Right when I was about to leave, I just sat there and began humming.
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Man, if you want to see one freaked out chick, you should have seen Saby.
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During all of this I was totally conscious. She just started yelling,
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"Pablo! Pablo! Would you please stop humming. I have to go to the dentist
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tomorrow."
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So, after about an hour and a half I stopped, coincidentally after she
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stopped playing Tori and I got up and without saying a word to her, I left.
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Hope all is well in Vancouver.
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-- Pablo
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(- Oregon -) -----------------------------------------------------------------
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He's been meditating for almost three hours now. I've been able to hear
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his steady breathing for the past two. It usually takes him an hour or so to
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get to this point where he can concentrate on the Divine, our Lord Christ.
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The sound of his breathing brings tears to my eyes. Sometimes more.
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We left for Oregon four days ago. He insisted that he could do this only
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here, no where else he told me. We took the train he told me so we could
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observe the beauty of it all. Michael loves the train. I love him so.
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It's dusk now and I can tell that he is losing his concentration. His
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breathing isn't so steady anymore. He seems to be dozing off every few
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seconds. He seems to be fighting it, though. I look at his body and see
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muscles that have gone through so much in a lifetime. Quite a lifetime it's
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been, too. For a man that's 46, he's done a lot. And I'm not talking about
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your usually American Dream type story. Yes, Michael had a job, and yes he
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knew he had to earn money to live and support his family, but he knew that
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that wasn't what he really loved. He loved everything in the world. Michael
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gives me everything he can, no matter how tired he is.
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He danced with me earlier telling me why we were here in Oregon. We
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swayed and swayed for hours. It was so relaxing to hold Michael close to me
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and listen to the quietness.
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"There is so much calm here. I can think clearly." he whispered in my
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ear as we swayed to the nonexistent music that was only in our minds. "You
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know these journeys mean a lot to me, don't you?"
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"Yes," I told him as I rested my head against his shoulder, holding him
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as tight as I could, feeling the sweat on his back that was left from
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sitting in the setting sun for so long. "But why? I mean, I know why you are
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here. I just don't completely understand. I look into your eyes and all I
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see is pain."
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"I'm not an idle man. I was once. You've seen what it left behind in me.
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I'm fighting it. I'm fighting the idleness that has been left behind in me."
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Michael let go of me and began to walk towards the shore, I heard a
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faint, "I love you, Noel," as he walked. "We'll continue our dance later."
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"Yes, Michael," I told him as I rested myself on the beach, pushing my
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skirt under me to protect myself from the pieces of liter that had been left
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behind. I began to pray silently to myself. His words were enough. I now
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understood.
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(- Peacefulness -) -----------------------------------------------------------
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Peacefulness within yourself is a most difficult idea to understand,
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to grasp, and to even believe exists. Peace, though -- when attained, is
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something that will never be lost because that feeling of peacefulness is
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such bliss that without it would be like living in hell itself.
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( - Everything and Nothing Else -) -------------------------------------------
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Just like the previous 2 nights, Pat had fallen asleep on his couch with
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nothing on his mind and his mind on nothing except the night and what he was
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going to do next. It was late, of course, and it was unreasonably warm for a
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February night in Chicago. The TV continued to play on, alive as could be.
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Speaking, but with its only audience member, Pat, dead asleep. Pat had spent
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the night alone, with only himself and his computer. His computer had seemed
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to become his only real friend as of late, mainly because of the anti-social
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behavior that he could not understand, but also because he really had no
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interest in meeting another person, that in his mind, he would have another
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worthless, meaningless conversation with and would later just say goodbye to
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and never think about again.
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Pat awoke yelling like he had never been asleep and as he fell off the
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couch and onto the hardest floor known to man. "Crap! I've got to get out of
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this place." Hopping over the leftover chinese food he had left out from
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last night's dinner he went into his room and grab a pair of dirty pants,
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clean blue shirt, and a his last pair of clean socks. "I really gotta clean
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up my room." After a few minutes, Pat finally got dressed amidst the
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horrible mess that was his room.
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"This is horribly quite odd. I really have no idea what I'm doing. It's
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like what? 4 am? Where the heck am I going to go at 4 am in Chicago? Now, if
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this was New York there would be plenty to do. Hmm. Cereal. I want cereal.
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Wait, I don't have any milk. Hmm. White Hen Pantry. They're always open.
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Hmm. I can get milk there. Hmm."
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Passing the security guard of his apartment, Pat checked his watch and
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waved bye to the guard that had always been quite friendly.
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"See ya later, Pat."
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Not really paying attention, but still hearing her Pat, remembering his
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manners that his mom had taught him years ago, Pat said a quick goodbye.
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"Yeah, later Claudia."
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"Where you going this late?"
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"Out to get some milk. I want to eat some cereal."
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"Kind of late for cereal, don't you think?"
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"Nah. It's just the right time. Cereal is good whenever, you know?"
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"I suppose. It's warm out, might not need your coat. It's like 68."
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"Odd," Pat quickly retorted as he finally got out the door. It rained
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earlier, or later (depending on how you look at it), that morning. As Pat
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hop-scotched over the puddles as he walked he thought about what really was
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important to him. "I just don't like what goes on around here, he thought
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aloud. I just don't like what I'm doing with stuff. I just don't do much
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anymore.
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"Streetwise? Help the poor! Streetwise? Streeeeeeeeetwise?"
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"Uh, no thanks man. I already got the new edition."
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"God bless ya," the streetwise vendor praised. "The Lord has blessed
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another one!"
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Pat looked ahead and could finally see the apartment complex that the
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White Hen was a part of. A block or so away from the White Hen, Pat heard a
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crash behind the apartment next to him. He stopped and looked behind the
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cold, industrial looking apartment that had the design of about 50 other
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apartment complexes in the city. There was another loud crash, but this time
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Pat realized it was some guy throwing bottles of hard liquor out of his
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apartment window. "Cut it out, man. You'll hurt someone."
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"Ah, shut up ya droog. I got me my beer and that's all I need."
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"But please be careful, you'll hurt someone," Pat told the man, ignoring
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any comment that funny man had for him.
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As Pat walked to White Hen he walked passed a little park he used to
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visit quite a bit. "That was quite a nice park, it was. The trees. The trees
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were so beautiful, they were. Every tree imaginable is in that park." And
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every tree imaginable was in that park. Every tree, every fruit, every
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vegetable. It was quite the park and Pat loved it so. "Why, I've got to get
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my milk. It's getting quite early. I must have my cereal before 6."
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Pat finally arrived at the White Hen Pantry approximately 15 minutes
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after he left he worn down apartment.
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"89 cents? Wow, that's an amazing price!" Pat grabbed the on-sale milk
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walked passed the also on-sale salsa. After getting the large
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african-american females attention away from the sandwiches she was making
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he slammed down his 95 cents.
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"That all you want?" the woman asked Pat starring deep into his soul.
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"Yea, I got what I need. All I need is my cereal anyways."
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"Alright. Have a nice day."
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And with that Pat had his milk and was set to eat his cereal. Now, you
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may ask, why is eating cereal so important to Pat at this time of day? Well,
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because cereal is in a way, something more than cereal to Pat. Pat has no
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one except himself and anything can become special when you have nothing
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else. This cereal now becomes everything else that Pat could not have.
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(- Everything Else -) --------------------------------------------------------
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A boy sits next to his mother, thinking of what his future could be. So
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much to choose from, so much to do. He is himself, and nothing else. The
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boy's mother asks him what he wants to be when he grows up. He says he wants
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to be everything in the world. He is himself, and nothing else.
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The boy sits next to his friends, thinking of what he is doing. What
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should he be doing? What will they think of him? He is not himself, and
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everything else. No longer did he care for them, no longer did he care for
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himself. He is not himself, and everything else
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The boy sits next to his grave. Thinking of what his past could have
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been. What should he have done? There was nothing he could do, he swears! It
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was just him, and nothing else. They ask him what was wrong, but there
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really wasn't a problem. it was just him, and nothing else.
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[History of _Everything Else_]
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This was originally written about two years ago (2/15/95) in a math
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class. The poem went on, in a revised form, to be the words behind "a
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disturbing, moody piece about the turmoil and struggle of being oneself (The
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Pantagraph, Saturday, July 29, 1995." "Everything Else," the performing
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arts piece was done by myself and a friend, Jason Huls, was critically
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acclaimed by many.
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Hopefully this summer I'll be returning to the Illinois Summer School
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for the arts as a counceler. WeeE!
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(- Four -) ----------------------------------------------------------------
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There's something strange about all of this. The people. The movement.
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The scene. Definitely the scene. The scene is very strange. All the
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rush-rush, no one looking back. Sometimes i don't even look back. I mean, I
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want to, I really do, but I just don't for some reason. I just want my world
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back. Everything I am is there.
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Rush-rush. That's what it's like. Everyone's in a hurry. The problem is,
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the more I see people hurry, the slower I want to go. Everything here would
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be so much better if everyone just realized that if they went slower they
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would enjoy everything so much more. It just goes too fast for me, that's
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all.
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When I moved to the city seven months ago I figured everything would be
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cool, and from an outsider's point of view, it is. I mean, to an outsider,
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what isn't here? You've got access to about anything that you could possibly
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want or need. That's just it. That's the thing. That's the problem. There's
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just too much in the city to grab on to.
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It was on a really slow day that I realized this and a lot of other
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things. I had class at 9:30 in the TORCO building and my class got out at
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around 10:50, five minutes late, like always. My teacher, Mr. Van Marter,
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always gets himself all riled up at about 10:40 and he just has to finish
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what he's saying or sometimes it's this Islamic guy who rambles on about the
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founders of the united states being hypocrites. Whatever the reason is, we
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just always get out five minutes late.
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I left my class and walked back to my place, passing by the usual -- El
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Taco Loco, parking lot, Harold's's Chicken Shack #42, parking garage, and
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the rumored to be owned by the maffia South Loop Club. I fumbled around in
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my torn up jacket for my key. My next class wasn't until late into the
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evening and usually I just go back to my apartment and sleep for a few
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hours, but this time i actually did something. This time I decided to be a
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bit adventurous and take the El down to the north side of town to go wonder
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around and just think about things and why things hadn't seemed to be going
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right since i had moved to the city.
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I got off the el at one of the more trendy parts of Chicago -- Belmont.
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That's not always bad, but it also isn't always very appealing. There's your
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usually trendy second hand clothing, book, alternamusic, and coffee places
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and then there's this one place i like to go to. It's a little corner
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restaurant off of Belmont on Armitage called Chili Mac's Five Way. That
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place serves some of the best chili i have ever eaten in my entire life. The
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chili is so good, in fact, that it will make all that is too fast in life
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seem to slow down a bit. The place is called Chili Mac's Five Way because
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they serve chili, of course, five different ways.
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Anyway, with only five bucks in hand, i went for the chili four-way and
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a water. I got my chili, sat down, and started reading from Huxley's _Time
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Must Have a Stop_. After about ten minutes later a large man walked in. He
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must have been 300 plus pounds. He wore an old grandpa hat, a fishing vest
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with all sorts of buttons, and had these humongous chops. He walked up to
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the counter, bought some coffee, looked around for a minute, saw me and came
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and sat down next to me. It was the strangest thing. He just sat there for a
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minute and then he pulled out a pack of cigarettes from one of the many
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pockets he had in his vest.
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"You like the chili here don't you?"
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"Yeah. It's pretty good I guess."
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"Want a cigarette?"
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"No. Don't smoke. Never have, never will."
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There was a weird pause. He just sat there and looked around and after a
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few minutes he just stared at me.
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"Like the book?"
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"This? Oh, yeah. It's pretty good."
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"I read it once. I've read a lot of books in my time. So many that i
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just stopped reading all together. Now i just wonder around these parts of
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town. Not just this town really, but a lot of towns. Oregon's my favorite
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part of the country actually."
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"And you just walk around and talk to people like me?"
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"No, you're the first one."
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"Oh. Okay. So, how's it going?"
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"Pretty good I guess. Mind if I have a bite of your chili?"
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"Hmm. That's some good chili."
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"It is, isn't it? You know -- this chili, it kind of reminds me of
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life."
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"How so?"
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"See, you got your one-way chili with just chili, which is kind of like
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when you are a young kid and you've got nothing on your mind except just
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being a kid. There's nothing there complicating your life, kind of like one
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way chili, cause there's just the chili there. No cheese or beans getting in
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the way of the taste of the chili."
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"Sounds kind of far fetched to me. How about you just eat the chili."
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"No, no. Check this out. See, then you got chili two-way. Chili two-way
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is like when you start second grade. Chili two-way adds the spaghetti which
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makes the chili a bit more complex, like in first or second grade when the
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kids that once didn't care about anything else in the world except just
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being kids have been exposed to the complex world long enough that they have
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begun to be like that world, becoming more complex within themselves. No
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longer does everyone like everyone else, but they realize that people are
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different."
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"I guess that the makes sense a little. Personally, I see life like this
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coffee I got. It's endless. Whenever I run out, there's always a waitress to
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refill it."
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"Hold on a sec. This is even better. Next you got the three-way chili.
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Not only do you just have the chili and spaghetti but you have a huge load
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of cheese on that chili. Imagine that huge load of cheese as all the peer
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pressure and other pre-teen crap that you're bombarded with when you hit 12
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and enter the 7th grade. Now not only do people not like each other, they
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hate each other for even worse reasons than when you were in elementary
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school and in junior high the kids get even more vocal and even more violent
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making your already low junior-high self esteem even lower. Heh. Too much
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cheese is bad, i guess."
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"But not enough cheese is bad, as well. Those initial experiences at
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that age are important. That's the age where you begin to develope a
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personality apart from your parents."
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"Then there's the chili four-way. It's the chili with an option. You can
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either get onions or beans, kind of like high school or college. You get to
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choose to either continue being dumb and ignorant like you were in junior
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high or you can realize that you have the brain capacity to realize that you
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were being stupid in junior high school and that you are going to stop being
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that way. At first I went for the beans, which are a little easier on the
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stomach, and continued being dumb, but after awhile I ended up eating the
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onions because of the more complex taste. The fifth-way, though, is the
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chili with everything. Like with the five-way chili, you have to have a full
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grown stomach to eat this. You have grown as much as you can and everything
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is there. Your life is complete, just like the chili. You can still make
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some decisions to do this or that, but everything is pretty much set."
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"Whatever. Like I said, just eat the chili. Say, what's your name
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anyway?"
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"Mark."
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"Mark, I came here for a reason. I came to tell you something that you
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need to know and you better understand. I'm only going to explain this once
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and there will be no questions so you better listen."
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"Okay. Shoot."
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"You think things are too fast, don't you? Well, they aren't. You make
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things too fast. You can make them slow again. You think things suck. Well,
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they don't. It's you. You made this all up. You made things as bad as they
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are. So stop. Since you made it bad, make it good again. The good is there,
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you know it is. Everything you love is there, so love it to death. Don't
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lose it, don't ever lose it because you know you love it. All this angst
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inside of you, that's all it is, inside of you. If you wanted it gone, it
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could be, just like that. That's it. That's all I wanted to say."
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And just like that he extinguished his cigarette and left. A few minutes
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after he left I decided that I should go, too. For such a short message, he
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made me think about a lot. He's right, you know. All of this, inside of me,
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it's just in my head. Anyway, i think i'll stop now. It's about time, too.
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(- Bye! -) -----------------------------------------------------------------
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Check for the rad html version of Trina Magna One in the next
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couple of days (http://pages.ripco.com:8080/~owilliam).
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Trina Magna One was completed on 04.16.97
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Everything here is (c)1997, the owen williams experience. If you have
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any questions or comments, contact me at owilliam@ripco.com.
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(- eof -)
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