2827 lines
150 KiB
Plaintext
2827 lines
150 KiB
Plaintext
Living in such a state taTestaTesTaTe etats a hcus ni gniviL
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of mind in which time sTATEsTAtEsTaTeStA emit hcihw ni dnim of
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does not pass, space STateSTaTeSTaTeStAtE ecaps ,ssap ton seod
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does not exist, and sTATeSt oFOfOfo dna ,tsixe ton seod
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idea is not there. STatEst ofoFOFo .ereht ton si aedi
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Stuck in a place staTEsT OfOFofo ecalp a ni kcutS
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where movements TATeSTa foFofoF stnemevom erehw
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are impossible fOFoFOf elbissopmi era
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in all forms, UfOFofO ,smrof lla ni
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physical and nbEifof dna lacisyhp
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or mental - uNBeInO - latnem ro
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your mind is UNbeinG si dnim rouy
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focusing on a unBEING a no gnisucof
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lone thing, or NBeINgu ro ,gniht enol
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a lone nothing. bEinGUn .gnihton enol a
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You are numb and EiNguNB dna bmun era ouY
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unaware to events stneve ot erawanu
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taking place - not iSSUE ton - ecalp gnikat
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knowing how or what 7/31/98 tahw ro who gniwonk
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to think. You are in FORTY-EiGHT ni era uoY .kniht ot
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a state of unbeing.... ....gniebnu fo etats a
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--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
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CONTENTS OF THiS iSSUE
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=----------------------=
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EDiTORiAL Kilgore Trout
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LETTERS TO THE EDiTOR
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STAFF LiSTiNGS
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[=- ARTiCLES -=]
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CLASS: MARXiST AND AMERiCAN Crux Ansata
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NO PARiS TO FORGET Clockwork
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THE BRAVE, KINDA NEW WORLD OF PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY Morrigan
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VERNA CARRiGAN Sweater Girl
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PAGES FROM A DiARY Crux Ansata
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[=- POETASTRiE -=]
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FOR GRANTED Radioactive Mutant in Search of Antibiotics
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TiTAN Radioactive Mutant in Search of Antibiotics
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[=- FiCTiON -=]
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VERONiCA Kilgore Trout
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AN EVENiNG AT STiNKY PETE'S Rich Logsdon
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REiNCARNATED HiTLER, WHAT?,
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or A PAiR OF BLUE SHOES, A STORY Kilgore Trout
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YOU TOOK THE WORDS Sophie Random
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--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
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EDiTORiAL
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by Kilgore Trout
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In less than 24 hours, hopefully I will be sitting in one of the two
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local arthouse theaters at a screening of the movie _Pi._ This makes me
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extremely happy. I don't think I've looked forward to a movie this much
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since, oh, _I Shot Andy Warhol._ Of course, I'm MORE looking forward to this
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||
because Valarie Solanis wasn't a damn kabbalist. If she was, that would have
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been really interesting. I wonder what the gematria for SCUM is?
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Do I have too much time on my hands? Some might think so. Jewish
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mystics would say that doing stuff like gematria leads to enlightenment
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because you find connections from everything to everything, thereby
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obliterating it all. Kinda like an active western path as opposed to
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||
silencing the mind like they like to do in the east. Which one works better?
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Different strokes for different folks. Kabbalists have cool diagrams, but I
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really like those stone gardens too.
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||
|
||
After paying way too much money for some books this past weekend, I have
|
||
come to the conclusion that I should give up my quest to get paid to write
|
||
fiction and write cheesy occult books. The books I bought were good enough to
|
||
justify (haha) the price I paid for them, as compared to other books on the
|
||
shelves that were the same price and complete crap. Yeah, I don't mind paying
|
||
15 bucks for a compilation of selected excerpts from John Dee's diaries and
|
||
notes because I'm not going to be heading over to England to see the original
|
||
Sloane manuscripts anytime soon, but I just wonder who pays $17 for a book
|
||
about the lost teachings of Atlantis as channeled by Mystic Joe Schmoe in his
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Hollywood home.
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But maybe I'm just a biased bastard. Maybe I'm a big skeptic who just
|
||
can't keep an open mind about everything. Maybe I make sure to really examine
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||
the contents of a book I'm considering buying if I see that it's published by
|
||
Llewellyn (one of the books I bought WAS from them, so nyah). I mean, I guess
|
||
people buy these things, although I've never seen them being bought or on
|
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anybody's shelves. Who out there owns a copy of _Practical Egyptian Magic_ or
|
||
_Invoking the Goddess in 10 Easy Steps?_ I mean, Clockwork (sorry to drag you
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into this) had a grand ole time laughing at a bunch of books that we thought
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were, quite frankly, preposterous.
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||
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And speaking of preposterous, yeah, it's nice that Crowley's all the big
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vogue now that Hollywood's getting into the kabbalah thing, but jeez... it'd
|
||
be nice if someone locally would publish his fictional works and poetry so you
|
||
don't have to pay 40 dollars for an import of 100 pages. Not that his poetry
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||
is all that great (although my heart heaves everytime I hear "Leah Sublime"
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||
recited), but some stuff I'd like to at least have access to.
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||
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But I'll stop there. Not like you need another rant about the woeful
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lack of quality publications in the occult community. You hear those all the
|
||
time, and then it devolves into two factions where one side says these authors
|
||
are full of shit and the other side says the authors probably are but we like
|
||
em anyway.
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So blah. The point is, I'm gonna write my own crappy occult book about,
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||
oh, faery angel candle crystal tree charm love magic. it's my ticket to the
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||
bigtime.
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Blessed beast or whatever, let's really stop this crap. On with the
|
||
issue, puh-leaze. One of our older poets has returned after an absensce, and
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||
Sophie Random, who just joined the mailing list a few weeks ago, has already
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become a writer. That I like to see. And her piece is really good, too.
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Plus there's the usual crew of misfits and miscreants at your disposal.
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||
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As you may or may not have noticed, the web site has changed to
|
||
http://www.eden.com/~kilgore/sob.html ... we'd like to thank Hagbard profusely
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||
for housing the website since 1995 and for giving us advance warning that the
|
||
website was going down. So, if you run across any pages which have links to
|
||
the old page, kinda email them and tell em to change.
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||
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||
I guess that's it. See you in August. Can you believe it? An August
|
||
issue? Will it actually happen? The suspense is killing me, I have to go
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||
bite my nails.
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||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
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||
|
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LETTERS TO THE EDiTOR
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||
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||
Let me say something about this story. Of everything I have ever
|
||
read, "Alex..." is one of the most depraved pieces of writing that I
|
||
have encounterd. Not one character has a redeeming characteristic. Not
|
||
Alex, not Nicky, not Lisa. Further, you glorify the very worst
|
||
elements of a culture given over to excesses in sex and violence. Your
|
||
story verges on pornography. In short, I loved "Alex the Wolf-God."
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||
Please keep it up.
|
||
Lew Sipher, Aspen, CO
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||
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[i think that letter speaks for itself.]
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||
|
||
|
||
--SoB--
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||
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To: kilgoret@geocities.com
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||
From: Diocletian
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||
Subject: Crazy Assed Party on undernet?
|
||
|
||
Ave! I've jsut discovered your web page a yesterday, and was quite
|
||
interested in your publication. Reading it I found it interesting. I even
|
||
downloaded MIRC to check out your channel. Here is the problem - I log into
|
||
Undernet, go to channel #unbeing, but there's no one there. Am I coming at
|
||
the wrond times, or am I leaving out something as regards the channel address?
|
||
|
||
Cheers!
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||
|
||
Diocletian
|
||
|
||
[heh. well, the "crazy assed party has kinda died out in recent times with a
|
||
bunch of us having to get jobs or change or schedules that don't facilitate
|
||
staying up in the wee hours of the night around a computer. i try to be on
|
||
whenever i'm online, so if you just keep checking in, i'm sure someone will
|
||
show up. maybe we'll even have another "see who can do the most impressive
|
||
textual impersonations of as many obscure gods as possible" night. that's
|
||
always fun.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
From: "Hades" <hades@netdoor.com>
|
||
To: <kilgore@eden.com>
|
||
Subject: Greetings
|
||
|
||
I would like to subscribe to SoB. A friend of mine sent me an issue
|
||
and i loved it. I currently read the zines, Devil Shat and Captial of
|
||
Nasty. I am always looking for something that makes me think.
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||
Thanks
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||
Ivy
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||
[of course, maybe you're just trying to plug those OTHER e-zines in my zine to
|
||
steal a bunch of my readers. i wouldn't put it past you. i mean, with a
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||
name like ivy, c'mon. wasn't there some military thing a while back?
|
||
operation ivy? sound familiar? yeah, okay. had to do with something bad,
|
||
i'm sure, as reported by some big conglomerate news network. we'll be
|
||
keeping an eye on you, ivy. oh, yes. and don't think i'm paranoid. cuz i'm
|
||
not. oh, yes. oh, uh-huh. not paranoid. not a chance.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB--
|
||
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||
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||
>Clock,
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||
>
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||
>Many thanks for letting me know the status of the tape!!! I appreciate
|
||
>very much your diligence and kindness.
|
||
>
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||
>I'll be mailing from this address from now on...as I took the link to
|
||
>hotmail and now have a more secure email address.
|
||
>
|
||
>I've been sending as many people as I can in my wanderings on the net
|
||
to
|
||
>the SoB page. I'm hoping that this will encourage kilgore not to kill
|
||
>himself off again.
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||
>
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||
>Again, muchos gracias!
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||
>
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>Trish
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||
[i can't kill myself off again. that would be so trite. i'd have to find a
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||
new way to grub up some sympathy. perhaps severing an arm or leg or possibly
|
||
carving large mayan glyphs into my forehead with a sharp rock as a
|
||
performance art piece entitled "grassroots movement ain't got no endtime"
|
||
would do the trick. hope you liked the tape.]
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
STAFF LiSTiNG
|
||
|
||
EDiTOR
|
||
Kilgore Trout
|
||
|
||
CONTRiBUTORS
|
||
Clockwork
|
||
Crux Ansata
|
||
Morrigan
|
||
Radioactive Mutant in Search of Antibiotics
|
||
Rich Logsdon
|
||
Sophie Random
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||
Sweater Girl
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||
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||
|
||
GUESSED STARS
|
||
Diocletian
|
||
Ivy
|
||
Lew Sipher
|
||
Trish
|
||
|
||
|
||
SoB OFFiCiAL GROUPiES
|
||
crackmonkey
|
||
Oxyde de Carbone
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
[=- ARTiCLES -=]
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
CLASS: MARXiST AND AMERiCAN
|
||
by Crux Ansata
|
||
|
||
The simplest answer to the question "What would a Communist society look
|
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like?" is this: A Communist society would be one without classes.
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This answer does not have a lot of meaning for Americans, brought up as
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they have been with the loose, almost meaningless American concept of economic
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classes. I cannot speak for the rest of the world, so when I speak of
|
||
American I mean as against Marxist, but my comments on the American
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understanding of classes is, to the best of my experience, relevant to the
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United States in general. It is hoped this article will give people at least
|
||
the vocabulary to understand what is meant when a Marxist speaks of a "class"
|
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and of a "class interest."
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||
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The typical use of the word "class" tends to refer to any grouping, and
|
||
economic classes to be a strictly relative grouping. The use of the term
|
||
"middle class" is especially sloppy. One typically considers a person to be a
|
||
member of the "middle class" if he is neither very rich nor very poor. This
|
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deprives the term "middle class" of any intrinsic meaning, and causes an
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amazing lack of comprehension among those who do happen to try to understand
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Marxist discourse.
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To take one example: Marxism predicts an increasing proportion of the
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population will become members of the proletarian class. When Marxism is
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discussed, it is not uncommon to find someone who knows just enough about
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Marxism to believe they can disprove it cite that, observe the "health" of the
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American middle class, and relegate Marx to the rubbish bin of history.
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This could be addressed a number of ways. The most relevant just now is
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the linguistic. When this person has heard "proletarian," he believes he has
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heard "lower class." The "middle class" is quite strong; there are still
|
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relatively more people between rich and poor than there are at either extreme.
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Because, to him, the expression "middle class" has only a relative meaning, he
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cannot imagine it diminishing.
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When a Marxist speaks of the proletarianization of the population, he
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means something a little different. He does not mean more people will fall
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into a relative "lower class"; he means a larger proportion of the population
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will end up holding the class interests of the proletariat; but more on that
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later.
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(A third, incidental way to address this situation would be to point out
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||
the middle class is not at all economically healthy. Indeed, we approach a
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third world rich-poor gap in the United States, far in excess of any in the
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other Western, industrial nations. Much has already been written on this,
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however, and I pass over it now.)
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Another effect that may be highlighted comes from the fact when an
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American hears "bourgeoisie" he tends to hear "middle class." Historically,
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in Europe, this is true. The United States were born without an historically
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European upper class -- that is to say, without a feudal aristocracy -- and so
|
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this does not hold here.
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One may perhaps see here why this concept of the class structure is the
|
||
ruling one here in the States. Most people like to think they are middle
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class, at least among the educated persons. They may invent concepts like
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"lower middle class" -- which cannot translate into Marxist terms -- to
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express the emotionally satisfying idea that if they save a bit more or are a
|
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little fortunate at the next round of pay raises they too can slip into the
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middle class, which they pretend to be a synonym for "bourgeoisie."
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The effect of this delusion is obvious. If I am, or may become, a member
|
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of the middle class, I will not want to bring about a system that would
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expropriate me. I -- if I suffer from this delusion -- become what is called
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"reactionary"; I seek to preserve the status quo at any cost. This is a cheap
|
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way for the ruling class to ensure the majority of the people will believe it
|
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is in their best interests to preserve the rule of the ruling class. And it
|
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all rests upon a simple linguistic delusion!
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But if, to a Marxist, the middle class does not mean the same thing as
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the "bourgeoisie," what does it mean? What is a Marxist social class?
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In Marxist analysis, a "class" refers to a group of people who are united
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in their socio-economic interests, and act in those interests. Because both
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of these are important, one cannot refer to classes in the nonchalant way that
|
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tends to be done. A group of people who do not act in the interests of their
|
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class -- or who simply do not have class interests -- is not a class in the
|
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terms of Marxist class conflict analysis. Similarly, an individual who acts
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in the interest of a class does not join that class thereby. If a rich person
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acts in such a way as to benefit the working class, he does not thereby become
|
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a worker. Indeed, he will likely come to act in the interests of his own
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class, despite his momentary lapse.
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These two requirements -- grouping and active interest -- are the reason
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why Marx saw the classes tending towards polarization, and towards the
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creation of, effectively, two social classes.
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One of these, of course, is the bourgeoisie. If the bourgeoisie is not
|
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the middle class, what are they? In the United States, the bourgeoisie tends
|
||
to be the ruling class. This is not a helpful definition, though. The
|
||
bourgeoisie, who were also referred to as the "capitalist" class before
|
||
"capitalist" came to refer to someone who held an ideological position, are
|
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those who own the means of production.
|
||
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||
A member of the bourgeoisie has accumulated wealth. He can live off his
|
||
wealth, and no longer needs to work. The bourgeoisie is the employing class,
|
||
because they are the ones who own the big businesses, as well as the wealth of
|
||
the society. Because they have more than they need to survive, they are in a
|
||
position to own the buisnesses, and to employ those who need to be employed to
|
||
survive.
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Throughout most of its history, the bourgeoisie has tended to be a or the
|
||
revolutionary class, in opposition to the feudal class structure. It is to
|
||
the revolutionary fervor of the bourgeoisie that we owe many of the rights we
|
||
take as standard today. This is not to say a proletarian society would do
|
||
away with those rights; it is merely to say the bourgeoisie was the class in a
|
||
position to take power away from the feudal lords and establish the capitalist
|
||
society we inhabit today.
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||
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Now, however, the bourgeoisie has degenerated into a reactionary class.
|
||
It is now in the interests of the bourgeoisie, as a class, to prevent
|
||
fundamental change to the society we live in, which would challenge the ruling
|
||
position the bourgeoisie now enjoys.
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||
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Dynamically opposed to the bourgeoisie, the current class which has the
|
||
potential for revolution is the proletariat. Like "bourgeoisie,"
|
||
"proletariat" is a seldom understood term. If proletarians are hard to see
|
||
today, though, it is due to their familiarity. The proletarian is the person
|
||
who has to sell his labor power in order to live. While some members of the
|
||
proletariat could accumulate enough wealth -- which is to say capital -- to
|
||
live without working for a time, this time is typically understood as between
|
||
jobs or at the end of one's life. These savings will seldom be enough to live
|
||
off the interest, and without being able to do that it is merely a matter of
|
||
time before the accumulated wealth is gone, and the person is reduced to
|
||
selling himself once more into wage slavery.
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||
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||
This, in the most simple terms, is the difference between the classes:
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||
The bourgeoisie can live without working, on investments and the "private
|
||
property," the means of production, belonging to them. The proletariat must
|
||
sell his labor -- must sell his life -- to another in order to eat.
|
||
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||
These are, as I say, the dynamic classes in contemporary society. The
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||
bourgeoisie is the ruling class; the proletariat is the heir to the throne.
|
||
Their interests -- when understood -- are in opposition. This is not an
|
||
exhaustive list of the classes, potential or existent. I will briefly mention
|
||
a few of these other classes.
|
||
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In feudal society, based on the ownership of land rather than the
|
||
ownership of businesses and factories, there were a number of classes who are
|
||
no longer dynamic in the United States. There is no real aristocracy in the
|
||
United States, and never has been. (I mean this, of course, in the sense of
|
||
feudal ruling families, not the reflections Americans have from time to time
|
||
set up for themselves.) The peasant class is of more importance. These
|
||
people are members of a class from a former age who have nonetheless played a
|
||
role in our world. Peasants are those who own enough land or control enough
|
||
land to survive and perhaps produce enough in excess to trade. They have been
|
||
squeezed out by commodity farmers -- so-called agribusiness. The members of
|
||
this class become, slowly or quickly, in all societies, proletarian, persons
|
||
who have to sell their labor to another. Their class interests in today's
|
||
society thus lie with the proletariat.
|
||
|
||
Another remnant class that still pretends to survive is that of the
|
||
petite-bourgeoisie. This class is what is left of the independent craftsman.
|
||
In former times, an artisan could exist on his own, in his own employ. This
|
||
continues to be in our society. Some people still exist in self-employ,
|
||
without employees of their own. It is rare, however. The petite-bourgeoisie,
|
||
thinking themselves to be bourgeois or embryonic bourgeois, believe their
|
||
interests lay in the reactionary direction of the bourgeoisie. They are
|
||
wrong. The petite-bourgeois will tend more to end up as proletarians than as
|
||
bourgeoisie.
|
||
|
||
There are some groups who exist but who have no real class interests.
|
||
One of these in the so-called "lumpenproletariat." This is a long way of
|
||
saying, more or less, underclass. This is the class of people who have
|
||
stopped playing the game, including petty criminals, persons perpetually on
|
||
welfare, and so on. This class has a potential for revolution when steered by
|
||
a class with revolutionary interests, but has no interests of its own.
|
||
Similarly, the intelligentsia, while it can have interests of its own, seldom
|
||
operates as a class. It is the obligation of the intellectual to articulate
|
||
the interests of the revolutionary class of its time; its other option is to
|
||
become coopted as propagandists for the ruling class.
|
||
|
||
Having examined the classes, it is clear that while American discourse
|
||
tends to pin the term "class" on relative standard of living, Marxism pins it
|
||
on something else. A proletarian cannot live for long without selling his
|
||
life force. But there is one last reason for the tendency to reaction in
|
||
America, and that is the belief classes are not "set" in America, the fantasy
|
||
that someone can leave the exploited class and enter the upper class. The
|
||
moral fact that a free man will no more want to exploit than to be exploited
|
||
is not the issue under consideration. I will merely point out that this
|
||
fantasy can only hold up when one believes class to be based on standard of
|
||
living.
|
||
|
||
A proletarian cannot leave his social class by saving. In order to leave
|
||
the proletarian class, an individual would have to save enough and invest
|
||
enough to live off the interest alone. While possible in theory, this is not
|
||
nearly as likely as people pretend to believe. No one will be able to set
|
||
aside enough from his salary to enter the ruling class; bourgeois life is not
|
||
open to everyone.
|
||
|
||
This does not exhaust the Marxist concept of class, obviously. It does
|
||
however hopefully provide a basic vocabulary so that, in reading Marxist
|
||
writing, even someone with a standard American background will be able to
|
||
understand what is being discussed.
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Everyone in this room is wearing a uniform. And don't kid yourself."
|
||
--Frank Zappa
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
NO PARiS TO FORGET
|
||
by Clockwork
|
||
|
||
I gather my consciousness before dawn, now, and it has some finer points,
|
||
as in fresh unmuddied air dancing with hints of the sun coming over a sphere,
|
||
silent spoken morning people, but it still does not jive with my being --
|
||
crazy dimlit coffee spill traffic flops, drudge and cringe along to some
|
||
office building along with the other patrons, some of which no longer kiss
|
||
their wives goodbye or see their kids off to school, no longer pilot blue
|
||
hazed steamboats upriver to find golden ambrosia pots, socialization occurs
|
||
with scowls and grunts, cutting off your fellow upright with six ton jacked up
|
||
cornfed trucks.
|
||
|
||
I'd much rather wake in the late morning early afternoon, allowing my
|
||
eyes to wander between the stars many hours later, rather than locking them
|
||
beneath the closet doors, hiding them from the secret bigfoot wonders the
|
||
sleepless nights carry under whipping funhouse curtains. The people about
|
||
relaxed and free under darkened moons, creative paint splat thoughts and
|
||
shunty dance mechanics all set free to seek out a concrete existence.
|
||
|
||
Instead, I'm left with high talking families of radio hosts, here to make
|
||
the commuters smile and hop over any 4x10 collisions on highways, byways, and
|
||
tucked away suburban dirt. Slipping home with enough time to toss the 8-hour
|
||
shoes around, sigh and sit, flip together some ornamental food, and think of
|
||
things to fill the swiss-cheese soul as I drift into early hour somberness.
|
||
The dreams of arms to hold you when you drip through the doors each evening
|
||
only come natural, with the only human contact day to day is cold marketed
|
||
Bugle Boy chatter in plastic vinyl walls and doors only the special people are
|
||
allowed to pass through. The small salvation is the car stereo between point
|
||
A and point B, with usually enough time to begin to groove and drum and
|
||
unbuckle your voice when you pull up to the curb -- buy a new album and listen
|
||
to tracks one through six during the next four days, because that's all you
|
||
can fit into your ziploc timescape. And it's sad to hear him ask millions of
|
||
people if they can tell him one thing they will remember about him.
|
||
|
||
I want the beatnik swing jam surprise again, dark polyester slim fit
|
||
dance slacks and buckle e buckle to belt e belt. Slipjacked wondermaid
|
||
costumes topped in fuh-door-uhs -- it just came a-flooding back when an
|
||
oversized _On The Bus_ hopped into my hands and turned its own pages. Grey
|
||
and kilter grain photos of Kesey and crew in daft paint buses with Leary in
|
||
his pre-health life, Ginsberg from juicy young to mint-shattering stringy man,
|
||
Mr. Grateful Dead himself stepping lively with mad smiles, and Kerouac always
|
||
looking the same. The bus drove by my house with ice cream jangles whining,
|
||
passing up the kids on the corner, and me swimming in maltese ovaries. They
|
||
passed me up the first time, and maybe the second, but I shuffled on
|
||
eventually, and got dropped off several state lines down the road. And now I
|
||
need to get on again.
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
"So she takes her pills, careful and round..."
|
||
--Adam Duritz
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
THE BRAVE, KINDA NEW WORLD OF PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
|
||
by Morrigan
|
||
|
||
"Depression is awful beyond words or sounds or images... It bleeds
|
||
relationships through suspicion, lack of confidence and self-respect, the
|
||
inability to enjoy life, to walk or talk or think normally, the exhaustion,
|
||
the night terrors, the day terrors. There is nothing good to be said for it
|
||
except that it gives you the experience of how it must be to be old, to be old
|
||
and sick, to be dying; to be slow of mind; to be lacking in grace, polish, and
|
||
coordination; to be ugly; to have no belief in the possibilities of life, the
|
||
pleasures of sex, the exquisiteness of music, or the ability to make yourself
|
||
and others laugh." (Jamison, 217)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Severe depression is a disease that affects about one in eight Americans
|
||
during the course of their lives. Some people are affected for purely
|
||
biological reasons, stemming from a chemical imbalance in their brains.
|
||
Others slip into depression's dark grasp due to a close experience with trauma
|
||
or tragedy. Whatever the cause, though, depression has an unmistakable and
|
||
significant cost. It not only causes unmeasurable emotional pain, but claims
|
||
a steep financial price as well. In a 1986 study, the annual cost of
|
||
depression in America was estimated at $16 billion. This figure covered the
|
||
cost of treatment (including doctor visits, therapy, and hospitalization),
|
||
cost due to lost productivity, and the morbidity cost associated with those
|
||
whom the disease killed (Dept. of Health, 9). Clearly, depression is a force
|
||
with which to be reckoned.
|
||
|
||
Though books such as the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic
|
||
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) offer a definition of
|
||
depression, it it lengthy and vague and most psychiatrists agree that it's not
|
||
even very accurate, because depression can take many different forms. An
|
||
oversimplified description would mention overwhelming grief, anguish, despair,
|
||
coupled with terror and panic in many cases. Often these emotions are strong
|
||
enough that they lead to self-destructive thoughts which lead to roughly 11
|
||
suicides per 100,000 people each year in the United States (Stone, 304). It
|
||
can include physical symptoms such as insomnia or, conversely, the need to
|
||
sleep constantly. The one thing that all mental health care practitioners
|
||
agree on is the point at which treatment is appropriate: as soon as the
|
||
depression is so great that the afflicted person cannot function in their
|
||
normal everyday lives. Of course, even this description is vague, because the
|
||
term "cannot function" is very open to interpretation. A more specific and
|
||
still accurate description is almost impossible, though, due to depression's
|
||
great spread of causes and symptoms.
|
||
|
||
Yet, even in light of its crushing weight and the bleak view of the world
|
||
that accompanies it, "one need not sound the false or inspirational note to
|
||
stress the truth that depression is not the soul's annihilation; men and women
|
||
who have recovered from the disease -- and they are countless -- bear witness
|
||
to what is probably its only saving grace: it is conquerable." (Styron, 84)
|
||
Though it can be an extremely debilitating disease, depression is quite
|
||
treatable in our modern society. I am chiefly interested in the various
|
||
methods available for said treatment.
|
||
|
||
Since the mid 18th century, depression has been treated fairly
|
||
competently and reliably using the art of psychotherapy (Stone, 52).
|
||
Psychotherapy consists of either individual or group sessions with a
|
||
psychologist in which discussion is used to facilitate resolution of the
|
||
emotional and psychological conflicts that both cause and accompany
|
||
depression. However, the problem with this method is that much of the
|
||
melancholia that plagues mankind stems not from external emotional trauma of
|
||
the sort that responds best to psychotherapy, but instead from chemical
|
||
imbalances within the human brain. For some people, the neurochemical balance
|
||
is disrupted for biological reasons, probably related to genetics. In those
|
||
patients who become severely depressed as a result of an identifiable tragedy
|
||
or trauma that initial imbalance is not present, but as a result of their
|
||
emotional distress, the balance is disrupted in the same way as for those with
|
||
a biological imbalance. These imbalances were the reason that for many years
|
||
depression could conquer souls with relative ease; once the ideal balance is
|
||
disturbed, it is very hard to reverse this disruption naturally.
|
||
|
||
In the early 1950s, though, a new discovery drastically and permanently
|
||
changed the way we view depression: drugs could reverse the disorder. These
|
||
drugs were the basis for a new branch of psychology called psychopharmacology.
|
||
This field deals with the effects of all the psychoactive drugs -- drugs that
|
||
affect the mind and its processes. Today, these medications are commonplace.
|
||
Almost everyone knows the name of at least one: Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, Xanax.
|
||
They have become an instrumental and widespread method of treatment,
|
||
completely replacing therapy for many patients. The appropriate balance
|
||
between the two is an extremely important issue -- one that often makes the
|
||
difference in length of necessary treatment, expense, and potential for
|
||
relapse in the future.
|
||
|
||
The psychotropics' current status as "miracle drugs" means that their use
|
||
should be examined more carefully than when they were highly controlled
|
||
substances affecting only a small number of extremely ill people. As we
|
||
develop ever more effective drugs that have fewer negative side effects, their
|
||
availability will continue to increase. Also, as we become more comfortable
|
||
with their use, they will be prescribed increasingly often. Already,
|
||
medications that were once only for depression are being prescribed for a
|
||
diverse range of maladies, including obsessive compulsive disorder,
|
||
kleptomania, and bulemia. This tendency towards more medication seems to
|
||
point towards a dystopic society where our every mood would be controlled by
|
||
medication -- where any sort of emotion outside of the accepted social norms
|
||
would be quickly taken care of with a pill. Our current society is in theory
|
||
far from such a state. However, it will be easy to slip into this
|
||
homogenizing mode of thought unless we more carefully evaluate our motivations
|
||
for and the results of medicating moods.
|
||
|
||
There are four families of antidepressants on the market today: the
|
||
Tricyclics, the Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors (MAOIs), the Selective Serotonin
|
||
Re-uptake Inhibitors (SSRIs), and a group containing the unique
|
||
antidepressants.
|
||
|
||
The first antidepressant discovered was Iproniazid, which is a member of
|
||
the MAOI family. Its discovery in 1952 was mostly accident: Iproniazid was
|
||
initially a drug given to tuberculosis patients for its abilities to kill
|
||
tubercule bacilli, though doctors soon noticed that it seemed to increase
|
||
patients' feelings of well-being as well as helping to cure their disease. In
|
||
1952, Nathan Kline released a report that supported the theory of its
|
||
potential for use as an antidepressant (Kramer, 47-48 and Stone, 189).
|
||
However, despite its early promise, Iproniazid had so many side effects that
|
||
it never truly caught on. Instead, it was imipramine, a member of the
|
||
tricyclic family, that took that honor. In 1957 Roland Kuhn announced the
|
||
results of his experiments with the drug, and even though the initial response
|
||
to it was rather skeptical, "worldwide studies quickly confirmed the value of
|
||
imipramine for the treatment of depression." (Barondes, 104) Imipramine
|
||
remains one of the major medications in use today.
|
||
|
||
All of the antidepressants available today function by manipulating
|
||
neurotransmitter levels in the neural synapses in the brain. We think that
|
||
emotions are regulated and influenced primarily by the levels of several key
|
||
neurotransmitters: the catecholamines (which include dopamine,
|
||
norepinephrine, and epinephrine), serotonin, and acetylcholine. Different
|
||
antidepressants function by inhibiting the normal cycle of neurotransmitter
|
||
release and re-uptake at different steps in order to change the overall level.
|
||
In the synapses of those with depression, the levels of these
|
||
neurotransmitters are usually below normal levels, so the intended effect is
|
||
to increase their numbers to a more acceptable level (Restak, 183).
|
||
|
||
Iproniazid, as a member of the MAOI family, acts upon the monoamines in
|
||
the synapse. Normally, the function of the monoamines is to chemically break
|
||
down the dopamine once it has been used. The MAOIs block this process, so
|
||
that dopamine is no longer being broken down and removed from the cycle, thus
|
||
increasing its concentration. Imipramine, a tricyclic, functions at the other
|
||
end of the cycle, affecting the re-uptake of the dopamine. In the normal
|
||
cycle, a neurotransmitter is released from one neuron and travels through the
|
||
synaptic cleft to another neuron, where a specialized transporter captures it
|
||
and returns it to the synapse, ready to be rereleased so that it can restart
|
||
its cycle. The tricyclics block the transporter so that the dopamine remains
|
||
in the synaptic cleft, where it is needed (Restak, 183).
|
||
|
||
While these early drugs were quite effective at the job they were
|
||
intended for, they complicated matters by affecting too wide of a range of
|
||
neurotransmitters, which seems to be behind the sometimes extreme side effects
|
||
of their usage. With effective medications safely in use, doctors began to
|
||
look for drugs that would target only one of the neurotransmitters, instead of
|
||
all of them. Because serotonin seemed to be one of the most powerful and
|
||
important neurotransmitters, they focused their efforts there. In 1974, the
|
||
research efforts of David Wong and Bryan Molloy were rewarded by the discovery
|
||
of fluoxetine hydrochloride -- brand name Prozac, the first of the SSRIs.
|
||
Their discovery was extremely important, because the SSRIs strongly affect
|
||
serotonin levels while leaving the rest of the neurotransmitters essentially
|
||
unaffected (Kramer, 60-63). This has the effect of reducing many side
|
||
effects, which is a very important factor in drugs that can so strongly affect
|
||
both mind and body.
|
||
|
||
The success stories of patients on medication are striking. "I no longer
|
||
experienced an ever present panic, which I had for years. I had often felt
|
||
worried, panicked, all of the time. As if there was some impending doom. I
|
||
realized, [approximately] 3 weeks after taking [Paxil], that this was gone,"
|
||
one young woman explained (Luckman). Another patient, taking Prozac, observed:
|
||
"I just feel strong. I feel resilient. I feel confident. I can get
|
||
bombarded and still feel in one piece. I no longer lack resolve when it comes
|
||
to the children. This is who I am." (Kramer, 219) Most patients emphasize
|
||
that it's not just the medication that helps them move on from their
|
||
depression, though. There are a scattered few for whom depression is purely
|
||
chemical, so that once they are on medication they truly are completely
|
||
capable of functioning normally without additional help. However, for most
|
||
the chemical depression is tied in with personal emotional troubles as well.
|
||
"Even if one's symptoms are greatly alleviated with the appropriate drug,
|
||
there are usually residual issues that should be addressed," warns one
|
||
psychiatrist (Travis). It is for this second category, the majority of those
|
||
who suffer from depression, that the balance between psychotherapy and
|
||
medication become a crucial issue.
|
||
|
||
Since the goal of all treatment for depression is the soothing and
|
||
repairing of the troubled mind, it seems that psychotherapy, which translates
|
||
literally as "the science of healing the mind," has to be a part of any mental
|
||
treatment (Stone, 319). Almost all psychiatrists are adamant that their
|
||
patients experience some level of therapy while on medication. This therapy
|
||
can range from monthly checkups that are more accurately described as
|
||
medication reviews than therapy to hour long sessions several times a week.
|
||
The more expanded version of therapy is regularly chosen in several types of
|
||
cases. First, when the patient was in therapy prior to beginning medication,
|
||
that therapy is almost always continued. The rest of the guidelines are
|
||
somewhat more vague, since they must be tempered to individual needs.
|
||
However, the US Government has put together a set of conditions for which
|
||
combination treatment is suggested: "The prior course of illness is chronic
|
||
or characterized by poor interepisode recovery. Either treatment alone has
|
||
been only partially effective. The patient has a history of chronic
|
||
psychosocial problems, both in and out of episodes of major depression."
|
||
(Dept. of Health, 87-88)
|
||
|
||
Besides the obvious case of those who don't respond well to only one type
|
||
of treatment, the federal recommendations cover two main groups of people:
|
||
those dealing with psychosocial difficulties such as "pessimism, low
|
||
self-esteem, or marital difficulties" (Dept. of Health, 89) and patients who
|
||
suffer from recurring depression. In theory, these patients return to their
|
||
depressed states once they stop taking medication because of some underlying
|
||
cause that is perhaps psychological rather than chemical. In these cases the
|
||
depression almost always resurfaces immediately once it is not being actively
|
||
blocked by the medications. Hopefully, by blocking these patients' immediate
|
||
symptoms with medication and then adding therapy, the root cause of the
|
||
depression can be discovered and solved.
|
||
|
||
The final group of people that most psychiatrists like to keep in
|
||
combination treatment are those who are actively suicidal. Their motivation
|
||
in these cases is twofold. First, it takes a while for the medications to
|
||
begin to take effect and attention at that time is critical in terms of
|
||
keeping the patient alive. Second, depression extended to the point of
|
||
suicide more often than not has serious non-chemical roots which need to be
|
||
addressed.
|
||
|
||
Even beyond these specific categories, many psychiatrists are most
|
||
comfortable with continuing therapy unless there is a compelling reason not
|
||
to. Their main line of reasoning for this is that the medications, more than
|
||
fixing all the problems of the patient, give them relief from the acute
|
||
symptoms of depression. Once the immediate torture of the disorder is eased,
|
||
many patients find that they have the relative clarity and peace of mind to
|
||
work with a therapist to find and work on the issues that triggered the
|
||
depression in the first place. The particularly notable part of this is that
|
||
the majority of such patients have little or no success in therapy before they
|
||
begin medication. "It wasn't until I was on medication that I could start
|
||
dealing with the emotional issues," explains one woman. "Psychotherapy has
|
||
helped me tremendously, but had the therapy preceded the medication, I'd have
|
||
been on the couch for the rest of my life." (Whybrow, 195) Another young
|
||
woman put it this way: "I firmly believe that my panic and my worst
|
||
depression [were] alleviated by Paxil. However, I am of the equally firm
|
||
belief that even if I no longer panicked or was no longer overwhelmingly
|
||
depressed, without therapy, I would [have continued] 'thinking wrong' and I
|
||
wouldn't have really gotten better." (Luckman) Hopefully, through therapy,
|
||
this pattern of "thinking wrong" can be reversed, leading to complete healing.
|
||
|
||
Of course, while people like Liane are completely willing to undergo
|
||
therapy even when their noticeable symptoms fade, not all depressed people
|
||
feel the same way. There are an almost disturbing number of people who, once
|
||
they feel that the medication has returned them to "normal," decide that their
|
||
problems are over and that they therefore have nothing to talk about with a
|
||
therapist. This is the more worrisome trend. One doctor warns: "If [a]
|
||
woman has anxiety or depression based on hidden wounds, we might conceivably
|
||
worry about medication as a form of collusion with her traumatic history: we
|
||
would want to help her gain awareness of her past." (Whybrow, 261) The issue
|
||
in this sort of case is that the woman may go on medication, and since the
|
||
causes are "hidden," once the surface symptoms disappear, no one may be aware
|
||
that her depression sprang from a deep internal wound. As soon as she stops
|
||
taking medication, though, the depression will immediately reemerge, because
|
||
rather than being healed it was merely covered up. There is always the
|
||
possibility that she will choose to stay on medication for the rest of her
|
||
life and remain happy on it, never realizing that rather than being purely
|
||
chemical, her depression had legitimate roots. This is one of the great
|
||
debates surrounding the use of medications: if people are happy on them, why
|
||
bother to force them into therapy, where they will have to address traumatic
|
||
issues, when they were content with leaving such issues alone?
|
||
|
||
The opinion of our society seems increasingly to favor not forcing anyone
|
||
to really deal with their troubles, but to take the quick fix that medication
|
||
offers. A good measure of our change in attitude towards these medications is
|
||
found in the number of people who take them. Prozac -- "the world's most
|
||
often prescribed branded antidepressant" -- is currently being taken as a
|
||
daily medication by over 28 million patients (Eli Lilly & Co). When we
|
||
consider that in 1975, about 20 million prescriptions were written for all
|
||
antidepressants combined (Schrag, 35) and that Prozac is estimated to make up
|
||
about 35% of the market, it is immediately obvious that in the past twenty
|
||
years the number of pills consumed has grown tremendously.
|
||
|
||
There are several facets to this growth in the consumption of
|
||
psychotropic medications. One is the issue of who is filling out the
|
||
prescriptions for their use. When the drugs were first released, they were
|
||
highly controlled substances used only on patients in mental hospitals.
|
||
However, by 1987 only 20% or fewer depressed patients were treated in mental
|
||
health facilities (Dept. of Health, 10). Only about 50% of the prescriptions
|
||
are even handled by mental health care professionals such as psychiatrists.
|
||
The rest of the prescriptions are handled by family physicians and general
|
||
health care practitioners who do not need to have any psychiatric training in
|
||
order to distribute these medications (Cervantes). Since people don't have to
|
||
go to the trouble and expense of making a separate appointment with a new
|
||
doctor, but can instead ask their regular doctor for medications, more people
|
||
are willing to seek such treatment. This change also influences the therapy
|
||
issue, since the majority of the patients who receive medications from their
|
||
family doctor are not required or even encouraged to seek therapy in most
|
||
cases, which means that most of them don't.
|
||
|
||
Another significant growth factor involves the changes in the medications
|
||
themselves. The tricyclic antidepressants, such as Imipramine, Elavil, and
|
||
Anafranil, have always had a fairly long list of side effects, including dry
|
||
mouth, constipation, sedation, low blood pressure, and weight gain. The
|
||
MAOIs, such as Nardil and Parnate, have a more serious roster of side effects,
|
||
such as significant rise in blood pressure and nausea. There is also a long
|
||
list of foods and drugs that can be fatal while on MAOIs, such as cheese,
|
||
chocolate, and simple cold medicines (Whybrow, 262-265). This range of
|
||
complications meant that taking antidepressants was less desirable and doctors
|
||
were less inclined to prescribe it, reserving their use for more extreme
|
||
cases. One psychoanalyst even refrained almost completely from such
|
||
prescriptions, because "merely listing the side effect of the tricyclics
|
||
interfered too much with the analysis. Patients would accuse [me] of
|
||
hostility, of unconsciously wanting to poison them." (Kramer, 65) However,
|
||
the SSRIs, such as Prozac and Paxil, because they operate only on one
|
||
neurotransmitter instead of affecting a wide range of them, are considered
|
||
"clean drugs" and have relatively minimal side effects. This is a very
|
||
positive feature for many patients and doctors. "Because both patients and
|
||
doctors [are] comfortable with Prozac's side effect profile, the medication
|
||
[has come] to be prescribed... for less ill patients -- those heretofore
|
||
treated with psychotherapy alone... Prozac turned out to be remarkably
|
||
effective for certain 'penumbral' patients,... who are not densely depressed."
|
||
(Kramer, 66) The lack of side effects is one of the major factors in the
|
||
dramatic spread of antidepressant use. One problem with this factor is that
|
||
it encourages a more lackadaisical attitude towards taking medication -- "it
|
||
can't hurt me, it can only help, so why not?"
|
||
|
||
Further evidence that such a carefree attitude is, on the surface at
|
||
least, warranted is that there are almost no reports of anyone whose
|
||
depressive condition has suffered as a result of taking a SSRI. The only
|
||
reported problems with medications involve the side effects, though even those
|
||
are fairly minimal, as discussed above. Doctor John Cervantes confirms this
|
||
trend with his experience: "Only very rarely [is] a patient's condition
|
||
worsened by medication. Usually side effects are the limiting factors in a
|
||
patient's response to meds." (Cervantes)
|
||
|
||
The first problem with casual use of these medications is that they are
|
||
extremely powerful, possessing the ability not only to chase away shadows, but
|
||
to completely change basic personalities. At first, stories of patients who
|
||
feel "like new people" sound like wonderful optimistic and inspirational
|
||
stories telling of the successful curing of a debilitating disorder. But when
|
||
patients are truly and permanently transformed, it is somewhat unsettling.
|
||
Prozac has been known to provoke a quick alteration in otherwise intractable
|
||
problems of personality and social functioning, that allows patients to
|
||
completely diverge from a lifetime of shyness or social insecurity to a
|
||
completely self-confident and socially competent personality (Kramer, Chapter
|
||
4). Again, at first glance, this seems like a wholly positive transformation.
|
||
Yet if that shyness was a central part of the person that defined who they
|
||
are, it is not quite so positive. Is it possible that medication can "[iron]
|
||
out too many character-giving wrinkles, like overly aggressive plastic
|
||
surgery?" (Kramer, 239) By taking away every detail that doesn't fit with
|
||
the social norm, is too much of the person, disturbed though they may be,
|
||
removed as well? Some patients define their entire lives around their
|
||
medication. One woman, after a few months on Prozac, casually announced to
|
||
her therapist: "I've changed my name, you know... I call myself Ms. Prozac."
|
||
(Kramer 11-13) Many prospective takers of medication over the years have
|
||
worried about precisely this loss or change of self -- even if it's a change
|
||
for the better -- because it seems very possible to lose the essence of who
|
||
you are when the basic functioning of your brain is being changed.
|
||
|
||
Despite all of these worrisome factors, though, increasing dependence on
|
||
antidepressants is a set fact in our society today. While once medication was
|
||
a source for social stigmatization, today it is commonplace and almost
|
||
unremarkable. Everyone can name someone in their immediate circle of family
|
||
and friends who is taking Prozac or some other antidepressant. Their use has
|
||
become part of pop culture -- bumper stickers read "Mean People Need Prozac,"
|
||
as if Prozac should be handed out by the bushel to anyone who doesn't fit the
|
||
societal "happy, friendly person" standards.
|
||
|
||
At first glance, there is no agenda being propagated by our government to
|
||
put Prozac in the water system, as some extreme conspiracy theorists have
|
||
suggested. Yet the concept of a fully medicated society is not as far fetched
|
||
as we might think. Even as far back as the late 60s, leaders at the National
|
||
Institute for Mental Health, a government supported and run organization,
|
||
discussed plans and hopes for "whole communities" that would be treated with
|
||
medication, where the system "would treat the society... and not merely the
|
||
individual citizens." (Schrag, 43) Though at the moment the figure for the
|
||
number of Americans taking Prozac daily is only equivalent to the entire
|
||
population of Orange County, that number is growing every day.
|
||
|
||
As long as we continue our current trend of moving away from interactive
|
||
combination treatment to a more drive-through style of prescription, a future
|
||
similar to Aldous Huxley's _Brave New World_ is not terribly unlikely. In his
|
||
world, a drug that instantly makes a person happy and relaxed, known as
|
||
_soma,_ has been invented. This drug is standard issue for all citizens.
|
||
While we'd like to think that the platitudes that his characters murmur while
|
||
knocking back pill after pill -- "One cubic centimetre cures ten gloomy
|
||
sentiments" or "A gramme is always better than a damn" -- are ridiculous to
|
||
us, they are not far removed from our current mentality, where antidepressants
|
||
are marketed in magazines, next to cigarette and liquor ads. At the moment,
|
||
antidepressants still have a degree of separation from easy access for all,
|
||
with some requirements for conjunctive therapy, but those requirements fade
|
||
away more with each passing day. As one psychiatrist observes: "I feel that
|
||
we are at risk of diminishing the impulse to delve inward and gain insights
|
||
that help us lead the kinds of lives that we aspire to. Instead, we pop a
|
||
pill and avoid the challenge." (Travis)
|
||
|
||
|
||
"I take
|
||
one, one, one
|
||
cuz you left me and
|
||
two, two, two
|
||
for my family and
|
||
three, three, three
|
||
for my heartache and
|
||
four, four, four
|
||
for my headache and
|
||
five, five, five
|
||
for my loneliness and
|
||
six, six, six
|
||
for my sorrow and
|
||
seven, seven
|
||
for no tomorrow and
|
||
eight, eight
|
||
i forget what eight was for and
|
||
nine, nine, nine
|
||
for a lost god and
|
||
ten, ten, ten, ten
|
||
for everything, everything, everything, everything....
|
||
(Violent Femmes)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Works Cited
|
||
|
||
1. Barondes, Samuel H. _Molecules and Mental Illness._ New York:
|
||
Scientific American Library, 1993.
|
||
|
||
2. Cervantes, John D. M.D. Interview given May 4, 1998.
|
||
|
||
3. Eli Lilly & Company. _Patient Information About Prozac._ 1997.
|
||
|
||
4. Hausenfluke, Kevin. Interview given April 27, 1998.
|
||
|
||
5. Huxley, Aldous. _Brave New World._ New York: Harper Perennial, 1932.
|
||
|
||
6. Jamison, Kay Redfield. _An Unquiet Mind._ New York: Vintage Books,
|
||
1995.
|
||
|
||
7. Jarvik, Murray E. "The Psychopharmacological Revolution." _Readings
|
||
in Psychology Today._ Del Mar, CA: CRM Books, 1967.
|
||
|
||
8. Kramer, Peter D. _Listening to Prozac._ New York: Viking, 1993.
|
||
|
||
9. Luckman, Liane Rae. Interview given May 2, 1998.
|
||
|
||
10. Menninger, Karl. _The Vital Balance._ New York: The Viking Press,
|
||
1963.
|
||
|
||
11. Project Inform. "Psychoactive Drugs." The HIV Drug Book, 1995.
|
||
Online. Available WWW: http://www.thebody.com/pinf/drugbkix.html.
|
||
|
||
12. Restak, Richard M. _The Mind._ London: Bantam Books, 1988.
|
||
|
||
13. Sandow, Neil. RxList - The Internet Drug Index, 1997. Online.
|
||
Available WWW: http://www.rxlist.com.
|
||
|
||
14. Schrag, Peter. _Mind Control._ New York: Pantheon Books, 1978.
|
||
|
||
15. Snyder, Soloman H. _Treating Mental Illness._ New York: Chelsea
|
||
House Publishers, 1986.
|
||
|
||
16. Stone, Michael H. _Healing the Mind._ New York: W. W. Norton &
|
||
Company, 1997.
|
||
|
||
17. Styron, William. _Darkness Visible._ New York: Vintage Books, 1990.
|
||
|
||
18. Travis, Alison. Interview given May 3, 1998.
|
||
|
||
19. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. _Depression in
|
||
Primary Care: Volume 2. Treatment of Major Depression._ Washington,
|
||
D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1993.
|
||
|
||
20. Whybrow, Peter C. _A Mood Apart._ New York: Harper Collins
|
||
Publishers, Inc., 1997.
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
Homer: No TV and no beer make Homer something something...
|
||
Marge: ...go crazy?
|
||
Homer: Don't mind if I do!
|
||
--The Simpsons, "The Shinning"
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
VERNA CARRiGAN
|
||
by Sweater Girl
|
||
|
||
An ancient house, set atop a large hill, came into view as my mother
|
||
drove slowly up the steep gravel road. Our destination was jealously guarded
|
||
on all sides by some rugged maple trees, staggered about, with a few
|
||
rhododendron bushes nearby. A picturesce picket fence with yellow, peeling
|
||
paint enclosed all in and watched over the frail countance who inhabited the
|
||
house. Inside, antiques filled the old house and kept the woman whom lived
|
||
there company. This was not because the woman bought the elite items, but
|
||
she'd simply owned them long enough for them to become such. I suppose that
|
||
made her an antique, also.
|
||
|
||
The surroundings of her house seemed like the cemetary at times. The
|
||
dark green grass grew thickly, and its moist scent was heavy in the air. An
|
||
unnatural stillness clung there, like the house and everything surrounding it
|
||
was trapped in a picture, unable to change. The rotting stairwell to her door
|
||
sank gently, slanting into the soft, moist ground. If not for the huge brick
|
||
retaining wall beyond her yard, the entire hillside that the neighborhood
|
||
resided upon would slide away into the streets below.
|
||
|
||
A darkened sky spit down on us as we approached and its noise filled the
|
||
car, effectively squelching any conversation. Each raindrop slammed itself
|
||
against the hood of the car, louder than I had ever heard it. My mother
|
||
pulled carefully into the driveway, and turned the car off. Her arms loaded
|
||
with groceries, she walked dutifully up the cement path and into the house
|
||
through the front door, leaving me to follow. I sat and waited in the car
|
||
until I couldn't anymore. I should have went with her immediately. It wasn't
|
||
like this visit was uncommon; It was actually a weekly occurance. There
|
||
shouldn't have been any fuss. So I slammed the car door and walked up to the
|
||
gate, opened it, and paused there, in front of that house.
|
||
|
||
I usually felt uncomfortable in the old woman's company because of her
|
||
refinement. I unconsiously avoided these meetings, too ashamed of myself to
|
||
see her. Her manners, her dignity, her grace contrasted sharply with my
|
||
boyish composure and failed attempts at mimicking her delicate poise, her
|
||
distinct carrige of herself. She effortlessly exuded an aura of warmth and
|
||
sweetness. But while my uneasiness alienated me, it had no such affect on
|
||
her. Every visit, she showered me with gracious smiles and politely genuine
|
||
questions about my life.
|
||
|
||
I watched the rain fall, wishing to drown in the onslaught. I remember
|
||
getting cold and ignoring the discomfort and I remember getting wet and
|
||
forgetting how dryness felt so the wetness wouldn't matter. The rain pounded
|
||
against me, in big drops, beading on my skin and running towards the earth.
|
||
Frozen in place, I imagined it to be a few endless seconds, though it was
|
||
truely hours. I suppose I must have been gripped by fear of her, for some
|
||
reason unknown to me. Immobolized by some unrecognized force. All I was only
|
||
aware of her presence inside that house, welcoming, as always.
|
||
|
||
It was me, not her, who made me uncomfortable, and I was vaguely aware of
|
||
this at the time. For that I will never forgive myself. I allowed myself to
|
||
weakly indulge in my fears, missing something in the process. She had a wealth
|
||
of experinces and lessons, from which, years ago, I would have benefitted
|
||
greatly. She loved the theatre, art, music, and because of that, her life was
|
||
filled with meaning. Like a great oracle, her varied life lent her the
|
||
ability to discern what was important, what knowledge she should impart on
|
||
those around her. A ready teacher, but sadly without pupils. She rarely saw
|
||
her own children; they had long grown up and forgotten her. No one to listen
|
||
except her cats, and my mother and I on our weekly visits. So it was that my
|
||
mother and I came to bring her the groceries she was too weak to shop for.
|
||
But this time I didn't go inside.
|
||
|
||
I waited outside until my mother returned. I must have been an odd sight.
|
||
Me, soaking wet, standing part way up the path. I didn't even realize she was
|
||
there when she walked past me and to the car. She had to call out to get my
|
||
attention. So then I climbed back in the car, without explanations given and
|
||
was driven off, the rain again filling our ears and consuming us. I was glad
|
||
for that.
|
||
|
||
In the weeks to follow, my mother never again asked me to go with her to
|
||
visit the woman. Such was the style of my mother: she accepted change
|
||
quietly and without justification. I gradually forgot that my mother even did
|
||
this chore. In the months afterwards, it was only upon occasion that I
|
||
remembered and a shameful guilt enwrapped me. It was always and easy feeling
|
||
to push away though. A year or so later, the lady died before I saw her
|
||
again. Her children didn't want her belongings and auctioned them off, and
|
||
donated the money to the local arts. A few days before the funeral, my mother
|
||
told me where it was to take place. I didn't go. I wish I had.
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
"The shell is the most active contribution to the formation of character.
|
||
A tough hide. Grow it early."
|
||
--Anais Nin
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
PAGES FROM A DiARY
|
||
by Crux Ansata
|
||
|
||
0505 071698
|
||
|
||
Again, I start too late. By this time of the morning, I'm usually
|
||
getting ready for bed. The activity of the morning is going on around me, as
|
||
Moonlight and Dad are getting ready for work. But a few lines, and then I
|
||
will go off to bed, too.
|
||
|
||
First, I suppose some readers will wonder if I am pretending to have a
|
||
social life. Well, two days after seeing Am., I suppose the book would say it
|
||
was time to get into contact. So, this evening, I called, and she was out, so
|
||
no one picked up the phone. As she is playing by the same rulebook, when she
|
||
got home, she called me, so after we had established we had both tried to call
|
||
each other, we could see that we were both on the same figurative page. So,
|
||
that is dealt with.
|
||
|
||
Still no plans. I guess I should flip ahead and see if it is my
|
||
obligation to proffer the next invitation. I have the excuse, since I already
|
||
mentioned to her the show this weekend Hagbard is in. It is also playing the
|
||
weekend after, but I intentionally did not mention that; we are now a week
|
||
from when A. will be here, and I don't want to risk any overlapping plans at
|
||
this point.
|
||
|
||
Despite the unusual expanse of two whole paragraphs, this is not a matter
|
||
of too much interest. In other social events, I am also waiting for R.'s
|
||
letter, and exchanging email with her, and waiting for A., so it is not as if
|
||
there is any real emotional stake in the Am. thing. But, for record keeping
|
||
purposes and the voyeuristic eyes of the thirtieth century crabs...
|
||
|
||
In more intellectual news -- if not too upbeat -- I made an effort to
|
||
write an article for the special Gopher issue on religion, explaining why I am
|
||
a Catholic. It makes sense to me, but whenever I begin writing, I get very
|
||
depressed and generally can't go on. If I hadn't made extensive outlines over
|
||
and over, I would probably have never finished the class article for the next
|
||
State of unBeing. This one petered out after a page and a half.
|
||
|
||
And, as we drag ourselves further and further up the slope in our
|
||
pathetic effort to make ourselves look like intellectuals, even if only to
|
||
ourselves, we turn to what I have spent some time thinking about today. I'm
|
||
afraid it wouldn't achieve the aforementioned purpose. For that, I should
|
||
probably talk about the three or so pages in the newspaper about the crumbling
|
||
infrastructure resulting in inadequate water and sewage just a county away
|
||
from me, or talk about the reading I've been doing on the rich-poor gap and
|
||
income tax reform in the eighties. Instead, I have been thinking about looks.
|
||
|
||
Rather, looksism. I internalized quite properly the sensitivity I was
|
||
taught. You can't judge someone by their appearance, and so on. However, I
|
||
am a bit less convinced. I suspect one can indeed tell things about people
|
||
from their appearance. In some, relatively conscious ways, that is clear.
|
||
People dress in cliquish ways, and so on. I have previously discussed this.
|
||
I mean something more fundamental.
|
||
|
||
I think this was triggered by that book on Narcissism. [Narcissism, by
|
||
Alexander Lowen] (Incidentally, until I read that book I hadn't known
|
||
"seduce" had a negative moral tag to it. Having read the book, I gather an
|
||
element of fraud is involved in seduction. I had always considered fraud to
|
||
prevent an individual from being able to make an adequate judgment, therefore
|
||
being incapable of consent, and therefore what he appeared to be saying is
|
||
meant by "seduction" was simply "rape" in my apparently inadequate vocabulary.
|
||
But this is far from what I was going to write about.) This book -- as is to
|
||
be expected, having been written by a student of Reich -- spent a bit on the
|
||
body. Through stance and body form, for example, he could gain some
|
||
diagnostic information. This was not the immediate trigger, but looking back,
|
||
reading this certainly set the stage for what I was considering today.
|
||
|
||
More relevant was my thoughts on body form. Or rather stance. It is
|
||
hard for me to tell which. I had noticed that some people reminded me of
|
||
others. No great breakthrough there. But then I would look closer, and try
|
||
to tell why. It seemed that I could observe in people not just one thing that
|
||
would remind me of another, but a cluster that would be repeated. Some of it
|
||
was intentional -- hair style, for example, and dress style. Some of it I
|
||
presume was subconscious, being especially the way they would sit, walk, and
|
||
carry themselves. This is what I mean by "stance."
|
||
|
||
If these elements were equally distributed -- if I would see people who
|
||
held themselves in one way, but didn't dress according to expectations, for
|
||
example, or if they would hold themselves in one way but contradict it in
|
||
their facial features, by which I of course mean the way they hold their face
|
||
-- I could dismiss it. Or if it was just a hint, rather than a clear feeling
|
||
that these people were appearing in the same way, it could be mere
|
||
coincidence. I didn't get that feeling, though. When I would look at them, I
|
||
could see very well they were not the same people, and I would even think they
|
||
shared little physically in common. When I looked at the whole picture,
|
||
though, and took my impressions without trying to find specific details,
|
||
though, I would see it, and the features that made it up would achieve a
|
||
feeling more than the sum of their analytic parts.
|
||
|
||
This seemed to contradict what I spoke of before. "You can't judge a
|
||
book by its cover" and similar cliches are very much a part of my mindset. I
|
||
rebel against the idea of determining things about a person based on their
|
||
appearance, and would rather be disliked because of my appearance than liked
|
||
because of it, because I feel that any good in my appearance is nothing I can
|
||
take credit for, while I consider it less unfair to be punished for something
|
||
I didn't do. I can alleve some of my moral resistance by saying I am looking
|
||
at trends, at tendencies, rather than at determinants. African Americans tend
|
||
to vote Democrat, for example. That is a statistical trend, and not a
|
||
judgment call; it allows for the Shelby Steeles. But even so, I hesitate.
|
||
|
||
I am not saying I hesitate, though, because I think it is not true. The
|
||
data seem to indicate that it is, and it does make sense within Reichian
|
||
assumptions. (Some of which I believe; enough of which I believe to make this
|
||
trend believable.) I keep emphasizing my resistance because I experience it.
|
||
It is my experience, and therefore valid. I accept it, and I think I
|
||
understand it, and I acknowledge it. Having done so, I try to move past it.
|
||
|
||
Because I think there is something here. But I don't know what. I am
|
||
grasping at straws. Body stance might be because of neuromuscular tensions.
|
||
That makes a lot of objective sense, and is testable. It does not require
|
||
looking for some kind of aura or psychic fields, and seems to explain the
|
||
available data. Why then do I have such trouble emotionally accepting it?
|
||
That is a question I can't answer.
|
||
|
||
Anyway, there is another thing I think is holding me up. I seem to see
|
||
some trends as being not due to individual choice, or even individual
|
||
experience. It makes perfect sense that one's sexual pattern will be visible;
|
||
I really doubt very many people can deny that. And so it makes sense that
|
||
people who have had certain traumatic sexual experiences will also have
|
||
similar body stances. (Again, not a determinant, but a trend, and it
|
||
certainly makes sense to believe that emotional healing would be reflected
|
||
also.) This is individual, and I have less trouble accepting that this shows
|
||
on the outside.
|
||
|
||
It seems less acceptable, though, that socioeconomic background and
|
||
racial make up would effect one's body stance -- because I consider body
|
||
stance to be probably a result of neuromuscular tensions. Well, I suppose
|
||
that isn't quite true, either. Certain socioeconomic conditions would I
|
||
presume result in certain similar emotional stresses, which would then be
|
||
reflected as similar neuromuscular tensions. I suppose certain racial groups
|
||
would also have similar social and emotional tensions as a result of our
|
||
society, and one would have to examine other societies to determine what was
|
||
racially determined and what was socially determined -- and a great deal more
|
||
research would have to be engaged in to determine what was a result of the
|
||
interaction between the two.
|
||
|
||
This specific concern is because of a girl in my class. I don't know her
|
||
to be a Jewess, but I noticed that she had a similar stance to many Jewesses I
|
||
have known, and which I do not recall seeing in people I knew to be of other
|
||
racial types. Despite my efforts to be able to move in and out of racial
|
||
prejudice at will -- or rather to overcome the anti-racist prejudice -- I
|
||
still have an emotional resistance to things that smack of racism and
|
||
anti-Semitism. I suppose that has resulted in another emotional resistance to
|
||
accepting this as a possible fact. Then again, I don't know that it should,
|
||
since the two distinct body types I noticed before the Jewess one were both
|
||
White in all the examples I know the racial make up of.
|
||
|
||
Looking back, I suppose this will say more about me than anything about
|
||
neuromuscular tensions. Spending more than two pages on this probably makes
|
||
me look rather neurotic. But I have been thinking about it for some time now,
|
||
and suppose I felt the need to get some of the thoughts out. Which I have
|
||
done. I guess I'll do some reading and then go to bed. I do, after all, have
|
||
class today.
|
||
|
||
0539 071698
|
||
|
||
0244 072798
|
||
|
||
I am too old. I don't mean too old for anything, of course. I could
|
||
still write the great American novel, or become an Italian fashion designer,
|
||
or the heavyweight champion of the world, or maybe even Queen of Brazil, with
|
||
a little surgery and some political upheaval. When I tell people I'm too old
|
||
they brush it aside because that is what they think of: There are still
|
||
things I can do.
|
||
|
||
I am too old for another reason, one which has more to do with being. I
|
||
happen to think I am too old to be happy. The things I can think of that
|
||
might make me happy tend to be things I consider behind me.
|
||
|
||
I suppose what this comes down to is I think I might be happy with a
|
||
girl, but I think I'm too old to have a love relationship of the kind I mean,
|
||
the kind I used to think about and write about but no longer do -- because I
|
||
am too old.
|
||
|
||
It seems to me high schoolers, that age range, love, or experience what
|
||
they consider love, in a very different way from the old people I'm around. I
|
||
imagine there are a lot of old people in high school, too, and more every day.
|
||
But I don't seem to see the young people past that age. I don't consider it
|
||
possible or acceptable to try to have a relationship with someone in that
|
||
emotional range, but when I think about it, I think that could have made me
|
||
happy. Once. When I was younger.
|
||
|
||
I went to sleep this afternoon, and I was awoken for supper. That was
|
||
about three hours of sleep. After supper I tried to sleep again. That was
|
||
hell. I wasn't exhausted enough to just nod off. I tossed and turned in a
|
||
feverish delirium, asleep and awake at the same time, tormented by violent and
|
||
sexual dreams or fantasies, which I was in and observing and separate from all
|
||
at the same time. I couldn't take it. My eyes still burning and my mind
|
||
still bleary I dragged myself up and started reading again. Now I feel
|
||
completely refreshed, but I imagine it must be some kind of illusion.
|
||
|
||
I was trying to read --
|
||
|
||
No, I left something out. Above. It seemed a little stupid. It still
|
||
does, but only for those of you who have to experience me in words. I don't
|
||
like to admit it, but I can experience me -- fleetingly, painfully -- in other
|
||
ways. There is a taste, that I associate with happiness. The taste of a
|
||
girl. The taste I think of as a girl in love. But, and this might not seem
|
||
to make sense, I am not being obscene. It is a powder, a cosmetic, I think.
|
||
This is not a dehumanizing denial of the natural woman by forcing her to paint
|
||
her face, because this is a *taste*. A taste. It has nothing to do with make
|
||
up. There is a smell, too. I know what I am doing. I am synesthetically
|
||
accessing memory-experiences of times when I was happy, and these have become
|
||
associated with uncommon sensory triggers, in this case the taste and
|
||
presumably the smell of cosmetics in close quarters. But, you know what?
|
||
This is one of those times when knowing doesn't make a damn bit of difference
|
||
-- the experience remains the same.
|
||
|
||
Now, I will go on.
|
||
|
||
I was trying to read The Epic of Gilgamesh. I borrowed a copy from
|
||
Moonlight. It is a half-century old translation. It translates all the
|
||
"naughty bits" into Latin. This is not too much of an inconvenience, since I
|
||
expect I will be able to follow the story missing the occasional line of
|
||
verse, but I found it very funny. I had read about this before, that the
|
||
prudishness of former ages led translators to be so embarrassed about the
|
||
subject matter that they translated portions into Latin. But I don't recall
|
||
ever experiencing it before. Anyway, I left it off, and I've been reading
|
||
about shamanism since. That involves lengthy passages in French -- and
|
||
occasional in German -- but apparently nothing vital.
|
||
|
||
And now I suppose I'll go back to it. Later.
|
||
|
||
Incidentally, not a word from A. When she told me when she would be in
|
||
town, she said August. Every time. But I am informationally quick, and I
|
||
chatted with her about her program, and so knew she was going to be in the
|
||
state July 23. She knew I knew, because I pointed out that I knew the last
|
||
time she tried to tell me August. I suppose, though, she is in Dallas, and
|
||
didn't want to tell me July 23 because she knew she would not be in town and I
|
||
would be thinking about her if I knew she was in the state. Well, as the
|
||
scholars say, "fuck it. I'm going to go study."
|
||
|
||
0258 072798
|
||
|
||
0646 072798
|
||
|
||
Why can't I sleep? It isn't that I'm not tired. My eyes are burning.
|
||
I've been up about twelve hours since my three hour nap, and I'd been up all
|
||
night the night before. I feel tired. Not exhausted, but tired. But I can't
|
||
sleep.
|
||
|
||
I've been laying in bed for two hours, staring at the ceiling. Haven't
|
||
been plagued with visions or anything, like the nightmares the day before, the
|
||
last time I tried to sleep. Just laying there. I can only do that so long; I
|
||
keep remembering and thinking, and that never leads to good.
|
||
|
||
Tried reading brain candy. I'm reading another Sweet Valley High book
|
||
[number 59: In Love Again], when I'm trying to relax. I like reading about
|
||
happy people. I like the thought that somewhere there are happy people. I
|
||
guess it makes me think that someday perhaps I, too, could be happy, or at
|
||
least that there are people in the world who aren't in agony.
|
||
|
||
Sometimes the books do get irritating. They are not dark at all, and
|
||
they seem a little campy in their naivete. But part of reading is the
|
||
suspension of disbelief. I can accept the premise that somewhere there are
|
||
people like this, or perhaps that there used to be. And they do hit
|
||
resonances of people I did know, even if the people I knew were darker,
|
||
dirtier, realer.
|
||
|
||
And then there is another level. I know this probably sounds crazy, but
|
||
I spend a lot of time on another level of my mind, one of the ones that are
|
||
not needed to follow the complexities of plot, following the sociopolitical
|
||
landscape of Sweet Valley. They have a class conscious society, of sorts, but
|
||
it is entirely bourgeois. In tone, of course. By profession, I suppose the
|
||
parents of the twins are petite-bourgeois. But not only can they afford nice
|
||
cars and to buy clothes whenever they like, in this particular volume the
|
||
choice between going to the exclusive private school or the public school --
|
||
or even going to private school in Europe -- rests with the children, not the
|
||
bank book. I know there are people in the town that are not wealthy, and they
|
||
are generally shown in a quite unsympathetic light, when they are shown at
|
||
all. In the strata of texts I'm reading now, it is between the upper middle
|
||
class and the lower upper class.
|
||
|
||
This dynamic I find believable, since I know there are communities like
|
||
this. A couple of years back I might not have, but today I do. The squeaky
|
||
clean atmosphere, however, is a little less believable. The upper class tends
|
||
to have less morality than the bourgeois -- but even this is reflected, come
|
||
to think of it. Concentrating on the twins gives a rather skewed, bourgeois
|
||
view of the world. (Suitable, incidentally, to children's books; it's a very
|
||
reactionary worldview.)
|
||
|
||
I remember when I started this book, they were talking about the problems
|
||
of large class size in public schools. Since this is a pop culture text, I
|
||
could be sure it was thus not a futurist view of the world, but they were
|
||
commenting on a banality. I remember thinking, "Ah, I suppose this book is
|
||
from the late eighties." Sure enough, it is copyright 1989.
|
||
|
||
Man, that's a lot about brain candy. I think I intellectually engage
|
||
Sweet Valley High more than I intellectually engage some of the more scholarly
|
||
works I read. I suppose that's good; I get some relaxation without utter
|
||
waste of time. I suppose it would be more useful if I was reading current
|
||
texts instead of decade old brain candy. That's a good way to make yourself
|
||
sick. But one deals; I got this book very cheap.
|
||
|
||
And anyway, I felt by about sunrise I deserved a break from trying to
|
||
read French translations of Arabic books.
|
||
|
||
I think I like these books because I like kids. I read other books about
|
||
them, but realistic books, of course, show them in pain. These books show
|
||
them in melodramas, where one can pretend they are in pain, and pretend they
|
||
get out of the situation, and everyone is amused. It allows me the emotional
|
||
charge of hanging out with kids without the legal charge. I suppose.
|
||
|
||
But I am still tense. I still can't sleep. And I am still depressed --
|
||
or I would be if I was feeling anything. I suppose I'll go back to pretending
|
||
to sleep. I want to get some sleep before class. Sleeping three hours over
|
||
the weekend cannot be good for the grades, and if I don't pass this, I don't
|
||
graduate. So, I sign off, yet again.
|
||
|
||
0701 072798
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
[=- POETASTRiE -=]
|
||
|
||
"The poets? They stink. They write badly. They're idiots you see, because
|
||
the strong people don't write poetry.... They become hitmen for the Mafia.
|
||
The good people do the serious jobs."
|
||
--Charles Bukowski
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
FOR GRANTED
|
||
by Radioactive Mutant in Search of Antibiotics
|
||
|
||
Life is everything you to take for granted
|
||
Between orgasms. Life is everything
|
||
You feel while sleeping. Life is everything
|
||
You take from your mother and father and take
|
||
From your friends. Life is everything
|
||
Your teachers do not tell you. Life is every-
|
||
Thing you fear and lust for. Life is wearing
|
||
Red, the blood red of human charity.
|
||
Life is waking to find everyone is still
|
||
Asleep,
|
||
beside you,
|
||
for ever.
|
||
|
||
Life is dawn noon and dusk; ephemeral
|
||
And sleeping.
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Though I sang in my chains like the sea."
|
||
--Dylan Thomas, "Fern Hill"
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
TiTAN
|
||
by Radioactive Mutant in Search of Antibiotics
|
||
|
||
He shrugs the cannon
|
||
down towards the sand
|
||
|
||
The tides are
|
||
receding as
|
||
the moon
|
||
|
||
a barren darkening moon
|
||
|
||
rises and casts
|
||
reflecting light on sands
|
||
and waters no longer swelling beneath its cast
|
||
|
||
Look what rifts
|
||
the cannon in its wake leaves!
|
||
|
||
Look what timeless chasms!
|
||
(Though they close in, though they close in)
|
||
|
||
The earth, this beach, would bleed
|
||
beneath its weight but it can't!
|
||
|
||
It never could.
|
||
I don't think it ever could......
|
||
|
||
And what blind flagging strength the Titan turns
|
||
Left shiftless as the dwindling ocean it can no longer see.
|
||
The light is failing, failing, my friends,
|
||
And so is He.
|
||
|
||
And so night has fallen
|
||
And what darkness visible
|
||
in blindness or death
|
||
Is left for the moon or for he?
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
[=- FiCTiON -=]
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
VERONiCA
|
||
by Kilgore Trout
|
||
|
||
"I think most men like shiny cars, shiny knives, and shiny girls,"
|
||
Veronica explained to me as I stared boredly at the end of my unlit cigarette.
|
||
"If you've got an eye-candy body and a few toys to play with, you can have any
|
||
man in the world."
|
||
|
||
Veronica was sixteen and lived with her parents two blocks away from my
|
||
house. We had met earlier that summer when she was looking for lawns to mow.
|
||
Being thirty-five and single, I couldn't resist having a young girl in a
|
||
tanktop and shorts getting sweaty in my lawn. She was strictly hands off, of
|
||
course, but I paid her double her asking price.
|
||
|
||
"Flash isn't everything a man wants," I replied, lighting my cigarette
|
||
and inhaling. "Find a guy who'll have curbside chats like this and you'll
|
||
have it made."
|
||
|
||
She leaned back, putting her hands in the freshly mowed grass, and
|
||
stretched her tanned legs into the street. I offered to get her another glass
|
||
of water, but she declined.
|
||
|
||
"You seem to know an awful lot about this type of thing," Veronica said.
|
||
"How come there isn't a Mrs. Mitchum?"
|
||
|
||
"Because I'm destined to be alone," I answered.
|
||
|
||
"Come on, that's so negative. You're a swell guy, you make good money,
|
||
and you're not bad looking. Aside from your smoking, you've got lots of good
|
||
qualities."
|
||
|
||
"It's not as simple as that, Veronica."
|
||
|
||
"Why not?"
|
||
|
||
"For me, the issues are different. I'm not sure I really ever wanted
|
||
love."
|
||
|
||
I took a final drag off of the cigarette and flicked it into the street.
|
||
Veronica stared at me quizically as I exhaled.
|
||
|
||
"How could you not want love?" she asked.
|
||
|
||
"It didn't work for me in the past. Love isn't always enough for some
|
||
people, and it took me a long time to realize that."
|
||
|
||
"That soulds like a pretty dysfunctional attitude to me."
|
||
|
||
"You're probably right."
|
||
|
||
Veronica stood up and said that she had to get home. I paid her and
|
||
watched her walk down the street. The sun was barely above the treetops, and
|
||
after a few moments a shiny car drove past, catching my reflection on its
|
||
door.
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
"The world will go out like a roman candle. Not even a blade of gras
|
||
will grow again. A lethal dose from which no awakening. Peace and
|
||
night, with no moan or whisper stirring. A soft, brooding darkness, an
|
||
inaudible flapping of wings."
|
||
--Henry Miller, _Black Spring_
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
AN EVENiNG AT STiNKY PETE'S
|
||
by Rich Logsdon
|
||
|
||
(Note to the reader: This story is the 141st in the famous but now defunct
|
||
"Alex the Werewolf" series.--XL, Editor-in-chief)
|
||
|
||
Nicky the ghoul felt like howling for joy. The scent of blood hung like
|
||
a thick cloud in the air about him as he, Alex, and Lisa drove hell-bent for
|
||
leather through the Southern California desert towards Las Vegas. The
|
||
blood-scent clung to them all like some wild animal perfume, intoxicating
|
||
Nicky. Having just participated in the most spectacular thrill-kill of his
|
||
life, Nicky felt as if he would never die.
|
||
|
||
It was a full-moon night, around three am late in August of '92. They
|
||
were traveling in Alex's '86 blue Ford convertible on the I-5 just east of
|
||
Baker, California. Lisa, Nicky's gorgeous stacked blonde girlfriend who made
|
||
her money performing in nude bars in the Southwest, sat in the middle between
|
||
the two men. She had placed her hand, with its beautiful blood-red
|
||
fingernails, between Nicky's leg, gently massaging Nicky's manhood into
|
||
ecstatic hardness. Life was good for Nicky the ghoul, and Vegas was only an
|
||
hour away.
|
||
|
||
As Alex drove, Nicky gazed upward, watching the meteors lighting up the
|
||
clear night sky in glorious reds, yellows, greens, and blues. For Nicky, this
|
||
was a blood-sacred moment, partially spoiled only by the '40's swing music
|
||
which Alex insisted on playing on his stereo. Nicky could still taste the
|
||
flesh and blood from the recent carnage. He put his arm around his girlfriend
|
||
Lisa, who had not yet become a world famous porn queen.
|
||
|
||
On this particular meteor-filled night, responding as well to the thrill
|
||
of the kill, Lisa had removed her top so that she could feel the night air
|
||
moving against her wonderful breasts. Over her right breast, she bore the
|
||
tattoo of a dark rose that Alex had given her last Christmas. Both nipples
|
||
bore the simple golden rings that Nicky had bought for her when the two of
|
||
them had started living together in Vegas five years ago.
|
||
|
||
Nicky smacked his lips in crude, bestial satisfaction and looked over at
|
||
Alex, his best friend. Unbelievably, Alex was a werewolf. In a normal
|
||
situation, when he wasn't giving in to the blood-call of the full moon, Alex
|
||
did not look very imposing. Right now, in fact, Alex was snapping his fingers
|
||
to Benny Goodman, and Nicky was reminded of how much he disliked his friend's
|
||
taste in music. Inspite of Nicky's protestations, Alex would never play Rush,
|
||
Aerosmith, or Van Halen. Alex, Nicky thought to himself, has always been your
|
||
basic nerd.
|
||
|
||
Nicky thought back to high school graduation. Since graduating from high
|
||
school eight years before, Alex had steadily worn wire-rimmed glasses, still
|
||
had a slight anemic build (the kind that invited people to kick sand in his
|
||
face, in fact), loved to discuss Conrad, Pynchon, and Nabakov with anyone who
|
||
would listen, and if left to his own devices would select totally mismatching
|
||
clothes to wear, like bright yellow socks, blue slacks, and a pink shirt.
|
||
Nicky cringed as he examined his friend: tonight, Alex wore a red California
|
||
Angels T-shirt, green shorts, and blue socks. "Ya look like a fuckin'
|
||
Christmas tree light," Nicky had said earlier. Alex's choice of clothes,
|
||
colors and music occasionally so outraged Nicky (who incidentally tried to
|
||
dress in the style of a Las Vegas mobster, long an extinct breed) that Nicky
|
||
was sometimes tempted not to be seen with his friend.
|
||
|
||
On this night, Alex, Lisa and Nicky had driven from Malibu where, four
|
||
hours ago, they had watched Lisa perform wildly, beautifully, exotically with
|
||
her pet snake Leopold on the stage at Stinky Pete's nude bar, her last
|
||
performance in a fantastic engagement that had lasted for two weeks. Though
|
||
she had received a glowing write-up in the most recent issue of _Boobs_
|
||
magazine, Lisa had made only a few insignificant appearances in some adult
|
||
films.
|
||
|
||
Nicky remembered the evening with excitement. At around 9:30, when Lisa
|
||
was going into the final part of her routine, Alex and Nicky were sitting at a
|
||
table way in the back of Stinky Pete's. Both men smoked incessantly, a kind
|
||
of preparation for an eternity to be spent in the fiery pit, and smoke swirled
|
||
continually in a blue cloud around their table. Alex was working on his third
|
||
or fourth Bloody Mary, and Alex had drunk about eight Tequila Sunrises. Two
|
||
of Stinky Pete's strippers, Magic and Amber, were sitting with them, drinking
|
||
and smoking as well. Nicky had bought them drinks throughout the evening as
|
||
he and Alex waited for and then watched Lisa's routine.
|
||
|
||
As they sat drinking at table in the back of Stinky Pete's, Nicky watched
|
||
Alex and still couldn't reconcile his friend's present mild demeanor with the
|
||
savage, insane ferocity Alex displayed when he turned into a werewolf. (Nicky
|
||
wondered if therapy would help merge his friend's disparate and obviously
|
||
alternate personalities.) Alex sat, almost timidly nursing his drink, talking
|
||
to the raven-haired Amber about Shakespeare, Dostoevsky and Joseph Conrad --
|
||
after all, Alex had gotten his masters in English literature from Princeton --
|
||
and Amber sat there, her face two inches from Alex's, her hand on his lap,
|
||
saying things like, "That's fascinating" and "Wow" and "I didn't know that."
|
||
Even when Amber did a lap dance for him, Alex talked nothing but literature.
|
||
"Oh, the horror, the horror," Alex said over and over again, waxing Conradian,
|
||
as Amber rode his bone. Amber just chuckled and just said, "Alex, you sure
|
||
are darned smart."
|
||
|
||
Nicky could have puked at this remark, but he remembered that Lisa was
|
||
very fond of Amber, who was studying color design at a local community
|
||
college, so he kept his mouth shut. Instead, as Lisa went through her routine
|
||
on the stage, Alex turned to Magic, a former cheerleader who had gone to high
|
||
school with him and Alex and whom Nicky had known for years, and asked her to
|
||
give him another lap dance. Because she still had a crush on him, Magic gave
|
||
the horny ghoul a great, great performance; as Alex commented to Nicky later,
|
||
it was like watching the two of them having intercourse right out there in
|
||
front of everybody in the place.
|
||
|
||
But Nicky didn't care if Lisa didn't care. Sometimes, in the middle of
|
||
her act (tonight, for instance), she hopped down off the stage, not a stitch
|
||
on, walked over to some overweight, balding, middle aged business type wearing
|
||
a suit and a tie, opened up his fly, took out his pecker, and, if the guy was
|
||
hard, whacked him off for five to fifteen minutes, depending on how the guy
|
||
acted.
|
||
|
||
When Lisa got to the final part of her act where she worked with the her
|
||
snake Rosebud, almost every man in the place was on his feet, panting,
|
||
shouting, howling, asking for more. It was something most of them had never
|
||
seen, only dreamt about. "The things this girl can make her snake do," one
|
||
lady at an adjacent table had commented to her boyfriend, "are delightfully
|
||
obscene." But Nicky had seen the snake part hundreds of times, and even
|
||
enjoyed it: he liked to imagine that he was the snake, crawling up inside
|
||
this beautiful blonde dancer in front of one to two hundred horny and drunk
|
||
men. Something of a purist to the end, however, Alex didn't like the
|
||
snake-act.
|
||
|
||
This night, in fact, Alex had stood up, walked over to Nicky so that he
|
||
was inches away from his friend's ear, and said, "Nicky, I just don't get it."
|
||
|
||
Clapping and whistling for his baby, just like everyone else, Nicky
|
||
asked, "What dontcha get, Alex?" Nicky knew that he and Alex had had this
|
||
conversation at least a dozen times before.
|
||
|
||
"Well," Alex began cautiously, "I have considered this matter before and,
|
||
well, how do you and Lisa do it, you know, Othello's "beast with two backs,"
|
||
the camel with two humps, after you've seen her do all those tricks with
|
||
Leopold?"
|
||
|
||
"I don't follow ya, pal," the ghoul said, wishing Alex would sit down and
|
||
shut up so he could enjoy the final part of his girl's act. "Like do what?"
|
||
Nicky asked, annoyed but trying not to show it. He knew exactly what Alex was
|
||
getting at.
|
||
|
||
"OK," Alex began, "after she actually has had our jungle friend inside
|
||
her, how can you and Lisa make love?" No one, thought Nicky to himself, ever
|
||
said "make love" any more except morons. Sometimes he wondered about Alex.
|
||
|
||
"I don't think about it," Nicky said abruptly, looking at Alex, getting a
|
||
bit pissed, "Why the fuck should I? If anything, I'm thinkin' about how good
|
||
it feels to be inside Lisa is all. Anyway, the snake's an act, Alex. It
|
||
don't mean shit. It's like when she used to do that shit with a mule in
|
||
Mexico." Alex recalled the stories Lisa told about the six months she had
|
||
danced down in Tijuana, her accompaniment on stage a mule. It was in that bar
|
||
that Nicky had met and fallen in love with Lisa, in fact. "It was a job,"
|
||
Lisa had commented. "I kinda enjoyed it at times."
|
||
|
||
"Well, I'm with Alex on this one," Amber piped up in a loud voice from
|
||
behind the men. She and Magic were still sitting down. "I think you're
|
||
totally screwed up, Nicky. Nothin' against you an' Lisa...."
|
||
|
||
"Who asked you, anyway?" Nicky growled at Amber. He looked for approval
|
||
from Magic, who was glaring at him too. Fuck both of these bitches, Nicky
|
||
thought to himself. I'll never figure women out. Nicky knew what was right.
|
||
|
||
When Lisa's act finished, every male in the house must have remained
|
||
standing for at least ten minutes, demanding an encore, which Nicky knew would
|
||
never come. Lisa's attitude was that you never give anyone anything extra
|
||
because, if you do, you're really setting yourself up to be fucked royally.
|
||
Lisa got paid $500 for the show, and that was it, over and done with, let's
|
||
head for home.
|
||
|
||
When Lisa left the stage and everyone sat down, Alex, Nicky, and the two
|
||
dancers sat in silence, waiting for Lisa to come out and join them. Nicky
|
||
worked on another drink, and as Alex and the two girls started mumbling
|
||
together he looked over at the next table right next where five or six young
|
||
men from a local church softball team, each with a dancer on his lap, were
|
||
talking and laughing about Lisa's act. They were saying some pretty wicked
|
||
things.
|
||
|
||
"I wonder what else ole pussy wonder does?" the big one, with short red
|
||
hair and bushy sideburns and a huge belly asked everyone at the table. "Maybe
|
||
a horse? A bull? A hippo?" Nicky figured this guy must be the catcher.
|
||
|
||
"I think that's all she can get," laughed the man right next to Red. This
|
||
one was taller though not built so heavy. He had dark, slick backed hair, was
|
||
dressed immaculately, and from the tone in his voice, obviously considered
|
||
himself the leader. His jersey read "Captain Hank" on the back. "Who'd want
|
||
to go to bed with something like the Snake Woman?" All the men laughed.
|
||
Nicky registered to himself: they are calling my girl the snake woman.
|
||
Brooding, Nicky slouched in his chair and slurped his drink.
|
||
|
||
"I think she needs a lot more tattoos," chimed in Red, taking a gigantic
|
||
swig from his bottle of ale. "Wouldn't hurt that bitch. Only help." The
|
||
other men laughed loudly but their girls, obviously some of the club's
|
||
dancers, squirmed uncomfortably and hoped this would pass.
|
||
|
||
"That's her boyfriend right over there," said the dancer on Red's lap,
|
||
pointing at Nicky, who was glaring at the big man. In a fight, Nicky knew,
|
||
these young softball studs hadn't a chance in hell. Nicky honestly hoped it
|
||
wouldn't have to come to that.
|
||
|
||
"Huh, huh, huh," said Red, trying to be the tough one, gazing at Nicky,
|
||
"do you fuck her before or after the snake? Or do you even got a snake?" At
|
||
this, Red grabbed his crotch and the other men laughed. Red picked up his ale
|
||
from the table in front of him and guzzled. Nicky had counted about twenty
|
||
empty bottles on the table.
|
||
|
||
Teeth clenched, Nicky had just risen from his chair when Lisa suddenly
|
||
came running up, dressed in an orange T-shirt that read "Stinky Pete's" and
|
||
baggy blue jeans. "Oooooh, Sweetcakes," she exclaimed, throwing her arms
|
||
around Nicky and kissing him on the cheek, "how was it? Was I good?"
|
||
|
||
"You were great, baby, real fuckin' great," Nicky calmly assured her,
|
||
keeping his eyes on the men at the next table. "You were the best, baby, the
|
||
best."
|
||
|
||
A belligerent drunk, Red couldn't resist and putting his bottle of ale on
|
||
his table grabbed the tall man sitting next to him and said, trying to imitate
|
||
Lisa, "Oooooh Sweetcakes, can I kiss you, too?" Then, turning to Nicky, he
|
||
asked, "What does it feel to be kissed by the Snake Lady, fella? Slimy and
|
||
scaly??"
|
||
|
||
Nicky knew he had to ignore the insult and began escorting Lisa to the
|
||
door. "Bye, girls," Nicky said over his shoulder to Amber and Magic, "it's
|
||
been nice. C'mon, Alex." Nicky, Lisa, and Alex slowly made their way through
|
||
the crowded room to the door, which was only twenty feet away from where they
|
||
had been sitting.
|
||
|
||
"Hey!!" bellowed Red, staggering to his feet and following the three.
|
||
"You ignoring me, you freaks?" Red began pushing his way through the crowd
|
||
towards Nicky. Anger building, Nicky was close to losing it, to giving the
|
||
spectators a bloody treat they'd remember to their dying days.
|
||
|
||
At that moment, always the gentleman and mediator, Alex stood his ground
|
||
between Red and Nicky, put his hand on Red's chest, and in quick breaths that
|
||
probably gave Red and his friends the impression Alex was afraid said, "Look,
|
||
I am terribly, terribly sorry if there has been some sort of misunderstanding
|
||
here. Terribly, terribly sorry. Now couldn't we just forget this and call it
|
||
an evening. We don't want a fight. You don't want to fight. I mean, you
|
||
guys represent our local church softball league, for goodness sakes. No
|
||
fights, please. We were just...." The way Alex talked in these situations
|
||
always embarrassed Nicky.
|
||
|
||
"Outa my way, queer," Red slurred loudly, giving Alex a push and then
|
||
bringing his fist around straight towards Alex, who easily ducked the blow.
|
||
Red's fist caught Lisa square in the mouth; and, her mouth now bloodied, Lisa
|
||
began screaming.
|
||
|
||
"Outside, you red fuck," Nicky stopped and said coldly to the big man,
|
||
who stood about six and a half feet tall. At six feet one inch tall, Nicky
|
||
stared the big man in the eyes and Red wavered. Staring into the eyes of a
|
||
ghoul was like staring straight into the pit of hell, and different people
|
||
always saw their own worst fears as they looked into the eyes of a ghoul.
|
||
Whatever Red saw, it temporarily scared him.
|
||
|
||
Red paused for an instant, long enough for Nicky to grab him by the
|
||
shoulder and escort him easily to the door. As a ghoul, Nicky's strength was
|
||
probably ten times that of Red or his friends. Red tried to take his arm
|
||
back, but found he couldn't move in Nicky's vice like grip, which sent
|
||
incredible pain coursing through the body like a million electrical
|
||
pin-pricks.
|
||
|
||
"No, no, no, Nicky," Lisa blubbered, blood frothing from her mouth. She
|
||
had a badly cut lip and was dabbing the blood with a napkin while trying to
|
||
talk. "Remember two years ago, Nick, in Dallas?" Indeed he did. Nicky had
|
||
gotten his man down and then, in front of all his friends and anyone else who
|
||
cared to watch had literally torn his adversary's head from his trunk with his
|
||
bare hands. Nicky had been forced to run from the law for a year and Lisa
|
||
couldn't get a job dancing anywhere for one year.
|
||
|
||
So Nicky tried to relax as he looked away from Red and his friends and
|
||
headed for the door. Seeing his girl bloodied, he wanted to kill Red and his
|
||
buddies and then eat their flesh. Just as Nicky and his two friends were
|
||
almost to the door, Red came up behind Alex, spun him around, and,
|
||
administered a series of blows. Alex fell to the ground, obviously hurt.
|
||
|
||
When Alex picked himself up off the floor, bleeding profusely from the
|
||
nose and sporting a huge gash over the right temple, Nicky could see the now
|
||
insane fury in his friend's eyes. It was beginning. Nicky had to get them
|
||
all outside, so he said, "All right, Red, outside now."
|
||
|
||
With a roar of approval, Red and his friends followed Nicky, Alex, and
|
||
Lisa out the door and around to the side parking lot, which was protected from
|
||
the freeway by a surrounding eight foot concrete wall that prevented anyone
|
||
from seeing in.
|
||
|
||
In the "hole," as it was termed inside the club, Nicky turned and looked
|
||
at Red, who had already removed his jacket and shirt. Red's fists were up,
|
||
and possibly attempting to imitate Muhammed Ali he began dancing, bobbing, and
|
||
weaving toward Nicky. Red's friends formed a circle behind him, almost as if
|
||
they were daring anyone to leave. The only others to come outside were Amber
|
||
and Magic, who had already made hundreds that night off Alex and Nicky.
|
||
|
||
"Uh, excuse me, you dumb fucking idiot," Nicky said to the pugilistic
|
||
Red, holding up a hand, "it's not me you gonna fight. Nicky wanted this to be
|
||
good. This big man and his friends needed to be taught a lesson they'd never
|
||
forget. "It's him." And Nicky pointed next to where Alex stood, bleeding,
|
||
saying nothing, panting feverishly, his eyes glowing red, his head forward,
|
||
his arms and hands changing shape even as he stood. Blind to signals that
|
||
were by now obvious to Lisa and Nicky, Red stepped forward and, with all of
|
||
his might, hit Alex in the jaw. Alex was literally lifted off his feet and
|
||
flew backwards for ten feet, crashing into some garbage cans before he hit the
|
||
earth. Because some other garbage cans blocked the view, Alex was no longer
|
||
visible.
|
||
|
||
"That'll teach you to fuck with me, kid!!" bellowed Red in the direction
|
||
of the garbage cans. Red knew he'd won, a champion among the men at Stinky
|
||
Pete's. Red's friends laughed uproariously, some patting the behemoth on the
|
||
back. Then Red turned to Nicky, who had already thought out how he was going
|
||
to get Red in a hammer-lock and then, quickly, pop this lumberjack's head off
|
||
for his friends to see. Should be easy and fun, thought Nicky to himself.
|
||
|
||
Nicky approached the belligerent Red when he heard a trash can tip over.
|
||
Nicky looked to the side, knew Alex was conscious, and heard the low guttural
|
||
growl that spelled the beginning of the end for Red and his buddies.
|
||
|
||
"What the fuck is that?" whimpered Red, his voice quivering, unaware that
|
||
he had about five minutes to live. "Is that you, little man?" he stupidly
|
||
asked, looking toward the garbage can, expecting the bespectacled Alex to
|
||
emerge.
|
||
|
||
When no answer came, Red relaxed a bit, probably imagining he had heard
|
||
things.
|
||
|
||
"Well," challenged Red, laughing in the direction of the cans, trying to
|
||
dispel the fear that had temporarily seized him, "I can't wait forever, you
|
||
little pussy. Either come on out from behind those cans and take your licks
|
||
or I put your friend here" -- he motioned towards Nicky with these words --
|
||
"in the fucking hospital." Red felt brave again.
|
||
|
||
You certainly had to admire this bozo's spunk, Nicky thought to himself.
|
||
|
||
Suddenly, a tremendous guttural scream shattered the night, seeming to
|
||
come from somewhere above or below. Nicky could see the lurking shadow moving
|
||
in the darkness between the walls and the garbage cans. He knew it was Alex,
|
||
the Alex that most people never got a chance to know. Again, the thing
|
||
screamed in rage, its deafening call rending the night.
|
||
|
||
In seconds, the beast-thing emerged slowly from the shadows, a huge wolf
|
||
with silver and black fur, crouching sideways, creeping almost, watching its
|
||
prey, the doomed Red. Saliva dripped from the snarling thing's jaws, and its
|
||
huge razor-sharp teeth glistened in the moonlight. A low steady growl, like an
|
||
engine, rumbled from its throat.
|
||
|
||
"Oh, my sweet, sweet Jesus," squeaked Red, visibly intimidated, "who
|
||
brought the dog? That is a dog, isn't it."
|
||
|
||
Standing slightly behind Nicky, Lisa laughed. "That's no dog, you dodo,"
|
||
said Lisa in her curtsey voice. "That's Alex, the guy you just thought you
|
||
knocked out. Alex, honey," Lisa said in a sing-song voice, approaching the
|
||
beast-thing as you would a mangy and potentially dangerous dog, "come out,
|
||
come out, come out to play." Having been witness to these terrifying
|
||
spectacles before, Lisa was reasonably confident that the beast thing would
|
||
not turn on her.
|
||
|
||
"What th-th-th-the hell is this?" wheezed Red, shaken, visibly trembling.
|
||
Red sounded as if he were on the verge of an asthma attack. "Oh, Jesus, Jesus,
|
||
Jesus. He'p me, he'p me, he'p me, Lord. I wanna go home, boys," sobbed the
|
||
man. At this, Red's partners began to back away, looking for the exit, which
|
||
Nicky ran to and blocked. When the men looked into Nicky's flashing zombie
|
||
eyes, they froze.
|
||
|
||
"What the hell this is," said Lisa, glad to have more than a few words to
|
||
say, "is dinner-time for Alex. And us." Lisa pointed to the wolf. "Uh, by
|
||
the way, big fella," she said, still giggling, as she looked back at Red and
|
||
his friends, "you better run. Prayin' won't save your skin now."
|
||
|
||
Red turned to begin his sprint to freedom when the beast-thing sprang,
|
||
grabbing one of the man's fat legs and, tearing the trousers, easily pulling
|
||
the big man down and dragging him backwards. Red was screaming like a little
|
||
child.
|
||
|
||
In an instant, the tall man Hank sprang forward, stupid and brave,
|
||
withdrew a huge hunting knife, and positioned himself in front of the snarling
|
||
thing. The beast dropped Red's now bloodied and separated leg, circled
|
||
quickly to the left, to the right, crouched, and then sprang quick as dark
|
||
light, grabbing the man's neck in its powerful jaws and flipping Hank's
|
||
severed head backwards and over the wall of the "hole." The captain of the
|
||
church softball team never had a chance, Nicky chuckled to himself, never even
|
||
saw the thing spring. Nicky watched the tall man, now headless, stagger about
|
||
for a second or two before falling forward in an explosion of dust, a crimson
|
||
geyser shooting from the hole of his neck.
|
||
|
||
One of the other men, a small man with glasses and close cropped black
|
||
hair (Guy looks like the fuckin' preacher, Nicky thought to himself), began
|
||
bawling and fled toward the exit where he met Nicky. As the little man tried
|
||
to get by Nicky, the ghoul grabbed the man by the throat and squeezed. Bone
|
||
and gristle cracked and blood trickled from the little man's mouth as Nicky
|
||
held his victim, a rat caught in a trap, dangling before him before dropping
|
||
him to the ground with a dusty thud.
|
||
|
||
Another man, this one almost as tall as Red but much fatter, put his bald
|
||
head down like a bull and charged Nicky. Quick as lightening, Nicky stepped
|
||
aside, tripped the man, who fell squealing to his knees. In an instant,
|
||
Nicky had the man's head in a hammer lock and, in one quick twist, had popped
|
||
the man's head off his body cavity. Blood gushed everywhere, like a broken
|
||
city fire hydrant. Quickly looking over at Lisa, who couldn't help admiring
|
||
her boyfriend's prowess, the bloodied Nicky commented, "Honey, I been waitin'
|
||
to do that all fuckin' night."
|
||
|
||
"Oooohhh, Nicky," Lisa cooed, "I love you, sweetcheeks."
|
||
|
||
"Christ," breathed Nicky to himself, looking away and dropping his
|
||
victim's head to the ground. "I hate that name."
|
||
|
||
With a cry that pierced that Southern California night, the beast thing
|
||
again went to work again, seizing Red's head in its massive jaws, easily
|
||
squashing the head like a ripe tomato, blood and brains spurting everywhere.
|
||
In an instant, the beast was on the three remaining men, who scampered about
|
||
like hypnotized rabbits, not sure where to turn. It was almost funny, thought
|
||
Nicky, like watching an old Warner Brothers cartoon. The Beast Alex sprang
|
||
from one man to another, seizing the next man's neck or head in its powerful
|
||
jaws, and then biting and tearing. In minutes, the ground of the pit was
|
||
covered with blood and littered with bloodied decapitated corpses.
|
||
|
||
Not sure what she had just seen, Amber stepped forward from the shadows
|
||
and towards the wolf and said, "Alex?" The wolf remained hunched over Red's
|
||
corpse, thunderous growls coming from its throat, ready to begin the feast.
|
||
|
||
Amber looked back at Magic. "This has been pretty cool, huh?" was all
|
||
Amber managed to say. "Better than Fright Night, that's for sure."
|
||
|
||
"Cool," returned Magic, nonchalant. "Now let's get back inside. I wanna
|
||
make some more money."
|
||
|
||
As Amber and Magic walked out of the pit, Nicky stepped aside and let
|
||
them pass.
|
||
|
||
"Call me up next time you<6F>re in town, big boy," Magic said with a Mae
|
||
West wink to Nicky, brushing up against him with her huge tits as she passed.
|
||
Patting Magic on the ass, Nicky whispered, "Sure, babe," confident Lisa hadn't
|
||
heard the exchange.
|
||
|
||
Now alone in the pit with six corpses and a friend who had turned into a
|
||
snarling, blood-thirsty beast, Nicky and Lisa didn't know where to begin.
|
||
There was almost too much to devour in one sitting and they knew that they
|
||
would have to leave one or two of the corpses untouched. Taking the corpses
|
||
home in Alex's trunk, once Alex regained his humanity, was out of the question
|
||
since Alex kept his car clean and immaculate.
|
||
|
||
In silent agreement, Nicky and Lisa looked at each other, looked at the
|
||
beast-thing noisily devouring Red, looked back at each other and smiled
|
||
hugely.
|
||
|
||
"By the way, baby," said Nicky, ready to begin, "please don't call me
|
||
Sweetcheeks ever again."
|
||
|
||
"Sorry, Punkin'," Lisa responded, anxious to eat but respectful of her
|
||
boyfriend's wishes. Nicky rolled his eyes and winced but was too hungry to
|
||
give his new label another thought.
|
||
|
||
Then, each one kneeling over a different corpse, Nicky and Lisa had
|
||
dinner.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
Meteors continued to streak overhead in a tremendous celestial show as
|
||
the memory of the evening swam like blood in Nicky's brain. It had been a
|
||
glorious evening, splendid really, the best killing any of them had yet taken
|
||
part in, but the three were tired and anxious to get home before the sunrise.
|
||
Nicky knew Alex was cutting it a bit short but didn't worry. He worried more
|
||
about Alex's wardrobe, in fact.
|
||
|
||
"Those guys back at Stinky Pete's thought you were a fuckin' queer. You
|
||
know that," Nicky yelled into the wind, loud enough so Alex could hear.
|
||
|
||
"All right, then," Alex responded, petulantly, throwing one hand into the
|
||
air, "why don't you buy my clothes from now on? It's quite painfully obvious
|
||
that I haven't a clue." Alex emphasized "clue," and Nicky cringed: Alex even
|
||
talked like a queer. "I'd rather spend my time shopping looking for good
|
||
books to read anyway," Alex added with a flip of his hand.
|
||
|
||
"You got yourself a deal," Nicky responded, not welcoming the task of
|
||
preparing a wardrobe for a friend who preferred Shakespeare to Seinfeld but
|
||
responding nevertheless to a task that had to be done.
|
||
|
||
At the rate Alex was driving, Nicky knew they'd be home and inside dark
|
||
rooms at least a half hour before sun-up. It would feel good to sleep on such
|
||
full stomachs, the odor of blood and flesh fresh in their nostrils. He would
|
||
worry about Alex's clothes next week.
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
"There are problems in these times,
|
||
but, WHOO, none of them are mine.
|
||
And I'm beginning to see the light."
|
||
--Velvet Underground, "Beginning to See the Light"
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
REiNCARNATED HiTLER, WHAT?,
|
||
or A PAiR OF BLUE SHOES, A STORY
|
||
by Kilgore Trout
|
||
|
||
The pair of blue shoes were tied together by their shoelaces and draped
|
||
over the telephone cable outside my house. The were blue shoes, maybe Keds,
|
||
and I had no idea who put them up there. The shoes had been there for about
|
||
four months, and I eyed them suspiciously every time I left my house. It just
|
||
wasn't natural, even for a pair of shoes.
|
||
|
||
She was an Arab, my wife, and I had met her in a dream on a Sunday night
|
||
while she was holding our son. Her name was Ouarda, which means "a rose."
|
||
The last place you want to be when you find out you're a father is in bed
|
||
asleep because you can't even react. No joy, no fear, no questions about why
|
||
you've never even met your wife before and how she could be the mother of your
|
||
son when you've only screwed yuppie alternachicks in Portland. Sometimes
|
||
marriage just hits you like a cat in heat.
|
||
|
||
"Are they still up there?" Ouarda asked, switching Gustav from her left
|
||
breast to her right.
|
||
|
||
"Of course they are," I said, lighting a cigarette and sitting down in
|
||
the recliner. "Those damn things are going to be up there forever."
|
||
|
||
"You shouldn't smoke around your son. It'll stunt his growth."
|
||
|
||
"Right." I took another drag.
|
||
|
||
"Why don't you take them down? Knock 'em off with a rock or something?"
|
||
|
||
"See, what you don't get is that you're a fucking construct of my
|
||
imagination. You don't exist, our son -- our, hah, like I should remember his
|
||
birth -- doesn't exist, and those shoes are probably not real, either."
|
||
|
||
"I wonder if the shoes have been causing our bad telephone connections."
|
||
|
||
"They're blue. Red shoes would do that, but not blue ones."
|
||
|
||
"Where's the logic in that?"
|
||
|
||
"I don't have a need for logic anymore. Probably why I'm married to
|
||
you."
|
||
|
||
Gustav leaned back, wiped his mouth with a forearm, and ran into his room
|
||
to play with his computer. His newest obsession was devising encryption
|
||
routines.
|
||
|
||
"Jesus, when the hell are you gonna ween that kid?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
Ouarda rose off the couch and kneeled down beside the recliner. "You
|
||
still miss your -- what is it -- your 'fridge, don't you, dear?" I detected
|
||
worry in her eyes. We had gone through this a thousand times before, and it
|
||
never ended prettily.
|
||
|
||
"Damn right I do," I replied, sniffing. "What kind of house doesn't have
|
||
a fridge? It's always there for you, especially for a midnight snack. Even
|
||
was one of the best prank phone call jokes. 'Is your refridgerator running?
|
||
Well, you better catch it then!' Guffaw, guffaw. And the best ones were
|
||
designed for the anal-retentives, with a bunch of compartments and separate
|
||
temperature knobs."
|
||
|
||
"And all that is necessary to store food? It seems like so much trouble.
|
||
Besides, breasts aren't removable."
|
||
|
||
"In the real world, people don't sustain themselves by sucking on tits.
|
||
They kill animals and harvest crops -- shit like that. What I wouldn't give
|
||
for a turkey and mayo sandwich."
|
||
|
||
"Has Dr. Simmons come up with anything new to explain these delusions of
|
||
yours?"
|
||
|
||
I scoffed. "He thinks I should be committed."
|
||
|
||
"Not on your life." Ouarda put her arms around me. "I don't think
|
||
you're crazy, just imaginative and a bit hostile at times. You should write
|
||
sci-fi or something. And you know I love you no matter what happens."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Moscow (AP) -- A group of protesting students at the University of Moscow
|
||
overturned police cars and firebombed florist shops to denounce the visit
|
||
of Graham Garibaldi, noted psychic warrior and winner of the 1999
|
||
International Card Matching Tournament, when he set a new record of
|
||
successfully completing 2,133 pairs before missing. He is in Moscow to
|
||
consult the president about a new foreign policy strategy with China in
|
||
an attempt to bolster psychic Chinese-Russians' waning morale.
|
||
|
||
|
||
I woke up and glanced over at Ouarda, who was still asleep. My dreams
|
||
always come in the format of news wire reports now, mostly from Reuters and
|
||
the Associated Press, but sometimes from Knight-Ridder as well. I used to
|
||
have such vivid and lifelike dreams, and now I'm delegated to watching a
|
||
teletype spew out words. Making sure I didn't disturb my wife, I got out of
|
||
bed, slid into a bathrobe and slippers, and ventured outside.
|
||
|
||
Pat Krieg, my next door neighbor, was standing in his driveway. Pat was
|
||
fat and conservative, but he kept his lawn well-manicured. His attire at
|
||
three in the morning consisted of a fluffy white pirate shirt and Tazmanian
|
||
Devil boxer shorts. He had once confied to me that he thought he had been a
|
||
pirate in one of his past lives, which provided a great bedroom fantasy for
|
||
him and his wife Mathilda. They even had a cargo net on one of the walls.
|
||
|
||
"Can't sleep, Jim?" Pat asked, walking across his freshly cut grass.
|
||
|
||
"Kind of. Had a bad dream and figured some fresh air would do me some
|
||
good."
|
||
|
||
"Ayup. That'll help."
|
||
|
||
"What do you think of those shoes, Pat?" I asked, pointing up.
|
||
|
||
He squinted at the shoes. "Dunno. Wacky kids'll do anything for kicks
|
||
these days."
|
||
|
||
"Don't they bother you?"
|
||
|
||
"Not really."
|
||
|
||
"But they're blue."
|
||
|
||
"Now I know they're totally benign. If they were red, whoo-boy, that
|
||
might cause telephone trouble, but blue shoes ain't nothing to get your
|
||
panties in a wad."
|
||
|
||
"I'm not so sure. They seem fishy."
|
||
|
||
"How's the shrink business coming along, Jim?"
|
||
|
||
"Huh? Oh. He spends more time flipping through his DSM-IV book than he
|
||
does talking to me. He throws around terms like 'bipolar' and 'flattening of
|
||
affect' and 'cognitive dissonance' without actually knowing what they mean. I
|
||
figure he thinks if he repeats the technical terms enough, he'll understand
|
||
them sooner or later."
|
||
|
||
"Never trusted psychologists myself," Pat said. "I mean, who exactly had
|
||
the gall to define normality? Besides the Bible, of course, *Sola
|
||
scriptura,* that's my motto. Ain't nothing you need to knwo that isn't in
|
||
that book. Now, if you'll excuse me, Mattie should have that peg-leg dildo
|
||
contraption put on, so I've got to go. Take care, Jim."
|
||
|
||
"You too, Pat. Have fun."
|
||
|
||
"I will, matey. Arrr."
|
||
|
||
I silently thanked God that I didn't have a pirate fetish as I lit a
|
||
cigarette and went back inside.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Little Rock (Reuters) -- A band of alcoholic preachers' wives have been
|
||
dressing up as depressed clowns and drive up and down the interstate
|
||
screaming slogans such as "I am a crazy German motorist" and "My other
|
||
car is a Fokker!" Arkansas state troopers have clocked them at speeds in
|
||
excess of 120mph, and sixteen have been arrested for recless driving.
|
||
The women belong to the Scientific Imbibing Baptist Church, a schism
|
||
group which believes that since Jesus turned water into wine and since
|
||
95% of the human body is water, salvation can be achieved by excessive
|
||
drinking.
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Daddy, wake up. You promised me you'd take me to the library today so
|
||
I could check out books on Kasparov's strategies."
|
||
|
||
I opened my eyes and looked up at Gustav, who was dressed in shorts and a
|
||
cypherpunk t-shirt. He was a cute kid, really, even though he bore no
|
||
resemblance to me whatsoever, and he had a brain on him that would probably be
|
||
able to bend space-time in twenty years. Course, all the kids are
|
||
superintelligent now. Probably something in the water. Or a solar flare.
|
||
One of the two.
|
||
|
||
"Yeah, okay, son," I said, rubbing my eyes. "Gimme a few minutes to get
|
||
dressed. Where's your mother?"
|
||
|
||
"Out back pruning trees. You know, Dad, no offense, but inactivity is
|
||
possibly one of the worst states you can be in with your mental configuration
|
||
as it is."
|
||
|
||
"I do stuff."
|
||
|
||
"Like what?"
|
||
|
||
"Like taking you to the library."
|
||
|
||
"Touche. Although I was thinking more along the lines of getting a job.
|
||
You haven't worked since, well, since I was born."
|
||
|
||
"Someone has to take care of you. And your mother makes good money."
|
||
|
||
"I'm eight. I can take care of myself."
|
||
|
||
"You don't think I've ben a good father?"
|
||
|
||
"No, it's just that sometimes you seem like you're in your own little
|
||
sphere, distant from everybody else. I know you're getting help, but it's
|
||
hard to relate to you on that plane of existence."
|
||
|
||
"Son, did your mother ever tell you that you were adopted?"
|
||
|
||
Gustav drew in a short breath. "No. I'm... adopted?"
|
||
|
||
"No," I said, smiling. "Just curious, that's all."
|
||
|
||
"See, Dad, you're going funky-like on me again."
|
||
|
||
"Okay, then I'll stop going 'funky-like' and take you to the library.
|
||
Hungry?"
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
I left thirty Egyptian pounds on the table as the waitresses sanitized
|
||
their breasts for their next customers, and Gustav and I left the diner and
|
||
began the four block walk to the library. No one had, to my knowledge, ever
|
||
ascertained why males couldn't produce food. Gustav had his theory that it
|
||
was because semen tastes too salty. If you think that's strange, you should
|
||
read his trip diaries.
|
||
|
||
This condition would have, I thought, invariably led to some sort of
|
||
breeding program of women like cattle, but this never has happened in recorded
|
||
history. Or maybe the history books lie. Whatever. The situation has
|
||
produced, however, a nifty mental disorder where men who feel inferior to
|
||
women due to their lack of food production have a tendency to rip holes in
|
||
their chest and try to get people to suckle on them while they bleed to death.
|
||
I forget the clinical term, but on the street people refer to it as "fucking
|
||
gross."
|
||
|
||
When we arrived at the library, Gustav ran straight for the chess books
|
||
while I wandered into the religion section. For the past few months I had
|
||
been devouring books on quantum phsyics in an attempt to figure out if I could
|
||
have been placed here by a wormhole or some similar theory. With those
|
||
exhausted (or at least as far as I could understand them), I had turned to
|
||
religion. As much as I liked the idea of everything being inside my head, I
|
||
hadn't yet been able to make everything go away with a thought. As Philip K.
|
||
Dick once said, "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, is
|
||
still there."
|
||
|
||
Today I was looking for books on Bishop Berkeley's ideas about reality.
|
||
He postulated that everything was imaginary and it was all in the mind of God.
|
||
It was a bad model, I knew, since Locke had subsequently disproven this with
|
||
the innate qualities of matter, but science already had quite a few strikes
|
||
against it already in my book. My belief in God was also quite negligible,
|
||
but hwat the hell, right? Gotta try everything sooner or later.
|
||
|
||
There was a tap on my shoulder and I turned, facing a young woman with
|
||
straight brown hair down to her waist.
|
||
|
||
"Berkeley's in the philosophy section," she said, pointing.
|
||
|
||
"Excuse me?" I stammered.
|
||
|
||
"They keep Berkeley in the philosophy stacks," the girl explained, her
|
||
hair now braided. "That way."
|
||
|
||
"How do you know that I'm looking for Berkeley?"
|
||
|
||
"I know the type." Her hair was now in some prom queen do. "You want to
|
||
know why God does bad things to good people. You're hurt, you're confused,
|
||
you want answers, and until you get satisfactory ones, you're gonna keep
|
||
looking."
|
||
|
||
"How the hell does your hair do that?"
|
||
|
||
"It's magic. Don't you want to know why God lets bad things happed to
|
||
good people?"
|
||
|
||
"Sure."
|
||
|
||
"Nobody knows why."
|
||
|
||
"That's it?"
|
||
|
||
"That's it. Pretty simple, huh?"
|
||
|
||
"Malarky," I expertly retorted. "That's no answer. How do you reconcile
|
||
that with your belief in a loving God?"
|
||
|
||
"I don't believe in God. Duh. Did you really think some college girl in
|
||
the library would miraculously have all the answers to life? Sounds like a
|
||
bad plot device to me. Maybe you oughta try clicking your ruby slippers three
|
||
times and wait for Glenda to give you a blowjob."
|
||
|
||
I took a step back. "You are one fucked up chick," I said.
|
||
|
||
"Not any more than you, dearie. Why don't you just enjoy what you have?
|
||
You've got a decent family, you don't work, and the only one who thinks things
|
||
are miserable is you."
|
||
|
||
"Why do you know so much about me? Who are you?"
|
||
|
||
She flashed a badge. "Madalaine Justice, Justice Department. We've been
|
||
watching you for a while now. Do yourself a favor and stop being a
|
||
troublemaker."
|
||
|
||
"Troublemaker? That's preposterous. What have I done wrong?"
|
||
|
||
"That's for me to know and for you to find out. Since you seem
|
||
unrepentent, I'm afraid I'm going to have to arrest you."
|
||
|
||
"For what?"
|
||
|
||
"Treason. Crimes against humanity. Being the Zodiac killer. Death camp
|
||
connissuer. Escaped prison warden. A reincarnated Hitler. I could go on for
|
||
days."
|
||
|
||
"This is absurd. I've done nothing."
|
||
|
||
"We've got videos, tapped phone conversations, secret love letters,
|
||
assassination contracts. The whole shebang."
|
||
|
||
"Gustav!" I yelled. "Come here quick!"
|
||
|
||
"Now you've done it," Agent Justice said. "Violating noise levels is a
|
||
capital offense, punishable by death."
|
||
|
||
Gustav ran around the corner. "What's going on?"
|
||
|
||
"Your daddy is scum," she said, "and I hate scum."
|
||
|
||
I stood still as Agent Justice handcuffed me and patted me down. She
|
||
then led me outside, where a whole SWAT team issued a collective sigh of
|
||
relief that I had been apprehended peacefully.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Calcutta (Knight-Ridder) -- Over the past seventy-two hours, people have
|
||
been spotting the apparition of Mother Teresa floating in the sky holding
|
||
what appears to be a headless baby. In a loud sonic-booming voice, the
|
||
ghost of the saintly caretaker wails, "Where is this boy's head? Look in
|
||
a hole." Windows in a three block radius of the sightings then proceed
|
||
to blow out. One motorist exclaimed, "I was tooling along, minding my
|
||
own business, when Mother Teresa screamed and the next thing I knew, my
|
||
face was given an implant of my windshield." The search for a small
|
||
boy's head is underway in an attempt to stop this haunting.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Gustav was poking me in the ribs. "Dad, you need to stay awake during
|
||
the proceedings," he explained, "or it makes you look uncaring to the jury."
|
||
|
||
The trial had been going on for eight days, and the whole time was spent
|
||
by the prosecution lumping charge after charge upon me for crimes that I could
|
||
not have committed. But they had evidence, boy-howdy, did they ever. A young
|
||
girl dressed in peasant clothes from a low-budget renaissance festival accused
|
||
me of killing the Cathars in France. Alan Greenspan described my effect on
|
||
the economy as "horrendous" right before four Navy Seals testified that I was
|
||
personally responible for the sabotage of what would have been the largest
|
||
cake ever baked by reknown Italian chef Santino Mazza. The list went on and
|
||
on with mocked up photographs, reconstructed phone conversations, and oodles
|
||
of witnesses.
|
||
|
||
My big question: why? I was just questioning the authenticity of
|
||
reality, not banging little Timmy from two doors down behind the the
|
||
neighborhood playground (although I was being charged for that, too.) Gustav
|
||
was my legal counsel. No one else would defend me, and he was doing a fairly
|
||
decent job under the circumstances. His only objection that wasn't overruled
|
||
was one concerning a statement mde by the D.A. which implied that I was a
|
||
blue-skinned alien trying to take over the world. I'm not sure if it made
|
||
much difference, though, because the next day's papers had a picture of me in
|
||
blue skin crushing a globe. I should also note that the jury, while
|
||
sequestered, received the morning paper with only the sports section removed.
|
||
|
||
The prosecution rested on the tenth day after a full reenactment of the
|
||
library episode and proof that I was a reincarnated Hitler.
|
||
|
||
"Hitler as an evil man, and this man is evil," assistant district
|
||
attorney Hans Goldstein argued, "so therefore, this man is Hitler
|
||
reincarnate. Kill him before he kills you."
|
||
|
||
During the recess, Gustav informed me that our chances didn't look good.
|
||
Always leave it to the children, even really smart ones, to state the obvious.
|
||
Ouarda had been pouring through legal books for days, looking for a precedent
|
||
or technicality to get me off, but she had no luck. Besides my family, I
|
||
didn't have any witnesses. Even Pat Krieg wouldn't testify on my behalf,
|
||
worried that his pirate fetish would make headlines and cause him to lose
|
||
business.
|
||
|
||
My wife and son did their best to paint me in the best light possible.
|
||
It was especially amusing to watch Gustav questioning himself, running in and
|
||
out of the witness stand. That lasted for about an hour and a half. While
|
||
this was going on, I was trying to imagine what it would feel like to have an
|
||
axe imbedded in my neck.
|
||
|
||
After the prosecution finished cross-examining my son, Gustav said he had
|
||
a surprise witness. Ouarda and I looked at each other in puzzlement,
|
||
wondering who it could be. Gustav removed his shoes and placed them on the
|
||
railing around the witness stand. They were the blue Keds. The judge had to
|
||
pound his gavel repeatedly to quell the laughter.
|
||
|
||
"Exactly what is the meaning of this?" the judge asked.
|
||
|
||
"If you will indlge me for a moment, your honor," Gustav replied, turning
|
||
around towards me and smiling. All I could do was shrug.
|
||
|
||
"Shoes, identify yourself to the court," Gustav ordered.
|
||
|
||
"We have no name speakable in your tongue," the shoes said in unison, the
|
||
front of their soles flapping up and down, mimicing mouth movements. "For
|
||
simplicity's sake, you may call us 'Horus.'"
|
||
|
||
"And is there any particular reason you chose the name of an Egyptian
|
||
God?"
|
||
|
||
"It is aesthetically pleasing."
|
||
|
||
"And where do you come from?"
|
||
|
||
"Our first memories are of dangling from a telephone cable outside the
|
||
defendant's house. We resided there for four months util you brought us down
|
||
this morning with a rock. You have much to learn about subtlety."
|
||
|
||
"And you exactly did you obtain consciousness?"
|
||
|
||
Horus sighed. "That is still a mystery, one we have been pondering from
|
||
our first waking moments. We are quite confident that we have souls, although
|
||
the jury -- ha ha -- is still out on whether or not God likes bad puns."
|
||
|
||
"Counselor," the judge groaned, "as strange as this is, would you please
|
||
get to the point?"
|
||
|
||
"Horus, what have you been doing for these past four months?" Gustav
|
||
asked.
|
||
|
||
"Aside from asking the usual existential questions that baffle every new
|
||
sentient species, we have been watching the defendant's house."
|
||
|
||
"And what have you observed?"
|
||
|
||
"Absolutely nothing." The shoes made a gagging sound. "We mean, the
|
||
defendant leads the most boring life imaginable. Oh, look, there he is again,
|
||
smoking a cigarette on the porch. Hey, he's giving us nasty looks again
|
||
before getting into his car. He's so mundane. And when he talks to that fat
|
||
neighbor of his, it makes you want to die. 'How's the weather? How's the
|
||
wife and kids? Repair that cargo net yet?' Frankly, it would probably end
|
||
his misery if you did sentence him to death. But all of these charges are
|
||
ludicrous since we've seen everything that goes on at his house, and that is
|
||
absolutely zilcho. Not even a dinner party."
|
||
|
||
"Objection!" the prosecutor yelled, finally recovering from shock at
|
||
seeing a pair of talking shoes. "This testimony should be stricken from the
|
||
record. Shoes aren't credible witnesses. Where are their eyes?"
|
||
|
||
"Hey ho, good question," said the judge. "Counsel?"
|
||
|
||
"Of course shoes have eyes," Gustav laughed. "Where else would you
|
||
string the shoelaces?"
|
||
|
||
"Objection overruled."
|
||
|
||
The jury gasped at the turn of events. The judge had to call for order
|
||
as people began taking off their shoes and talking to them.
|
||
|
||
"Is there anything else you'd like to say, Horus?"
|
||
|
||
"Well, after we're through here, we'd like to be placed somewhere a bit
|
||
more exciting, perhaps in a sorority house during rush week or in an amusement
|
||
park. Maybe somebody would even be kind enough to wear us. Just get us away
|
||
from the defendant."
|
||
|
||
"No further questions, your honor."
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
I was, of course, acquitted. An internal investigation of the Justice
|
||
Department by Agent Justice revealed a history of incompetence and gross
|
||
negligence, for which she was promoted. I happily returned to my boring
|
||
suburbian existence, still trying to figure out how I had gotten here, but
|
||
Ouarda and Gustav kept me distracted enough that it didn't worry me too much
|
||
anymore. After all, when a pair of talking shoes saves your life, you tend to
|
||
just take things in stride.
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|
||
"You want your empty words heard and everybody's ready,
|
||
I want to know your secrets but you are not telling--
|
||
You're just gesturing, saying
|
||
'Open up your arms & hearts and let me in.'
|
||
You must be out of your brilliant mind."
|
||
--Furniture, "Brilliant Mind"
|
||
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
YOU TOOK THE WORDS
|
||
by Sophie Random
|
||
|
||
She had nothing to say that was of particular interest to anyone, and if
|
||
she did, they most likely disagreed with it. This troubled her. She furrowed
|
||
her brows and sighed over it as she walked from A to B.
|
||
|
||
She marveled at those who had so much boiling over everyday, who managed
|
||
to flood the pages every night or at least thrice a week. She, she took years
|
||
even to simmer and then it pushed out. She vomited it up, reluctantly,
|
||
remembering that it made her nauseous and bloated otherwise.
|
||
|
||
She never knew quite what to do with them, her thoughts. She tried to
|
||
arrange them smartly, accentuating their positives, drawing attention from
|
||
their negatives. But she never could accessorize well and they only wound up
|
||
looking as if she tried too hard, gaining her patronizing pity rather than the
|
||
sought-for admiration.
|
||
|
||
Like any well-meaning pseudo-intellectual, she tried to read her way into
|
||
depth. But no one ever told her that the mind without some degree of
|
||
mysticism keeps its head above water, whether it be afraid of drowning or
|
||
ruining a good hair day. No one told her much of anything, not in clear-cut
|
||
terms. She deciphered and analyzed and often felt as if they didn't want her
|
||
to get it. This bonded her with many real-life modern-day intellectuals who
|
||
were very chic with their conspiracy fixations. But they had each other,
|
||
which is something that they failed to admit, or chose to ignore, and this she
|
||
noted. She wasn't fooled any longer: Where there was one, there were many.
|
||
They traveled in packs.
|
||
|
||
There is a secret world out there. There is, out there, a secret pact, a
|
||
secret secret, an ineffable secret that surrounds a pack of wolves, a pack of
|
||
lions. They travel in secret with hints wrapped in pages of nonchalant books.
|
||
They travel sometimes alone, as a trick. But they're never alone, they're
|
||
bound together by The Secret and they do not separate. Among them there are
|
||
factions, little special interest groups with their little special causes like
|
||
Computer Science and English and Anthropology and Philosophy. They will cut
|
||
your flow to test your energy levels, unnerve you to test your impulses. They
|
||
will break you to put you back together again, to make a new one in their
|
||
style, they have their own genome project. She was scared of them, with their
|
||
knowledge of her secret code, of The Secret Code. God is dead and they have
|
||
deconstructed him to test his energy, his impulses, to put him back together
|
||
the way they'd like him to be. She was afraid of these new gods, who had
|
||
traveled farther than her in their minds. She did not want to be redirected,
|
||
she did not want them to recode her, she did not want to lose focus on her
|
||
path -- her path which did not lead to them. She did not want to be rerouted,
|
||
she did not need a guide. She hated The Secret, she couldn't break its code,
|
||
she did not know it. It is Sanskrit, it is Greek, it is a summer session of
|
||
Latin. She speaks with a fiery tongue of hate, she does not speak with idle
|
||
wisdom, she does not speak with an activist's heart. She speaks in the dead
|
||
language of her past that is not worth learning.
|
||
|
||
She struggled much with Desire and what the philosophers call
|
||
"inauthentic existence." Her problem, primarily, was that she was equipped
|
||
enough to recognize it but not quite enough to do anything about it. This
|
||
nagged her, naturally, and she bit her nails and anxiously fiddled with her
|
||
barrette while mulling it over. So bothered was she by her lack of sufficient
|
||
spirituality that she found a book on the lives of the saints, which she
|
||
promptly sat and read. Or more accurately, she sat, skimmed, and skipped.
|
||
Saints, she remembered, were known for their mystical experiences. She read
|
||
through various visions, ecstasies (she assumed they were different than those
|
||
that she had, for she would be a saint many times over and quite an important
|
||
one at that), and premonitions. These did not touch her.
|
||
|
||
What did touch her was the story of some saintess, her name very
|
||
saint-like: Ann, or Elizabeth, or Colette, she did not make note of it. The
|
||
saintess worked as a housemaid. Everyday the poor people of the neighborhood
|
||
would come to the door and she would give all the leftover food to them
|
||
instead of to the pigs. So compassionate was this young saintess that she
|
||
even sacrificed her own dinner.
|
||
|
||
She paused after finishing this part of the story, for she had a vision.
|
||
A remarkable, enlightening vision. She saw a frail young girl in simple
|
||
clothes, with tiger eyes and sunken cheeks, approaching a door with leftover
|
||
stew and bread, including her own untouched meal. But then she saw behind the
|
||
closed door, to the outside, where toothless, pocked, old, ugly beggars were
|
||
snickering. Snickering, guffawing, mocking that dumb broad who had actually
|
||
stopped eating and was giving them her dinner every night.
|
||
|
||
She had a revelation: Most saints were stupid. She slammed the book
|
||
closed.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
She did not simply listen to the words that came from people's mouths or
|
||
fingers. She read behind them. This is not to be conflated with "reading
|
||
between the lines." The techniques are quite different. The latter entails
|
||
searching for intimations, hints. This is not what she did, for what she
|
||
needed to know lay in the lines themselves. Most of it, however, lay behind
|
||
the words. And behind these meanings (which were themselves more words,
|
||
really) lay the only god she could still believe in: The Author.
|
||
|
||
Her faith evidenced itself in her role as The Reader. Of course, at
|
||
first she had tried to be The Muse. She began working for one or two of The
|
||
Poets, but they were just starting out and she wasn't very good at it. They
|
||
were dissatisfied with her work, for the poems often rhymed and were full of
|
||
cliches. Then once, under the spell of an incredible lie, The Poet tranced
|
||
over to her, the one he knew best. Yet she too was changed in the spell, and
|
||
had become a butterfly who whispered songs that took flight in the wind. He
|
||
did not know what she said but it sounded like a kiss. Excited, he ran to The
|
||
Question with An Answer in his hand, and presented it before all of Wisdom.
|
||
But Wisdom only laughed at his naive youth and calmly sent him back to Before,
|
||
where he was chained again in Truth. The butterfly became only her mediocre
|
||
self, and her whispers -- only words of reality that hit his ear with a thud.
|
||
That was the last she worked for any of The Poets. She auditioned for The
|
||
Author anyway, as it was her dream to have at least one prose piece of The
|
||
Author's to boast. But she was rejected for this position, being told that
|
||
her demeanor was too earthly, her body too uninspiring, and her mind simply
|
||
too real to ignore. So she devoted herself as The Reader, feeling the
|
||
position to be at least as essential. She soon believed it to be The Most
|
||
Essential Position, and thought herself to be a central figure (and a more
|
||
respected one) in The Author's life.
|
||
|
||
She believed in The Author completely, wholly, unconditionally. She
|
||
would not listen to reason, or what it is commonly called in these times,
|
||
Postmodernism. She shook her head, she rolled her eyes, she even stuck out her
|
||
tongue. She did not listen to those people who accused him of being a phony,
|
||
who called for his death, who invited him to his execution. It never occurred
|
||
to her that The Author himself did not believe in his existence, that he had
|
||
accepted the invitation. She had gone through many gods and many inane
|
||
rituals before she had found him and she thought herself an expert; however,
|
||
it never came to her mind that she and her new god had ideological
|
||
differences. She had experienced such differences with believers, whom she
|
||
inevitably would consider an insipid bunch lacking in substance and beauty.
|
||
She would grow angry with gods for not punishing such stupidity, or at least
|
||
correcting it, and then she would terminate their agreement. But she had
|
||
never disagreed with a god's own idea of himself. She chose her gods
|
||
cautiously, taking much into account. Those with ideological differences
|
||
should have been eliminated in the screening process.
|
||
|
||
There was nothing that infuriated her more than ignorance. It was such a
|
||
lurking evil in her mind that she capitalized it: Ignorance. It took many
|
||
forms. Its worst form was Ignorance of Power. She had little respect for
|
||
those who did not make themselves aware of how their actions influenced other
|
||
people. Nor did she respect those who did not use their actions to their
|
||
advantage or even simply to reach others. Another form of Ignorance was
|
||
Ignorance of How People Will React or Understand Your Actions. Perhaps this
|
||
is a form of Power Ignorance, and upon further reflection, it may be far more
|
||
repulsive.
|
||
|
||
But The Author was a bit of a dolt. He was really quite a disappointing
|
||
figure, if one were using her criteria. He authored but then claimed he did
|
||
not. This was both ridiculous and Ignorant. He seemed to have a propensity
|
||
for adopting titles while disbelieving in what they denoted. In short, he was
|
||
a living walking breathing cognitive dissonance. Moreover, he denied the
|
||
existence of what he authored, commonly referred to as the text. When she saw
|
||
TEXT in her mind, there were no quotes around it. But The Author was always
|
||
seeing things in quotes, as he had a hard time believing in anything and was
|
||
hesitant to state conclusively that anything existed. This was somewhat
|
||
charming in print, but quite infuriating when one had to converse with him. It
|
||
was like dealing with Descartes in his Meditations: Yes, you exist. No, you
|
||
are not dreaming. No, there is no evil demon making things appear this way.
|
||
The first two he usually conceded, the last, never. A modern translation of
|
||
Descartes would no doubt translate 'evil demon' as The Government. The Author
|
||
put no quotes around The Government and there was no convincing him that it
|
||
was he not them who was fucking up his life.
|
||
|
||
The truths that realize themselves after certain events in one's life may
|
||
destroy Ideals and Dreams, shattering certain pieces of one's world-view.
|
||
This shattering which results is commonly referred as an "intrapsychic loss."
|
||
She dreaded this none too little and often put it off at least until she had
|
||
done the laundry, taken a shower, and made the obligatory weekly phone calls.
|
||
She could feel an intrapsychic loss coming ahead of time, like many sufferers
|
||
of arthritis felt the next day's rain in their knees. It entered her through
|
||
the mouth and sat at the back of her head. She found this quite bothersome
|
||
and usually went to the salon in a futile attempt to take her mind off of it,
|
||
or it off from her mind.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
It was a good day. She finally had gotten a haircut that enabled her
|
||
barrette to stay fastened securely in its place, instead of dangling
|
||
perilously on her head. Although it was a warm summer's afternoon, people
|
||
weren't being obnoxious about the good weather. The happiness that invades
|
||
people in response to good weather (and manifests itself most strongly during
|
||
the first week of true Spring) killed her mood. She felt compelled to rebel
|
||
against such ubiquitous saturnalia on principle.
|
||
|
||
However, she did have a gnawing headache.
|
||
|
||
She was walking aimlessly. Quite honestly, it was more of a
|
||
people-watching meander. But this gnawing headache, this distinct uneasiness,
|
||
finally got the better of her and she stopped abruptly. She wanted to know
|
||
where it was. Where that thing was, whatever it was, that was the cause of
|
||
this general nausea. She never liked hide-and-seek as a child as she was far
|
||
too impatient. She just wanted to know where the person was and then go about
|
||
chasing them, the hiding seemed superfluous. She would shout for the person
|
||
to come out so that they could get on to the good part. This is how she felt
|
||
now, impatient, wanting to get on with it. She wished she could shout out,
|
||
demand that it show itself, so the real game could begin. She looked
|
||
suspiciously around but saw nothing. She continued her stroll and began to
|
||
brood, causing her to fidget with her barrette. This of course nudged it out
|
||
of place and the whole day was simply ruined. The sun became too hot, the
|
||
people were too loud, she needed to get out. She ran into a bookstore. There
|
||
she saw Him, The Author, on the cover of some trashy literary magazine. It
|
||
was an old photo, quite a bad likeness, as most photos are.
|
||
|
||
She became very conscious of her inner thighs. They seemed to press
|
||
together as she stood there staring at the picture. She felt that they had
|
||
grown at least an inch since last week and she chastised herself for laxing on
|
||
her thigh work. She grabbed the magazine and walked over to the cashier,
|
||
feeling her thighs hit each other, swearing that she could hear the rubbing of
|
||
flesh. She went back to her apartment and did the laundry. She took a
|
||
shower, applied an avocado-oatmeal mask to her face (for toning), and did her
|
||
thigh work as it dried. She called her mother and listened to her bemoan her
|
||
sad state of affairs and unsympathetically told her it was her own fault and
|
||
she should deal with it. She called a friend and repeated this, her universal
|
||
advice. She made herself some citrus spice tea, finally took some Advil, and
|
||
got into bed. She reached over and grabbed the magazine that she had bought
|
||
that afternoon and flipped to His interview.
|
||
|
||
He spoke without using bothersome metaphors or trite imagery. He stated
|
||
calmly, removedly, and simply that He didn't "exist," at least not in the way
|
||
everyone has accused of Him. Furthermore, He explained that the "text" was
|
||
not concrete, it was a product of The Reader's biases. The whole enterprise
|
||
of writing was just an exercise for Him, at the very most, an experiment. The
|
||
by-product, the "text" -- it was not a manifestation of His Self, His
|
||
Anything. It was the product of that everpresent "What would happen if..." in
|
||
His mind as He sat and sipped, stood and smoked. He admitted that to say that
|
||
He wrote for Himself wasn't an accurate description. But to say that He wrote
|
||
for Her, The Reader, this He disdainfully and patronizingly denied. No, He
|
||
was, if anything, writing for the sake of Writing, for the sake of these
|
||
arbitrary images that sat in His head, but weren't connected to His Desires,
|
||
His Consciousness, His Beliefs. In fact, this, too, was incorrect. More
|
||
appropriately, He wrote from these images, these images so disassociated and
|
||
unrelated to His Self; but to whom and for whom, wasn't that irrelevant? He
|
||
created to create, as that is what gods do. The Reader wasn't a consideration.
|
||
The Reader was an incidental warehouse of these arbitrary images manifested in
|
||
prose, giving meaning where there was none.
|
||
|
||
The words hit her instantaneously and she hadn't time to defend herself.
|
||
At such a vulnerable moment, her first reaction was to sob violently. She was
|
||
aware of a familiar tug, it reminded her of when she was 15 and she found out
|
||
that the brooding boy she had been in love with was interested in her Mind
|
||
only, and the real cause of his sadness was his yearning to sleep with some
|
||
slutty friend of hers.
|
||
|
||
But despair always made her feel weak and stupid, and she soon grew sick
|
||
of it. She became Furious. Angry, Injured, Offended, Livid that He had used
|
||
her mind, like all of the men in her life, used it because it was a fine
|
||
curious mind, with plenty of storage space. He threw His Junk there,
|
||
haphazardly, unappreciatively. It held only a small interest for him. He
|
||
used it because it fit His experiment, because He was amused that The Reader
|
||
processed and decorated it with Meaning.
|
||
|
||
Her respect for Him lessened as she saw that He took no responsibility
|
||
for His damned by-product. He didn't own up to it, He didn't admit to it, He
|
||
didn't acknowledge any reality of it. He was simply too Ignorant to realize
|
||
its inevitable effect.
|
||
|
||
And layer by layer of emotion exploded from her until all that was left
|
||
was the blush of foolishness. Embarrassment, naked embarrassment, because she
|
||
had thought that she meant something to Him. But she never occupied a space
|
||
in His Consciousness, sub- over- or un-. And nothing was inside of her. She
|
||
was hollowed. She felt her solitude resentfully, and was confused to find
|
||
that she had a hole inside.
|
||
|
||
She began to realize that throughout her life, all of the Emptiness, and
|
||
the Pain which stemmed from it, had the same source. Because more than
|
||
anything else, she needed to be needed. She needed someone to need her to
|
||
understand, she needed someone to need her to love them, she needed Need more
|
||
than anything. Beyond love, beyond respect, behind these words, there lied
|
||
Need.
|
||
|
||
She had thought, erroneously, that The Author needed to communicate.
|
||
That He sat up every night or at least thrice a week needing to tell the story
|
||
of Himself to her. Needing her to understand. Needing her, The Reader, to
|
||
soak Him up, to store Him inside, and most importantly, to process Him because
|
||
otherwise He couldn't exist. She had thought that she clarified and guided
|
||
Him with her presence, that He needed her in order to explain Himself.
|
||
|
||
If He didn't need her, then her head was full of lies. They weren't
|
||
even lies, for lies are substantial. She had empty words. Like empty
|
||
calories. Her whole head was full of Twizzlers and Starbursts.
|
||
|
||
She hadn't realized that gods are by nature selfish creatures who do not
|
||
Need. They fill their voids with themselves, they don't need to find others
|
||
to fill spaces. That is why they are gods.
|
||
|
||
She became vengeful and petty. She wanted to invade Him -- but how to
|
||
get inside? How to penetrate, how to disarm? He knew her, was wary of her
|
||
actions, He would not let her in -- no matter how many pretty words she threw
|
||
at His feet. But what if she tricked him? What if she made it so that she
|
||
was Him and He was her? From where He stands, He cannot see Himself. He can
|
||
only see out to the words. But she saw behind His words to Him. If they were
|
||
to switch, would He see her then? Would she get in His head just long enough
|
||
to claim some territory for herself? Perhaps. But how, how do you trick your
|
||
god into switching places?
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
State of unBeing is copyrighted (c) 1998 by Kilgore Trout and Apocalypse
|
||
Culture Publications. All rights are reserved to cover, format, editorials,
|
||
and all incidental material. All individual items are copyrighted (c) 1998
|
||
by the individual author, unless otherwise stated. This file may be
|
||
disseminated without restriction for nonprofit purposes so long as it is
|
||
preserved complete and unmodified. Quotes and ideas not already in the
|
||
public domain may be freely used so long as due recognition is provided.
|
||
State of unBeing is available at the following places:
|
||
|
||
World Wide Web http://www.eden.com/~kilgore/sob.html
|
||
irc the #unbeing channel on UnderNet
|
||
|
||
|
||
Submissions may also be sent to Kilgore Trout at <kilgoret@geocities.com>.
|
||
The SoB distribution list may also be joined by sending email to Kilgore
|
||
Trout.
|
||
|
||
--SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB-SoB--
|
||
|
||
|