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Friday, December 23, 2016

Conceptual Piece Four

By Late Night Writings

Finding an entire community in the belly of a gargantuan beast isn’t so rare these days. Anytime I’ve been swallowed up by an immanis crocodylinae duplus, I would rest easy on my trip down its esophagus knowing that I would be sleeping comfortably in the bed of a cozy inn within half an hour. Each time I have been guzzled up by a loxodonta grandis maximus, I've known I’d land in the welcoming arms of a small city whose economy runs on tourism. Whenever I have slurped up by a balaenoptera corporosus inmensus, I've gladly immersed myself in the local culture.
Before the Galactic Scale Reconfiguration, this wouldn’t have been possible. The largest animals on Earth weren’t physically capable of containing even a small village. They weren’t capable of swallowing a small trailer. I doubt a dog house would even fit in there. Looking at pictures from back then - any year prior to the reconfiguration - you can see that their elephants were about the same size as a modern bloodhound. Bloodhounds were about the size of a modern mouse. Of course, not everything was scaled up using the same ratios, so this won’t give you the full picture of how much things have changed, but it does give you a vague idea of how much things have changed. For an example of something that almost didn’t change at all, there’s us. Humans were scaled up so slightly that the percentage of growth is entirely insignificant. It’s not noticeable. Even for the people who were alive during the reconfiguration and therefore experienced the changes, it mostly went unnoticed. Some people may have have just had slightly less trouble reaching the cups on the high shelf, but it made no significant impact on their lives.
Imagine living in a version of our world so small that an eight hour non-stop flight from the East coast of North America to the West coast of the European landmass was considered long. Imagine living in a world where rats were known for being sneaky little rodents that were small enough to be squashed with a pan or small enough to use one of our modern gnat traps. Imagine not knowing you have lice because they’re too small to see when they’re young. These days, lice are as big as our fingers, and there’s no way that you could be uncertain of whether not you had one nestled in your hair. Imagine keeping a parrot in your living room, instead of boarding the windows to keep one from smashing its way in to steal your pet cicada. Back then, there was a completely different set of domesticated animals: dogs, cats, rabbits, a ton of things we see in zoos these days. They were completely different, as you already know, but it’s amazing to imagine seeing miniature versions of those things rolling onto their backs and begging for treats. Think of replacing your mantis with a miniature cat, putting a leash on your cat and walking it about town, or picking up a cat. Even just picturing these things feels silly. Though imagine how people from before the Galactic Scale Reconfiguration would feel about how the world is now. All the bugs that we keep as pets used to be freaks of nature. They would complain about sixteen hour flights. They wouldn’t survive here. The world we live in isn’t for the people who made it. The changes were for the people of the future. This future seemed barbaric and disgusting to them, but we all think it’s pretty good. Moving forward, we have to keep this in mind. We have to remember that changes like the GSR were made for the people of the future and that many of the decisions we make are also for the people of the future. We may not benefit from the changes, we might be terrified by the changes, but the future isn’t for us, so we need to work to build the future that the upcoming generations are demanding. If they end up regretting it, it’s not really on us, and they’ll be able to handle it.

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

fall disillusion

fall disillusion
by lei

dethroned of all naiveté
stripped of warm preconceptions:
a premonition of harsh winter winds
winding their way,
weaving into me
soft whispers of tomorrow’s gusts.

i hear their stories
watch their lives unfold
try to convince myself i’ll get there one day

but tonight,
in cold autumn waves
i realize i will wear the title of youngest
til the holes in the soles of my shoes
are no longer the negative spaces

but the overall -ness.

Saturday, October 22, 2016

Renovated Shack

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To the Fishbowl, Again

By Leiani Brown


yeah
i told you i'd try
not because i will
but because i have learned how to please
how to shut people up, out

i live in a replica fish bowl
where i am surrounded by alien clone fish

i've met their doppelgängers
and learned to hate them each

one by one

then left my fish bowl home
to meet their doubles
and learn hate

all over again

and it's funny when you think if you think if you dare if thinking is your thing if you don't fear
pain
it's funny,

i succumbed to this naive belief--
its clutches so cowardly beautiful
--that running by flying
away meant newness

newness in the smell of wind
newness in the shape of trees
newness in the people that people my dreams and people my inside and people i wish
i was

but even paradise has its parasites
complete with plastered smiles  

pity--shot out from every angle
side glances and ulterior messages,
dripping in its dense gooeyness that shouldn't but does make me feel like nothing
until all i am is a pile of the stuff--

and nothing i or you can do will make your kindness
not taste forced

"congratulations you changed the scenery
emptying pockets and filling expectations in the process
only to realize nowhere is new enough
to make people not people you know
to make hate not the spoiled result of you trying to love them
to make opening up not feel like a chasm awaiting daggers

to make you
not you"

i mumble this
in my skin every time i walk away
leaving you believing you've somehow helped

and you have

you've given me practice to learn how to please
how to shut people up
and out,
how to shut people out.

because i don't even like fish,

Sunday, October 9, 2016

Victoria's Diary

By Late Night Writings


I’m a dramatic person and it does actually cause a lot of unnecessary problems, but I’m not going to change. Katy didn’t respond to my text yesterday. It was a question. Isn’t she terrible? I certainly think so. Darla didn’t like a tweet I posted last week. That’s the first time she hasn’t liked one of my tweets, since she started following me on Twitter five months ago. What kind of statement is she trying to make? I think she’s trying to say she’s better than me. Nobody is too good for my tweets, especially not Darla Peggy Pots. That’s right, her middle name is Peggy. Nobody can pull that one off. I know you might think these things sound stupid and I want you to know that I think they sound stupid, too. I used to get really hung up on how stupid this sort of stuff is. I’d get home from a date and immediately tell myself that “I made such a fucking mistake” because I didn’t get great vibes when he dropped me off. Vibes. Then I would get angry at myself for having that reaction. Then I would get upset with myself for getting angry at myself for having that reaction. It went in circles. Now, I just let myself feel my stupid feelings and I don’t get angry. I’m better for it. I throw a tantrum, cry, tell myself “I need to stop making these stupid fucking mistakes”, and then I get over it. Now that I don’t let myself get angry at myself for being irrational, I recover from irrationality a lot faster. I still know I’m an idiot, but I don’t get mad at myself for it. Being dramatic keeps me connected to my feelings. My many feelings. Well, I guess I don’t have a big variety of feelings. By “many feelings”, I mean I feel two or three things very often. Those would be disappointment, sadness, and frustration. That’s just me. I’ve accepted it. I still feel the other ones, for sure, but not as much. Just last week, I was real happy because I was getting the attention I needed. It sounds a bit pathetic, but people just need attention sometimes. That applies to everyone. The really pathetic part of it is that I felt like shit after because I felt bad for relying on other people to feel good about myself. Yeah, I think I need help. Anyway, I’m in-touch with my feelings. I get them. Obviously, I’m big on overthinking things and that helps me understand myself. I’ve tried a lot of things to get myself to be normal. Nothing sticks. Nothing ever sticks. Nobody ever sticks. Around. For long. Anyway, nothing sticks and I think I need to stop worrying about that. If I can’t change, I really need to stop trying to. What am I going to do to fix the problem? I’ll control it. I’m not going to get better. All I can do is keep myself in check. Know when I’m overreacting. Katy isn’t really terrible. She was busy and I knew she was busy. I also need to recognize when I’m one-hundred percent right. Darla is absolutely playing a game. If I didn’t believe that, I wouldn’t have told everyone about her fugly middle name. She’s not going to win this one. I know I’ll change in other ways. I might be more refined. I might be more confident. I might be more exciting. I won’t be changing in this way though. I will always be overly dramatic. I will always read too far into things and read too far into things that aren’t there. I’m never going to process my emotions in a normal way. This is me. I’m not perfect. I’m not amazing. I’m fine.

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Injection Eight

By Leiani Brown

It was one of those snowy mid-February mornings that Alice had loved. Just after a blizzard. The surrounding whiteness gave the earth a newness that seemed to slow time. It was 5 a.m., the softness of the snow soothing the harsh sounds of morning to a kind of muffled silence. Sean was used to being the first one awake in the world, but there was something about snow that made everything softer, sleepier.
       He walked out to the road, rubbing his hands together to generate heat. He could feel the numbness already beginning to take hold of his skin. His were the first footprints to touch the fresh snow. He stopped in the middle of the road, the orange glow of the faulty streetlight illuminating his lone figure.
       Within hours, Sean knew, the pure, untouched road would become a grey slush, tainted by car exhaust and tire tracks.
       Alice had hated the slush. Sean would always hear her griping about the grey mess that seeped into her shoes and made a splash with every step. That's why he'd often find her outside in the cold at 4, sometimes 3 a.m., just staring at the untouched snow.
       “It's so beautiful,” she'd say when he came to herd her inside. “Why can't it stay like that forever? Why can't people just stay inside? Just leave it alone?”
Alice was a bit of a purist in that way, she hated to see things tampered with.
       He had laughed at her then, shook his head at her ridiculous standards and unrealistic hopes. But he wasn't laughing now.
       Sean and Alice had been married for 27 happy years. High school sweethearts. Their marriage hadn't been perfect, but it had worked. That's why Alice leaving two years ago took him by such surprise. Sure, he hadn't always been around, but it was a part of the job, and he knew Alice understood that. Being a truck driver meant traveling a lot. It was a lonely profession, but they had found a way to fit marriage into the lifestyle. Or so Sean had thought.
       He shoved his hands into his pocket and sighed.
       The drive to the clinic was long and uneventful. He stayed in the car for a dozen minutes before finally going inside.
       “And how may I help you, sir?” The woman at the front desk wore a cyborg-looking Bluetooth attached to her ear and had big bulging eyes that stared up at him as she spoke in an annoyingly sweet voice. Sean wasn't sure if she was talking to him or the electronics wired to her face.
       “Sir?” she repeated after an uncomfortable amount of silence. “Sir, can I help you?”
       “Y-yeah,” his voice cracked. “Yeah I'm here to see Dr. Stanport.”
       “Alright, if you'll just wait one sec,” she smiled a toothy, over-friendly smile, and turned to a computer behind the one in front of her.
       She wears way too much makeup, Sean thought to himself as he took a seat that was set out for waiting clients. And how many computers do these people need?  He was thinking like Alice again. He did that sometimes.
Sean calculated his age to be somewhere around 84, and his bones often agreed, despite . He had striking green-blue eyes that held the vividness of his 20 year-old self, and the slightly sagging skin of an 80 year-old, with the brown, somewhat greying beard of his thirties.
“Sean Kimball.”
His name came over the intercom, like he was back in grade school being called into the principal's office. Dr. Stanport's office certainly matched the description of one, as far as he could remember or imagine one might look like.  
       “Sean! What a delight to see you!” Dr. Craig Stanport, head physician of the clinic, stood in front of his desk in the middle of his office, welcoming Sean in.
       “I had a scheduled appointment. You were expecting me.” Sean replied brusquely. He’d always suspected Dr. Stanport of faking pleasantness. In fact, he’d always got the feeling everyone was faking something, like the whole place was just one giant plastic bubble filled with plastic plants and phony mannequins posing as people.
       “Yes, but nonetheless, it's a delight! An absolute treat!” For a mannequin, Dr. Stanport sure was animated—so many hand motions and shifting facial expressions. “How are you doing this fine summer day?”
       Sean froze. “Summer?”
       Dr. Stanport nodded, a fake smile still vibrant on his baby-faced features.
“What do you mean? I had to drive through a nasty snowstorm to get here, the roads are awful.” Sean began talking fast, his confusion and dread picking up speed. He jerked his head in the direction of the window to see sunshine creeping in through the blinds.
       “No…” Sean groaned.
       “Ah, I see we still haven't given up on those hallucinations.” Dr. Stanport’s voice was annoyingly matter-of-fact.
       “There's snow on my windshield you can look for yourself!”
       “Please, Sean. Take a seat.”
“But it was snowing! I felt cold! I'm wearing a coat for Pete's sake!”
       “Yes, and you're sweating immensely. Please, take a seat.”
       Sean suddenly became aware of an uncomfortable amount of heat generating from the insides of his thick winter coat. He wiped beads of sweat from his forehead and cursed. “No. No no no no no... I don't understand. I honestly... I thought…”
       “Sean, please, take a seat.” Dr. Stanport spoke slowly, as if coaxing a child.
       Sean reluctantly took a seat, never taking his eyes off Dr. Stanport's baby face. He didn't look older than 19 or 20, and Sean hated that. Dr. Stanport took his spot across the desk from Sean, pulling out a few files, a smile seemingly ever-fixed onto his face.
       “Are you telling me I can't even tell what season it is anymore?” Sean’s confused voice mixed with frustration and hostility.
       “Can't? Sean, we've been over this. You alone can eliminate the can'ts.” Dr. Stanport and his stupid philosophical quips.
“But it was freezing! I woke up and the snow was there! If I had gone out in shorts and a t-shirt I would've frozen to death!”
       At this Dr. Stanport’s eyes widened, a kind of fear sneaking into his curtain of tolerance. “Sean—”
       “What was I supposed to do? What was I supposed to think?”
“Sean, please. Just leave it.” His voice was dangerously low, and his smile teetered ever so slightly.
       “I'm sorry. Honestly, Dr. Stanport, I wasn't trying to be difficult, it just caught me by surprise is all. I'm sorry. I really have been trying my hardest to let everything go like you said, sometimes I just get confused. And I was doing good too, I had everything together—”
       “It's alright, Sean. Please, take a seat.” Somehow in his agitation he had stood up again, and he quickly shuffled back into his seat.
       “Tell me about this morning,” Dr. Stanport finally stopped flipping through files and placed his hands atop the stack, fingers interlocked.
       “I woke up early,” Sean said slowly, thinking hard. “It was a long drive to the clinic, and I didn't want to be late. But I... I took a moment to look at the fresh snow. Alice, my wife, loved fresh snow…”
       “Sean.” Dr. Stanport sighed. “I can't help you if you don't help me.”
“I can't remember. Please, just show me the tapes. Please.”
“Sean, you can't rely on that forever. You're never going to improve if you don't at least try to remember on your own.”
       “Tapes? Haha how old is this guy?” A third voice made Sean jump out of his seat. A young man in scrubs was standing behind Dr. Stanport's swivel chair, but Sean hadn't seen him. Had he been there this whole time?
       “Shut up Chris,” Dr. Stanport's voice was uncharacteristically brusque. “He can still hear you, you know.”
       “Why does it matter? He won't remember any of this,” the man named Chris said bluntly, either oblivious to Sean’s presence, or he just didn’t care.  
“Ha, true.” Dr. Stanport’s voice was different now. Callous. Raw. Unpleasant, even.
       Sean's hands were shaking. “Excuse me? Who do you think you are?”
       “Sean please, sit down.” Dr. Stanport repeated, reverting back to his fake pleasant voice.
       “I'm not stupid! I will not be treated like this! You're just going to let him treat me like some kind of-of—” Sean began to yell, flustered and angry.
       “Of what?” Dr. Stanport snarled. That look on his face. The one of smugness mixed with indifference. Sean hated that look. “Struggling to find the words?”
       He was sweating immensely, his boiling rage only adding to the heat.
       “Please, Sean. Sit.”
       Sean obeyed. He was beginning to feel lightheaded.
       “How about taking that coat off now?”  
       The coolness of the air-conditioned room seemed oddly harsh, like being dunked in ice-cold water.
       “There we go. Much better, huh?”
Sean could barely hear Dr. Stanport's voice through the ringing in his ears.
       “Now. Tell me about your morning.”
       Sean could see a woman's face. She was laughing. She was staring back at him with big brown eyes. She was staring at her palms, holding them up to the light to see every line and detail with perfect clarity. She was slipping—
       “My wife, is she okay?”
Dr. Stanport sighed.
       “Guess I should go get the 'tapes' now,” Chris said with heavy exasperation, forming quotation marks in the air.
       “Shut up, Chris,” Dr. Stanport said again, this time more harshly.
       “C'mon, let me just stick him and call it good,” Chris argued.
       “No, wait. Not yet. Sean, don't you remember?” Dr. Stanport persisted in his most soothing voice, slowly, deliberately. “Remember last week? What did we talk about last week?”
“I don't think we met last week, did we?” Sean was full-on confused now, his mind flicking through images he couldn’t identify. Memories, he thought they must be, days spent in this very office. Across from Dr. Stanport, talking. But he couldn’t remember what about. The woman again. She was there. Only she wasn’t. She was wrapped in white linen being poked and probed--she hated needles.    
       “We meet every week, Sean. Do you remember why? Look at me, Sean. Do you remember why?” Sean could hear Dr. Stanport’s voice, but he couldn’t shut out the woman’s face. Who was she? No, she didn’t belong here. He pushed her away, thumbing through memories, looking for Dr. Stanport, their conversations. Sean’s arm felt numb and sore, remembering a pang just below the top of his shoulder as his memories of Dr. Stanport resurfaced.   
“The car accident…” Sean said quietly, slowly.
       “What car accident? Tell me what happened.” Dr. Stanport continued to coax it out of him.
“No, we've done this before. You know what happened.” Sean said, annoyed as everything started coming back to him.
       “Yes, but I need to know you know what happened.”
       “Of course I know what happened, I'm not an idiot!”
       “Okay, okay. No one's calling you an idiot, Sean. I'm just trying to help you.” Dr. Stanport smiled.
       Sean could feel a tingling under his skin, he felt dizzy, irritable. He could see yellowing skin, hair falling in clumps in his hand, her discolored hands clutched in his. At the same time he could hear her laughter, he could feel himself laughing, he'd forgotten he could do that—
       “I don't understand.”
       “What don't you understand, Sean?”
       “Why would she leave me right after I got in a car accident? Because she wasn't there, I was working, she was at home—”
“Sean, you've never been married. This woman doesn't exist, these are hallucinations, and you're better than this,” Dr. Stanport's blurted finally. But his words seemed rehearsed. How many times had he told him this?
       “Oh give it up, Craig.” Chris said, already advancing towards Sean.
Dr. Stanport sighed and placed a small rectangular box on the desk in front of him. He placed his thumb on the center and a blue light scanned it back and forth. The light glowed green, and he withdrew his hand.
       Had Chris not already silently injected the needle into Sean's arm, Sean would have clearly seen a holographic image sprout from the center of the box moments later. He would have watched as it showed a semi-truck and a smaller, unrecognizable car collide in a silent tumult of metal and blood, then rewind to show a slide-by-slide sketch of a life not his, but plastered with his name and face all over it. He would have seen Dr. Stanport grab a recorder and move to the window. He would've heard Dr. Stanport's tired voice as he spoke into the small, electronic speaker: “The 22nd of July 2025. Subject 28843. Subject's eighth round of injections. Still not fully severed from dependency. Effects barely last a week. Subject reported the same circumstances as last week; his brain appears to be permanently replaying the same winter morning. Significance of the morning still unknown. Subject does, however, believe in the car accident scenario streamed during initial injection. Subject still remembers lost one’s name, but remains unaware of death or cause thereof. His brain seems to have explained it away in terms of ‘leaving,’ implying perception of conflict, but he shows no sign of recognition of death. However, today he displayed fluency in the terminology of death, his first recognition of its existence, but it appears only to be on an idiomatic, figure of speech level of understanding. Recommended close monitoring for further signs of cracked perception buildup. End session eight.”
Had Chris not already injected him, Sean would have heard Chris ask Dr. Stanport why he even bothered to talk to patients, that clearly the drugs were working. He would've seen Dr. Stanport shrug his shoulders, and heard him mumble, “The reason we began the clinic was to stop people from remembering their hurt, but clearly this man is still hurting.” Sean would've then heard Chris’ matter-of-fact reply, “Every cure has its minor drawbacks.” He would've seen Chris leave, but Dr. Stanport remain. He would've felt the doctor’s eyes as he stared at Sean’s lonely face. He would've watched him pull out the files and take one last look at the picture of his patient’s dead wife before throwing it into the pile of a dozen files stuffed with pictures of other dead wives, husbands, fathers, brothers, children, pets.
But the instant the needle hit Sean's skin he felt its substance enter his body and rinse out his thoughts, draining out words such as “death” and “cancer” and “Alice,” and wringing out his limbs and mind until both were suffocatingly numb. His eyes and his subconscious were the only parts of him that stayed awake, and the instant the holographic images popped up in front of him, his eyes locked onto them and fed the lies to his subconscious: a quiet life alone as a trucker, shattered windshield shards, waking up alone, unhurt.