Things That are Awesome: Base Ten.

June 27th, 2018

This can’t possibly be right.

-Awe-inspiring and wondrous power held by single-celled organisms that don’t know or care about you, where ‘you’ is anything eukaryotic.
-The biggest breadth of breath a beard can bring.
-A hot cup of donut with a nice crisp joe.
-Lawns left to their own devices which grow beyond all sense of proportion.
-An astute Stuart.
-Crime time.
-Dedicated and loving spiders.
-Especially if they bring you your slippers without prompting.
-Evil old men that on the inside are just evil.
-Pigs that are smart enough to turn in their trotters for gallopers.
-Or, as we know them, galoshes.
-The mediocre white shark.
-But not his shitty politics.
-Neo-deconstructivist grumptasia.
-Where there’s a whisk, there’s a way.
-Cynical chain-smoking detectives that retire while they’re still fairly young and inexperienced because of all the lung damage.
-Retro-zeerust.
-Or as it may also be known, tsureez
-Clerks and quarks.
-The place where all those eggshells go.
-Loud wig van beet oven.
-Lost plateaus where ancient forms of life live in prehistoric splendor, as long as those ancient forms of life are really boring and uncharismatic.
-A reuben without a crust.
-Guttural rumblings.
-Which are distinct from, yet closely related to, ‘grumblings.’
-Bigness. The more relative, the better.
-The inability to be choked STUPID WINDPIPE.
-Tisk tocks.
-The oldest story of all: humanity’s eternal quest for meaning and understanding in a unicycle that is indifferent to them.
-Durdling.
-The complicated and sophisticated desktop ecosystems of unread letters and bills, which are slowly perishing as a result of mass email production.
-Kindly clawing.
-Burlap, as long as there are no burrs in it. And that it isn’t on a lap. Actually, forget burlap.
-Understanding between people that although they may appear superficially different, it is their deep-seated awfulness that makes them the same.
-Rugosity.
-The crucial yet understated importance of the distinction between ‘vicious’ and ‘viscous.’
-Things that glow for no good reason.
-The many names and norms of the alpine frog.
-Twuzzlers licorice. I still can’t believe they lost out to that knockoff.
-Meaty molluscs.
-That noise you get when you find one of those old coiled-wire doorstops and give it a good yank.
-The greatest gyration.
-Anklelosaurus, leglosaurus, and kneelosauruses.
-Making a wishbone.
-The ruthless song of the rogue keet.
-Reunification of brush and bush.
-Tickling tyrants.
-A real good solid CRUNCH all caps maybe even bolded. Too big for punctuation, too.
-The depths to which you can sink if you’re properly trained and hold big weights on the way down.
-Ripples. They’re very pretty.
-Reteething.
-Warbling willows.
-Cloning dinosaurs hurdy-gurdy.
-Crumpets, but uncrumpled. It’s tricky to do, but if you use a small enough screwdriver they’re delicious.
-That place down by the coast where all the little jetstreams flow together into the jetriver and drain into the jetgulf.
-Gradual and highly tentative action sequences. Especially if two of the participants bump into each other and stop to apologize.
-Overstuffed bookcases. A lot healthier than overstuffed pets, too. Garfield is not reality.
-An unsensible chuckle.
-An insensible chuckle is pretty good too, but it’s very different and somewhat risky.
-Rap scallions.
-A creative curse that doesn’t fall back on cheap irony.
-Speaking of which, pricy irony.
-Bearing your teeth.
-Hearing about tape from anywhere but Scotland. Share the spotlight a little you hogs.
-The mole as a unit of measurement.
-A little less inspiration and a lot less concentration.
-Wrinkly fruit.
-Idiot wolves howling at the sun like some kind of imbeciles.
-Longer walks on fewer days with less purpose.
-The expulsion of ‘quik’ because you don’t need to save one letter that badly.
-Sure locked homes.
-A small ruckus.
-Counting systems that prefer acids to bases.
-Wrangling anything that’s wriggly.
-Up.
-Down
-All around.
-And a partridge in a decade’s-worth of pear trees.


Storytime: The Most Man in the World.

June 20th, 2018

Make way, make way!
Stand aside! Clear the path!
Make way for the most important, average, humble, righteous, special and relatable man to ever walk this earth!
Make way for John Q. Protagonist!

Step aside please – give us room to breathe, and breathe softer, lighter, less obstructively. We don’t want anyone to get in the way of the point of view. It’s a dot, not a line, and it sits in his pupil. Don’t clutter it, don’t insert yourself, step meekly and be judged as he sees, ‘cause he sees FIT and FINE.
You, you, you and YOU! You are antagonists now! You dislike him for petty reasons, prepare to be put in your place. You – yes you – behind the counter! You are infatuated with his everday charm, his exceptional attractiveness, and will flirt shamelessly on-shift! Not a love interest though, you can stop existing after this. And you…all the rest of whoever you are. You will be our canvas, our backdrop, our stage. Applaud, swoon, dance, sing, sing, sing! Let the world respond to the act that is the actions of he!

Make way for John Q. Protagonist! He’s a busy man, with so many people to be.
He’s everyone that matters, and he isn’t you but maybe he could be! Buy a lottery ticket to your closest theater, bookshop, or video game today! Step up, step up, no need to be shy – claim a few minutes in the sun as the most important man to ever walk, love, laugh, kill, and live.
(for the ladies, Jane Q. Protagonist will be appearing down the road Thursday night, because we care)
Put on the blank face and be amazed at how much it resembles your own from inside your head. Speak words and watch them matter; take action and watch it succeed; spend time and have it matter, oh sweet god matter, each hour filled with action, emotion, and precious sweet honey-suckled angel-kissed god-blessed meaning – and even metaphor.

Make way for John Q. Protagonist; there will never be another like him! There never was another before him; he’s as old as the first story, and always just in the prime of life. A perfect demographic flashpoint; he’s always the majority, but always goes his own way, fearlessly giving them what they desire! What a democratic maverick! A truly independent man of the people! He breaks all the right rules and makes all the right laws; he’s got his finger on the pulse of the universe and tells us its heartbeat with total confidence in that awkwardly charming way of his. What would we do without him?
Hah, as if we’d ever do anything without him.

Make way for John Q. Protagonist; he needs time and space to mend!
His heart’s been broken, his job’s been lost, his best friend shot him in an alley and left him for dead, his mentor disowned him and his dog died. He needs time and space to mourn, but in a way that makes him look good and leaves him emotionally sound yet wiser.
Pour him a drink, give him some advice, give him some space, pick a fight with him and let him get beaten up and tossed out in the alley like so much garbage to prove how much he cares (more than anyone else, nobody else cares). Soothe him, comfort him, tell him harsh truths; whatever it takes to get his mind moving again before the plot stagnates and we all give up.
Just don’t hog the screentime. Remember, this isn’t about you.

Make way for John Q. Protagonist right this second! Roll out the way under his feet and wrap it back up behind him as he goes, because you never had it to begin with. It’s his way or no way, you see – not that you see anything. You think you had a point of view? You think you had a soul? Get real, get lost, get off your high horse. If you were somebody, you’d be anybody, and you’d be John Q. Protagonist. You may challenge him, you may obstruct him, you may even kill him, but you can’t replace him. Without him, nothing matters, and you’re not even nothing.

Make way for John Q. Protagonist! He’s an ordinary guy just like you with a very special set of skills! He’s hopeless at something; maybe even something important. He’s okay at something; maybe even something stupid and useless. Bet you a dollar that both of those things create a satisfying narrative with some intriguing character development. Go on, BET you nameless troglodyte! Bet against the will of the universe – nay, the universe itself!
PIT YOUR WILL AGAINST A WALL AND LOSE.

Make way for John Q. Protagonist, and steel your empty souls, for their fulfillment is at hand. You oppose him in the most fundamental way: you are barriers between him and the conclusion of this story. Maybe you love him, maybe you hate him; maybe you help him up or shove him down, but you’re all there on the page, clotting it up, weighing down the wordcount, shoving your stubby generic bodies between him and that bold-font THE END.
You disgust us. You try our patience. You wear out your welcome. Get going and good riddance.

Make way for John Q. Protagonist – and hurry! He has no time for you, or you, or you, and you, and yours!
There are three sequels and a prequel due by tomorrow, poor bastard, so give him some space and get lost.


Storytime: On Squirrel Tales.

June 13th, 2018

I see you like squirrels. Yeah, me too. Who doesn’t?
They don’t count.
Listen, I’ll tell you something good about squirrels. Something nobody else has ever told you.
I’ll tell you why squirrels have big poofy tails.
No, shut up, I don’t care what you’ve heard. Yeah, yeah, your mom’s an ecologist, but shut up and listen you little scumbucket.

***
So there’s a squirrel. Regular old squirrel, of moderate stature and years. She lived in a highly lovely tree, and one particularly nice spring morning she ran down its trunk and was surprised to see a human being there, leaning against it. It wasn’t at all the season for that sort of thing.
“Hello,” said the squirrel. “Who are you?”
The human being turned its head to look up at her and the squirrel was somewhat surprised to see that it was unmistakeable the great disciple, sage, seer, prophet, fortune-teller, well-wisher, and dogs-body, Kem.
“I’m being pursued,” said Kem, “and I can’t stop to chat.”
“How about a bite to eat?”
“Can’t stop for that either.”
“Jeez,” said the squirrel, “you must be HUNGRY.”
“Thirsty, too,” said Kem. “But you know what I really miss?”
The squirrel didn’t know and said as much.
“Sleeping,” said the disciple-sage. “I haven’t had a nap in a decade. You see, I am continuously and constantly chased by the three great demons of Ignorance, Despair and Cruelty, and if I halt for a moment I’ll be caught and mangled by them.”
“Well, why don’t you put your feet up here and have a little rest?” asked the squirrel. “Being chased when you’re half-asleep never helps – trust me, I’ve lost a few cousins that way. And this is a really shady and most refreshing tree to sleep under. Besides, I can keep watch. You’ll be fine.”
“They are extremely great demons,” said Kem.
“My teeth are very sharp and never stop growing,” said the squirrel.
“Fair enough,” said Kem. And without so much as a good-night or thank-you-very-much the disciple-sage rolled up in a small and extremely holy ball and began snoring.
The squirrel combed through the disciple-sage’s pockets for any stray nuts and found nothing, then immediately climbed up to the top of her tree and began the watch. She didn’t have to wait long. The ground was trembling, the leaves were shaking, and over the horizon came the great demon Ignorance. It was sixty miles tall and forty miles broad and it had to walk bent double and double again to prevent its head from being lost high above the clouds. In each of its huge warty hands it carried a brutally spiked war-club the size of a well-travelled highway; from each of its ears dangled incongruously small but splendid little earrings, decorated with emeralds a deeper green than oak-leaves.
The squirrel was very impressed by Ignorance’s appearance and wondered if there was any deeper symbolic meaning behind it. “I’m very impressed by your appearance,” she told Ignorance. “I wonder if there’s any deeper symbolic meaning behind it?”
“Dunno,” said Ignorance in its small, somewhat flat voice. “Hey, you seen the disciple-sage, Kem?”
“No,” said the squirrel. “Hey, is that her?”
“Where?”
“Just over your shoulder.”
“Where?” asked Ignorance, craning its neck about three times.
“Your left shoulder.”
“Which left?”
“Your left.”
“Huh?” said Ignorance, twisting its head back around the other way six times.
“Now she’s right behind you.”
“Huh?!”
“Right above you now!”
Ignorance spun its head around five times each way, reared straight up, bonked its head on the moon and toppled over into outer space, dead as a doornail.

The squirrel checked the horizon, ate some nuts, explored the inside of the great disciple and sage Kem’s hat, and generally made up things to take up time. At last she sat on a branch, utterly deprived of things to do.
“I’m done,” she said.
“Tell me about it,” whispered the great demon Despair into her ear.
The squirrel nearly leaped out of her fur. The great demon Despair was very quiet, so very quiet indeed that it had crept right up to her in her tree without so much as a hint of a warning. This was in spite of both the fact that it was the size of a mountain range and was being dragged on top of a jeweled palanquin by the innumerable labouring efforts of millions of tiny nagging doubts. In its right hand it held a jeweled flog; in its right hand a blacksmith’s-puzzle made of two perfectly-trapped circlets; in its other right hand it clutched a few stray nuggets of mucus, as it was currently knuckle-deep in its nose.
“Get your finger out of there when you’re talking to someone,” said the squirrel sternly.
“Sorry,” sighed Despair, brushing crumbs out of its palm and flicking them into the distance. “I’m hopeless, aren’t I? Well, I’ve screwed this up. Tell me, have you seen the great disciple-sage Kem?”
“Nowhere near here,” said the squirrel.
“Really?” asked Despair. “Not even under your tree, where I followed her tracks?”
“Nope,” said the squirrel.
“Not even huddled under that cloak and hat, which I have seen in the distance just ahead of me ten thousand times?”
“Not in a million years.”
Despair sighed again, a wind that dragged on forever. “Gosh, I’m just WORTHLESS,” it said wretchedly. “I can’t believe I’ve screwed up so badly. I can’t do anything right. I’m not a real person. I’m going to go home and never do anything again.”
And it did, towing its nagging doubts behind it like fishing-lines. The squirrel watched it leave, thoughtfully munching an acorn, then shrugged.

The great demon Cruelty was less subtle – and not merely because it was a vast and crawling thing with a thousand thousand arms and a million claws and sixteen hundred mouths with a billion very sharp teeth. It took an hour and a half to walk from the far horizon to the squirrel’s tree because it kept stopping to uproot and shred every blade of grass and crawling beetle it could see.
“HRRRNRNRNRNRNRNNRNRNRNGHGHGHGehehehehehehehhehehehehe,” it said to the squirrel.
“Hello,” said the squirrel.
“HRURURURURUURruururrrr,” said Cruelty, and it reached out with six of its arms.
“Are you looking for the great disciple-sage Kem?” asked the squirrel very quickly.
“HAHAHahahahayes indeed,” said Cruelty. It tore a few branches off the squirrel’s tree and began to strip the bark off them.
“Why?” asked the squirrel.
“I wish to commit unspeakable tortures upon her,” said Cruelty, idly scouring an ant colony with its heel. “I have plans.”
“Tell me,” said the squirrel.
“I just said they were unspeakable,” said Cruelty, and a wasp-whine of annoyance filled its sixteen hundred mouths. “There will be no words. Only flayings. And mutilatings. And wrenchings. And so on and so forth. There are a thousand complicated steps and seven thousand winding substeps and ten trillion individual components”
“Astounding,” said the squirrel. “How sure of them are you?”
Cruelty glared at the squirrel, eyelessly. “Very. My plans are astute and exact.”
“Well then luck is your ally! At the foot of this tree, vulnerable, blissful, and unaware, slumbers the great disciple and sage Kem!”
Cruelty clapped with glee and all its hands, knocking every bird in the sky senseless. “Hooray!” it said.
“Now go to work with your plan then,” said the squirrel. “Just don’t mess it up. Because you have only one chance and a thousand complicated steps and seven thousand winding substeps and ten trillion individual components.”
The great demon cruelty considered this. Then it considered the sky. Then it considered the squirrel. Then it considered the sky again.
Then it opened its mouth and said “well, I would begin at the forearm…”
“I don’t quite understand,” said the squirrel. “How do you mean?”
“Just here, at the nerve.”
“Where?”
“There are no words,” sighed Cruelty, and it held up its thousand thousandth favourite arm. “So. Starting from here…”

What was left of Cruelty in the end was just a few wayward atoms which quickly underwent isotopic decay and vanished just as Kem yawned and stretched herself upright.
“That,” she said, “is the best nap I’ve ever had. And also the only. Tell me, squirrel, did you find yourself troubled?”
“Somewhat,” admitted the squirrel. “But not to any great degree. Your demons are not very clever.”
“No,” agreed Kem. “But they are persistent, and I imagine they’ll be back someday. I think I owe you something all the same, mind. For the sake of a good nap on a kind spring morning.”
The great disciple and sage extended her hand and blew on her palm and then and there, nose to tail, the squirrel’s furry tail shifted and shook and shimmied until it had turned into a marvelous swirl of colour, every shade of the rainbow and more besides.
“Gosh, thanks,” said the squirrel.
“Don’t mention it,” said Kem. “Now shoo! I’ve got a load of ground to cover.”

***

Of course, next Wednesday the squirrel asked for her old tail back, since her marvelous rainbow-fur made her extremely visible to hawks, foxes, and cats. And thus it was that the squirrel acquired her tail, which was the same as her old tail. Sometimes life’s like that.


Storytime: Summer.

June 6th, 2018

It was a waste of time, just a stupid waste of time – I said that from the outset. But we were into summer now, where time didn’t exist. Schedules had slipped apart; weekends blurred into Thursdays; nobody had anything to do but nothing.
So me and Sam and Dan went down to the old school, just to kill an evening, any evening, whatever day it was didn’t matter.

The fence was short and wire, didn’t even have barbs. Its mesh was too fat to keep out a rat, or even a raccoon; its frame was too feeble to stop a bear; a coyote or stray dog would dig under in a flash. It only existed to prove its point and hold up a sign.
TRESPASSING
PROHIBITED
UNSAFE
CLOSED
SOLD
LOT
and so on.
We climbed it like it wasn’t there, first Sam, then Dan, then me. Slow Jo. But it wasn’t my idea to come here – it wasn’t anyone’s, really – and I didn’t want to see this place again all that bad.
Neither did Dan. Sam didn’t either, but she’d said she did and so there wasn’t any way around it and here we all were with Sam’s crowbar and the little side door by the gym breaking apart. We probably could’ve pushed it over.
“Dark in here,” said Dan, because he was the one that said the things people had to say.
We pulled out flashlights, switched on apps, poked around until we found the door that still opened and walked into the gym, where the first zombies were.

They weren’t doing much. Standing. Groaning, but softly. Life doesn’t move too fast around here to start with, and once it stops it drops without rolling. Four of them, under a dirty old skylight like bigger versions of the strange moulds and mosses that were sprouting up from the tiles around them.
We took some pictures. Sam whacked one of them a few times with her crowbar, trying to get the head off, but she gave up as fast as could be excused. People are tougher than they look, and zombies are the people that wouldn’t fall apart properly to begin with.
Dan smoked in the gym, like he said he’d always sort of wanted to. Then we went into the halls and the classrooms and the bathrooms and up and down, looking for something and finding zombies, always more zombies. Here and there, still wearing t-shirts and dresses and suits. Sneakers mouldy. Eyes turned off and lungs pumping for nothing, staring up at the ceiling and the water damage coming in through the roof.
One of them did stop us on the second floor – my fault. I recognized one of their shirts and freaked out a little. I explained about middle school drama, Dan said ‘wow, that sucks’, and Sam pulled out the crowbar again.
It didn’t help anyone at all, really. Like getting revenge on a tree.

The teacher’s longue was empty. Just another room, once you ignored the fridge with the two overgrown tupperwares in it. Dan made us spend ages in there – kept insisting that Sykes kept a bottle hidden in a sewn pocket inside the couch, that he was always sloshed after lunch. Sam ended up jumping up and down on it to show him there was nothing there, then the whole thing collapsed into a big explosion of spores and dust. Gross.
“It’s your fault if we all get hantavirus,” I told her. She just laughed at me.
The principal’s office was even less exciting. They’d taken all the paperwork when they shut the place down, so we couldn’t even look up our files or anything.
“They’d just be boring anyways,” said Sam. “Hey, here’s Jo’s: ‘this girl exists. Went home sick twice. Freckles.”
“And yours would just be blank,” I told her. “Since you never came in.”
We busted it up anyways. We had to use the crowbar for something. We had to do something. The desk was just as tough as the zombies – dead, cheap wood that wouldn’t crumple properly. There were no electronics.

It was easy to get onto the roof. They’d taken the paperwork, they’d taken the keys, but they hadn’t done anything with any of the doors that was more complicated than some planks and a few screws.
The lawn looked nice from up there. They’d come by and tore it up real good about six months after the shutdown, but the grass had grown back and all the trees had gone wild and bushy, really real bush-y, not fluffy but like something from ‘the bush.’ They seemed to be eating up the lawn.
Dan had brought beers. Lite beers. We drank them because it was what we had, and we threw some rocks off the roof. Sam bugged me until I threw the zombie head she’d brought with us. “It’s therapy,” she said. “Therapeutic. Do it. C’mon. Just do it. Go for it. Do it. Now. C’mon. Do it.”
I did it. Still wouldn’t blink, but I guess it might’ve helped.

By then it was getting dark – too dark, where’s-my-hand-in-front-of-me dark – so we pulled our stuff together and headed back downstairs after we threw the bottles at the old basketball net. None of us made it. Sam hit on Dan after he missed his shot, but he didn’t notice and she got embarrassed and gave up real fast. Nothing new.
I’d expected the trip home to be bad, for something to go wrong, but really… It was dark down there, and the zombies wouldn’t stop sighing, but it was ALREADY dark down there, and we’d already heard them, and there was nothing new there, just green and crumbling dampness, and, well, nothing had changed.
We talked on the way back, casually, about very important things. Dan was going to ask around at the auto shops; Sam was heading to college.
For me, I looked at the blank, breathing faces around us, and I couldn’t think of much else. Not much else at all.