Saturday, April 27, 2013

Got really excited there.

Just woke up from a dream in which I discovered how to give two men their own genetic son. 

That's right. I dreamt how to give men the ability to have children with the ones they love.

It requires the use of a donated egg, the precise determination of the contents of the egg itself minus the chromosome present, an sensitive light microscope, two needles small enough to penetrate the egg simultaneously, hundreds of hours, and close to a billion dollars.

Also a cow. I'd need a live, female dairy cow.

My brain knows this will work, and I got really excited about it for a minute there until I realized that I will probably never have access to the resources or money necessary to make it happen :C

But you all see this. It was my idea. If someone else gets credit for this, I'm gonna sue.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

"In Progress"

This is a short story I wrote for an English class. I recently rediscovered it and decided to share it with you guys. This is "In Progress."



“In Progress”

Four. Four days. Four days since they released me back into the wild among the herds of humanity. For four days I stayed in the small, sparsely furnished apartment my therapist helped me find, not quite ready to join the masses on the outside. He called every day for the four days, leaving messages on my outdated answering machine, telling me that I need to seek some “social interactions.” Ha, as if. They’ll be sending me back to the loony bin faster than they can say “potential threat.” But today has been particularly bad, some of the old, dark thoughts twisting around my mind like the tendrils of a Virginia Creeper, choking back all I’ve accomplished over the past few years. As I pace my apartment, my phone rings, and I let it go to message. It’s my therapist, right on schedule.

“This is Sherman Dink for Abraham Whitmore. Get back to me as soon as you can.” I chuckle. Good old Shrinkie Dink. After a pause in the message, “Abe, I know you’re there listening.” I stop pacing. It continues. “Look, it’s not healthy for you to stay cooped up like this. You’ve already rescheduled with me three times. We need to get you around some people, make sure things are good to set up a job.” He sighs. “Look, no one knows more than me how hard it’s been for you.” Another pause. I reach for the receiver, my hand dropping just short. “Come meet me today. There’s a little cafe not too far from your apartment. This’ll be good for you. I’ll see you around three.” There is silence, and I release the breath I’d been holding.

I weigh my options, and as I can no longer be alone with my thoughts, I decide to take my therapist’s advice. I put on the faded jeans I’ve been wearing for the last two days and a brown t-shirt. I don’t want to stand out, now, do I? I stand in the middle of my apartment, mustering up the will to exit. A faint ticking has started in my mind, familiar, behind my left eyeball in the deep recesses of my brain. I hit my temple with the palm of my hand, in an attempt to silence the ticking.

I exit the building and my mood seems to worsen almost instantly. Small town living has never really appealed to me, and the “downtown” area of this one was spattered with backwards people who seem to have no destination in mind. They mosey along the sidewalks, wave at everyone, drink sodas from glass bottles. How incredibly cliché. The front steps of my apartment building faces an old general store, as the faded letters boast. The brick is weathered; what was once probably a deep red brick is now more akin to brown clay. Hmm, quaint. In front of the store, two rather large women, seemingly in their forties due to the weight on them, are yack-yack-yacking away.

Tick.

Tick.


One of the women raises a chubby arm in my direction. I watch as the flab of her arms jiggle with the motion, and I feel a strong urge to vomit.

Tick…tick…tick.

I manage as close to a smile as I can. The woman’s hand drops quickly to her mouth, though it doesn’t block the “Oh!” that escapes, audible even on this side of the street.  I turn to my left in a desperate attempt to distance myself from the woman, the regular cracks in the sidewalk moving swiftly under my feet. I glance up periodically to take in some landmarks.  On either side, little family-owned stores line the streets. Harper’s Sporting Goods, Jim’s Fishing Gear, Antiques by Amelia. A few people pass me on the sidewalk. I do my best to remain invisible, but each nods in my direction with a “Hey now!” or a “Gooday to ya!” like I’ve been here forever.  I’m uncomfortable. My anxiety is building rapidly and the ticking with it.

Don’t let it go off…don’t let it go off.

I pick up my pace, almost at a sprint, sweat beading my brow. I run into something that knocks me off pace, and I stumble a little. Some brat of no more than thirteen gives me a mean look and a “Watch it, asshole!” before carrying on his merry little way. I can feel it rising.

Tickticktickticktick.

I make a dash into the nearest building. I need out of the open. The door closes behind me, and I sink to the floor. My head is spinning, and I take a few deep breaths to settle my heartbeat and building anxiety. One thing Shrinkie Dink got right: this breathing thing does the trick. I close my eyes, leaning against the door, the sweat cooling against my skin. I shiver involuntarily. Stupid brat…this whole damn town… I run my hand across the back of my neck and take another few deep breaths. Easy…easy…

“I said, do you need any help?”

I open my eyes to a frail-looking old man with a soft voice. He’s dressed in mostly grey—grey slacks, grey vest, grey tie, grey hair—all but for a vibrant blue shirt to match his eyes, eyes lacking no vitality, now full of concern. Concern for me? I look around to find that I’m in a library, rather small, but packed with as many shelves as were legal without being a fire hazard.  A few reading tables take up the right corner of the room. A boy, maybe seven or eight years old, stares at me from them.

“Sonny?” the old man, I suppose the librarian, asks me.

“No.” It was the first time I’d spoken aloud today and the words came harshly, sticking to the back of my throat like phlegm. I clear my throat and attempt again in a more civil tone. “No, thank you.”

“Gave us all quite a startle.” The grey librarian extends his hand to me. I silently refuse the gesture and stand on my own.

“Welcome to our little library,” he continues. “Haven’t seen your face in this neck of the woods.” His eyes are exploring my face, and I feel violated. “You let me know if I can do anything for ya.” Without waiting for a reply, he turns and heads toward a small office near the reading tables.  That kid is still watching. I look around again and see only two other patrons, both unconcerned with my entrance. One is a teenage boy using the only computer in the room to blare music into his eardrums. The other is an ancient woman in a chair much too large for her tiny frame. Her eyelids are so droopy that it’s difficult to discern wither she’s deeply immersed in the large book in her lap or simply asleep.

Libraries have never been my place of preference, but now as I take in the silence, the musky aroma that seems to come from nowhere and everywhere at once, the afternoon sun streaming in through the windows heating the room slightly, peace begins to sink in. Except for the kid who has now turned in his chair to watch me. I turn and walk towards the tight rows of shelves, wide enough to allow only one person at a time. The library is small, but the collection is vast. I pick my way through the authors of mystery and horror, stopping in crime fiction to pick up a copy of Jeffery Deaver’s The Bone Collector.

Hmm, I wonder if they’ll write one of these about me. Readers probably won’t sympathize with me…no one sympathizes with the monster if he’s male. Only the girls get off easy.

I flip through the pages finding a few illustrations, and I let my mind travel back to her. Angelica was her name, and she was much more beautiful in death than in life.  Some mother she was to me. Poisoning her was a simple task, an easy end to a witch of a woman. I touch my ribcage reflexively, feeling the numerous scars from broken whiskey and wine bottles and telephone cords stretching around and spreading out over my side and back. Oh yes, the stomach acid she gargled out was glorious, foamy like the suds of bubble machines the kids across the street from us back then used to play with. An eleven-year-old couldn’t have asked for a better birthday present. Her screams were my symphony that night, like a muted trumpet, only…wetter. Four glorious minutes. She got exactly what she deserved and I’d do it again if—

I look up. The kid from the table is peeking around the row I’m standing in, and is doing a terrible job of hiding himself. He slinks around the corner, now caught, and stands at the edge of the row, staring. I hate being watched. I raise an eyebrow. He’s thin, a little tall for his age. His face is light with a mass of freckles covering his cheeks. A mess of dark red hair covered his head, almost amber in the dim light of the library. Yellow shirt with a Pikachu on it, black shorts, Band-aids on his knees. Spitting image of a youngster trainer from the Pokémon games.

“Your shoes are untied,” I say to him.

He looks down at them, and I take the distraction to snake around the back of the row into another. I pick up a copy of Ted Dekker’s Black out of curiosity.

“I’ve never seen you here before.”

I look around and see no one. Then I realize the kid is staring at me through the spaces of the shelf.
“Didn’t your parents ever tell you not to talk to strangers?” I’ve always wanted an excuse to say that to a kid. Check one off the bucket list.

“There aren’t too many strangers in this town.”

Weird little kid. I move further down the row, and he matches me. “Hey, beat it, kid.” It was starting again.

Tick.

Tick.

“My name’s Fit, not kid.” He slinks off, and I pick up another book. This one smells of old carrots as I thumb through it. What kind of name is Fit? The shock of red hair is in my periphery again.

“What’s your name, mister?”

Mister. This town is just as old-fashioned as I thought. At least he didn’t call me sir. He hadn’t bothered to tie his shoes.

“Abraham.”

“Like the president!” He was quite pleased with the connection he’d made. He smiles a toothless grin. Cute… Real cute….

“Look, what do you want, kid?”

“Fit.” He looks at me expectantly. I sigh in exasperation.

“What do you want, Fit?”

He smiles, I suppose assuming he’s made a friend out of me. “Whatcha reading?”

I narrow my eyes at him. “Books about dangerous people.”

“Why? Are you dangerous?”

“Maybe.”

He mulls over my response, and I step past him, attempting to hunt down that librarian. Not in the office or at the front desk.  A clock reads 12:17. Probably left for lunch. Great.

“I don’t think you’re dangerous.”

I jump, genuinely startled. “Hey, don’t you have friends to play with or something?”

“Not really.” He doesn’t seem fazed by this realization.

“Why don’t you go make some?”

“Okay.” He waits a beat. “Want to be pals?”

What a weird kid. “No.” I drop down to his eye level for effect. “And you’re wrong, ya know. I’m very dangerous.

His eyes widen with wonder, and maybe a little fear. “Did you kill someone?” It was a whisper.

“Oh, yes. And not just one, but many. And I’ll tell you a secret.” I lean in close to him, narrowing my eyes to increase the spookiness. “I just might do it again.”

He is silent for a second, then laughs, calling my bluff. “Really?” He laughs again. I smirk, a little annoyed and amused by him at the same time. “If you’ve killed so many people, tell me about them!”

I look around. The librarian is still nowhere to be seen. The old woman’s head is now resting against the back of the chair. Definitely asleep. The teenager must have left a while ago; an outmoded screensaver of the old windows logo has now replaced the digital images, bouncing off the edges and corners of the screen. I look back to Fit. Why not? It’d be good for a laugh or two.

“Fine, fine. But first, tell me. What are you doing here anyway? You’re like, seven. Why aren’t you outside playing or at home?”

For the first time, Fit’s expression drops, laughter gone from his voice, eyes on the floor. “My dad’s at home.” He doesn’t say anything else, and I don’t need him to. My fingers move to my ribcage, dispelling the phantom pain that has settled there once again.

“Come on,” I say, leading him to the tables. We sit, and I recount the tales from my tortures and ritualistic killings, from the butchering of my fifth grade teacher to the mercy slaying of my first girlfriend, interrupted only by the occasional “Are you serious?” to which I would reply in my best spooky imitation, “Oh, yes, little one.” This would get him laughing again, and I would continue. When I finish my tales, I glance at the clock, 3:38. Huh. I stand and make my way towards the checkout counter. Fit doesn’t follow.

“Will you come back tomorrow?”

I smile. “Maybe.”

I take my books to the checkout counter, and the little old man in grey is waiting patiently. I place them on the counter, and he stamps them and hands them back to me.

“Glad ya found what you were looking for.”

I glance back at Fit with a wave. “It’s a start.”

I step out into the late afternoon sun, books in hand, and make my way farther down the street to the only café in town. I pass the chubby-armed woman on my way. She’s carrying a few paper bags of groceries and avoids eye contact with me. Huh, almost no tick that time. Dink is sitting at a table under a tacky pink umbrella, furiously tapping a fork on a saucer. He hasn’t seen me yet, so I amble around behind his distracted form.

“Boo.” It’s just a word with hardly any volume, yet Dink jumps at least a foot as he turns to face me. He sees the books under my arm then looks back to me and smiles.

“Looks to me like we have some things to discuss,” he says, dabbing his brow with a napkin.

I smile and hold up my treasures. “Progress.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Sleep Paralysis Pt. 2

It happened again, this time while Boyfriend was here.

We were sleeping, his right arm under my neck, left under the pillow he was sleeping on. I was on my side facing away from him. (Yes, these positions are important.)

I was just coming out of a dream where I was in my friends' apartment, and some guy who could be easily labeled a redneck was drunk and yammering away, smoking a cigarette in his cut-off shorts and steel-toed boots. He had some weird, intricate tattoo on his arm, and as he's gesturing wildly, he flicks his cigarette in a perfect arch into their window, landing not a centimeter from the cup of one of my friends. Boyfriend picks up the butt and walks it to the door and flicks it back at him, calling him an idiot in the process.

It was then I could feel myself coming out of the dream, and I was giggling to myself and thinking, "That showed him" when I could feel myself slipping into the sleep paralysis. It was like a mesh veil drifting on top of me, and as I was starting to feel it, I thought I'd slipped out from under it. I though I'd be able to ward it off, since I could feel it coming on. I thought to myself, "Wow, I just dodged that one."

That's when the voice of a thousand whispers came back, this time angry and in a fever pitch.

"We can't have any of that, now can we?" it hissed.

It was then that it hit. I felt my body go rigid, and it felt like a left hand was around my shoulder, while a right hand was digging into my belly button. I squirmed as best as I could, but the hand just dug deeper until it was behind my belly button, at which point it pinched as hard as it could. It hurt terribly, and I couldn't cry for help or move it off. 

After some squirming, I'd managed to push the hand around my shoulder off and sit up, but the right hand was still in my stomach. And it was still pinching. It hurt so badly I wanted to scream, but no sound would come. I braced my hand against it and pushed. I tried to turn my head to see if Boyfriend was doing it, but it was like trying to move through sludge. It took as much effort to turn my head as it did for me to sit up, which seemed to take forever in itself. Eventually I got around, and Boyfriend was sleeping soundly, none the wiser to the fact that Keepers wouldn't let go of me.

I got another hand around the one at my belly and pushed with everything I had.

And it was gone. Just gone. I almost hit the desk next to my bed, only barely stopping myself. I was breathing heavily and my stomach still hurt. I whispered to Boyfriend, and graciously, sound came from my lips. I woke him up and told him about it, but he was too groggy to comprehend more than the fact that I had a bad dream. We cuddled, and he was out again before I knew it. I don't think I slept much after that. I wanted to make sure these details didn't slip from me before I got a chance to write them down. 

I probably shouldn't be trying to keep a record of these...but they'd make an interesting story later. The Keepers coupled with the Shadow Man who would follow me in my childhood.

Anyway, that was it. The whole ordeal took about four minutes total. It felt like at least an hour. This is one of the few ones where there was actual pain afterwards. The first was the time the Shadow Man was crouching on my neck and shoulder, and I woke up standing after trying to pull myself out from under the weight of no weight. My neck and left shoulder hurt like mad for the next few hours.

Now that I'm keeping a record of these, I'm almost excited to see what the next one is gonna be like. Also terrified.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Valentine's Day Observations

So I was reading a journal on a fiend's FA page talking about all the negative feelings people seem to get around Valentine's Day, about how people are posting journals saying it's a terrible holiday and they hate it and the like. It made me think of a few things. Maybe it's my priorities and my interpretation of the meaning of Valentine's Day, but anyway, this way my post on her journal (with a few additions), and I felt like sharing it.

I happen to like Valentine's day, even when I was single (in fact, this is the first Valentine's Day I'm spending with someone in like 10 years maybe). All the same, I view it more as a day where people go out of their way to be nice and loving to someone else, because it seems like nowadays there has to be an excuse to do this kind of thing.

I can agree that the commercials get cheesy and such, but no more than Christmas commercials or Halloween ads. And I agree it gets kinda gross to see couples being so overly lovey-dovey in public; PDA make me self-conscious, and I get second-hand embarrassment from watching it. Everything is geared at couples and engagements and cuteness and pink.

So, I can totally understand how people without someone to spend it with could find it a terrible holiday that rubs it in their faces, but I'd prolly bet money on the fact that if they were spending it with someone, they'd have a totally different attitude about it.

I wonder why those who are single don't jus celebrate it by showing random acts of kindness to strangers. Like get a cheap box of cards and jus write kind things in them and pass them out to someone who looks down. Or give away Hershey's kisses (cheaper and less work for those that are lazy like me). You'd be surprised how the little things can put a smile on people's faces. You may even make a friend or meet a special someone out of the deal. There is no reason why this holiday can't be a good one for everyone, single or not, and there sure as hell isn't enough love in the world out there.

Plus, chocolate <3

I think people need to stop being so negative about everything. Don't use a holiday focused on love (yes, even commercial and cheesy love) to be hateful to others. If you don't wanna be kind and loving to others, don't do anything. Spreading negativity just because you're grouchy doesn't help you or anyone else. If things suck, do something to make them better rather than wallow in it, ya know?

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Weird Dream I Had

"We are the whispers and keepers of secrets."

The only dialogue I remember of it.

The scene was one of sleep, I was watching myself from outside my body. I couldn't see who spoke these words, but I could feel it, a thousand whispers tickling the inside of my skull around my ear, making me cold.
I'm not sure what it (or I guess they) wanted, but the feeling was unmistakable yet indefinable. Touch without tangible essence, concentrated cold under the weight of no weight.

It was so odd. Like a dream of the sensation of restless sleep, but no tossing or turning for fear of disturbing the disquiet. Why there was a fear of ending it, your guess is as good as mine. Maybe something inside me sensed hostility from that thing breathing emotionless nothings into me. Just as likely not.

Can't shake that feeling though.

Monday, January 7, 2013

Sleep Paralysis

It happened again today O_O

I was taking a nap while waiting for work to pick up a little bit, and set an alarm for 9:50 since I had to meet a prof at 10 to discuss scheduling. The alarm went off, and I hit snooze and leaned my head back in my chair and it hit, all at once.

Couldn't move my hands as much as I tried, couldn't move my head or neck which was starting to hurt, couldn't lean forward, couldn't raise my arms, couldn't make a sound.

Then suddenly it felt like I was surrounded by invisible people, like I could feel the weight of the air pressing my sides and the tops of my head and shoulders. Then the noise started. My brain knew the room was silent, but I began hearing hundreds of voices talking at once, like in a stadium or auditorium. A very loud murmur that steadily rose in volume until it seemed to fill the room.

I wanted to yell for help but sound refused to escape my mouth, and I was alone anyway so who would hear?

I began attempting to turn my head to the side, and it felt like it was made of lead and it hurt my neck to move it. But I kept turning, slowly and slowly, and suddenly, like someone flipped a switch, it all just stopped. My head moved easily, my fingers would bend, I could move my shoulders.

I had a killer headache afterwards.

The kicker? It felt like it lasted half an hour. It only lasted one minute.
One terrifying minute.

Does this happen to anyone else?

Friday, January 4, 2013

The Values of People

A Facebook post from a friend of mine about the concept of friend-zoning got me thinking about a few things, explicitly how people measure and view the value of others.

As most know, I have little to no faith in the human race as a whole, so know that this is not directed towards anyone. Just me expressing some curiosities.

So as you know, friend-zoning is the phenomenon that happens when two people are friends for a long time, and when one pops in with the idea of getting serious, he/she gets turned down because he/she is "a nice guy but just a friend." The one friend-zoned is labeled as pathetic by society, while the one friend-zoning is labeled a shallow person for not liking the "nice guy."

One thing this made me think about is the person who gets labeled the terrible person for not liking the nice guy. For these purposes, I'll use she, since the media generally portrays friend-zoning as a phenomenon of heterosexual relationships in which the girl is doing the friend-zoning. From what I can tell, during the friending process, she's labeled a sensible person for being friends with such a great guy, but as soon as she confesses that she doesn't have romantic feelings for him, she's suddenly some heartless person that's playing with people's feelings. Suddenly she's viewed as "not worth it" by the guy's friends, when just before the confession, all of them loved her. To the guy, she's becomes a bitch when she was once worth doing anything for. Am I the only one who has seen this or is this actually rare?

It makes me wonder why her value has suddenly decreased because she doesn't think of her friend romantically or doesn't want to get serious. Sure, they have a lot in common, like a lot of the same things, spend a lot of time together, etc. They should if they're friends in the first place. So just because the guy is interested, she's supposed to be as well; and if not, she's worthless? Was she actually setting out to deceive him or are there just a lot of butt-hurt feelings floating around?



I feel like it should be okay for the two of them to be close, for her to be able to not have romantic feelings for him, and it not decrease the value of either of them. She can be funny and awesome to hang out with. He can be cute and smart and charming. She can still not be interested, and that should be okay, right? It should be fine for both of them to be total catches and one not be interested in the other, shouldn't it? Or am I just silly for assuming that a girl should get a say in the matter?

On a tangent, I feel like it's crap to become friends a person with the interest of becoming more with them, especially if you don't tell them about your schemes. I feel like to do so is deceiving, and I feel like it's legit to turn that kind of thing down. It's a terrible method of persuasion that most definitely will lead to this phenomenon. People should be friends to be friends, and if it becomes something more than that, my above rant applies. If you want a relationship, it should be stated out front. Guess I'm a sucker for efficiency, but I just get so sick of people tip-toeing around each other, wondering why nothing is happening they way they want it to. I've got a secret: no one is gonna know for absolute certain that you like them, unless you tell them. Mind = blown. There's too much asking each others friends, trying to judge from across the room, peaking from the corner of your eye going on to get anything done. The quickest way to figure out if someone likes you is to ask. The quickest way to get your feelings across is to say them.

"But, Deer-Skunk," you might say, "what happens if they don't like me back?"

Nothing, until you make a decision. You can choose to do nothing, at which point you existence goes on exactly as it was going, and you're no worse off than before but for a shot to the self-esteem. Or, you can choose  to attempt to woo said person. If he/she still says no, move on and your existence goes on exactly as it was going, and you're no worse off than before but for a few shots to the self-esteem. If he/she says yes, huzzah, you've accomplished your goal. Congratulations.

On an even farther tangent, there is a commercial out now for some toothpaste where a girl sees a guy she likes and instantly begins picturing her future house, two cars, 2.5 kids and dog. That commercial makes me mad. She knows nothing about this guy, except that he's pretty. Call me old-fashioned (and a little feminist, I guess), but I see this as an insult. Don't get me wrong, it's fine to assess the guys appearance. I just hope most women would attempt to hold a conversation with this guy before she begins picturing their kids together. You know, find out if you could even foster a friendship with this guy, let alone a marriage.



Guh, I think as a whole I'm just tired of people being people. It happens. I realize I'm ranting a lot here. It may not make sense. I'm tempted to not even see if it flows....feeling lazy. Thoughts on any of it?

Also sorry, pony memes are good for this. I will publicly state that I am not a bronie, though I do enjoy the show. There, I said it. Lauren Faust, you're awesome!

Come at me, bro.