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ArcAne's blog: "ramble"

created on 05/07/2008  |  http://fubar.com/ramble/b213922

mind gaze

R A M B L E II VI The sun went down again, the same way it had when we first got off that metro, when we descended into hell, to those pearly gates that weren't pearly, to the handguns and to the crazies and to the judges. The jury was out, but that judge kept sitting there in his throne, staring you down, makeing you feel small in comparison to the scale of existence. Everyone's a judge, eventually, and everyone makes everyone else feel small. I just hate it when real judges do it. When the time comes to stand in front of the entire world and let the judges judge, who's really man enough to say "I'm scared?" I would. I'd say it until i was blue in the face and dying. I'd whisper it on my dying breath, even if it meant staying alive that much longer to curse out one last syllable. VII How many times does the sun come up? How many times does the sun go down? How many times do we stand here? Does this end? Do we ever get to see tomarrow? Will I wake up? I swear to God I just want to wake up, but is there anything left to wake up to? Can I even shake myself out of this? Is there anywhere left to go? I can't see anymore and I think I don't want to. When do people learn? When will I learn? Can I learn? Will you let me learn? I lie well but I don't want to, I don't want to for the love of this. Please let me die here, please let me put on my shoes and walk out this door and stand in front of everything I'm afraid of and let this all just end, let's do a bang up job and let's let this be done. When you're crazy, you think crazy things. I'm a master of it. I stand around all day and I think these crazy things; bastard thoughts that scare and intimidate the guys whith the degrees, the kind of sick twisted mind that Johnny Law is trying to scrape off the street and institutionalize. I've done my fair share of mingling with psychologists and analysts; They've poked and prodded and drugged and bound and gagged for all I know, and I'm still here, alive and kicking--a byproduct of a perfect society's obsession with the imperfect. Every night, right before the sun went down, I had the most beautiful clarity, and I could see the craters on the moon with the most random precision. I could see stars and clouds and buildings, an none of it was muddled in what William Pierre Ender, M.D. assured me was "over romanticizing." I knew what I was looking at. Another city, another skyline. Another lonley 2:00 AM with the ghosts and the deamons and the neon signs. My company. My crowd. My scene. My ball and chain. A subtle reminder that I dragged with me from town to town, unafraid of the consequences, because I silently knew there wouldn't be any. There aren't any when you associate with ghosts. Sometimes I wonder about my own mortality. Maybe I'm dead. Maybe I was never real to begin with. Maybe I was just some lucid manifestation of people's conscious thought gone awry, and I'm the mechanization of all things temporally incorrect. Maybe I've survived the centuries from thought to thought, constantly regurgitated by the hateful, sinful deeds of everyone else. Maybe I'm just a conglomeration of sex and drugs, a walking manifestation of drunkards and burned out junkies. "In his head it's like the weather back and forth it's like the weather back and forth it's like the weather..." She smiles at me from behind curtains, and I can tell that I'm real. I'm real only because she makes me real. Only because she smiles, and I smile back. A constant reminder that somewhere, sometimes, there's enough beauty to will the ugliest, loveless creatures to be lovely and loving. There aren't enough pills in the world that could replace her; I'm not that insane. No, I'll never be that insane. VIII With enthusiasm, I checked myself out of the cheap motel, and rode my bike down into the haunted, grey vally of downtown. Cars passed me as I made my way slowly through the most digusting, revolting avenues and streets. The escalators delivered more dead people into hell; more children, more elderly people; more hapless scumbags than you can point and laugh at. I passed them by, because they had passed me by. I personally blamed them for everything. All my problems, all my indecisions. All these ghosts that haunted me when I wasn't aware that I wasn't being haunted; distracted by sunlight and reflections. So where do we go from here? Where do these streets take us? We were on the hills watching the falls; we were watching the falls and I was staring into that abyss. We just met each other but By God we were in love and there wasn't a thing in the world to take that from us--we just stood there watching those Falls fall into that abyss that was supposed to watch us back but didn't. I watched it until I thought I could vomit, and she stared into it; a reject from society that had forged her into the cast. She didn't want to be here, I know I didn't want her to be here--if I could take her a thousand million miles from here I would but you can't just do that. Do that. Do what you want to do, because that's what you want to do. "When is this loon gonna jump?" She kept staring into that empty abyss, same as me. Just a big empty swirling of water; nothing more than mist and boats and people in silly blue ponchos, smiling up and takeing pictures. With enough glow in her heart, she turned and kissed me, I felt alive. But I loked at her, and I felt her next to me. Felt like she was with me, and that was enough to reassure me. I felt content, and I haven't felt content since. I looked into her eyes, and I turned. And the Falls; the roar of the Falls, and the mist and the moisture and those goddamn blue ponchos all flashed in front of my face, and everything swirled around. This was the empty abyss I had been staring into all week; that culmination of water and sounds and echoes, that eyeless thing that hovered right before me, but never stared back. She was sad; I had met her while she lay crying and broken in front of the lights and he amusements and the calliope, sobbing because she was alone; I was wandering because I, too, was alone. We're all so alone. Sing a song of sixpence. That presence next to me vanished> I turned, and she wasn't there. I looked back into the abyss, and it had two new eyes with which to stare at me. For the first time in what seemed like a handful of seconds and tick-tocks on some cosmic clock, we were both stone cold and alone. So I ran from city to city, haunting hotels and motels and allyways and strangers and bottles of beer. I haunted the lonly circle of light beneath strret lamps, and I clung to the mid-summer humidity with the persistance of a ten-year-old. I wouldn't let go for the life of me. I wouldn't dare let myself become a part of this society again. Not after it had shunned us, and not after it had made her haunt me. I loved her, and she came with me everywhere. It's through me that she can see this world; it's through me that the sun goes up and down. Without me, she'd be no more than an empty voice... a forgotten body floating in the sea of faces...this dreary, dark place. This woe-begotten world of bigotry and pride, where gluttony and lust have replaced morality and decency. Sex is a virtue; useing and abusing are feats of human nature. There's nothing subtle about this society anymore. There's nothing decent or clean, and we're the victims. We're the ones broken and crying in the center of all the amusements and pastimes. we're just faces in the sea.

mind gaze

R A M B L E It starts out as chaos really. The different noises and faces. Laughing, talking, searching, staring, slowly blending, until it all becomes a drone. It's jus a constant ringing in my head. A constant reminder of what I'm doing to myself. Then i begin to look at all the people around me. Those whose company I chose, and those I did not. And as look at each person individually I am able to distinguish to connection. The feelings that arise because of the person. Some understand-many do not. I dont hold it aginst them, It's a lesson learned in time. Sometimes, i encounter new feelings. Not by chioce, but maybe circumstances. Events i can not control, things i cannot change, but i wish i could. Confusion begins to cloud my thoughts and i become restless and cold: silent. Mt eyes transfix onto something that isnt there. But still, I look for it. I've always wondered how the look of something unknown can create such a strong physical and emotional reaction. How the absence of something can create a presence. It is like there is glass between us. I can scream forever, but my cries go unheard. So I stop screaming and take a step closer to the glass. I stand locked in your stare, my heart melts as my focus changes. You begin to fade into the background, and i can see my reflection. My eyes are as empty as before, I lower my head and step back. Everybody knows you can't reach the stars. But is it wrong to try?? II By way of escalator, we decended into hell. Instead of obsidian gates, we met a thousand or more individuals combined into a sentient collective that was as self-aware as a brick, and an infinite amount of times less appealing. City lights and afterglow's rained down on us like confetti from a parade, and we watched that parade--that endless line of downtown traffic-- dance around us in a neurotic display of car-horns and headlights. Had I understood the dynamics of our decent, I would understand that it was no amount of good deeds or prayers that had pulled me out of that sub-basement to that pinnacle of human aspiration; rather, it was simply a conglomeration of wires and gears that had dragged me kicking and screaming and gasping for air out of the dank sub sectors of washington D.C. The wail of electronic brakes and synthesized emotion resounded down a corridor of obscure darkness and commutes long over. And like a silver bullet speeding off into the heart of the sniper's taret, that metro car tore its way along tracks (clickity-clack clickity-clack) into the heart of that amalgamation of car-horns, headlights, and high-risis. Whether of not this was hell was open to debat, but if ever there was a placebo strong enough to convince a man that death was the only acceptable outcome, then the aura of this damn city was it. And so we walked down imaginary boulevards and nameless byways; we walked through tunnels and under bridges; we sat in parks and stared at monuments. We lived, that night, through the accomplishments and sacrifices of thousands of men and women, and we turned our heads from the majesty of democracy, to see the fruits of legislation. We watched men and women stammer and stagger from behind executive buildings; we watched children pine on the street corners; we watched pimps, whores and pushers wait like wolves for the hapless tourist to step off the block, to fall into the shadow of what was real. "My God, it's beautiful." Despite my ragged protests; despite my accusations and my hatred and the newly developed bile that was gagging and ripping and exploding towards the tip of my tongue, i agreed. "Yeah, it is." By way of taxicab, we made our way to a forelorn parking deck on the edge of forever. The potomac glistined like rabid eyes from beyond the chipped pavement below. The yellow caution lights that came from the greedy good deeds of city commisioners and federal lawmen gleamed off cement slabs and tinted windows; her car waited morosely at the far edge of the deck. License plates and flat tires guided us through rows of lookalikes and copycats, status symbols on weels. We filled our journey with chit-chat and small talk. We recalled days long past, and days soon to pass us by. Through openings in the cement, we watched the transgressions of a sidewalk society. The property exchanged in blood, the morals for money. I watched children squandered and money burned to ash. I watched negligence, and I watched hate. I watched her open the car door, and i loved her. "Tonight we're going home." III We woke up drunk and disorderly in a cheap motel. The dusty fan swung idly overhead, filling the empty space between us and the television with a squeaky rattling that seemed to echo on the verge of insanity. The news reporter's mouth opened and closed, but no words came out. Only the sounds of rockets and sadness and oil tankers exploding off the coast of maine. There weren't words anymore, only the travesty of human negligence, and the disasters of human mindfullness. A sort of grey, obstinate hopelessness decayed the pricipals that schools and institutions had ingrained in us. No matter how much the billboards and beer commercials assured us that the world was a better place, the death tolls and the car-bombings kept getting higher, and my high hopes kept getting lower. Her hand found mine, and for three brief, shining seconds, I wanted to cry. Whether or not she could see, the television ate at my consciousness. Could she see it? Could she hear it? Was she even paying attention to that box of pessimism at all? Or was this just the vodka talking? I couldn't be sure, really. There's no way to be sure, any more. There are no checks, there are no balances. Only the gut-feelings and instincts. You have to trust your instincts in this dog-eat-dog-eat-man world out there. The winos and the hookers are the kings and queens of the streets, and if you can't trust them, who can you trust? Nobody, really. Your religion is a fiction, your governors are liars. Your drugs are a placebo, this music is a cancer. Your drinking yourself to hatred, and I swear to God you're pushing us all into this blender, and I won't go down without at least a fifth of scotch in my stomach. I swear to God I won't let the clouds pass me by without spiting the sun one last time. I swear to God. You can keep swearing to God, but eventually, He just doesnt give a damn about those four-letter words you spew like vomit. Pretty soon, God starts dishing bak what He's been dished, and God have mercy on you if you should walk under the shadow of that wrath. After all, you can only stare at the sun so long before you go compleely blind. You can only drink away your vision so much, and that's the lession I learned one dusty September morning. She veered dangerously in and out of consciousness, and I hovered ominously in the center of a dimly lit motel room, where cigarette smoke and empty moans haunted the doorway like demons in the darkest corners of my mind. Like the memory of some forsaken child who hung on just long enough to stab his girlfriend in the face and hurl her off a cliff then jumped off after her. Such is the way of humanity, though. With all the majestic flourish of a fool, I got out of that hard bed, and floundered around for pants and a jacket. Without showering, without slowing even to brush my teeth or apply this useless deodorant, I grabbed twenty dollars and fell down the curb into the limbo of the Beltway motel's front parking lot. I stole a bike, and I damned myself to prison for theft, and for destruction of private property, or some other such nonsense. Was she lying asleep in that bed? Was she even aware that I had woken up, that I had put on my shoes and my jogging pants? Did she know where I was going? Or doesn't she have to know? Do I know what I'm thinking? I've got twenty dollars and enough cheap booze to keep me dead long enough to see winter. I've got enough of this below my belt, and all I need is a final push to the last hurrah. One more downhill slope until I can stand, finger raised high abouve my head, in a triumphant salute to the mongrels and the tramps, and offer the world a chance to go fuck itself. But I cry with the subtlety of a machine gun, and I laugh with the occurrance of a lunar eclips. Through pressed lips and clenched fists, I damn the pavement and I curse the birds. I shake broken hands at broken people, and they give me broken smiles. I still say there's enough water in this green Old world to kill us all and end it. IV I rode my brand new bike into town. I stayed on the sidewalk, while commuters waited at bus terminals and metro lines; while car-poolers fought their way through sidewalk congestion like blood cells in the arteries of a bacon lover. And I cut through them all. My wheels became machetes, my handlebars became a grip. I pushed my ay through the hustle and rush of downtown, with jets and helicopters to serenade me; ambulances and squad cars joined in to create an orgasm of sound, a four-part harmony that sang the lament of inner-city. A psycologist (William Pierre Ender, M.D.) once told me I romanticize everything. I enjoyed the pills while they lasted. So with downtown acting as a high-fidelity stereo system, and my wheels acting like machetes, I chopped my way through the dormant jungle of downdown. The monuments glared at me, the faces of leaders and doers hateing me silently behind concrete expressions, locked forever in a gaze of dissaproval. I hated their faces. I could not bring myself to deface a monument, save for those judgmental, hateful faces. I didn't know where I was going. I still don't. "dear morning pedestrians: Give me your eyes so that I may see; give me your tongues so that I may speak; give me your hands so that I may love; give me your heart so that I hate you endlessly, forever and ever amen." My response came in the form of a hum; an electric buzz of engines and conversation. I didn't understand what they were saying to me. The only intelligible answer a crowed can give you is ignorance, and no matter what dialect or language you speak, it all translates into exclusion, anyways. The potomac, that rabid river of glass shards and plastic, bird-killing rings, guided me to a bridge, where I could watch the planes take off all morning. It struck me as odd, as I stood there, bike leaning aginst the railing, that all those people were flying away from whatever is was they were leaving behind. That there was something they were leaving behind. Why leave anything behind? What's worth leaving behind? You can't leave love, or life, or anything at all behind. Because if you run, you're a coward. I got back on my stolen treasure and rode it all the way back to the motel. V "This all reminds me too terribly much of my trip to Niagara Falls, when I stood at the front of the Falls, and I stared down into what everyone kept calling the 'abyss,' and I wondered, if you stare into the abyss, does it stare back into you? But I guess that's the problem, because I couldn't really tell. You can't tell with abysses and stuff, because there is no eye to stare into. You're stareing into empty space. Is it possible for empty space to stare back at you? I guess it could, if you wanted it to, but I don't want it to. If you don't want it to happen, don't let it happen. So the Maid of the Mist just kinda hung about underneath the Falls, and the onlookers looked on with their blue ponchos, and I laughed because they all looked so goddamn rediculous. They looked so goddamn ridiculous, all those Canadians and Americans and Japanese and Chinese people, because they wore those silly blue ponchos, and that the American flag just kept a-swayin' and swayin', but it wasn't swayin' for anybody. It was swayin' because the wind was tellin' it to sway. There's no rhyme or reason anymore, you just follow the wind, ya know? And I guess that's why Clifton Hills hurt so bad. Because I saw you standing there, by all the horrorshows and all the side-shows and that calliope kept playing, and the hard rock was comming from the Hard Rock Cafe, and you were so beautiful. I had to talk to you. I had to talk to you. I'm glad we talked, because I kept staring into that abyss, you know, and there were all those people, just standin' there, just standin' there, and you know they all had one thing on their mind." 'When is this loon gonna jump?' so I guess it didnt remind me of anything at all, other than dredged up recollections of a time that never happened. Flights of fancy I romanticized and realized all too soon, and made a scenario up out of nothing." She always did everything with the most patient hand. We'd followed each other around ever since I never met her at Clifton Hills, where the casinos and the amusements are in Niagara. She was the only person that had ever patiently smiled at me, and I loved her. I didn't want to let her go. She could leave, but she'd always come back. I always had to ask her to please leave, but she always came back. It was like we were connected or something....
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