Monday, November 30, 2009
The Third Floor
I dreamed about the house again. Especially, the third floor. Why is it always the third floor? The first floor has the door, that much is obvious. But it also is the beginning. The shake of inside versus outside. And the inside is wrong. And then there are stairs. So curious a thing. You might hesitate at the top of stairs before running down. If you need to run down. Stairs are so close to falling. Controlled falling, actually. One little freefall, and you catch yourself. Two little freefalls, and you catch yourself. What if you don't catch yourself? Because on the second floor there is fear. Thicker than the first floor. I feel it in the walls. Like something is sliding through the lumber. It might pour from the ceiling to block the door behind me. It might wet my terrors underfoot. It might bleed into the frame of any window I choose to see. But most of all, I feel the almost. The evil not yet here, but close. The watching. Just a few short steps from now. Like my razor's edge of control is a mercy it can rip away. And because it doesn't rip it away, it laughs. But on the third floor, it's different. So very different. The third floor is inside the inside. So not the door. The outside world no longer coherent, far from the maze to the meat grinder door where reality is bloodied and pulped. My heart is beating on the third floor. Hard. The almost is so close. No farther than a neck kiss when you already feel the breath. The walls breathe with something not insane. Something trapped and tired and stewed to tranquil hate. But only while it sleeps. And it doesn't want to sleep anymore. Two sets of stairs from the third floor are no escape. A cliff is no escape. It's just a trade of deaths, one for another. A slivery hot death smashing into ground. A howling, scrambling death when your mind can no longer stay. But I hold it together on the third floor. I endure. The gnawing terror stops just before bone. I walk and endure, and curiously often, I go back.
Friday, November 27, 2009
Twittering
For anyone on Twitter, I'm branching out! If you'd like to follow each other, my user name is ClarityofNight, and you can find me HERE.
There will be some content only available there (in addition to general nonsense). I'm also cooking up something I'm calling Machine Gun Poetry just for the Twitter format. It's a series of single words followed by the culmination in all caps. Here's an example:
restless russet chattering sandpaper veins bending bare clicks abandoned FOREST

See you over there!
There will be some content only available there (in addition to general nonsense). I'm also cooking up something I'm calling Machine Gun Poetry just for the Twitter format. It's a series of single words followed by the culmination in all caps. Here's an example:
restless russet chattering sandpaper veins bending bare clicks abandoned FOREST

See you over there!
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Monday, November 23, 2009
Beer Philosophers #4: You're a Chicken
"I saw an interesting news story today."
"Oh?"
"Yeah. They're doing a study on whether chickens are unhappy when they're raised in cages to lay eggs."
"I wonder what it feels like to lay an egg."
"Remember when you ate all that popcorn?"
"Oh."
"Anyway, they're wondering if the chickens essentially go insane."
"Chickens always look kind of insane to me. Making their heads go like this. Like this. Like this."
"The animal rights people are screaming that farmers pack nine chickens in a cage. They can't move or spread their wings."
"...and they scratch. And scratch. And scratch."
"Dude. Sit down. You're freaking me out."
"Sorry."
"The farmers, on the other hand, claim the chickens dig it. Very calm and comfortable. Because the chickens are caged right after birth. They never know anything different. Kind of cozy."
"Awww. I like cozy."
"Dude. Seriously."
"Sorry."
"Here's the important part. Are you listening? Think about getting into that cage. Think about how important that precise moment is."
"I'm thinking that's the moment I run."
"You're standing in line with all those newly hatched chicks. Farmer comes along and onetwothreefourfivesixseveneightnine. That's it. Game over. You're whole universe mapped out in the count of nine."
"I suppose you can't trade anybody off later."
"Nope."
"I'd probably get the guy who farts."
"Exactly! Nine bodies shoulder to shoulder. Up close and personal."
"I guess I wouldn't get the 'guy' who farts. Male chickens don't lay eggs, right?"
"You might totally luck out and get some super cool chickens to hang with. You could rag on the boss. 'Stick this one in your omelet, asshole!' Or, you could get eight of the most stupid, evil, grotesque chickens that ever graced a McNugget."
"I don't want to be a chicken."
"Not if you have to live in a cage, man."
"Amen."
"But then again, are we so different? We only meet who we're going to meet, and that's it. More than nine, yes. But most of us stop trying after a while, don't we?"
"I stopped with you."
"And our cage is just a lot harder to see."
Friday, November 20, 2009
Game Friday: Comfort Food
Welcome to another fine Friday! Today, I'm inviting you all over to dinner!!
If this were a real dinner, I would do all the cooking. (I'm not bad. Really.) But this internet dinner is going to be potluck. Here's the game for today.
In the comments, take the next letter of the alphabet and give us a food that starts with that letter*. Make it something that means something to you. Something that evokes some kind of emotion. Then, as you sit down to your food, let us hear a little bit about what is swirling in your head. I'll start with A.
A
Apples. (I know, boring.) But nothing beats a tart, wild apple. My father introduced me to them at my grandparents' house, where they grew at the edge of the forest along their road. In high school, when I used to golf a lot in the evenings, I'd load up my bag from a tree on the course and eat them as I played. Now, I have this weird wish to have my own fruit trees. For years, I've been working on a cherry tree and a small orchard near our cabin. So far, my only big success are blueberry bushes. Maybe next year! (I say that every year.)
(*For the tough letters (q, x, y & z), if the word contains the sound, that's good enough. Or just skip it.)
If this were a real dinner, I would do all the cooking. (I'm not bad. Really.) But this internet dinner is going to be potluck. Here's the game for today.
In the comments, take the next letter of the alphabet and give us a food that starts with that letter*. Make it something that means something to you. Something that evokes some kind of emotion. Then, as you sit down to your food, let us hear a little bit about what is swirling in your head. I'll start with A.
A
Apples. (I know, boring.) But nothing beats a tart, wild apple. My father introduced me to them at my grandparents' house, where they grew at the edge of the forest along their road. In high school, when I used to golf a lot in the evenings, I'd load up my bag from a tree on the course and eat them as I played. Now, I have this weird wish to have my own fruit trees. For years, I've been working on a cherry tree and a small orchard near our cabin. So far, my only big success are blueberry bushes. Maybe next year! (I say that every year.)
(*For the tough letters (q, x, y & z), if the word contains the sound, that's good enough. Or just skip it.)
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Brain Surgery

Measure me a lobotomy
just above the eyes
they were fashionable once
with a man and a van
traveling right to your school
calling out the detention boys
hold still
don't mind the ice pick
they're cheap
and sterile with gasoline
detention will be over
forever
with one mallet thwap
I'm looking for connections to snip
tracing a crumpled map
of detours and burst water mains
but where to cut?
a snip over here
and I turn a numb cheek to another slap
a snip over there
and an enemy flutters away in flames
Monday, November 16, 2009
Under an Oak Tree on a Fall Morning
"Hi."
"Hi."
"I didn't mean to bother you."
"You're not bothering me."
"It's not like I'm usually in the habit of approaching strange women hanging out under oak trees."
"I'm not usually in the habit of hanging out under oak trees."
"Not that I mean 'strange' in a bad way."
"Right."
"Just in the sense that I don't know you."
"I understand. Strange, as in strange men."
"Yeah. Exactly."
"Thought so."
"It's really a beautiful day, isn't it? With the leaves...."
"You didn't come over here to tell me it's a beautiful day, did you?"
"No."
"Right."
"I came over here because...."
"Yes?"
"Well, actually...."
"I think you came over here because you somehow knew I would be here."
"What?"
"Don't look so surprised."
"I...."
"I'm right, aren't I?"
"I was.... I just...."
"Stop. Just stop. Take a deep breath."
"Okay. Okay."
"Why are you looking at me like that?"
"I knew you were going to say that. Tell me to take a deep breath. What's going on?"
"What am I going to say next?"
"You're going to tell me to sit with you."
"Interesting."
"You're going to say something to me, and I'm going to say something back, but we're really not going to be listening to each other."
"Very interesting."
"And then I'm going to look down, and without thinking, your fingers are going to have slipped into my hand. You're going to look surprised too."
"Now I'm having a little trouble breathing."
"And then I'm going to tell you to take a deep breath."
"Okay. Okay."
"So what should we do now?"
"You should sit down with me. And we should get started."
Friday, November 13, 2009
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Leaving
Ulrich Johns waited to board the plane to Alaska.
To die.
He sat in front of immense glass overlooking the dark tarmac. A coffee machine hissed behind him. A lone worker yawned behind the counter. The only other early passenger mumbled a sleepy message on his cell phone.
Five thirty five on the clock. Even the glow of the digital numbers looked tired. Below, a man dragged the hose from a refueling truck in the predawn twilight.
The lights of Philadelphia speckled the distance.
An unattended world blinking time.
Automation turned the wheels while people slept with the reigns of power tucked under pillows.
But human power was a joke. Unless you celebrated chaos. Left, right, forward, backward, start, never finish, yell, kiss, fall, birth, abuse, exalt, crush, humiliate. Soon, alarm clocks would ring. Drooled faces would roll out of pillowcase craters. Hands would slap snooze alarms and gather back the fluttering threads of dreams.
And Ulrich sat outside of it all. Above the tarmac of Philadelphia International Airport. Like a brooding god. Never in. Never part of. Seeing patterns. Seeing the march of causes and reactions. Seeing the strings pulling millions of marionette skins.
His mechanical calm waned as dawn seeped with pale yellow and infused the black with grey. Families arrived. A breathless little girl bounced into a nearby seat. A father squeezed the bridge of his nose and told another to stop jumping. Ulrich closed his eyes as the attendants opened the boarding station and tapped keys on the computer.
With the night still alive in his mind, he tried to reach beyond the immense glass. Beyond the fueling planes. Beyond the rolling lights dueling on the runways.
He imagined that he felt electricity. Switches switching. Computer code chopping human blundering into manageable packets of perfection.
But no.
The crowd heated to a simmer. The noise tapped cracks into the clear glass of his thoughts.
Alaska would be so different. The endless rainforests of the Tongass National Forest. Trails for hundreds of miles. Deep silence so profound that the northern lights sizzle in the sky.
If only he could die under the northern lights.
Somehow they would accept him. Somehow they would touch the poetic reds and ghostly greens buried in his soul. Somehow his tattered emotions would finally be soothed.
At some point, the plane arrived, and the attendants called for first class passengers. Ulrich rose. No way he was going to fly to the wide beauty of his funeral in coach.
(As an experiment, I'm going to be sharing pieces of my new novel-in-progress, but only scenes which have merit as stand alone pieces. If you find something you particularly like in these scenes, such as a mood, style, or theme, please let me know. On the flip side, if you find something you particularly don't like in these selections, please do the same. Some scenes will feature Nami, a woman who finds herself budding with profound powers over the Earth and its elements. Other scenes will feature Ulrich, a man who embarks on a one-way hike into the rain forests of Alaska to die. This particular scene has the distinction of being the opening of the novel.)
Monday, November 09, 2009
A Hunter's Mysticism

~~A forest is never the same twice. It's always changing. Choose your path before you walk, and see where every step will fall.
~~Never go backward. Only forward. No matter how hard the terrain ahead.

~~Know what colors and textures a plant never makes.
~~The more patient animal usually wins, whether human or prey.

~~Never trust a sound in the wind. Like a mirage in the desert, a breeze in the forest is a siren's song of lies.

(Pictures from Wayne County, Pennsylvania, U.S. Infrared trail camera.)
Friday, November 06, 2009
Thoughts in an Elevator
Wednesday, November 04, 2009
High Voltage
Monday, November 02, 2009
Beer Philosophers #3
"Dude. You know how they say that if you die a martyr, you get 72 virgins in the afterlife?"
"Maybe. Yeah. Kind of like a suicide bomber retirement plan, I guess."
"I wish I lived over there when they announced that. When they made the big announcement."
"Why?"
"Think about it! 72 virgins!"
"That's a lot of virgins."
"You can say that again."
"Wouldn't it be enough to have, say, three?"
"That's not the point. Where do you think they get all those virgins? 72 and 72 and 72. Adds up pretty fast."
"Definitely."
"Does anybody ever consider, though, that paradise for these martyrs does double duty as hell for virgins?"
"Huh.... Excellent point."
"Think about it. Getting rounded up with 71 other girls and being assigned to some scrubby asshole. Talk about adding insult to injury."
"As if dying a virgin wasn't bad enough."
"So, imagine the day they figure all this out and make the big announcement. At some point, the virgins must figure out what's going to happen to them if they die before doing the deed."
"Yeah. Bad day."
"So, if you're one of them. What are you thinking?"
"I'm thinking that being a virgin is serious liability."
"And?"
"Well, I'm thinking I need to jump on anything that moves."
"Now you're seeing my logic."
"Wow. Millions of them."
"Yep. Millions."
"Actually, you'd be doing them a great service. You'd be saving them from hell."
"Beautiful, I know."
(Contemplating awhile.)
"Dude, why are you shaking your head? You're a genius."
"In all seriousness, the world is a fucked up place."
"I'll drink to that."
"Maybe. Yeah. Kind of like a suicide bomber retirement plan, I guess."
"I wish I lived over there when they announced that. When they made the big announcement."
"Why?"
"Think about it! 72 virgins!"
"That's a lot of virgins."
"You can say that again."
"Wouldn't it be enough to have, say, three?"
"That's not the point. Where do you think they get all those virgins? 72 and 72 and 72. Adds up pretty fast."
"Definitely."
"Does anybody ever consider, though, that paradise for these martyrs does double duty as hell for virgins?"
"Huh.... Excellent point."
"Think about it. Getting rounded up with 71 other girls and being assigned to some scrubby asshole. Talk about adding insult to injury."
"As if dying a virgin wasn't bad enough."
"So, imagine the day they figure all this out and make the big announcement. At some point, the virgins must figure out what's going to happen to them if they die before doing the deed."
"Yeah. Bad day."
"So, if you're one of them. What are you thinking?"
"I'm thinking that being a virgin is serious liability."
"And?"
"Well, I'm thinking I need to jump on anything that moves."
"Now you're seeing my logic."
"Wow. Millions of them."
"Yep. Millions."
"Actually, you'd be doing them a great service. You'd be saving them from hell."
"Beautiful, I know."
(Contemplating awhile.)
"Dude, why are you shaking your head? You're a genius."
"In all seriousness, the world is a fucked up place."
"I'll drink to that."
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