Saturday 21 April 2012

Friday night/Saturday morning

1. Yes, I often eat five hundred grams of dates in a day, but very rarely more than that. One day I did eat six hundred and I must confess to feeling rather slovenly for several hours afterwards. Today, also, I ate slightly more than that, although it was spread out over the course of the afternoon.

2. I left facebook around nine months ago. I completely obliterated my account – deleted all posts, comments, photographs, and friends – and then deactivated it. Been very happy ever since and not missed it one bit. However, for a couple of uni things – squash notices, some writing stuff – an account became necessary; I remembered one I still had that used one of my secret email addresses. No friends or nothin’ on it – not even my real name – it just exists. Anyways, after realising that I would need it active for at least a few weeks I decided to add my current email address, just to see who might find me. And what happened? I started getting friend requests from people I was pretty sure didn’t give a jot about being my friend; this was confirmed when I wrote back to them, explained that I was no longer using facebook, gave them my email address and said, but we can keep in touch that way, and all they did was say, ok, have a good life. They didn’t want me, they just wanted their numbers up. As I once did too. A couple of other people, seeing me reappear in their ‘people you might know’ thing went one step further and said, ‘how! hey come you defriended me in the first place? that isn’t very nice,’ and I had to explain to them that I hadn’t defriended them, that I’d quit and was briefly back. Conclusion from this: my God, they hadn’t even noticed my absence from their virtual life for the best part of a year – but they sure noticed it when they thought I’d booted them out of my friend collection. Anyway, not wanting them to feel neglected and hurt I explained again and, same thing, they just said, ok.

3. I should go to bed now. After a few good weeks Nicky's come home with a black cloud over her head and I think I can hear her snivelling. Hot damn! Is it because I wasn’t here during the sixty-minute window between her getting home from work and her dining with a friend? Like I’m supposed to be at her beck and call. Women! Tsk! (Actually, it’s most likely something to do with the dream she had this morning in which we broke up. Coupled with my dream of a few days back I gotta wonder, something in the air again? We’ll see…)

Written by Rory Miller at 22.51 on a Friday night in April

4. When I woke up I was thinking, “who the hell is Sally Slater?” The last three mornings she’s been in my dreams – no actual appearance or face or activities, just an awareness of the name and the knowing that it means something significant. I thought she was maybe off Eastenders; but on googling her I see she’s actually a teenager from Yorkshire who was in the news back in 2000 because her heart had been destroyed by some mysterious disease and her family were desperately trying to find a donor. She was in a hospital in Newcastle and reports said she was basically hours from death. Strange thing is, I now recall that event as Shawn and I were driving past Newcastle on our way to Scotland and we both felt a massive pull to go and see her. Of course, we were well into the healing thing at the time. So we went, and waited a while, and the message came back that her parents weren’t interested. I think we did some prayers in the waiting room and then left. In any case, a heart came through and she got better and now she’s alive and well. Good good – but why on Earth is she popping up in my dreams?

5. Regarding 3. The thing is, Nicky sometimes gets upset when I’m not home for when she gets home. Takes it as me not wanting to spend time with her, or that we don’t spend enough time together. Man, that bugs me! Puts all this pressure on me like I have to be here at a certain time whether I want to be or not. And – well, fact is that there are a lot of hours in the day and usually she’s out for ten of them working and then quite often a couple of the rest doing yoga or seeing a friend. Last night was a case in point: she had dinner arranged and so was out for a while. Fairy snuff: it’s good to go out and see your friends. But how come I get punished for the time I’m out while she’s free to come and go? And how come the time we get together is then ruined by her moaning and sulking about, ‘it would have been nice to spend some time together’? Women!

What I’ve decided is she’s being selfish. She’s chosen to spend most of her week in work and that’s of no benefit to me or our relationship. It’s not to support us or to add anything to our lives materially. It’s not really of any benefit to her either, since it makes her quite unhappy, except in a purely financial way. She’s in it for the money, and she wants the money so she can go travelling at some point this year, and she’s mostly thinking about going travelling alone. Ten hours out of each weekday, doing something she dislikes purely for the money, and yet I get doghoused ‘cos I’m not here at 6pm to spend an hour together before she goes out again.

NB: I’m not moaning. I’m not particularly bothered by this. It’s her black cloud and I got enough in my life to keep me in the sunnies. I just think it’s interesting, that’s all, and worthy of record.

6. Regarding the above: on Thursday I went over to Harry and Simon’s after football, which would have been about 10.30pm. Nicky was at yoga 6-7.30 and I left the house before she got back from that. I guess I got in a little before 1, so we went something like 19 hours without seeing each other, and all that seeing entailed was really just sleepy bed time and maybe a peck and a cuddle. Perhaps that was the problem too. But so what? Where’s the rule that people have to see each other every day? Who cares? Jesus: put a little space in your togethernesses, then maybe you’ll have something to talk about when you get together instead of just watching movies.

7. I’ve been rocking this week: I’ve organised a squash tournament and got 12 students fighting it out for 4 places to play a Varsity match against the Met. How to pick those 4? Easy: 4 groups of 3; then a winners’ group and a second-placer’s group; then the top three winners become the top three seeds; then the fourth-placed winner plays the first-placed second-placer and they’re the number four seed. That’s the way to make sure the best four players emerge. Also, it gives everyone plenty of games. Also, it’s awesome! I could really get into this sports-organising malarkey.

8. In fact, sports is by far and away my number one thing at uni. All the squash and football I’m playing and trying to get people together for. The refereeing, which has travelled light years over the past six months, and which I never dreamed of before I got here. Getting involved in the Intramural program, meetings with the Sports Development team and putting forward ideas and seeing them come into reality. And the coaching thing too, which I’ll begin in May. I don’t know why I never thought it in my younger years but earning my crust from sports would just be awesome. Coaching, reffing, or even admin, such as working here at the uni – how cool would that be? Sports ain’t dull – it’s alive.

9. Conversely, my studies are dull and pretty much dead. Two projects to do to complete my MA and I couldn’t give a monkeys: drafts were supposed to be handed in this Monday just gone and my pulse hasn’t even twitched. I suppose it’ll happen but it really just feels like ticking boxes. Writing, I no longer care about, dream of, or aspire to. Blogging is fun and easy. The rest of it? Slaving over books that don’t say anything new? Working your ass off for some crumbs from the table of TV and dream one day of a job on Eastenders, the crown of the pyramid? In comparison with sports, it’s all so dry and stupid: I picked up a book on critical literary theory, hoping it might spark something for a proposed essay, but the only thing I got from it – from whichever page I turned to – was, man, these people should really get a life. Strings of words appearing intelligent but actually just gobbledygook. It’s sad to live in a world where this kind of thing is trumpeted.

10. The other thing I’ve done in the past week or so was complete once again Retrospec’s amazing version of Head Over Heels. Yay! Such a good game. I still recall happy and challenging hours from childhood plugging away at it on my old 464. Much better at it now though. Adulthood’s the time for playing computer games, I reckon: kids just ain’t got the coordination or the smarts. :-)

Thursday 19 April 2012

DB Dream

Very strong dream this morning: I’d won dinner with Derren Brown and he and Nicky and I were together conversing this and that. He was usual Derren Brown superior atheist sceptic and I was usual Rory biting tongue no point getting into pointless arguments yet still believing believer. Later, we were elsewhere and I wanted to try and levitate, to prove, I guess, my point experientially. I did it different this time: not the chair position lift off but, instead, lying on my back, eyes closed, and trying to bump off the ground. I’d bump and bump and then when I was exhausted I’d let go and go into a kind of trance and feel myself floating, lifting maybe two or three feet high, drifting around the room, eyes still closed for fear of breaking the spell. When I was done I looked at Derren – but he apparently hadn’t been watching; that was frustrating. So I tried again, but the juice was gone. I implored Nicky to tell him what she’d seen but she was tongue-tied and stumbled. She did say she saw me floating “waist high” but he kind of gave her a look and she got doubtful and he just laughed the whole thing off; obviously she hadn’t seen anything.
But that’s not what the strong bit was: the strong bit was later, when we were walking, and I was doing my best not to get into discussions of spiritual matters and just get to know the guy. I wanted more dinners, more hangings out. We were in some streets by some funky shops; Derren said to Nicky, “go in there, you’ll find the perfect shoes,” and in she went. Then he turned to me, grabbed me by the shoulders, and said real meaningful that I should leave her, that some kind of crisis point was coming up – the moment of choice, what he called “the [something] of [somethings]” (it was such a good phrase, but all I can think it was was “the severity of severities” or “the scarcity of scarcities” – though neither of those make any sense; hopefully it’ll come back). Then he told me to seek out my true soulmate – and I immediately thought of Grace. It was a powerful message. Prophetic. And seemed to be coming through him with some obvious reluctance. He said he’d see me after, hinting that it would be in the role of teacher, but that all this would have to come to pass first. I wanted to ask him “Colorado?” but he wouldn’t let me. Then he skipped off down some stairs, almost leaping or floating down the entire flight. “Spring-heeled Jack,” I called after him teasingly, which I now seem to remember is some kind of name for the devil – great; the last time I had a dream giving me ‘soulmate messages’ it was through some kind of imp I wasn’t sure was good or bad.

I couldn’t much look at Nicky for a time after I woke up. And this is after I’ve been trying to forget my Coloradan dream girl. But my heart was back set on the old sneakeroo and a weird old jaunt down there. The moment of crisis, I figured, was Nicky getting – or not getting – pregnant. This is what occurred to me at the moment in the dream, and, waking, I see no reason to change that. Certainly, I want to be careful – which I, and we, are generally not.
Strangely enough, things have been good with Nicky of late. She’s let go of whatever demands – however subtle – she’d been placing on me and seems to be coming over all lovey-dovey and accepting. For my part, it amazes me how well she tolerates my mad head – it must be bizarre to live with me, the way I come bouncing in and telling crazy stories and expounding my strange theories about how love and sex and romance is all made-up. But she handles it so well. She just looks in and smiles and she really is Dean Moriarty’s Inez. Problem being there that Dean left Inez pretty prompt sharp, much preferring the hard-times of Camille.
Still, what I’m trying to say is, she’s good. She fulfils that thing that I’ve always thought I wanted in a woman – no hassles – and amazes me no end with how well she puts up with me, laughing at my farts, indulging my whims, saying, “no problem” as I head out the door for yet another game of football after she’s been at work all day and all I’ve been doing is lazing around writing or playing squash or simply lazing. A good woman indeed. But…does she rock my world? Am I “in love”? And are those things even necessary? Those are the big questions.

A dream: it was just a dream. But a telling dream at that. Well, I have all kinds of mad dreams and lots of them are strong, but generally I figure they don’t mean anything. Some, however, do, and I’ve come to reap great benefits by paying attention to them. So what of this one? Messages on changes to be made? Or does it merely appear significant because its contents tie in with my fantasy life, telling of my subconscious wants rather than any sense of outside/higher instruction? Like crazy Eve always dreaming of me and having her feelings of my presence and thinking it means I’m thinking of her when it’s only ever her. Damn; I don’t know; I guess we’ll see. Outside/higher instructions probably appear more than once, and rage persistent, insistent, and ultimately get their way. The feeling is overpowering, never a mere wondering and hoping, something you can’t live without. Like Sophie. Like Jonah and his whale. Like the dreams that kept me in Mexico the first time.
We shall see. Just thought I’d type it here though. Maybe it never appears again and it’s just the thrashing of the tail of the old desires and fantasies: the dying dragon that’s been whispering various things to me these past few months. Sometimes he breaths fire and I get hot and then watch as it dissipates. And sometimes he roars his roar and I think, my God, he’s real, and try and grab hold of him, forget he’s nothing but fading embers in the fire of past subconscious dreams and then I make him real and bring him back to life.
It’s about choosing what to breathe life into – but sometimes the choices make themselves.
Like I say: we shall see.

Saturday 14 April 2012

Ellie

I think I spent pretty much the entire next day lying on the couch, watching golf and feeling sick. My head was in a right fucking state. Felt like someone had puked in my brain – and not good puke either. Thank God for the fucking golf – eight hours straight and a bottle of Lucozade. It was all I could keep down.
Still, there was something wonderful about this hangover: no thoughts. My brain was goo. Nothing was working. How refreshing from the normal state of affairs, all those ideas and imperatives to get up and do something. Almost worth the pain. Rendered incapable, I was in peace.
Except for mum, of course, coming in and tutting and trying to shame me off the sofa. Calling me a lazy bum. A sod. Shaking her head at me and saying she was blowed if she was gonna make me owt to eat.
God, that woman could tut. But even her barrage of clucks couldn’t reach me in my fog of wankered befuddlement. Everything floated on by. If only I didn’t feel so sick I’d’ve been in heaven.
“Mek us a cuppa tea mum,” I said, “I don’t feel well.” I smiled behind my tired eyes. I knew there wasn’t a chance in hell.
“And who’s fault is that?” she said. “You can mek it yerself if you want one.” And out she went, banging the door behind her.
I winced. I wanted to shout something but I didn’t have the strength. Didn’t want to hurt my head. Instead, I watched Greg Norman sink one from the edge of the green. Listened to the cheers. Got interested in Fuzzy Zoeller in the rough. The commentator’s voice so lush and smooth. Lulling me into a sleep…
…where I had the weirdest fuckin’ dream of my life. Me and Andrew Pickin gay lovers together. But then he broke it off, said he had to go to Australia. Everybody was going to Australia. Debbie. Lance Dixon. Nicola Brown. Everybody except me. But I was the only one who knew anything about the place! Hadn’t I been supporting the cricket team for like seven years? Knew Allan Border’s average and everything. And…Andy Pickin! Christ!
What did it mean? Do I want to bum him? Yikes.
I spent the whole next day in my room playing Head Over Heels and then Steve came over and we watched One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest on my Betamax and then went up Kirkby for a walk with Joanne Woodhouse and Kelly Thomas. We knew they normally only went for the sporty guys but we also knew we could make ‘em laugh better than they could and they sure liked a giggle. We got them so giddy Kelly ventured a joke of her own – which had to be the worst joke anyone’s ever told or ever will tell in the history of the world.
“Tommy’s mam med a pie,” she said, “an’ she left it on windersill t’cool darn. But when she kem back t’pie were gone. ‘Tommy,’ she sez, ‘weir’s tha’ pie worra med this mornin’?’ Tommy just winked. ‘Tha noz,’ he sed. ‘Tommy,’ she sed, ‘weir’s tha’ pie?’ But all he would se’ were, ‘tha noz.’ So Tommy’s mam fetched Tommy’s dad and ‘is dad sed, ‘Tommy, weir’s tha’ pie?’ an’ Tommy winked and said, ‘tha noz.’ Tommy’s dad gorriz slipparart an’ sed, ‘Tha’d bess start talkin’ Tommy lad: weir’s tha’ pie?’ ‘Tha’ noz,’ sed Tommy. ‘Grrrr,’ sed Tommy’s dad, an’ he went an’ fetched a bobby. ‘Ask ar Tommy weir tha’ pie’s gone,” sed Tommy’s dad, and the policeman asked and Tommy just kept sayin’ ‘tha noz.’ Anyway, finally they got some more policemen and some soldiers and the prime minister and then they all said, ‘Tommy, weir’s tha’ pie?’ and Tommy winked and sed, ‘tha’ noz. Tha’ noz av etten it!’” – and she laughed and laughed and laughed.
“Tha’ noz I’ve etten it!”
But, still, she were gorgeous – and she din’t tell no more jokes and she laughed loads at me and Steve’s. Kelly Thomas, t’prettiest girl in t’year…
The next day I thought I should go in to school. But then the alarm clock didn’t go off – I didn’t hear it, anyway – maybe didn’t set it – and as I was lying there thinking, well, I’m an hour late already, there’s probably no point, I realised I didn’t ever really want to go to school again. Lying there staring at the ceiling and seeing it all so clearly. Why? What for? All this being told what to do and writing boring stuff about things I didn’t care about, all to get into university to write more boring stuff and then after three years of that finally go free into the world and get a job and why not just do that now? So I played some more Head Over Heels – completed it again: 275 rooms explored, 99% done (God knows where that last 1% is) – and when my mum came home I told her the good news.
“I’m done,” I said, “I can’t be arsed. Can you ring them and tell them I’m not coming in anymore?”
Oh man, she went livid. I thought she was going to explode. Going on and on about how I was supposed to be the first in the entire family to go to university. How I had all these brains and how I was just wasting them. Hadn’t I won that scholarship to QEGS and then dropped out? I could’ve been going to Oxford or Cambridge. But she’d sorted that out for me and all she’d ever asked was that I got my A-Levels and could do whatever I wanted after that. But now only halfway through I was telling her I wanted to drop out of that too. And to do what? Couldn’t I just finish them off? Well she was blowed if she was going to support me in just lazing around the house playing computer games and watching TV. I was gonna start paying my way.
“You’re going out there to find a job,” she said, “and by the end of this month you’re going to be paying your share of the bills. If you don’t want to go to school – if you want to be an adult – you can start living like one. Starting now. I can’t afford to keep you.”
I just stood there thinking, yeah, whatever.
“And if you don’t want to pay your share, you can give me your key and go and find somewhere else to live. Your bloody dad can support you. I’ve had enough.”
“Is that all?” I said.
“Go on,” she said, “off you go. Get out of my sight.”
I went upstairs. I sat on my bed. I wondered what to do. Play Sonic? Or look for that missing one percent on Head Over Heels.
I looked at my school books and smiled. Maths, Physics, Phillip bloody Larkin were going bye bye. All those years of sitting behind desks were over. Hadn’t taught me anything anyway.
Out the window was the world, and the world was where it was at. That’s where I wanted to be.
The world. The…some faint remembrance of something, of having been here before. Déjà vu – I always got that. I told my mum once that I got it in a class and knew the answer to a question I didn’t know the answer to ‘cos I’d seen it in déjà vu or maybe in a dream. I told her that when I was real young – maybe when I was in my lying and making stuff up phase – and she’d repeated it back to me over the years, told it like it was a story she was witness to – but I know she wasn’t in the classroom with me. Now I didn’t know whether it happened or not. My lies coming back to me as facts. Unless it had happened. In any case, déjà vu hit me now, lying on my bed waiting for Head Over Heels to load up, and I started to get this weird feeling…like the whole ceiling was rippling and vibrating and I could see these little red dots on the peaks of the artex mountains and my breath was going real fast and I felt a bit sick. But it was like I’d lived it before. And there was something I needed to realise or remember or do…
What was déjà vu anyway? I wondered. And then I felt like my brain came up with an answer and it was saying, that’s the life you’ve lived before, and you’re living it again and you need to pay attention when you experience déjà vu ‘cos that’s the moment of choice.
What the fuck? This was weird. I wanted to get up except I couldn’t. My body felt heavy and pinned to the bed. Head Over Heels was not even halfway through its title screen. The ceiling shimmered and became veiled in a red fog. I blinked my eyes and it cleared but then came back immediately. I got scared and closed them instead. But it was like some light show going on inside my head, colours popping and flashing everywhere. I tried to open my eyes then but they felt stuck. I wanted to call out for mum – shout, “mum! come quick!” – but I couldn’t even open my mouth. Just stuck to the bed, comatosed, vegetabling, I was…
Dying! That’s what. And with superhuman strength I pulled myself up and shouted out and managed to roll onto the floor where I lay heaving my chest and pretty much back to normal.
I sat up. Looked around. Stared at my room. The black painted walls. The old bookcase. Alan Dean Foster’s ‘The Thing’ and ‘Alien’ and the entire series of ‘Nightmare on Elm Street’ novels. My Zoids. My Jimi Hendrix records. Tapes and tapes and my hi-fi and speakers and guitar. Everything seemed like it was staring back at me, from as close as the hand that I held up to my face. And my hand was huge. And all those little tiny lines, the points of intersection, the hairs and the feel of the skin as I touched my hands together, turning them over in front of me. The lines in my palms, formed when I was a foetus, this one apparently saying that I would live to seventy and have three children. This one saying I was creative. But mainly the pattern of stretched diamonds just above the meat of my thumb, dots connected by lines, and the dots glowing red, and how’d those lines get there anyway, so perfect and delicate and beautiful…
I don’t know how long I was staring at my hand. I was snapped out of it by a knock at the door.
“What?” I said.
“It’s me.” It was Ellie, my girlfriend. I tried to pull my eyes away from my hand. Tried to look around the room again and pull myself up off the floor.
“Can I come in?” she said.
“Huh?”
The door creaked open.
She looked down at me and stared.
“What are you doing?” she said.
“Come here,” I said, “look at my hand.”
She sat on the edge of the bed and looked at me, then looked at my hand.
“Don’t spook me,” she said, “what’ve you got on your hand?”
“Nothin’,” I said, “just look here. Look at the tiny little dots and the lines between them. Have you ever noticed them? Have you got them? Oh. You have. But just look.”
“Are you on drugs?” she said.
“No,” I said, “course not. Just look.” I looked at my hand again. Held it out for her to see. Looked at the dots on the meat of her own thumb.
“Your mum says you’ve dropped out of school. You haven’t, have you?”
I sighed. I put my hand away. Got up on the bed and stretched out and looked at the ceiling.
“Come here,” I said, “come lie with me on your back and look up. Tell me what you see.”
She kicked off her shoes and lay next to me, put her head on my arm.
“What can you see?”
“Nothing,” she said, “what can you see?”
For some stupid reason I wanted to say, ‘it’s the entire universe’ but I didn’t even know what that meant. Instead I told her I could see red dots on all the little artex peaks, that the whole thing looked like it was a foot away, not all the way up there. Everything was big. And then I told her about not being able to move and the lights in my eyes and the voices.
“You were hearing voices?”
“Yeah,” I said, “it was…I got real scared. I felt like the top of my head came off. And I was there in the corner of my room and I was looking back and seeing myself lying on the bed. I didn’t know what to do. Is it safe? Is the top of my head still on? I could see myself, I swear, there were two of me. I’m so glad you’re here.”
“I don’t know what you’re – ”
“Sh,” I said, “just tell me it’s safe. Is it safe? Is it safe? Is the top of my head still on?”
“It’s on,” she said, and patted my head as if to prove the point. I knew I was acting but I was getting into it so much it started to feel real. I was good at pretending to be scared, to be mad, and I could see she was buying into it. The more she bought it, the more I wanted to do it. And the more scared I acted, the more concerned she got.
“Is it safe?” I said, “that’s all I want to know. I could see myself – there were two of me – and I didn’t know which one I was. I ran away and then I realised I was the other one and that the other one was actually running away from me. Who am I? Who am I? I feel like when I was eleven and I lay right here in my old bed with a little mirror staring at my eyes and a Meccano screwdriver pressed against my chest and I didn’t know what I was. I thought if I just pushed it into me – right into my heart – what would I be then? Where would I go? That’s not normal thoughts for an eleven-year-old is it? Did you think things like that? What’s wrong with me? Is it safe? Don’t leave me.”
Poor confused girl. She didn’t have a clue. Her boyfriend was talking like a maniac. She just wanted someone to watch telly with.
I pulled her close. I kissed her cheek.
“Everything’s fine,” I said, “it was just a passing thing.”
I jumped up from the bed and put a tape cassette in. Hendrix at Woodstock, the entire set. I flicked off the computer and we got right down to it. Got naked on the bed. Fucked there. Fucked in my chair. Fucked on the floor. Three whole sides of the C90 going in and out of her. Delicious sex. My personal best.
When it was over I said, “all that stuff from earlier, I was just messing about. For the most part.”
I put the telly on and we watched some Fast Show. The night we lost our virginity it was so fuckin’ boring I turned my head halfway through and started watching Russ Abbott – and I hated Russ Abbott, that was how bad it was. But things had got much better since then. We’d loosened up a bit. Three sides! That’s – like – more than two hours. Fuck me!

Friday 13 April 2012

The Plough

I’m sitting in a pub. I’m back in the world. Phew. Is this…? It is: it’s The Plough, circa 1984; I recognise the pinball machine. The smell of fish fingers and chips wafts in. Am I…?
No; I’m a man. I’m in a man’s body. My man’s body. The residual image I have of myself, unable to recall any other, finding it the most convenient and pleasant. The body is the physical representation of the mind. The mind is…
Oh, here we go again.
“Still thinking weird?” It’s Chamone.
“Damn straight,” I say, “when will this thing wear off? S’been…what? An eternity? Freak sake man, I was just in space.”
“How was it?”
“Cooler than anything you could ever imagine. I was like…the centre of the entire universe. Got to see that everything was me – was in me – we were all the same thing. Like how The Big Bang happened. And why life exists.”
“You’ll forget that,” he says, “in time. Best to keep reminding yourself. Even when all the evidence says otherwise. Especially when all the evidence says otherwise. That’s the challenge. Part of the equation.”
“The dichotomy. Right. No knowledge without ignorance, huh?” I take a sip. “Ug,” I say, “who put that beer there? Why am I drinking it? Nasty stuff: I don’t even like the smell.”
“You will,” he says. “Look.”
He points over to the door on the other side of the bar, just by the pinball machine. In walks…my mum! She’s young. Quite fit.
I laugh. I go to stand up and say, “hey mum!” but Chamone puts his arm on my elbow and pulls me down.
“Not a good idea,” he says, “have a think. Probably you’d freak her out. She’s, what, twenty-six? And you’re thirty-six and you want to tell her you’re her son and she’s your mum. Just watch. I’m sorry, but it’s not for interacting.”
“This isn’t real,” I say, trying again to rise in my seat.
“Oh, it’s real all right. Just because it’s weird doesn’t mean it’s not real – something else you’d do well to remember.”
“You’re kidding?” I say, settling in my chair. I push the beer away from me, spilling a bit on my fingers. I wipe my hand on my trouser leg. Sniff my fingers and assure myself they stink.
“Holy shit!” I say, “it’s me!”
In through the door walks me – a little fuckin’ kid. What the fuck? The dude’s so tiny: I don’t remember being that small. How old? Like eight or something. This is mental. Tugging at mummy’s handbag. Asking for 10p. Mummy too busy talking at the bar, ordering some lunch. Except…
“Shit, she’s seen us,” says Chamone, “we’d better go.”
Mummy’s clocked her eyes on me. My ‘holy shit’ was a bit too loud in an empty room in a lunchtime pub. Some weird expression she’s giving me. Continuing to stare. Looking back at the bar – Johnny Lynam’s mum! – and then back at me.
Do I look like my biodad? Do I look like her son, only four times older and bearded and a man? No one would ever think such a thing.
She shrugs me off – the younger me – and takes a few steps towards Chamone and I.
But Chamone’s already rushing us down the steps and into the toilets and I think wiser of glancing back.
“I don’t get it,” I say, “how come all the other stuff that’s been going on lately but this we’ve got to run away from? I’ve been in space, man. I’ve had sex with myself. I’ve had multiple conversations with imaginary people from my long distant past. Been strapped to a – ”
“That’s the thing,” he says, “all that was imaginary. In your head.”
“Even you?”
“But this is real now. I knew this was a bad idea, bringing you here…”
“Where are we?”
“Nineteen-eighty-four.”
“What, for real?”
“For real.” He looks down solemnly and shuffles his feet.
“Hey man,” I say, “you’re wearing my shoes.”
I look closer and they are indeed my shoes. And then I notice the shoes I’m wearing aren’t mine – and yet they look vaguely familiar…
“I’ve got to go,” he says.
I look back up to his face. His face is now my face.
“What the…?”
“Listen, I’ll take this back, to the present, and you come when you’re done here. Go look in the mirror.”
I look around me. There’s a mirror over the sink, by the soap dispensers. This same old Plough toilet I peed in when I was eight, when I was…
“Eighteen. No, no. What the fuck? I don’t want to be eighteen again. Give it me back. I can’t go through this again.”
I rush over to Chamone and grab my shoulders.
“Are you kidding me? You want me to live all this again?”
“Nothing like that,” he says, brushing my arms off him, taking my shoulders in his hands. My hands. My proper manly hands and now I’m all thin and scrawny and not even shaving anymore. The clothes I wear don’t fit. I got them off the market. Such a poor cut of jeans! Such a shitty design of a t-shirt. I’ve gone from being the centre of the universe to being a stupid gawky teenager. So often we long for our youth – but now I’ve got it, I know how misplaced that longing is.
“Come on,” he says, “we’ve got time: I’ll buy you a drink.”
“I don’t drink,” I say.
“You do now.”

Out the door, I glance around. I feel almost naked in this flimsy old body of mine. How did I never notice it at the time? It feels like it could blow away in the wind.
“Mummy’s gone,” I say. The pub’s gone too – or rather, it’s changed. No more pinball machine. No more fish fingers and chips. Everything a little brighter and shinier than it was ten minutes ago.
We sit down.
“Look at that,” I say, “ashtrays. Fag ends. It feels like a lifetime ago. My dad was shit at stubbing out his cigs – all those times I’d grind it out with a glass, the trail of smoke too much for my eyes, him staring at me like I was some sort of weirdo. Man, I used to sit in pubs not three feet from someone who smoked and not think twice about it! And now I don’t even want to be within fifty feet when we’re in a park. What happened? How did I change? How did I never notice?”
“Bodily awareness,” Chamone says, once more himself, “you had no sense of what your body was doing back then, what was good or bad for it, the effects that substances and even words and thoughts were having on it. Here,” he says, “have a drink. You’ll see what I mean.”
“Ah, that’s good, I say. Tasty.” I lick my lips. Take another sip. Take a bigger one. “Real good.”
“But is it?” he says – and suddenly I’ve got my future awareness back, and I feel this weird fermented taste in my mouth and a woozy feeling in my head. My belly feels sick. Poison in my veins. I want it out of me.
“Don’t like this,” I say.
“It’s okay,” he says, “you can have whatever you want. Want awareness or not?”
“Not right now. Feel sick. Better without it sometimes. Just want to enjoy.”
“Then enjoy you shall” – and with that, I feel instantly better, buzzed up and excited.
“There’s a glow in my cheeks,” I say. “I like it! Woo!”
And I drain my pint.

“So what I want you to do,” says Chamone, “is just have a night out with your old friends, see how it feels, and when you wake up you’ll be back in twenty-twelve and back in your normal, old body. Unless, of course, you want to stay here and live the whole thing all over again.”
He smiles at me, like he knows that’s the last thing I want.
“Might,” I say, slurring a little, and taking another sip, “I’m kinda getting’ a likin’ for it.”
I burp loudly. Chamone frowns. Checks his watch.
“Well that’s up to you. Listen, I’ve got to go soon – ”
“Say, where is my old body anyway?”
“Got it right here, old bean, under my hat.”
“What hat?”
“Fohat’s hat. Fohat digs holes in space, remember?”
“What?”
“What what?”
“What what what?”
I laugh. My eyes feel wobbly. I take another sip.
“I can’t remember what I was just saying,” I say, “something about a hat.”
“That’s right,” says Chamone, “you were saying you’ve never had a hat. And I was saying I’ve got to go – but before I do, I need to check in with you, find out what you think you’ve learned. You know, over the past few days. Just blurt it out.”
“Blurt it out? Okay, me old mucker, you asked for it. Remember November the fifth of November, gunpowder treason and plot? Remember December the fifth of December…”
I trail off. My head rolls on my neck and my body rolls in my chair.
“Whee,” I say, and flop my head onto my shoulder and try to my best to stare at Chamone, who keeps moving.
“Honestly, man, it’s important. Here,” he says, opening up his wallet, there’s twenty quid in it for you.”
Right. Twenty quid. That’s a whole lot of fun.
“Twenty-five,” I say.
“Twenty-five,” he says. “Fine.”
He lays it on the table. I go to pick it up but he bangs his hand down over it, spills some beer on the beermat as he does.
“Hey!” I say, a little too loudly, “watch the beer.”
“Twenty-five,” he says, “and another beer before I leave.”
I lift my pint. Take a gulp. Look at him over the top of my glass with the rim still in my mouth.
“Hey, I remember,” I say, “I useta bite a chunk outta these glasses and chew them up. Spit out the glass in little pieces. Same with a lightbulb. S’nuffin’ – but the girls sure love it. Meks ‘em squeam – scream – squeamish. I’ll sh-sh-show you.”
I grip the glass in my teeth.
“I’m going,” he says, and stands up, taking his money.
“Okay, okay,” I say, dropping my glass to the table and wetting the beermat some more. I suck my fingers. Wipe them on my jeans. “It’s obvious, innit? The universe got created ‘cos it was boring everything being perfect in the absolute and so I – and you – and everybody and everything – the grand old ‘We’ – had this idea of splitting ourselves into like an infinite number of pieces and then we could experience really cool things in relation to really bad things. And the bits of us that got to be really cool took it in turns with the bits that started off being really bad and that way it was fair and everybody got to have a go. It was sort of like a deal, you know – like a kids’ game: okay, no you be Hitler and I’ll be Douglas Bader – Adams – no Bader – and then next time you can be the hero and, okay, I’ll play the baddy. It’s all relative, innit? It’s like, no up without down, all that jive. Except, we forget. We keep forgetting. And so the buddy of ours who’s playing Hitler we think, what a fuckin’ shit, how could he do such a thing? – not realising that he’s the one we’ve got to thank for making all our righteousness and angel-balls possible. But forgetfulness is all part of the game too – otherwise it wouldn’t seem so real. So forgetfulness makes it feel real and makes us able – enables us – to really get into the role. Like a fuckin’ actor or somebody who forgets that he’s an actor and starts to actually believe he’s Batman and maybe he can fly. ‘Cept Batman can’t fly, can he? He just floats, really, swoops down, controlled landings and all that…”
“Henny-way…that’s the main thing, the forgetfulness. And the hopposite of that is remembering, and remembering a really cool experience and that’s why we invented forgetfulness so we could have that and so we could play the whole game of cowboys and Indians in the first place. Ya know, s’all just a game, right? Like, make-believe. Pretend. You pretend to be a human and you pretend to be a rock and then we’ll all have these experiences and do things that we could never have done before when we were all just part of the dot hanging out in infinity not really aware of anything ‘cos we just so happened to be aware of everything all the time and that didn’t leave room for not knowing and discovering and having a good old root around and looking for things. It’s like Einstein transforming himself into a single-celled being and then going through the whole process of billions of years of evolution just to enjoy the ride. It’s the getting there that’s the best bit, right? Not the arriving. Any tinpot gap year traveller’ll tell you that.”
“But that’s just the beginning. You know what’s really cool is when you get into remembering that you forgot all about infinity and time and that’s been the main thing for me these past few days, realising just how big I am and how many of me there are out there. Like billions of us. Like, even more than that. All these mes living every possible possibility and, wow, that’s just such a freeing thing. Like, all my life I used to worry about the choices I was making and, what if I did this thing and then I wouldn’t be able to do that? Or, what if this was the wrong choice and I was being daft and maybe I should be sensible instead? But having met a few of these other mes and realised they’re all doing everything anyway – well then it’s like I don’t need to worry about missing out on anything ‘cos they’re all gonna do it for me anyway and like spies or scouts they’ll be bringing back the information too and giving it me when we get reunited and squished back into one so I couldn’t be missing out, I just gotta wait. And what that really means is that I can do any fuckin’ thing I want – pardon my French – ‘cos there’s no point worrying about it. And so you might as well choose the best and the maddest thing and then let all the other more conservative yous do the boring thing like buy the house or marry the sensible girl ‘cos – well, mostly what I’m into is the learning and the growing and that sort of requires a full-speed rocket ahead ‘cos there’s only so much you can milk from any given situation or location or girl, right, before it starts to become a drag and get all mundane and heavy. Sooner or later they’re gonna make you wanna have babies – but like I’ve already been sayin’, I don’t want no babies – I don’t even wanna stick my dick in any girls – that’s all just weird, pieces of the puzzle dating from missing urges from parents and all I’m doing when I wanna stick my dick in a girl is trying to make up for cuddles I didn’t get as a child, or the time my mummy told me off for nicking someone’s lego and sticking it up my bum, and then of course all the weird thing around you that says – from billboards and movies – sex is the best, aren’t women hot? and you keep trying and trying to see what they’re getting at and wondering why it doesn’t really feel that way, why other things seem loads better – and then you realise that, ah, yes, they were just talking bullshit ‘cos that’s what someone else told them and – wow, I broke free of that spell – rode that fuckin’ donkey right off the edge of the cliff – and now I’m onto other things. Baby shakes rattle, young boy plays with choo-choo – and on and on and on…”
“Point is, don’t worry, be happy. Oh, and don’t give no fuck about dying – that ain’t real neither. The life just goes on, in some other new and better body, or maybe even in this one. Sometimes I died and then I said, no, wait, I didn’t wanna do that just then – and so I went right back and switched a few things around and carried on from where I left off or even some other place. Forgetting the whole thing of course.”
“Forgetting, forgetting – that’s where it’s at. What was I saying? I forgot.”
I laughed. I took a sip. My head wobbled stupidly.
“Flink flink,” I said, “we’re right back in the past and – wait, was it all just a dream? I dreamed I was thirty-six and had done all this stuff and wandered out from South Elmsall and discovered, like, beauty and spirituality and met these people – John somebody? some Indian woman – and…once upon a time I couldn’t ever imagine it, couldn’t bend my mind into some of the things I’m saying – ‘cept I did of course grok my young head on Hendrix and Gong and buy that weird old I Ching in a record shop in Bradford and genuinely think it groovy and – of course, what about the time I took all that acid? Except I’ve been thinking about that and I’ve been thinking, hm, maybe what if drugs like that don’t even really open your mind, what if experimenting with them is just a symptom of a mind that would really like to be opened anyway, and one day gets to be opened irrespective? But then maybe that’s not right. Like sometimes I think the brain isn’t really the source of anything anyway, it’s just the lighting-up board that lights up as things pass through. But then that doesn’t gel with what happens when you remove bits of it, either by accident or on purpose – ‘cept maybe it does: the lightbulb is not the source of electricity, nor even the wires that lead to it. What is? The sun? So what then the brain except the place that translates and transforms these signals coming from elsewhere? And, sure, we can see patterns and waves and things flashing on and off – but that’s just the lightbulb again, not the source. Who has seen the source of thoughts? What man can say, ‘my thoughts are mine and they come from me and I control them’? For what man has ever said, ‘and I can stop them whenever I want’? Or, ‘I can force them in whichever direction I want and they always do my bidding’? Psh! That’s a man I’d like to meet, if that man exists. Or woman.”
“Woman!” I said. “I need a woman!” I looked up from my drink. Daytime drinking. Drinking alone. What a state to be in – and only (watch face comes slowly into focus) twenty to eight.
Where are they? Why always late? Ah, here they come – the crew – my friends – Brent and Ady and Steve and Chris. Kelly and Debbie and…
Ah, the stirring in my loins. Glorious forgetfulness. No rush to reach the end. We’ve seen it anyway. It’s the getting there that’s the best bit – hey, that’s deep! What a realisation! And true, so true. What a wise young head you’ve got, always realising things. Like how cooking’s better when it’s not just you. Like how some people don’t really listen, they’re just waiting for their turn to speak. Like how The Empire Strikes Back is really the best Star Wars film and wouldn’t be awesome if they made some more? Like how women’s titties look better in bikinis and if you’re ever on a topless beach it’s actually quite boring ‘cos there’s no mystery or longing for the big reveal.
The longing. The getting there. And the longer it takes, and the bigger the tease, the better and more juicy it feels. The getting there is just the getting home after a holiday and a long and tiring flight – but wouldn’t you much rather stay there on the beach? Keep the holiday going? Prolong, even, the bit where you’re on the plane and watching the movies and eating the free food and dreaming about the stewardesses?
But, no, you wouldn’t: for even that would become old. Everything must be novelty, always. Everything must be new. Always growing, always stretching into new directions. That’s life. Nothing wrong with any of it – but let’s not try and let the thing get stale. That’s the sign it’s time to move on. Time for a new reality. No shame in letting anything go. And always some new undreamed of reality to move into.
Ah, what thoughts I have in the microsecond before my friends pile into the table and they laugh at me for being pissed already, even though it’s still light out, and the music blares from the jukebox, and, ‘who put this on? it’s shit,’ and the room goes all swirly and mad and the whole outside world is forgotten for this night, at least, the centre of the universe here in this pub, on this pub table, while chaos swirls all around.
Check her out man.
Down in one.
You stupid cunt.
The – harharhar!
Shubbashubbashubba fish wife – yeah! Fillet o’ fish – grand designs – oriental slinky-eyed bushwhacker – Ray-mond Ray-mond – Raymond-o – no, Ray-mong! Harharhar!
Shubbashubba fish slice. And listen as the dalek bands who are my dad sit mouldering with plasticine fingers in Victor Street attic while a yellow plastic bathtub that stinks of piss ‘cos it’s got piss in it and – shubbashubbashubba: why am I lying with my face pressed into grass with drool spooling down and such heavy eyes talking shubbashubba to myself on this cold damp Stockingate school field. Where woman? Where girlfriend? Where night go? How come…strange old dream and images before these…aching eyes, bleurgh.
Gonna…
Cry? Puke? Die?
Gonna have to change a thing or two, ‘cos this don’t feel right. What a night! And not that I remember it but – sure musta been good, judgin’ by how bad I feel right now.
Where my shoe?
How get here?
And where to now?
Ah: the human condition of forever waking up in weird places and needing to think of something to do. But what if I just lie and lie forever? Would I get swept up and moved away? But moved to where? Or would they let me just shit and piss and I suppose eventually starve to death, all because I couldn’t think of anything to do.
“I just couldn’t think of anything,” I’d say, “I got tired of moving and I tried it all and I ran out of ideas. I didn’t mean to lie here until my bones were poking through and my clothes rotted to rags and blew away – honestly, I really did think something would occur to me at some point but…it just never did. Can you blame me? I mean, why are you moving and where to and did you ever stop to think about it bearing in mind the day that this Earth’ll go spinning into the sun and all life past and now and to come will go kaboom and disappear into spacedust? So what of your grandchildren then? But I guess it don’t take the fun out of flying kites; yep, I’ll give you that…”
I sit up in the grass. The world spins violently. My eyes feel like they’re being tortured.
“Huh huh,” I say, spitting out goo and carefully rubbing the top of my head. “Two miles from home. Two miles from my bed. And I haven’t even got my keys. Hope mum’ll let me in.”
I stand. I want to heave. I shiver a little and pull my jacket around me.
“Sausage and bacon and eggs, that’s what I need.”
I walk into the sunrise and wee while I walk, spreading my legs so it misses my shoes.
“Doin’ the wee walk,” I say. “Wee walk, wee walk,” and laugh.

Thursday 12 April 2012

Procreation

“I went to a yoga class once and I had this moment of clarity wherein…we were lying on our backs and because the room was quite small people were really close to each other. There was this girl next to me, pretty fit. I could feel her right there, even though my eyes were closed. Sometimes her hair would brush my face. Wow! Such electricity and tension. And, man, how much I wanted her – thought her beautiful and perfect and alluring – possibly even “the one”. But all without speaking. And all generated in my own fool head. I wondered about her boobs – and when we were upright and open-eyed I caught a glimpse of the top of her cleavage and shuddered. Nothing unusual in all of this, of course – I’ve lived this experience ‘a thousand times, with a million different girls’ (you do the math) but this time I saw so clearly how it’s all bullshit, how it’s actually the tension that’s appealing: the not-knowing of someone so much more preferable, in the desire sense, to the knowing of them – if you know what I mean. I mean, I had a girlfriend at the time – a beautiful lovely woman with the body of an Amazon – great boobs – and every night she slept naked next to me, and every morning she woke up naked and hopped out of bed completely free with all to see – and I had so little interest. There was no appeal in looking at her actual boobs, only the hint of boobs. No spark, even, in holding her naked in my arms – not when compared to the brush of a stranger’s hair in a yoga studio. But what madness is that? Why the tension so desirable? And, of course, if fulfilled, destroyed. Why the bridging of a gap so much more preferable than actually reaching and standing with both feet firmly on the previously longed-for other side?”
Who are you talking to, Rory? There’s no one here…
“There’s so much that’s in me, with regard to women, that they say was in primitive man. Like that: like even when I’ve got a woman at home – got what I thought I wanted – how I always have a wandering eye. Attracted to women I know won’t be good for me. Swayed so easily by a glimpse of some flesh, the curve of a breast. Always wanting another, and another, and another – nothing so satisfying as the new love, a fresh conquest. In fact, that’s when sex feels its best – when it’s someone new. That’s when I put my all into it, pull out all the stops, as Pete Townsend used to say. But after a while…it dies down. Sure, companionship, comfort, getting to know someone – but, sex-wise, it really does appear to be all about spreading the seed as far and wide as possible. And yet I resist, for social pressures, and for the knowledge of the mess it would make. Poor kids growing up daddyless. The way we’ve shaped our world so that we no longer live in communities where everybody helps out and it doesn’t matter so much if one daddy runs away or falls off a cliff or gets eaten by a tiger or killed in battle because there are plenty of other daddies to take his place. And plenty of other mummies, too, to lend a hand. Man, if I had a million dollars I swear I’d have a harem, invite all the women I’ve known and loved over the years, that’ve wanted my babies – and give ‘em to ‘em. That’s what they say in Islam, right? Sure you can have all the wives you want – so long as you can support ‘em. But I’ve always been poor as a rock, and so I’ve never made one. Now I’m not even sure I want to…”
Open your eyes, Rory. See where you are. You’re not where you think you are. There’s no one here…
“Babies are for women, that’s what I say. They ask the wrong question when they ask guys if they want babies – for what man wants a baby? They’re weird-looking useless things. Just images of shitty nappies and keeping you awake. You can’t talk to them. You can’t teach them things. You just have to wait years and years till they’ve grown some sense – and then you can begin. Surely no man wants a baby – cute, though, in small doses they may be – but a child…ah, now that’s a different thing. A child you can discuss things with, share what you’ve learned about life and the world, teach them sports, take pride in them as they grow tall and strong. It’s all bows and arrows and hunting again…”
Open your eyes. Where do you think you are?
“…but what’s to take pride in all that lying around gurgling and shitting and crying. Not that I’m saying I hate them, just…different strokes for different folks. And in this case, babies for women, children for men. Women want babies. Women see them and think they’re cute, enjoy spending time with them. And probably take pride in their gurgles and their smiles and their first steps and first tentative words. I’m sure some New Ager once told me that kids themselves are more into women for the first seven years – into the internal, the nurturing, love and warmth and emotional connection – and then around that time they shift to the guy, to the daddy – to the external, to looking outward, to getting to grips with the world. Something like that. Obviously I’m generalising and don’t really know what I’m saying – leaving myself open to accusations of ignorance and sexism – but…something in it; purely by observing myself I see how little appeal a baby holds for me – how it even feels a disagreeable and unattractive thing – but how much joy I’ve had in my interaction with older children, seeing their passion for life and inquisitiveness, and in sharing things I’ve learned and experienced and in helping bring out of them what they think and feel and want. That’s the good stuff. Not to mention the kicking of balls and the climbing of trees and the running through fields and the – right back to the spearing of deer and the feasting on meat, my son, bringing back the bacon for the tribesfolk, beaming proudly as my own baby boy grows faster and taller and wiser than me, no jealous, petty ego-lion am I, evolution through the generations the natural order of things – and that I shall pass on too…”
Yes. You’re right. But open your eyes. There’s no one here. I want you to see where you are…
“Huh?” I laughed. “Oh yeah, sorry, I’ve just been going on and on and – wow, I guess I went into some sort of zone. Well, your fault – you shouldn’t have given me that weird-ass shot. Like talking tea. Except I don’t even remember the…what happened? I remember the…Sophie…Grace…and then…”
Open your eyes.
I realised then it wasn’t Harry’s voice I was hearing – it wasn’t even a voice at all. Not an outside one. Not one I was hearing with my ears. A whisper, in my brain. A…
I tried to open my eyes.
“I can’t open my eyes!” I screamed. “I’m blind!”
You’re not blind. Open your eyes. Relax.
I breathed. Except, I wasn’t breathing, I was only thinking of breathing. Still, it worked. It helped me to relax.
“I can’t feel my eyes,” I said. “I thought they were there but…they’re not. I can’t feel anything. Where’s my body? Why can’t I see?”
What do you see?
“I see…wait…wait a minute…I see…space! Yes! I see stars and space and – wow…this is unreal. Where is my body? It’s gone. Where am I? Fuck my eyes! I don’t need ‘em: this is wicked!”
I opened…something. I could see, eyes or no eyes. The space grew darker, the stars brighter and more colourful and shining. Brighter and brighter still, the gaps between them lessening. Was I moving towards them? Were they moving towards me? Or was everything closing in?
The centre. I’m at the centre of the universe. I am the centre of the universe.
But then, everyone is. The universe is infinite. The centre is, therefore, everywhere. No wonder it feels as though the whole world revolves around me.
The world. The world is gone. The world is but a distant dream. A fading idea of something that once was. Imagine! All the life and birds and trees and volcanoes and even humanity and me – just a dream. Did I make it up? Was it some story I told myself and got so into I forgot it was make-believe?
But certainly this was real.
Welcome to the real world.
I laughed. I laughed with all my being and the stars pulsated and laughed with me too. Closer and closer they came, faster by the second. Except time not what it once was – time, too, just a figment of my imagination. Difficult to describe but…
Everything wonderful. Everything peaceful and glowing and gorgeous. All my chickens coming home to roost.
Where am I?
Where do you think you are?
In space? The end of time?
The end of time.
This is what I wanted to see.
This is what you wanted to see.
Will it hurt?
It won’t hurt.
The stars, rushing now, racing madly towards me. Me at the middle. The first one hits. Oh, wow! It feels like I just got bigger, like I suddenly know – and am – so much more.
Everything increases. The rate of impact. The speed. The light is immense.
What am I? I want to know.
The answer: a dot.
With a final mad flurry everything – every thing: the stars, the darkness, the space in between the different threads of darkness – has entered into me. And now there is just me. And what I am is a dot.
Am I tiny? Am I huge?
How can I tell, with nothing left to compare myself to?
I feel amazing – but even as I say it, I lose the awareness of what ‘amazing’ is. ‘Amazing’ just a relative term. Good, bad, horrible, sweet – it’s all gone. What is there in this dot? Just…is. Just me.
I get a panic. The memory of all that great and magnificent and strange and wonderful is fading – and I don’t want it to fade. It was all so much fun – and, sure, there was all that bad stuff too, the small and the stupid and the petty and the fucked-up – but now I know, that was what made all the good stuff possible. The dot is amazing – was amazing: amazing has been sucked up too – but…it’s just not the same.
Or maybe that’s the problem: that it is all the same.
I thought I wanted peace – but even peace is only possible next to the existence of that which isn’t peace. I thought I wanted…
But now I know what I want: I want it back. I want to do the whole darn thing all over again.
The panic. The wanting. The fear of not having it and the desire of knowing that it’s exactly what I need. It grows. It bubbles up inside me. I feel it…expanding, struggling, wanting to burst free. This desire – incredible, immense – is overwhelming my being, till it’s all that I am.
I explode. A million, billion pieces of me shooting out into the void. A trillion. A quadrillion.
It’s infinite, really.

Wednesday 11 April 2012

Mrs Monroe

I slept. I don’t know how long I slept for. Days, maybe, perhaps even years. Dreamed a thousand dreams. Dreamed I was Jeremy off Peep Show, and realised I was too was him, some self-inflated loser sitting around in pyjamas living off my good looks and smarts and others. Dreamed I was some pissed-up old man watching war movies and making model tanks and staring forlornly at an unringing phone. Dreamed I was a young girl crying in a bowling alley toilet with an aching vagina and a noseful of happy candy. Dreamed I was an ostrich, an otter, a sackload of sand longing for the beach I’d been robbed from but lacking the legs to get there. Just waiting for the millennia to pass, to be scooped up again by clouds or storks and winded home to one day rejoin my brothers, in the meantime crying as part of a portion of cement on an inner-city patio. A temporary city, a temporary patio; and me the sand waiting and waiting till the trees sprouted through the cracks and the house was crumbled into dust and the oceans swapped places with the land.
The trees, the trees…
I looked up into the sky. Trees towering above me, stretching long and tall into the heavens. Spots of blue in between the branches and the leaves. The sun falling down gently and quietly in warm kisses on my face.
I was in a bed. The sheets felt clean and new. A lovely duvet and lovely pillows. The mattress thick and deep. A baseboard of old oak.
“Question two,” said a voice; a woman’s voice. “Have you ever been in love?”
“Huh?” I said.
“Did you not hear me?”
I turned my head. Mrs Monroe, my old drama teacher. Funnily enough, my first love. I sent her a valentine’s card when I was fourteen. Then she was plain old lovely Miss Weiss. She got married and broke my heart.
“Wow,” I said, “you got old. I used to think you were like…so pretty. But I guess I was just young.”
She looked down at her clipboard. Pushed her glasses up her nose. Pursed her lips.
“I’m sorry,” I said, “I just meant that…this is just a dream, right? We’re not really here?”
“We’re really here Rory. What makes you think it’s just a dream? You’ve been dreaming a long time. Now you’re awake. Welcome to the real world.”
“The real world? Man, why does everyone keep saying that?”
“You can answer the question,” she said, “or am I going to have to use some other method of getting these answers out of you?”
She seemed faintly menacing when she said that. A couple of thorns sprouted momentarily out of her face. Maybe she was planning to stick something up my bum.
“You’re not Mrs Monroe,” I said, “you’re Chamone.”
“Chamone?” she said, “Chamone doesn’t exist. You made him. With your head. But we haven’t got time for this.” She reached down under her chair and pulled out a large syringe. She squirted it so that a clear liquid arced up into the air and splattered across my chest.
“No, wait,” I said, “we don’t need that. What is that? Some kind of truth serum? Honestly, you couldn’t find a truer guy than me.” I smiled at her. The twenty years worth of changes in her appearance had integrated themselves into my brain. No short, sharp shock. Now she was what she was, updated and, you know what, actually quite saucy.
Naughty Miss Weiss. She could stick me with whatever she wanted.
She stuck me.
“Ow,” I said, and then I giggled. “You stuck me, you naughty little monkey. Stuck me in my bottom with your…”
The trees. The sun. The woods. The peace. I recognised it. The woodland in Canterbury where I lived my first year of uni in a caravan. We were under the grand sequoias; the ones that felt so mothering (in a good way).
“What year is this?” I said.
“No year,” she said. “Now, question two, have you ever been in love?”
“Love,” I said. I leaned back into my pillows. I looked up at the sky, the leaves. “Ah,” I said. Everything was beautiful. Everything shimmered, like gay little fairies. Everything wanted to sigh and smile and relax.
“Love,” I said, “what is love? Psychologists make out it’s just some sort of disease, a regression to infantile fantasy, trying to cobble together the emotions we never got from our parents by seeking them in others that don’t even have them. The holes and pain in me the driving force. What I think of as love really just a panicked urge to grab onto some person I’m convinced can heal me. Infatuation. Lust. Fear of being alone. Yes, yes; I have been in love. Been in love a thousand times, with a million different women. Some men too – but, again, just men that represented something I wanted, something I wanted to be. Strong, together, sensible men. Men’s men. The kind of men that hold down jobs and wear shoes and look good in them. Drive their fancy cars. Know how to treat their women. Happy people. People I wanted to be. But is that love? Or just wanting something? What is love? Isn’t love something you give, not get?”
I knotted my forehead, stared at a passing cloud. Maybe the cloud knew the answer? Maybe if the cloud could speak it could give me an inkling.
But it just slowly moved across me and faded into the sky.
“So many theories of love,” I said, “that infantile regression – even the weird urge to put my lips on someone is starting to feel…well, like a weird urge. Kissing? What’s that? Isn’t that something monkeys do? Not even a universal human activity. I mean, humans have always fucked but they haven’t always kissed. Not Eskimos. Not the Finns or Africans or tons of people over the ages. Hard to imagine – yet I’m beginning to see why it wouldn’t occur to them. Cowboys told me horses put their lips on you as a sign of disrespect or ownership. Something like that. Maybe that’s what kissing is. Saying, ‘I own you. I transferred saliva onto your face and now you’re mine.’ It’s always so unappealing when you see it in others. Slurping away. The young. Or those sad stupid desperate guys forever pecking at their subtly pulling away women on trains and on buses. Pecking. Making that stupid noise. Saying, ‘I own you, I’m desperate, I’ll die without you around.’ Pathetic. I’ve lost the belief.”
“U-uh,” Mrs Monroe said – except, when I looked, she wasn’t Mrs Monroe, she was Kelly, the girl I was secretly in love with from like fourteen to sixteen to eighteen to twenty-six.
“Oh Jesus,” I said, “but not you. The time we kissed was awesome.”
She looked at me over the top of her glasses. But Kelly doesn’t wear glasses. They were Mrs Monroe’s glasses. She had Mrs Monroe’s voice too.
Of course, I thought, none of this is real. I’m still in the room. I’ve been injected. But even that was just a dream. Chamone’s bloody nuts!
I’m bloody nuts. The dream Chamone (dressed up as a woman) just told me that Chamone didn’t exist. And here I am in a bed in a forest when ten minutes ago I was…
“But what was awesome about it Rory?” she said.
“The way it felt,” I said. “But more than that, it was…getting to do it, finally, after all those years. All those declarations of love – but I suppose all I really wanted was for you to see me, to want me, to…my God! It really was just ownership! All the things I thought I wanted – a relationship, marriage, your babies – but it was all gone once you gave yourself to me. That’s what it was. I wanted you…to want me. And once I got that, everything changed. I moved on. To the next person. To another piece of…”
“That’s terrible,” I said, shaking my head, not wanting to accept. “Is that all I’m doing?” I furrowed my forehead. Almost wanted to cry. “In Rocky Horror…Columbia tells Frank N. Furter that’s what he does, chews people up and spits them out…and when I look at myself…I see someone I want – someone I think is better than me – and I work so hard to win them. And then I win them. And then I work my way up to their level. And then, after some time, I come to look down on them, realise I don’t want them anymore. It’s like I’m some evil cartoon baddy who feeds off other people’s energy. They’ve got something I don’t have and after spending a certain period of time with them I integrate the thing I want – soak it up, like some energy forcefield sponge – and then when they’re used and empty – or I’ve grown bigger than them, having taken in their essence – I toss them aside. Isn’t that why people seem so amazing at first, and then so dull? Why I inititally look up to them, and then feel like their equal, and then their superior? Why they lose their appeal? And isn’t that just maybe how life works? Taking inspiration, growing, and then moving on? But what room for love in any of this? What does love even mean?”
I shook my head again, utterly confused. Mrs Monroe was back, staring intently at the clipboard, writing like mad.
“Mother Meera says people should get married and have families, that the most important thing is harmony. I dig that. I can’t stand all those constantly bickering couples. Although I do see the value in a good, get-it-all-out-in-the-open argument. And yet…well, science says that married people live longer, suffer less depression, and are generally healthier than the single – but among the least healthy of all are women who describe their marriage as ‘harmonious’. So what does that mean? Actually, the closest couple I know bicker pretty much all the time. I couldn’t stand it for five minutes, but they sure do seem to love each other. Then again, they drink too much and are a little bit mad. I can’t work any of this out.”
“Who have you been in love with?” Mrs Monroe said. Except she was now Sophie. Great.
“You,” I said. I didn’t want to say it but I couldn’t stop myself. Everything was falling out of me, like puke or shit. Like the floodgates had been opened and I was going to shit and puke my entire inner body out onto the forest floor – organs and bones and all.
“I mean, I really fuckin’ wanted you. And you sure made me feel weird. Like a tool. Like a spaz. Like I had to change myself loads to get you. That’s what love feels like, right? And then I got you. And I got you to like me. And I got you to love me too, and made you cry, and made you want to marry me. And then I got bored, and wanted to move on. Felt trapped and henpecked. Wished you would talk less – or at least only say things that were interesting. Not that I only say interesting things. But they’re interesting to me.”
“Then there was that – oh, you’re here.”
Grace. Sure, it was about time she put in an appearance. Thirteen years is a long time to remain a phantom.
She smiled at me.
“Hi,” I said, “you can’t imagine all the things I’ve wanted to say to you all these years. Like…what the fuck? Do you know how mad that was? That I wanted to fuckin’ marry you and I didn’t even know the first thing about you?”
“You were mad,” she said, reaching down to hold my hand, stroking it tenderly. “Totally off your tree. You’d just done three days of White Tantric Yoga. Everybody wants to marry everybody after that. You were so wide open…man, you were a danger to yourself. I was just the angel dressed in a girl’s body who came to screw you up and try and get you back to Earth. Nothing like a bit of heartache and tears for reminding someone they’re still human, not some disembodied bucket floating high above the ocean of emotional experience.”
“But I am a bucket!” I whimpered. “I do float above it all just dipping in when I feel like it. Sorrow and pain and all that stuff are just coats I try on from time to time, for a laugh – but the floating bucket remains. That’s the real me. The ocean doesn’t touch me up there. But I can touch it. It’s just pretend. Even when I get right down into it and get a real good bucketful – it’s just pretend: just me pretending that I forgot I’m a floating bucket. Sometimes it’s fun.”
“But you’re not a bucket, are you Rory? You don’t float, you just like to think you do. It’s more a case of emotional disassociation and coldness than true detachment and transcendence. Aloofness, not awareness. Where compassion? Where empathy?”
“They’re not my bag. It doesn’t work like that for me. I’ve gone beyond those things.”
“Really?” she said, still stroking my hand. She was so tender and gentle – but so to the point. Like a calmly reassuring doctor as he cuts out my liver to sell to the Turks.
“Yeah, maybe…”
“You don’t sound so sure.”
“I’m not sure of anything. How can I be? Who is? None of this makes any sense.”
I bashed my head into the pillows and shut my eyes.
“Good,” he said, “there’s some wisdom in there. But…”
He said? He who?
I turned to look. It was Harry back.
“I won’t be long,” he said, “I’m just your subconscious.”
“Right,” I said, “I don’t mind. Everything’s fine. You win. Whatever you want, I’ll do. I have no love, no compassion, no understanding. I only thought I did. I really am just some loser, just – ”
“Now there’s no need to be so hard on yourself.”
“You’re right,” I said, “I’m awesome. And the rest of the world are just a bunch of lunatic shitters. Nobody knows anything – but at least I know a bit more than them. And I’m gorgeous. And I’m good at squash. And I can write insane monstrous piles of shit that no one can understand and nobody likes but at least it’s better than the monstrous piles of shit that they do like. Anybody can write that. And it’s only because they can’t understand it that they don’t like it. Over their goddamn heads. You’re right. I am brilliant.”
“Well I didn’t say that,” said Harry.
“No, you didn’t,” I said. “Jesus, Harry,” I said, “why am I such a loon?”
“Everyone is,” he said, “just that you’re the one who knows it.”
“Really?” I said, “is that true?”
“Probably not,” he said, “but it’s what you want to be true, right?”
“Fuck,” I said, “this is just getting worse all the time.”

Tuesday 10 April 2012

Distraction

The Easter weekend. Take a break from your narrative of the experience in the room, though plenty more to tell. Return to the real world of your life in this other room in Leeds.
Nicky was away for the weekend, on a Vipassana retreat. Good for her. I miss her when she’s not around. When she is, I look forward to her going. It rained lots and I sat inside and couldn’t think of anything to do. So little appeals. Even if it wasn’t raining, same rules apply. I looked at my mind. What I saw was fear.
Everything I think of doing is distraction. Reading, watching something, eating. It’s all an attempt to get away from what lurks on the other side of conscious thought. What lurks there, I believe, is good – but I’m afraid to go into it. I know the smart thing would be to sit and meditate, but I can’t. I don’t want to see it. I don’t want to go into it.
But what turmoil when you know every single thing you think to do is just an escape. And all the time the power those things hold over me continues to die…
The world has no appeal. The material world. The things other people do. Shopping. Going out for meals. Watching TV. I know it’s all distraction and serves me not, and so I avoid it. But then where do I dwell? For I avoid the spiritual world too. I’m stuck here in limbo.
Thank God for sport. I wonder how long that’ll continue to sustain me?
Treading water. Not knowing that I’m actually just slowly drowning. And that drowning would be good. But perhaps this is the only way – to exhaust oneself, use up every last bit of the fight – to taste every last avenue of distraction – before finally giving in, well and truly surrendered. No forced surrender but actual surrender, when there is no other choice.
The other thing I’m afraid of is love. Nicky returns all full of purity, and in her absence I have dwelled on the ways I have treated her more poorly than she deserves, and I feel bad. But I cannot let her love me – and maybe because of her Vipassana energy, I cannot hide it or deny it anymore. Her touch reveals my shield, my enforced distance. I know I’m doing it – almost consciously doing it – but I don’t know how to let it drop. Love is scary. Like the light that lies beyond my thinking mind is scary. They are the best and most terrifying things I can think of.
Love. Who’s afraid of love?
I am.
But why? What’s to be afraid of?
Vulnerability. Openness. The letting down of my guard. Merging.
Love is egoless. Love is death.
The vision of light beyond my thoughts is also death: death to the mind, death to the ego – and I don’t want that because, as far as I’m perhaps ignorantly concerned, that’s what I am.
The road winds on, and the trip continues, and as we near our destination…it is a conveyor belt that we are on, and though I grasp at passing branches and hold them tight to slow my journey, prevent the inevitable, the grip they have on me is not strong enough to postpone it long. Try, again, another branch – but I am, alas, running out of branches.
Avoidance of the material world and avoidance of the spiritual. A man in limbo, in no man’s land. What it feels like is a loser’s land – but I guess that’s a judgment shaped by the outside (Buddha was a homeless madman – but I’m no Buddha).
Still, there’s the other part that longs for it – the other part that makes stupid bargains like, okay, we won’t sit for even five or ten minutes and meditate here and now, when that’s what we’re crying out to do – we’ll eat our tenth cheese sandwich – we’ll watch again some comedy we’ve already seen five times – what we’ll do is one day in the distant future, when everything’s exhausted and we’ve worked our way free of women and responsibilities and jobs – we’ll take ourselves off and disappear into the canyon or a monastery somewhere out East. And then, boy, we’ll really go for it! No, five minutes may be beyond us now – but sure we’ll manage five years easily then, and make it.
What folly. What silly bargains I swallow from my brain. Yet more distraction.
Distant plans and deals and dreams. They currently go something like this: finish the MA and then probably never chase wanting to be a writer again (stick to good old simple blogging, if anything at all); do that football coaching thing and the refereeing thing September to December and maybe find out that’s something that really satisfies or more than likely find out it’s just another thing – and maybe a last thing – to tick off the list; and in July and August we’ll be free to fly to Canada and sneak into the States; and in December, after the coaching commitment is satisfied, and just before the Mayan calendar ends, we’ll be free to fly off from England forever and ensconce ourselves in the canyon and there, finally, really get down to it.
Oh boy. Future fantasies. More distractions. More daft thoughts.
And where woman in all this? Where family? Just running away from it, that’s where. No desire for human love, for Earthly life. Commitments and growing old in a twenty-first century UK stylee massively unappealing. Dawning realisation that Rory no good for that kind of world: for mortgages and babies and doing things to make another human being happy, bringing her flowers and taking her out to dinner and compliments and stuff like that. Sex is weird. Faces are weird. I can’t fall in love with a human because they look strange and say strange things. They want me to do strange things too, and I’ll have to do them otherwise I’ll be bad.
No wonder freedom and keeping one’s options open and pie-in-the-sky dreams of escape and some other realm. But is that other realm even true? For more and more it feels like fantasy – but then maybe that’s just the effect of living in heavy concrete England, all the weight of its history and secularity and material celebrity-worshipping boozed-up mindset pressing down on me. Life is for shopping, for getting laid, for the clothes you wear and the car you drive and the size of your TV. Everybody knows that. Everybody knows that what it all comes down to is the pension you stash and the state of the economy and getting rid of your children. On and on and on…
Was it real? Memory says so. Must get back to it, one of these days.
Though Dawkins says otherwise. He knows best. Me just lone weird voice can’t find no meaning in modern city civilisation, probably just standard depressed person unable to appreciate the joys of buying clothes, TVs, drinking beer.
Weirdo.
No. Me not that. Me on edge, at crisis point. But gentle crisis. Like butterfly. Like butterfly fighting to stay in cocoon, even as the cocoon rots all around him, constrains him, starts to hurt.
Like foetus grasping onto womb. But whoever heard of a foetus that didn’t come out?

I got an interesting email the other day. It was interesting because it was from John Milton, my Colorado/Mexico spiritual teacher/shaman, and it was interesting because he never, ever writes back to me. I’ve written him dozens of times, probably, over the years. Some of them have been quite heartfelt. Some of them have been massively apologetic, looking back on our times together, on how mad I got myself, on opportunities lost. And he never replied to those. Only time he did reply to me was when I was contemplating going to Peru in 2009 and asking him about Ayuahasca – he said something about not recommending plant-based drugs, which is what he’d always said to me (“you don’t need them where you’re going”) – and then this one the other day. Sure, I’d written to him first, but it sure was something…
What I’d written was that I was thinking of coming to Colorado in the summer. I said, of course this would involve me sneaking in from the woods in Canada but I feel kind of good about that. What I was thinking was that, if it was really a bad idea he’d probably say something about it, warn me off as he’d done with the Ayuahasca. But instead he got back to me real prompt and said, sure, I’ll be here x dates, you’ll be welcome to camp. I couldn’t believe it! So warm and open after all these years of silence. And that got me thinking…
Last year when I was considering it – when I was fair burning for it, checking plane tickets like every day – I ended up tossing an I Ching and the I Ching said a load of stuff about “not seeing daylight” and “laws must be obeyed” and “stop being so stupid” (maybe not that last one) and I basically thought, oo-er, I’m going to get arrested. Or, more likely, the I Ching is using that imagery to say, no, it’s not a good time for this. And it turned out to be perfect, of course – I applied instead for Leeds, and won the bursary for the Master’s, and got with Nicky – and then got into refereeing and this coaching thing and playing lots of squash – and despite everything that I might have said above, which seems a bit bemoaning and dowdy, it’s been a very happy and good and learning time and I couldn’t imagine things having worked out better. Like I say, even the drowning is good, right? It’s only the taking away of things that don’t mean much in the grand scheme.
But now this. A new year and a whole new feel of things. Life set, so therefore no grand giving up or escape: I’ve still got a university deadline for September and then the coaching commitment September to December. It’s not like I’m leaping off into the wide unknown. And yet, July and August have presented themselves as totally free. Nothing occurs in that time. The football season is over, the refereeing on hold. It’s summer: the perfect time for a walk in the woods. It’s a window.
I guess we’ll see. I guess we’ll toss the I Ching and see what plane tickets are on offer when the time comes. And then we’ll do one thing or the other.
John Milton. Holy Crestone. And Shawn and California and those roads. I long for it. I think there’s magic out there. I’d love to experience it again. And no doubt if I hadn’t been such an arse back in 2000 and 2001, I would’ve done by now.
Either that or it’s just another ticking off the list. Is perhaps my path merely the path of tasting everything until there’s nothing left to taste but my Self?

That’s the week, I guess. Those are the words that occur to me to type. Sure, there was refereeing and eating and somewhat interesting occurrences – but you can take all that as a given (main things were losing the hundred-and-forty quid car key for Nicky’s brand new Mini – and then having it turn up at the police station – and an interesting meeting with good old Laura, in which I saw ‘the light’).
Anyways. That’s enough.
Cheers! :-)