Saturday, December 26, 2020

Forget-Me-Not

 Forget-Me-Not


Maria sprinted to the beach.  The diamonds she owned sparkled on her ears as her rare, honey blonde hair flew like wings in the wind.  Emerald eyes she could not see focused ahead on the ocean where her favorite assistant sat, watching the waves of time roll in and out.

“Emily! Guess what?”

Emily turned around.  Maria loved her small nose and red hair and how she treated Maria, how she read Maria’s poetry and responded with a smile, not like the bland look of disinterest found in her sterile mother.  Emily could not draw or paint but seemed to find art anyway.  

“What?” Emily said, putting her voice a note higher.

“He said he wanted to marry me.”

“Kevin? That’s great.”  Inside, Emily wondered what would happen to the happy, adult child she spent time with.  She didn’t hate or look down on Maria, found her a fun flavor, but she knew tides turn quickly.  The dark skies of depression rarely gave way to the sun in a frozen world lacking insight.

“He gave me this ring.  It’s a diamond.  I love diamonds. It sparkles with love!”  Emily preferred the glass rings, as they sparkled more.  She decided to try to give Maria a few words, hoping the woman would have some peace, at least. She was also sad she’d lose the friend she had valued for so many years. She supposed herself childish in this way as well.

“Love is a thing?” Emily asked.  Maria seemed confused at first, but she trusted Emily more than her icy mother.  

“Love is great.  It’s in everything.”

“Love is in hatred, too.  You won’t lose love easily,” Emily said.

“No, I won’t.  I will live in a big house and have beautiful children and parties.”

“Yes, I agree.  Love is in women, children, and sparkling icicles.  It keeps us hanging on.”

“I’m so glad I have you, Emily.  You understand me so well.  I’m sorry I’m moving away,” Maria said.  

“Me too.”

The two embraced, and Maria ran up the hill, skipping a bit.

Emily turned her back on the ocean and walked up to the small koi pond.  She liked to feed part of her lunch to the hungry fish.  She liked to see them greedily fight each other like sex.  Nature enjoyed the act in such “civilized” humans as well.  A penis and vagina are the ugliest creations in the world, not evolved to be beautiful, not like a sunny day or glimmering star.  The soulless organs hide most of the time except when nature makes humans the highest.

Emily had loved a man, four years ago he faded away on a ship and left her no children to justify the time he stole or the vows he broke so easily.  He came into money and sunk into the warm waters of exotic fish and drunken wine.  

A wind picked up, lifting her curly hair.

Emily grabbed the dried out forget-me-not flower she had kept in her pocket, the one from the wedding placed in starched paper.  She stared at the dead thing, shriveled now, lifeless. She threw it to the splashing koi fish who consumed it without regard.  

Then she left.

Thursday, December 17, 2020

Justified Life

 So my grandma is worried about me. She basically is still trying to bring me back from the dead.  It's annoying that happens when you love someone who is sick or hurt. They'll pamper and pill you to death to try to make you, you again.  I put up with being a pet for a while, but I'm done.

Fuck off.  If I want to sleep all day, I will.  She's trying to control it.  If you've been through what I have, you'd ignore the time, too.  

DEATHSTARs will see these stupid family emotions with what he's doing.  It's like, shut up, nice society. In special ed, it's like your fucking kid is a vegetable, but they hold on.  The government can screen us now, but it would rather keep us alive to torture us.  

Bjork and others say, "Wow, she's so happy now, and everyone cares for her."  No, I'm not a happy retard.  All their cures made me a dead-thing that has no purpose and no future.  I wasn't able to live any of my dreams, and you killed a large chunk of my soul, which is almost as insulting as you running up in my life. 


My life is not worth living.  It's hard to just not off myself due to being ignored. I have to do one last task. They'll put me in a mental hospital for random things.  I can die in there, too. 

Life isn't about being happy all the time or gems.  It's about learning, growing, experiencing, and creating.

I had some ability, but I belong in Hell.  No one else can perceive themselves.  

Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Moments to Last

This would be better than being assaulted and die in shame without dignity.


Shelly made her way into the clinic.  The walls were blue and fake trees littered the waiting room.  Dead, plastic flowers rose up to the fluorescent lights above.  

“Are you Shelly Anderson?” The lady behind the desk asked.  

“Yes, ma’am,” Shelly replied. 

“Well, the psychiatrist is in and ready to see you.”  The clerk smiled.

Shelly went through the glass doors.  Her high heels clicked on the wooden floor. For some reason, she felt the need to look pretty.  Why? She didn’t know. 

“Hi, I’m doctor Moore.  I assume you’re Shelly?” His whiskers twitched.

“Yes.”

“Alright, Shelly, please have a seat.”  His boring brown suit resembled dirt along with his bland tan tie. 

“May I ask why you decided to choose our clinic Moments to Last? 

“Well, to be honest with you, it’s partially social and partly my prospects for success.”

“Do go on.”

“I feel as though my station in life is causing me to feel deep psychological pain. I suffer from a slight disability, as you know, sir.  I wear the identifier around my wrist and most people stay away from me, but I am suffering greatly with shame and guilt.  I am not even equal to the lowest class.  I have no future in the world, no job, and I can’t satisfy myself or deal with the judgment of others.”  Shelly felt a boulder fly off of her chest.  How nice it was to say it.  She pushed back her blonde hair.

“You seem confident in your decision.  Have you told your family?” Dr. Moore wrote notes on to his pad.  Shelly liked the blue pen.  

“My family wouldn’t understand at the moment.  They are optimistic due to their own denial,” Shelly said.

“I see.  Do you think this will cause them any harm?”

“I think their psychological state might need to be examined.  After a month, I believe they’ll agree it is the best decision.”  Shelly rubbed her nose, as she had a slight cold.  

“Do you realize this is the end?  That nothing follows?”

“I know an afterlife is for children, sir.  I don’t need any promises.  I will know nothing, see nothing, and remember nothing of my life.  It is truly meaningless and worthless, so a fancy grave marker will be unnecessary, too expensive.”  

“You seem very mature.  Have you decided on your last moments yet?”

“Yes, I would like to cuddle with my crush.  A girl thing.  He is worthy of status.  I would like to feel someone who is strong in my last moments.  Don’t worry. I know we are not equal, no need to release my feed to anyone.”

“Of course, we know better. It would result in you having to work on a drone ship if you did it outside of the clinic, a punishment for a low deed, but we reward those who have the honor to die rather than stay and waste space. Well, Shelly, let’s get you into the room.”

Shelly walked across the hall into the hologram.  The walls around her were white, sterile, and uncaring.  In front of her was a bed with fluffy blue blankets and two pillows, both white.  

Shelly thought back to her life as the simulation began to load, a process that can take a few moments.  

Reflecting back on school, she heard the students laugh at there as she tried to remember what whatever equation it was, how to draw and paint, how to sing.    

“She’s so stupid,” a past classmate said. The others giggled and left the table.  In the memory, she toyed with her bracelet, which was supposed to caution others about her disability.  Authorities said they should know to look for odd behavior.  Her eyes fell to the checkered floor. 

She thought about her time in the library reading books, her favorite activity.  In those worlds, the impossible happened, and one could expand the mind in many ways.  A good memory. No real people.  No longer fulfilling.

The system came up, a few beeps here and there.  The room darkened with stars revolving around her.  They shined all different colors.  She traced a few constellations, feeling like a child again.  

“Shelly?” A voice asked.  

Shelly turned around and saw him.  It was Pan from the internet.  In real life, he looked even more spectacular.  He wore a tight t-shirt etching his toned body.  She loved darker eyes, hating her blue orbs always pestered with bags underneath.   

“Pan?”  Her heart fluttered with emotion, which she rarely expressed. 

“It’s so nice to meet you.  You should come closer.  I won’t hurt you, you know.”  He waved his arm and she came over.  They were at the edges of the bed, close enough for now.  His deep eyes turned soft as his face.  

“You, too,” said Shelly.  “I don’t meet people like you in real life.”

“I’m real.” Shelly smiled to herself, letting the lie sink in. 

“These stars are amazing!” Pan said.

“I know.  We don’t see them in my city much, just the balls of gold.  I like the stars.  They’re so far away with so many possibilities to think about.”

“What do you think is up there?” Pan asked.  His eyes stayed interested, fixed on her.  Nobody did that in real life. 

“Oh, childish things, spaceships, aliens, and black holes that suck up everything that comes near them, the inescapable death in which nothing can be saved.” Shelly sighed. 

“Do you wish upon a star?” Pan asked.  

“People like me don’t get many wishes. No moment lasts, you know.”

“Come now, don’t feel sorry for yourself,” Pan replied. 

“You’re right. I’m doing the proper action.  I should take pride in that.” Shelly smiled with self-approval. When you’re worthless, she figured, any noble action feels like redemption. 

“Come closer, Shelly.”  Shelly moved forward and Pan wrapped around her.  She felt safe, the smell of man relaxed her body, and her heavy head sank into the pillow.  

They laid there for many moments.  The stars spun around them or Shelly, the only one there.  The little world revolved around her and her choice.  She let time sink in, let it flow through her body.  

Pan leaned over and kissed her softly on the forehead.

“Are you ready?” He asked Shelly in a whisper.  

“Yes,” she said calmly, feeling comforted.  

“Till death do us part.”  Pan pushed the hair from her eyes, which began to close softly, her body weakened, as her will surrendered to eternity.

Dr. Moore opened the door with a metal table. 

At least a piece of shit knew it was a piece of shit.  The dead body plopped on the cold metal in an awkward, grotesque pose.  

“You’re not looking at me are you, little bitch?”  He broke her neck away from him and walked toward the morgue.  


Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Only You Can Make Yourself Suffer! Rough draft

 Only You Can Make Yourself Suffer


“Inmates, you will be let out of the cages one by one and escorted into the Big House.  I already see a few familiar faces.”  The prisoners growled in their minds, about to let it out. This policeman was a tough guy who could cause massive amounts of pain, eternal pain. They held their feelings inside of themselves.

Steven knew all about this, but he faced a new realization, too.  The sun would never shine again for this group of men.  They’d committed the ultimate sins.  And guys get locked up for that here in the Nine Rings.  

“Alright, inmates, we will begin with Mr. Steven first.”  Steven quickly left the unlocked cage and was chained with one of the bio-chains that could bite a person with a sedating venue that gave a person nightmares from Hell.

The other men jumped off: Tony, Raz, McMad, Jeff.  Their eyes still shone anger.  Soon they would realize how defeated they would be, shells with haunted souls.

“I don’t take no lip!” McMad yelled, launching at the officer.  The officer smiled and hit him with a strong electrical charge, a web around his shaking body.  McMad’s hair became disheveled, and he screamed.  He beat his head on the hard, concrete floor.  Blood flowed through his eyes.

The other prisoners obeyed, already losing the light in their eyes.  Time took them all.

“Now inmates here is your cell.  You are in circle 5, not that I need to tell you that.  You will never leave this area for any reason.  You are going to eat, sleep, and then die here.”  

Tony surveyed the cell.  The walls were bright white.  The bars were black and imposing on his mind.  He’d grown up on the streets of New City.  During his time there, he’d certainly became a man.  He had a kill count of fifty.  He enjoyed licking his victims’ eyes, letting them feel the warmth they would never have again.  That bitch caught him.  He’d find her. 

No you won’t, a voice told him.

“Alright, criminal MINES, not like you have minds, you will each be issued a pistol with one bullet.  Use it wisely.  Remember the slogan of Nine Rings: Only You Can Make Yourself Suffer.  If you want out, you can shoot yourself.  If you want another who’s causing you to suffer, blow his brains out.  Suffering is always a choice.”

Steven lay on the mat on the floor.  He stretched his long, scrawny legs out, covered in blonde hair.  It reminded him of his father, the man he loved, the only person he loved who was killed by a police officer for jaywalking.  

Of course, the police state had the ultimate rule of the land.  Any tiny infraction could cause a place to lose discipline.  The order had to be maintained.  

Yeah, Steven said in his head.  They sure had to keep us controlled.  There’d never been a time without control.  Most of society accepted it. They didn’t care to think deeply about reality. Their lazy apathy justified obedience.

McMad shook his head a few times. The mess of red made him look like a beast.  Toned muscles bulged from his shirt now useless.  He liked to be a strong man in life, ready for the ultimate fight.  His dad told him that, yeah, and pops was right.  A man had to be strong and ready to take on the world if he had to.  Already, however, a feeling of helpless panic tickled his nerves.

Tony, a skinny little black man, stared at the white ceiling.  The impression reminded him of an office, much like the one he used to work in. Now he’d be here for an eternity, a life.  He tried to fight the state, tired of them oppressing him, leaving him out of the party.  In a way, his optimistic attitude still lingered.  He smiled.  The others all looked at him, so he made his expression blank.  

Raz, a short plump man accepted his fate.  Perhaps with all he’d been through, a final resting place didn’t seem so terrible.  He could make peace and sleep safely.  The cops took all his money and food away.  He tried to enter into a different embassy but was too slow. 

“So, what shall we do in Nine Rings?” Steven asked.  

“What can we do?” Raz asked back.

“A bunch of nothing,” Tony said.  “We’re here forever. That is, unless you believe in an afterlife.”  

“Stupid fairytales,” McMad said.  Something hit his pride.

“Don’t get mad, McMad,” Raz soothed in.  “We have enough time to suffer. Let’s not make it any worse.” 

“Do you think we could escape?” McMad asked.  

“Do you think pigs will fly?” Steven said.  “The more we wish, the more it is going to drive us insane.”  

“Insane, bitch, I’ve been a nut all my life,” McMad said.

“Don’t call me bitch,” Steven said hostilely.  

McMad jumped up and pointed this pistol at Steven. 

“Are you really going to waste that bullet on me?  You have such a big head.  It could use a little deflating.”

“Hey!” Raz said.  “We have years to die.  Let’s not start out like this, come on, guys.”  The men sat back down in their chairs, hard and uncomfortable.  

Steven signed.  Jeff went to the bars.  He placed his fingers around them and pulled.  No man could open the bars.  

“Man, I don’t think Jesus could get out of here,” Jeff said.  

“Jesus, man, he wouldn’t come here. He’s too busy with the good folk who are going to heaven,” Raz said.  “We’re going into the dark.  I guess that ends all life.  You don’t have to think when the dark comes over you.  You go into the ground and you rot.”

Tony chirped in, “I think there is an afterlife.”  

“Yeah?” said Steven. “So why don’t you go now?  It’s going to be better than in this place.”

Tony turned his head to the outside of the bars, the grey wall blocked everything else. The place had no windows.  He looked down at the pistol.

“Yo, yo, yo” said Steven. “You don’t want to go before your time. Calm down, man.”  

Tony took the gun and put it into his mouth.  

“Come on, Tony.  We want you around.  This is too fast. I’m sorry, man.  I didn’t mean it that way.”

Tony’s brains bounced on the wall and sprayed the ceiling.  Steven backed off.  His face covered in speckled blood.  

The other guys paced the place for a while, not wanting to say a word.  They blamed Steven.  What a bastard, they thought.  The blood smelled like death.  

Meals came down from the ceiling minus Tony’s. Apparently, the man in the sky knew he was dead already.

Raz turned over a piece resembling meat.  He took a bite, and it was sour. He spit it out.

“Holy Hell, what is this?” He asked.

The other spit theirs up as well.  

“It’s starver’s food,” McMad replied.  “It’s the stuff that you can only eat when dying.”

“I ain’t dying, so this shit can get away.”


A few days passed. 


Raz started to shake.  

“Steven, I can’t take this much longer.”

“You gotta.”

Raz pointed the pistol at himself.  

“No, drop it,” Jeff said and ran toward Raz.

Bang.

Raz shot Jeff, grabbed Jeff’s gun, and shot himself.

Now there were only two inmates left.  Steven and McMad.


The cell’s blood rotted with each pressing day.  

Weeks passed.  The smell lingered, massaging the air.  

“I think it’s time we left,” Steven said, unable to take any more of the agony, the smell, the desperation.  

“I believe it is.”  

“Ready to abandon humanity as it has us?”  

“I believe so.  It’s a stupid race.  I don’t want to be apart of it anymore.”

Two shots fired.


The office smiled at them from behind the station.  

“Only you can make yourself suffer!  There’s no need to ever been unhappy.”  He jogged outside and smelled the fresh spring air.

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

It's Fun

 yeah, but it sparks the imagination so whatever.  The "I-Know-Everything" people will properly not know that the pyramids used to be white or what a Ben-Ben is.

https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/isaac-newton-believed-pyramids-revealed-221700103.html Wonder if he got a special visit. They only let people reveal so much at a certain time, or it screws everything up.  Several young mathematicians have had meetings. 

In the Bible, God says he put many things in the void to test us.

They placed things all around the world so that our population would multiply at a quick rate, and we wouldn't all die from one plague or war.  They also made certain mating patterns to create diversity and sometimes disease.  A few populations are going straight to Hell on judgment day.  Who knows what they'll be on that day, which dimension.  No hate from me.  They knew we'd fall from grace, no longer directed. We'd solve it with technology and tools.

We've almost died out several times in the past.  The ancient scientists, you could say, made it so that wouldn't happen again, even though, like I said, humanity would get a bit trashy.

My personal opinion.

I also, like Newton, entertain the notion that there are safe spaces for judgment day. The lords are supposed to lead their chosen people there, not all people, and then civilization has to be rebuilt. 

The rest of us... might be safe simply where we are on that day.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Ilh1ewceco 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bUhJRQSs6UQ

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Just a little Joke Story! Feel free to expand on it or make it better!

 Scrambled


“We’ve got another one,” Ronald said to Migg.  His eyes traveled to the floor, a grey color where many tears fell, storm after storm.  It never seemed to end with people and this infliction.  Many times, Ronald believed they could be saved, given a new start, but alas, fate doesn’t rhyme with time in a nice song.  

“OMG,” Migg said.  She already knew what had happened, what horrible thing had happened.  While she took the job hoping to help, ignorance held her for only so long.

These people were trapped. 

“Should we put him in with the others in the A or in B section?” Ronald asked.

“I can’t, I can’t, just give me a minute.” She turned her back on the patient, shivering with sympathy, with a will that was worthless. 

“Calm down, Migg,” Ronald said to her and to himself as well.  

A sound came from the man, a medium built person in what looked like his late twenties.  

“Cats and dogs are the yin and yang of the multiverse. Relativity is an attack on our freedoms.”

“Oh no,” Migg uttered. She hated hearing them.

“Did you know that there are people in Africa who are actually brown from dried mud?  Some live with white people in the South but love North Korea’s way of governing, unlike our country.  The fascist democrats are destroying this land.”

“Oh, shit,” Ronald said.

“Blacks and whites are different species but can breed like cats and lions.”

“I don’t know if I can take it. It’s so sad,” Ronald uttered, crying.

“At least he’s not a Scientologist. There might be hope,” Migg said, attempted to comfort Ronald.  

“The Illuminati planned 9/11.  The snow fell that day because the Jews prayed to Satan.”

“We should give him an injection to slow him a bit, to lull him to sleep, maybe. You know some seem worse because they’re stressed about being away from their homes,” said Migg.

“Yeah, maybe that will help. All we can do is pray for him.”  

“The Earth is flat!”  

They quickly injected him. 

“What’s that noise?  It’s another alarm!”  Ronald said in a panic. The hospital’s lights blinked as the siren came on.

“I can’t take this!” Migg reacted.

“I know,” Ronald said, “There’s no way to stop it in the information age. So many are being scrambled.  They’re evolving without logic and critical thinking skills. Damn you, education system!  You cut funding and just built internet cafes. They’re trying to learn on their own.  When they collect in groups, they’re unstoppable! Unstoppable! We’ve tried everything, haven’t we? God, hear us!”

The woman was placed in a bed.  

“Lightyears are really 365 days. That’s a year.  They don’t want you to know that!  The masons are bringing in spirits to deceive those in power to end the world.”

Migg ran for the bathroom wherein she burst into sobs.