Professional Documents
Culture Documents
03.
3. Introduction
7. William Reid - Forecast
10. Marie Fullerton - The Room Of My Life
15. Kennet - I Took A Life Today
17. Internet Zombie Movie
20. Crazydiamond - Alone In A Crowd
23. KJShady03 - Real
25. Gerry - Teenage Dilemmas Part 1
28. Penitent - Adam & Eve
30. Carolina - Poem In Progress
34. Velvetlungs - Highschool
36. Juniperlillie - First Day Of Summer
39. Poetry - Haikus
42. Steve - This Day Behold
45. ManDartin - A Few More
46. Rosie Short - What The Hell Crazy Lady...
48. Daniel Grosvenor - Outer Eden Chapter 1 - The Bust
53. I Fear They Know Too Much - Eggs
55. Milas - Moonlight Wanderlust
57. Emmana - A Tale Of Connections
61. The Colclough - It Was For My Tomorrow
62. Taymaz Valley - The End Is In Sight
64. David Barron - Will I Find Contentment?
66. What Is The Purpose Of Art?
68. L.A Temple - The Comma Man
Back Hyla Levy - One Perfect Day
hejtejp - stadsfesten
Emmana - Sky Train Shakeup
07.
William Reid -
Forecast
Wirrow - Bloodss
Kelly Parra - Witch Doctors, Spacemen and Zombies!
19.
20.
Crazydiamond -
Alone In A Crowd
Inner Turmoil
Therese - Andre
22.
(The boys might remember and I hope the girl’s will smile)
Perpetual life embodies a single man, who walks through earth unchanged by time.
His steps have graced the desert sands that became a sea of rolling green,
a mark was left by him on most ancient tree, that sheltered him at noon,
he walked the slope that ash and fire engulfed, destroying all besides he.
Both are cursed to live forever outside the garden, and neither can stand the other’s company.
I wrote the damn note just in case I didnít wake up. It was all
aesthetic, the drinking, smoking, the music, and oh, those
terrible pills; those tiny, engraved, colorful pills. They didn’t
mean shit. They would only possibly make my stomach
bleed at the worst. But the drunken note, that was blurry
desperation in its essence. Only six hours earlier, I wouldn’t
have dreamed of writing my first suicide note; it was a vacant,
vanilla day. I made phone calls here and there, I checked my
email many times, but that sweet digital ring of my cell phone
never tolled this night. Not once. I was unsurprisingly alone.
It’s every morning at 6:23, when I feel the warm press of an
unorthodox angel singing me back to sleep despite the alarm.
In my dreams, I am ushered in by a thousand colors and the
ghosts of friends Iíve never met. But instead, I proceed to my
daily baptism of steam and suds and then on with the stained
oxford blouse that Iíve been buttoning for years. I always
arrive to school just on time. There, I smile politely, apply lip
balm all day, give petty compliments, and struggle for small
talk while my brain quietly pulses a giant middle finger to
everyone I see. I am occasionally renewed by the kindness of
strangers, but not here. I sing through the halls to the portraits
of former students and trace the cold eggshell cinderblock
with my fingertips.
I often come home exhausted but walk straight to the nearest
mirror. Sometimes it’s ‘you’re a piece of shit,’ and other times
I pout my lips and raise my brows seductively. On those bright
black nights when I should have been enjoying my company
in the city, I fell in love with every dark-haired boy I met as he
radiated passion and promise with his music taste and skinny
wrists. It was a new pink tongue in my mouth, a warm hand
on my fishnet thigh; he didnít know my legs werenít shaved
and he would never know because I had a one o’clock curfew.
I’d never see him again.
Most nights spent in solitude, I would recall a night like this
with lustful envy of myself in the past receiving such craved
attention. But the night that note was written, I didn’t weep,
just simply laid down wrapped lovingly in cotton sheets wait-
ing
for my low-swinging chariot. It would be the best way to find
me in the morning. There was a martyr in my brain, a prophet
drinking alone writing love songs to the world. But now she
hangs from a tree, bleeding final drops of softened light onto
the hardened, apathetic soil.
35.
Velvetlungs - Bubbles
36.
Juniperlillie -
First Day Of Summer
hejtejp - stege
39.
Poetry -
Haikus
“
Do you love Haiku’s?
Are you listening to me?
”
Yes. I love Haiku’s.
”
May sound like gunshot
“
Angel’s eyes roll high
When they look upon the earth,
”
And feel ostracized.
”
except in my mind.
“
WTF
It should be changed so it means:
”
Wow, That’s Fantastic.
Ben Spees - Portrait Of My Father
Berry Connel - UKNOPINK001
42.
Steve -
This Day Behold
ManDartin - Campfire 4
45.
ManDartin -
A Few More
Hello all you faithful readers of my irregular, occasionally I walked over and told him to get up. “Go to the front and
funny, often bonkers blog. teach the class about the conditions in the plantations and
about slave trading” I said, taking his seat. He looked at me
So, I go back to my old school to teach. Yes, laugh if you smirkingly. Usually, if the kids said, “Can’t miss.” They were
wish for my guillibleness at going back and teaching (at the allowed to sit down again. He said it. I looked at him, raising
moment) for free, but as you all know, I need to do things, or an eyebrow. “Do I look like I care?” I asked.
boredom overcoms me and I do something stupid, crazy, or
more often than not, both. He stood at the front for fifteen minutes trying to read my
notes and failing.
I teach anti-racism, which involves plantocratic racism. I
have to explain why monkey chanting is pointless as mon- I remembered why I hate kids and never want any.
key’s characteristics (white skin, straight, abundant bodily
hair, thin lips) are all common characteristics of white Euro- So, the moral to this story children is this. If you think you
peans. As you can imagine, it’s hard to be diplomatic and know more than me about a lesson I’ve been teaching for
not end up meaning “Go call whie people monkey’s kids” two years, think again. I’ve got sweets, and I will entice you
indvertantly in their minds. into a cage.
I taught my lesson, and then asked for questions. Silence. Over and Out
Silence thick enough to cut through with a carving knife. Hell,
I doubt even excalibur could cut through this awkward si- Rosie xx
lence. Then, slowly a small child raised his hand. smiled with
relief. “Yes?” I asked, in my least child-catcher from Chitty
Chity Bang Bang voice. He frowned a moment, and then
said, “What the hell crazy lady? Youre psycho you are.”
BORDER CONTROL
OUTSKIRTS OF HEAVEN
The cart slowed to a halt and a round, slightly wrinkled head poked curiously out of the
driver’s window.
“Purpose?” mumbled the robed figure who had stopped the cart, his nose buried deep in a
clipboard.
“In a cart?” the man asked - more out of curiosity than suspicion.
The man shrugged and ticked the appropriate box. “Standard or sacred?”
A blank look fell across the driver’s face. The man looked up briefly and met his puzzled
gaze, then rolled his eyes and lowered the clipboard.
“Crosses. You know, lines going up and across their backs, sign that they’re divine property
and all that?” After a further reply of silence, his eyes narrowed slightly. “You did check them
for crosses, didn’t you?”
The driver’s blank expression turned quickly into that of dread, and one couldn’t help but
notice his eyebrows advancing rapidly toward his receding hair line. The robed man sighed
loudly and threw down the clipboard.
“Fine!” he grumbled, marching irately toward the back of the cart, “don’t get up, I’ve only got
a million and one things to do tonight, but don’t you worry - I can always find time to check if
a few donkeys have some glaringly obvious...”
“Uncrossed!”
“What?”
“Th-they’re the n-normal ones. I-I checked them yesterday... they’re regular. No crosses.”
The robed man’s heavy breathing returned to normal. He turned around to look the driver in
the eye.
“That was awfully honest of you. Are you new here?” and added as an afterthought, “You
seem awfully nervous.”
The driver offered a weak smile and nodded, embarrassed. “First day in Heaven.”
“Ah, you’ll soon get used to it. I’m Brother Jonathan: Border Control. Just sign here, please
- there’s a twelve percent tariff on unbranded cattle, I’m afraid. Hence why most people lie
about it. Bless you.”
“I didn’t snee-... oh, I-I mean, thank you. I’ll be on my way then, shall I?”
“That I... I’ll be on my way?” He began to quiver. “If there’s nothing else to-”
“Did I? Well, it was probably one of the donkeys. I wouldn’t worry about it.”
“Sir,” began Jonathan firmly, lowering the clipboard, “the only animals allowed to sneeze
within the Heavenly Borders are kittens. God declared all other sneezing creatures ‘annoy-
ing’ millennia ago. So unless you’re carrying a consignment of kittens with especially gruff
voices back there, I suggest you tell me what you’re really doing here.”
The now-very-worried-indeed man resumed his silent stance and fumbled with the reins,
weighing up his chances and wondering if it was worth making a break for it. Jonathan had
anticipated this and, with a click of his fingers, summoned two mean-looking cherubs from
behind a cloud. They were clutching spears and, despite their size and baby-like features,
looked fully able to kill a man.
“Maybe one of them sneezed!?” he cried defensively, and watched uneasily as they flew
higher until their spear tips were level with his jugular, possibly in response to the accusation.
“I’m not sure you fully understand the way Heaven works, Mister...?”
“Opey.”
“...Misss-ter Opey,” Jonathan found that placing emphasis on scary-sounding letters was a
good way of frightening people who got cocky with him, “there is no dust, disease or excess
ground black pepper in Heaven. There is no asthma and no such thing as a ‘cold’. One
cannot hiccup, cough, belch or otherwise perform any vulgar and mundane bodily function
unless they explicitly desire to do so, and even then only with written permission from an
archangel. Atop of that, we’ve already established that God is not a fan of sneezing. Now,
they relieve the deceased of these ailments and abilities at the Pearly Gates, and while deliv-
ery drivers may be exempt from this rule as they’re not quite dead yet, rest assured that right
now you are the only being on this entire plane of existence capable of sneezing. That is, of
course, unless there’s something you’re not telling us?”
The ‘gulp’ Mr Opey emitted in response to the question could probably have been heard on
Earth.
Jonathan leaned in close to the petrified driver. He raised his wings to look even more intimi-
dating. Mr Opey cowered.
At the mention of the word, the cherubs darted around the back of the cart and - with fright-
ening strength - tore open the locked doors to reveal a small crowd of humans seated on a
blanket of straw, wedged shoulder-to-shoulder and doing their very best to look invisible.
“Well... he is,” an old man declared, pointing at a middle-aged barrister huddled in the far
corner. “And he’s the one who sneezed.”
50.
“Oh, come on, Guv - they’re not bad people.” Having had his cover blown, the driver was obviously done with niceties,
reverting instead to good, old-fashioned blagging. “How would you like to be in their shoes? Doomed to an eternity of
sharp, fiery things just fer committing a few necessary sins - hardly seems fair, does it? They didn’t go around drowning
puppies or shooting nuns, y’know; they’re victims of circumstance. Think about it. You have to sin to get ahead in life
these days, and God wants ‘em to make the most of their life, don’t He?”
“I am fully aware of the travesty of justice that is the admissions system, Mr Opey, but unfortunately that does not
change the fact that you have illegally smuggled humans - sinners or not - through the Pearly Gates without proper
decontamination and are now attempting to bring them into the city. They’re infectious. And don’t you think a lawyer’s
going to stick out like a sore thumb up here?”
Mr Opey beckoned his interrogator forward, so as to be out of earshot of the cherubs (who pointed their spears threaten-
ingly at their new captives, awaiting further orders).
“Look, you’re an angel: you know who’s done what in life; you know these guys are decent. A bit of premarital and adul-
tery, a few lies - mostly about that - couple of divorcees, maybe the odd blasphemous comment when they banged their
toe or something. Don’t you know what it’s like down there? Teenage pregnancies, terrorism, fashion magazines: the
world’s in a right pickle. Are we supposed to just abandon all these people that get caught up in it? I mean, if God’s really
got a problem with the way people are turning out, why doesn’t He just go down there and fix it? Seems a more loving
option than leaving it to the dogs then punishing people when they turn out less than angelic.”
Jonathan gave a quick glance toward the cherubs, who were still glaring ungracefully at the terrified sinners. He lowered
his voice.
“It’s not that I’m unsympathetic to the cause. But why do you think my job was created? You think, given the choice
between eternal bliss and eternal suffering, anyone’s just gonna waltz down there and yell, ‘Cheerio, happiness. It was
great knowing you’?” he scoffed. “Half the people up here are sinners (though they’ll never admit it) - this place is only
walled with clouds for Heaven’s sake! In the past we’ve had people sneaking up here in balloons, wafting under the
Pearly Gates, even dressing up in cotton wool, pretending to be clouds - I’ve seen it all. We’ve had all the clouds lined
with silver motion sensors for the past few decades, but there are ways around them if you know what you’re doing.” He
sighed. “Things just aren’t what they used to be.”
“Don’t they throw them out?” asked the driver, notably more relaxed and inquisitive now.
“Hah! They don’t claim asylum up here, buddy: they claim SANCTUARY. You ever tried using the grace of God to deport
someone protected by the grace of God, while in the kingdom of God? The whole thing’s a bloody shambles! Kicking
them out would be a sin, so the whole fiasco’s just swept under the rug. But the bottom line is: we don’t have the capac-
ity anymore. A few thousand more and that’s it: Heaven’s full.”
The impact of the final sentence actually sent a shiver through the mortal man. The finality of the word ‘full’. He thought
perhaps he should hurry up and die before tickets went.
“By traditional rules: centuries. The entry requirements for Heaven used to be pretty damn hard: praying at the precise
moment of death, facing a particular direction, lived a life of unquestioning devotion to whichever deity you think to
be the ‘right’ one, wearing a certain type of hat... ‘course, it’s all different now. In the last fifty years only eight people
managed to get in the official way. I said they should leave the system as it was but, of course, someone had to decide
that it was damaging the economy having such tight regulations, so the spectrum was broadened to include not only
“all believers who don’t kill people”, but all people who are “very nice” and gives the possibility of appeal for the “quite
nice”. There’s even talk of letting creationists in! Bloody liberals. Now don’t get me wrong, it’s great seeing more people
allowed in. But that, coupled with sinner trafficking, is what’s bringing this population problem rapidly into crisis level. I
think that’s the reason God’s letting the world go to Hell - it’s the place with all the room! Poor planning on our part, there
- banish Lucifer to the place with unlimited space and resources and not realise till it’s a few thousand years too late. It’d
be embarrassing if we swapped now. I doubt he’d swap, anyway - I hear he’s making a fortune mining that stuff. Helps
that all the right ‘contacts’ are already down there, I guess.”
“Sounds pretty bad,” the driver offered, hoping the rant would go on so long Jonathan might forget to arrest him.
51.
“Thank God the war happened, is all I can say. Can you imagine the rut we’d be in other-
wise? If Heaven were just some free-for-all with all sorts coming in as they please? Not to
mention all those ‘activists’ like Pruflas and Mephistopheles cavorting all over the place
with their unions and good-for-nothing takes on philosophy.”
He adjusted his halo, which had come loose from all his fuming.
“Let’s face it: original sin saved us a lot of problems. And I’m glad it happened when it did
- can you IMAGINE if Nietzsche got up here!?”
While coughing was not permitted in Heaven, one of the cherubs still did his very best to
imitate one in the hope of reminding Jonathan he had a job to be getting on with.
“Sorry, sorry, I get quite worked up about immigration,” he told the man who was just glad
he’d managed to spend the past half-hour caught red-handed, yet had so far avoided ar-
rest.
“Well, it’s a noble cause to get worked up about. It shows you have compassion.” Mr
Opey had finally chosen his words wisely.
“Really? You think so? Well I’m glad someone agrees - I write a column about this, you
know. It normally gets vetoed by one department or another, but I tell you, I’ve worked out
the figures: if there was some sudden influx of faith on Earth - some world-uniting miracle
or something - Heaven would literally explode. That’s specifically why Jesus hasn’t gone
back down yet...”
“Say, um...” Mr Opey thought it was worth a shot, “seeing as there’s still some room up
here, and you make the place sound as if it’s pretty doomed regardless, I don’t suppose
we could find some room for these poor souls back here? It’s just that they’re awful cold
and I’m sure they’d love to see Heaven before it, y’know, explodes.”
Jonathan just shrugged dejectedly and said, “Hell, why not. It’s not as if anyone up here
cares what I do anyway. Just keep them out of the city - especially that lawyer - you don’t
want to attract attention.”
Mr Opey looked understandably stunned that that had actually worked. He hesitated
a moment to check it wasn’t a trick, then galloped the cart away with immense speed.
Jonathan watched it leave and felt the angry eyes of the cherubs burning into the back of
his neck. Although he’d never admit it, that wasn’t the first time he’d allowed sinners into
Heaven. The key weakness to all angels is that they can never resist doing a good deed if
the opportunity presents itself.
Surveying the Heavenly Planes, which stretched farther than even an angel’s eye could
see, he prayed. Heaven is a big place, he thought to himself. Although, he feared - watch-
ing the bustle of countless millions in the city below - maybe not big enough.
53.
I Fear They Know Too Much -
Eggs
Willhardi - Oma 2
54.
55.
Milas -
Moonlight Wanderlust
By light of moon I make first tracks along the full length of you
This valley is the starting point that leads to all your treasures
Soon I will move from this glorious resting place and I must
decide my course
Shall I turn back in hopes that your angelic face will greet me
in the morning light?
Or do I survey the hills that rise before me, into lands yet
undiscovered?
A small museum,
An old exhibit behind glass:
That mutilated wreck used to be a Spitfire.
Its crew survived, but how many others
Fell on the cold altar of war, of human pride.
Hi all,
I really liked the discussion about what makes us human so thought we could try another
one.
Art stimulates your senses. If your senses are stimulated you feel happy. If you feel happy,
your mental and physical functions are improved to an optimal level.
If your mental and physical power is on top, you can work and perform better.
No matter what you do for a living, if you believe it or not.....we are all working together for
one single reason. If you could take a giant step out from this world, and study mankind
from a global perspective, you would learn that the human being, just like any other fellow
species, actually lives, works and fights for one single and ultimate reason only. This reason
which is “The Highest Purpose”, is nothing more, and nothing less, than the struggle to
maintain our existence for ever, no matter what it takes...
Kennet
_______________________________________________________
Well, I couldn’t be more with Kennet on this question, which has been much on my mind
of late anyway. A dear old friend, the painter, Raymond Obermayr, and a lot of others with
whom I was recently united during a visit to the US. Ray insisted that I read “Homo Aes-
theticus”, by Ellen Dissanayake. He is a longtime mentor, and I do what he tells me. Ellen’s
book, and the personal statements of those artists I mentioned, while each expresses it in a
highly personal way, all seem to agree on the essential character of the art-making behav-
ior. So the question “What is the purpose of art?” (the title of Ellen’s first book is “What is
art for?”) is also essential. Rosalie Sorrels claims that her great purpose in writing and sing-
ing is to satisfy the need to do so.
I wish I could provide the source of my favorite story about art, in which a child (maybe
one of Kennet’s?), upon learning the answer to his question, “What do you do at work,
Daddy?” is “I teach grownups how to draw.”, with genuine incredulity exclaims, “You mean
they forget!”. It’s no coincidence that, in tandem with Ellen’s book, I am reading Richard
Dawkins path-breaking work on genetic evolution, “The Selfish Gene”. I am becoming
more and more intrigued by a notion that, along with specific physiological specifications
for elemental aspects of organisms, is also imparted something that amounts to the germ
of that need that Rosalie cites. After all, what is more exemplary of the nature of art than
the Art of Nature, as exemplified not only by millions of individual species of life forms, but
each one genetically unique? I am beginning to think that the purpose of art is to ensure the
continued existence of matter in the universe, from the neutrino to the galaxy. Perhaps it is
the same impulse in humans to “make special” that Ellen says is at the heart of the artistic
impulse, that causes certain subatomic particles to defy Newton’s law of motion, becoming
self-excited to the point that it causes itself to move.
Jack Large
________________________________________________________
Personalmente, necesito el arte para poner orden en mi caos (y necesito el caos para
crear)
Con mis obras me recuerdo, y espero que a los dem·s tambiÈn, nuestra capacidad de
soÒar.
Menchulica
___________________________________________________________
Can there only be one purpose? Communication or expression? I think art is a conversa-
tion. This, I believe combines the two; and a conversation can simply be between you
and your canvas, or between you and yourself. This is off the top of my head, so it may
change within the hour, but for now, I’m happy with it. The alternative is that art is a multi-
faceted way (joy, sorrow; the joining of hands or the swaying of minds... ) of passing time
until we die. :-(
Hyla Levy
_____________________________________________________________
To me, art (inc. music) is initially pure expression of self (feelings, personality, thoughts..),
and when its shared with others it becomes a way of connecting and becoming part of a
whole.
Chris B...”Crispy”
__________________________________________________________
I have been thinking about this a lot lately; as well as, “What is art?” Right now I am think-
ing that art is the one thing that lasts. People tend to want to leave a mark of their exis-
tence in this world. What better way then through art? Whether it be painting, music, or
writing, it does not matter. What we create lasts forever. Maybe not literally, but figurative-
ly. Even if the actual piece ceases to exist, what the piece did for someone is still there.
Arts purpose is about existence. At least that is what it is to me right now. That could all
change next week.
dunielle
___________________________________________________________
Art is my religion. It gives my life meaning and purpose, without asking me to believe
in god or anything supernatural. When I am painting I am transported in the way other
people describe feeling during prayer. When I stand before a great painting, like a Rem-
brandt or an Assael, I am filled with a transcendant awe. The desire and need to paint
keeps me going in life, even when it is hard. To have all that without having to believe in
spiritual or supernatural concepts which are unsupported by evidence is a wonderful thing
for an atheist like me.
ben spees
____________________________________________________________
juniperlillie
L.A Temple -
The Comma Man
I am staring at the nurse and she is sticking a needle for the fourth - fifth - time into a poor
old pruneís wrist bone. It feels like the sordid operation has been going on for some hours
although it has probably only been a minute or so. I feel sorry for him. His name is Mr.
Comptom, and as far as I am aware, he does not deserve this. It is making my eyes water
and I am only sat watching this grim spectacle. He has algae-coloured veins spaghettied
all over his muslin-skin but she seems to want marrow and not blood. His face looks like
an apprehensive testicle. Silently he lies in the bed and grimaces and gets slowly paler
and paler and it looks like he is actually waiting for the needle to snap. Or for his life to
extinguish. I make a quip about getting blood from a bone. She ignores me.
Bitch.
What a bitch.
I probably know more about medicine than she does. I know which way the heart rate
monitor armband goes. That seems to perplex most of the staff in this dump. First it is
put on inside out. Once this is rectified there comes a muttering and a thumping of the
machine because it still does not want to work. She will then attempt to jump start it with
her fist. Nine times out of ten the technician gets called. Nine times out of ten the plug lies
idly on the floor next to the socket, missed by our torturer. Nine times of ten Iíve pointed
this out to her. But I am always ignored.
Bitch.
The doctor comes over and raises a black spindly eyebrow. I forget his name but I re-
member his face. His face is not easy to forget. I hate to say it but the doctorís face is
repulsive and unreal. It is the first thing about him that you notice. He has the kind of
face that people look at and think that however bad life gets at least they do not look like
that. It is sort of bloated with sticky-out ears and thin wispy hair covering his odd-shaped
cranium. I think something dreadful every time I see him. I cannot help it. Every time I just
think of an aborted foetus wearing a stethoscope and a white coat. There I said it.
In our first meeting I was instantly prejudiced against him because he looked like most
second-rate doctors. He looked shifty and ratty and untrustworthy. Like the kid at school
who would grow up to live off benefits and cider. The kid who somehow got scurvy in the
twenty-first century. He would also get some fat fifteen-year-old girl pregnant in the back
seat of his car whilst showering her with sexually transmitted infections. In fact he is a
nice guy. The nicest member of staff in this hole by a long way and not at all like that.
“So our patient Mr. Comptom here had another relapse in the night?”
The nurse nods in response. In the bed, unlucky Mr. Comptom just tries to minimise the
pain in his wrist. I think he is going to piss himself. Blood has started to trickle down his
arm, not where the needle has entered his skin, but from a previous stab wound. It is thin
and watery and it looks to me like his heart has been pumping cranberry juice around his
decrepit frame. No wonder he is ill. Alarm bells should ring when your blood has turned
into fruit juice. One of the major organs should surely get their act together and deal with
that.
70.
I think he is in his late seventies. Skin thin like tracing paper and his body is all ribs and
collar bones and liver spots and veins. The latter still blissfully free of punctures whilst his
wrist begins to resemble a sieve. A patch on his head hides a graze that does not seem to
be healing. Dry blood encircles the white gauze. Looking at that patch I get a feeling that
starts in my jaw and travels southwards. He is weak and stupid and I develop a knot in my
chest that is hard to explain. Feels like my bones are trying to escape from my body.
The feeling does not shift and it makes me uncomfortable and disgusted and at the same
time ashamed. Of course the wound is not his fault and he should not be blamed for it.
The time it is taking to heal is not his fault either but such a blatant display of vulnerability
is almost vulgar. I just begin to get nauseous when the doctor speaks to him and thank-
fully distracts my tangled mind.
“Mr. Comptom?”
The poor man nods lightly seemingly in the fear that a more energetic movement would
cause his head to careen off his neck.
Another nod. The doctor beckons for more information but receives none. The nurse looks
tired. There are heavy bags under her eyes and a general listlessness about her. Fatigue is
common in this place. Even the light that streams through the window is flaccid and falls
limply on the faded dÈcor. The room is all sixtiesí browns and oranges, and the window
frame is wooden. The window itself is grimy.
In general, the whole room looks like it has just exhaled. Except for the doctorís eyebrow,
nothing is tight, everything is saggy and slack. There is no tautness to it. It is all so tired.
The doctor looks tired also. His eyes are switched off.
“Okay Nurse, once youíve done with that can you go and check on Mr. Arnold?”
Yet another nod. It is as if nobody but the doctor knows how to use their vocal chords.
Vibrate them for goodness sake. They all seem to suffer from a muting disease. Of course
the doctor-patient relationship is an interesting thing. Perhaps the perfect job for power
abusing. I once heard about a psychologist who convinced his patient to have sex with
him because he told her that that would cure her mental woes. Pretty sure that does not
go in this place. Though with that face of his it would be the only way this doctor would
ever get laid. Through the manipulation of a mentalist. I forget. He is a nice guy really. And
now he is walking away to leave Mr. Comptom in the hands of Nurse Barbarian. If I had to
choose between blindness and sadism I would say she is inflicted with the latter. You can
tell by her eyes that she is enjoying it.
Josh Jaratt - Eyes
Hyla Levy - one perfect day
I want one perfect day
Just one
For I have never had a perfect day.
I want one
Just one
So I may always hold hope that tomorrow can
be perfect too.
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