Tag Archives: death

And then I died

crowgrave

“…an eagle came and swooped me up
And through the air we flied,
But he dropped me in a boiling lake
A thousand miles wide.
And you’ll never guess what I did then–
I DIED.”

~ Shel Silverstein’s “True Story” from Where the Sidewalk Ends

I posted True Story in it’s entirety once, I only needed a tidbit for this entry. Basically, I only needed the last line…

Have you ever had the fleeting thought that you actually died at one point in your life and all of this is just you dreaming in your coffin? Or your afterlife? Or that millisecond before death and you imagined all this is what would have happened? Not in a morbid, gothy-whiny sort of way, but in a more elusive, disenchanted, disconnected and possibly surreal moment kind of way. And for our purposes, without the use of drugs to get there. Have you?

I have.

And I’d always thought it a bit odd. One of those strange thoughts I have that I keep to myself for fear of being locked up. But, as a little moonlight and a lot of tequila have revealed, I am not alone in this thought. It’s fleeting and not at all suicidal, it’s more of a “what if” situation.

And so, I drag it into the garage for this Thursday’s question. Never mind if you have or haven’t had the thought, I wouldn’t want to out those of you still protecting yourself from the encumbering styles currently available in high-end straight jackets. Rather, for giggles, let’s pretend you all have… now tell me when you died. What moment could have been your death? That near miss on the highway? That accident that didn’t happen on the farm? Whatcha got?

Me? I drowned when I was six. I was swimming with the daycare away group in some shallow rapids and hit one of those soft spot drop-offs. I remember going under, hitting bottom way over my head, springing up and gulping air, and then going down again. I did this several times before… Before I died, and dreamed the rest of this life I’ve had =)

That was my moment. When did you die?

Tell me a story…

73781812Age is a funny thing. The older you get, the more you think back to what’s come before now. Of course, you also forget more of those memories every day than you remember. But just for fun, let’s pretend you remember everything… and now you’ve died.

Ha! Happy Thursday. You weren’t expecting me to kill you all off, were you? Well, for today’s garage talk, we don’t want to talk about your death. We want to talk about your life… or rather, how you would portray it in a movie.

Everyone’s heard the “who plays you in your life story” question. This is different. I don’t care about the actor, their talents, their looks, nothing… I only care about their voice. If the story of your life was made into a movie that started with your death and then flashbacked—so you are not in it, except your voiceover—who is the voice? No, not you. Cheap answer. Cusack? Depp? Hepburn? Cher? Who would you like to be the voiceover of “you” in this film?

And why? Because you knew you weren’t getting off easy with just a name for an answer. Why do you choose that person? Is it their voice? Their timbre? Their tone? Just a favorite actor and that’s enough for you to want their voice? Gimme a good answer… or at least a completed one. There is no bad answer.

Who is you?

Me? Easy. I’ve had the same answer to this question for the last twenty years: Kathleen Turner. She’s got a great, sultry, deep female voice that sounds like she may have spent just a touch too long in the smoking section at a convention. Great tone, great range of emotion, and come on, she was Jessica Rabbit for pete’s sake!

You and you and you… and you

human-cloningYet again the couch in the garage is the hot seat for debate and discussion. This time, it sounds like just the thing for a question or two for everyone. Yep, it’s Thursday. Yep, it’s Garage Talk…

The topic: cloning. Now, for clarification, “cloning” as currently defined by successful scientific experiments is technically more of a manipulation rather than duplication. For this conversation, however, you need to travel 20 years into the future and join our “what if” situation—exact duplication of a human, not manipulation of an embryo or egg. Your cell sample creating an exact duplicate of you.

How do you feel about that?

You like that? We’re barely in and there’s a question already. Don’t worry, it’ll get worse. Because—as we discussed cloning and scientific research, and took a tangent over to computers and the development of a self-aware machine, and back again with a combination of the two—the conversation got a little scary. Maybe I’m watching The X-Files too much lately. Maybe my paranoid, worried, mommy-head is working overtime. Regardless, there are some scary things on the horizon.

To bring it to a nutshell… Imagine a few of the situations we brought up. 1. president is shot, it’s ok, we have a clone, plug in the memory backup and put him/her behind the podium and no one will ever know. 2. body farm clone for each individual, until a child dies and the parents just want the whole clone to raise. 3. clone armies and neighbors, as they mingle with society. 4. Souls, nature vs. nurture, and other chewy tidbits. 5. Dolly, the new movie Splice, and the imagination of two writers with a pot of coffee… yep, it got interesting. This blog would be four miles long if I went into the whole thing, so let’s just pull a few thoughts for some mind play.

Would you eat cloned livestock? Would you clone yourself for body parts? Would you allow your children to date and/or marry and reproduce with a clone?

Ohhh, that last one is the fun one. We asked the kids and neighborhood clan and they all freaked out. Not a “yes” among them. This, of course, made me wonder (and discuss with the Hippie) how prejudices would work with clones in society. The same civil liberties expected and the same close-minded results as every other minority and/or subculture has experienced. But would they deserve civil liberties? Sure they’d be “technically” human. Scientifically they would be no different—although we did have a great little tangent regarding the belly button and back alley surgeries to correct that. But would they be accepted as “human”? No. I do not believe they would be. Not by the majority any way.

So, what are your thoughts on this wandering topic of chewy goodness? Your neighbor is a clone. Your kids’ teacher is a clone. Your granddaughter brings her boyfriend home and you find out he’s a clone. In our reality, where science never knows when enough is enough, and human beings are a destructive force when it comes to technology, energy and progress, what are your thoughts on the future under the “what if” of actual cellular duplicates developed and maintained in a lab somewhere?

My strangest thought of the conversation…still stuck with me? “We don’t have enough room for all our dead on this planet… where are we going to store all the extra living?”

Evil Plans

scr-weight-loss-diet-supplementsI’ve come up with the best diet EVAH!! I swear! I promise! Hell, if I had snake oil, I’d give ya some of that for FREE!

Really?

Yes!

Because the planet is full of people looking for that easy way out. And because I’m sick to DEATH of hearing advertisements for this diet and that diet, and know that 99.99% of them don’t work… but their creator’s are getting rich from all the people willing to try it.

So I’m here to tell you the greatest diet plan EVAH. You don’t have to exercise or eat right. It doesn’t include surgery. And I guarantee results. That’s right. Guarantee. And the best part? It’s only $1.00.  Of course, my evil business partner has a $400 pill that you’ll want eventually, but we’ll get to that. For now, just think $1.00 and no exercise!!

How’s it work? Simple! Just swallow one little pill,  sit back and wait—or is that weight? hehe… Inside that capsule is a tiny little tape worm that will find a happy home inside your guts. As it grows, you shrink. Voila! It’s like magic.

Now about that other pill. When you’re done losing weight, you simply purchase the other pill, conveniently priced below the cost of a doctor visit and the procedures you could optionally use. Swallow pill and voila, tape worm dead. Diet over. And now you fit in that dress!

Isn’t that brilliant?

Whaddya mean “no”? It’s no different than what’s on the market. Well except it comes with a parasite. And I’m being honest, which is more than what the rest of them do. Of course, it’s dangerous. But…

Fine. It’s not brilliant. But it sounds like something we’re going to hear in the not-to-far future the way the commercials are getting. And when it happens I’ll be able to point back to this blog and know I said it first.

So… pre-orders are open. Who wants a $1.00 pill before they go swimsuit shopping?

Tearing Down the Past

tearitdownSaturday-Sucked, part 2…

I moved a lot as a child. From Wisconsin to Texas and back, and quite a bit around Superior. By the time I got to high school, I had gone to five of the six elementary schools and knew 80% of the kids in our town of 36,000. As such, I didn’t really have any attachment to the places we lived. I don’t truly have a “childhood home”. Oh I have memories at this one and that one. But none of the memories are of the house itself.

Save one.

For the last half of fourth grade and the first half of fifth, I lived in a huge monster of a Victorian house. It was gorgeous. It had sliding glass doors, hand-carved cherry wood throughout, hidden passages, a dumbwaiter in my bedroom, strange rooms that no one liked, and an odd walkway through a section of the walls that may have been underground railroad. It was cool as hell.

And haunted.

My sister and mother and I all agree to this without any hesitation. We lived there with someone else. I’ve told friends about this house over the years and the woman that stood in the attic window. I’ve explained how one of us would stand on the street and watch, and the other would go to the attic room and stand in the window, waving their arms to the horror and dismay of the one on the street. She was there. You were standing right next to her! There were footsteps heard going up and down those stairs all night long. There was a basement room that none of us could stand in without wanting to run. Things happened that could not be explained. It was haunted. We know this. We don’t question it one bit… and the following residents must have agreed, because they boarded up that attic window in no time flat.

I’ve actually written quite a bit about the year I spent in this house. This was where we lived when I nailed my sister in the forehead from across the room with my hairbrush, because she was touching my books. This was the house I started writing short stories instead of just poetry. This was where we experienced the tent worm attack that has since turned into a novella (due out next year, announcement coming, and referenced in my short story “The Man Who Slept Through Tomorrow” in Shroud #6). This was the house of the moose skull that’s in my upcoming novel “In the Shadow of Darkness” (announcements on that also coming). The nearby graveyard we explored is in a novel I’ll be working on next year. The ghost in the attic has a whole novel dedicated to her. Unfortunately, this is also a house filled with horrible memories, some of which have also been muse fodder—but I don’t dwell on those, and no, I won’t tell you which stories. Whenever I’m standing at the edge of a major decision, I have a reoccurring dream which includes the trap door in the attic of this old mansion. This house came with memories for the muse and cemented lifelong beliefs in the afterlife and paranormal experiences. This house, overall, was a major turning point in my childhood. In my life.

And I wanted to show Bob the famous haunted house of my childhood.

I had planned to do better than a drive-by—I was going to knock on the door and explain I lived there as a child and ask if I could walk through. I was going to see if I could stand in that basement room now. I planned to find out if I was even able to climb those attic steps. I was going to say good-bye to old ghosts—both the house’s and my own. I was going to get an adult visual of the rooms and passageways for the novel. And I was going to rescue the journal I forgot, above the 3rd tile from the left of the drop-ceiling in my old bedroom.

But the house is gone.

My sister told me they tore it down and I couldn’t believe it. I think I was actually in denial. They couldn’t have. It was one of the oldest houses in town. Of course, it was in a town that loves to tear down its history and replace it with concrete and glass. So after we went treasure hunting on Saturday, I had mom drive by. I had to see this for myself. And I found that it was true.

It was gone.

The massive porch, gone. The weird twisting back entry, gone. The massive windows and cool little gables, gone. Hell, even the sidewalk to the front street was gone. There’s nothing there but a dirt patch to hold my ghosts. I was shocked. I was saddened. About a decade ago, when they sold the lot across the way and my favorite reading tree was trashed to put up a garage, I was stung with loss. This went deeper. I had a hard time comprehending what was right in front of me—nothing.

The ride home included mom and I rehashing for Bob several of the ghostie’s tricks. She reminded me of the storm that scared the crap out of us. I recalled the shadows that seemed darker than they should have and the sounds we could not explain. And I repeatedly droned, “I cannot believe they tore it down.”

And as we neared my parents’ house a thought dawned on me, “Where will the ghost go?”

My ghosts are buried in the soil. If you believe that events can haunt a location, I may actually be one of the ghosts in that ground. But I was referring to our mystery maid (the attic window was the servant quarters, so we had all agreed years ago that it was a servant’s ghost). Where will she go? How will she walk the stairs that are no longer there? How will she slam the door that has been dragged away to some salvage yard? What will she do? Where will she go?

And the more we thought about it, the more we questioned it. Where do ghosts go when you tear down their haunting grounds?

I got home and hopped on Google hoping to find pictures to use as reference for the novel. There was nothing. Mom laughed, “Well, no one can fact check. You can just make shit up now.” Yeah, I love turrets, but that house didn’t have any…and it won’t in the novel either. Realizing her snark was met with sadness, she told me that the woman that lived there before us probably had pictures and that she ran into her all the time at garage sales and such. I told her to ask next time and she agreed. Case closed.

I thought.

The universe is goofy. Just when you need something the most, it delivers. I had taken a one-two punch Saturday—between the teacher’s estate sale and my house being gone—and was feeling beaten. I was deep in thought, dredging through memories of both school and that house. And still in that funk when we returned to the estate sale Sunday.

And the universe provided.

There was Mrs. Farmer, chatting up my mom as I came around a corner. And yes, she has pictures. She also has my address now and will be sending me what she’s got. I have to wonder if the ghostie will show up in them or not.

They say “you can never go home again.” This time, they weren’t joking, but I’ve got pictures coming in the mail. And as mom says, I’m writing it all down and making my ghost immortal, even if the walls that held her are gone…