Monday, May 18, 2009
The Lonely Sailor
Nature, in all of its majesty and peacefulness, is more violent than any war-torn country. It can make a glorious, mile-long and seemingly impregnable steel ship bend in half and become devoured by the unslakable ocean, only to be rediscovered later covered in plants, and half-buried in sand. It can turn a thriving city into a serene lake, filled with disease and pain.
Now here I am, resisting futilely, trying to think of a way to escape. Shards of wood are flying past, along with metal parts of the former stairs to the upper deck. My sanctuary is quickly becoming my demise. I am stuck in a room, and it's pitch black, except for a sliver of light at the top, or is it the bottom, or side, of this encasement. After I reach the hole, I firmly shake the hatch and it slides open lethargically.
I hear the frightening creak of my boat crumbling up like a piece of paper destined for the rubbish. The creaking reminds me of the melancholy, slow utterances of whales I hear on informational t.v. shows. Maybe it is a whale, but I am not worried about that right now. My lungs are burning, and my brain is yearning for precious oxygen, the pangs grow more unbearable each second.
I swim with all my strength up, up, up, even though I have no idea which way I am going. Give me air!, give me life!, my body screams at me. It cant be too far away, I know it. I reach for air, as if air was palpable and I could grab it, but to no avail. There is only water and I do not have gills. The water pushed more on my ears, and I felt it, which told me that I was going the wrong way. Too late to turn back, I'm much too far to make it back up. I accept the fact of my impending death. BREATHE!!!
My brain tells my body, for it can't take it anymore, it's dry.
I inhale the life-giving water and salt, but this is not air, and my brain is not fed. I start to think of more peaceful things. My body has already given up, and I lay on a bed of grass, surrounded by plants and melodically chirping birds. Slowly the coldness of the water drifts away and I am warm, and calm, relaxed. Finally I forget about what has happened and it's just me, completely relaxed, and peaceful with myself, and I drift away, succumbing to the storm.
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
I Jumped
So it was just me, in space, flying away, abandoning hope, while hoping. Hoping that I would reach another place, another chance. In my travels, I passed a probe, with a flag of the former United States painted on it. It just continued in a straight line, without a purpose. It probably would have brought valuable information hinting at hope of life on another planet, but now it travels in vain, one of the few remnants of civilization. Maybe the probe was a preemptive attempt to establish life somewhere else, and they knew that they couldn't stay on that planet much longer.
There were comets off in the distance, emanating beauty in a tail of elegance, as their icy body melted off gradually from the heat of the nearby stars. Eventually they too will meet the same fate as my former home, melting down to nothing, and being forgotten. But at that time, it dazzled anything that was blessed with its presence, even though I was the only one who could see them. I had no one to tell this to, no one to share this vision with, so I could only awe myself with it.
The giant belt of rocks I passed consisted of millions of giant boulders, the size of buildings, crashing into each other with force I had yet to witness. Every collision pulverized the participating rocks, and it seemed if let to go on forever, that they would eventually turn themselves into dust, and lose their quality of being the obstacle course of our mini-universe.
Up higher, I could see all the planets in our solar system, looking so insignificant. I was headed toward a larger light, more hopeful looking then others. As the days passed, it appeared larger and larger. I didn't even have days anymore. When you get far enough away from the blanket of the sun, it becomes out of reach, and time becomes your own.
Even higher, above the sky of our system, I reminisced about the days when I lived on what then was a not even visible speck in the vast expanse of my field of vision. I thought about my days as a teacher. I taught my students history of our civilization on the grounds that history repeats itself. Now I realize that that statement is only partially true. History does repeat itself, but each time it repeats, it repeats itself ten times more intensely.
The former generations were limited by the technology that they had, they could wreak havoc on themselves, but there was only so much you can do with clubs and sharpened bone. As projectiles were discovered, killing was much easier, and with each advance in technology, ease of killing advanced. Then one day we harnessed the power that until that point in time, only god, or whatever made everything, had been able to harness. We could split an atom, the quintessential unit of matter. We could split existence. Before long, the world's inhabitants had the power to make the world uninhabitable with a couple depressions of buttons. So, unavoidably, history repeated itself, except this time, when we tried to destroy each other, we were capable of it and succeeded.
As I got closer to my destination, the light in the center enticed me and everything around it into its grasp. Closer, closer, and my hope was suddenly shattered by a sudden realization. This hole was attracting everything inside of it, but nothing was coming out. I was already at the point of no return, but still I tried to swim against the judgement whirlpool's current desperately. Like a bug to a zapper, there was nothing I could do to fight it. Faster, I approached it, faster, with every unit of time.
Doom was inevitable. I couldn't help but marvel at the beauty of this colossal engine of ending. It looked so serene, and there was no noise coming from it. But I knew what it really was, the most violent device in the universe. My body began to stretch, and I could see everything else being swallowed into this garbage disposal to nowhere. I just closed my eyes again and waited for it to end. Eventually there was nothing.
Maybe the nature of the universe is inevitable ending. Things are created to be destroyed, and life is a catalyst. I question whether any one thing can coexist with another forever. From a super giant celestial whirlpool eating itself and everything around it, to humanity collapsing in on itself, it seems as though it can't. I don't think I ever had a chance to begin with, or if everything is just too competitive.
Just as something as minute as a virus, after being almost completely eliminated, can build resistance and reestablish itself, maybe the largest entity that I know of, the universe, will reach the same fate as everything in its domain, and eventually be sanded away by itself, and reestablish itself. If it does, then will history repeat itself and come to a violent end again? Or will the new universe have a more peaceful existence? Perhaps somewhere out there in space, there is a universe that lacks violence, and that began peacefully, unlike with the bang of our current universe. On that universe, history wouldn't repeat itself, it would just continue.
Sunday, May 3, 2009
Im Red/Green Colorblind
Then she broke the news. "You're mildly red/green colorblind"
"Oh..." I replied
"It's no big deal its not like it changes a lot but you might not be able to be a fighter-pilot when you grow up."
I was devastated. All my life all I could think about was being a fighter pilot, flying around, doing flips in midair, taking out other fighter pilots. When I was 3 I got my first model airplane to play with and I was in love with planes ever since. I even tried flying one off the roof of my 2 story house when I was 8, and it worked.
Just kidding, I actually never really wanted to be a fighter pilot or anything.
When I asked the doctor how this affects the way I see things, she told me: "That's more of a philosophical question, I really don't know. Maybe its just different for you."
"Great." I thought. Now I have to go around for the rest of my life trying to think about how I see differently, mildly differently. Maybe Christmas is just less exciting for me. Maybe my red and green colors are switched. I guess I'll just ask a philosopher, who is probably better with philosophical questions than I am.
My whole life has been a lie and I have no idea what red and green is now. For now, I suppose I will just walk around, maimed in the eyes. Hopefully I will survive this colorblindness and continue on with my life...
Actually, its no big deal and doesn't really change anything at all, so I'm not worried about it.
Friday, May 1, 2009
There's An Eyelash in my Eye
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Happiness or Day Jah Voo? (based on scenes in "Their Eyes Were Watching God" by Zora Neale Hurston)
Cory
Their Eyes Were Watching God Essay
Topic #1: Narrative that tells a story from Janie Stark’s point of view.
-This narrative is told from the point of view of Janie, after she had married Joe and left Logan, and looks back
on how this happened.
Happiness, Or Day Jah Voo?
Boy I shir got tarred werkin down thurr in those thurr fields cuttin dem god danged seed ‘taters.
When ‘Ol Joey Starks came commin round tha way on dat road, I cud see him from my seat wurr I waz cuttin’ dem tater’s. He was dah guy I been dreemin of all dis time, tah get me way from my mizzerabull laff. I gave ‘im some sweet well water tah slake dat thursty throat of his. I got in quotations wid him and he told me dat I shuddent be doin’ wat I be doin now, doin deh “man’s work.” Dats wat I was be thinking all long!!!! I gotsd so happy at dat time, cuz all dat time I ben wating fer a way to get away frum dat terrible man Logan Killicks. One nite, I was so upset wit
Erry day after dat day since he came down to see me, he came again, the bee tah mah bloom, deh horizon wuz vizz’ble, I swurr tah gahd. Den one day I told
Fahnly, one mornin’, Joe was tah come and pick me up. To really stick it in his face, I made
Joe picked me up dat morn’ in a hired rig, almost lak a dream, and dah wagg’n carried us off tah Green Cove Springs, and we gots married tuhgethah, and we was buggin’. We took dah train down tuh a town full uh colored peoples juss lak me, and Joe wuz surprisinly gud at conversin’ tuh everyone. I was m’pressed. For duh hole train radd we wuz talking bout wut to do wid duh new town we wuz goin to. Joe had duh whole thing planned out.
When we gots to duh town it wuznt as gud as we both had hoped fer it to be, but Joe wuz still cool ‘bout it. We only hadz 50 acres wen we gots thurr. Joe di’nt think that was gud ‘nuff, so he went out and bot s’more land fer deh town. 200 acres t’be ‘xact. After dat, he bilt a mail place and a generile stoar. Den one day he told me I hadda werk in dat dere generile store. I was like in my hed “Aww hell nah, hurr we go aggin!”. Frum dat point ahn, our relashunship wuz a ball was lak a snowball rollin down a hill, ‘xcept instead of snow the snowball was collecting… bad… So our relationship gotstd bad. He start’d gittin all crazy and all ‘bout my hair. He thought there was be other guyz tran’to git wid me cuz mah hair was purrty. His control started tuh get more stronger, and I gots more sadder.
So now hurr I am, trapped in uh ‘nuther relashunship that is wid a guy dat controls mah laff az much as he can. Ahll never reach dat horizon. Love is a Sisyphean struggle. How I lurned dat word wid duh turrble vocablary dat I gotz I don’t know. But it works. So iz duh next man I meet gonnah be happiness, or duh same thing all ova again, or will I be stuckszed with this man fer mah whole laff. I hope not, I hope he getz rull sick n’ dies…
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
"Flight" by Sherman Alexie Review
I chose to buy the book Flight, mainly because of the interesting cover and the large text. I'm glad I chose this book, because it was one of the best books I have ever read. The story begins with a 15-year-old rebellious half Indian/ half White foster child in a new foster home. He tells us to call him Zits, without telling us his real name. He hates everyone, except for one 17-year-old interestingly called Justice. After a certain incident (read to find out) he begins an odyssey throughout the lives of many different people, and time era's, each with a challenge or an epiphany. It is a truly deep and modern novel, and I highly recommend it.
Alexie's style is so unique. The book reads very fast-paced, and the sentences are not too hard to understand, yet there are so many profound meanings and connections made throughout the book, which he won't outright say until the end, but you will most likely notice them beforehand. Via the mind of Zits (and the bodies and minds of others), Alexie conveys messages that truly make you think, without obscuring them with complex sentence structure.
Also, Alexie has a great sense of humor, he'll throw in lines that catch you off guard and make you laugh. Just on the third page he throws in a line which immediately made me respect his humor because of how peculiar but funny it was.
"And my alarm clock isn't playing Blood, Sweat & Tears or any other kind of music, so I punch it quiet, get out of bed, walk into the strange pink bathroom, and pee for three minutes"
I laughed out loud when I read this and just thought "What?". You pretty much have to read on after this. This book never gets boring, because there is always something happening, and every previous sentence makes you want to read the next one. Go buy this book!
I'm glad to actually be able to praise a book, because recently I have been forced to read, or sparknote some pretty miserable books such as "Their Eyes Were Watching God" by Zora Neale Hurston. I'll post my thoughts on that book later.
Anti-Poetry Poetry
Loaded sentances,
Like questions,
Objection.
Unconventional
----------------Sentance
---------Structure...
-------Minimal Words...
S P A C E
-------------Wonder
-----------------------What's [inside]
like
-------------a picture?
3rd:
Like Occam,
and his razor.
But don't forget
The open ended suggestions
Or it will be read but once
Its meaning deep like oceans.
Like oceans,
Much the same.