autumn twilight

… where the water meets the sea, between the worlds, within the void …

autumn twilight

… where the water meets the sea, between the worlds, within the void …

Servant of the Moon

He sat on the bench looking out over Lake Michigan. The humid air was no weight to him, clad in his pajamas (or what would have been pajamas if he didn’t sleep nude). Layers of clouds moved at various speeds across the sky above him, heading out over the lake. The water, indigo, shone with the streaks of light cast by planes moving towards O’Hare airport. It was an unlikely night to find him out of doors, when he’d normally prefer to be at home, reading, or working on the computer. But the moon was full, and for once, he found himself utterly unable to reject her call.

He clenches his black journal in his lap, holding it tight. The flexible cover was soft beneath his fingers, comforting. The moon peeks out from the clouds time and again, sending pale-white rays of light into his dark hair, piercing the veil of his eyes and pricking something within them.

There are shadows in those eyes, shadows that mirror the shapes of silence that skitter around his ankles, and in the trees behind him. Shadows that look out at him from the eyes of the late-night strolls, that stare at him from the eddies of the lake. Or maybe it is the shadows in his eyes that mirror the demons which lurk about him. He closes his eyes, as if that would seal away the demons, but they are waiting in his mind, their taunts filled with vicious glee.

He opens the journal, and uncaps the pen — a Pilot Varsity, his preferred pen when he can’t use a speedball. Pulling the black ribbon out of the way he lays the flanged tip of the pen to the paper in the upper right corner of a new page and dates it.

His script flows across the page. Not particularly pretty, nor even. There is nothing special about the writing, except perhaps that it is varied in style and weight. He draws his lower-case f’s with a flourish, a long curve and a tiny cross bar. It is one of the few letters he adores the shape of after he has written it. There is an elegance to the style of it. A part of him wishes his hand was fine enough to see that simple elegance in all of his characters, but there is no shame or regret. A steady and elegant hand is not his gift.

He strikes the naming of his demons upon the page, a driven mind using all it’s faculties and force to subdue the myraid beings which seek to conquer him, to return him to the chains of fear. It is a battle. Perhaps the people who walk by sense that something is going on, and they walk a larger arc around the strange man sitting on the bench, muttering to themselves in scorn or fear, but he knows only the battle. At length he recognizes that he is no longer afraid of the beings that circle him. They are no more then a distraction, an avoidance. And seeing their purpose he puts them aside, leaving his signature — a compressed scrawl of looping sigils — at the bottom of the page.

With a feeling of confidence he turns the ribbon down upon the page and closes the journal. He caps the pen, and places them on the bench next to him. He feels worn, drained. He is not certain that he has won anything in these past days, weeks, or years. The strength of him feels diminished, as though he has been lessened by battles that should have made his stride more sure. He lifts his eyes to the sky, and the full moon bursts through the cloud cover, her light pouring down upon the world as though it were meant only for him. He sits transfixed by the sight, and murmurs, not knowing what the words mean, only that they are true. “I am a servant of the moon.”

There is a resonance of sound around him, and the world stands still. The words hang, suspended in the air before him. They turn and circle him, growing in volume as they spin about, dancing in the moonlight and flooding him with their purity and truth. The stillness passes and he is left gasping for breath, and he feels a weight in the core of him, a dirty blackness, and for an instant he considers taking the Gerber pocket-knife out and cutting away the vile sensation.

He knows this feeling though, and he rebels against it. This is not the time, not the place! his mind cries out. He looks around, and there are plenty of people about who might interrupt him, who might disturb him as he tries to expel this horror within him. He stops the panic that rises within him. He can feel the gagging nausea in the back of his throat, trying to expel the darkness already. He takes a deep breath and lifts his eyes to the sky. “I am a servant of the moon.” He tries the words on, letting them slither around his body, raising hairs and shivers, raising a quiet peace about him.

Turning the tip of his tongue to the roof of his mouth he bends over towards the pavement before the bench, leaning his elbows upon his knees. He spits once, expelling the excess saliva that has built up. I can do this gently, he thinks. He breaths in through his nose, letting his tongue find the center of his soft palette. He instantly feels a surge of life, a silver current of vital energy that fills his lungs and body. He exhales through his mouth, slowly, and a dirty gray taints the air, pooling on the cement in front of him. Again, measuring his breath slowly, carefully, using all the skill which he possesses to squeeze the lesser bile out of himself.

Here again, the passers by may look upon him strangely. But they see only a man who appears nauseous. The air on the pavement appears normal to them, though to his eyes it grows darker and darker. His exhalations grow slowly more difficult, as though he were squeezing his esophagus with his diaphragm. The breath which leaves him grows more vile each time, although there is nothing of darkness in that silver light that fills his eyes, pouring now from his very pores. This too goes unseen by those around him, although how they could miss the glow of his already pale skin, he will wonder later.

Finally, he tries to exhale and there is no breath to pass. He inhales more deeply, and again he can not expunge his lungs. It comes, though he had worked to avoid the need, and he begins to choke on the dark matter that rises up his throat, pushed ever so slowly by the air that is trying to escape. He forces his body to calmness and lets the convulsion wrack his torso. He gags and chokes, and his body heaves as though his stomach were turning itself inside out, and finally a tarry mass of air flies from his mouth to puddle with the darkness at his feet. He spits into the morass. Again. His eyes are filled with tears. He inhales slowly, gently, deeply through his nostrils.

The convulsions take him again, worse this time, and still more of the dirty air pours from him, as though he were a fountain. Minutes pass, and still the violence of his exhalation worsens. Until finally he spits and his mouth is dry. He inhales cleanly, and the silver light that permeates him washes through his exhalation, clean moonlight that arcs from his eyes and lips to dispel the accumulated wreck of so many battles. His cheeks are moist with tears, and they wet his lips as he rubs his fingers through them. He breathes deeply and gazes up at the moon, which glows only for him at this moment, a mother, her belly full with a new child, gazing proudly as her son becomes a man.

He smiles and lets his tears trickle down his throat. He frees his hair from it’s band and it falls down around his face, absorbing the moisture there, and then lifting as a cooler gust of air comes out of the city. He places his hand on the journal and pen and picks them up rising. He salutes the moon with a single hand, and with the shimmer of his soul.

There are more battles to be fought, far more he must do in this world. There is more tar that lies hidden within him, and there are new demons which will come to haunt him. He knows that it may never end, but there is no sadness in it now, for he is a servant of the moon.

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Free:

What an interesting feeling this is. I don’t really know where it’s coming from. It wasn’t really there when I woke up this morning, but it’s been building. It was a seed then, and it has been blossoming through me all day. It’s as though I’ve been infused with some strength or knowledge as I slept, or done the work that needed to be done and awoken to find that I am whole.

I feel as though I am a new person, singular. I feel better, healed. There is a sense that I don’t need the crutches that I’ve used to survive anymore. It feels like the masks no longer fit, like the troubles I’ve had in my life are merely garments, raiments which have served their purpose and must now be cast aside.

I know, Know, this is not so simple as my senses lead me to believe. There is struggle there, there is pain. There is the inevitable force of will I must exert. There is a maintenance cost. There is suffering, and aloneness. There is a long hard travail down the crooked path which lies before and behind me, but Inside, there is me. And I feel overjoyed, happy with the featherless soaring of a balloon or kite. I feel as though it takes but a though to cast aside my shroud and awaken. It is as though a spell has lifted, and I am free to be myself.

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Free to be Myself

A hundred angered thoughts as I draw myself awake,
thrown from my mind by the pressure
of their fury. Bereft of attention, I am
hungered. And Alone. Not alone, but Alone.

There is a stirring as I rise, and all
seems as it should be, but there is a stirring inside.

A quietude of force, a seed,
roots now wrapping around my spine,
rising like the serpent with a magnitude I do not grasp.

The mirror smiles at me, and though I look
like shit, there is peace.

I commute, and somewhere in the between-ness,
There is a stillness, a clarity, that I am Free.
Free of what? Free of whom? Free.

Libera me, de eterna morte, vita en eterna morte.

I don’t know what it means yet, but for once
I feel free.

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Games for Grades: not an incentive, but a permission…

Games for Grades: Kind of Backwards

Wow. The manager of this GameStop decided that he was going to help out the community by refusing to sell games to teenagers unless an adult vouched that they were getting decent grades.

Bad Business. Bad. GameStop suspended the manager, wisely, and has said that he instituted the policy entirely of his own volition and that it is not a corporate policy. They said they would review the concept to see if it had merit.

It does have merit. If they’re trying to stop selling games. I understand the intent here. It’s a good one, but this manager obviously didn’t get very good grades himself, at least not in psychology. By refusing to sell games he’s creating bad PR, losing sales, and generally making himself a nuisance. Since there are certainly other stores where kids can buy games that don’t have this restriction he’s just driving away business.

Corporate policies should definitely try to help communities. But is driving yourself out of business and creating job-loss good for the community? I have a better idea. If you make the honor-roll you get 5% off every purchase for the next 3 months. Straight A’s? 10%. — Even better, register as a participant in the program, and your discount will increase each time you achieve your level. (first time 5%, second in a row 7%, third in a row 10% etc. Miss one you start back at 5% next time)

If the guy doesn’t get fired he’s lucky. GameStop has the opportunity to turn this event into a whole LOT of money in volume if the make the policy described above official and spread it across all their stores nation wide. Great PR, and most people won’t take advantage of it, but they’ll shop there because they know GameStop is working to make a difference.

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Quick, tase the shit out of him, he’s a college student!

Okay. What the Fuck is this about?

Shocking Q&A: Student Tasered

Don’t get me wrong, resisting arrest is usually not a wise thing to do. That said I’m not quite sure the student was resisting arrest, and considering that he was already in handcuffs it seems a little excessive to tase the kid.

Here’s what I suspect happened. The officers, having been assigned to keep the order at a political event with a very big-name speaker, were nervous, because they were made aware of how important it is to make sure nothing goes wrong and reflects badly on the school or the community. Well, failure on that count.

I’ve read some mixed opinions on the subject, and sadly there seems to be no conclusive information about all the events leading up to the arrest, or the reaction of Kerry to the arrest.

I found a more complete version of the story here. Kerry is clearly distressed, although as a politician he is probably concerned about his public image as much as anything else. The officers have been placed on administrative leave. The states attorney hasn’t yet decided if they’re going to prosecute him.

I’m going to follow up on the story and I’ll try to update this post with the results.

What does it say about our officers that they responded this way? Shouldn’t there have been an amiable solution to what seems to be a relatively simple solution. Granted Andrew probably shouldn’t have struggled or gone into hysterics, but I don’t think the situation was undeserving of them. The article doesn’t give details about the exchange between Andrew and the officers before they physically accosted him, but did they warn him they would use force to remove him? How long did this conversation take? Did the officers resort to force for the sake of expediency? It seems likely to me.

This brings up something that I’ve noticed often. Now before I say this let me be clear. I have a great respect for men and women who put their lives on the line in service to the public. Police officers deserve our admiration and respect. Still, why is it that so many police officers are dicks? When I say so many, what I’m really saying is ‘any.’ Police officers should theoretically have the weight of the law to back their actions, so why are we always hearing stories about how they strong-armed somebody, or threatened them? Why is it that officers turn their sirens on just long enough to get through a red light and then immediately turn them off? Or more infuriating still, why do they just run the light without any warning, ignoring the safety of the people around them? (I live in Chicago. I see this constantly)

I don’t know, but I have some suspicions. We of course need to acknowledge that the assholes we hear about and run-into are very likely the extreme minority. The one time I was arrested the Officer and I talked about our families and our plans for Thanksgiving. Great guy. Anyway, I suspect that for some officers one of two things (or a combination thereof) causes them to be dicks.

A) They were attracted to the job because they’re bullies who enjoy having the authority to be abusive.
B) They’re genuinely people with a good intent, that get hung up on their authority because nobody ever taught them how not to do so.

So how do we discourage our officers from being this way? My answer, give them respect, and hold them to a higher standard. We have granted these men and women a great authority and responsibility. I understand how heavily that must weigh on them. With that responsibility comes a standard of behavior. When you interact with an officer be polite, honest, and straightforward. Don’t dodge the questions or mouth off. See if the officer returns the courtesy. If he does, sweet! If not, note his badge number. If you feel he’s treating you inappropriately first let him know, politely, that you feel in that manner.

“Officer, I am cooperating fully with you and have been polite and direct. I would appreciate it if you did not (Condescend to) (Verbally Abuse) (Speak harshly) (Touch) (etc) me in that way.”

Note the officers badge number. If he or she doesn’t improve his or her behavior, report the officer at your next opportunity. I would recommend (unless their behavior was clearly illegal or damaging) that you not attempt to report his or her behavior from your holding cell.

All in all, Cops are good people. A few months ago I accidentally ran a red light. I pulled over immediately (Actually pulled over before I even knew there was a cop there, I scared myself). I explained what happened to the officer, sheepishly, and gave him my License, Registration, and Insurance information. I expected a ticket. Instead he teased me about it and told me to get home safe.

So the moral of the story? Don’t fight the cops, file a complaint later. Be upfront and honest, and understand that they’ve got a tough job. If they’re doing something wrong, pay attention to it, let them know, and then let their superiors know.

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