Wednesday, October 03, 2007
No More
He had finished dragging all the big pieces to the shed by moonlight. He couldn't remember how he did it. Did anyone see? The boughs of the elm in the yard shaded the radiating street lights that vainly try to brighten the lives of those who wander the backstreets. He shrank into the shade of the doorway and fell silent, listening for the sounds only a suspicious mind could imagine. A pause, feeling like an eternity was filled with nothing but dead air. He inhaled deeply and closing his eyes he leaned into the wooden frame of the door. It smelled like seasoned cedar. He looked into the garage at what he'd dragged in and descended upon it. Closing the door shut tight before turning on the hook light, he took in the seriousness of the situation. Frightening shadows cast by the lamp made his thin and normally harmless form turn into something as macabre as his intentions. Disbelief would have crowded his wrenched mind if only he would stop rationalizing his actions. It's too late now... He needed something sharp to finish his work. The clockwork of his brain was so jammed. Everything was built up to this and the release would be the end of all his frustration and pain. The first blow came and the tension from his knotted neck and face unwound and gave him the courage to strike again. A large chunk flew off and hit his shins. He would clean it up later. For now, it was about the violence and he brought down the axe. The axe he had never used because he told himself that he bought it for cutting hedges and yard work. He'd known all along what it was really going to be used for. He looked down at the destruction created by his hands and the tool held in them. He exhaled years of lies and poison. He would never use a computer again for as long as he lived.
Friday, September 07, 2007
Giant Beans
She was stolen from her parents when she was five years old while waiting for a bus. There were big colourful bean shaped seats meant for patrons of the public transit system to wait on and take in the refreshing smells and sounds of a small garden in the middle of downtown. She saw the same giant beans almost everyday but she never played on them again. Was it so horrible that she knew what happened to her and didn't do anything to find her real parents? Everyday she sat in the bus and was brought to the giant beans and thought asked that question to the window pane. She hadn't been so young when she was lead by the hand of an old woman away from her family and she remembered what those people meant to her. They were disorderly and mean people that hardly fed her and just barely clothed her. These people that occasionally put her to bed at night would strike her in foul moods and lock her in closets so as not to be bothered by her presence. She was always hungry and dirty and stopped going to school because no one cared if she went or not. Her things were kept in a garbage bag.
Then came a very nice lady who cried for her and promised her that Jesus loved her very much. These days she knew that Jesus was really just an idea and she watched those giant beans everyday through the thin pane of glass and remembered how ideas saved her and how ideas loved her. Something invisible loved her more than her real parents did and although she didn't choke up anymore at the idea, a big stone of sadness was still sitting at the bottom of her stomach. She loved her new mother more than Jesus ever could and always would but pain has a long memory and the stone of sadness would not be digested.
That particular day, a group of kindergarten children were waiting for a bus to the museum and while they stopped they played on the giant beans. They rolled over them and jumped off of them and slid down the sides. No one looked very hungry or especially filthy and this warmed the frosty hurt inside her. She smiled to herself and at that stop a boy her age sat down next to her and excused his guitar because it was rather large. They talked about music for almost half an hour and about half a year later they moved in with eachother. Eventually, they bought a car together and she didn't pass by those giant beans anymore. Eventually, the giant stone beans at the bottom of her stomach shrank like the wad that is eaten away with time and acid when you stop swallowing all your gum. They moved with her mother and their new daughter to just outside Toronto and those giant beans never saw her again.
Then came a very nice lady who cried for her and promised her that Jesus loved her very much. These days she knew that Jesus was really just an idea and she watched those giant beans everyday through the thin pane of glass and remembered how ideas saved her and how ideas loved her. Something invisible loved her more than her real parents did and although she didn't choke up anymore at the idea, a big stone of sadness was still sitting at the bottom of her stomach. She loved her new mother more than Jesus ever could and always would but pain has a long memory and the stone of sadness would not be digested.
That particular day, a group of kindergarten children were waiting for a bus to the museum and while they stopped they played on the giant beans. They rolled over them and jumped off of them and slid down the sides. No one looked very hungry or especially filthy and this warmed the frosty hurt inside her. She smiled to herself and at that stop a boy her age sat down next to her and excused his guitar because it was rather large. They talked about music for almost half an hour and about half a year later they moved in with eachother. Eventually, they bought a car together and she didn't pass by those giant beans anymore. Eventually, the giant stone beans at the bottom of her stomach shrank like the wad that is eaten away with time and acid when you stop swallowing all your gum. They moved with her mother and their new daughter to just outside Toronto and those giant beans never saw her again.
Friday, August 31, 2007
Opportune Moment
He shared a classroom with her for over four years but he had still only spoken to her once when they had been paired as project partners yesterday. He fully recognized how madly in love with her he was and that is why it was completely unbearable to know that she pretty much held him in common thought with mud and the goo of bugs on the front of your car after a long drive. She moved like an angel... He thought about her in Biology the most because she sat directly infront of him. That was mostly the reason they had been set up into that fateful group.
Her friends thought that he was really strange and she generally agreed ; he wore a towel around his neck. If maybe he was a jock and always sweaty then perhaps the sporting of absorbent cloth would make a little bit of sense but he actually just wore a towel for some kind of statement. She had read his favourite book in grade 9 out of curiosity and thought that that kind of dedication was somewhat admirable but after four years she was begining to think that he was actually out of his senses. This meaning that he be sentenced to social ostracism for being different and difficult. It was never her intention to bring this about but she realized it the day they were partnered and they spoke to eachother for the very first time in four years.
He thought she was the most beautiful girl that he had ever seen and the most perfect human that had ever been created. He stashed his towel in has backpack to get to Biology so that no one would steal it as a prank in the hall and he really felt like the connection between them was so strong that the teacher had chose them together because he could sense it too.
All class he thought about taking her out to dinner and making her think that they were going to work on their Bio project but really it was a suprise! She sat infront of him unmoving and quietly. Then the bell rang and she stayed seated while the class packed up their things and filed out, shuffling their lazy feet like penguins waddle. Still she remained seated and looked nervously around for her girlfriends. He felt something was wrong and decided to bring it up.
"Is something the matter?"
She seemed so embaressed that she could die and kind of muttered something short and quiet.
She waited a second until the teacher turned away and the last classmate left then sort of arose from the chair a slight little bit. It was covered in blood.
"I didn't know it was coming. I can't leave the classroom like this." She snivelled and broke out in tears. He took his towel out of his bag at that moment and offered it to her.
"Wear this until you can go change in the locker rooms. I'll cover your chair with papertowel until you're back and changed."
She shuffled into the towel as fast as she could and took off down the hall. He covered the messed chair and felt hurt that she hadn't thanked him at all.
Then he looked up and she was there, changed into her gym shorts and flushed with embaressment and hurry. He couldn't remember how she got from the door to him but he liked to think that she floated over. All he could remember was that she kissed him and that they missed their next class together and that he never got his towel back. Slut.
Her friends thought that he was really strange and she generally agreed ; he wore a towel around his neck. If maybe he was a jock and always sweaty then perhaps the sporting of absorbent cloth would make a little bit of sense but he actually just wore a towel for some kind of statement. She had read his favourite book in grade 9 out of curiosity and thought that that kind of dedication was somewhat admirable but after four years she was begining to think that he was actually out of his senses. This meaning that he be sentenced to social ostracism for being different and difficult. It was never her intention to bring this about but she realized it the day they were partnered and they spoke to eachother for the very first time in four years.
He thought she was the most beautiful girl that he had ever seen and the most perfect human that had ever been created. He stashed his towel in has backpack to get to Biology so that no one would steal it as a prank in the hall and he really felt like the connection between them was so strong that the teacher had chose them together because he could sense it too.
All class he thought about taking her out to dinner and making her think that they were going to work on their Bio project but really it was a suprise! She sat infront of him unmoving and quietly. Then the bell rang and she stayed seated while the class packed up their things and filed out, shuffling their lazy feet like penguins waddle. Still she remained seated and looked nervously around for her girlfriends. He felt something was wrong and decided to bring it up.
"Is something the matter?"
She seemed so embaressed that she could die and kind of muttered something short and quiet.
She waited a second until the teacher turned away and the last classmate left then sort of arose from the chair a slight little bit. It was covered in blood.
"I didn't know it was coming. I can't leave the classroom like this." She snivelled and broke out in tears. He took his towel out of his bag at that moment and offered it to her.
"Wear this until you can go change in the locker rooms. I'll cover your chair with papertowel until you're back and changed."
She shuffled into the towel as fast as she could and took off down the hall. He covered the messed chair and felt hurt that she hadn't thanked him at all.
Then he looked up and she was there, changed into her gym shorts and flushed with embaressment and hurry. He couldn't remember how she got from the door to him but he liked to think that she floated over. All he could remember was that she kissed him and that they missed their next class together and that he never got his towel back. Slut.
Sunday, August 19, 2007
Friday, August 17, 2007
Jenwa and the Pepper Spray
Walking home late at night down the tunneled streets of Wolseley Avenue is probably my favourite thing to do on this planet. There is however, a very big difference in walking home late at night and walking home very late at night, completely trashed. The air is still and quiet almost like it's sleeping too. The sound of your footsteps are the loudest thing for blocks and the light of the moon is kept away by the very trees so adored by the dozing hippies all around. The deep wish that everyone dangerous has already passed out by 3AM becomes more and more feverant. Being a small and weak creature, clutching desperately at a small can of dog repellant/pepper spray is the only line of sanity keeping me anchored and safe from the raging waters in the Bay of Panic and Run. Every shadow is a rapist and every tree in the wind a robber.
What a perfect time to practice my Kung-Fu!
Lawn Gnome casualties: 7 and 1/2
Jenwa casualties: 0
What a perfect time to practice my Kung-Fu!
Lawn Gnome casualties: 7 and 1/2
Jenwa casualties: 0
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