Mailed

PROMPT: “The Hobbit” episode of South Park is ultimately about the giving up of integrity and self-image for the perceived worth of public beauty. It’s the idea that image has more substance than self. And the sadness at the end when Wendy tearfully gives in to the pressures of society and sacrifices her self-worth to be like the other girls. It’s poignant.

FILL: As a girl she was confident and smart and believed that she could do anything. But somewhere along the road to adulthood she lost that belief in herself. The people around her chipped away at it with their words and their expressions until she found herself changing, growing smaller, compacting inward.

There are times when she fears she will implode. Too many words aimed too sharply and her internalization will see her fold in and disappear. She will be gone, and the stranger walking around in her skin will be the woman they’ve made her into: shallow empty shell with hollow eyes and a soulless smile, desperation oozing from every pore. “What can I do to please you, master?”

It sickened her as much as it made her afraid. How much of herself could be carved way until nothing of substance was left? It was probably too little and too late to wonder.

The confident happy-go-lucky girl she used to be was gone. She’d taken her pony dolls and lasso of truth and disappeared somewhere too narrow for a woman to foll.

This is what growing up does to people, she thought. We become the mold we’re forced into. Images become reality, and reality becomes shaded with lies powered by greed and self-indulgence.

We are the Cube.

[IMAGE: the puzzle from “Hellraiser shifting and turning through empty space. Close up, each block is a room full of danger. People struggle fruitlessly to escape, each one representing an aspect of a personality: intelligence, aggression, compassion, self-awareness, despair, and delusion.

The people battle their way through to find the exit. The weak and unable to adapt perish, unaware that the traps are the obvious danger, while the thing that really kills them is their own fear and desperation.

A single survivor makes it through the shining door. To live, to die, who knows. It is an open-ended possibility.

Expanded outward, past the cube and it’s sliding, changing state. Past the writing on the walls and the edges of fingers working the puzzle. Farther and farther, until light.

Outward through an eye and expanded to focus on a room. And in that room sits you.

We are the Cube. We are the evil trapped within, and the hope left shimmering at the bottom of the box. Trapped, waiting, willing a pair of idle hands to find us.]

She flopped back on her bed, staring — shocked — at the ceiling.

“I don’t want to do this,” she said. Her voice sounded scratchy and strange. But she listened.

She didn’t want to be the perfect little girl anymore.

She didn’t want to be anyone’s baby.

At the end of the day, she wanted to be loved. So like sweet pig-nosed Penelope, she would learn that she had value and self-worth. If no one else would love her the way that she deserved, she would love herself.

Whether she sent herself flowers or wrote herself uplifting notes, she treated herself with a kindness she never had before.

And suddenly those hurtful glances didn’t matter quite so much. That loudmouthed boy was an inconsequential ant (though secretly she feared he might be the next Hitler). She still hung out with her friends, but she could already feel herself slipping away from small town life.

She was ready to leave high school behind and go to college. She was counting down the years, months, and days until she could finally move into a small apartment and live FREE.

She thought about different things: Shaving her head. Having sex with a variety of people. Fucking herself on her bed or all across her apartment and being as loud as she wanted. Walking around naked and feeling sexy as she freely looked at herself.

Being at home meant there was never any privacy. There was always someone waiting to listen outside her door and call out “You alive in there?” right when she was on the brink of orgasm.

She could barely wait until she had a place of her own.

Somewhere where she could lock the door and not have to fear that those boys were filming her. (She still ached over the loss of innocence when she’d realized his friends had installed cameras in her playhouse. That had been her private place and they’d STOLEN it from her. And she feared that he’d helped.) She wanted somewhere where she could feel safe and be alone.

And so, in her bedroom where that shattering image had briefly overtaken her mind, she changed herself. Bit by bit, she shaped herself into the person she wanted to be.

She made sure to do the best work she could do in school. She received the award for Second Best Grades in her junior high graduating class.

She entered high school with the expectation that she would do well.

Small Gods at Amazon

I think I’m losing track of moments. It’s a strange feeling.

It’s spooky, like an old house. There’s this constant sense that I’m all alone.

Nothing else is real.

Which leads to furious masturbation and the opaque sense that I’m falling into a black hole.

The other end is full of despair.

*
Sometimes it’s hard not to give in to the more dramatic aspects of my personality.

Somewhere inside me, I’m still that dumb kid that faked heart palpations to somehow get my turn on the class exercise bike. (Heart palpations + ?!? = Yay! Exercise bike. I will never be this excited about exercise ever again. Thanks for killing all my joy, Mrs. Teacher Man. I hope you never retire.)

And so I find it hard to hold onto the people around me when they’re like ghosts to my senses.

I get wrapped up in my obsessions.

I wonder if I have aspbergers?

Or if it’s just a deepening of my anxieties and manic depression?

I don’t know.

I find it hard to stay in contact with people.

And I get weird when I know there’s actually someone on the other end of these messages.

Because how strange to imagine someone listening to my lonely voice.

As I make up lies to tell the people around me.

* * *

There was a sense of static in the air. It made the captain afraid.

His men were depending on him. He could see them sneaking glances at his face. They were drawing their strength from him.

He kept his voice firm and his expression easy. He borrowed heavily from his impression of Admiral Lackensby’s exo — a rather locquacious fellow with an admirable mustache — though toned down to match his own personality.

He kept his men steady and on-point. Though it was hard. He didn’t even know how they’d gotten into this war in the first place.

Something about Messages from the Great Beyond and kama.

He didn’t understand half the politics.

All he knew was that when rich men ordered soldiers to fight, they fought. And here he was. Beseiged on both sides; trapped in a castle with fast dwindling supplies; and knowing that there was no way he could surrender.

There were fertiles amongst them. Hidden here and there beneath a masking shield of suppression medication.

And that would be why the armies would try to take them alive. Because given enough time drugs wore off. Because certain activities could bring on a Heat, forcing the body to ovulate, and betraying the different biology.

The fertiles would be separated from the rest of the prisoners, shuffled off to who-knows-where. To maybe be rescued in the future. Or not. For the non-fertile prisoners, there would be a hostage exchange or ransom for their freedom.

It was the way of the world.

The captain squared his shoulders and wished that he wasn’t the one in charge. But he was the highest ranked officer left alive. So he would do his best.

“Listen up, here’s the plan…”

*

One minute Simon had been in his house, minding his business. The next he was on an alien world.

“My name is Ash. I am a slave. I wasn’t always a slave…” He giggled to himself. It was either laugh or completely fall apart.

He was toiling in a charcoal pit. His job was to use a three-pronged rake to drag out useable chunks. It was the worst job he’d ever had. But he didn’t know the language and he was trapped in a city under siege.

So he nodded his head to the few words he managed to understand and he kept his hood over his head. Because he didn’t know what kind of situation he was in. And he looked different from the people around him.

They all had hints of bronze to their greenish-skin. And there was something different about the way their eyes looked, though he couldn’t describe what it was. He didn’t think that they were human.

He was on a medieval world. He didn’t know how to get home. And he didn’t want to be discovered and hauled off by the red armored soldiers.

Simon wore a leather mask over his face and claimed he’d been burned. He wouldn’t be the first victim of the so-called Amoeba Flame, or whatever the name translated to. All he knew was that he’d noticed the abundant use of weaponized fire and the number of people in the city masking burns.

Shoveling charcoal and skulking in the shadows was a horrifying experience. But there wasn’t much else he could do. The city was under siege. He wasn’t going anywhere. So he worked and he survived and he tried to learn as much of the language as he could.

And when the city wall fell and the invading army captured dozens of people before they were repelled, he was safe. Huddled in the charcoal pit with the lid pulled shut, he sipped the filtered water he’d squirreled away and nibbled on his homemade energy balls until everything had gone quiet.

Life was a bit tense for the next week and there were several more attacks. Then came word that the Homeguard had rallied under the command of General Ignacio Holdayne.

While Simon continued to toil in the charcoal pit, there were the sounds of battle coming from the outside the city walls. Two weeks of battle and another week to clear the area, then the general’s army was allowed through the gates.

Six months of working in the charcoal pit. Then the city was free. And he had a little bit of money saved and a working understanding of the language. And he was ready to move on. Finally.

He hitched a ride with a caravan headed west. He did odd jobs on the journey and built himself a backstory. He spoke to the other travelers to practice his language skills. And he learned about the various jobs open to a peasant like him.

So wrapped in somewhat form-fitting clothing, he applied for work in the household of a young lord. And his past history was a tale of woe — someone orphaned too young, trapped in a besieged city, forced to work in filth to survive — and he wasn’t surprised at all to get the position of footman for Lord Geofrey Laramieux.

Panoply at Amazon

I’m a bit upset because I’ve lost those pages. But if there’s nothing I can do about it, there’s nothing I can do.

It’s better to let the upset go away than to rail against what cannot be changed.

Z

I’ve been feeling very disconnected lately. As a result, I’ve not had much interest in socializing. So my apologies for the weirdness.

Weird is my natural state.

Z

Shows I like:
iZombie
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Angel
Invader Zim
It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia
American Dad
The Cleveland Show
Clarence
Horrible Histories
Coffee Prince
Minority Report
Supergirl
Hannibal
Orphan Black

Fortress in the Eye of Time at Amazon

COLLECTION B

iZombie is basically the beginning of the zombie apocalypse.
That or the beginning of a world where people can choose to never die.

Blaine “losing his memory” could be a real side-effect of The Cure2 or it could be his way to wipe his personal slates.
==He’s still the Boss of brainfood. He’s faking having amnesia while still running things behind the scenes.
==That or his little scumbag protege really is in charge of things. Lennie and George.

Ravi should have told —-Babideaux—- and —-FBI agent—- about zombies. If they were in on what’s happening, they could help to cover things up.
==The frozen zombies

Super religious kosher diet –> how they

Chaos Killer –> Vaughn and Co. use Major Lilywhite to cover the abductions of their zombie victims.
Once Vaughn realized they weren’t actually being killed, he had the bodies removed from the freezers and taken to his labs.

==You would think that while Ravi looked for The Cure, he would also look for some way to synthesize brains.
How much easier would undead life be if you could mix up a smoothie of faux-brains and be able to function. No fancy footwork or frightening controversies.
Pop open a can of brainfood and basically live forever with optimum health.
I would think *that’s* the angle Vaughn would play rather than sticking with MaxRager, but whatever. I mean, the health food market would buy the hell out of something like that.

Zombies become a regular thing. They have all the rights of the living.

Z
Z
Z

OPINE: ST:TNG

Star Trek: The Next Generation was a great show.
Picard was totally my favorite captain.

The Enterprise was out meeting new races and finding new members for the Federation
It was the Flagship of Starfleet. It had the best of the best for its crew.

Picard was a bit of a dick. (Seriously. He’s got the best intentions at heart, but he’s *so stiff*.) And his first officer — William “Number One” Riker — is pretty sleazy and self-satisfied.[1]
Those were my first thoughts on watching season one. But the characters and the crew definitely grew as the series progressed.
Post-Lieutenant Yar episodes had a better vibe between the cast.
*
[1] Every “Riker” episode makes me feel like I need to take a shower.
I don’t suspect him of being a serial killer or anything, but I could imagine him stealing my underwear after sex.