Jun 14 2012

Bio-Elegance

The microbial children squealed delightedly as the otter submarine torpedoed through the river. Older members of the bacterial colony were perhaps more sedate, but no less enthused with the practiced tumbles and breakneck twirls of their new host. Most of them couldn’t recall when they’d last been on a pleasure cruise rather than a mission. The Colony Elders had mulled it carefully, eventually approving the expedition on grounds that the community had suffered so much recently from chemical ravages and fierce herbal destroyers. The war had been misery for all, but especially those who had faced the genocide of the xenophobic White Blood Cell Armies.

But the Colony had expected the fierce reaction of the WBCA and everyone, even the children, was prepared. They’d sacrificed individual after individual as part of the greater strategy of takeover, reproducing even when resources were low and morale flattened. All Colonials upheld the sacred mission of their Colony: No Waste. Each of them existed to use biological resources that would otherwise go to waste in senseless, foolish beasts. They were stewards of the natural world, and wanderers who would go wherever they were needed.

They’d won the battle called Martha, though she didn’t know it yet. As customary, they’d retreated momentarily out of respect for the defeated. The elders had performed the Division and Passing ceremoney but instead of the Eighty Days of Silence, the elders suggested a pleasure cruise to celebrate the impending end of the Long War of Martha Millenson.

The underwater world swished through the otter’s fur, brilliant blues and greens illuminated by the midday sun. The children shrieked to see massive fish mauled by the still more massive teeth of the otter, and the adults watched contentedly, enjoying the show of light and shape.

“Will we live here now?” asked a little one, hopeful and trembling.

“No, we’ll go back to Martha soon,” someone said.

“But I like the otter! And anyway, Martha hates us!”

“Why is that bad?” said an Elder. The child had no answer, and settled at the massive eye portal to watch and consider this. As every Colonial child learns eventually, first to its shame and then to its credit, hatred is a sign of a job well done and bio-matter elegantly used.

(Inspired by Robyn Hitchcock’s “I Often Dream of Trains”)

——

This was a pretty weird OWM, I admit.  I was thinking about being sick and what it might be like from the bacteria’s perspective.  I’m sure they don’t just sit around rubbing their pseudopods together in fervent delight at making me ill.  If they have a sense of purpose, what would it be?  Surely it would be more than “Woo-hoo, we be makin’ humans feel like crap!”

Poor Martha.  She can rest assured that if she keels over dead, at least the little bastards will be homeless again.

I’m actually not a fan of Robyn Hitchcock ordinarily, but this song has a strange otherworldly feel to it–the kind of feeling I associate with being feverish in a pleasant place.  The world is charming with flowers blooming outside your window or people swimming by on a shining summer day, and you’re wobbling on your feet and walking on the ocean floor.

Great little drawing, isn’t it?  It is by deviantARTist *J-C, who kindly let me use it.   I love otters.  Recently I saw one in the Monterey Bay, a mama sea otter swimming with her baby on her belly.

 


Sep 23 2011

Space Witch

She lounges, nude, in the long window seat, long legs draped over velvet cushions threaded with silver.  The stars and gas giants, ripped from galactic tranquility, rumble and flare as her ship saunters by.  She loves their two-fold reaction of shock (the insect has turned the attention of our immensely old celestial bodies) and frustration (we are mired in our vacuums and cannot pursue this novelty) while her dark ship drifts past.

Amorous liaisons between witches and planets have not happened for millennia, but she is old enough to remember the spurious actions that caused the whole arrangement to collapse (a girl could go from “beloved” to “insect” at the speed of light).  She still has her edge, and a little cosmic tease will serve these neglectful hunks of rock right.

She sorts her herbs and cards by the window as though she does not notice the straining of the stars, as though she has not done this to random solar systems for thousands of years.  It never gets old, this stoking of fire in dead space rock and clean fire.  She has seventy light-years before she reaches Galaxy A1689-zD1, where all things Terra are much in demand.   She might as well have a little fun while she passes the space-time.

(Massive Attack–Butterfly Caught)

————-
This posted in honor of the startling news today that scientists at CERN discovered neutrinos that move faster than the speed of light!  Perhaps the space witch is just a little sub-atomic particle traversing the universe.

This song was inspired by Massive Attack’s “Butterfly Caught.”  The band’s sound changed significantly over the years, and I’ve liked nearly everything they’ve put out.  Their album Mezzanine defined the musical sound of the late 90′s for me (not the washed-out alt-rock the radio stations were playing). I wasn’t sure how to categorize this one, but settled on electronica for lack of a better descriptor.

One of the interesting aspects of writing this blog is that I listen, write, and then post the video–which I’ve usually never seen–here.  This one is super creepy even though not a lot happens, and it was completely new to me.  Subtle, like the whole 100th Window CD it was on.


Apr 28 2011

The Tulpa (and a new game)

I’ve been asking some of my favorite creatives–artists, musicians, writers, entrepreneurs, etc–to recommend some of their favorite otherworldly tunes to me. Today’s story was inspired by Oingo Boingo‘s “Insanity.”  More on the song, recommended by musician Dave Goff (aka DRBIOR) after this story.

I spent 1917 in a series of anonymous seaside cottages, bunking with proper socialites so that I might press their gowns and wash their teacups.  The daughters of London lords taught me to summon Baphomet, and I taught them to hex each other’s tea.  They had not been sent to learn such low-brow spellcraft, but the convenience of sympathetic magic wormed its way into their drawing room studies.
I think of those girls now, in their white frocks and tidy pompadours, and wonder if any survived.  You must forgive their mothers and fathers for sending them to such ungodly work.  You must consider the times, in which young women of means had only marriage to aspire to, and the War had already devoured so many eligible bachelors.  A certain kind of free-thinking parent might indeed send a bright young woman to learn the ways of the occult, ensuring her independence and safety by way of the will and the mind only.  And of those noble qualities, they were greatly blessed.

And a certain kind of school mistress might indeed take pity on an orphan girl and wish to save her from the indignities of the streets and the men that congregate there.  She might, from good intent and kindness, give the child a too-large maid’s uniform and a bed of straw in the lean-to, seeing nothing but the girl’s sweetness and little of the girl’s cunning, created by generations of village witchery.

To say I did not mean to create it would be untrue.  To say I did not intend its effects would be more accurate.  If a young lady spoke snidely to me (a regular occurrence,as any Irish girl from a Catholic parish can tell you), I would turn a quick hex as my great-aunt had taught me.  Then fearfully thinking of my parish priest and his dire warnings, I would throw the ugly thing in the corner of our bunk house where its bright red light would dwindle as I watched.

The fact of the dying embers of vengeance and spite congregating and growing under the floorboards … well, if I had attended the lectures with the students, perhaps I would have guarded against this.  Instead, I scrubbed their garments outside the open windows of their classrooms, catching half-phrases and incomplete diatribes.

What did it do, I wonder, all those years?  As I grew into a bewitching woman with ever-increasing power and none of the restraints of nobility, what was it doing?  Did it travel to far-off lands to feed off the mad and the shell-shocked?  Did it don a fringed dress and long beads and dance the Charleston, driving starlets to suicide and automobile accidents?  Did it stalk the refugees of the Dust Bowl, blowing the Black Blizzards into the minds of poor farmers’ wives?

Did it dare enter Germany during its dark years?  France?  Spain?

I cannot bring myself to think of it.  I know its excesses fed me, though I did not understand at the time and thought my allure and financial power to be wholly self-made.  And in a way, I was correct, for I made the tulpa.

Away for so many decades, the tulpa has returned to its creator.  It lurks behind the grandfather clock, ostensibly doing little but ‘breathing” in my earshot.  It does this deliberately and unnecessarily, as it has no organs or breathing apparatus.  I tell myself that it waits for a command, and that I’ve grown so old that I don’t recall what I must tell it, my indecision dooming it to an eternity of bated breath.  It is a pitiable creature, but there is nothing to be done, save to ignore it.

Over the past several months, those young ladies at the summer  cottages troubled me.  I had a mind to use the power of this “Information Age” to look them up, old as I am.  I stopped after the fifth girl I could recall.  None had survived past age forty.  One of particular beauty and cruelty had died in a madhouse as it caught fire.  If others are still alive, I do not want to know of them.

The surf crashes below my house, the sky a permanent gray.  I have learned, of course, that there is no God, only spirits more good than evil.  They will not speak to me now, not with that creature constantly near.  Therefore, I have no one to confess to, and no one to absolve me.  I have thought of suicide, but my tulpa’s presence feeds my vitality and I start to wonder if perhaps I cannot die, and if this is the eternal state of my existence.

And if that is true, without direction, we will remain together in this fearful stasis forever.

I must give it a task.  Cautiously, I offer innocuous but challenging activities.  Its breathing does not change. It does not respond until out of desperation I shout, “Make a proud and lovely girl hang herself!  There!  Is that what you want, you loathsome thing? To feed on the vibrant and healthy?”

Yes, my mistress.  Thank you, my mistress.

***


Those of you who aren’t familiar with Oingo Boingo might recognize the influence of the band’s singer, Danny Elfman, in several movie music scores, such as “The Nightmare Before Christmas.” Check out this video–while I think the radio edit totally mangled the song (a black magic song if I ever heard one), the creepy video successfully depicts the festering underbelly* of religion, politics, and social norms. I watched it after writing “The Tulpa” and was  taken aback by the girls in white, who match up with the my story.  Stop-motion video just lends itself to creepiness.  Watch it here:

Hard to know how to classify this song.  Oingo Boingo‘s often known as a New Wave band, but this is practically gothic.  If you like the song, download it in the Otherworldly Music Store.

Thanks, Dave, for this recommendation.  To check out Dave’s  equally-weird music (recorded under DRBIOR), visit www.drbior.com.  Dave also runs Gestalt Digital, which provides digital distribution for independent musicians.  Contact him at www.gestaltdigital.com if you want to get your music into iTunes, Amazon, etc.  even if you don’t have a CD pressed.

*Ok, I just wanted to use the word “underbelly” in a sentence.  Makes you inadvertently picture the rest of the beast, doesn’t it?  What’s it look like to you?  I just saw a disgusting-yet-fascinating live nautilus at an aquarium last week, so I’m voting for Chthulu.

Photo by Splarks, art “The Vampire” is by Philip Burne-Jones, 1897