Devil’s Whisper

jimmicampkin's avatarjimmi campkin

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Her parents once told her she was an accident, and as the years tumbled by she grew into a catastrophe.  She told me; I’m gatecrashing a party here.  I have no rules.  I have no (finger quotes) dress – code.  I exist in a vacuum.  I am in the empty spaces.  I am life.

Or maybe the echo chambers.  I didn’t say that.  It came to me years later whilst going over our conversations again and again and again, trying to find a clue.  I realise now that my one-liner would’ve killed her.  She would’ve laughed, thrown her head back to show me those home-made fillings, those gaps where her brother forced her skull into a doorframe before violently closing it, the tongue chewed into ridges by dreams of murder and foxes eating people alive.  Of course, even if the reply had come to me in the moment, I wouldn’t…

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Metamorphosis of the Pearl

each lazy and hazy morning
of late
I see, with blinking sandy eyes
too long a sorry time’s been spent
in slumber’s strange cocoon
encased within this wooly secret
there has been no metamorphosis.
Instead, I am imbued with an insistent tune.
A siren song surreal.
Mayhap it is uplifting, or a disturbance unwelcome.
Like the bit of grit inside the oyster’s shell,
it is a provocation.
Will there be a singular pearl?
Not now, but one day.



I make a small incision.
I part the fluffy case.
The Day obscures my vision.
‘Tis full upon my face.

The melody still lingers.
Its weaving lasts the morn’.
This phantom choir of singers.
This afterlife unborn.

Each night, the pod will form again,
the butterfly awaiting.
Or will it be the final pearl
for those whose hope’s abating?

Oh, to be home

Trigger warning: Dementia, Alzheimer’s

The old couple had lived alone in their house for the last thirty years.  Their kids would visit, along with the grandchildren, but, in the end, it was always old Ma and Pa who would say goodnight to each other.  Ma was a stickler for organization, and was the drill sergeant of the family.  Pa liked to think he let her do it, and said as much under his breath, but usually kowtowed to her every whim.

Now that they had raised their family, and the kids were gone (although not far away),
Ma started to find that her skills and eccentricities were wasted on the old man, and she began to get a little more anxious, restless, and obsessive with her cleaning and such.  The visits from the kids were now a little less frequent, and, when they did come, some odd things about the house were noticed and discussed amongst them.  The bathroom was often short of supplies such as tissue.  A loaf of bread, newly purchased, would be found in the garbage can.  All of the blinds would be closed (and tied down) even during the day.  I don’t want anyone to see in here.  Pa’s personal effects would often go missing, and he would find them inside Ma’s dresser.

If any of these things were mentioned within her hearing, she grew agitated and more restless.  If someone asked for a roll of toilet paper, she would get up abruptly, go to her bedroom, close the door behind her, and come out a minute later with the prize.  She developed an aversion to bathing, or even changing clothes, and underhanded methods had to be used to get her to do these things.  Once, the old man suggested that someone could “accidentally” dump a glass of grape juice in her lap as they walked by.  It was the first uniform change and bath that she had had in quite a while.  When missing items were discussed, she would accuse “someone” of stealing them.  She made frequent requests to have the furniture rearranged “just so”.

Finally, the kids drummed up the courage to suggest that they both needed to be in a continuous care home.  She became almost violent, and they were at their wits’ end.  None of them  had the time or the capacity to look after their 80 year old parents.  On a time, Pa, who was still lucid, devised a plan where they would persuade her to get dressed because they were going for a nice ride.  The kids were almost in tears with guilt, and could not look at each other, but co-operated in this little charade.

Until Ma, getting into the spirit of things, began to clean herself up and to put on her Sunday best.

“We’re going home, aren’t we?  We’re going home!

Pa kept a stiff upper lip, and they all bundled into the car for the drive to the care home.
Are you sure you packed my suitcase?  Yes, Ma.

They stayed with her there, all afternoon and part of the evening, encouraging her to  meet and greet some of the folks there.  She treated them as long lost friends, and seemed right at home, much to everyone’s chagrin.  There was a small room for her, and Pa was allowed to stay with her for the night, to ease the transition.  The reality was that he had not been assessed yet, and it would take some time for him to take up residence.

And so, some of the kids took turns staying with Pa at home, or having him to their place, until better arrangements could be made.  They took him to see Ma every day, and, as the couple were used to sleeping in separate rooms, she seemed not to find it odd when he kissed her goodnight.

One cold night, after Pa had stayed with his daughter and son-in-law for a couple of days, they discovered he was missing.  It would be the last night of his life.

He was going home, too, but not to a house.

Ma had never found her home, but her keyholder was now gone.  She knew it, and was gone three days later.

Factory follies

Thirteen years of my industrial career were spent in a certain manufacturing plant, seven of those as a machine operator.  It was a job that required considerable training, and you were initially hired as kind of a “first mate”, pairing up with the actual operator, helping out, doing some basic changeovers, and learning the ropes.

When I was finally given my qualification, I was proud, and sincerely wanted to do my best to match the quality and output of the senior guys.  It was a learning curve with a lot of responsibility, and I made my share of mistakes, but never enough to lose the job.  It helped that I had a reasonable boss, who I think saw that I was genuinely trying to do better.

As I became more proficient, I did match the big guys on many occasions, and eventually found ways to increase the output from there.  As you can guess, this was not very popular with some who had their set ways of doing things, took extra long coffee breaks, and were members of the Old Boys’ Club.  When new people were promoted to operator after I had been, some of them sensed which way the wind was blowing, and took part in a program of sabotage.  This would consist of any number of things, including leaving the machine in a mess, without product changeover being done, putting out parts for the changeover that I believe were deliberately damaged or incorrect, and needlessly shutting down the machine in the middle of a run, while waiting for me to relieve them.  I put up with this crap for a while, until my boss came to me one day at the beginning of my shift, and asked me why it had taken me over an hour to get started the previous day. I told him to refer to my production report, where I had penciled in the reasons:  cleanup, wrong parts, changeover not done, etc.  He nodded and we did not speak further.

Next day, I was approached by my counterpart on the opposite shift, who said  something like “So, Lee, you ****, how come you had to rat on me yesterday?  I got chewed out by the supervisor this morning.  You f**** ass****.  I said ” If you quit booby-trapping the machine, you won’t get into this kind of trouble.”  That did the trick, but of course resulted in greater unpopularity and more ostracism for me.  Two of them actually attempted an ambush down the road from the plant one day,  but I was tipped off and managed to avoid them.

Eventually, I was befriended by a small group of people who were of like mind to myself, and just wanted to do their job and go home feeling some kind of accomplishment.  Out of the 500 people who worked there, we were in the minority, which is pretty sad when you think of it.

Closing time

On the nights that I pick up my wife from work, there is an impromptu show of sorts that takes place after closing time.  Sometimes, it seems as if it could have been scripted.

Their closing time is 9 pm, and it has been so for as long as I can remember.  They lock up, do a cleaning of the store, and usually turn out the lights by about 9:30.  I sit and smile at the number of cars that pull up within that half hour, and the people that get out, try the door, peer into the windows, shake their heads, go back and look twice at the store hours which are plainly posted on the door, make various gestures of frustration, and depart.

There was a woman who arrived after the store lights were already turned out, got out of her car, and went through the above procedure at least twice, then commenced to bang on the window, demanding entry.  I could see the employees shaking their heads and pointing to the clock, but the woman just stood there gesturing.  Finally, the crew came out, followed by my wife, who locked the door.  The woman went up to her, shouting and waving her arms.  They talked for a moment, then my wife got into the car.  The woman had wanted them to reopen the store so she could get a pack of smokes.  My wife had suggested that she go to the grocery store next door, and the woman said she was not allowed in there anymore.

On another night, there was a youngish fellow leaning against the front of the store.  He was obviously very drunk and had just finished a cigarette, tossing the butt into the garbage can.  After a couple of minutes, he started searching his pockets, presumably for another, without success.  He then spotted a small metal box hung upon the wall.  This box was the designated destination for cigarette butts, and he looked happy that he had found it.  He opened the lid and withdrew two or three, put them in his pocket, and finally found one that was mostly intact.  With a smile on his face, he searched his pockets once again.  No matches left.  Stumbling around, he sidled up to my car window.  I said “sorry, buddy, my car doesn’t have a lighter”.  No lie, it didn’t.  He then went towards the grocery store, attempted to enter via the OUT door, and got body slammed when someone activated it.  Nothing serious.  He got up and went in, but was subsequently forcibly removed by store staff.  Lastly, he went back over to where he had been leaning, hanging his head dejectedly, until he noticed a waft of smoke coming from the garbage can.  He emptied it on the ground and found that his discarded butt had started a small blaze, and eureka! he had a light for his stogie.  He stamped out the flames and just left everything lie.  This whole vignette brought to mind the old
Red Skelton character by the name of Clem Kadiddlehopper.

Just some idles studies in human nature.  Don’t get me wrong, there are many things I’ve done in my life that deserved to be laughed at and probably were.  The smiles I enjoyed were by association.

You’re my home

the way you  say wheee! when we turn a sharp corner

how you offer to push me around in the shopping cart when we go for groceries
(never gets stale….Ahem)

how you sing that song “Over There” when I tell you where I parked the car

how you cook and cook and cook when there are only two of us here,
then take some to needy families and the rest to our kids

how you shop the specials for others who can’t get around, and deliver as well

how you nod off in your chair every night with a cat or two on your lap

how you put that “to do” list up each week, even when it doesn’t get done

how you are the one who always remembers our anniversary, and makes sure
we celebrate it.

how you were there to hold my hand in the hospital

how you have taken three days off sick in thirty years.

how you put up with my sullenness and silences

how you are the one who squirrels away the money for a rainy day, and there are lots of them coming.

how you always have that kettle boiled when you hear me get up, and make the duck lips when I kiss you goodnight

Treacherous

Morning coffee

It’s a clockwork routine

You with your twitching whiskers

And pointy ears

And wobbly walk

You detect my footsteps to the kitchen table

And make your stand by my feet

Look up pitifully, eyes round,

Like that one from Shrek

I know what you’re here for

But pretend I do not

A little coolness is in order first

When you get a little manic

Then I break down

Let’s see, where to scratch first?

Under the chin? Top of the head?

Chest, where you can never scratch yourself?

You beam at me with those big round eyes

Your purring is whirring

You wet my hand with drool, you fool

Temporary nirvana

Then, one eye quivers a bit, and closes slightly

I have learned not to miss the signal

The one night stand is over

In five minutes.

” I vant to be alone”.

“Leave me or, yes, I vill bite the hand that feeds me.”

One Life

A fine lesson in spiritual attachments and regret, by Pradita Kapahi.

Pradita Kapahi's avatarThe Pradita Chronicles

In the end there was darkness. Pain, white hot pain, and hopelessness. So much so that they swamped me completely. Till I finally succumbed…

Then…

Let there be light… and light there was. Warm, welcoming, pure, ethereal.

When that moment passed, I floated up, weightless like a feather. The pins and tubes stuck to my body, the pain of my failing organs, it was there no more and I was free, devoid of every human ailment or frailty. It was a moment of immense lightness and strength. I felt renewed.

In the room though, the mood was different…

“Flatline…”, the Doctor pronounced with resignation in his eyes and tone, as he looked at my family. Guilty eyes pleading sorry, as if he had let them down. One by one everyone but my family moved out.

That’s when it started. The mourning. It was grey. Did you know emotions have colors…

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Another statistic

Trigger warning: Suicidal ideation.

She might have seen the signs in the months before.
His snarlyness.  The odd sleeping hours. The overeating.  The loss of interest in anything but the damn iPad.  How everything else seemed to require a gargantuan effort.  The seemingly blatant and secretive disruptions of her compulsion for organization.  The knives stuck to their magnetic strip inside the cupboard door (one pointing downwards).  A coffee cup hung “backwards” on its hook in defiance of the other dozen.  His surly incommunicativeness.  “Where are you going?” To a medical appointment.  “What for?”
Doc says I need to see a psychologist.  “What’s the matter?”  I don’t really know.
“Well, snap out of it, will you?  It’s no picnic around here”  And “Get off those damn pills,
I don’t want to be around to see you pass out on the floor.”  These words, like daggers to him, open a perfect furrow, and an unwelcome seed is sown.  An unhealthy association develops between the figurative knife and the actual.  After all, how can she know, or understand?  She has only her fear to guide her, and knows not what else to do.  If I tell her about the blackness, she will think it is her fault and will become more distraught, or she will view me as weak.  They have been fighting more as of late, with few pleasant moments between them.  She goes off to work, this time for the whole evening.  Good, some time to myself.  I’ll lay down for a bit.  God, I have to get up and do something.  This is no good.  Too restless.  The Doc asked me to write down how I feel at some particular moment.  How about restless, anxious, sad, and worthless?  How long has she been gone?  God, it’s too lonely.  Too lonely.  I wish she was here.  Why am I thinking about the silverware drawer?

Merry Christmas.