#FridayThoughts: #HappyNewYear! Once again, “In with the Old”

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For my new friends here and at Spoutible, sharing this short story happens every year! It’s impossible to believe it’s time again, I’m as surprised as Trina, apparently. But I am so grateful I got to spend time with you this year, and I hope that the new year is as bright and shining and packed with good things as physics allows. Thanks for hanging out with me.

And, in what is now firmly a tradition, with a tad of editing to be timely, here is a short story from my collection, Better Living Through GRAVY and Other Oddities:

In with the Old

“It’s nothing personal,” she said as kindly as she could muster, “it’s just time.”

“But I’m not nearly as used up as they said I would be,” the other one said, “not nearly at all. I’m not wrinkly, or old – I’m kind of in prime time.” She gave herself an once-over, careful not to break her bond with the contraption behind her.

“Unfortunately, we really need the machine.” She sighed and tapped her pen on her clipboard. “We only have a few more hours.”

“We?” said the woman in the machine. “We only have a few more hours? You’re going to install that thing,” she gestured with her head toward the giggling baby making faces at the man in the white coat at the other end of the room, “and go on with your routine. You think I don’t have it down by now? Daily dial turnings, just one click. Then you, with that pretend-serious look, yanking that lever. You think I didn’t notice you enjoy those lever pulls? Well I did. And you do.”

“Now come on, Trina, there’s no need to be this way. You can go out with dignity.” She shot a look across the room to her coworker. He was too enthralled with the baby to get her message for a little help.

“What am I supposed to do now? I was huge, I was everything.”

“You’re sounding like a bad movie.”

“They don’t tell you what you’re supposed to do when it’s over.” She relaxed her grip on the copper handles inside her chamber, her visible gears going slightly slack down her arm toward her shoulder, the teeth just a bit looser. The worker took that as a good sign. She quickly tamped down her encouragement, in case Trina saw.

“There are always retrospectives,” the woman said. “You know, ‘Best ofs.’ And there’s still plenty to do in the first few months, while people are getting adjusted. You know, rent checks, 18-month calendars, that kind of thing.”

“And then what?” said Trina. “Then what happens? Where do I go? What do I do?”

“I’m so glad you asked,” the woman said, finally able to return to her script. “You see, we have this lovely facility, all of you go there, you know, when you’re finished. Here,” she slid a glossy folded paper from beneath the clip of her board and held it toward Trina. “There’s even a brochure.”

The pictures were bright and multicolored, with others sitting and laughing, eating, strolling by the water, the patina of their clockwork innards glinting warmly in the setting sun. It didn’t look too bad. She nearly let go of the handle to take the brochure, to open it, to see what kind of crafts there were, as promised on the cover, when she remembered.

“No,” she said.

“Trina,” said the woman, her tone sharpening, gaining hardness around the edges, “I’m afraid you haven’t got a choice. It’s time.”

She shook her head as much as the chamber allowed, which wasn’t much. “I’m not going.”

“But what are we supposed to do with him?” She pointed her pen at the baby, who turned, stared at them and burst into a full beam, his tiny gears engaging as he reached his arms toward Trina. “It’s his turn now. Don’t you want to give him his turn?”

Trina closed her eyes. It wasn’t fair, she thought. It went by so quickly, her lifetime of usefulness, her purpose, and now she was supposed to retire off with the rest of them, with some anonymous body of water and a dining hall and crafts. Though crafts are nice. But still, this was her machine, it was hers.

The worker had moved away, but she could hear her talking softly, her sentences interspersed with the cluck of her two-way handheld.

“No, no, I’m telling you it didn’t work.” Something unintelligible garbled through from the other side. “No. Clamped on, completely. Like a vice.” Again, soft electronic murmuring. “It’s like Oh-Three all over again.” More garble. “What? She can’t hear me. I’m away from the chamber.” Indistinct chatter. “Fine, fine, Trinity. Like Trinity all over again.” She waited for the response. “That would probably be best.” After a long interlude of murmur, the handheld fell silent.

“Umm, Trina?” said the worker several minutes later, the ice in her voice retreating. “I’d like you to meet someone.”

“Not interested,” she said, her eyes still closed. She knew the truth, the worker had practically said so herself, with the conversation she thought Trina couldn’t hear. She was only a number to those people. Oh-Three indeed. “What do you call me when you’re out of the lab?” she said, her eyes still completely shut. “When you’re talking to your buddy over there at lunch or wherever it is you go?”

“Trina,” the woman said, her discomfort obvious even to Trina and her closed eyes.

“What do you call me? Two-Three?”

“Trina, really, there’s someone here you should meet-“

“Or Twenty-three? Do you call me Twenty-Three? A number to you, that’s what I am after all this time.”

“I thought she couldn’t hear,” she said to someone, though Trina wasn’t going to bother to open her eyes to see who it was. “I swear, I wouldn’t have used the technical–“

“Technical?” said another voice, a new voice, a male voice. “Technical? Really? Is that how you’re describing it?”

“Well-“

“Her name is Trina, you know,” he said, his tone both relaxed and oddly engaging despite the rebuke. Trina couldn’t help herself, she opened her eyes a crack.

“I’m Twain,” he said with a half-smile. “I’d shake your hand, but I understand your position. Obviously,” he said. His gears were slightly rainbowed with a healthy dose of age. Trina thought they made him look distinguished.

“Twain,” she said. “So I?”

“Replaced me, yes.” He took a step toward the chamber, careful to keep a distance. “Flip of the switch and it was me in there. And you over there,” he said, and smiled at the baby, a real smile, not a put-on one.

“What did you do?”

“I went,” he said. “It was time. It’s how it works, you know.”

“I know,” she said, looking at her feet, so comfortable in the only spot they’d ever known. She glanced up and met his gaze. “I know,” she said again.

“The place really looks like the brochure,” he said, offering her his hand to help her to step out. She considered it, but didn’t lessen her grip on the handle.

“What about the crafts?”

He took the hand he’d been holding out and dug into his pocket, his gears gliding smoothly along. He pulled out a wallet. “I made this,” he said. “Stitched it myself.” She took in the uneven stitches and frowned. “I’m not a very good crafter,” he added quickly, “but they are fun to try.”

“Hmm,” said Trina. She glanced at the worker who looked at the clock on the wall and back at Trina, her face full of cautious hope. Twain set out his hand again.

“The sunsets are every bit as pretty,” he said, “and the best part is there are no more dials, no more levers. No more chamber.”

“But I like the chamber,” she said, scooting back to be further back within it.

“You like the chamber,” he said, “because all you know is the chamber. Take a leap.”

“No, no,” said the worker, “that’s him.” She pointed at the baby.

“You understand you’re not helping the situation?” Twain asked her.

“I do, yes, realize that now.”

“So what do you say, Trina?”

She gave her chamber and the lab a final look over. She could probably make a better wallet. She could certainly make a better wallet. Maybe they’ll have pottery. Slowly, she released first her right hand and then her left, and placed it in Twain’s outstretched palm. The machine beeped behind her while the worker anxiously watched the clock, the man with the baby leaning, ready to place him.

She stepped out of the machine.

The woman grasped a crank on the side of the box and turned it furiously so that the chamber got smaller and smaller and the arms shorter and shorter. The man, watching the clock rather than her or the baby, placed the baby where she had been moments before but where she would never fit now. The baby giggled.

Without looking back, Trina took Twain’s arm, and together, they headed toward the door. They reached it and disappeared into the flash of sudden white light.

The worker leaned against the machine, her hands shaking. “Happy New Year, everyone,” she said weakly.


Check out  my full-length novels (affiliate links): 
Aunty Ida’s Full-Service Mental Institution (by Invitation Only)   
Aunty Ida’s Holey Amazing Sleeping Preparation (Not Doctor Recommended) 
Her Cousin Much Removed
The Great Paradox and the Innies and Outies of Time Management.
And download Better Living Through GRAVY and Other Oddities, it’s quick and weird!
Peruse Montraps Publishing
See what I’m writing on Medium.

#ThursdayThoughts #ThursdayTen ten word photo prompt: Celebration

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Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

It’s THURSDAY!! And after a little break last week, our #ThursdayTen is BACK! With a vengence!

Or a celebration!

Or anything in between! Your pick!

Using the image above as a prompt, write a ten word story. EXACTLY ten words.

Last one of the year, so have fun with it! And if it’s your first one of the year, also have fun with it, and I hope you’ll hang out for more next year!

Ready? Here’s mine!

And with that final bell, the evil vanished, forever defeated.

#WednesdayWisdom: Hope fireflies.

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Gray again, which seems the norm right now. More like November than December but the weather is the weather and there’s not much to do about it. Rain later, apparently.

Here we are, poised in this week that always feels a little like a car on a train, closing in on the station. All that has come before falls away into the mist of memory as we gather our things and take down our bags and prepare ourselves to disembark.

Slow and trundling; so fast the landscape was merely a blur; sometimes the mild pace between, but rarely for long; and though we’re all on the same track, our mileage can vary.

I’ve had some rough, largely unpleasant years, so a new one looming raises a mix of emotions, among them, of course, trepidation. The unknown is the unknown.

I’d like to be hopeful about the year to come, but sometimes hope is a delicate, tiny thing, a firefly lost in the vast, sardonic universe, placed in a jar with a hint of amusement. Or sometimes squashed flat.

Lose enough fireflies and you hesitate to bring them into being.

We can view it merely as the turning of a calendar page, a click on the dial, another number up.

We don’t have to do anything, you know. Time will come and go as it pleases, however we try to box it in. The station lies ahead, and transfer we must.

I’m not sure we can call this wisdom, but if you, like me, find yourself looking at the signs and billboards as we start to slow in our approach, know you are not alone.

Have a wonderful Wednesday.

Check out  my full-length novels (affiliate links): 
Aunty Ida’s Full-Service Mental Institution (by Invitation Only)   
Aunty Ida’s Holey Amazing Sleeping Preparation (Not Doctor Recommended) 
Her Cousin Much Removed
The Great Paradox and the Innies and Outies of Time Management.
And download Better Living Through GRAVY and Other Oddities, it’s quick and weird!
Peruse Montraps Publishing
See what I’m writing on Medium.

#ChatTuesday #TuesdayThoughts: For once in this vast science-fiction world.

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It’s Boxing Day for some of us (Happy Boxing Day!), the first day of Kwanzaa for some of us (Happy Kwanzaa!), the day after Christmas for most of us, whether or not we celebrate, and my second cup of coffee is on the brew. It’s gray and I think there maybe some rain on the way.

Or maybe not.

Ah and there is the beep of my coffee. I’ll be right back, though you likely won’t notice a thing.

See? Didn’t even take a paragraph.

After mostly going through our first major holiday season on Spoutible, I’m struck by what the world looks like when people who value diversity get to celebrate that diversity. Celebrate.

Not tolerate.

And let’s take that little side trip for a moment. I’ve never been a fan of the use of the word “tolerance” when it comes to people who are different from you in some way. “Tolerance” makes it sound like something that you cannot stand, that it makes sense you cannot stand, yet you bravely don’t do active harm, which would be the natural inclination.

“Tolerance” sounds like there is a base, a “norm,” a position of power that “allows” others to exist in another state, through gritted teeth and an attention-starved benevolence.

I prefer embracing, celebrating, and at a very minimum “accepting.” Not totally thrilled at that last one because again, it sounds like someone has the ultimate say rather than starting from a point of innate human rights.

And back to the point of today.

On Spoutible, as everyone’s different holidays roll around and users talk about their various traditions even for the same holiday, we enjoy broadening our spectrum of light. We enjoy it, we embrace it, and the key to Spoutible, the trick to it is thus:

There’s no one around to tell us we can’t.

There are no troll-y wet blankets. There are no wagging fingers about right ways and wrong ways. There are no antagonsists.

I mean they do show up, of course they show up, but for once in this vast science-fiction world of global communication, the odds are stacked in our favor. The structure of the very institution itself…

Celebrates diversity.

It doesn’t tolerate it like a character flaw. It nourishes it, it feeds it, it waters it until we have a lush, verdant endless variety of people being people in all of our different ways.

How beautiful is that?

How revolutionary?

And with that, I wish you a lovely Tuesday.

Check out  my full-length novels (affiliate links): 
Aunty Ida’s Full-Service Mental Institution (by Invitation Only)   
Aunty Ida’s Holey Amazing Sleeping Preparation (Not Doctor Recommended) 
Her Cousin Much Removed
The Great Paradox and the Innies and Outies of Time Management.
And download Better Living Through GRAVY and Other Oddities, it’s quick and weird!
Peruse Montraps Publishing
See what I’m writing on Medium.

#MondayThoughts: Can you see the ripples?

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It was sunny for about five minutes, but now it’s overcast again, and perhaps it will rain.

Not snow, though, no chance of that, it’s almost 50 degrees, which is pretty warm for this time of year. No white Christmas in the Midwest, at least.

It’s not my holiday, but it seems to me the vibe is decidedly mellow this year. Or maybe that’s Spoutible, particularly.

It’s pretty fantastic, really.

What if it could grow and yet remain a source of community, of comradery, of information but never abuse? That’s the goal, of course.

But what if Christopher Bouzy and the Spoutible team manage to maintain this social media oasis they’ve created?

Can you see the ripples?

I can.

When we leave Spoutible to do the things we need to or want to in the physical world, we aren’t carrying with us the aftershocks of attacks or cruelty. Or defenses aren’t all the way notched up, we are not flinching, ready for the next problem or insult.

I can’t speak for anyone else, but when I leave Spoutible, I tend to feel fortified, refreshed. It’s like a place with a door ajar and friendly faces, always open, no matter what the rest of the world looks like.

How much would that change people, change people’s offline interactions with others?

Social media is used as a way to prime emotion, to have us on edge, because then we are susceptible to all kinds of things. Our logic and reasoning are being subsumed. We need coping mechanisms, we feel competitive or left behind, we bicker and by bickering allow people who should never have power to have power.

With Spoutible, we take all of that back. All of it.

And that’s an incredible, positive stone to throw in the ocean.

The stone will get bigger and the ripples will become waves, and I tell you this because I can see the future, at least this very vision of the future. Because unending strife takes us nowhere.

So that is it for me on this Christmas Day, I hope, if you celebrate, it is a lovely one full of joy and light and peace, and the beginning of an incredible year to come. And also if you don’t celebrate, because why not?

Check out  my full-length novels (affiliate links): 
Aunty Ida’s Full-Service Mental Institution (by Invitation Only)   
Aunty Ida’s Holey Amazing Sleeping Preparation (Not Doctor Recommended) 
Her Cousin Much Removed
The Great Paradox and the Innies and Outies of Time Management.
And download Better Living Through GRAVY and Other Oddities, it’s quick and weird!
Peruse Montraps Publishing
See what I’m writing on Medium.

#FridayThoughts: Ants on a leaf

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It’s a rainy one today, dark and gloomy, with the air heavy. It’s warmer though, so definitely no snow on the way.

Which is good, given the rain. I hate when it ices over like that, the roads get so dangerous.

We’ve come to the end of the week at the end of the year, a year that never felt quite real to me, and I wonder how it all just went, one day after the next. On and on up to now.

It’s not a particularly deep thought or an especially original one, even here, but sometime it seems like we are ants on a leaf (if we’re lucky) adrift on a sea too vast for us to even consider as a concept, floating and bobbing and doing our best not to lose our footing.

And footing on a floating leaf on a sea too vast for us to even consider is a tricky thing to maintain.

So if you have gotten to now, good job. Without facetiousness, without demand of any further accomplishment or effort, good job. You’ve faced cresting waves you didn’t anticipate or imagine, you’ve held on when the wind made everything choppy.

And if you’ve done even more than that this year, how amazing does that make you? How incredible that you not only held on to your little floating leaf, but you built something with it, something that may have made the ride harder at times, something that was tough to construct on an always-moving foundation.

Let’s not focus on the things we didn’t do, on the people we could have been, if only for a different leaf or more leaves.

Let us thank ourselves for staying on the leaf we have, even when the water on top made us unsure it would remain seaworthy.

Have a wonderful weekend, and if you celebrate Christmas, have a great one, though I expect to post on Monday.

Check out  my full-length novels (affiliate links): 
Aunty Ida’s Full-Service Mental Institution (by Invitation Only)   
Aunty Ida’s Holey Amazing Sleeping Preparation (Not Doctor Recommended) 
Her Cousin Much Removed
The Great Paradox and the Innies and Outies of Time Management.
And download Better Living Through GRAVY and Other Oddities, it’s quick and weird!
Peruse Montraps Publishing
See what I’m writing on Medium.

#ThursdayThoughts #ThursdayTen no prompt this week!

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Due to my relentless efficiency (!?!?) I am not able to swing a prompt today (could I swing one any day? How heavy is a prompt?!), so I will wish you a lovely Thursday and suggest you check out this prompt instead!

Or feel free to peruse the old ones!

Have a great day and I’ll see you tomorrow.

#WednesdayWisdom: Garbage ennui.

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It’s sunnier and warmer today, which is a decent combination. I’m not in the mood for writing or my to do list or much of anything, really, this morning.

I wonder what a bird, for example, does when it’s not in the mood for hunting worms. Or a deer just doesn’t want another day in the woods, with leaves, leaves, leaves. Or a raccoon is feeling garbage ennui.

Surely it happens?

But then again, maybe not.

It’s not like they’d tell us, anyway. We’re not close like that.

It’s weird how things go that way, sometimes. Days where all is easy and you wonder how it ever seems difficult; days where the opposite is true in abundance.

Ebbs and flows of life, I guess, of energy, of enthusiasm. Of inspiration.

Though that last one is the trickiest.

I think, when it happens, sometimes it’s best to lean into it, to accept that it will just be one of those days where even the bare minimum feels like a maximum. That, like all other days, eventually the sky will grow darker and the night will settle and the day will end, one way or another.

I can’t tell if that’s comforting or not so. Hmm.

I’ll leave it for you to decide.

Anyway, that’s it for me today, have a wonderful Wednesdsay.

Check out  my full-length novels (affiliate links): 
Aunty Ida’s Full-Service Mental Institution (by Invitation Only)   
Aunty Ida’s Holey Amazing Sleeping Preparation (Not Doctor Recommended) 
Her Cousin Much Removed
The Great Paradox and the Innies and Outies of Time Management.
And download Better Living Through GRAVY and Other Oddities, it’s quick and weird!
Peruse Montraps Publishing
See what I’m writing on Medium.

#ChatTuesday #TuesdayThoughts: They don’t make us flawed

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It’s suddenly sunny but chilly, and chillier than the temperature claims. One of those deceptive days where you might be fooled into thinking it’s not bad out at all.

Chicago likes to play games with us that way.

Today I’m thinking about the absence left after a death, the human-shaped hole that time, like water, may fill in but will always leave a bit of a depression.

Take the pun or leave it, either way, it’s kind of a weird place for one but that’s how the words worked out.

We, who are living, have to keep on, because that is the way that life works, and has always worked, ever since there was life. It’s unrelenting in that way.

I’m going into my second loop around without my mom here, though it’s kind of like second-and-a-half because she was sick for so long. There are no more firsts, but somehow it doesn’t make it all more routine.

It is what it is, as they say.

I don’t really have a point or any deep conclusion, because what conclusions can we mere mortals draw? What suggestions, what solutions?

All that lies in the mythical realms of alchemy and we all know they always go awry.

But I pledge to share with you my thoughts, and for today, these are they, the thoughts we don’t really talk about out loud because we don’t want to bum anyone else out.

We all have such days, and such days without the down thoughts, so they don’t make us flawed, they make us people.

Anyway, that’s it for me today, have a wonderful Tuesday.

Check out  my full-length novels (affiliate links): 
Aunty Ida’s Full-Service Mental Institution (by Invitation Only)   
Aunty Ida’s Holey Amazing Sleeping Preparation (Not Doctor Recommended) 
Her Cousin Much Removed
The Great Paradox and the Innies and Outies of Time Management.
And download Better Living Through GRAVY and Other Oddities, it’s quick and weird!
Peruse Montraps Publishing
See what I’m writing on Medium.

#MondayThoughts: That second type of person.

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It was sunny, now it’s gloomy, I’m not sure the weather knows what to make of itself. Me either, weather.

On Spoutible this morning, it occurs to me that there are people who like to do things their own way and there are people who demand everyone does things their way. Given that choosing Spoutible as a social media home right now is a rebellion of sorts, that second type of person is facing, at best, a rough salmon run, and at worst, beaching or eventual scuttling.

Nothing about Spoutible is based on the numbers, really. I mean I guess “going viral” is, but what does that really mean in a place that isn’t about artificial trophies but real human interaction?

Is the extra attention that important?

Even if it’s fleeting?

It’s tough to get rid of our twitter habits, which trained us in Pavlov’s stats. Later on, tweets even told you how many people had seen them, with the paltry number of interactions right next to them for comparison.

I mean, what kind of emotional response is that supposed to provoke?

Nothing about Spoutible’s design is an accident or a coincidence. Christopher Bouzy didn’t stumble into anything. He started out studying the behavior of users, with a focus on troublesome accounts.

So the deemphasis on the numbers increases feelings of connection and community. You’re not competing with other people for likes and echoes and quote spouts, you’re not bracing for a flood of deliberately pedantic and abrasive replies, the underlying motivation is not rage.

And some people don’t like that.

There are plenty of places for them to be that replicate all of that, but the push to remake Spoutible into it is not only unwanted by the community, it’s impossible.

The structure does not allow for it.

By design.

I’ll repeat that, it’s by design. From the bottom up, with a person at the helm and a great team who watch in real time and adjust to keep it so.

So that second kind of person, who is already trying to herd cats and llamas and donkeys and any other mythically stubborn animals, will find forcing others to do as they choose isn’t going to be fun or satisfying or productive.

It’s a site that is thriving through authenticity. You can’t dictate other people’s authentic.

And that’s it for me this Monday, have a wonderful day.

Check out  my full-length novels (affiliate links): 
Aunty Ida’s Full-Service Mental Institution (by Invitation Only)   
Aunty Ida’s Holey Amazing Sleeping Preparation (Not Doctor Recommended) 
Her Cousin Much Removed
The Great Paradox and the Innies and Outies of Time Management.
And download Better Living Through GRAVY and Other Oddities, it’s quick and weird!
Peruse Montraps Publishing
See what I’m writing on Medium.