Though it’s only been three days, this holiday weekend has seemed to drag on for a week. Not that I complaining, mind you. But for some inexplicable reason, my internal body clock gets thrown for a major loop. All day Monday has felt like Sunday. One in the afternoon feels like nine in the evening. It’s strange how out of tune your body gets when you don’t follow a prescribed (or at least semi-static) schedule. Nonetheless, I hope everyone had a good holiday and that everyone still has all of their appendages in tact.
As for me, I went the overindulgence route on everything: sun, food, sleep, guywatching, movies, keeping cool, etc. Now it’s Tuesday and my body still somewhere in Saturday night. There really should be laws against such things.
My house is about ten miles from Elephant Butte Lake. One of the few lakes (and the largest one) in New Mexico, Elephant Butte was the fifth largest manmade lake in the U.S. when it was finished in the early 1900’s. Formed by the damming of the Rio Grande River, Elephant Butte Lake got its name from a dormant volcano cone that forms an island in the lake’s center that has the uncanny shape of an elephant. (Gee, I suddenly feel like I’m giving a history lesson.) The point of all this is that during the summer months and particularly holiday weekends, the size of our town suddenly blossoms exponentially with the overflow of lake visitors. It can make for interesting times in a town that is normally just over 7,000 in population.
A lot of times, it will mean that I’ll get to see friends from college or other states that are spending long weekends nearby. This holiday, I was left guestless. So left to my own devices, I did awful and shameful things like:
–eat an entire jar of manzanilla olives with a pair of chopsticks
–watch ‘The Machinist’, ‘24th Day’ and ‘We Don’t Live Here Anymore’ on DVD
–had a play date with my kitty
–went man grocery shopping
–avoided (for the most part) ‘accidentally’ running my cart into single men wearing shorts and exposing tanned gams
–worked on a couple of writing projects
–did some serious magazine reading
–avoided the sun (and heat) to the best of my ability
All in all, it was a string of days filled with languorously listless lollygagging. (Today’s entry brought to you by: alliteration)
INTERESTING READS
01. The New York Times: Benedict Carey:
‘Straight, Gay or Lying? Bisexuality Revisited’
02. The New York Times: Todd S. Purdum:
‘Presidents, Picking Justices, Can Have Backfires’
03. Editor & Publisher: E&P Staff:
‘For July 4: Three Editorial Pages, Three Views of War’
A MEANS TO A MURDER?
The following is the beginning of a story that’s been fermenting on my brain for the past several weeks. It’s a bit darker and moodier than my normal fare. The seeds of an idea are germinating, and yet, I’m not quite sure what it is and where it’s headed at this state. I’m assuming at this point it will be a short story. But, who knows?
Anyhow, I thought it might be interesting to start fleshing it out on my blog and see what happens to it. There may yet be a pay-off for someone in the end. I’ll be revisiting this story over the next several months and I will keep the sections linked together for those of you who want to follow along.
We’ll just call it an ‘experiment’ and see which of us is injured first.
==========
His head exploded.
All of the thoughts that had lined up against the hall of mirrors that bisected his brain began to hit one another. Shards of glass, at once brilliant and frightening, were flying around in his skull waiting to pierce any little thought that dare get in the way. He felt his body fall backwards and yet not hit the ground. The force slung him against the semi-erect chain link fence that separated the parking area from the abandoned warehouse in the background. He wasn’t sure if his eyes were opened or closed. Yet, flashes of light exploded in his mind’s eye. His hand had instinctively reached toward his stomach. A warm flow of hot liquid seeped between his spread fingers.
His body gave a slight lurch as it slammed into the fence and slightly rebounded falling further down the incline. To the birds flying overhead, his figure cut the ghoulish specter of a half-fallen scarecrow who had seen his better days in some sunny cornfield. In this darkened, empty city block, the last sound he would remember over the cacophony of whizzing bullets were the footsteps that calmly traced their way back to the car and the familiar hum of the car’s engine.
It was all about to end–here. Here, wherever he was feeling the fire of life drain out of him. A guttural, gurgling sound was the last to escape from his vocal chords. The shards of mirror all crashed to the floor of his skull. The sparkling glints intensified and then began to flit out like fireflies escaping from a jar on a hot and humid evening.
The light was extinguished.
HAPPY BLOG-A-VERSARY
Today, Obliquity is officially TWO years old. A lot has transpired in two years. But, constants remain and I hope the sentiment contained in what follows still resonates here. Here is a copy of the very first post to grace this weblog:
IT BEGINS…
Welcome to this place…this space. A cursory glance often leads us to look at things in a narrow field of vision. We are too readily satisfied to accept anything at face value. We live in a World of three dimensions and usually see things in two. Obscuring our judgement is the lack of angles. We live in a place where it is too easy to see the black and white of an object, but never the greyscale. The greyscales that defy the logic of our labels. We are attracted to the the polar ends of any spectrum, where the labels are easy to define–and the small print is never read. Everything and everyone must have a safe cubby hole in our “perfect” Universe. Sorting people and things–ideas and opinions–into well-defined cubbyholes is safe. It’s comfortable and familiar. But, square pegs never fit in round holes. We all have our own unique angles. We don’t fit into the same holes. If we did, what a lackluster World we would live in. I’m always searching and exploring my angles. I hope you do as well.
To all my readers and friends, thank you for enriching my life. I am humbled by your gifts. xox A.