--I'M A LOT STRONGER THAN YOU THINK
…I have two new stories up at Solarcide
and one more Friday:
…I saw “Argo” yesterday and it was about
as I’d anticipated: a strong movie with great acting. B+.
Ben Affleck has turned into a quite a director and he pulls off an
appropriately restrained acting effort.
See it.
My guess is it’ll be up for an Academy
Award but that Lincoln will win Best Pic and Best Actor.
…I watched a disturbing program about child/teen
abductions.
One girl was taken inside her home and
no one knows how or who and it’s been years.Another was a college-aged girl who went missing after bar-hopping and seeing some friends. The last people to see her have lawyered up and refuse to talk any more than they legally have to.
Perhaps the most disturbing was about a girl, twenty-something, who’s been missing for a few years now. The girl’s parents get all kinds of prank phone calls. One person called and just kept repeating, “Mom? Mom?” Who does that? Why? Other times, people called up and just screamed or said, “I killed her!” It’s hard to fathom how any human could do such a thing to another person.
…A friend sent me an article about this man with cancer who was only supposed to have six months to live. He moved to some Greek island to be with his family in his last days.
But his cancer disappeared and it’s now been 30 plus years since his fatal diagnosis. I borrowed the idea and the article’s title and wrote this:
The Island
Where People Forget To Die
She wanted to be forever young and
so she moved to The Island Where People Forget To Die. It was in the tropics with brightly flocked
macaws and squirrely little monkeys that laughed at you for no reason
whatsoever.
Before this the cancer inside her
felt like a large bowl of steel, invisible yet heavy filling her gut, making
walking difficult, causing her to rasp if she spoke.
But on the island paradise melted
the cancer. She knew this because she
felt spry and light. For a few weeks her
urine was dark, coffee-colored yet she did not become frightened because she
understood that she was merely, and literally, pissing the cancer out of her
system.
There was no electricity on the
island and the last call she made with her cell phone before the battery died
was to her family back in the states.
They’d been worried about her, but became elated when they heard the
news of her recovery. They called it a
miracle, and she agreed.
In time, boats arrived, stuffed with
all sort of maligned and diseased people.
Each of them—the blind and lame and infected—were cured. After a while, perfectly healthy folks showed
up, greedy to live beyond their allotted years.
Condominiums and Hotels were erected.
Roads were paved. Shops
built. A localized regime was
established with a constitution.
In a short span, The Island Where
People Forget To Die became so massively congested that new inhabitants were
turned away dismissively. Then a fleet
of warships arrived, looming shore-side like large walls of steel, blocking both
sky and sun.
Using homemade catapults and
roughhewn spears, the island’s tenants fought back. But it was no use because the enemy was the Federal
Government. Naval vessels fired missiles
and bombs, so many that the island at once went up in flames and those who did
not burn to death were forced into the ocean where the current caught them, if
not many of the menacing sharks.
In the water the woman floated on
her back. She drowned out the cacophony of
bonfire noises and screams, drowned out the shrieking pleas for help and
violent cursing.
It’s better this way, she thought. The end of something means all that came
before is real and of value.
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