Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta writer. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta writer. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 12 de septiembre de 2014

Lies

We love to believe them. They are comfortable an easy to accept and to live by. We don't really assume them as the truth but they are easy to come by and, let's face it, the truth is sometimes too much for many.

Let's say love. Many people still think they can change others or that love is eternal and forever. But we know what's real: no one changes for real, they only evolve in their ways of being. And love dies, and is reborn once and again. As we are beings of mutation and evolution, love is not bound to us and sometimes breaks during those transformations. It's unavoidable, unless the two people involved have worked for it.

Now, we have to state something else: the obsession of the human race for working and effort. Our humanity tells us that in order to be accepted and even admired, we have to work our bodies off to get somewhere and then, we will have recognition.
But is that really the way things should be? Some people say they work hard all their lives to have a better life but they realize that they never enjoy the life they have worked for. Is that really the life we should have? Or the one we want to have?

What about a life of going after what you want? About discovering your needs and passions? Many think they only can do that when they're young, in school. That's way many young people do drugs, have sex, crazy parties and trips. They think they have to gather memories for the future as their adult lives may not enable them to enjoy the things they like in the future.

That's no way of living, although is a respectable one. Many people worry about money and, unfortunately, they have to. They have no chance of avoiding the responsibility of work, unless they have no real goals.

And that's another problem nowadays: people who have no passions or goals are ostracized, as if working hard made them better than others. The world today has created levels and ranks, making certain people admirable and others, not. Those who work and show their work, are admired, even if their real effort was to look for the right people and doing something slightly better than the rest.

No goals means no ambition and this world runs on ambition. We are made to think we need more and, no surprise, most people work hard to get things that they already have or that they really don't need. In many countries it's more important to buy a TV or a car, rather than assuring a good education or healthcare.

More listings have being created even to classify us, to separate us in groups, in order to divide us even by the way we look: ugly, good looking, fat, skinny,... Or by our perceived behavior: rebellious, slut, intelligent, dumb, empty, sportive,...

And what about creativity? In our world, creativity is only appreciated if it server the general need for more of the same. The most award "creators" are the ones working for advertising companies. It has being proven that most campaigns in that world are rip offs one of the other and of the other. Less than 10% are actually original and even when they are, they serve only the great capital and no the people.

So, when our capacity to create is put aside, scientific thought is also put aside. Many countries prefer to invest their earnings in weaponry and other defense related items. Science is not really appreciated, even in "first world" countries. If the United States invested less in war and more in science, many needed discoveries would have already taken place.

We have been obliged to comply with physical models, for men and women, that are impossible or unlikely. Companies want people to think that they will be much more desirable if they are seen in the gym or doing some kind of exercise. The fact that exercising is good for your health, is almost not important. Looking good is what's important.

Our world is one of lies that we decide to live by. But what if we just said "Fuck it" and started living by our standards? Not everyone has to go at the same pace to get somewhere. If your friend is a successful actress, good for her. But do not try to be like her, try to discover who you are, good and bad, and go from there.

We are told to be fast and not stop because time is money. But time is also life and life, if science is correct, is not done twice by the same entity so we have to live as we want to and not as we are told to.

Let's always remember no to divide ourselves in tiny groups and ranks. That creates discrimination and discrimination leads to hate and hate is no way to live life. Just go as you want and see how much more fun life is if you just do your thing.

miércoles, 10 de septiembre de 2014

To Heal and Live

 * This piece of writing is dedicated to all young men and women that have died because of the narrow and hateful minds of others. Love and peace.

  We were never the kind to dwell on anything. It was simple really: we were officially not wanted anywhere in the world. It wasn't surprising or confusing, just a bit painful.

People in general didn't care. That had enough with the war ravaging life here and there. Human rights were not really on the top of the list of things people cared any more. They just wanted to live in peace, like before. We did too and that's how we decided to leave.

Eric had learned that Iceland was a safe haven for many people and was being overlooked. This wasn't World War II, planes didn't need to stop in the middle of the ocean as they could easily do the trip.
Besides, Iceland had signed a pact with the Confederation: they wouldn't mess with them as long as they didn't mess with Iceland. Fair enough. The Confederation wasn't really interested in them, at least not yet, as they had bigger fish to capture.

The day Eric got with the news of our future journey on the Aurora, a freight boat bound for Canada, it didn't came up as a surprise when we the news broadcasted live the invasion of West Africa by the Confederation. Horrible images of gruesome deaths and bombing were broadcasted daily and, as the country had surrendered to the confederation, they had to show it all, no editing.

We gathered the few possessions we still had, put them on one big suitcase and hugged goodbye our families. It was clear that it might be the last time we saw them, so we were sure to say it loud one last time, in case they died or we died. That was the reality of things.

For one whole day we hitchhiked to the coast. Many men and women were heading there: they thought that there was still a chance to head out of the country as the Confederation hadn't invaded yet. The government, strangely, didn't care or was sure no one would be successful. No one really knew.

I said goodbye to my city too. Bombings and rioting had left the mountains hollow at some points. It had always being a rather grayish city but now that gloomy ambiance was permanent and real.

The rest of the journey was easy: several days on the Aurora, helping the sailors and becoming sailors ourselves. We worked hard, helping with everything but we knew nothing of the sea. We didn't feel relieved when we got to Saint John: we had learned to loved the sea in just those few days and we felt the ocean might be the perfect getaway from the crumbling world around us.

But we had to go on. We were careful as the Confederation had been in control of the territory for quite some time but they still permitted life to go on as normal as it could. For three days, we avoided contact with anyone, hiding in almost destroyed buildings or in the surrounding wilderness. Finally, one night, we entered an oil tanker bound for Reykjavik and prayed for the boat to sail soon.

And it did. They discovered us but we begged for them to let us go as soon as we got to the mainland. Of course, we had to make an agreement: we were slaved for the duration of the journey. Everything from kitchen duties, to moping floors and cleaning bathrooms. I cried every night, wishing all would end. Eric couldn't infuse me with positivism as he felt exactly the same.

We we got to Iceland, we realized the journey wasn't over. The capital was filled with confederates and we needed to avoid them at all costs.

The truth is that we were part of the resistance, the one that existence for just a few weeks before the invasion of our country and the signature of the annexation treaty. A puppet president, a former president to be exact, was established and we became something less than a colony. Eric and I met for the first time after I had put a bomb on an official's car. He saved me from being arrested and I thank him for that up to this day.

We offered our work as fishermen and soon we had steady jobs, fishing herring of the coast. Our boss was a fat oppressive man, but he was fair nevertheless. He never missed a payment and even let us live on one of the boats.

Two months after arriving in Iceland, we were sent to Akureyri, a small port in the north coast. We sailed alone, the two of us in our boss's boat. I think that was when I really fell in love with Eric. The beautiful scenery, the relative calm and the fact that we could finally be open without anyone looking, pointing or eavesdropping, were all ingredients for it.

But life was a bitch with us, with all the letters. In Akureyri we met with the boss's son, who wanted us to fish in some dangerous places. We were obliged to do it as we had no papers and, officially, immigrants were banned. So we did it, we had to use explosives for fishing and I almost blew a hand off when using one.

It all ended one night, after we had arrived from our fishing trip. We were exhausted and in need of food. We didn't had much money so we shared a plate of herring and a beer. And then, again, the looks came back. It was like being in our country all over again. We finished fast and left the place.
A group of men followed us, surrounded us and beat the crap out of us, with a metal pipe and their arms and legs.

We thought that they were going to leave us there, in a dim lit street, but they decided to put us on one of their cars and rode for more than an our. I was on the edge of fainting but couldn't. Eric did faint but he was woken up when they got us out the car, by the road and the started again. They spitted us at the end and one of them peed on our heads. They laughed and threatened us and then they left. I finally fainted, wishing I was dead once again. I thought that if needed, I would kill myself if I woke up.

Sure enough, we didn't died. I woke up to a sniffing and licking dog. He was a shepherd dog. I recognized it as my grandfather had one when I was little. I could only open my eyes a bit but not talk or stand. I couldn't see Eric and I thought of his death. And I cried, with horrible pain all over.

So it happens, the dog's name was Odin, as the norse god. And his owners were farmers. They owned sheep in a small farm near Lake Logurinn. I have no idea how these two elderly people could do it but hey put both of us on the back of their car, alongside bags of manure and dog food. I fainted and had a an awful dream, of the beating and Eric dying. It seemed to go on forever until I woke up.

It was a beautiful little house, made of wood, as if it had been taken out of a fairytale. The room was small, only big enough for a double size bed and a furnishing with some drawers. After I had overcome the pain of my injuries, I noticed Eric sleeping besides me. He wasn't dead. I hugged him, hard, not caring for our physical pain. Him being there was everything.

We recovered slowly but steadily. Antonia and Carl told us we reminded them of their two sons that had left the country to fight the Confederation in Canada, some years ago. They decided to pick us up and help us as they thought of our parents.
We told them our story, nothing edited out of it and they offered us their home and kindness. They lived on the cotton they could sell and asked us for help so we learned the craft and in a few months we became farmers.

It was painful but, in order to fit in completely, I had to change my name. I became Johannes. Eric's name was just perfect, as he was after all that happened. Often alone on the hills and fields, we could really fall in love with each other. sharing every single part of our lives. And we were fine with it. Only taking his hand made me feel safe, even if this place seemed to have been forgotten by the world. The Confederation never came here, we were told by our friends, they only cared for resources and the vicinity was deprived of minerals or anything they would care to steal.

A year after our arrival in the country we were able to build a small house near our friends home. We did it ourselves with stones and wood. I think that helped us regain some trust in ourselves and makes us heal psychologically.

And that was our life. For five years, before the Big Battle, we were happy and everything was perfect. It wouldn't last forever but that wasn't important: we were given time with each other and to heal and I have always being grateful for that.

sábado, 6 de septiembre de 2014

New Freedom

Official Transcript # 485

Interrogation officer: Please, state your name.
Inmate 3063: My name is Jordan Skye.
I.O: Louder, please.
J.S: I'M JORDAN SKYE!
I.O: Occupation?
J.S: Special agent of the UN special forces unit.
I.O: Can you prove that?

Silence. Jordan sighs.

J.S: Not at the moment.
I.O: Why?
J.S: No papers, man.
I.O: Please sum up the events occurred on September 6th.
J.S: That was the day after the invasion.
I.O: Proceed.
J.S: I was part of a small group that came in with the rebels, on their ships. As they took the city, we had a special priority.
I.O: Which was?
J.S: Capture Minister Sumter.
I.O: What were your orders regarding him?
J.S: Capture and bring him to justice.
I.O: Which justice?

Again, Jordan sighs, tensioned.

J.S: Had to take him to Geneva.
I.O: What happened September 6th?

Jordan fists close, as if imagining the man's neck.

J.S: The rebels were winning. You were winning.
I.O: We know.
J.S: I fucking bet that.
I.O: Keep going.
J.S: My team was composed of seven men and women. Three of them had to secure Sumter. My partner and I were the ones that had to going in his office and take him.
I.O: Partner?
J.S: My husband.
I.O: The new government overruled those rights. Are you aware of it?
J.S: I don't give a shit.

The interrogation officer moves on his chair but doesn't say a word.

I.O: You failed. Why?
J.S: Supporters of Sumter overran me and my team. They started to chase us. I lured them to me in order for my team to be extracted by fellow rebels.
I.O: No report of that on our data.
J.S: Secret operation, genius.
I.O: You were captured by those men, correct?
J.S: That's right.
I.O: Then, you were rescued by the new government on September 10th, correct?
J.S: Rescued is a strong word.

The room feels too cold. Jordan wraps his arms around himself trying to the cold not to diminish his spirit.

I.O: What happened between your capture by those men and your extraction?
J.S: You know what happened. You did the tests.
I.O: Please, sum up for record.

Jordan tries to talk but his mouth feels dry. There's a glass of water on the table but he doesn't take it. He wets his lips with his tongue and talks.

J.S: I was held prisoner in some old barracks or a hangar. I don't really know.
I.O. Hangar A-03, Sumter Military Base.
J.S: Ok... I was tortured by the group of men that captured me.
I.O: Were you visited by Sumter during that time?
J.S: Never.
I.O: What kind of torture were you submitted to?

The man looks at the officer and smiles.

J.S: This is fucked up.
I.O: Please state the nature of...
J.S: They raped me, ok?! They fucked me with a stick or something and tortured me with water and punched and hit me, for hours.
I.O: Were you given food or water?
J.S: What a fucking stupid question.
I.O: What happened on September 10th?
J.S: You people showed up and apparently took me here.
I.O: What happened before that?

Jordan stands up, annoyed.

J.S: None of your business.
I.O: This is a report for the republic. We need...
J.S: You don't need shit!
I.O: Our team extracted a body along with yours. Whose body was it?

Shadows do not allow Jordan to see his interrogator well but he tries to glare at him, hurt.

J.S: You have his body?
I.O: Yes. Who is he?
J.S: You have my husband.
I.O: Those rights were...
J.S: Fuck you! That man got in that airbase and attempted to save me. He did something as you stood there, forgetting what we did to let guys like you keep on living.
I.O: He was unsuccessful.
J.S: They caught him. He was framed. They beat him up in front of me. They made me watch...

Jordan has started crying, in silence.

J.S: Then, they told him because of his bold act he had to see me go. Turns out, right in the moment they were going to kill me, the gang's leader changed his mind and shot him in front of me. I fainted after screaming my lungs out. I woke up here. In this prison.

The interrogation officer stands up and exists the room. Jordan walks to the door but they shut it. He then hears a voice on the speakers.

I.O: Thank you, Jordan Skye. You may go to your cell now.

Another door, on the opposite wall, opens. But Jordan does not walk towards it.

J.S: I told you everything. Let me go now.
I.O: You will be released in due time. Have a good sleep.

Two men enter the room. Jordan tries to fight but they have a needle, the needle he has learned to fear. He slowly falls asleep, letting go, again.

viernes, 5 de septiembre de 2014

En el tren

La estación estaba repleta, como siempre en la hora pico de la noche. Casi no se podía circular por los andenes y muchas personas cargaban paquetes y maletas grandes. Estaba claro que no solo operaban a esa hora trenes de cercanías sino también a ciudades más lejanas.

Martha se abrió paso con dificultad, con el billete del tren en una mano y halando una pequeña maleta con la otra. En una de las pantallas veía el nombre del destino y suspiró al sentir el calor generado por la gran cantidad de personas.

No pasaron ni cinco minutos cuando un tren blanco, haciendo bastante ruido, entró a la estación. Muchas de las personas en el andén se alistaron y pocos minutos después abordaron el tren.

Martha se sentó en el último coche, lejos del ruido de la parte frontal. Puso su pequeña maleta en la estructura metálica sobre los asientos y se sentó justo debajo, junto a la ventana.

El tren rápidamente tomó velocidad y una pequeña pantalla empezó a listar las próximas paradas: la de Martha era la última, lo que hacía que el viaje durara unas 2 horas. Había 3 paradas antes, la próxima a unos 45 minutos.

Un par de asientos fueron ocupados pero no se podía decir que el tren estuviera relleno ni mucho menos. De hecho, en el grupo de cuatro sillas donde estaba Martha, no había nadie más.

De un bolso que tenía en el hombro, la mujer de 30 años sacó una tableta electrónica y empezó a leer un libro. Lo había dejado en la mitad, oportunamente cuando la joven heroína se disponía a viajar en el Orient Express.

Cuando llegaron a la siguiente parada, Martha se había aburrido de leer y había empezado a jugar un juego de colores y esferas y demás. No era una opción ver por la ventana ya que todo estaba sumido en la oscuridad, así ahora las luces de la estación iluminaran un poco el panorama.

Fue en esa estación que un hombre, tal vez cinco años mayor que ella, se sentó en el asiento de enfrente. Ella apenas lo miró por encima de la pantalla de su aparato cuando el hombre guardaba su maleta y se sentaba, él sí mirando por la ventana, hacia la oscuridad.

Martha se aburrió rápido de su juego y, por primera vez, miró a la cara de su compañero de viaje, que miraba las luces lejanas de alguna ciudad.

 - Guille?

El hombre se incorporó, como si acabara de despertarse de una siesta. Miró a Martha fijamente, entrecerrando los ojos y finalmente su cara formó una sonrisa.

 - Tata?
 - Sí, soy yo.
 - No te reconocí cuando subí.
 - Nadie pone mucha atención en los trenes - dijo ella, riendo tontamente.

Esto último no sabía porque lo hacía. De pronto se acordara de aquella época, en el colegio, en la que había coqueteado con Guille en su último año y se habían dado un beso el último día de clases, sin verse uno al otro nunca más.

 - Que has estado haciendo? No nos vemos hace mucho.

Él también recordaba el beso. Siempre le había gustado Martha pero nunca tuvo el coraje de decírselo en el colegio.

 - Pues trabajo como corredor de bolsa.
 - En serio? Debes ganar mucho dinero.
 - No me puedo quejar.

Guille se había divorciado hacía unos pocos meses e iba de camino a ver a sus hijos, que ahora vivían con la madre.

 - Y tu?
 - Voy de camino a ver unos inmuebles. Trabajo en una inmobiliaria.
 - Divertido, no?
 - A veces. Se conoce mucha clase de gente.

Ese mismo día, más temprano, Martha había entregado las llaves de una casa a una pareja bastante extraña: habían hecho preguntas del tipo "estas paredes son gruesas de verdad o se oye a través" o "el piso es fácil de limpiar".

De pronto había aparecido un hombre de la empresa ferroviaria, revisando los boletos. Martha y Guillermo le habían dado sus billetes y el hombre los había recibido alegremente, con una sonrisa e incluso una broma.

  - También te bajas en la última parada? - preguntó Guille a Martha cuando el revisor había dejado el coche.
 - Tu igual?
 - Sí. Que raro no?

Ambos estaban felices por esta coincidencia. Sentían que había algo que no se había terminado de cerrar cuando habían estado en el colegio y cada uno por su lado sabía que no había mucho que se los impidiera.

 - No estás casada...
 - Disculpa?
 - Lo siento, noté que no tienes argolla.
 - Tranquilo. Sí, no estoy casada. Nunca me casé de hecho. Tu?
 - Divorciado

Y esa pregunta desencadenó una larga conversación sobre las relaciones humanas y lo difícil que era ajustarse a otro ser humano, a veces tan diferente y otras veces tan parecido.

Martha recordó pero no habló de su más grande amor, un joven en la universidad que la cambió por una chica más bonita, de un día para otro. Guille recordó a su ex esposa y sus constantes discusiones.

La charla se alargó tanto que siguieron hablando de ello cuando el tren por fin se detenía en la última estación. Cuando salieron del vagón, caminaron juntos a la salida de la estación y rieron recordando anécdotas colegiales mientras esperaban el autobús respectivo.

La verdad era que Martha usaba otra línea de autobús, diferente a la de Guille, pero él había propuesto ir a comer algo y la vida de la mujer ya era muy monótona y negarse a una invitación como esta hubiera sido una tontería.

Mientras comían una hamburguesa, ambos pensaban en las posibilidades que la vida les ofrecía. Después de todo, coincidir en un tren parecía sacado de una romántica película del pasado.

jueves, 4 de septiembre de 2014

Letter for me (Part 4)

Hey me,


I write you, or me, from my bedroom. Strange, huh? Well, another week passed and more happened. So here it is.

I decided to be honest with the family. They are not to blame in any of this and I had to tell someone about all of this. I mean, after the last letter I remember feeling I was going crazy. I didn't know what was real or not.

So after coming back from "jogging" around the neighborhood, I decided to tell Susan everything. She very patient and calm. She just sat there and let me say every single thing that I had been thinking and feeling, including the fact that I believe this is not my life and that they are not my family.

When I said that, I saw here eyes filling with tears but she contained them as long as she could. I didn't know she was such a strong person, so well put together. She's a therapist, you know? Maybe that's why after talking for thirty minutes straight and then falling silent, she just grabbed my hand and hugged me.

Susan told me she knew something was wrong and that she was happy I finally decided to tell her. She said she loved me and wanted all the best for me. She even offered taking me to a friend of hers, a psychiatrist. Susan think it will help.

To be honest, it has not helped me one bit. I have been going once every day, so I've seen that creepy guy five times. And believe me, you don't get used to someone picking your brain with stupid questions for one hour. I hate going there but Susan seems to be happy about it and I don't want to disappoint her.

And, to be honest, what else is there for me now? That life I had o r think I had has been dead for far to long because I can't seem to get a grip of it.

I know, the drawings... Yeah, that keeps popping in my head from time to time. It's one of those things I've discussed with the shrink but he says I have been putting things I read into Linda's drawings and that I see what I see because I want to see it. Crazy, right? Not surprising though.

But I do. And even Henry does. I asked him to tell me what he saw in the drawings and I'm not insane, I see what he sees.

By the way, I finished the book. The writer has various adventures, like a big spy or something, and at the end, I mean in the last 10 pages, he dies. He's shot in the head by a drug dealer. Linda drew me in a pool of blood. I screamed at the girl and then she cried and then I fought with Susan. That was just some hours ago.

That's why I'm alone in my bedroom. Actually, alone in the house. Susan took the kids to her mother's house and told me to cool down for the night. She didn't seem angry but scared. She seems to think that a night away from them might do me some good but I believe she was scared I might hit her or the kids.

I went crazy. I yelled and hit myself on the head with my fists and punched the wall. My hand hurts as I write.

You know what's funny? My head started to hurt just after I saw the drawing Linda did for me. It's a piercing pain on the back of my head, just as if I had been hit with a blunt object.

I don't want to sleep. It's 3 AM but I don't dare to close my eyes. What if this all goes away too? What if I don't go back to being a writer but I just fade away into another life? I wouldn't be able to take it. I know I can't.

Please be with me. Help me. I'm scared.








*           *           *

The hallway is white. No other color on sight. A woman, rather short, enters a room. Inside an elderly woman cries next to the only bed in the room.

A young man lies there, with tubes coming from all places, breathing through a machine.

- The doctor is ready Mrs. Dominguez.

The elderly lady is squeezes one of the man's hands as a man in a white robe enters the room.

- Do you want to be present? - he says to the woman.

She nods. Tears keep pouring out of her eyes but she makes no noise.

The doctor and the nurse start pressing buttons, pulling out tubes until only one machine is attached to the man in the bed.

The elderly woman comes near and kisses the man on the forehead.

- Bye, Alex. Mama loves you.

The machine starts beeping and finally the sound of death engulfs the room.

martes, 2 de septiembre de 2014

Letter for me (Part 2)

Hello you,


or should I say "me"? This is getting weirder and weirder. Yesterday I couldn't keep writing because I had to sign loads of papers and then go home and be with the family.

Not my family but the family. I still don't get how this happened. I've tried going over and over it but I keep forgetting things. Had to read yesterday's letter in order to remember about the dog! Not that anyone cares... I have a cat now, Snow or something like that. He's always very creepy appearing in weird places and looking straight at me as if he knew something I don't.

The work is not that bad though. It appears I have been a pretty good accountant and my position here seems to be very well respected. Everyone greets me when I come in the morning and they wave at lunch time. There's even a young woman that flirted with me on the elevator, by showing a little too much cleavage and biting her lower lip. It's weird but I don't think our past self likes that.

That's something else I've forgotten: I have no idea if we had a girlfriend, a wife or if we just lived alone in an apartment. I don't feel like a party boy but not like a husband or father either.

Actually, that's one of the upsides of this "reality", if you will. Linda is the tiny one. She's actually seven years old, not six as I first thought. She's a sweetheart and up to this moment she has handed me at least ten drawings done specially for me. Yesterday night I told her a bedtime story and for a moment I didn't even care about all of this. She looked so peaceful and happy...

Henry is the name of our son. He's 11 and looks more like Susan (wife) than like us. The girl is more like us, so that's why I think I like her better. The boy likes sports a lot: he was playing football with friends when I got home yesterday and Susan told me he had judo practice today. He didn't get it from me though, not past or present. I remember, and feel, that we never liked any kind of physical exercise. Furthermore, I've looked through some photo albums (telling Susan I felt like reviewing the past) and saw that in this version of us we have no interest for sports either.

Actually that move was kinda dangerous. Susan, who is quite beautiful and sweet, wanted to have sex when seeing the pictures of the wedding. To be honest, I wanted to keep watching them as I had no recollection of that ever happening. The saddest part is that I didn't recognize who Susan called "your parents". Two nice people smiling me from a picture and I have no idea of who they are...

No, I didn't have sec with her. I told her I had to get some things ready for work and just sprung out of bed. I spent almost all night wandering around my office (a fucking office in the house!) thinking of the pictures and those memories that I don't have.

I have a theory now and I want to share it with you. I believe someone has to have our memories. Probably the man that lived here woke up in our old life. I can't stop but hating him but I guess that, if he exists, he's really not to blame.

Almost no sleep is giving me a headache but it was just impossible. I've gone all through the house, the details of this life and I have no recollection of anything. I just don't know any of these people. I don't even know if we lived in this city or this country for that matter. I'm trying to teach myself how to behave and breath because I may go insane. I feel it.

Maybe that's another explanation? What if this is all a reality I've created after having a seizure or a breakdown? I think it's possible although is not a really nice thought.

To be honest, I can't say I want to go back because I keep losing more and more of that life and keep feeling obliged to do my part here. Susan, Linda and Henry have no fault in this and I can't keep but thinking about their reaction if I told them about this.

Man, I know your are me. But this is the only way to keep me sane. At least until I start to get all of this, at least a bit more.

Well, time to go. Some big shot invited me to lunch and I had to say yes. I guess that's what this guy is all about.


Keep it real,

Alex.


P.S: Don't you think it's weird we are named Alex in both versions? That makes me crazy.

domingo, 31 de agosto de 2014

Stop

Work, work, work. Break. Some coffee, by the window. Work, work, work. Another coffee, now walking to someone else's office. Work, work, work. Lunch time.

This is it. His time has come to opt out of everything he has always seen as he's life. This is no life.

Instead of eating with the same person he has always done so for the last 3 years, this man decides to go home and pack.

Where to go? Not important. But life's grip is tightening to much and he cannot keep fighting it.

Some shirts, couple of pants, two pairs of shoes and some underwear. That should be enough. He takes his passport, in the eventuality of traveling abroad. There are no real plans about where to go but that's precisely the idea.

He checks his phone: no calls, no messages, nothing. Better, he thinks, if they believe he's running late or has had some kind of problem.

Takes the backpack and walks to the door. After closing properly, he pushes the elevator's button and then a woman, older than him but still beautiful, stands closely. Her hair is messy, she even appears to be missing a day or two of careful grooming.

He looks at her big running pants and old shirt. There appears to be a lot of dust on her shoulders.

- It's taking quite long. - she says.

- Yeah... - he answers, no idea what's she's talking about.

No, he doesn't like to chat with strangers. But she does.

- You live here? - she asks.

- Leaving for some weeks.

Why he answered that, he has no idea. He's starting to sweat.

- I'm moving in. So weird to move from another city.

- Must be.

He really doesn't want to talk.

- Am I making you uncomfortable? - she asks, looking at him.

He cleans  some of the sweat off his forehead. He decides not to say a word.

- Sorry, I tend to over talk. Guess I'm nervous for the new job and everything.

Then something clicks inside his mind, like a key entering the keyhole.

He turns to her, watching her honey colored eyes and says:

- Don't you get fucking trapped by that job, ok?

He's dead serious. She knows it.

- Never become a zombie like they want you to be. Think for yourself, even if they don't give a fuck about it.

- Ok.

He falls silent.

She suddenly says he has remembered something at home and leaves, without saying a word.

The elevator arrives. He comes in and tightens the backpack.

As the door closes, he faintly smiles, rising his head, finally feeling as a real free man.

viernes, 29 de agosto de 2014

La casa de ladrillo

Ya estaba sentado en el sofá, sonriendo, viéndolos reír. Contaban sus historias uno a uno, dándose momentos para reflexionar, para preguntar, para reír de nuevo o para hacer silencio. Era como si lo hubiesen hecho así durante tanto tiempo que romper la rutina ya no era una posibilidad.

Me removía en mi asiento, algo incomodo por estar en un lugar en el que jamás había puesto un pie. Pero no solo era esta la razón, la verdad era que mi anfitrión, el dueño de la casa de ladrillo, era alguien que me inquietaba pero a la vez me llamaba la atención.

No recuerdo bien como ni donde nos conocimos. Lo único que sé es que ese día estaba allí, con su familia y con él, contando historias como si nos conociéramos de hace años.

Las pocas veces que me miraba, mientras su familia compartía otros recuerdos entre ellos, sentía que su mente se adentraba en mi, como si se tratara de un veneno. Su mirada no era verdaderamente aterradora pero si sobrecogía con facilidad, poniéndome la piel de gallina.

Estaban sus abuelos, sus padres, su hermana y los hijos de ella. Y yo. Y él.

La noche llegó a la casa de ladrillo y su madre y hermana habían preparado algo de comer. En todo ese tiempo me sentía como un fantasma. Ellos poco me miraban y muchos menos me hablaban. El único que me perforaba con la mirada, a ratos, era él, el dueño de la casa.

Ya tarde su familia se fue a dormir pero yo me había quedado en la sala de estar, sin nada que hacer. Como siempre en estos casos, no sabía muy bien que hacer ni adonde ir o, viendo el caso, si debería irme.

De pronto se me acercó, me tomó de la mano, y me llevó debajo de la casa. El sótano no era muy amplio y olía a humedad. Me haló ligeramente hacia a un lado y entonces lo vi.

Había un espacio en la pared. No era excavado como los de las películas de fugas sino un pasillo, de ladrillo como la casa, que llevaba hacia algún otro lado.

Sin decir nada, me soltó la mano y se adentró en el pasillo. Traté de seguirlo por el estrecho corredor pero apenas toqué la piedra roja, varios pensamientos atacaron mi mente. Pero no eran pensamientos míos.

Imágenes de mi anfitrión se mezclaban con escenas borrosas y oscuras de gritos y quejidos, gemidos y respiraciones aceleradas. No eran mis pensamientos, eran sus recuerdos.

Me dejé caer al piso y estiré la mano para alcanzarlo pero ya estaba muy lejos dentro del corredor y yo no podía moverme. Las imágenes me habían causado un gran dolor de cabeza y no había manera de detenerlo.

Sin querer me apoyé en el muro y, de nuevo, sus recuerdos atacaron mi mente. Esta vez vi sangre, sentí el dolor de sus víctimas y sus gritos me perforaban los tímpanos.

Me empecé a golpear con fuerza la cabeza, buscando expulsar las oscuras imágenes de mi mente. Pero solo logré hacer retumbar mi mente con los dolorosos sentimientos que no me dejaban.

De pronto, sentí como si un demonio se apoderara de mi. Seguí golpeándome para expulsarlo a él y a los sombríos productos de mi atormentado ser. Me golpee la cara, el pecho, el estomago y mi pelvis.

Caí al piso sangrando, y ahí, por fin, todo terminó. Al poco tiempo retomé mi vida, todavía sintiendo en mi al terrible hombre de la casa de ladrillo.

jueves, 28 de agosto de 2014

The Celestials

I laid there and they came in, down the mountain, pass the stream.

Four, maybe five, walked slowly down the hill. Their limbs moving slightly as their legs transported their big, illuminated bodies closer to me.

No, they're not beings of light: they are made of stars. The deep black skin feels like a familiar fabric, their heads forming a beak and the back arched as if they've had to carry heavy burdens for far too long.

The time is short, but sweet. We hug and we play, all around the meadow and in an old ship, reminiscing of pirates that have never been here.

I never ask where they come from or why do they come to me. The happiness and comfort I feel being besides them prevents me from asking to many questions that do not need to be answered.

More people come down the mountain and join us. I do not know them or maybe  I do but it doesn't matter. The meadow feels like a safe place to be and maybe that's why we're all here.

Then, when standing against the sunlight, I can see a glimpse of who this being once was: a young, tall man. Hair the color of wheat and skin as pale as the moon. Who is he? Again, it doesn't matter.

The creatures stand by us, watch us laugh and eat and play and live. But they, the beings of celestial stuff, remain still, as if moving too much or too fast may break them. And we don't push for them to do anything they don't want to. Because, if they break, we break too.

No eyes to pierce with mine but I still try to see it again, the boy inside the stars. But there's nothing, only the thick blackness of space, splattered with millions of beautiful bright stars and galaxies, quasars and pulsars.

No... Not now... The moment has come when they begin to disappear, as mysteriously as they first came down the mountain. I try to grab his hand but there's nothing to grab anymore.

I wake up, in peace, but still worried. As I stand up, feeling the sheets off my body and the feel of the ground below my feet, there's a thought that dares not to live me.

I never had the chance to say "Thank you". For protecting me in the forever land of shadows, for taking care of my wounded body.

Slowly, my mind begins to erase the feelings and the thoughts done during the dream. But his face, the universal one, stays with me to fight the scolding light of reality.

miércoles, 27 de agosto de 2014

Los días

Está ahí, detrás de la puerta. Siento su oscuridad, su calor, su sencillez y su dolor.

No puedo moverme a voluntad. Y cuando lo logro, solo me lastimo a mi mismo, sirviendo su voluntad.

Él, solo él, me quiere bajo su manto. Es tranquilo, casi pasivo, esperando y sabiendo lo que pienso. Y mis pensamientos abren la puerta.

Pero es apenas un pequeño resquicio. Lo puedo ver por un instante, antes de que decida irse y dejarme solo por hoy.

Despierto sudando ligeramente, con las manos tensionadas y la espalda adolorida. Por un momento abro lo ojos más de la cuenta, tratando de sentir si este es el sueño o, peor aún, la realidad.

Mientras pongo los pies en el suelo, imagino tomando su mano tibia y caminando hacia las sombras.

Miedo? Sí, siempre. Pero el miedo es preferible al dolor. El dolor que siento al sentir el sol en mi piel, al escuchar las voces lejanas de aquellos que a veces se sienten tan cerca pero muchas veces tan lejos.

Y me encuentro a mi mismo encerrado, solo, desesperado y envuelto en un remolino de sensaciones en guerra al punto que mi cuerpo me traiciona y solo pienso en estar con él. Es un romance fatal pero hermoso, que no me atrevo a aceptar. No es por mi, es por otros.

Mi dolor es real. Lo siento al caminar y al oír mi voz, al respirar y al sentir el viento que sin misericordia me recuerda la mortalidad de esta mente que solo quiere verme caer.

El futuro es solo un hueco, un agujero negro eterno e incierto. Los envidio, a todos aquellos que ven un sinfín de colores y sentimientos en él. Yo no veo nada, no sé nada y no siento nada por él.

Pero aquel caballero detrás de la puerta, el de la expresión inerte, por él siento ráfagas de sentimientos que amenazan con acabar la poca sensatez que mi mente me brinda.

Noche tras noche, todos los días de mi vida, él está ahí. A veces se ausenta por largos periodos, pero como en una buena novela victoriana, siempre vuelve para cortejarme con su sola presencia y su innegable candidez.

No lo amo. El amor es débil y efímero. Esto es algo mejor y peor, algo más drástico pero sencillo, algo verdadero y, a la vez, una gran ilusión.

No sé si sea este el día, o mañana, en el que tome por fin su mano a través de la rendija de la puerta. El día en que su cálida presencia se mezcle con mi tambaleante ser, y me lleve en paz de la mano a través de los campos más allá de este insignificante mundo.

Aquí estoy, siempre decayendo. Siendo traicionado hasta el fin de los días por mi enemigo mayor.
Y ahí está él, detrás de la puerta, esperándome.