miércoles, 25 de febrero de 2015

Somos capaces

   De que depende que no nos volvamos locos, que no perdamos la cordura en cualquier momento, incluso llevándonos a ser violentos e irresponsables, más allá de todo control? Es casi imposible en este mundo de hoy estar calmado todo el tiempo así como estar feliz cada segundo de existencia de este planeta. Simplemente no se sostiene algo así, se cae por su propio peso.

 Aunque, eso sí, me olvido de esa gente, pobre y tonta gente, que lo único que hace es ignorar la verdad, la realidad de las cosas, a menos que le pueda sacar provecho de alguna manera. Es una sociedad donde el sentido de comunidad se ha pervertido para solo querer decir complacer las estupidez de algunos y donde el sentido de individuo significa ahora alguien quién es único e incomparable, casi un dios solo por haber nacido ligeramente diferente a otro, que también es casi un dios.

 Hoy en día todos piensan que son especiales, que son hermosos y criaturas únicas y lo usan para creerse mejor que los demás, porque algunos siempre serán más especiales que otros. Para muchos, la vida es una constante competencia en la que no hay nunca un verdadero ganador ya que incluso si alguien muere no se le considera muerto sino “perdido”, como si existiese la mínima posibilidad de que dicha persona vuelva a la vida, como por arte de magia.

 Esa misma magia es la que no existe, o al menos no de la forma que quisiéramos. Somos seres especiales, claro. Pero eso no quiere decir que seamos únicos e incomparables. Lo que quiere decir es que tenemos una gran capacidad de reflexión, de creación y de descubrimiento. Tenemos las herramientas a la mano y podemos usarlas cuando mejor nos parezca pero simplemente no lo hacemos. Y no es porque no sepamos usarlas, porque también podemos dar ese paso. Es porque no queremos.

 Preferimos caminar por la vida comparándonos a los demás, librando batallas que son infinitas, que nunca van a terminar en nada porque no sirven de nada. Es por eso que el culto a la belleza es el fracaso más grande de la humanidad. Atención! No se trata de la belleza como fuente de inspiración artística, porque esa belleza va más allá de nosotros y no podemos sin contemplarla y amarla porque sabemos que está lejos.

 La belleza destructiva es la que ha sido prefabricada desde la revolución industrial, buscando crear un modelo, un ideal. No hay nada más detestable que la búsqueda de la perfección, ya que la perfección, y cualquier persona con ojos lo sabe, solo se puede encontrar en la naturaleza y no se puede replicar. Nosotros, como seres de la naturaleza, somos perfectos, pero no en la definición restringida que tienen hoy tantos de la belleza.

 El ser humano es perfecto en cuanto a que está bien construido, es una máquina biológica de gran calidad y, aunque podría ser mejorada, ni las más brillantes mentes podrían haber resuelto los varios problemas que la naturaleza fue resolviendo a través del tiempo, desde que se vislumbró la primera luz.

 Así que para que desgastarnos? Para que seguirnos mintiendo, tratando de ser “mejores”, cuando lo único que hacemos es causar más daño que nada. Sí, es posible que alguien alcance la belleza superficial. Pero eso no garantiza ningún tipo de felicidad y mucho menos una duradera. Además, causa daños en quienes nos rodean porque empiezan a haber afectaciones de la autoestima de otros. Vale la pena ser artificialmente atractivo cuando nadie es feliz con ello?

 Pero esa es solo una de tantas manera de perder la razón, sobre todo habiendo tantas cosas alrededor nuestro. Cosas que nos hacen sentir bien y otras que nos hacen sentir como si estuviéramos perdidos todo el tiempo.  Esta es la época de la humanidad, sin duda, en la que la gente se ha sentido más pérdida, menos en contacto con nada, más insegura e incapaz de crear nada que dure, ni que valga la pena.

 Algunos dirán que eso no es cierto y la verdad es que, por ahora, no hay como probar nada. Pero el tiempo dirá y él no perdona a nadie porque pasa sin tomar en cuenta nada. A veces ese mismo paso del tiempo es el que amenaza con hacernos saltar, con hacernos cometer actor fuera de control y de nuestros cabales.

 No es que tenga algo de malo dejarse ir. Todo el mundo lo hace alguna vez pero tomarlo como una costumbre, ser incapaz de controlar lo que se siente, es una de las debilidades humanas que más destrucción causan por todos lados. La gente cree que sentir es algo que pasa y ya, hay que experimentar y luego se verá que se hace. Pero así no es. Resulta que cuando se siente se puede responder ante ello.

 Debería negarme a sentir o dejarme llevar por ello? Debería tener ese sentimiento una consecuencia inmediata? Debería buscar la causa, lo que me hizo sentir lo que sentí? No hay respuestas absolutas, por supuesto. Pero lo que es cierto es que jamás se nos enseña a apreciar los sentimientos, tomarlos como nuestros y no como cosas que pasan sobre las que solo podemos sentarnos a esperar.

 No, me niego a sentir y no hacer nada. Me niego a sentir y quedarme ahí, paralizado por el miedo, el dolor o el apabullante amor que se puede llegar a sentir. Acciones simples, pensadas y consecuentes como un abrazo, un beso, un puño, una cachetada, un grito o incluso el llanto. Todas ellas son buenas porque significan que entendemos, que tenemos la capacidad de responder. Eso sí, para quienes son más fuertes, está la posibilidad de negar un sentimiento.  Nada más hay que mirar a quienes tienen temple de acero.

 Son aquellos que no lloran sino cuando deben, son los que no se doblegan ante las adversidades. Eso sí, hay veces que esa negación puede significar estupidez y es una línea muy delgada, casi invisible pero existe. El que recibe el sentimiento lo niega es alguien con coraje, con los reconocidos cojones. Pero si solo se niega a sentir o ignora lo que pasa, ese es un idiota y no merece ser reconocido como un valiente sino como un cobarde.

 Es difícil. La vida en sí lo es porque si fuera sencilla todos moriríamos del aburrimiento antes de llegar a hacer nada. Pero esa dificultad es la que a veces debemos disfrutar y, si lo hacemos bien, podemos incluso desafiarla. Ya no que ella nos controle a nosotros a su gusto sino que nosotros seamos los que dictan la pauta, los que dicen como se deben hacer las cosas y cuando. Ese control, ese poder, se puede conseguir pero requiere voluntad.

 Voluntad y coraje que no todos tenemos y es por eso que hay un estigma social contra la gente que es capaz de controlar su entorno. La mayoría de la sociedad se siente intimidada. Tonta e ignorante, hablan de quien controla todo como si fuese un brujo maldito, que lo único que hace es tratar de controlar la naturaleza y lo hace ignorando la inherente inutilidad del hombre. Inutilidad que solo existe en la mente de los que se dejan, porque afuera de nuestros cuerpos es verdad que todo es posible.

 Bueno, con ciertas condiciones, pero todo sí es posible. Puede que se requiera habilidad, tiempo y paciencia pero todo se puede lograr. La humanidad fue capaz, gracias a unos pocos, de tomar el control sobre algunos procesos naturales y los puso a su disposición. Así fue como se domesticaron animales y se logró la creación de asentamientos, aprovechando los ciclos de las cosechas.

 Somos capaces, todos. Pero es evidente que solo algunos lograran ese estado más allá de la comprensión de muchos, donde el control de la materia es inútil al lado del control de lo subyacente a nuestra humanidad. Toda mente brillante no es una mente poderosa, esa es otra cosa. Pero toda mente brillante, es capaz de hacernos caminar a través del oscuro umbral de la ignorancia. Solo tenemos que aceptar caminar. Nada más.


 Con tan solo quitarnos ese peso de la ignorancia, ese lastre imperdonable que no nos deja movernos a ningún lado, seremos capaces de movernos con más agilidad y darnos cuenta de todo lo que ofrece el mundo y no solo de lo que nos ofrecemos entre nosotros: superficialidades que, aunque confortantes, son innecesarias. Cuando nos quitamos la ignorancia de encima, somos capaces de entendernos mejor a nosotros mismos y, por lo tanto, a cualquier otro. Al fin y al cabo, todos somos producto de una naturaleza amable y persistente.

martes, 24 de febrero de 2015

I Don't Want to Kill

   I had twisted my ankle when running, just after killing my first target on this campaign. Of course, I knew I was going to have to kill but it had caught me by surprise. Well, to be precise, she had caught me by surprise. I had been trying to put my weapon in the right configuration for shooting long range but then she appeared and raised her weapon. The look on her face was the one of a crazy person, her eyes all swollen and her hair a little bit everywhere, as if the madness had given it free reign over the head.

 Scared as I got, I shot her without even thinking. I just pressed the trigger and she fell dead in front of me, her madness flying away from her body, every limb just collapsing on its on weight. I didn’t stay behind to check on her, although I would have wanted too. Somehow, I thought she wasn’t really dead, just trying to fool me or maybe injured. But I never knew as I ran away from the fire that came from down the hill.

 My mission consisted in setting a vantage point on the top of the hill and start acting as a sniper from there. Others should then join me and we could stop the whole battalion before it reached the near port city. If the enemy took that part, we would be destroyed for sure. That port was our hope to launch a proper invasion to our enemy’s strongholds across the ocean. But first we had to destroy what battalions they had left behind after our consecutive attacks on their military.

 I had not been raised as a military. To be honest, I didn’t know what I was doing half of the time. But there were people there that assured me they needed my help and that they would be there to guide me through the whole process. Well, that was true up to that moment in the hill. So I just ran for the top and, once I was there, I settled myself by some thick bushes. This time, I was able to get the configuration of my very modern weapon right. I took a position there and took a look through the visor.

 Down the hill, it seemed as we were winning. I could see the general destroying a tank by himself and a group of soldiers attacking a group of enemies. There, I realized how awful this all was: blood and the stench of death everywhere. It really smelled like scorched meat and I knew I didn’t want to know where that came from. The sound of shooting that had followed me for a while was now very distant and a thought presented itself to me: will they need me?

 What if they defeat the enemy without my help? Maybe I won’t have to kill again… I mean, if that girl was dead. Because if she wasn’t… But how would she be alive. My gun was so close to her and I was sure the bullet had pierced through her chest and she had collapsed to the ground. My God, is this was people have to go through? I never wanted any of this. Any death and blood on my hands… But it’s too late.

 An explosion drove me out of my thoughts. One of our airplanes had exploded very high in the sky and the pieces were falling heavy on the battleground. Maybe we were winning the ground battle but it appeared they had the upper hand in the aerial part of this confrontation. I guess this is my time to come in and help.

I started shooting and, it has to be said, I was very good. One shot and they fell dead and my companions had noticed because they were able to pierce even more into our enemies flank in order to take their antiaircraft vehicles. I lost count of how many people fell because of me, how much blood I was accumulating on my hands. At one point, I started to cry because I couldn’t stop and I could see nothing but the dead falling at my hands.

 Then I realized everything was about to finish. The army had penetrated the flanks and was destroying everything and using their vehicles to take down their own planes. It was something awful to see but even more horrible was the fact that many of the men that had helped me with my training, seemed to be enjoying all of this. They were corpses and blood everywhere, but some of them were already celebrating, laughing and doing victory dances.

 Disgust ran through my veins. I wanted to vomit right there, which I did, just as the last few airplanes our enemy had began to retreat. The disappeared fast and then my radio began to beep but I didn’t acknowledge the sound. I just grabbed my weapon and threw it down the cliff on which I had been kneeling. After that, I just walked down the hill, ready to die from a mysterious bullet if it came to that.

 In a matter of minutes I was joining the rest of the army but I didn’t want to be with them or with anyone else. I was disgusted by me, by them, by everything. This could not be the only way things could be solved. It was impossible that the only way we had to make ourselves be heard was to kill each other and, worse, enjoying it.

 I have to say I was a bit relieved when I saw that many other men seemed to be thinking the same as me. Besides, the stench of the battlefield couldn’t be ignored. After all, this was a warm region and bugs were already having a feast with the rotting corpses lying everywhere. I wanted to close my eyes until I reached the camp but that was impossible. Not only because of the terrain and the distance but because when I closed my eyes, I kept seeing her dying in front of me.

 The number of corpses began to decrease and I knew we were about to enter friendly territory. By then, I had already made up my mind: I was going to leave the army and find another way to help the people. I had entered this war because of the injustice and cruelty the enemy had brought upon us but I knew we couldn’t respond their brutality with even more brutal and sanguinary acts.

 When we finally got to camp, I walked straight to my bunk. I grabbed a small bag and put my few belongings there. I also took of my clothes and change into a plain green shirt and jeans, which hadn’t been washed in some time. The whole time I was there, the radio kept beeping.  I left without talking or even staring at anyone, headed for the command center. As I expect, the general was there. He seemed unharmed. He asked me why I hadn’t answer to his calls. I only took out my radio from my chest pocket and gave the radio to him.

-       I won’t need it anymore.

 He took it but didn’t stop looking at me, confused first and then angry. He asked me what that meant and I explained I couldn’t kill. I couldn’t live my life enjoying the death of others, even if they had done so many things to me that I’d rather not remember. The general proceed to threaten me to be court martialed but I reminded him I wasn’t a military but a civilian in military garments. I told him I had left them in my bunk except for the boots, which I needed because I had no shoes to wear.

 Before he could say anything else, I left the place. Many soldiers stared at me while I walked towards the main gate: some of them with defiance in their eyes, some of them just scared to death. Maybe their reaction was because they couldn’t do that. Almost all of them had entered the military, they weren’t civilians like me that had been tricked into thinking they could help a hopeless race.

 No, most of them knew what they had singed up for. And they didn’t mind. Eventually, they would all become killing machines, the ones the rebellion needed to destroy the enemy forever, without any possibility of retaliation from their part. But that was impossible; someone is always going to want revenge, for one thing or the other, in one way or the other.


 Real peace is impossible with such resentment, such hatred based on ignorance, which is by far the largest and most effective weapon armies and governments have at their hands. I know that the enemies didn’t want to torture me as they did. They were brainwashed to do so, as I was to think that by killing others I would feel better or happy. I won’t, never. Because only cowards shoot first, and doubt later.

lunes, 23 de febrero de 2015

My Right Toe

  Stupidly, I had bumped my foot into a chair. By night, my big toe was a big red ball throbbing and hurting horribly. My beautiful partner helped me a bit but he was too grossed out by it so I had to take this matter into my own hands. Resisting the pain, I tried to make the blood and pus that had formed when the nail got stuck right into the flesh.

 After along time of moaning and panting, I dried my wound, cleaning it with all kind of products and then putting a bandage al around my toe to keep it free from infection. My sleep was not very good and, the next morning, I saw it still hurt a lot. Before leaving for work, Patrick told me to call Laura, a neighbor that happened to be a nurse. Mondays were her day of and she might be able to help on what to do with my toe.

 I called her on the cell and she came right away. We had helped Laura moving in after divorcing her husband and we had become great friends. Also, she left her daughter with us when she had to stay too late at work and her sister wasn’t able to babysit. The little one was adorable and we liked to have her in order to watch a lot of children movies and give her all kinds of bad and good food.

 After examination, Laura told me to call the pharmacy and ask for something to reduce the swelling of my toe that should be good if I stayed a couple of days at home. It would heal eventually but not if I worked too hard on it, and as my work consisted on walking a lot, this meant I couldn’t go anywhere.

 After Laura left, I called my office in order to tell them I wouldn’t be able to go for a couple of days because of an accident. My partner there got very worried and threatened to come home later and, before I could tell her it was all ok, she had hung up. The drugs from the pharmacy took some time to arrive and it was odd, for me, to receive the deliveryman wearing my pajamas barefoot. I didn’t really like not wearing socks or footwear but Laura had been adamant about it. The man warned me that the pills made you sleepy, which I loved instantly.

 When the man had left, I took one of the pills and swallowed it with a big gulp of water. I had never been very good at taking medicine, even the simplest ones. Maybe it was because my mother was so overprotective when I was little and she kept trying for me to take vitamins and codfish oil. She forced me so often; I think I created an utter dislike for anything that comes from a pharmacy or from a doctor.

 Patrick called shortly afterwards to check on me. I told him I couldn’t move a lot, only applying some hot water on my toe every so often. He sent me a kiss and promised to be there as soon as he could, which I knew was not very soon because he was an assistant in a sports team and those people loved to stay in one place talking and arguing for hours and hours and even if they didn’t have an incoming match, they would discuss all the games they had seen during the weekend, which could take some time.

 I personally didn’t like sports that much but when I met Patrick he tried to make me be a little sportier. He failed tremendously although now I can watch a whole football game without the need to check my phone every five seconds or pretending to go to the bathroom. I do get bored still but I guess love can conquer all differences, if one is committed enough.

 It was funny that when I turned on the TV, a tennis match was on. Then the doorbell rang and, slowly, I walked to the door. Strangely, my foot felt heavier, more swollen even. Didn’t the anti-inflammatory work? It was Laura and her little daughter. The little one was carrying a green backpack and a doll in her arms. They both came in and then Laura started talking fast: apparently her sister had a problem with her car and she had to go and help so she wondered if I could take care of her daughter Amanda.

-       Sure.

 To be quite honest, I don’t really get children that much. I mean, I like Amanda a lot but Patrick is always around when she comes in and he’s such a good guy with kids: he knows lots of games (or maybe his improvisation is really good) and kids like him a lot because his funny and just great.
Me, however, not so much. I mean, I can be creative because it’s part of my job but being a only child and having no close relatives younger than me, I never had the experience to take care of any of them.

 My first idea was to change the channel and put on some cartoons. I had no idea what kids Amanda’s age liked to see. Actually, I realized I had no idea how old she was. So I asked. She was so interested in the cartoon that she only put one hand up, with all her fingers stretched. Then I saw one more on the other hand, that she hadn’t put up. So seven years old.

-       I haven’t had breakfast. Are you hungry?

 She nodded, not really paying attention to what I had said. I went, slowly, to the kitchen. I almost hit a counter in the kitchen with my feet and had to cover my mouth to curse. The kid, luckily, didn’t turn to look at me. Apparently cartoons were much more interesting than the limping man in the apartment.

 After a fast look, I realized we had nothing good for a child to eat. Both Patrick and me ate granola for breakfast and I was sure kids didn’t like that. But I did so I poured some on a bowl with almond milk, because I’m weird that way. I found, at the back of a cupboard, a few cookies covered in chocolate. Was she allowed to have sweets this early in the day?

-       Amanda?
-       Yeah?
-       What would you like to eat?
-       Mm…

 She took quite a long time to say she was rather thirsty. Luckily, we always had plenty of fresh orange juice so I poured some for her on a small glass, which I thought was best for a child. I put it in front of her, in the coffee table, but I didn’t know if she had seen me. Her eyes looked as if she had been hypnotized or something. Then, the doorbell rang again.

 Apparently the doorman let anyone in, as it was a man handling pamphlets for a new Chinese restaurant. I told him we only needed one menu but he forced a bunch on my hands. As I couldn’t move, that was most probably a crime, or so I thought. I closed the door but then it was the intercom ringing. My toe was throbbing more than ever when I answered: we had bought a new dining table and I had totally forgotten about it.

 So for the following thirty minutes, I had a child drinking juice and watching TV, two men trying to get everything in the tiny elevator and then out, a bunch of useless restaurant menus and a toe hurting like mad. I was already cursing my luck when an older lady, a neighbor, came to complain about the noise the guys from the furniture store were making. I tried to be nice but then the old bat put her cane right on top of my foot.

 I don’t know if it was on purpose but I pushed the lady aside and made her fall on a chair by the door. Then the man in the living room dropped the table heavily, scaring the life out of Amanda, who screamed loudly and starting crying noisily. The man dragged the chairs in, as I helped the old lady up. I then screamed at them for damaging my floor and the lady fell again and I almost fell with her but apparently faith hates my foot as one of the guy’s dropped a chair right on it.

 I cursed so loud and hard everyone stopped making a noise and just stared at me, like I was mad or something. Then, I saw Patrick’s face and he was visibly confused by everything.

-       I got the day off… What’s going on?

 Behind him was Victoria, my partner at the office. She looked worried.


 Done with the world, I just decided to fall onto the sofa and let him deal with everything. Finally, with a huge pain on my foot and the sounds of people crying and screaming and talking again, I fell asleep. The medications had kicked in.