Poetry – A Quantum Poem

A Quantum Poem

This poem exists in two places at once

                And also does not exist at all.

                                It has no substance.

It changes its meaning

                As you read it

                                But has no meaning at all.

It is the building block

                For every poem

                                That has ever been written.

It is not a poem.

Then it is.

This poem has no rhyme or meter

                To look for one would defeat you.

It has no structure or form

                It is a wonder it was born.

The rules it follows are oblique

                Yet perfectly clear.

It uses words in lines

                To make its meaning queer.

No two people could read it the same

                That is the nature

                                Of this

                                                Universal game.

For this is a quantum poem.

                You cannot pin it down.

                                Every time you understand

                                                It changes.

Opher – 23.12.2019

It is not possible for my mind to marry the astounding reality of quantum physics with the physical world we live in.

Our world has substance. It has laws. It is rational.

The quantum world seems to exist on a different level. It does not work on Newtonian physics. It is weird.

The more we find out the more peculiar everything gets.

How can photons behave differently when watched? How can electrons be in two places at once and then disappear? How can subatomic particles arrive before they have left?

Some use this as an excuse, a spiritual answer. It reinforces their idea of god.

I choose to say it reinforces my sense of wonder and delight at nature.

There are no certainties or answers – just wider ignorance.

We should just appreciate the moments we are adrift within it – whatever this universe really is.

This is a quantum poem. It changes.

Poetry – I Was But Now

I Was But Now

I once was an elephant

And kept my dreams in a trunk.

I once was a crocodile

With a tale in my tail.

I once was a giraffe

With my head in the clouds.

I once was a hippo

Wading through the depths.

But now I’m a man

Whose thoughts fill the world.

10.2.2017

I Was But Now

This was nothing but a bit of fun. I was playing with words and ideas – trunks and tails. But then there was the glimmer of some greater depth of meaning.

These days we blog and our thoughts are transmitted to the very ends of the world instantly. Ideas are dangerous. They can catch fire and transform society. They can enrage, calm or excite.

Ideas are the thing that man does best.

We are desperate for some new ideas.

My Weird Surreal Sixties Book – Chapter 30 – Sunshine and weirdness

The strange things you write when you are twenty one and your brain is still wiring up! This is a sort of mystical bit of strangeness about reality, infinity and where we fit in.

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30.

It was Wednesday – a quiet day. Messny felt the sunlight bouncing on the wall and off out into space as he lay in his morning bed. It was still relatively dark in here with the curtains drawn.

‘Wait a bit?’ Messny thought to himself. ‘How did I manage to feel the sunlight hitting the wall?’

But he allowed himself to retreat into his drowsy state. It did not really matter how one felt these things.

‘Outside,’ he thought sleepily, ‘how absurd. If there was such a thing as outside I could not possibly feel the sunlight. No – at last there was no outside or inside.’

After a while the sunlight lessened in intensity and then there was only the softer play of moonlight on the wall which played a gentler tune and lulled Messny to sleep.

Dreaming, dreaming softly, dreaming of green fields and soft hues – tranquil, lazy days in which the Earth is bathed in sunlight. It is a new world – forever young, with no yesterdays or tomorrows. Messny was busily moulding it out of thin air. In his lazy dreams he lay on his bed and felt the sunlight meander through the layers of the wall before bouncing off into space.

Messny whimsically thought to himself – ‘if someone was to wake me now and say ‘Hey, you were dreaming,’ I would have to say – ‘No, I was not dreaming, but now I am.’

A hand shook Messny’s shoulder and he woke into the room with sunlight bouncing off the wall again.

‘Do you want something to eat?’ Janey asked with a smile.

‘No thank you,’ Messny replied. ‘I’m OK I’m dreaming.’

As soon as his eyes closed he awoke back in his bed, dreaming of sunlight bouncing off the wall. He thought to himself – ‘Only a dream away I had thought that I was doing precisely this. Now it is really happening.’

Another annoying side of him whispered in his inner ear in a tone of voice that suggested that it knew better – ‘How do you know you are not dreaming now?’

‘That’s easy,’ he answered himself, ‘if I were dreaming I could pinch myself and wake up.’

Messny pinched himself and woke up in the same room with the same sun busy at work.

‘That’s incredible,’ Messny said to himself, looking around the room, ‘Only just now I was dreaming about exactly this.’

‘You thought it was real then,’ his irritating inner voice said in such a superior tone.

‘Yes,’ Messny replied, continuing the inner dialogue. ‘But at least I am sure that this is real.’

‘Don’t be too sure of that,’ it replied in a tone that suggested that it was in possession of better information that the rest of Messny.

Before Messny could really decide if this element of doubt could ever be resolved the door opened again and disturbed his trend of thought. Janey appeared with a concerned expression on her face.

‘Are you sure you are not hungry?’ she asked. ‘You haven’t eaten for over a day.’

Messny became aware of a decidedly uncomfortable hollow feeling in his stomach.

‘You know, I think you’re right,’ he replied. ‘I’m ravenous.’

‘Well get up then,’ Janey instructed him.

‘There you are,’ Messny said internally, addressing that inner voice of doubt. He was feeling smug because he thought he had a little bit of ammunition this time. ‘I’m feeling hungry and in a minute I am going to get up, go to the loo, get dressed and have something to eat. I can remember back into all my past life and this is a logical extension of where I was. If this was a dream it would not be so rational. It would be chaotic and disjointed. This is my life. It is ordinary.’

Messny swung round and got himself out of bed. There was no reply from his inner self and he interpreted that as admitting defeat. It had caved in before such impregnable logic.

Messny ate his meal and made pleasant conversation with Janey. She had been concerned over his strange behaviour and thought that he must be sickening for something. Messny reassured her that he had merely been exhausted. It was a lie. He wandered off into the garden with a mug of coffee. He could feel the sunshine bounce off his face. It seemed to beckon him.

Without a thought he stepped out of his clothes so that it could play across his skin. He luxuriated in the naked energy interacting with his body. He walked around watching the energies cascading in delicate arcs of a billion different hues and his senses sang with pleasure. His skin throbbed as his cells soaked up the warmth and light. He could sense the earth and grass all pulsing in time to the rhythm of the sun. He was part of it. They all danced to the melody of the sun. The ground crawled up and the sky reached down. Messny was bathed in the ecstasy of the cosmic dance – connected to the furthest star and beyond through the universal stream.

Energy was all there was and everything vibrated with energy.

A voice pulled Messny back from his infinite reveries. It was a tiny vibration almost too small to bother with. He felt little as hands gently guided him away.

Dimly heard voices filtered through to his ears from another dimension:

‘I’m really worried about him,’ the vibration was saying. ‘He’s been acting very strange lately – lying in bed all day and not eating. I’ve just found him wandering about outside with no clothes on. He appears to be in a daze. He’s not there at all. I’m wondering if I should call a doctor?’

‘He’s probably just got a dose of flu,’ another vibration answered. ‘Give him a day or two and he’ll probably be fine.’

Messny woke in bed with the sunlight bouncing off the walls. He was full to the brim with contentment.

‘Where are you now?’ the irritating voice inside his head asked.

‘Lying in my bed, of course,’ Messny replied.

‘Are you still sure you are not dreaming?’ it sneered.

A wave of panic passed through Messny’s mind but before he could reply the doctor arrived and proceeded to examine him. He checked Messny’s throat, took his temperature, poked around his abdomen and proceeded to ask a series of questions. He prescribed a sedative and left.

His prognosis was too much sun.

Messny was drowsy and passed into a deep sleep. The last thing he remembered was the feel of atoms playing in the sunlight. His dreams were empty and forgotten.

A while later he woke into a fresh world. Energy was causing crazy patterns to flow in the wallpaper. He quickly got out of bed and dressed.

The others were up and starting to eat and he joined them. They greeted him jovially – delighted to see him looking so perky and bright. It appeared that Messny was back to normal. He made small talk, smiled and was positively glowing with health and joined them for breakfast.

Messny looked out of the window at the garden with all its vivid colours. The sun was shining and the earth and flowers danced. He wanted to go out to play but thought that he had best not – at least not yet.

The doctor’s prognosis was probably right – a case of too much sun.

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My Surreal Sixties Book – Reality Dreams – Chapter 26 – the film

This is proving fun. I wouldn’t suggest it is high literature but I am enjoying how my young mind was playfully toying with ideas as this surreal collage of a book progressed.

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26.

Messny was feeling jaded and worn. It had been a hectic da y. The kids had been troublesome. They were always the same on a windy day. It made for nerve-racking lessons. He usually loved it but today school hung over the bright, sunny day like an oppressive dark shadow. It had left him feeling all keyed up inside and decidedly disgruntled. He needed to get out. He knew that if he returned home he would simply slip into the TV jag and waste the evening in front of the hypnotic box and wind up feeling depressed. What he needed was some energy. He wanted to get away from the routine.

The main problem was that there was nowhere to go. He did not need company and he certainly need to get drunk. He checked but there were no gigs on. Reluctantly he decided on a film. At least it would get him out of the house.

He arrived at the cinema and was shown to his seat. The film had just started. There was silence as the audience were engrossed even to the exclusion of popcorn and sweets. Everyone was sitting as still as statues.

Right from the moment he sat down it began to feel strange. The film was familiar yet he knew he had never seen it before. It had only just been released. The characters and settings were all jumping out at him. He was convinced that he must have seen it but could not think how. He was puzzled but settled back down to study it more closely.

As he became engrossed the audience around him faded away and the feeling of familiarity grew. He found himself becoming emotionally involved with the characters and carried away with the theme. He began to realise that he knew exactly where the action was heading, what the characters thought and were about to do. He knew it inside out. Yet part of him scoffed – it was not possible.

As it progressed it was as if he had supernatural powers over the film’s progress. He could influence the sequence of events and actions of the characters as if they were puppets that he was directing. It felt like he was changing the flow of the film as it was being shown.

Messny had this strange idea form in his head that the celluloid in the canisters was all blank and that it was his own mind that was processing the film into pictures as it passed through the projector. It made him feel very uneasy and uncomfortable. He tried to shrug it off and enjoy the film for what it was.

He shifted uneasily in his seat as the film progressed. It seemed to become more real and larger as if the screen was extending round the theatre and becoming three dimensional. He sank down in his seat and toyed with walking out but it felt as if he was being sucked into that interplay created by the beam of light from the projector. He was helpless to act. He was being sucked into the action as if he was one of the actors and had a role to play.

Glancing around him he became aware that the audience was no longer there. The whole theatre had melted into the setting of the film. He was standing in the middle of a road with his hands raised in front of his face, a shriek on his lips, as a car hurtled towards him. It was the obvious climax of the hero’s death.

 

 

My weird Surreal Sixties book – Reality Dreams – Chapter 24 – conclusion

Well I quite enjoyed rewriting that. The conclusion was just as I remembered. Very exciting. I was very much into gestures and still am.

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Messny had lived in this harmonious manner for over five years, apart from humanity. Fortune had favoured him for he had never so much as encountered another man.

It was in the course of his sixth year that life changed and his peace was shattered.

They began to construct a road across the hills to connect the cities. This was the modern age. Time was money. They were no longer content to skirt around the moor. Progress demanded growth, speed and expansion. Profit was the only consideration. Now that the construction industry had the means to deal with the inhospitable terrain there was nothing to hold them back.

The first Messny knew about it was when the team of surveyors appeared on the moor to reconnoitre the area. He watched them from afar. They were soon followed by the bulldozers and construction crew. A paths was gouged. Mounds of rock and soil was strewn around. The moors around were soon strewn with discarded junk and waste.

As the weeks progressed they blasted through the rock leaving jagged, scarred passes like gaping wounds. Clouds of fumes and dust rose into the air and the serenity of the moors was shattered by the roar of the massive earth moving monsters as they ripped and clawed at the living land.

Messny watched helplessly as the strip of tarmac grew, the wild-life fled and the green plants were covered in the cloying dust. He stood and watched as the hills vibrated with the impact of each body blow and he winced.

Messny’s heart was moved to pity. It was the first time in his self-imposed exile that he had felt helpless. He grimaced in pain as the rape of the land continued and saw that his way of life was doomed to end. Once the road was laid the traffic would roar along day and night. The wildlife would retreat, the peace would be gone and his ability to carve a living out of the desolate wilderness would be compromised. There was no place left for him or the creatures out here in this forgotten space. There were all to be harried and chased away.

Messny saw the future. It would be the same where-ever he went. Each new place would only provide a temporary respite. Each time the bulldozers would come to bury the land in concrete. They would never be content until every hill was flattened, every tree felled and even the remotest places were beset by fumes and noise. The tourists would come to stop and take their snaps, to leave their litter and marvel at the beauty they were busy destroying with every single step.

Messny stood helpless before the onslaught of a relentlessly expanding civilisation. He could on watch in agony as it grew and engulfed every part of the thing he loved and felt part of.

At night Messny lay under the blanket of stars and explored his heart. There was no escape. There was nowhere left to retreat to. He had no alternative. They would seek him out where-ever he went. He could not shake that vision of the future out of his mind.

It was time to make a stand and face the problem head on.

He waited until darkness drove the workmen from the hills back to the light and warmth of their homes, their meals, families, TVs, central heating and computers – perhaps down to the pub for a pint or two. Messny waited.

When they were gone he struck. The walls of the compound were no barrier to one such as him. He destroyed, set fire to and wrecked everything he could lay his hands on. He vented his hatred in an orgy of destruction. By the time he had finished everything on the site was laid to waste.

But even as he wearily returned to his home he was engulfed in sadness. He knew it was futile. It would not make any real difference. In the big scheme of things it was a minor set-back. The equipment would be insured and replaced. The project would continue.

The next morning, concealed in the undergrowth, he watched the men return, as they drove up and surveyed the smouldering ruins of their machines. They milled around in confusion.

Police were summoned and they poked around among the wreckage for clues. The site was sealed off and swarmed with people like a freshly disturbed ant-heap.

Over the ensuing days it calmed down. Repair teams arrived. The destroyed vehicles were removed and, as predicted, replaced.

There would be no end, no quarter or respite. Ahead lay only futile escalation tinged with a gesture of defiance. But Messny was aware that this was all any man could ever hope to achieve. To stand up for what you believe was at least something worthy.

Messny resolved to continue to the bitter end.

In the beginning he remained unseen, coming at night to evade the guards, thwart the dogs, to block the road, to damage the machines and cause the maximum destruction and chaos.

He could see that it was not going to stop them. It became a battle without any hope of victory. The police activity grew until the whole area was a mass of uniforms and security cameras. The work was slowed but not halted. In the day they had sniffer dogs out and helicopters hunted him. He had to use all his skills to evade them.

Messny decided to alter his strategy and bring it all to a head. It was time for total war. He could not continue like this. It was only a matter of time before they tracked him down. Already the wildlife had moved away and he could no longer hunt in daylight he had been reduced to raiding the sheep from the adjacent moorland, cooking the meat a distance from his home and spending time covering his trail. He knew they would soon stumble across his home no matter how cautious he was.

Messny gathered his weapons together. They were rudimentary but lethally effective. He had crafted spears, bows, arrows and knives. He had developed the necessary skills. He knew how effective they were through his success with large animals such as the deer. He selected his best. He was set on using them on something more than game.

That night Messny ventured off to the outskirts of town and commandeered a horse. Returning to his camp he set about his preparations. He bathed himself in smoke and sat immobile as the image of the flames purified his mind. He made his peace with the world, allowing his thoughts to journey back through all the places and people he had known, to thank the spirit that flowed through them all and connected them, to give thanks for the beauty and pleasures and to say his farewells. By the time he had completed his rituals he was prepared for death.

Using pigments he had created from the minerals and herbs he painted himself and the horse using symbols and designs that flowed out of his spirit. He discarded his clothes, cut his long beard and plaited his hair. The only thing he wore were the belts necessary to carry his weapons.

When all was ready he led the horse to the top of the hill overlooking the moors and stood on the tor as the sun began its journey above the rim. He watched as the light crept into the clouds and drove the darkness back. He watched the clouds festooned in their purples, mauves and rosy reds and he gave thanks. He was saying goodbye to the beauty, wonder and mystery he had shared. He was making peace with the universe for the last time.

He stood bathed in that glow, silhouetted against the sky – a man.

Some things were worth dying for.

When the sun was up and the last star had been swallowed he turned his back, mounted the horse and headed off to his destiny.

Messny breasted the hill and looked down at the crew below. They had opened the gates of the compound and were milling around preparing for the work ahead. Nobody noticed the lone horseman on the hill.

Messny urged the horse into a trot and as he approached he set it into a full-blown gallop. As he neared the startled faces, hearing the thudding of the hooves, turned to register the horse with the painted man bearing down at them.

He raced through the gates and into the compound sending people diving out of the way with shouts and warnings. He had already, like any hunter of worth, selected his target, the foreman supervisor who was standing in front of the office with a look of shock horror on his face.

Messny wheeled the horse and let fly with a single arrow. It struck dead centre through the heart. Without pausing he turned the horse and galloped back through the compound and out as the man crumpled and fell.

People were yelling; there was pandemonium, yet for Messny it was as if he was encapsulated in a bubble of silence where the entire world was slowed into a surreal unreality. Around him the faces were screwed into grotesque caricatures, mouths were open, screaming, but he heard nothing. Men were turning towards him, some appeared to be hurling rocks, some waving fists, some scrambling to their feet, some towards some away, but none of it penetrated his bubble. He guided the excited horse through the uproar and out through the gates.

As he headed back up the hill it unfroze, everything speeded up and the yells and fury followed like an explosion in his wake. At the top of the hill he turned the horse and stood looking down at the scene below. Below, in the chaos, men were shouting, pointing and gesturing; a bunch of them were gathered around the body on the floor. Messny could not see if the man he had shot was still alive. He doubted it. He could tell when he had loosed a shot that was true.

In among the calmness of his thoughts there were those of regret. That man had not been to blame. He probably had a wife and children, friends and relatives. Taking a life was a terrible thing to do. But who was to blame? He dismissed the thoughts and returned his mind to stillness. It was not over yet. There were still things to be done.

He sat on his nervous mount, holding it in check as it snorted and pawed the ground. He watched and waited. The time would surely come. The people in the compound continued to mill around, standing in small groups, gesturing wildly and pointing towards him. The angry noises drifted up to Messny on the wind. But not one of them made a move towards him.

Within an hour vans arrived. An ambulance on full blue light rushed up. Police spilled out of a variety of vehicles. Two big vans pulled up and armed police in full protective uniform slid out in well-oiled drill, weapons at the ready. They took up positions around the compound with many training their guns on him. But no shots rang out. He could see a discussion going on between those in charge. A helicopter appeared overhead. The ambulance roared away but there were no blue lights this time.

Messny waited patiently.

Finally he could see a decision had been arrived at. The armed police, anonymous in their flak-jackets, helmets and uniforms headed out of the compound and moved in an arc towards him. They spread out at the base of the hill responding to the guttural commands. All the rifles were pointing at him. The helicopter hovered lower overhead.

‘Dismount!’ A voice commanded from the sky. ‘Get off your horse! Lay down your weapons and raise your hands!’

Messny showed no sign of having heard the instructions. He stared passively down at the troops below as they fanned out through the undergrowth.

‘You have no escape! Get down off your horse now!’ The voice boomed.

Messny ignored it. His eyes swept along the line of troops assessing the strongest point. His mind was as clear as a mirror. His emotions were quiet. He knew he would know when the moment came. He blotted the voices out along with the chattering of the helicopter.

He looked back over the moors that he had called his home. There in the distance was the corrie he had lived in. All the colours of the heather, bracken and gorse glowed in such vividness that they brought tears to his eyes. What a beautiful world to have lived in. He looked up at the sky and imagined falling into that vivid blue. Gentle clouds drifted in the distance. The sun’s warmth was on his skin. It was a perfect day.

At that moment the time arrived.

With a shrieking whoop of delight he kicked the horse and sent it careering down the hillside towards the troops below. As he stormed towards them with one arm raised bow in hand shouts rang out, the loudhailer blared and he could see the gun barrels pointing as the troops raised their weapons to their eyes and sighted. He roared a great defiant whoop, gripped the horse tightly with his knees and tried to fit an arrow to the bow-string.

A series of cracks rang out. Messny felt as if he had slammed into a brick wall. He was smashed off the back of the horse as it careered madly on.

The media had a field day. There were photos of the painted madman who had killed the supervisor. There was even footage of his last stupid charge towards certain death. The whole world was enthralled by the ridiculousness of the White Indian and his war against the machinery. There was speculation about drugs and mental illness as well as conjecture and recrimination for his heartless killing of the poor foreman. The pictures of a painted Messny mounted on his painted horse became a common sight. Magazines and newspapers wrote endless articles as they delved into all the aspects of his life and picked over the remains of his campsite. Some environmental groups even adopted him as a symbol of rebellion against the madness that was destroying the world.

The road was built without further hindrance and in the days to come the traffic zoomed past oblivious to the spot where Messny had made his last gesture.

 

 

My Sixties Surreal book – Chapter 20 – Chills and terror

By now my hero Messny was working his way through a series of bizarre situations. I think I may have just read Franz Kafka’s The Trial.

20.

Messny felt a bit of a fool standing to attention in front of the glass sphere. He looked back down the room towards the man working at the desk. It was difficult to understand why he had to go through this fuss every single time but the secretary did not seem to care.

The man at the desk studiously ignored him. He had brushed him off as one did with a fly. Messny was an annoying irritation. His face was set and he stared fixedly at his computer screen. There was a mechanical, precise manner about him even to the uncoordinated manner in which he jerkily moved. His face was fixed in an expressionless mask. Messny would get no sympathy from that quarter.

While he was waiting Messny allowed his eyes to roam over the secretary’s immaculate suit, his muted tie with pin, and crisp white shirt. Everything was preened to perfection. He found it amusing. It looked so restrictive, boring and uncomfortable. Quite unlike Messny’s loose fitting, colourful garb. The secretary was an automaton. He was following his instructions. It was so infuriating to be kept waiting like this but a smile began to creep into the corners of his mouth. The secretary despised him and all he stood for but Messny would not have swapped a single minute. He imagined the same precise, sterile landscape on the inside of the man’s head as there was on the outside – everything uniform and in its place. There would be no hidden thoughts behind that mask. Everything was orderly and in its place.

A buzz broke his reverie and wiped the amusement from his face. They were ready for him. Messny turned back to the sphere still clinging on to the jaunty feeling of superiority that might even have contained a touch of arrogance.

It was time to present his case.

He was confident. He knew his position. This was of no consequence. He talked easily unhampered by fear and outlined his defence. They were bound to understand. Minor indiscretions were of no real importance.

At the end of his disposition he felt that he had explained it well and awaited the outcome.

There followed a short silence as his input was analysed.

Messny waited impatiently.

A section of wall silently slid aside behind Messny. Two big-set men in dark suits stepped out noiselessly. It was as if they had been stored in a cupboard marked ‘Break Out In Emergency’. They had slept and now they were activated.

Without hesitation they silently bore down on the unsuspecting Messny. Something made him turn round. He stood he ground as they came up to him. His eyes searched their faces for intent but they were expressionless, their eyes held no emotions. They wore the same fixed mask as the secretary.

For a moment Messny had been stunned but that soon turned to sheer terror when faced with this menace. He knew they weren’t going to pat him on the back and send him on his way or congratulate him on the way he had handled himself. He had the impression that their job was to break him utterly and leave him limp as a rag doll to be thrown into the bin.

He stepped back with an involuntary stagger as they reached for him.

A strangled cry came to his lips at the sight of those pitiless faces. He turned to escape and slammed into a clear glass that now separated him from the door.

Messny screamed as the hands closed on him. Their steely grip tightened as he clawed desperately at the glass and shrieked at the top of his voice.

The secretary appeared unconcerned. He carried on studying his computer screen without a glance.

My weird Sixties Surreal Novel – Chapter 19 – where it really becomes strange.

I’m still typing up my first book. This is Chapter 19 of Reality Dreams. It is really a surreal short story about freedom and control.

I remember when I was writing the book that I could not remember having written it. It appeared out of nowhere.

I’m enjoying rewriting this. I’m not sure how accessible it is to anyone else but it is fun to reconnect with my twenty year old mind.

19.

Messny found himself in a huge hall. The roof towered above his head. The colossal awe of the building made him feel ant-like. Never before had he felt agoraphobic, not even under the open canopy of the infinite sky, but he did here. In his massive edifice he felt fear and was overcome with vertigo so that he had to fight to control his rising panic.

Messny took a deep breath, looked around to steady his nerves and set off. He had prepared for a strange and dangerous experience but this was beyond his wildest imagination. Who could have built such a monstrous hall? How was such a colossal structure supported? At any moment he was expecting to see giants entering through the portal riding huge beasts – beasts so gigantic that they would crush a man beneath their paws without noticing, as one might a small insect.

He walked slowly with his thoughts running riot. The hall was full of crowds of normal looking people which came as a relief and helped calm his nerves. They teemed across the huge open concourse as if someone had kicked down a termites nest, dwarfed by the enormity of the building, accompanied by a great babbling of voices and shuffling of feet which echoed of the high ceiling with hollow acoustics.

His state of mind calmed as he walked among the crowd who were intently heading off in all directions, rarely stopping to talk. Nobody paid the slightest attention to him as he meandered in a bewildered daze.

At first he could not discern a pattern. The place was too large to gain an overview. But then he began to notice that there was a definite progress. People only entered from the two large portals on the left. They spread purposefully out, pausing to group together in conversation for brief periods before setting off, and converged on two large portals on the left where they left.

Messny decided to explore. He had little other choice. He circumvented the entire hall. The people assiduously ignored him. There were no features or furnishings to orientate yourself with. The walls were smooth and plain as if made from a uniform plastic with no visible support structures. There were no windows and yet a uniform light pervaded the whole area. It was the scale that made it so spectacular.

The men, women and children he passed were all dressed in similar one-piece, close-fitting suits, although he began to detect slight differences in cut, colour and insignia that seemed to indicate status. Some strutted or strode with an in-built arrogance; others looked more shabby and slouched as they scurried around the place. Messny found it fascinating. He could have spent hours just studying these strange people and their behaviour. There seemed to be a law against touching. Despite the density of the crowd people wended their way through, weaving through the most densely packed regions without so much as brushing against anyone in the process. It was uncanny to observe. When not engaged in conversation they maintained a fixed expression and studiously avoided eye contact. There was no interaction. Yet when in groups they were animated and effusive, with gestures and facial expressions that were exaggerated beyond the normal. The contrast was extreme.

The lack of contact as Messny moved through the crowd was disconcerting. Nobody acknowledged his presence. They effortlessly glided past him without looking. It made him feel strangely shunned and invisible. It was abnormal and unfriendly. There was something alien about it.

Curiosity overcame him. Messny worked his way across the massive concourse towards where the crowds were exiting. He was uncertain what to expect. On the way he nearly precipitated an unpleasant scene and was only just able to avoid an incident by rapidly walking away. He had inadvertently made eye-contact with one of the people he passed. The reaction of shock and embarrassment left him in no doubt that he had offended some deeply held taboo. He could see from the reaction that there was the possibility of an aggressive response that might have led to an ugly scene and quickly ducked out and hurried away. The rumpus rapidly died away in his wake but left him feeling decidedly jittery. It had shaken him up enough to assume the same far-away stare and averted eyes of the rest of the denizens he passed and no further problems ensued.

It was with some relief that he reached the distant portal and walked through. He had no idea what to expect on the other side. At first sight it was a major city. Immense sky-scrapers towered above the hall on all sides, dwarfing even this huge building with their unbelievable size. Messny craned his head and stared up towards the giddy heights. They went upward and upward towards a distant haze and tiny patch of sky. Down at his level the light did not come from the sun but seemed to glow from all surfaces around him creating a shadowless environment.

The city seemed to be separated on all sides from the Hall by a decorative garden of neatly trimmed lawns. Every blade of grass seemed manicured into shape. Intermittently there were flower-beds with colourful plants arranged in intricate patterns – all perfectly aligned as if every single leaf had been slotted into place and wind had been banished. There were signs along the edge of the path that pictorially warned the citizens to keep off the grass. They looked severe.

Messny felt trepidation just looking at it. It made him recoil. There was something sinister about the sanitisation of it.

The orderliness of the arrangement gave him the feel of having wandered into an ants-nest rather than a city of human beings.

P1120115 (2)

The shape of everything was so geometrical and precise. The people moved in such a trance-like manner with such a purposeful air. The warning signs were redundant. The poor caged beasts of people were completely cowed and tamed. They would not have dreamt of stepping on the grass.

The place gave Messny the creeps and after watching the people trailing off towards the various buildings all around for a short while, he ducked back inside the door, working his way against the flow.

From the side he could see that the random movement of the vast crowd was in fact a very intricate set pattern. Everyone appeared to move along invisible preordained pathways. He did not know how he had not noticed it before. They were behaving like programmed automatons. Messny was the odd one out. His random moves were the only ones not in a straight line.

Eventually he reached the other portals, he chose the middle door that few people seemed to be passing through, and with mounting anxiety, stepped through. He had been expecting to be met with a similar scene as at the other end but found that was not the case. Instead of an open space his eyes met with a great long corridor. Despite its great width he could see the walls merging together at a point in the far distance and people moving along like tiny ants all trailing along in the same direction. It gave the impression that the corridor was never-ending. He could not even visualise it ending; it had that infinite feel to it.

Standing at the entrance made Messny feel dizzy. He felt as if he was being sucked down into some spinning vortex. He placed a hand on the wall to steady himself and peered along the corridor’s length. It seemed as if he was standing on the edge of a great hole in the ground and was precariously balanced on the edge. A force was pulling him forward and if he dropped into that hole he had the uncanny notion that he might drop and fall at tremendous speed forever. The idea came into his mind that it wasn’t a corridor at all; it was a tunnel that ran right through the planet and would eject him out into space on the other side.

He told himself he was being absurd. Pulling himself together he mastered his illogical fear and stepped forward into the passageway.

It felt solid enough. The ground did not give way before him and he was not pitched forward into infinity. Reassured he calmed himself down and began to walk forward with purpose.

There were doors spaced along the entire length of the corridor at six foot intervals. They were all the standard sliders with no distinguishing features or identification, as was customary. All the doors were uniform grey and stood out starkly in the cream walls of the corridor. Above each of the doors was a luminous sign which said, in red lettering – ‘Engaged’.

It was intriguing. Messny was immediately beset with a compulsion to seek out a vacant room. The feeling was so strong that it drove everything else out of his head. He set off in pursuit of a vacant sign, striding along and glancing at each sign as he passed, his eyes constantly darting ahead to the next. They were all red ‘Engaged’ signs, but that did not deter him.

Hours passed and he must have walked many miles down this uniform corridor without finding a single vacant room. Every single door was adorned with the same red ‘Engaged’ sign, yet ahead of him he could see a steady stream of people going in to or coming out of rooms. The same was true when he looked behind. They were all finding vacant rooms. Why couldn’t he? Perhaps it would be a better tactic to stand outside of a door and wait? But nobody else was doing this and he still felt compelled to walk, so he pressed on. Messny had the feeling that there was just one door that was his. He had to find it.

The sight of all the others finding their doors was making him feel persecuted. Perhaps he did not have a door? Perhaps, as a stranger, there was not a door for him at all? Yet something told him that there was. As he strode along e was plagued by the thought that he would never find his door; he might be doomed to walk along this passageway forever on an utterly futile task. He cursed himself for having started out on this senseless journey in the first place. What had made him do this? It was mad. But he had come this far and consoled himself that there were many others around him who had walked just as far looking for their doors and very now and then one of them seemed to find their vacant room.

The hours passed and still the corridor stretched ever onward without the slightest variation. Messny’s determination had not diminished even though his mind was actively churning over the stupidity of what he was doing and the peculiarity of this absurdity. He had walked many miles by now and yet had not passed a single sign of any maintenance crew. Yet the walls were all completely spotless despite the thousands of people who were walking down the endless passageway. It began to prey on his mind. A wall of this length and colour had to show signs of wear and tear yet there was not so much as a single blemish.

Messny stopped to examine the surface carefully. Whereas the grey doors appeared to be made of a plastic substance, the walls appeared painted. They were smooth and, even on close inspection, utterly pristine.

He walked along further, pondering this aspect. For some reason it rattled him. Something snapped and he swung a boot at the wall. His boot connected and skidded over the smooth surface leaving an ugly dark scuff-mark on that light coloured surface. A feeling of horror and guilt bubbled up in him threatening to choke him. He glanced round guiltily to see if his act of vandalism had been noted by any of the people in his vicinity. Nobody appeared to be paying him the slightest bit of attention. Looking back at the wall he found to his astonishment that the scuff mark had completely vanished. The paintwork was unblemished.

This was indeed a strange experience. He had been walking for hours and hours and yet he neither felt tired, hungry, thirsty or in need of a lavatory. Yet the oddness of this hardly seemed to connect with his brain. Somehow he was able to reconcile it. Even so, the monotony was beginning to get to him. It had moved from merely irritating to thoroughly maddening. Messny felt an anger brewing in his belly and sweat broke out on his brow. It was becoming an effort to act normally but the sameness of this endless corridor was beginning to get to him. He needed a change.

Messny tried speaking to the people he was walking with. They completely ignored him, looking straight ahead and striding along. He stood in front of some and they looked straight through him, veering to the side to pass him. He even went as far as grabbing hold of one by the shoulders and forcing him to stop. The man merely waited to be released and made no response. As soon as he released him the man walked off as if nothing had happened without the slightest hint of emotion.

It irked Messny. He craved a reaction, a change of some kind, even if it was merely a hostile response. The people around him were simply not behaving like human beings. There were more like androids. It troubled him that, despite the duration of this marathon, he was not suffering the normal bodily needs. In a fit of rebelliousness he came to a stop and boldly prepared to urinate against the wall. It was not that he needed to but more in the hopes that it might provoke some kind of response. In that he was sadly wrong. He might just as well not have been there. The urine trickled down the wall and seemed to flow directly into the floor without leaving the slightest stain. As soon as he had finished he noted that the moisture on the wall instantly dried up leaving no indication that it had ever been there.

He resumed his journey with the corridor stretching forward interminably and his mind reeling in disbelief.

It seemed that no matter how many people went in or came out of doors there was always exactly the same number.

It was just one more fact that he slotted into his catalogue of peculiarities.

Messny hurried on working himself into some kind of panic. He was beginning to feel doomed to wander this endless passageway forever. He was lost in a maze consisting of one path. Even if he turned and went back he was no longer confident that he would find the beginning. He convinced himself that the portal would have disappeared. He was lost and a sea of hopelessness rushed over him. All that was left of the world was an endless corridor, stretching on like a hamster’s wheel.

He propelled himself forward into a jog, and began running and finally sprinting, knocking people aside in his desperation. His mind was shrieking inside his head, tears were welling up and he felt as if he was on the verge of a complete breakdown. Forces were battling for control of his mind. Armies were fighting behind his eyes. He was bombarded with a series of different emotions and conflicting thoughts. It was driving him mad.

‘Go back to the beginning while you still can.’

‘You will never find it.’

‘Go forward.’

‘There will be a door.’

‘No. Go back.’

He came to an abrupt halt, panting and shaking his head from side to side, leaning against the wall, bent over. He raised his eyes and saw it.

It stood out from all the other doors. Above this one there were green luminous letters that said ‘Enter’.

A surge of relief flooded through him. He knew that this was his door. He had found it.

He stood in front of the door with great trepidation and timidity. This was precisely what he had been looking for, yet now he was reluctant to find out what was on the other side.

His eyes slipped over the surface in search of a mechanism. There was none.

Then it silently slid open.

Messny briefly hesitated before stepping in.

His heart was fluttering as if a bird was trapped in his chest. In his ears it sounded like a thud of thunder followed by the rush of a waterfall. It was so loud that he imagined it filling the room. He was deafened by it. It seemed to reverberate off the walls around him.

The door slid shut behind him and he found himself in a small cubicle of a room. It was smooth walls and bland, reminding him of a prison cell. The whiteness of the walls was blinding as walls, ceiling and floor all merged together. The only furniture was a single white chair.

A deep resonant voice spoke in a commanding manner.

‘Please sit down.’

It was not so much a request as an order.

Messny complied, searching the room for signs of a camera. There was nothing to see. It made him panicky again. He felt as if he was in a prison. That was frightening. He had actually worked hard, walking all that distance, to place himself in this dungeon. He felt trapped. Now that the door had slid back there was no exit. Escape was impossible. He could not leave even if he wanted to. There was nothing he could do other than to sit and do as he was told. He waited. Gradually his heart settled and he became resigned to his fate.

The minutes passed as Messny reflected on this strange course of events. It was unbelievable the way things had progressed. Unresistingly he had allowed himself to be led to here. It all seemed so unreal. He could not understand how it had happened. He had no idea where he was. It seemed as if a fog was clearing and he understood that he had been led here through blind compulsion. His normal rational reasoning had deserted him. It was bewildering.

He had no recollection of how he had arrived in the hall and could only wonder at how he had stumbled along through that hall and then down the corridor, all in a dream. His every move orchestrated. He had been manipulated and controlled.

How much of his life had been controlled in this way? He began to feel as if all his thoughts and passionately held views were merely deliberately implanted into his head. It was a scary thought. Was there anything that emanated from himself?

The strange thoughts swirled around his head as he sat there attempting to decipher the tangled mess of the origins of his beliefs and desires.

There was simply no way of knowing what he truly believed, how much was him and how much was the work of others?

The time passed and Messny sat as his mind idled away.

He began to wonder if he had ever had an original thought or view. Perhaps every single thing he had ever done had been programmed? He was an automaton controlled by the ‘Masters’ – whoever they were?

Incongruously he allowed himself a little involuntary chuckle.

He imagined the whole of society directed by the whims of an unseen group of people. For what ends?

It amused him to think of himself as a mere cog in a pointless machine.

Could any mind be clever enough to plan all this so carefully? What was it all about? What purpose could there possibly be?

He was beginning to relax when the voice boomed out again causing him to automatically sit upright in his seat. Messny felt threatened. He felt eyes were on him and he was being scrutinised. He listened intently.

‘You are a free man,’ the discorporate voice informed him. ‘You are able to do anything you wish.’

That did not ring true – given what he had just been through.

‘We must protect you from the actions of others, just as we must protect them from you.’ The voice explained in a reasonable tone. ‘We have to preserve the freedom that is our right. It is our heritage, passed down from our forebears.’

Messny blinked. It seemed that it was unnecessary for him to have to respond. All that was required was that he should sit and listen.

‘If people were allowed to have unfettered freedom to molest and be aggressive towards others, to do damage or destroy property, to rampage and kill, nobody would be free. Everybody would live their lives in fear of others. The strong would rule and even they would live in fear of an uprising from the many. Nobody would be free.’

This seemed to Messny to go against the opening statement. How could you both be free and yet constrained?

‘It is to ensure the freedom of everybody that we have formulated the laws that you live by.’

That sounded pragmatic enough.

‘We have created laws to protect each individual’s freedom. None can encroach upon his rights.’

That seemed fair.

‘All free men are equal. It is for the good of society as a whole that we maintain a system that provides us with security. We have standards that we live by. That is why we are subject to certain conditions.’

As Messny listened to the voice he found his mind drifting and falling between the words. Each word seemed to transform into a sinuous worm that floated in the air to penetrate his mind and imprint itself deep within his subconscious. It was a hypnotic weaving that entranced him with its melodic drone and captivated him.

The rich voice was etched with deep compassion and spoke with an unbroken depth of feeling.

‘It is necessary for everyone to contribute – for all people to work at what they are best at. That is also what is best for society. It protects your freedom and makes it permanent.’

Messny was no longer thinking about the words. He allowed them to flow over him like a soft, warm, velvety glove caressing his spirit. It was so soothing.

‘People contribute differently and are rewarded commensurate with the level of their contribution. But that does not alter the fact that all are equal.’

‘Everyone is free and all have the opportunity to enjoy the fruits of their labour. Everybody is able to rule.’

Everybody was able to rule? How did one go about that then?

‘Should people decide to break the laws of our society they must pay the price; they will be severely punished. All contraventions of the law necessarily affect the freedom of others.’

‘As free people you have a say in the government of our society. In due course you will receive a message explaining the procedures of who you may vote for in order to protect your freedom.’

Messny considered the proposition. He was to be presented with a limited choice of people who had already been selected. He wasn’t sure if that was a choice at all.

‘Remember,’ the voice instructed, ‘to break a law is to defile your own freedom. If your freedom is misused it may become necessary to remove it from you in order to protect the freedom of others who might find their own freedom put in jeopardy due to your own antisocial actions.’

Messny could not fail to internalise the threat.

‘To maintain your freedom – maintain the State!’

‘Freedom is your right and must not be abused!’

‘Freedom is obedience to the law!’

The voice halted in a way that Messny understood to be the end of process.

Messny felt as if something inside him clicked back on.

He stood up and turned. The door silently slid open. He walked out into the corridor and turned right. There, two hundred metres away, was the portal through which he had entered the corridor. He quickly walked back out into the massive hall. His face was set into an expressionless stare and he stared straight ahead. He had no memory of recent experience.

He did not care.

He was beginning to feel his old happy self.

What did any of it matter, anyway?

My Surreal Sixties book – Chapter 5 – Messny Krapbutt’s first love.

Well I started Messny as a sperm, followed him through as a foetus and birth. Now he’s experiencing his first love. Ten years old and smitten.

5.

Novelty, coupled with unrealised desires, creates an enjoyable attraction. Emotions are extremely strong and surge through the mind in unbridled turmoil. He was beset with an inner warmth that grew with magnetic intensity.

At the delicate age of ten year he fell in love.

She was dark and sensual with all the charms of an older woman – of eleven. As they became closer Messny felt a return to those serene days of peace and happiness. They enjoyed each other’s company; just lying back in the den or in the meadows and being together was enough. They grew closer with a love that was beyond their years, relishing the time.

Each day as Messny walked down the road to meet her, hands in pockets, whistling ‘Slow Boat to China’, head back with a jaunty swagger, a thrill coursed through him and electricity ran through his body. He longed to spend every moment with her and was only content when they were together. Nothing else mattered.

Both of them felt the strange, alien awakening yet it was below the level of their consciousness. They did not quite understand what was happening to them. They were shielded by their own innocence yet driven by this dynamo of desire and a wish to satisfy their curiosity.

In reality they were two small people silhouetted against the backdrop of the harsher world of adults. There was nothing to hide. They radiated their happiness and had no understanding of how badly things can go wrong.

It was that curiosity and excitement that drove them to explore each other’s bodies. They wanted no secrets between them. The fact that they knew this was the secret world of adults made it all the more exciting. There were things happening to them that they did not understand.  They knew what they were doing was forbidden but that only served to set the pulse faster. Besides they could not see why. Their pleasure was in sharing, in giving, in watching the other. She always initiated it and Messny eagerly followed her instructions.

The future was taken for granted. They sat on the kerb in the road outside her house and discussed how many kids they would have. She decided on seven. It was settled. That is what was going to happen. It was as inevitable as tomorrow’s sun rising.

The cricket and football had been kicked into the long grass. The climbing trees and wading through ponds was put on hold. All they wanted to do was to be together, holding hands, talking, sitting in the long grass, lying in the den, cuddling, kissing and exploring each other.

Their passion ignited their imagination and sense of independence. Their confidence soared. They were no longer children. They wanted more. They had assumed a maturity in excess of their years. They were not to be denied. The adult world was out there and they aimed to enter in to it.

Town became the focus of their attention. By day it was drab and ordinary but in their imagination at night it became a wonderland and they wanted part of the action. They imagined the neon lights, the crowds and excitement. It was a different world.

They began making plans, saved their pocket money, and formulated a strategy for an illicit trip. The excitement shone through their eyes as they talked about it. They would meet up after their parents were asleep in bed and walk the mile into town, buy fish and chips and soak up the wonder of this adventure.

They hatched plans, secreted clothes and planned out every detail. They would rendezvous at the elderberry tree where they’d built a treehouse, at midnight. They were going to town. They were going to mill with the crowds and sample the nightlife. They were going to stroll along with the flashing lights strobing on their faces eating fish and chips and laughing. In their minds it was the biggest adventure on Earth.

On the big night they synchronised their watches like spies. They had decided on midnight. It was when they were sure their parents would be asleep. They would creep out and meet at the tree.

What could do wrong?

That night Messny could hardly contain himself. His body shook with excitement. It felt like Christmas and birthday all rolled into one. He kept his underpants on under his pyjamas and thought about his clothes stuffed under the hedge outside. That evening he lay awake listening to the sound of the telly seeping through the wall interspersed with his parents’ voices. He willed the time to pass but it crawled. As the evening droned on in interminable monotony, he lay in the dark and thought about what they were going to do and how magical it was going to be. Tiredness started weighing heavy on his eyes but he fought it. It came in waves but he was determined to keep it at bay.

Eventually his parents went to bed and the house went quiet. The rafters creaked. He thought he could hear his heart beating. He kept checking his watch. At five to twelve he quietly sneaked out of bed, slipped his pyjamas off and crept out of the house. His footsteps sounded so loud but his parents did not hear. The back door key clicked and grated, the door sounded like a volcano erupting. He stood in the dark holding his breath. There was no sound from his parents’ room. He walked on tip-toe down the drive and retrieved his clothes and dressed.

He was free. He had made it.

He rushed down the road on a surge of adrenaline. The road was a different place at night. The street lights created pools of illumination. In between were eddying storms of swirling darkness. Even though he knew it like the back of his hand it was spooky. He imagined murderers lurking there waiting to pounce out.  He reached the tree and shinned up into the treehouse. She wasn’t there.

Messny waited impatiently but she never came. Miserably he shinned down and scuttled along to her house. It was in darkness and as silent as a tomb. He went to her window and knocked quietly, scared silly at the thought that her parents might hear. There was no response.

Completed dejected he went home, undressed and slipped back in undetected.

She had fallen asleep.

They laughed about it the next day and planned a reprise. She promised faithfully not to fall asleep but alas the rigours of the previous night proved too much and it was Messny’s turn to fall asleep. On the third assignation his father heard him and called out. He made a lame excuse about needing a drink.

That was the end of it. They never had their big adventure.

It was probably for the best. The town was always wonderland in their imagination. In reality there were no neon lights or exciting crowds. The fish and chip shop was shut. It was a forbidding place of rowdy drunks and puke.

If you are at all interested in my writing on Blues and Rock Music you can check out my books here:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Opher-Goodwin/e/B00MSHUX6Y/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1474797981&sr=1-2-ent

I would recommend the Blues Muse or In Search of Captain Beefheart to get you started:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Blues-Muse-Opher-Goodwin/dp/1518621147/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Search-Captain-Beefheart-Opher-Goodwin-ebook/dp/B00TQ1E9ZG/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_4?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474886379&sr=1-4

or

537 Essential Rock Albums Pt. 1

https://www.amazon.co.uk/537-Essential-Rock-Albums-first-ebook/dp/B00OEMO7TA/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474902569&sr=1-3

Opher’s tributes to Rock Geniuses

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ophers-World-Tributes-Rock-Geniuses-ebook/dp/B00U0NLP4W/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_32?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474967124&sr=1-32

If you would like some of my Sci-fi I recommend Ebola in the Garden of Eden or Sorting the Future to get you started:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ebola-Garden-Eden-Opher-Goodwin-ebook/dp/B0116VXVIY/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_19?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474886688&sr=1-19

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sorting-Future-Opher-Goodwin/dp/1533082669/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_10?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474886738&sr=1-10

If you would like a sixties novel I recommend Danny’s Story or Goofin’ with the Cosmic Freaks

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Dannys-Story-Opher-Goodwin/dp/1533487219/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_9?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474886738&sr=1-9

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Goofin-Cosmic-Freaks-Opher-Goodwin-ebook/dp/B00MT3GWIK/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_18?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474886872&sr=1-18

Happy Reading!!

 

My Surreal Sixties book – Reality Dreams – Chapter 4 – Into the mundane

After starting my hero as a sperm I followed up with an embryo and the process of birth. Then I plunge down into the mundane for a little bit of narrative.

It’s a bit like War and Peace, don’t you think?

4

The egg and sperm had joined. The consciousness assumed identity and grown.

Messny Krapbutt was born in the suburbs of London. He arrived, frightened and confused, into an immense world of extremes that was full of madness and speed. He left behind the tranquillity of the womb; separated from it by a wall of crushing terror. That closeness was forever replaced by a distance too great to transcend.

He grew.

In the post-war Britain, with its bombsites and open spaces, trees to climb, dens to build, and various games to play, the years of his childhood merged into one long summer’s day. He had little and wanted for nothing.

The directions he chose reflected his richly scattered tastes. He was never aimless.

He played in the quiet roads and wild fields, under blue skies and scorching sun that turned his body nut-brown so that it would not show the dirt. He lost himself in the pursuit of nature, crawling along ditches and under hedgerows, collecting anything that moved to cherish and inspect.

He played with gangs of kids, running, leaping, climbing and occasionally fighting; hunting adventure with co-conspirators as close as brothers.

In later years he came to reflect that all of his childhood was a brief memory in which the patterns of his life were set. He was loved, cherished and given freedom and scope. What more could anyone want? But that need for contact is constant. He had experienced it with the warmth of his family and nurtured it among his friends. It was as necessary a nourishment as food.

Overnight everything changed. The games of childhood were put aside. His hormones now dictated the balance of his body’s chemistry and his mind proved susceptible to the rigours of chemical interference. It was hopelessly tossed into raging seas by the traitorous messages in his bloodstream as he became the victim and no longer the master.

He began frequenting novel areas of the locality hitherto unvisited, such as the local girls’ school seeking closeness of a different variety. He enjoyed the differences of these new relationships with their gentler overtones and stomach wrenching burst of inner excitement.

If you are at all interested in my writing on Blues and Rock Music you can check out my books here:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Opher-Goodwin/e/B00MSHUX6Y/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1474797981&sr=1-2-ent

I would recommend the Blues Muse or In Search of Captain Beefheart to get you started:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Blues-Muse-Opher-Goodwin/dp/1518621147/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Search-Captain-Beefheart-Opher-Goodwin-ebook/dp/B00TQ1E9ZG/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_4?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474886379&sr=1-4

If you would like some of my Sci-fi I recommend Ebola in the Garden of Eden or Sorting the Future to get you started:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ebola-Garden-Eden-Opher-Goodwin-ebook/dp/B0116VXVIY/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_19?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474886688&sr=1-19

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sorting-Future-Opher-Goodwin/dp/1533082669/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_10?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474886738&sr=1-10

If you would like a sixties novel I recommend Danny’s Story or Goofin’ with the Cosmic Freaks

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Dannys-Story-Opher-Goodwin/dp/1533487219/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_9?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474886738&sr=1-9

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Goofin-Cosmic-Freaks-Opher-Goodwin-ebook/dp/B00MT3GWIK/ref=la_B00MSHUX6Y_1_18?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474886872&sr=1-18

 

Reality Dreams – A surreal Sixties book – Chapter 1

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1.

He was dimly aware of his existence, irritated by a sense of incompleteness, feeling lonely and lost, as if the bulk of himself was missing.

He had very little sensation. He could neither see nor hear. He knew not that he lacked senses with which to probe his surroundings. He had no comprehension of senses. Yet sensations of a kind did filter through to his cloudy awareness. He felt safe and warm. He felt the touch of a caring companion. There was no need to worry. He knew he was a tiny cog in some huge machine. It did not concern him. He was cared for and maintained but ultimately he was of no importance. His loss would pass unnoticed.

He flexed his body and felt joy at the pent up power that he felt. Yet he was not yet free to move. He lay quietly and attended to the flow within himself – waiting.

All around him he could feel the presence of others. They pressed in on him from all sides; their thoughts were impinging, crude and inexpressive, like those of his own.

He was patient. He awaited his destiny.

As his awareness grew he developed a feeling of being apart from the millions around him. His life was full of dreams in which he felt incomplete; there was a greater self to which he was only half. His other half, the half he sought, was not to be found among these similar beings that surrounded him. She was far away. The huge distance of their separation haunted him and aggravated his sense of incompleteness. He could not imagine her and wondered if she was able to conceive of him. They were separated in some colossal abstraction with an overpowering longing to be united. It dominated his life.

He waited, poised in the darkness of his existence with vague feelings that he and his companions were part of some greater consciousness, something huge and distant, which drained his own cognizance as if it were a mental flea, amalgamating them into something more substantial.

A change came. He had separated from that he had been and felt invigorated, purer, with more purpose. The energy coursed through him and he was filled with impatience. He could taste it in the currents around him. The potential to move welled up inside him and he felt restrained. Unfettered he would have sped through the fluids in which he floated, but he was moored, still waiting to be released. His overriding desire was to locate his other half so that he could be complete. Nothing else mattered. The tension within him was building.

Out there in the distance his other half felt very much the same. She too was clearer and more alert, certain that fulfilment would be soon. She too had separated and was overcome with a sense of imminence. Unlike him she could not move and had no desire to. Instead she produced subtle alluring chemistry that she scattered in the fluid around her. Patience was her game.

Her world was rocked by a huge convulsion. She was ejected, buffeted, rocked and spun madly before finally coming to rest. She drifted lackadaisically on the currents, waiting and luring with her secreted messages, seeking that uniting where-in she might become one.

All of a sudden he was rapidly moved along in an overpowering current, to come to rest in a huge chamber, crammed together like fish in a net, silently waiting.

It came! He was shot down tubes at huge speed. Chemicals and fluids were poured on him as he was helplessly propelled forwards in a tidal wave of blurred movement. He gave himself up to it as it boosted him onward, helpless in its terrible grip. Yet even as he was buffeted and pounded he could feel the chemicals bringing him to life, activating his latent energy and flooding his body with power. If he could only free himself from this irresistible torrent he knew he could move like never before.

Eventually it came to a halt. Yet he was not free. All around the fluid had vitrified to hold him in place. He was trapped. It seemed to last for eternity but then he could feel it melting him to free him from his prison and he was free. He flexed and raced in delight, exhilarating in the freedom and giving full vent to the locked up power that had been held in check for so long.  He had been released.

He became aware of a new sensation. Something from outside filtered through to him – a scent drifting on the currents of his new world, an alluring aroma that was the most exciting sensation he had ever experienced. He instinctively knew what it was. He recognised it immediately. It was his other half. They were now close. He could sense her. It was what he had dreamed of through those long lonely aeons of time

Yet he sensed that those around him had noticed too. They were equally agitated and eager. The waters were churned as they turned and swam. A terror consumed him as he gathered his determination and swam the currents with all the force at his command. He had to reach her first. He raced to beat his fellows and gather the spoils for himself. To fail would leave him without hope or purpose. He knew she waited for him.

He swam until his body felt exhausted and yet he could not afford to stop. He had to prove himself the stronger. The scent was so strong now that it consumed his consciousness with a raging desire which drove him frantically on beyond the limits of his overstretched resources, yet he refused to lessen his pace. Around him others slowed and dropped behind. The numbers around him lessened and that served to drive him on even faster. The scent was unbearable. He knew she was close.

He arrived and pressed up against the wall that kept him from her. All around him others were fighting to get through. There was a surging melee. They were releasing their chemicals to break down that barrier. He could feel it dissolve. He joined in, thrashing for all his might to force his way through. All around hundreds of thousands were doing the same. He was desperate. He had to prove himself the fittest and the best. He dashed himself against that last barricade and strove frantically with all his might.

He broke through into a world of peace. He had won the prize. Behind him the others could no longer enter and were doomed to thrash away in futility until overcome with exhaustion. Their wittering counted for nothing. He alone would be fulfilled.

He moved across to embrace, merge and become one; to live and grow.

They became whole.