________________________________

      MOST FUCKED-UP PERSON ALIVE

          TELLS ALL
      _______________________________

      The Autobiography of Being Pissed Off

      
      
      
               [pt.2 of 17]
      
      
      
      
      
      ==============================
      Copyright © 1995 Cognitec/3rd Force
      ==============================






          -----EIGHT----

            1

    Then suddenly, unexpectedly, one morning, the world
    was restructured in a most natural way -- in the image
    of cable television.

    Old nationalities were gently laid aside, and
    individual nations stopped being about language and
    culture and historic hatreds and central, holy bodies
    of lies -- and started being about one highly
    specific, precisely targeted, life/media product
    orientation.

    In this new world of theme states and tight-focus,
    monophonic republics, each piece of geography offered
    its own unique vision, so that, once you tired of
    roaming the planet forever, and decided to settle down
    until-death, you could choose the place to do it in
    from an extensive list of archetypal, brand-name
    countries that included the Sport Nation and the Court
    Nation, the Comedy Nation and the Home Shopping
    Nation, the Family Nation and the Disaster Nation, the
    All-Talk Nation and the All-Action Nation, the Work
    Nation and the Party Nation, the Compulsive Nation and
    the Repulsive Nation, the Reckless Nation and the
    Recluse Nation, the Lost Nation and the Salvation
    Nation and the Man Without A Nation Nation and the
    Weather Nation and the News Nation and the Music
    Nation and the Amused Nation and the Abused Nation and
    the Confused Nation and the Fucked Nation and the
    Straight Nation and the Spirit Nation and the Emotion
    Nation and the Delusion Nation and the Contusion
    Nation and the Collusion Nation and the Cold Fusion
    Nation and the Reform Nation and the Balanced Nation
    and the One-Dimensional Nation and the Basic Nation
    and the Bullshit Nation and the Pure Nation and the
    Hand-Jive Nation and the All-Business Nation and the
    All-Showbiz Nation and the Song-and-Dance Nation and
    the Nickel-and-Dime Nation and the Miracle Nation and
    the Extreme Nation and the Supreme Nation and the
    Simple Nation and the Sample Nation and the Hard Core
    Nation and the Romance Nation and the Horror Nation
    and the Self-Righteous Nation and the Self-Deprecation
    Nation.

    And a few nations remained unchanged: Italica,
    Albania, Costa Lavakia.

            2

    Before you could relocate, however, you had to attend
    special classes to learn the new universal language,
    Worldspeak -- which used only 28 universal words to
    encompass just about anything any new world person
    might ever want to do or say to any other.

    
    
    
    
    
    
          ----NINE----

            1

    Though it took me 5 tries, eventually I was able to
    pass the Worldspeak proficiency exam without cheating
    or lying, and was cleared for emigration.

    Of course, I'd chosen the Most Fucked-Up Nation to be
    my new homeland, because I assumed that not only its
    people and government, but also its societal and
    institutional structures and waste treatment
    facilities, would all be just like me.

            2

    For the trip, I bought a reconditioned Alzheimer's GT
    with the last of my World Ponzi Markers, and swapped a
    ream of Mitsurola intelligent paper for a case of
    Exxon-Valdez Full-Spectrum Peanut-Fudge bars.

    Then I got on the road.

            3

    Everything went fine for the first 500,000 miles or
    so -- a quarter of the way there -- and I had just
    turned onto the Null Expressway southbound -- when the
    engine began vibrating at the exact resonant frequency
    of my skeletal system, and I was forced to pull over
    and roll the car off a cliff -- just to get the feel
    of it completely out of my bones.

            4

    I curled up, that first night, in a stand of small
    bushes on the divider strip, and slept OK, despite the
    traffic.

    I dreamt I wasn't an asshole. Then I woke up. Beside
    me was a doctorate in Placebo Theory which I must have
    earned while unconscious.

            5

    I decided to settle down wherever I was, and rented a
    place at the edge of a compound, where, at the center,
    a 50 foot high, 360 degree display screen showed
    endless, scratchy video loops of the nation's
    President, staggering around naked and drunk, outside
    the Presidential Palace, vomiting and pissing on all
    the world's sacred symbols, flags, and logos and the
    official portraits of all its sacred, holy people and
    charismatic leaders, spread out there, on the ground,
    in the rose garden.

    And gathered around, in a rowdy mob, all the members
    of Congress, the cabinet, and the Supreme Court,
    relentlessly cheered her on.

            6

    Since this was the Flaming Compulsive Nation, the only
    jobs they had here were in the cleanup trade, and for
    my first assignment, I was jammed into the back of a
    pickup truck, one night, with 10 others like myself,
    and taken to a famous Northwestern lake, now quietly
    strewn with the bodyparts from multiple freak
    collisions between jet-skiers and water-skiers.

    Our task, once we'd cleaned up the water, was to
    continue on to land, to clean up some hunters who'd
    been so startled by the screams from the
    jet-skier/water-skier collisions, that they'd all
    accidentally shot each other, as well as some people
    on nearby golf courses, who we cleaned up next.

    Then, we had to go cleanup the trails where some
    joggers had been killed by direct frontal lobe hits
    from balls viciously hooked or sliced by the golfers
    shot dead or wounded at the precise moment of
    ball-clubhead impact.

    And then we had to go cleanup the tennis courts where
    some frightened joggers had run to try to escape the
    gunfire but, instead, were killed by the players for
    disrupting their game, or accidentally hit and killed
    by a vicious volley off the racket of someone suddenly
    startled by the deathsounds of horses on the way to
    the track whose trailers had just been slammed into by
    race car drivers who'd just spun out of control
    because they'd been hit by linedrives from a baseball
    game in a nearby stadium where the players had lost
    their concentration because a fan doing a Heimlich
    maneuver on his choking wife in the bleachers had
    failed and the wife fallen over dead, smothering a
    small child asleep beside her whose despondent parents
    tried to shoot themselves over this, but kept missing
    and wound up killing everybody else in the stands,
    instead.

    And, of course, we had to clean all that up too.

            7

    Complex jobs like these required that we bring our
    entire inventory of sports cleanup equipment, and if
    nothing else, it was always a joy just to be able to
    deploy all that technology, whether it actually did
    any good for anyone or not.

            8

    Instead of returning to a home base, our truck stayed
    constantly on the move, so we'd be guaranteed a
    running start on whatever the next emergency was.

    We were also expected to be on the lookout for
    situations where trucks carrying used body bags from
    12-car smash-ups, had collided with trucks carrying
    VCRs designed to show tapes of ancient earthquakes to
    halls full of people who didn't already have their
    own stories of tragedy and abuse.

    We were to report such collision sites to Cleanup
    Central, but not stop or attempt unauthorized cleanup
    operations ourselves.

            9

    In the end, though, despite its romantic image and the
    glamorous stories told about it, cleanup is really
    nothing more than just long periods of intense boredom
    and total disgust, punctuated by brief moments of
    sheer terror and total disgust.

    And so, to try to forget this, and to help pass all
    the dead time on the road, we were always trying to
    come up with The Next Big Thing. You know, like The
    Next Big Hit Song or The Next Big Story or The Next
    Big Game or Organism or Level Of Consciousness.

    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
          -----TEN-----
          
                                  
            1

    One night, we drove into a new city, where all the
    lights were on and all the tall buildings were lit up
    inside, but the streets were empty, with only a soft
    desert breeze snaking through.

    We'd been put into a laughing sleep, so when the team
    leaders woke us up, we were fresh, and ready for any
    job.

    Since we didn't know what it would be, we quietly
    began preparing for all 5 categories of cleanup.

            2

    We were told to put on our blindfolds, and after a few
    more miles, the truck stopped, and we were led into a
    building.

    Inside, the blindfolds came off, and here was this
    once lavish theater, so recently trashed-to-shit, that
    the sounds of its debris still settling, nearly
    deafened us.

    The stage was littered with expensively dressed and
    mostly dead bodies (a few still twitching), and faced
    an audience of several hundred more bodies in similar
    attire and condition.

    Two of the onstage dead were connected by a thin
    envelope, half in the right hand of one, half in the
    left hand of the other, with a little statuette on the
    floor beside them and, towards the rear of the stage,
    behind the proceedings, 20 more pretty corpses, neatly
    collapsed in a fallen-domino pattern.

    All my comrades puked uncontrollably and had to be led
    out of there and consoled, while I was left to clean
    it up alone, because I'd laughed instead of cried.

    This was the first celebrity massacre, and nobody knew
    how to handle it. Except me.

            3

    The owner of the auditorium/slaughterhouse was already
    on the phone to the managers and agents of the dead
    celebs, and they didn't know what to do either --
    other than quickly rush out and find new look-alike,
    work-alike replacements for their former meal tickets.

    Meanwhile, the slimy, barely beating heart of the
    future of world celebrity, quivered naked and exposed,
    beneath the sharpened, rusty church key of my talents
    and skills and capabilities and lamenesses and utter
    fucking lack of any fucking attention span whatsoever.

            4

    So, first, I went through all the victims' pockets and
    purses, till I had enough drugs to do the job right.

    Then, ... [But the methods and techniques I used are
    all valuable, proprietary, trade secrets and cannot be
    discussed any further, without seriously jeopardizing
    whatever future livelihood I've not yet blown.]

    When I was done, all bodies had been disposed of
    without leaving a trace, and the theater was
    completely cleansed of all hint of human tragedy or
    pain.

            5

    Overnight, I'd become the planet's leading authority
    on the cleanup of celebrity massacres, and my services
    were in demand everywhere. I was paid vast amounts to
    simply hang around major events, doing absolutely
    nothing -- just so I'd be on hand to save everybody's
    ass if something did happen.

    Of course, all the other workers thoroughly resented
    me for this, especially the celebs, who found my
    presence there, nothing less than a constant reminder
    of all the psychotic, pissed-off assholes who might
    try to kill them that night.

    Yet they always treated me with the utmost respect and
    unconditional love -- because they understood the
    deathblow it could deal to universal culturtainfo, if
    their sudden, en masse demise weren't rapidly,
    efficiently, cleaned and covered up.

            6

    Though I have mostly bitter memories of this period,
    these are somewhat mitigated by the close personal
    friendships I had formed with many world-famous and
    world-revered celebrities, who remained close to me
    throughout my fucked-up life and who, time and again,
    helped pull me through some of the most pathetic of
    human moments, even though they knew I'd rather see
    them dead.

    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
          --ELEVEN--
          
                                  
            1

    But I was growing sick of all this crap and began
    thinking about going back on the road.

    And of course, the perfect person to go back on the
    road with was Brother Teresa.

            2

    I'd first met Brother Teresa at a class reunion of the
    people who'd been truly holocausted by life itself.
    At the time, she was on trial for the only first
    degree murder ever done entirely in software.

    After she was convicted, she wrote me often from death
    row -- imploring me to teach her "...all the sweet,
    beautiful things about celebrity cleanup...," just as
    soon as she escaped.

    Then, one day, out of the blue, she showed up at my
    door with Mario Vargas Llosa.

            3

    She was dressed in generic promotional gear: a cap
    that said "your logo here," a tee-shirt that said
    "your company name here," and a pair of jeans that
    said "your ad here," across the crotch.

    We all sat around for a while, watching "Hey, Ninja,"
    and talked through the night, doing vodka implants,
    and skin-popping angel dust. We had much in common
    because we already shared the fundamental belief that
    class is what you do when you're drunk.

            4

    The next morning, we went over to Brother Teresa's
    place on the outskirts of Hypercity-6, where she'd
    shot her girlfriend through the stomach one day, but
    that had only brought them closer together.

    She'd spent the first week out of prison, getting all
    her vid/comm devices to function under a single,
    standard control protocol, but now was totally pissed,
    at the end of it all, to learn that she still needed a
    human to bring her the master remote.

    "So that's what family is for," she muttered to
    herself, slamming the unit against the wall till it
    was powder.

            5

    Just before leaving for death row, she'd married her
    brother, Sister Teresa. But now that she was back,
    she wanted to forget all that and only tell prison
    stories that ended with her vicious, brutal cellmate
    either blushing crimson, or breaking down crying.

    Then, when she got bored with that, she'd read aloud
    from her living will -- the part about how any film
    she starred in had to end with her either severing the
    bad guy's corpus callosum with a meat cleaver, or
    shooting an arrow in one of his ears and out the
    other.

    Then she showed us her latest resume. Instead of
    writing down the names of old jobs, she'd written down
    how sick she was of being stuck in a world where power
    relationships only existed because sex had somehow
    gotten confused with real life, one day.

            6

    We went someplace and got a little drunk and, then,
    went downtown, where famous actors always seemed to
    leave their simulated Ford Broncos double-parked
    outside unfashionable restaurants, while they ran in
    and pretended to look for a recent friend, beneath
    them socially, who they were trying to help.

    When the night was over, rather than go back to our
    respective lives of stupidity and despair, we stole a
    car and decided to get directly on the road, before it
    was too late.

    If we did nothing else, out there, we knew we'd at
    least be able to help other, less fortunate people who
    were on the road for the first time and, thus, in
    serious danger of falling off it and being hurt.

    With our experience and knowledge, we could probably
    catch them before they hit the ground or injured
    themselves. Which, I guess, would just sort of make
    us the catchers on the road, or something.

            7

    Once we actually got on the road, everything was just
    the way they'd described it in road books and road
    movies and road songs and road videos and road CD-ROMs
    -- except for all the fucking pop stars.

    These obnoxious assholes were everywhere, and once
    they sensed you were on the road, they wouldn't leave
    you alone.

    They'd come up to you, stopped at a light or at a gas
    station, screaming, "Why aren't you staring at me?"
    and force you to take their autographed photos and
    candid snapshots of their families at play. Then
    they'd start rambling on and on about their 6 picture,
    4 magazine, 8 greeting card, 3 theme park, 5 album
    deals, and promotional tour tie-ins up the wazoo, and
    how Ennio Morricone or Sly and Robbie were gonna do
    their personalized doorbell ring, just as soon as they
    got back from vacationing in Acapuclo or the south of
    Franz.

            8

    When we reached the desert, Brother Teresa took the
    wheel and drove all night, while I slept, and then I
    drove all morning and afternoon and night, while she
    slept.

    I had the radio on, as I drove, even though the only
    station that came in was just a 24-hour loop of the
    local #1 song, ".357 From the Heart," over and over
    again.

    I passed the time by playing the game where you see
    how fast and how far you can drive on a single blood
    rush, with your eyes closed and both hands off the
    wheel.

            9

    After a while, the radio started picking up a popular
    show on the Get-Out-of-the-World Satellite Network,
    and its professional MC voice seemed to mesh, in
    unexpected ways, with the Alzheimer's gentle roll
    across the desert night.

    "Alright, contestant number 2," the MC voice
    introduced, "It says here that you're a broken, bitter
    person, and your hobbies are serial murder and turning
    lights on and off till the bulb blows or a switch
    breaks."

    "That's right, Vinnie," the contestant voice said. He
    sounded like something out of some sit-rag where the
    only emotions are rage, lust and irony.

    "And I understand," Vinnie continued, "That all the
    pejorative adjectives have your name on them."

    "So what!" the contestant snapped, getting a little
    pissed. "Let's get on with the show."

    Suddenly the reception dropped off, and I felt a shot
    of desert fever. There was no longer any highway.
    Just an endless, wide stretch of dense hardpack, where
    direction itself was the only road, and information
    the only energy that mattered.

            10

    Eventually, the pure desert turned back into scrub
    country, and the radio came back on in random bursts
    of language fragments and audience applause. Everyone
    on the show had lost, and the consolation prizes were
    being awarded.

            11

    Around Fort Tamboo, we pulled off the dirt path and
    headed up a little bank of dust, where a hitchhiker
    who'd lost everything else, was thumbing a ride. He
    just wanted somebody to pull him and his hangglider
    till it was airborne, and then let go.

            12

    Instead, we stuffed the hangglider in the trunk, and
    the hitchhiker got into the back, and as we drove off,
    Brother Teresa and I introduced ourselves.

    "I was abandoned in the jungle at birth and raised by
    fruit flies," I said.

    "I hold the world record for serial murders done using
    micro cold-fusion explosives, unwittingly swallowed by
    the victims," Brother Teresa said.

    The hitchhiker told us about the Lima Express, just up
    ahead. The tracks were on some low sandstone cliffs
    that ran along about 100 feet above the beach. A
    little ramp on the surface street, parallel to the
    cliffs, let you pull up alongside the train, match its
    speed, and then, sail off the top and land on the
    flatcar or in the open boxcar of your choice.

            13

    Our first night on the train, we were joined in the
    dining car by a group of triathletes. They gracefully
    punctuated our stories of lameness and despair with
    their own dark tales of genetically-engineered bicycle
    shoes and satellite neural-net running-gloves.

    Huge racks of cows and pigs were wheeled in for them
    and the train had to keep stopping to take on more
    food and milk. 6 foot long loaves of French bread
    were scarfed down in a single gulp, like a peanut.

    Each triathlete wore an LED headband that publicly
    displayed his current physiologic parameters, updated
    each second, and including net worth and humanity, all
    measured in BTUs.

    Whenever their conversation started to lag, it could
    always get livened up, in an instant, by somebody
    pointing at somebody else's numbers and calling him a
    metabolic asshole or just a plain, old, metabolic
    loser. Then laughing uncontrollably till the guy
    stormed off and did 50,000 laps of the entire freight
    train -- out of pure, metabolic, athlete angst.

            14

    After a few more days of this, we got back in the
    Alzheimer's and drove off the flatcar onto an exit
    ramp and headed for the nearest town. We only had
    another million and a half miles to go, but the car
    kept driving into the roadway, instead of on it and,
    as always, had to be abandoned.

    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
          ---TWELVE---
          
                                  
            1

    We walked a ways, through a field of hung over
    sunflowers and dried corn stalks, and eventually wound
    up in downtown Infanta City, where they'd just
    finished fighting the 3-Letter-Word War.

    The minute it was over, millions of people took to the
    streets and started celebrating all kinds of random,
    illogical, inappropriate holidays.

    Holidays like "Dissolution of the World Celebration
    Commission Day," or "Ethnic Hatreds Re-affirmation
    Day," or "Just Plain Dirt Day."

    But this only stressed them out even more, till they
    all got so pissed, they almost started the
    2-Letter-Word War -- which, of course, would've just
    been endless streams of 2-letter invectives like GO!
    BE! DO! HA! NO! US! and SO?! flung with the most
    virulent sounds, gestures, and facial expressions by
    members of each side at members of the other.

            2

    A few days after we arrived, Brother Teresa was shot
    on sight for some old, leftover, unpunished crime
    without a name.

    The Shoot-On-Sight Authorization had classified it as
    "Contempt of X; where X is any institution, species
    or time of day."

            3

    Of course, the only real vengeance for this was the
    kind where you just wiped out the entire population of
    the world -- because, under World Peoples'
    Government, everybody was responsible for each and
    every stupid law, as well as for each and every stupid
    instance of the enforcement of that law.

    But, like, say you actually set out to do this, and
    just walked around killing everyone you saw for maybe
    3 or 4 days or a week, or so.

    Sooner or later, you'd just have to hit that wall or
    ceiling where it all starts to suck so bad, that all
    you wanna do anymore is just break down crying
    everyday and spend the rest of your life running
    around apologizing to everybody. On sight.
    Regardless of who they are, or how big a scumbag.

    And at that point, 99.9999% of the population would
    still be left untouched.

    So why have bothered at all?

            4

    I rented an apartment nearby, and shortly after I'd
    moved in, found the following message scratched into
    the underside of one of the kitchen chairs with
    probably a strong pin or fork prong:

      Dear King Pope-President Saint-Satan
      Nature-Nurture DNA-Zeitgeist or
      whomever it may concern:

      Please undo whatever you've done.

      And (thereby) deliver me from this
      (constant) pain.

      -- Yours, etc.

            5

    When my landlord tried to collect the rent, I pointed
    at the message on the chair and said, "You can't make
    somebody pay to live in a place that has that written
    in it! You should be paying me!"

    But, in truth, if the message hadn't already been
    there, I'm sure I would have wound up scratching it in
    myself, verbatim, in just a week or two.

            6

    My day job was with the Center for Navel Analysis, and
    in the evenings and nights and on weekends and during
    vacations and lunch and coffee breaks, I worked on
    writing the runaway, international best-seller, More
    Drugs, Please
    .

    As soon as it was released, it attracted many avid
    readers and fans who flocked to my seminars and
    book-signings. These people felt great sympathy for
    me and were always trying to fulfill my impossible
    drug needs via air-mail or by driving up and dropping
    stuff off, right at my doorstep, in the middle of the
    night.

    But despite all this, I still couldn't get enough
    drugs or the right drugs or strong enough drugs or the
    right combinations of drugs -- in order to have a
    single waking moment when my only request ceased to
    be: "More Drugs, Please."

            7

    It got so bad, I started trying to fulfill desires I
    didn't even have. I went and hung around at the
    finish lines of Class AAA 1000-meter dashes, where you
    could always grab one of the runners coming off the
    line at the end of the race, so exhausted and out of
    it, she falls into the first available arms without
    checking to see whose they are, until someone else
    from her team, or one of the coaches, comes and grabs
    her and chases you away.

            8

    Then, one day, I was arrested for this and knew,
    suddenly, that I'd better get serious about my life.
    Things were slipping by, and if I didn't grab onto
    something fast, I'd risk becoming, well, you know --
    somebody who hadn't grabbed onto something fast.

            9

    After serving half my sentence, I was released on
    Mussolini's recognizance or Reagan's (I forget which)
    and moved into an Oldsmobile with Pope Our the XXIII.

    To prove I was serious about getting it together this
    time, I called a press conference, and right in the
    middle of answering the first question, I just stopped
    cold and burst out singing the local national
    anthem, "Viva Central Control," to the tune of last
    year's global national anthem, "Viva the Junta," but
    at the tempo of the Italo-CanaMexican pop hit, "Viva
    .357."

    This should have meant a lot to them (I had, after
    all, just come out with my own hit single and could
    have sung that instead), but the people were blind to
    my affectations of caring for them -- which just goes
    to validate the old cliche about how people (like
    History) only exist to make you sick with the idea
    that maybe there was once possibility.

            10

    After several more such fiascoes and debacles and
    juggernaut boondoggles and trans-global fuckups, I
    stopped doing press conferences altogether, and just
    crawled into a little sack of wheat and hid there and
    stopped doing drugs.

    The press kept clamoring for more information and
    interviews and photo-ops and televised debates, and
    some top martial arts instructors kept calling me up,
    trying to get more self-improvement tips out of me, as
    well as the ancient secrets of one-finger murder.

    But I was really too fucked-up, this time, to do
    anything for any of them.

            11

    Instead, I turned on my camcorder and hit the "world
    broadcast" button and started bitching to the whole
    human population -- live and in real-time. Then I
    pointed the camera lens down at my toenail, pretending
    that that's who was doing the talking -- but I was
    really just flattering myself to even think that.

    All over the airwaves, people were hearing my plea and
    saying, "Shit, even a toenail isn't that bad off" --
    so nobody believed me.

            12

    I had the library of my complete works with me, on a
    Smart-Card, and I sat there and re-watched all the
    movies I'd scripted and all the ones I'd starred in
    and all the ones I'd only directed or line-produced.
    Then I read all the books I'd written, and while I was
    reading, I had all the songs I'd composed and arranged
    and sung, playing in the background, over the speaker
    system.

    Of course, all my patent applications were there too,
    and I skimmed through those as well, occasionally
    stopping to re-work a wiring diagram or re-write a
    line of code.

    I looked at the pictures of all my Institute Awards
    and all my Olympic gold medals for fucking up -- but
    couldn't ignore that all I'd ever done to win them was
    just jive harder than anyone else in the show.

    I'd never really felt the way the judges thought I
    felt, or did the things they claimed I did.

    But, I guess if your stories are horrid enough, even
    sadists and slimeballs will be too embarrassed to
    check them out, and would much rather just give you an
    automatic "10" for that event, and move on.

            13

    Then I swallowed a transmitting endo-camcorder that
    beamed its signal directly up to the satellite, so the
    whole world could see as deeply into me as it was
    possible to see -- without censorship or
    post-processing or time-delay.

    But even as they watched, in awe of my boldness and
    honesty, everybody in the world still knew what a load
    of shit it all was.

    Cause, no matter how deep you went, or how technologic
    you got, you just never seemed to escape the lock that
    neural structure (and a few neural molecules) had on
    the possibilities of understanding and on the
    possibilities for being.

    And stories and myth, of course, were just the face of
    this chemical lock, projected into symbol space.

            14

    Eventually, I saw how badly I was drifting and how
    much I needed to simply get back to my gameplan.

    "OK," I said, "So where's my fucking gameplan?" And I
    started throwing papers around and ransacking drawers,
    looking for it.

    A few hours later, when I still hadn't found it, I was
    forced to admit that, well, maybe there was no
    fucking gameplan -- and maybe I'd already dreamed up
    and perfectly executed all possible gameplans -- years
    ago -- and each had only left me more nowhere than the
    one before.

            15

    I called my in vitro family for moral support, but
    they couldn't talk now. Their in vivo dog had just
    died.

            16

    So what, I thought, and out of spite or love (I can't
    remember which) I sat down and invented human
    consciousness -- just to show everybody how fucking
    pissed off it was possible to be, even in today's
    gentle world.

            17

    Then, when it was done, I launched the ad campaign,
    which went, simply:

      ___________________________
      
       CONSCIOUSNESS:  IT WORKS! 
      ___________________________
      
      

    And the rest is history.

            18

    But who cares?

    I was still fucked for life -- and for several
    afterlives and incarnations far into the future and
    past, and across all galaxies and dimensions.

    And though I'd come here thinking maybe it'd be a
    whole new ballgame -- I was leaving, knowing it'd been
    just a few scattered innings of foul balls and infield
    fly rules -- ending in mutual forfeit.

    
    
    
    
    
    
    
        [ End: Part 2 of 17 ]

    
    
    

  • joekay2@well.com