Showing posts with label weird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weird. Show all posts

Sunday, March 10, 2019

story of a silly-singy family


They, by ‘they’ I mean the tidy family of four, heard the knock on their front door from the kitchen where Sassy was applying glitter to her paper mache pink walrus baby girl, Muchi-poo. Her older brother was constructing the counterpart volcano on the floor out of wire, stone, and mud and its slopes had crept out and were threatening to collide with the dishwashing machine, which was broken and had been since Bag decided to clean his collection of blue-red-green garden rocks.

 “Is it almost done?” asked Sassy, now fitting out the walrus fashion model with an Academy Award’s style gown. Walrus divas must look their best when plunging down into the fiery depths of raging volcanos.

 “I don’t have the east slope properly combed.” Bag was rubbing his chin and looking suspiciously at a handful of multicolored pebbles. “Also, waiting on dad and the boxes of baking soda. And sparklers.”

 The dad was sitting at the kitchen table looking over schematics. Large sheets of paper covered the well-used wood surface. “Mmph.”

 “Dad!”

 “Mmmph.”

 “Your father is busy, Bag. We’ll go shopping for your project later this morning,” said their mother sternly from the sink, where she was cleaning and peeling sticks. “In the meantime, I have your defoliated lumber. What was that?”

 They were a normal, suburban family. And at seven o’clock on a Saturday morning in March, before the sun pushed out the night, there was a knock at the door.

 Peggy Tinville dropped her paring knife into the sink. It clattered against a spoon. “Did you hear that? Was that a knock?”

 “Dad!”

 Dad looked up. He had on peering goggles. “What?” he said, “a knock? M-possible, that was only a realtor’s yard sign blown by the wind into our siding which caused a noise, which alerted you all to the fact of said heavy winds. Probably caused a dent too. Blast it.” Derby adjusted the goggles and began gathering the confusion of papers from the table top. “Time to clean up this mess,” he said. “You too, Bag.”

 “I can’t just put away a volcano.”

 Derby peered at the volcano. “You should have put it on wheels; this is sandwich day after all. Followed by spaghetti night.” The goggles were for peering at schematics, not volcanos. “Unacceptable.”

 “You can’t just fold up a volcano and push it under the bed, dad! Duh.”

 “Duh,” repeated Sassy. The walrus baby was stunning. There came another knock at the front door. This time it was series of raps and was unmistakably knock-like.

 “That’s no blown sign. That was repetitive, and clearly a defined knock,” said Derby taking off the goggles and handed them to his son. “Go check the door, Bag.”

 Peggy turned from the sink, her flower pattern apron spun with the twirl, and stepped over a landslide of graham cracker crumbs and loose gravel.  “We’ll all go,” she said. Sassy hopped down from her chair and took her mother’s hand.  “After all, this may be a momentous Saturday morning!”

 “Ok, gee. Come on Bag, leave that for later. The door awaits!”

 Bag put on his father’s big goggles then jumped up, as boys do, and sprinted from the kitchen into the living room. A slight disturbance of air particles and footfall on the floor caused a tremor and a North Slope avalanche which killed a family of parsley munching plastic cows. Nobody was there to see it. Cows made in China don’t count.

 “Wait for us, please,” called Peggy, and he did while hopping on one leg. “Okay, we’re here.” Bag opened the door a smidge and with half his goggled face looked in to the outside.

 “Nobody there. Musta been a sign.”

 The family gathered at the door, and they heard another sound. It wasn’t a knock, but a soft mewl from lower down. On the doorstep was a lovely wire woven bassinet stuffed full of blanket and wriggling baby.

 “A baby!” cried Sassy.

 “Not a sign then, curious,” said Derby Tinville. “And on a Saturday!”

 The next noise they heard was neither a knock nor a baby cry, but a weird clicking, like the whirring of a hand held, manual eggbeater, from above. They all looked up, but saw nothing and soon the sound dissipated and only the soft caterwaul of the infant remained.  Peggy moved through her small crowd of family and bent over.

 She plucked out a printed sheet of alien velinium-sheef from the blanket and read it aloud. “’Given your western propensity of bestowing three names upon a child we of the dry and boney planetary system Staria name this creature we found in your distant Cro-Magnon past from these popular titles in your culture: Netflix Taco-bar Babyshark. Care for it as we choose not to, for this baby is not so cute as the one we desired for our earth-themed zoo, and we instead procured a mule deer. ‘”

 There was silence, but for the wind which in any case was not nearly blustery enough to blow realtor signs on to siding. Derby was relieved.

 “Well, that is just ridiculous,” said the father. “Netflix is a rather unwieldy name for a baby. We’ll call him Taco-bar, by his middle name. Is it a boy?”

 Thus begins the enigmatic life of a normal everyday family of five, voila!

Sunday, May 24, 2015

weirdness at a future date







a bit of weirdness doodled out for an art exchange.

 fun stuff, and I got some terrific art for my walls!

thanks, Jane!

Sunday, July 25, 2010

things i have learned


When I was young I was told, who wasn't, you can do anything you want to. And I heard some guys say, I'll try anything once. Once my teacher asked, would you jump off a bridge if everyone else was doing it? I said no, of course, but then when everyone did, I followed.

You know what I mean. You see, just because someone says something is so, doesn't mean we'll believe it...until we see for ourselves. That's why I made love to the hairy manilla Angora carnivorous rope bridge creature of the Alps. Now here I am, reporting from the afterlife—yes there is one, but it is different for everyone—don't try it; I tried it, and I didn't like it, and some mistakes you just can't take back. But hey, if you don't believe me, I can draw you a map.

I had a book and a bottle of wine, which I gathered and took to the rooftop balcony one evening. The sky was calm, but there was a hint of the baby weather god's teeth in the air...it was nippy. Fancy that, a great big space peppered with lounge chairs and little tables, and just me, alone with a book and chilled libations. Not a bad gig, and I picked the first available seat overlooking the street and plopped into it. Book in lap, bottle in hand—oops, no glass. Go figure.

If you are very still, if you concentrate very hard, if you let the moment take you where it will, a dimension very near will swallow you up; you can exist in both your own, and an alien place that is like and unlike at once. It is strange but comforting, until the moment becomes real. The willpower it takes to break free may very well elude you—you must be very strong to try this or you will go insane and not even know why. I know people who've done this—so might you; they live in two different worlds and the variance is ripping their souls into ragged fragments that float like paper ash and gather in corners to disintegrate.

Yesterday I reached into a sock drawer and shook hands with myself. I was wearing a pith helmet and had a cheetah draped over one shoulder. I was so shocked that when I recoiled, I forgot to leave go of my hand and pulled from the drawer a mismatched pair of tube socks unmistakeably from the year 1975.

I drank straight from the bottle and after half was gone my interest in the book I'd brought along had migrated. Laying my book to one side, on the little coffee table, it seemed to be a resting bird. And indeed it became one, flitting off the table and fluttering close by. I stood and staggered, then followed the bird-book to the edge of the balcony, where naturally it flew from and beckoned for me to follow. The words of my teacher came back to me, and wisdom of my years warned me, but an interdimensionality cured me of my doubts and I took to the sky.

I'm not sure in which drawer I delved into the seedy lifestyle of the Angoran, and as I plummeted I wondered on my sanity, but life is full of surprises, and the ground is merely a fast stop on the merry-go-round of tomorrow's yesterday. My disco socks prove that.

I wondered which me would wear them tomorrow.