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Frederick I wanted soldiers eight feet tall and some people believe they can commune with the dead, or with birds, as if it is not the height of arrogance - having innovated the opposable thumb, and with it everything from the arrowhead to sure, eight-foot tall sentinels on servomotors - to now want to move things with our minds. The kingdom of animals would hate this hubris, would Marx our prehensile hands and Mao Tse-Tung our nimble larynxes if they could. As in moments of great distress some panicked parents lift buses for love of kin, who hasn’t - in moments of pain - wanted the dissolution of their love which certainly feels immortal to prove itself so, by evaporating every living thing in the vicinity? What human heart, trembling or melting, has not wanted to cry a galaxy, or call down a flock of birds on an errant spouse? Who doesn’t want the kind of heartbreak that requires that FEMA intervene? Well, for one, not I. The better moments are the ones where absentminded you look out past the dashboard and have lost a second or two. Given it to nothing specific, as tribute. You’re giving seconds back to a hungry mouth and gut, already full of seconds and the crumbs of seconds. You know that. But it feels appropriate to bleed a bit, and wonder. That corium elephant’s foot goes stomping in all directions and the town deserts or flees, but lead contains it; and the town, its Ferris wheel still moving, but only with the earth’s rotation, is inhabited once more by grass, then birds, then adventure seekers with DSLRs, then real, honest people who have wanted to live here again for a long time and it is the coming back which feels best and is only harder with great disasters.
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Mar 27, 2018
Mar 27, 2018 at 10:29 AM UTC
The Supernatural
Frederick I wanted soldiers eight feet tall and some people believe they can commune with the dead, or with birds, as if it is not the height of arrogance - having innovated the opposable thumb, and with it everything from the arrowhead to sure, eight-foot tall sentinels on servomotors - to now want to move things with our minds. The kingdom of animals would hate this hubris, would Marx our prehensile hands and Mao Tse-Tung our nimble larynxes if they could. As in moments of great distress some panicked parents lift buses for love of kin, who hasn’t - in moments of pain - wanted the dissolution of their love which certainly feels immortal to prove itself so, by evaporating every living thing in the vicinity? What human heart, trembling or melting, has not wanted to cry a galaxy, or call down a flock of birds on an errant spouse? Who doesn’t want the kind of heartbreak that requires that FEMA intervene? Well, for one, not I. The better moments are the ones where absentminded you look out past the dashboard and have lost a second or two. Given it to nothing specific, as tribute. You’re giving seconds back to a hungry mouth and gut, already full of seconds and the crumbs of seconds. You know that. But it feels appropriate to bleed a bit, and wonder. That corium elephant’s foot goes stomping in all directions and the town deserts or flees, but lead contains it; and the town, its Ferris wheel still moving, but only with the earth’s rotation, is inhabited once more by grass, then birds, then adventure seekers with DSLRs, then real, honest people who have wanted to live here again for a long time and it is the coming back which feels best and is only harder with great disasters.
wade-redfearn
Written by
Mar 27, 2018
Mar 27, 2018 at 10:29 AM UTC
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