A Puppet of Idealistic Will

“Now, Maxence, would you like to start this conference?” An official hands me the microphone. My trembling fingers grip the base of the black contraption, lined with blue light. My thumb runs over the cord.

Flashing lights lash across my vision. The archaic chirps of shutters opening and closing— they vocalize the moments they capture my shock. The spotlight never bothered me before. Now I feel my jaw clench under the attention. My breaths become more desperate, like the air is leaking from my lungs.

All these people expect me to explain why all my friends disappeared.

This stage is decorated elaborately, as always for any kind of public event. Renovatio went for a mostly blue theme this time; the color makes me woozy.

People fill the lobby. Of course it’s full— I’m speaking in it. I’m the star of this building. The celebrity they write about most. The one they supply with everything I need to craft projects that help rebuild the world.

Flooding and redistribution of people— something even a century hasn’t been able to fix since the climate acceleration. New problems in government, housing, structures, and environment. I, like many other engineers, am recruited to fix it.

But I can’t fix everything. I broke my own life less than a week ago; can I really continue acting like I can help other people if I can’t even help myself?

Renovatio drafted an address for me to say now. About my friends receiving opportunities elsewhere, and that’s why they all left suddenly. Without saying goodbye. Years before they were supposed to graduate Renovatio.

I pluck at my vocal cords, desperately hoping that there’s some idea hiding there. A strangled grunt reverberates through the microphone instead. Silence ripples through the audience, giving space for me to speak.

There’s that awkward pause after my noise. In the past, I would’ve immediately come up with something witty about me being nervous or having talked myself hoarse for my friends’ ears this morning.

My eyes dart to the sides of the room. Renovatio officials line the walls. I can’t escape them. I can’t escape this place. Even when I asked yesterday, they wouldn’t let me leave the building for a break. What am I— their prisoner? I thought they were supposed to help me fix the world. I trusted them.

The images from my nightmares flash through my head. Officials wrestling my friends to the ground and shoving black pills down their throats. My friends frothing at the mouth, collapsing as their muscles twitched until they couldn’t move anymore.

Alex was the only one who got away. His expression reflected my pain as he screeched the truck out of the building. I don’t see him here. I had hoped he’d somehow be in the audience— actually there, not as some figment of my mind. But then he’d be a prisoner too. All we wanted was to leave the building for a little while without Renovatio knowing.

I used to think this was a place of opportunity. They’re making me lie about what they did. And if I try to resist, they’ve got more black pills. I learned that they have a whole floor of that stuff. Drugs that control people, even to the point of ordering a body to die with a single, small pill.

And that isn’t even the worst one. 

They gave me the blue pill before this press conference.

My mouth curls into a smile. “Well, what a dramatic pause, am I right?” I receive some light chuckles. “So, I’m betting you want to get to the mechanical elephant in the room. The quick travels my friends made! I want to see them again too. So, let’s call them up, shall we? Officials, can you ring up Annie?”

My shoulders shift stiffly. It’s enough for me to see the screen behind me. My smile flickers as the computer-generated video of Annie appears. She beams. “Hey, Maxence— it hasn’t even been a week! Did you miss me that much?”

The accurate voice smacks my chest. My troubles with breathing don’t seem to be over.

My voice lilts and my eyes roll toward the audience. “I just thought you might want to let us know how you’ve been doing. What, you got some engineering deal in the Argentinian region and you didn’t let me visit for a few days?”

My voice goes back and forth with the computer-generated video. I remember every word and inflection in my voice that must be included. Creating Renovatio’s perfect version of me in this idealized situation.

I really thought I could trust Renovatio— they took me in and gave me the means to change the world. All the adults seemed supportive, especially in helping me learn here.

Betrayal has swarmed my mind the past few days, but my first emotional overload was sourced in anger. In those first moments of pain, after I couldn’t revive my friends. When I ordered the technology in the self-tying neckties to clasp around their necks relentlessly. I killed the officials who killed my friends, but it didn’t fix anything.

I feel a stinging develop in my eyes. My eyes, however, refuse to cry.

I can’t even cry if I want to?

They tried feeding me the green pill, which distorts memory. But my nightmares kept showing me my friends’ last moments. They tried feeding me the purple pill, which knocks people unconscious. It only made my life worse.

And now, the blue pill is their dominant method. The one that makes the subject do whatever they’re told. For example, leading a press conference without breaking down.

The makeup they put on me hides the purple beneath my eyes, and the blemishes from injections in my arms— signs of their efforts to control me when my mouth would bite their fingers too hard. The clothes they put on me make me look less thin, as if I’m still eating healthily. They started sticking crushed pills in my food. I need to learn to cook my own meals.

As my mouth takes the lead over my mind, answering questions from the audience, I notice the dark hair. Short stature, especially in comparison to the adults in the audience. Her face. It’s the same.

Her lumbering soles creak across the stage. Dribble drips out the corners of her mouth as she sways in uneasy steps. Toward me. Such a stark contrast from her image that was behind me. Annie didn’t deserve this. None of them did.

I expect her to vanish. But she keeps approaching.

Fear clamps around my skin, trembling me with a chill. I can’t even see through her. I know she can’t be real. It’s just another hallucination. Like Alex, and all my other friends. They don’t talk. They just stand there most of the time. But this one’s moving.

“Maxence.” She mutters.

I drop the microphone. Dread jolts the fake, blue-pill-induced version of me out of my body.

My feet trip over themselves scrambling backwards and I smack into the floor. My breaths exhale so quickly, warming the floor inches from my face. Ache from the impact squeezes my limbs. When I next look up, her eyes are so close.

“You should’ve known that we couldn’t trust the adults.” Her voice dips, dejected.

I lurch to my feet and sprint for the elevators. The clamor behind me dissipates the further I get. My vision spirals until I’m back in my bedroom. It’s so far away from the lobby. Only the officials can reach me here.

I collapse on the floor, leaning against my bed. The hard frame etches away at my spine. I lean forward, resting my head against my bundled legs. If I don’t look up, I can’t see Annie sitting in the chair in front of me.

“You really lost it, huh? I wonder how Renovatio’s going to explain this one.” Alex’s voice lulls. “What if they try to blame you for killing our friends? And I can’t even be there to defend you.”

“All the adults care about is their image. They try to claim adolescents care too much about maintaining images, but at least we admit how much we care. The adults will kill to hide their care.” Annie says bitterly.

I cram my palms into my ears. Although it’s futile against their voices, it feels like I’m doing something to fight them. The pressure on my head is somewhat grounding.

Their voices are painful. Yet, the words themselves… those are somewhat reassuring. They bring up thoughts I didn’t consider. As if my friends really were here.

I look up as I consider how to answer them. But there’s no Annie, no Alex. No one here with me.

The lower part of my face feels unfamiliarly solid. A warning ache of pain threatens my mouth as I attempt to open it. Curious, I stumble into the bathroom.

There’s black thread resting on the counter. When did that get there?

In the mirror, I stare at the dark thread frenziedly stitched around my mouth, tightening it into a thin smile. My fingers delicately touch the taut thread, sticky with semi-dry blood. The hardened signs of pain look so real. Did I sew my mouth shut, or is this another nightmare? Perhaps it’s a hallucination.

A laugh bubbles up my throat; it buzzes behind my teeth. At least they can’t shove anything down my throat now. And they can’t make me lie.

If my skin were scarred, could they not inject me either?

The laugh buzzes louder. It builds in my chest, as it can’t leave through my closed lips. And my breath is too turbulent to rely on. The edges of my vision are harder to focus on.

The laughter fades when it feels like it. There’s no climactic result afterwards. Everything around me remains the same.

Renovatio will likely send officials tonight to give me more of the pills. I can’t tell if the hallucinations and nightmares are from grief or the drugs. But if my fake friends talk more… maybe I wouldn’t mind hearing what they have to say.

Another laugh buzzes behind my teeth— lighter this time. My thoughts seem insane.

Was I truly so crazy for thinking I could fix the world? For trusting the adults around me to guide me through it? For hoping I’d have so many more days with my friends?

Could I find someone that insane to replace my position?

Maybe if I ruin myself enough, they’ll let me quit and someone else can give it a try. Maybe then I can escape all this, one way or another.

Because even if I tried, I don’t think I could fix it. And I can’t be their puppet. That isn’t the role I want to play in this world. They may want me to as I grow through my teenage years. As I age to fourteen, fifteen, all the way to nineteen when I can graduate Renovatio. But mark me, I will defy their choices every step of the way.

There may not be a happy ending to this— to fighting their expectations. But even after a week of subjugation under their idealistic will, I can’t stand another second of not resisting it.

I’ll find my own way forward, thanks.

So much to ask

Those who truly know you 
say that you are the 
essence of all solutions, — 
that you are the answer itself. 
So have mercy on my state as I 
ask this question: 
Why does lust taste sweet like honeycomb..? 
Is it not vile to want some body 
and reject their soul? — for it 
would be a moving corpse 
I seek and not the 
life which breathes (your presence). 

A composure is hard to sustain 
if I stand on mountainous slopes. 
How easy it is to tumble with 
laughter, to immolate 
myself in carelessness — 
an avalanche of fire. 
Goodness is the ultimate liberty, and yet 
it feels like a punishment 
I pursue; temptation rings bells of 
reward, but the ringer hides a dagger 
behind him.

O, Lord, bring clarity to my dark side, before 
it betrays the lighter half.

The Drive to Live

Okay, yeah, so it all started with my left lung, right? I was maybe 54 at the time, and the thing went and developed a tumor on me. I reacted poorly to the news, of course, spent most of a week taking long walks and screaming at the river. I almost gave up, you know? Yeah, I was just about to lie down and let it happen. I didn't have much in particular I wanted to live for, and it just... sounded like the path of least resistance.

It was the birds that did it for me. I woke up one morning and there was a finch outside my window. I sat there, and it hopped around, chirped at me for a bit, and flew away, and I realized that I wanted it to come back. 

I wanted to be there, to see it come back. 

So I got to work.

It took up about two months, getting the necessary supplies, and throwing everything together. Getting the blood cells to oxidize properly took some finagling, and I ended up having to shunt the process to a rather bulky external unit, which I had to carry around with me. I would later refine the design, of course, you have to understand I was under some intense time pressure to get the first prototype functional at all.

But function it did, and I cut the tumor out, along with both of my lungs for good measure, just three weeks before I was expected to kick it. By that point I had firmly made up my mind that if I was forced into being a thinking, feeling being, then I was going to at least eke as much joy out of the experience as I could.

The rest was honestly a bit of rinse and repeat. My heart, kidneys, my full muscular system, they all eventually gave out, and I gave them each a personal overhaul in turn. 

The trickiest one was the nose, I think. Replicating taste was a simple matter of chemical analysis to determine flavor, and then an obscene density of nerves to apprehend texture and shape. Smell, however, was much more complex. I ended up having to program each odor individually, and I've come across smells that I hadn't encountered before and needed to add within the last decade, even.

The nose also led to a bigger problem; that of the brain. Brain cells, as it turns out, do last quite a while when it comes to aging, but it did start to become a problem in due time. Full Upload wasn't a thing back then, mind you. It took massive computers, the size of a large room, just to store a mind. But at that point, see, I was entrenched. I had fallen in love once or twice, grieved a few losses, and watched a lot of finches gather nesting materials. It had taken a while, and no small amount of spite, but I had earnestly started to love being alive.

And so I decided to continue doing just that.

My first design used a processor in my skull, with a signal transmitted through gravitational waves, streaming information from a database under my home to a unit in my chest, wherever I was. It was terribly inefficient, and I couldn't move more than a few miles from my brain before I started to encounter lag (sidenote, if you haven't experienced your own mind skipping like a holorec with a scratch in the drive, I would emphatically recommend you avoid it), but I was, what, maybe 200 by that point? 225? Anyway, I had been around the block, and had plenty of experience designing workarounds.

Oh, I hope you'll understand, but I can't really tell you what my current system is, as that would be something of a security risk. If you'd like, I do have the blueprints for my previous design on a drive somewhere, I'd be happy to send you a copy. And in return, could you send me a bit of the tea leaves you use? This blend is quite spectacular.

Yes, well, I suppose it's getting late. Would you  like to meet again sometime? I know I didn't exactly leave any time for questions.

Lose It

On one day, there was a sunrise. 

Today there is rain. 

Today I have never been nothing. 

I just have to figure out who I am. 

It is such a big question. 

There's so much water flowing through 

This waterfall, even though it looks peaceful 

From far away. 

The fish swim behind a rock, 

Trying to fight the current. 

I want to join them but I

Have forgotten how to swim. 

It snuck up on me, this forgettance of self. 

All I used to know was the fight against change. 

I knew how to stay still. 

The rain has soaked me to the bone. 

I have gone with the current. 

It is not spring and I am not a salmon 

And I don't know how to swim back up. 

I am here and I don't know what here is 

And I don't know where I've been and 

I don't care to know where I am going.

Little Green Creatures

Goblins, ghouls, and little creatures that make funny noises and skitter around at night: they’re all real, I saw one once. He was a little green guy, about two-and-a-half-feet-tall, wearing a child-sized Dallas Cowboys onesie, a pair of cheap star-shaped sunglasses, and he was smoking a gas-station cigar that smelled like my grandfather’s fingernails. 

He smiled at me. His nose was longer than his cigar, and his teeth looked like someone had stuffed his mouth full with a bunch of broken saltines. His ears were long and curved like scimitars, and his black hair was shiny like all those guys I’d seen in The Godfather when I’d watched it with my dad. Around his neck was a gold chain that went down to his waist. 

He gave me the middle finger and flicked cigar ashes onto my shoes before disappearing through a sewer grate. 

I saw him again one time, at a convenience store ripping open a 12 pack of canned beers he hadn’t paid for. I just watched and drank my soda; watched as he pried open each and every can, and dumped the contents onto the floor. He would then crumple the empty cans into discs, and eat them like rice cakes, and once he’d finished the cans he ate the cardboard. 

I glanced back at the store clerk, who seemed blind to the whole ordeal. 

Once the little Goblin or Ghoul was finished with the box, he excitedly made for the door, but slipped in a puddle of beer and crashed into the wall. 

He let out a scream that nearly made my ears bleed, and a long green tongue lashed out from his mouth like an angry snake. When he popped up from the floor his nose was missing. 

I tripped, and this happened, he said, holding his nose like an unripe banana in one hand, Fix it? 

I didn’t move, but in an instant, he was standing in front of me, and he wrapped my fingers around the length of his nose, moving my hand to his face, and sticking it right back where it had come from. 

Thanks! He said, and he grabbed a bag of yogurt-covered raisins from the shelf and threw them at me. I caught them, and before I realized neither of us had paid for them or could pay for them he was gone, and all I was left with was the ringing of the bell above the door. 

I saw him again in my house. 

My dad had just called me to go and help rake up the wet leaves that had gathered like a damp carpet in our yard, and I reluctantly threw open my closet door for my jacket. 

I wasn’t surprised to see him sitting there in the dark, this time wearing a child-sized Adidas tracksuit and gambler’s sunglasses that hid his eyes. In his hands he held an empty paper plate. Don’t say anything, he said, I was just sitting here eating a large collection of black spiders and bugs. I asked him to leave, and he made like he was about to scream, but instead he lowered his head and shamefully shuffled out of the room. 

Once he left I saw that he’d left a three-dollar-bill on my desk, and later that day I told my dad I’d found it on the sidewalk, but he told me it wasn’t real and someone just thought they were being funny. 

I didn’t see him for years after that, not until I had a yard of my own. 

I was lost in my own world, my senses dulled by the earmuffs I had donned as I piloted my John Deere lawn mower around my stretch of grass backing up to the nearby woods. At first I thought he was a squirrel, and I was about to swerve when I saw a familiar green face that froze my foot. The last I saw of him was his tiny body wrapped in a plastic Red Sox poncho, strangling a garter snake. Then the lawnmower lurched forward and there was the sound of a knife on steel, and I leapt from the machine in a panic only to see it trailing a glowing green goop that I tracked back to a writhing mass. I buried the little ghoul, and had a cry over him, and a beer. I even nibbled at the can in his honor, though I felt like a fucking idiot for it.

Dear Myself, Myself

scrubbing the bathroom floors till the pink tile sparkles in between pure white grout

i've got a snakeskin i'm shedding

the only way to remember is to lose

an action of contradiction, 

yet the hypocrisy falls away with every snip

to cover is to project cruelness

below four years of grime i can't erase

is a warmth worthy of exposure

i'm getting clean, baby!

i'm revealing myself to myself

some things cannot be summed up in words

only whispers into split ends

cascading towards my parent's bathroom sink

the "you-missed-a-spot"s into the dorm's drain

people will see below this layer of change

and i will not be pretty

but i will be me

i'm getting clean, baby! to myself, myself

memory leaves a mark i won't erase

i'm making space for my love

i'm nursing away the bruises atop my skin

but theres scars on my bones that i'll press just to check on them - keeping them there

for cleanliness is not forgettance

i'm soaking up change

there's a self to be cultivated here

i'm tending to the garden of my soul

weeding for life to be lived

i’m getting clean baby! for myself, myself

The Revelers

I was eighteen and very lonely when I knocked on the door of the Nur Ashki Jerrahi Sufi Order’s Dergah in Chelsea, Manhattan. The door itself was narrow with a metal grate on it, the sufis had tucked themselves between an Irish pub and a dim late-night lounge. I was nervous, wearing a long skirt and shawl I’d found at the Bushwick Goodwill. When the Wali opened the door, I told him that back in the Bay Area, I was friends with Amin al-Jamal, the grandson of Sidi Muhammad Sa’id al-Jamal. Hearing the surname al-Jamal (literally: the Camel), the Wali's face lit up and he welcomed me into the Dergah. Sidi, who had passed away a few years before, had been a beloved Sufi Shayk. 

Inside everyone went barefoot, kneeled on sheepskins, shared glasses of mint tea. People stirred stew and cut bread in the kitchen, talked softly in English and Arabic, Farsi, Turkish, Berber. In the bathroom I washed myself the way I read on WikiHow: hands, mouth, nose, face, arms, hair, feet. I learned how people greeted each other in the Dergah: a deep head nod with one hand over the heart, often followed by an embrace. The light was warm and dim and it smelled like rosewater. And soon enough we were doing the Zikr, a musical chanting that seemed to morph and move underneath us, like a wave. There was singing, accompanied by the Santoor and Gimbri, and there was a spiral dance where you got to sort of hug strangers and hold their hands, which you don’t get to do very much in New York. More people filtered in throughout the night, fifty or sixty by the time the whirling started. They said if you kept your eye on the crux between your thumb and your forefinger you wouldn’t get dizzy. I got dizzy anyway. The rhythms of the Zikr echoed in the thumps and squeaks of the subway car careering around corners on the ride back to Clinton-Washington: la ‘ilaha illa Ilah. la ‘ilaha illa Ilah. Almost home.

I frequently had no idea what was happening. I arrived only knowing sufism from poetry: Rumi and The Conference of the Birds, and bits Amin had fed me. That was the real reason I ended up at the Dergah–I missed Amin. He is in grad school now, becoming an arachnologist, but back then he studied insects, a fixation so complete he felt compelled to eat them: fried grasshoppers, roly-polys and bees in teriyaki sauce. At the 24-hour Korean grocery store I found a can of silk worms in black bean sauce that I mailed to him. We had spent the previous summer reading each other's science fiction stories, listening to doom metal and making sculptures that we hid in the oak trees of the San Geronimo Valley. They’re totems, he said. Not idols. 


I attended the Dergah semi-regularly for about a year. Once I showed up, hoping to attend Zikr as usual, and there was a memorial service happening for a member of the Dergah. I can’t remember his name. He had been twenty-six years old, and in his picture he was handsome, smiling through a thick beard as he stood on a kitesurfing board. He worked at a bakery. His supervisor said on his first opening shift, he blasted Iron Maiden through the bakery speakers, to wake the customers up.

In the end, I didn’t study sufism hard enough to understand what was happening around me in the Dergah: I didn’t take the Shahada, I never converted. The plague year came. I left New York. But a year later I found myself dropping my phone in a metal bowl to amplify Run to the Hills while mixing pancakes for my coworkers, and thinking about the man whose name I couldn’t remember. Rain buffered the canvas tent. Butter and batter sizzled against cast iron. It was dark out, and we needed a flashlight to see if the pancake undersides were oozy, or burned, or maybe perfect. We weren’t really awake yet, but we were trying. That was the spring we spent in the burn scar north of Santa Cruz, clearing trails and roads of charred, fallen debris. The fire swept through six months earlier, but once, as we were digging out a drainage swale, we found a pocket of roots clinging to some smoldering warmth. We picked it up and felt its heat like a baby animal, passed it around until it fell apart. 

Over that month we watched the landscape change: rain turned the ash to black mud, anthracobia fungus bloomed up in orange polka dots, followed by parrot mushrooms and elf cups. Salamanders made their slow pilgrimages across the trail, tunnel spiders built cities in the bare ground. Redwoods and Manzanitas send shoots up from their charred stumps, followed by flowers: chickweed, milkmaids, trillium. In our last week there I found a hatchling garter snake in the old fireline birm. It slipped between my fingers and into the bracken. The foreman yelled to keep moving. I kept moving dirt and underneath it I found more dirt. My roommate asked me to scratch a pentacle into his pec with a bit of obsidian, for protection. Later, in a new city, I met a group with radical haircuts who were sure we could reach transcendence by flogging each other with salvaged bicycle innertubes. And then my friend went to Columbia to take Ayahuasca and ended up tied to a Poinsettia tree because she ripped open the Shaman's earlobe. 

White kids! Why are we like this? Why do we need things to be so foreign, so indecipherable, so extreme, so utterly devoid of context, in order to feel like we’ve woken up? Why would I only say God’s name in a language I didn’t understand? 

We sprinkled chocolate chips in the pancakes and watched the batter seize up. Once in a while, slogging uphill with a dolmar of gasoline over my shoulder, my breath sunk into a rhythm a little like Zikr: la ‘ilaha illa Ilah. Someone stooped to lift a salamander off the path. But I forgot to tell you the important part. This happened in the Dergah around midnight on a Thursday in November, 2018. We had finished whirling and everyone sat on the carpet, feeling glowy and warm. In the silence before the Shaykh spoke we could hear the rain outside, the taxis honking, and people coming out of the bars on either side of us, drunk, laughing loud. 

“We can hear the revelers outside,” the Shaykh said. She stopped on that word and smiled. “There are many ways to revel in the light.”