Archive for February, 2010

The Pulse of Kato Whip: 11

Excerpt:
“You are Lady Dusk, aren’t you?” he said, stepping further into the firelight.

She stared at him. “Have we met before?”

“In a dream.”

She remained puzzled. Then, seeing the steed, which had followed him, she exclaimed, “Why, you have my steed! But what is wrong with him? He looks pale — downright transparent, in fact!”

“It’s not exactly your steed,” Kato Whip tried to explain, “but a version of it dreamed by the tarantula. It became mired in reality when it tripped and snagged itself on a web. I have to admit it was the fault of a good friend of mine, a baby earthquake, but I assure you it wasn’t intentional.”

“This is all very confusing,” she said, studying him intently. “What particularly perplexes me is how you remain awake so near to me — though I’ve noticed this in others of late as well.”

“Your reign of pure goodness is at an end!” he proclaimed with a fanfare wave of his hands. But this seemed only to confuse her more. “Uh, you see, I woke the spot of bad that had fallen asleep inside of you, and now you need not fear being such a bore.”

The adventure continues…
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The Pulse of Kato Whip: 10

Excerpt:
“Enough!” Kato said. “I don’t want to hear any more bickering for a while.” He gathered the girls about him. “Just stay close, okay? Don’t go out of sight again.” He counted them with a finger that trembled with emotion.

“What happened to your horse?” Vickie asked.

“It’s gone,” he said, counting them again, and still again.

“But we want to ride in it some more,” an in-between said.

“Stand still! I’m trying to count!” he scolded, because the count kept coming out wrong, very wrong, and when he had convinced himself there could be no mistake, he asked, “Why are there eight of you?”

“Eight?” they said. They took turns counting, coming up with eight as well.

“Which of you doesn’t belong?” he asked.

They looked among themselves, then said with a singsong whine, “It’s just us!”

He looked them all over, and for the life of him he could not pin down which was new. “Let’s go,” he said, just wanting to get them to their aunt’s before something else happened. “Hold hands, understand? Don’t let go no matter what.”

The adventure continues…
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The Pulse of Kato Whip: 09

Excerpt:
The eel slithered to and fro, clearly out of his element. “Well, I can juggle.” Five stones shot up out of the sand, and the eel set them to dancing in the air.

“Wow!” Kato watched in amazement. “That’s great!” He noted how the eel’s body sparked and pulsed, and how from time to time the stones clanked together, probably hematites and certainly made of metal. “Electromagnetic induction, am I right? You’re using your electric current to induce a magnetic field, and that is what you use to manipulate the stones.”

“That’s how I do it?” the eel said. “Yes! That’s how I do it!” He froze with the complexity of the notion, and the stones fell to the sand. “Oops.” The eel tried to get them going again, but could not.

“I guess I shouldn’t have said anything,” Kato apologized as the eel’s head sank lower.

The Pulse of Kato Whip: 08

Excerpt:
Kato remained amazed that he had made a kite that could fly, and while it didn’t zip about like the others, he could appreciate its little movements, dips and surges and feints of a more subtle nature, a delicate dance that began to speak to him.

For as it moved about up there, he became aware of its diaphanous nature, and how it didn’t resemble a kite so much as it did a woman. The Diaphanous Woman. It was she up there, doing that subtle dance, which wasn’t a dance at all but a struggle. Her hands were at her neck, clawing at something there. A collar? No, a choker chain! He could see the panic in her face, the mouth beginning to pucker, the tongue protrude, and the chain drew tighter still, made that way by a line descending towards him, to his straining hands–

The adventure continues…
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The Dimensions of a Grudge

It’s been decades since I revisited my high school yearbook. A couple things stand out — or rather, fail to. First, though I’m in many photos, you’d have a hard time spotting me. I lurk — in the back, at the edge, peeking from behind. It’s like Where’s Waldo with me as the elusive star. The other thing of note is Bernie, the class bully. In all his photos he looks downright angelic. Not surprising. Around grownups, he had a saintly demeanor. When the grownups were away, he grew horns and made for the smallest and meekest to mete out endless torment.

He would come up behind you and clap his hands over your ears and rub fast and hard, crinkling the ears back and forth, trashing the cartilage to painful effect. He liked punching you in the stomach, pushing you around. He liked intimidating you in every possible way, see your uneasiness and fear. His favorite torture was to bend your fingers backwards, relishing the moment when your knees would buckle and you’d fall to your knees, crying out in pain. He just couldn’t get enough of this one.

One time a teacher caught him pressing his thumbs into a kid’s temples. The teacher stopped him, explaining that this was very dangerous. That was the only time I ever saw a teacher challenge Bernie’s bullying tactics.

A couple of times I challenged him. One time in gym class he had one of my friends down on the floor, and I stepped in and pulled Bernie off. It startled him — he wasn’t accustomed to it — and he wandered off to find someone else. Then there was the day I stood up to him in lunch line. When he approached, ready to grab my fingers, I doubled up my fists and made it clear we’d be fighting it out. Not that I would have fared well. But it would have caused a stir, drawn a teacher, and that’s not what Bernie wanted. So he backed off and went in search of someone else.

In the back of the yearbook there’s an In Memoriam note for Leland Stump — 1951-1966. Leland was my best friend. In his freshman year he was diagnosed with a brain tumor, and I watched him slowly die over the course of a year. I remember praying back in those days when I believed in prayer. I prayed that Leland would be spared, and that Bernie be taken instead. Yes, I prayed for Bernie’s death. That’s how much I hated him, how miserable he made life for me. I dreaded every break, every recess, every moment when grownups wouldn’t be around. Because that was “Bernie time.”

I suppose when it comes to something like Columbine, I hold politically incorrect views. Read into that what you will. But schools should be a place for learning — not discrimination, ridicule, intimidation or fear. When I hear people argue that kids need to learn to stand up for themselves, I wonder if maybe grownups ought to learn to stand up for kids, rather than look the other way.

Yes, I held a grudge against Bernie. I held it a long while. In my 30s I became involved in the martial arts. I trained hard in Shaolin kung fu for nearly 20 years. Along the way I competed in China, even trained for a week under the monks at Shaolin Temple. A couple of times I went back to Indiana for class reunions. Each time I would joke beforehand with friends that it was payback time. Not that I was serious. But the fact that I even thought it shows that I still held a grudge.

How long should one hold a grudge? I mean, grudges seem an unavoidable part of life. You form grudges against people, companies, beliefs, and often for good reason. But it can’t be healthy or right to hold them forever. What’s the correct length to hold a grudge? After a lifetime of experience, I’ve narrowed it down to somewhere between five seconds and fifty years.

Last week I was again back in Indiana. Bernie land. I was visiting my mom and other relatives. While there, I received an email from our high school class. Bernie was going in for some minor surgery. A follow-up email came the next day. Bernie had been sent home with inoperable and very aggressive cancer. While chemo and radiation might give him six months, he’s opted to skip it — because it would make him very ill the whole time. A few classmates arranged a dinner that Bernie would try to attend. I went to it, but Bernie didn’t show. Finally I just sent him an email of encouragement and positive thoughts. No god stuff, because I’m not religious, but it was compassionate and sincere. Because I think it’s time to drop this grudge.

Good luck, Bernie.

The Pulse of Kato Whip: 07

Excerpt:
Tucking the paper wad in a pocket, he continued down the corridor, which had an unmistakable downward slant. He walked for several hours. He walked for a day, a week, a month. And still he had not reached the end. To help pass the time he pulled out a rubber band and worried it between his fingers until it broke, then another, and another, to the point where he dared not waste any more. After several months, wearied from so much walking and getting nowhere, he leaned against the cold corridor wall and listened to the scribbling of pens on paper, the tapping of fingers on keys, the blup-blup, clank, gulp, and splash of coffee being brewed, stirred, drank, spilled–

“Excuse me,” he called out. “Excuse me. Have I reached the hacks yet?”

Screams of outrage issued from the offices. All form of object sailed out into the corridor, slamming the wall about him. He dodged a coffee-maker, ducked a monitor stringing a keyboard, leaped over a shattering mug, and hurried onward.

The adventure continues…
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