Category: Dial ‘666’ for ‘Mom’

  • THE INHERITANCE

    THE INHERITANCE

    I have never expected to have a long life, but I’ve always known that I was meant for something great, to have a life that would be full and important in some unknown sense.

    I could not have imagined the opportunity for adventure my destiny had in store for me. My life’s direction was so far beyond what I could have foreseen as a child or teenager.

    The responsibility of greatness weighed heavily upon my mind long before I could understand my suffering. My family history of emotional malady seemed one-dimensional – evident and inevitable – and I painfully waited for my turn for the demon to claim my soul as well.

    Not content with a powerless resignation to what seemed like someone else’s fate, I began to dig. Seeking buried treasure is one thing: a known objective hidden in what seems like the proverbial haystack. However, searching for an answer that one cannot be sure exists within oneself, in a labyrinth of tunnels within the psyche, can feel impossible, except for one powerfully important variable: Faith.

    To believe deeply in something so intensely and assuredly that no matter what tries to sway or dissuade from your objective, you cannot give up because it ceases to be belief and becomes an axiom for your soul, you know it to be true. There is no question when it is a matter of faith, and I knew a sinister answer was lying beneath my family’s common inherited torment. I also knew that whatever this truth was, it was woven deeply into the fabric of my lineage beneath any of our conscious thoughts.

    As a teenager, recreational drugs helped me delve into the depths of my consciousness, making me aware of the profundity of the human mind and the latent potential of the unconscious within all human beings. I had always been vaguely self-aware of my “sixth” sense, a voice within me that provided me with astute intuitions at times but left me fearfully alone at other, equally important junctions. I began to seek out this voice within myself and outside sources.

    In high school, I received an entrepreneurship award not because I particularly liked business or the idea of becoming rich. Still, I loved the idea of conjuring something from nothing without the subservience of working hard to make someone else successful on my shoulders.

    Incidentally, my teacher’s advice to think outside the box and my penchant for self-prescribed pharmaceuticals led me to my first real job as a drug dealer. I realize now how fortunate I was to remain untainted from this venture and escape unscathed from a destructive lifestyle that should have claimed not only my life but my soul as well.

    I only provided substances for a profit to degenerate spirits who craved escape from the emptiness of the life they were born haplessly into. Still, I later learned I was just a tiny expendable cog in an evil machine meant to keep all involved locked in the prison they were trying futilely to flee from.

    Fortunately, my unconscious instincts, at the behest of my guardian angel, saved me from being drawn deeper into the diabolical conspiracy I unwittingly served.

    The urgent desire for the truth behind my family’s illness kept me from ever (ab)using the products that I sold; I had much more pressing engagements for my mind.

    Though I hated every minute of high school, several incredible teachers inspired me to pursue the answers I so desperately sought and never give up. I went to university for several years, though never officially, so I worked twice as hard as those who paid for their education.

    While their purpose was for a degree or a career, mine was for the key to my own embodied mystery before it was too late and I ended up at the mercy of an invisible devil poking a pitchfork into my sensory perception of reality, like the rest of my family.

    I was working against myself and the clock, since I learned in the many psychology lectures I attended and textbooks I devoured that the symptoms of the disorders that have plagued my people for generations usually have a severe onset in the late teens to early twenties. I felt that the only thing that could save me from the abyss that I had stared into and resisted since childhood was the correct information as ammunition and an unshakeable faith that I could fight this thing, whatever it was.

    I had battled depression alone all of my life, refusing to allow the shadow to pervade my soul and cloud my vision from my objective, my destiny. I had many holes to fill: between the barely audible echoes of my murmuring unconscious and the countless works I found in the university library collections, I began to make real and invaluable neural connections within my mind.

    Not being limited to any one degree program allowed my mind to wander like a dowsing rod and radiate toward whichever door it felt the answers lay behind. Studying at university is doubtlessly a self-directed pursuit, but my literal interpretation of this concept opened my mind to the university’s namesake: the universality of knowledge.

    Knowledge is power, to be forewarned is to be forearmed, and I was frantically arming myself against possible attacks from myself, for all I knew.

    Information is key to opening any door in the universe, seen or unseen, within or without. [“Within without, without within” – Coma] This is the “key” to a good education, the forest that many fail to see among so very many trees.

    It was also the key that led my life almost seamlessly into private investigation as a legitimate career. Selling drugs successfully led me into a vast underworld of secrecy that my former life as a God-fearing altar boy would never have suspected; the scope of its depth would have been beyond my grasp.

    When the weed hit me, it was an eye-opening experience; I could understand why people did it, risked arrest for it, and wrote poems about it.

    It was a total escape that required next to no work from the participant. Take the drug, forget yourself for a while, and everything’s great. Until the stuff wears off, then either take more or realize how shitty things had become again. I suppose I had a fairly solid grasp on my mixed-up life, or at least I had come to accept it as it was, because I never had the urge to go further.

    When the ride ended, I got off, went home and reflected on the trip.

    My case is unusual, however, since most who employ the method of dope as a cure for their dissatisfied malaise lose perspective between the real and under the influence, wishing to remain in the latter.

    The “most” I refer to is a lot of people, for one substance is quickly replaced by another. Remove coffee from a caffeine addict or cigarettes from a pack-a-day smoker and observe their behaviour. It is human nature to seek enhancements to existence, however fleeting and detrimental the perceived ‘benefits’ may be. [Addictions Poem]

    For me personally, I didn’t and could not find what I was looking for with substances (believe me, I tried), and I knew this from the outset.

    My addiction took the form of something I could use indefinitely, or for as long as my memory held out.

    No drug could make me smarter, although I found occasional experimentation did make life enjoyable. Marijuana is the only substance I have abused, and I refuse to call it a drug, but the police disagree, unless they’re selling it. Then it’s a job perk, an unofficial bonus.

    My disgust for the establishment increased exponentially when I learned the extent of the hypocrisy that went on behind so many stately, ornate doors. Some of my best clients were the same women and men who harassed harmless pot smokers with powdered noses and syringes in their pockets. I enjoyed the profit I made from these people’s wanton pleasures and the benefits of doing business with a powerful, well-connected society. Still, I realized that my luck had held out long enough, so I cashed in my chips and made a career change into private investigation.

    Getting my P.I. license was no trouble because I had a contact high enough up in the Corrections Department Investigative branch who processed the documents quickly at my request. At the end of his workday, we made an off-the-record trade, and that day, I became Nick Savoy, Purveyor of Information.

    I decided to name my organization (of one) Ananda Investigations, after a Sanskrit word loosely meaning bliss or pleasure, as in the elation attained at the time of a brain snap or ‘eureka’ moment.

    Incidentally, anandamide is a chemical produced and released in the brain to create an euphoric state of mind. I never bothered too much with the typical boring investigative routine of fraudulent insurance claims, cheating spouses and paper-serving for law firms.

    Ananda was to focus on more interesting (and engaging) assignments like corporate espionage and deep cover infiltration (interpersonal break and enter). Of course, I had to start small to establish a reputation as an honest spook, but my mental Rolodex was full of shady characters with plenty of disposable income to spy on each other.

    I soon started making a very comfortable living. I could hone my emotional chameleon act, since I had learned long before that people were just complicated locking mechanisms that required the proper pressure exerted expertly to yield desired results. I was excellent at manipulating people, and being paid for a legal exchange of information was almost too good to be true. I lived to know as much as I could learn, and being a freelance consultant was a perfect arrangement for me to let my imagination soar.

    A small one-room office downtown was a sufficient safe house that served as the base of operations; I would also set up and use other spaces for more clandestine projects. With the money I was making, I outfitted my operation with all the high-tech gear required for illicit data gathering.

    Starting Ananda put me on the global radar of all sorts of intel groups, some of whom sought my services as a ‘Consultant’ while others considered me a threat to their respective agendas. Nevertheless, few would have guessed that Ananda was only one person and his network.

    I have always lived in shadows, where I felt safe despite the usual fear of dark places.

    There was always a tingle in the hair on the back of my neck when danger was near – my inner eye saw it coming – and that was how I managed to stay one critical step ahead of my assailants, whether they intended to arrest or kill me. I was like a cockroach that they just couldn’t step on, and it was satisfying knowing that now I was trying to serve justice rather than obstruct it.

    Ironically, my purpose in life had taken a 180-degree turn: to expose those whose secrets I had once helped conceal.

    In addition to being a spy for hire, I used the mobility of my work as an opportunity for travel and exploration to inspire my artistic pursuits of poetry and photography.

    Mysteries always had a way of finding me, or vice versa. I have never been able to accept facts or events at face value: my burning curiosity has never failed to submerge my life in ever-present undercurrents impossible to ignore.

    My persistent overanalyzing has prevented me from being misled into believing utterly false thoughts commonly accepted by many, an obsession with the relativity of truth as an eternal, pervasive concept.

    • Condo in Geneva
    • Apartment in Monaco
    • Nice Estate, Café & Antique Bookstore
    • Vineyard with Airstrip Provence

  • childhood memories consist of social seclusion and immersion in escapism

    Nick’s thoughts of childhood memories consist of social seclusion and immersion in escapism. Dreams, fantasies, substances, and most of all, Nick was addicted to information.

    00028 454301027.png
    00028 454301027.png

    Secret knowledge drove him and, in his mind, gave him power. Reading fuelled his mind and provided an alternate reality to that around him following his mother’s hospitalization during his childhood.

    Nick’s mother, Helen Savoy, had suffered from severe postpartum depression after his birth, having conceived him while unmarried had stirred up a hornet’s nest among a family with suppressed mental illnesses combined with an ultraconservative mentality. After Nick’s father committed suicide when he was very young, his mother fell very ill emotionally.

    She continued to decline while he was under the vigilant attention of his grandparents, who were intent on raising Nick in their manner.  

    “They blamed my mother, under sinister pretences, for the death of my father. He had been their “favourite son,” and she had “made” him kill himself, ignoring, of course, that they were sophisticated drug users themselves with many unresolved psychological issues.

    They laid this trip upon my already feeble mother, who had a guilt complex for having me in the first place. This was part of the designs they had on the baby, so they deemed her unfit to raise the child, and as soon as they could feed me mistruths and negative exaggerations about her while she and I were separated. Being unable to distinguish truth from crap bought what they were selling, and I unconsciously became increasingly obstinate and insolent with her as I grew up.” }

    00032 3286885371.png
    00032 3286885371.png

    Between her inherited illness and the evil seeds of dissent planted in his fertile mind by his [father’s] parents, Nick watched his mother’s condition worsen until the tragic and mysterious death of his baby brother when she became hospitalized, and he went to live with them.

    Nicholas learned at a young age the effects of causality, guilt, and the art of manipulation.

    He saw how minds determined in a focused direction could set events in motion. He understood that some things occur beyond our doing and control, but nevertheless, we must pay the consequences of the actions of others. Therefore, we are all connected whether we like it or not.

    The world is bigger than just us, but a great number of things can be accomplished for either good or evil.

    Such were the lessons he learned from watching his grandparents flatly and emotionlessly slander Helen and deny her justified accusations to maintain their innocent image in front of the doctors when his brother died, delivering the death blow to the poor woman’s sanity.

    She would never be the same after that betrayal. In private, however, they sought to convince Nick that it was his behaviour that had contributed to his mother’s diagnosis of schizoid manic depression. Nick grew apart from the only people he had while alienating his mother almost entirely until near his eighteenth birthday. Only then did he begin to search for the truth of his life and seek a relationship with his mother in vain.

    “My mood has always been rotten and depressed when I visited her at her home of nearly twenty years, my thoughts a flurry of neural confusion. On one hand, I could hardly bear to see her in such a vegetative state – such a stark contrast to the vibrant woman that remained locked away in my few memories of her that my grandparents hadn’t corrupted. I hated the powerless feeling that I was forced to remember when I saw her, about her and for my own sake; seeing her was like looking into a mirror that refused to conceal my true identity, the dark secrets of my family’s past. When I visited my mother, I was forced out of my dream world and had to look within myself, and that has always been the scariest thing for me.”

    After his mother became comatose, Nick took his passion for literature and his propensity for escape and became a freelance journalist (a cover for dealing drugs and thievery) who went wherever the wind took him.

    He developed very few personal relationships of any depth because he had lost hope in love for himself, reasoning that true love was merely an idle fantasy and that “real” love, in his experience, was a conduit for pain and psychological torment.

    Nick chose to live on the run from his family, his past and ultimately himself. Travelling the world armed only with his camera and notebook, wits and curiosity, Nick found a semblance of a happy life in voyeuristic escape through art that allowed him the illusion of being able to change the way he saw things.

    electric city fantasy cityscape digital art sd 2.1 arcanediary.com 0007
    electric city fantasy cityscape digital art sd 2.1 arcanediary.com 0007

    The darkness of Nick’s mind was mirrored in the ghastly nature of the macabre he so gravitated toward. He focused his attention on grotesque events, always on the furthest fringes of a society that he desperately wanted to rebel against the very core of.

    For him, impending death was something to be marvelled at, precarious heights were meant to be dangled from, and the dark was where he lived to overturn the grittiest rocks among the deepest shadows.

    Nick rebelled against every notion that the mainstream of humanity held dear. He obsessed over what others feared, seeking to learn about the sources of fear by exposure to extremes to defeat them, for one fears the unknown most of all.

    Nick’s flight response to his own fears compels him to search to uncover truths and expose falsehoods of the world around him, leaving him painfully alone with an insatiable circular quest. A childhood with morbid and malevolently deceptive elderly people had given Nick a uniquely skeptical slant on his perception of truth and reality. His grandparents’ self-serving manipulation had taught him that trust was a precious quality to be given most apprehensively.

    Foreword by Nick Savoy

  • SCENES OF H-TOWN

    SCENES OF H-TOWN

    SCENES OF H-TOWN: Bum on a street corner, on a median at a busy intersection with a cardboard sign. Some callous ignoramus flicks a five out their window, and the bum jumps into traffic, getting killed for $5. Whether the man was crack-laden or starving for what $5 worth of food could do for his immune system in this cold weather, the newspaper article the perpetrator reads about it the next day in the newspaper doesn’t care, and neither does the unknowing reader. Just one less piece of human litter has fallen through our great society’s many cracks. It was then I decided to leave the city for a while.

    Group Hug – Thugs – Pirates

  • “Modern Western Civilization”

    Snapshot of Another Time

    “Modern Western Civilization”

    Lighting candles in the bedroom, reading The Idiot’s Guide to Lost Civilizations

    –                  

    Enrolled in courses a grade ahead, dreaming of university

    –                  

    Shopping for fountain pens, mapping out second-hand stores in “exotic” downtown

    –                  

    Having crushes on impossible girls

    –                  

    Traveling on buses (or dreaming of it) to school and libraries to get out of the house. Listening to trip-hop and jazz. Reading about ancient and lost societies. Alone, amidst people.

    –                  

    Loneliness

    [[How a person views the world is how they feel about themselves]]

  • How a person views the world is how they feel about themselves

    How a person views the world is how they feel about themselves. That is our gift and curse, to delude ourselves into thinking and believing whatever we choose, should we choose to. It is a power we have that most don’t even realize. If you feel the world is dark and hostile, that’s all you will see and feel from it. If you believe the world is beautiful and full of wonder, your experience will reflect those aspects of life. It’s all in our attitude toward the world surrounding us, mirroring how we value and appreciate our selves.

    A PLACE CALLED ARMAGEDDON