day #1

11/02/06 I remember when I got my first stereo system for my birthday. It was pretty simple. More of a boom box than a stereo, actually. I would borrow my parents tapes and play them because I didn’t have any tapes of my own. Eventually I would take to making mix tapes of songs I liked. Of course, I was young & I didn’t have any sense of flow or theme and most of the resultant tapes were just jumbles of songs that caught my fancy without anything to tie them together. But then I found that I could record myself, not just other tapes. So I’d do interesting things with my voice, trying to make myself sound like other people or recording at dubbing speed and sounding like a chipmunk. Sometimes I’d DJ songs for a nonexistent audience. All of this, though, I did with only a few blank tapes. And I was rarely careful to delineate sections or start recording at the end of my last session. So I come back to them now, and it’s like looking through a broken window into my past. Or a dada radio play version of “this is your life”. Layers of history and thoughts cut off in mid-sentence. I don’t have that stereo anymore. I was fascinated by it. So I took it apart. Every single screw came out; every connector was disconnected. I was especially taken by the tape head. It was like a little set of alien teeth that would chomp down on the magnetic strip and extract the memories of the tape like a vampire. But the alien biology of the stereo escaped my understanding. Its organs were all silicon and metal and plastic, and wholly unlike my own. That’s not to say if they were like my own I would be any closer to understanding how it worked & I don’t even think I’d started elementary school when I undertook this project, so my knowledge of human biology was pretty scant. That didn’t stop me from trying, though. I carefully laid out every piece and catalogued it like I imagined a good scientist would. I did my best to recreate the entire device in my head & tried to imagine what each piece’s function was. I’m sure I was wrong for many of them, but my intentions were sincere. I never tried to put it back together. I’m sure somewhere in my parents’ attic there’s still a box that has the pieces of this strange organism in it. It may even have the careful notes I took. But once I’d taken it apart the device I had in my head was far more precious to me than the physical object itself. It was purer. Eventually I did come to understand how it worked. The next year for my birthday I received an electronics kit, and I was in love. The pieces were all simple, and logical, and I felt with them that I had an immense power. I knew that if I organized them in the right pattern I could recreate anything in the world. But the things that I made would not be the black boxes that I saw everywhere else & they’d be a part of me, because they were made by my hands and I would know exactly how they worked. None of the things I built back then I kept. Once I completed something, I was done. And I’d reuse the parts for my next project. It was far more important for me to learn something new than to create something useful. Sometimes I wouldn’t even bother finishing a device once I got close enough to completing it to know that it would work.
I think this affected my interactions with other kids at school. People were far too complicated. And I did eventually take biology classes, and learned all about the parts that we are built from, but something was always missing. I understood how all the organs went together and interacted but it never seemed enough. Most people would say that’s a “soul” but that left me unsatisfied. Needless to say I didn’t make very many friends growing up. Sure, I had a couple, but none that ever shared my interest in electronics or how things work. I felt more kinship with the kids who were destined to go into the priesthood than anybody else, actually. Their interest in the secret nature of things was the closest to what I felt, but the focus of their inquiries was very different from my own and I certainly didn’t agree with their conclusions. When I look back on things today I don’t think I would have changed anything. Sometimes it feels like I squandered my time because I don’t have anything tangible to show for my efforts, but I learned a lot. I feel stuck in my shitty job but it supports me and the lack of responsibility allows me the freedom to concentrate on things that are important to me. Lately the notion has struck me that I should create something permanent. Something that’s the culmination of my work that I’d want to keep around once I’m done. But I couldn’t decide what. So I’ve been alternating between libraries and coffee shops in my free time, brainstorming and trying to come up with a great opus. And it was around this time that I met Joseph. I don’t remember exactly when or how we met, but I’d see him around one of the coffee shops I frequented, always with a well-worn notebook open and a stack of books. Like me, he was never with anyone else. The books were always changing; each day I saw him it would be a different subject. Sometimes philosophy, sometimes computer science, sometimes theology. What caught my attention was sometimes he’d have electronics books. Some even ones I had in my own library. After a time we’d share a table if we happened to go at the same time, but we never planned to meet. At first he was reluctant to talk about what he was researching, but it was clear that he did want to. Eventually I got it from him that his friends were universally involved in something deep and mysterious that he was wholly excluded from. None of them would talk to him about it & or at all. Naturally he was troubled by this, and so he came out here, to another part of the city in order to avoid those he once called friends, to piece together what was happening.
“I’ve seen you with religious texts, so I assume you believe it’s some sort of cult & that’s nothing new. Cults spring up all the time, and fade in and out of favor. But what’s with the programming and electronics books? How does that fit in to all of this?” “Well, okay. I live in urbs speculum so you know we’re known for software and hardware and all that, i.e. “˜information technology’. I think this all started with a group of people from via dormiens &” “Those guys? So, the cult of Morpheus?” “The same. Either they visited my part of the city & started talking to people, or some people from my neighborhood went there. In either case, my friends seem to have picked up some stuff from them and merged it into a new… system. Or something.” “That doesn’t seem too sinister.” “Well, you have to remember. These aren’t kids, but they’re not adults either. People my age. I don’t think they know what they’re getting themselves in to.” “Okay, fair enough. So what happened next?” “The most I can make of things is they’ve started & or are trying & to make devices to augment their perception. Sort of like a drug-induced ecstatic trance without the drugs. If I were a concerned parent, I’d certainly think some of them were on drugs, but I’m not, and I’m pretty sure /they’re/ not.” At this point I must admit I was pretty intrigued. “They’re augmenting their perception? To what end? Have you seen any of these devices?” “No, I haven’t. The idea, as far as I can gather, is to filter information from the outside world & sight, sound, etc. & to sort of… trick the mind into thinking it’s dreaming. Or to break down the hard-wired preconceptions of what reality is. You know, your typical mystical mumbo-jumbo. But that’s about all I know. And I may even be wrong on some counts.” That night I got to thinking. Would this thing Joseph was talking about really work? I wasn’t actually considering building the device he described. What with how it affected the people close to him, it seemed too risky. But the idea of a filter between reality an one’s perception of it… Of pushing the boundaries of what was perceived as real. It’s like stress-testing your own psyche. Which I guess is what mystics have been doing for millennia, but this time it was on my terms.
But that didn’t get me any closer to solving my own problem. Sure, Joseph’s was fascinating and if he asked for help I would be willing to lend a hand, but in the meantime I was preoccupied with not coming up with any viable ideas on something to build. I’d never had this problem before: I’d just start building something because I was interested in it. But now I wanted to build something /important/ and it wasn’t even that I had ideas that fell short; I was completely lost.
The next day I ran into Joseph again. This time we talked about my problem. I told him my story, and how I felt it was time for me to do something with my talents and build something long-lasting. word count: 1634 words I’m just shy of the 1666 words for the day. And I’m still a day behind. Hopefully I can catch up tomorrow.