Although I'm not good enough a writer to actually be at stake as an author, I feel that I have to express what I feel are points about life, and which I can't (at least not easily enough)write with good quality. I apologize for that :-( ... and hope people can enjoy these stories anyway.
Friday, April 1, 2016
"Your Friends Aren't as Good as Mine!"
Adult (or at least semi-adult) story; follow the link if you want to read it anyway: "Your Friends Aren't as Good as Mine!"
Monday, March 28, 2016
Linda's New Therapy
“They're being stuck up about it.”
thirteen-year-old Linda said in the beginning of her first
group-therapy session.
The five people around her sighed, the
therapist included. Her, the therapist's eyebrows wrinkled a little
and then she said: “It's not wise to always be accusing them. Even
so I can understand that they sort of were stuck up with you all, or
at least most of, the time.”
One of the two boys who were in the
group looked at Linda and asked: “Why try to be different from
everybody else? You know we all had that kind of abuse against us.
And we've all been manipulated into finding ourselves comfortable
with pretending to be something we aren't.”
“I don't,” the other boy said,
“find it to be that what I did was to find myself very comfortable
with that!”
One of the girls broke in: “I don't
like that you're saying they didn't find it in you to seem to be part
of their club for socializing the way they have it young boys should,
because you told me you had to fancy yourself as a man already, and
thereby pretend to be as tough as they!”
“Exactly!” the other boy said. “I
also know that you pretended to be satisfied with it! Besides, it
seems you didn't pretend to be blackmailed into seeming to be!
Thereby think it's impossible
for them tho have you pretend that well without making you feel
comfortable with it!”
“But,”
the boy defended himself, “I couldn't escape that they would be
bullying me! I mean, although there wasn't quite any blackmail about
it!”
“That's
right,” the therapist broke in. “I recommend that it's not to be
seen as if we were an group only for those who pretended to be happy
in a way that actually fooled them into faking their happiness to be
real, or so.”
The
boy who had spoken first cleared his throat. “But I am a guy who
never found myself to be happy without pretending to be happy in the
first place!”
“I
can't find it in you to be happy on the surface right now, though.
... So what do you actually mean by you insinuation that I aught to
treat them as if they were in a group for pretend happy people?!”
“I
can't help being facially happy when you tell me I'm not happy!
Because I am facially happy right now, in the sense that I'm not even
remotely as happy as I seem to be right now!”
She
sighed. “I can't pretend that you aught to be pretending in my
group, that you're actually fairly happy about the situation even if
there are feelings in you of complete unhappiness! Thereby I
recommend you to tell me about those unhappy feelings you say you
have!”
“I
feel unhappy that she isn't coming here to find our group to be for
real about the problems of manipulation! I also feel disappointed at
that Eric pretended to be someone who didn't have to be into faking
himself into comfort as if happy about unhappiness!”
Linda
looked at him, and then at her therapist. She felt as if she (the
therapist) didn't realize that the boy she spoke to was just being
obnoxious. In a sense she felt the therapist had no point in actually
being the one to say there was any half a point even in letting that
boy speak out for himself. She thereby seemed unhappy to the people
around her, and the therapist looked at her and asked:
“Why
do you keep on writhing as if we were trying to manipulate you right
now? You know we're a group for trying not to be manipulative!”
“I
find it in me not to pretend that I am not trying to be happy, only
I'm not trying to be happy in the way that actually makes me
comfortable!”
“What
do you mean by that?” The therapist looked a bit interested in
Linda's mimicry about her situation.
“What
are you staring at?!” Linda burst our.
“Oh,
I was just looking at the way your facial expressions changed during
our conversation! It's just an interest I have in feeling comfortable
about each other here in this precarious locality for having therapy
against your notions of not being for real!”
The
girl who hadn't yet spoken before broke in: “Why do you feel that
it's therapy to say that they are for real, those people we can't
trust, when we feel ourselves that those people try to facilitate our
interpretations of them as so real that they aren't ever to be
handled as if questionable?!”
Linda
said silently to herself that she too felt that way about it, but
that she hadn't dared to speak that way about those people in charge
here. So instead she looked at the therapist now and added: “How
come we never get to view ourselves as the kinds of persons who don't
very easily find ourselves not to be a nuisance?! I mean I don't have
an argument in my mother for actually trusting her! That is she is
always the bitch about it! She always pretends I'm the imbecile in
her company, and then when I'm being that she scorns me into feeling
inferior so that I become even worse an imbecile for her and
everybody else!”
“I
can't see you as the kind of girl who doesn't fit in with having me
in therapy. I can't see in any of you not to feel inferior because of
those who insinuated about you that you are imbecile or something
seemingly the same as that. Because I can't see it in you to be
imbecile enough to actually pretend that you are secure with those
acquaintances - including family - that you present for me as
though you didn't care for actually being their friends or family,
nor even acquaintances.
“What,
then,” the boy who spoke first asked, “do you mean by pretending
we're all family with each other around here!? I mean we're no family
with each other! On the contrary she and I are very unalike!” He
indicated Linda when saying the last sentence.
“Oh,
Golly!” the girl who spoke first broke out. “Why do they feel
that they are so stuck up, those parents!? I mean I have in my own
two parents not to ever fake that they're unhappy about me and my
so-called imbecile attitudes! Instead it's they - and they're
virtually the only ones for that - who cared indiscriminately to
say to me that I was an okay person and an okay soul to for that
matter! So why do you complain about your parents!? I feel my parents
are really good enough and they should be into pretending as if
something about their own, so that they could be good enough as
well!”
The
second boy looked grimly at her. “We all have our own parents to
talk about! They're not a bit like your own!”
“Then
how come,” the girl asked, “do you never comment me about them
when I tell you how nice it is that they still keep on caring?!”
“It's
because,” the boy answered, “we have nothing to say about those
parents who are just completely different! We have nothing to say
about you, because you don't seem to be the same as the rest of us!
Our problems are with parents; yours are that you're a stuck up
little rascal who has parents that tell her she's an alright kid,
although she isn't!”
Linda
looked at the two of them. Now she found in herself to fit in,
although she felt awkward about being fitting in just for being
miserable enough for it. Then he looked at the therapist, who looked
a bit troubled.
“How
come,” the therapist asked, “do you feel that it's so important
that she is different?”
“It's
because,” he answered, “we don't have anything to say to each
other! I mean how come she's here after just being that stuck up
person whom nobody likes - except for her own folks!?”
“I
suppose there isn't any need for therapy for her according to you,
then? But I, I feel she needs therapy, just like you! And thereby she
needs also to be treated with respect just like the rest of you all!”
The
second girl said: “I guess we should all go home then and talk to
our freaking parents about this session, which wasn't at all very
rewarding, but which after all taught us to reward our parents for
not being as stuck up as they, those who pester us for all they're
worth, as it seems!”
The
therapist looked at her watch and stated: “Yes, I believe there's
need for doing something of that kind for perhaps all of you. But
before you rush into anything, let me just tell you that it's not
demanded from me that you tell your parents about anything. But
neither do I recommend that you don't. Because I feel that if you do
- to the extent you do it - you will very likely be able to find
out from them, at least something about who might have to be seen as
stuck up according to them. Thereby I recommend for you all to try to
be into thinking about them as something of wiser than you are, and
thereby, perhaps, you can get yourselves to talk to them, and thereby
get to know yourselves from them. But, as I said, you should not feel
that you really should have to do that. What I mean is that if you
can, you really aught to try that!”
Upon
that she ended the session by rising from her seat and going to the
door, standing at which she said: “I fully understand that some of
you feel uncomfortable in this group as well as with for example your
parents. If so - or something similar to it - then you should try
to feel comfortable with at least relating your problems with
someone, perhaps not me, who thereby can be your parent about it! If
not, then I am ready to be your parent, and then perhaps you can feel
as well that I am the one to find it in to take interest in your
problems.
“As
for you, Linda, your problem with your grandma and mother both being
stuck up, please turn to anyone else about it! I don't feel that you,
yet, aught to speak to either of those two directly about it! And for
you others, all of whom are already in therapy since at least six
months, you should be speaking to either your parents,or to me, or to
anyone. But don't speak to your parents if they don't agree with that
you should consider them haughty - or stuck up, that is. Just speak
to them to the extent they actually feel bad about themselves for
being stuck up, or, as with Lisa, that they are not even part of that
problem for you!
“Even
if there perhaps are tendencies of facial happiness seeming to be
everything there is of trust from your friends or so, even if so, you
should try to speak to me, your parents - or at least someone!”
Not
until now did she open the door. Linda stood and waited until all
others - but the therapist - had left. Then she walked slowly
towards the door, and whispered said to the therapist: “I don't
have anyone to talk to! But I feel not even that I want to talk to
you about my problems! So how can I abide by the assignment without
you - or all others I might talk to - feeling that I am not to be
seen as anyone but an idiot who doesn't seem to fit in with anyone
but those who despise me?”
“I
feel you are not to be despised! Now how come you are so scared of me
or anyone else relating to your side of the story you have to tell?
To tell me is, I can assure you, not a very dangerous thing! To tell
your parents, or your grandmother or so, can be that, but for me it's
not very interesting to have them know what we say to each other. So
why don't you tell me, and then I'll drive you home, but not until
you've told me all will I have to take you to those parents you are
so afraid of!”
With
that they talked for about half an hour. But Linda didn't really say
much about how to relate to her mother (or the father whom she hardly
knew). Instead she fussed about her mother not trying even to feel
empathetic, which the therapist tried to sympathise with. But in the
end she just felt confident that she had in Linda a patient who would
never be well and whom she thereby didn't have to care about.
She
drove her home and followed her up to her mother apartment. When
saying hello to the mother of Linda, she felt that she could not
believe Linda to be an imbecile. But even so she felt tempted to
actually scold her as such. But for the better of things, she
thought, the mother seemed to be into saying to herself that she
didn't have to be into finding this therapist to be very bad even if
the therapy failed.
Sunday, March 20, 2016
A Very Adult Vacation
Adult (or at least semi-adult) story; follow the link if you want to read it anyway: A Very Adult Vacation
Wednesday, March 16, 2016
Matters of Trust
Sitting in the rather cheap salad bar
in the neighbourhood, I happen to overhear two people talking from
the next table. They are one young man and one young woman. I can
fairly easily look right at them, and have noted them both to be
fairly good-looking. Thereby I feel a bit surprised by their
attitudes:
“It's true!” the young woman said.
“Almost every other guy I've met has been thorough about checking
me out as though I was an imbecile!”
The guy looked at her. “Me too,” he
said after a while. “But also feel the young women in this
neighbourhood seem to laugh at that I am naive enough - or something
- to find it in me to be a guy who would have cared to care about
morals and stuff.”
“Then what do you mean that I am not
the only one that you could imagine hanging out with among the girls
around here?!”
“I mean that I simply imagine them to
be for real about morals and stuff.”
“What do you mean you simply imagine
that!? I mean couldn't they be what you should realize that you aught
to avoid them?! They could be even meaner in the long run if you
don't! That's what I feel!” she burst out.
He sighed. “No! I hate to imagine
everybody to simply be faking that they are into morals just for the
sake of pretending they aren't for real about finding it in
themselves to care for immorality and so!”
She seemed disturbed by this. After a
while she looked deeply into his eyes and said: “You don't know
what they can do to someone who is naive with them!”
He stared at her for a while. “I
imagine they can't take it for granted that they are good enough
people to be into trying to be good all the time! But I cannot say to
myself that they are completely evil, unless they are clearly into
pretending to be simply about ways of being clear minded about having
lust for evils that one cannot say to oneself that anyone has a right
to do.”
“Do you mean that they seem to be
good just because they don't pretend all the time to be satanists or
something?!”
“Yeah! That's sort of what I mean!”
he said rather solemnly. “But I do mean to say that I also am into
believing that they are satanists even without there being any proof
for that!”
The girl looked a little bit uneasy
about this. “I feel they are into sort of being into satan! I feel
they are into him in the sense that they are into evil in the first
place! It is evil to pretend as though they are rather good people
when one knows that they don't care for either men nor other women in
any sort of real sense!”
“I can't suppose they don't really
care for one another,” he said, with an attempted air of
apprehension. After a short silence he added: “Also, I don't think
I'm into pretending they're as evil as the men they hang out with!”
The girl looked at him as if she had
just seen a ghost. At first she said nothing. Then she slowly began
to say that she was into something that she didn't realize they
seemed to be too innocent to do to her.
But he looked as if there was nothing
real about what she was telling him.
Then she continued by saying that they
actually pretended to be for real about men around here. But instead
they actually harassed other women, as long as they weren't part of
“the type of attitude,” she said “that seemed to lure about
them - or at least I find them to be full of that real evil
attitude!”
“I feel that they are not into men
and thereby they are evil enough not to try to realize what is evil
and what isn't! It is not up to me to decide, of course, what is and
what isn't - I don't mean that! But still i can find it in me that
as a man I can find it in me to know something about when things
start to really be evil, and then I have to care about it, unless I'm
a bad man. But with you and other girls and women around here, it is
as if they never had any man around them, except for in a sense their
family and perhaps one or two others. Thereby I feel they are not
imbecile but evil but not in the sense that you put it when you say
they're into the devil - even sort of!”
As I listen to this I start to realize
that it's not imbecile to realize one is bad, but that it's also not
imbecile to realize it too little to take for granted that one must
be punished - unless God somehow fixes one a punishment just the
same! As I keep on thinking about this, I find the two people before
me to be rather imbecile, the two of them, apart from the fact that
they are both into God in the not so imbecile sense that they are
mature enough to care about what He has to say about morals.
While I ponder upon this, I find that
the two people before me rise and leave. They are not talking any
more about good and evil, nor rights and wrongs. Instead they are
talking about going home to her place or his, and they somehow seem
too trustworthy to be viewed as the kinds of people that God punishes
for their attitudes about seeing more of each other.
Friday, March 11, 2016
Scornful Attitudes for a Newcomer
This story is not really for adults only! ... : Scornful Attitudes for a Newcomer
Monday, February 29, 2016
In the Mists of the Dissatisfaction of an Honest Man
They stood there, crying, those two
girls, about whom Donald knew for certain that they at least one of
them must have stolen his wallet. Even so they looked very innocent,
although there was absolutely no way that they could actually be it!
In amazement Donald stared at them for a while.
Then one of them said: “I was trying
to find out if it was he who had stolen my ticket for the train.”
then she gave a fairly detailed description of the train ticket he
had himself bought earlier that day.
A boy who was with the girls stood up
and said to him: “You better give that ticket back to her! Because
it's no way to treat an innocent girl like that to fake that its she
who stole from you rather than the other way around!”
Even the boy looked astonishingly
innocent to Donald, although he wasn't exactly the crying type - on
the surface, even. Instead, he looked a bit threateningly at him now.
At first Donald was frightened so that he felt he couldn't decide on
what to say. But after a short while he did speak his mind, and said:
“I don't recall that she ever had a reason to think I ever stole
from her! I believe that they are just faking it! And so are you
perhaps!?”
He looked at the three of them. All of
them seemed to be from somewhere near Mediterranean sea, or so, he
thought, and looked glanced quickly at each of them again. Then he
felt that the three of them were related, and probably even siblings.
In the pub where they confronted each
other, there were fairly many people around the four of them. A lady
who seemed to have been listening since about two minutes back said:
“I don't believe you can have the guts to say to the girls there
that they are trying to steal from you! Instead, you just stand here
and say to everyone else that they have been stealing from you!”
This comment surprised Donald a bit, because the lady who had spoken
seemed unrelated to the other three. But he found her to be perhaps
in league with them - and possibly even related to them, even
though it didn't show.
A bartender arrived and looked at them
all. He had an air of sophistication about his ways, which Donald
wondered if it had to do with that he worked with other things as
well.
“What should they all think you are?”
the bartender asked him. “It seems to me, as well, that you are an
asshole in having stolen from these young and innocent girls.”
Donald felt happy that he hadn't drunk
more than one glass of whine that evening. Because, he figured, they
could perhaps even have had him himself believe their fairly
outrageous lies, if he had! At the same time, though, he felt
frightened about not being able to show that he was not the one who
was guilty at all of stealing anything form anyone this evening.
There wasn't even a clue in him about how the could have stolen even
a train ticket.
“Unlike those youngsters, and perhaps
that young woman too, I can't trick people into believing me! But I
can say I'm innocent because I'm not very capable of stealing! I
wouldn't be the one to be able to steal that ticket - and perhaps I
can even prove, later on that it was I who bought such a ticket
earlier today!”
The waiter looked at him for a while.
He seemed to be into scrutinizing him to the extent he could possibly
be a liar. Then he answered: “I can't know to which extent you're
imbecile enough not to be able to steal anything! But this time it's
you who owe her a ticket, not the other way around!”
Donald stood still for a while, a bit
baffled by it all. Then he checked his pockets, and found that he
didn't even find his car keys. Nor could he find his mobile phone,
which didn't surprise him, disturbed him even more about that the
girls - and whoever else could be in on it - seemed very guilty
to the extent they didn't admit that he was the one that someone had
stolen from.
For that reason he said to the waiter:
“Even though they look innocent, I still don't have my care keys,
even. Can you understand that it's probably she who stole them.” He
pointed at one of the girls. “If not, then it's probably her
sister, but I wouldn't know who very easily!”
The waiter examined him again. But this
time he chose to believe him. “Okay,” he said, “I'll call the
cops and tell them a young man has probably been pick-pocketed by
some youngsters who act innocent, but who do steal cars, even, as it
seems.”
Relieved, Donald thanked the man, who
said that it was nothing to thank him for; he just did his duty, and
that now that he believed him he should get the help they, the
police, can give him.
When the police arrived the waiter and
Donald and a few others who had been there described the three
youngsters. Even the woman who had taken their part initially
described them fairly thoroughly and called them rascals, of whom she
had thought better but now realized even they could be totally guilty
although looking innocent.
Donald gave a description of the three
as dark-haired, fairly dark-skinned but not too obviously southern.
He said they somehow matched his idea about how robbers who might
kill during their robberies might look. At the same time, though, he
said, they seemed to him to pretend to be innocent so thoroughly that
for seeming it they might have to alienate themselves from all that
they're doing.
Two weeks later, the police had caught
two guys and two girls who seemed to match those criteria and a few
others of those who had given evidence or so about them. The two
girls and one of the boys did seem to Donald to be those who
seemingly stole both his wallet and his car keys. The forth boy was,
the police said, an accomplice who wasn't at the scene of that crime,
but whom they had caught red-handed, while robbing someone else.
Saturday, February 27, 2016
Bad Neighborhood
“I don't feel comfortable about it!”
Sonya said. “I mean all the suggestive porn we have around here!”
Her two brothers looked at her. The
younger one, Richard, answered: “I sort of don't like it either,
actually. I mean i really fancied it to begin with. But nowadays I
feel rather fed up with it.”
“Me too,” the eldest one said and
cleared his throat. “I actually feel that their into so pointless
sex that it's rather boring in the long run.”
“I feel, that we've actually been
tricked by them, you and I,” Richard answered him, “into fancying
it to the degree that neither one of us can fancy sex without that
edge to it anymore. Or at least I feel that way about it!” he
exclaimed.
“Yeah, me too” his brother said.
Sonya looked at them. “I feel they
are trying to harass me into feeling that way. I mean into feeling
that I have to fancy that stuff for real! What has happened to you
guys upon that you fell into their trap?!”
Her two brothers were silent for a
while, then the younger one spoke: “I guess we both felt
embarrassed unless we fancied it to begin with. What happened to me
after introducing myself to that type of fancy is mostly that I began
feeling blunt and so. As for Patrick, I guess he feels the same, but
off course you better speak for yourself old bro!”
Patrick said nothing at first. Then he
began slowly telling them that he felt more than just blunt about it.
He said he felt both and humiliation he couldn't quite describe, he
said.
“Really!?” his siblings said.
He sighed. “Yeah, really that bad.
But in a sense I felt I had to enjoy for a fairly long time, you know
when we were new here and only I was a teenager. Now that the two of
you are fourteen, I guess I should tell you again about how they
seemed to be so clever at seducing me and then simply left me for the
fool who paid them for actually leaving me with my shame and my
guilt!”
“I feel it's silly to say that they
didn't seduce you old bro,” Richard said. But Sonya broke in and
said:”I feel that you shouldn't have fancied them in the first
place. Even though they - and who are they, actually - seems to
have pressured you into believing in them, I feel that those whores
are nothing that they want to seem to be about, and that they're
nothing of value to anyone with the right fancy of things!”
Patrick stared downwards, his gaze sort
emptying out, it seemed with the notions he had of - was it of
himself - or was it of something else? ... “I know!” he said
at last.
Sonya looked at him with pity. “Oh,
Patrick, I'm sorry if I just insulted you for what you already are
into hating yourself for! I can't suppose it's not easy for you! ...
Even I could have, I guess, fallen for at least one or two of those
gigolos who are also out there!”
“I feel,” Patrick said finally,
“that you and he, Sonya, don't seem to care for the notions of the
attitudes that I have warned you for. I feel that there's no reason
for us to pay attention to those gigolos nor whores any more.”
Sonya and Patrick looked at him. Then
Patrick glanced at Sonya and then looked back. “I guess there's not
any big deal about simply having it they're idiots apart from the
seductive capacity they all have! How about we all, including our
parents perhaps, start seeing that in them. I mean in a different
sense than to religiously or something try to pretend as though we
were sort chosen to be better!”
“Yeah! I think we should!” Sonya
burst out. Richard, too seemed to agree. “Yes let's to that!” he
said. But then after a short break he added: “I feel that we both,
I and you, Sonya, are wise now in the sense that we probably can't be
caught in the trap of the prostitutes or the other pornographers. But
I feel also that we are not, probably, wise enough to be able to
handle any embarrassment or harassment they might do to us! I mean
somewhere dons the line, it seems, some of them are gonna start
having it we are stuck up unless we try to fake that we're into the
same kinds of thinking as they are! Right? ... Sonya? ... Patrick?”
His two siblings looked at one another.
Sonya began saying that she wasn't sure about what he meant when her
older brother broke in and answered: “I feel that they are not
gonna harass us since we all now know what they're into!”
Sonya shrugged. “No, I guess not,
then!” she said.
Richard looked at the two of them. “I
feel there's no embarrassment, actually, anymore, to the extent that
I can see it in them to be nothing but the frauds they are. But how
about you, though, old bro? you have seemed to be into thinking about
them as though they supposedly could have been wise if they only were
out of that lifestyle. In a sense I think that will be a trap for
him!” he added, looking at his sister, who took notice and seemed
rather thoughtful for a while, during which she began saying that she
wanted them both to feel safe about themselves. “Because it seems,”
she said, “that they all are going to find us to be naively
innocent or so, and by that notion insinuate that we should be into
sex of their awful kind!”
Her brothers both looked rather
thoughtful at this. After a while they both said that they agreed.
Patrick added that they “might not have to be into caring about it,
their bullying, I mean. But we might all need to become more proud
and confident in, not only ourselves, but also in truth, decency and
so.”
“I meant that!” Sonya replied.
“Okay. But it seems I and not you was
able to say it, then, sis!”
“Anyway,” he added, “I expect to
be going to college fairly soon. Because, after all, since we moved
here, they - I mean our parents - have been saving money for it.
I'm not sure if you know it actually, but hey really did say that
they were gonna move with us to a cheap neighbourhood because they
wanted to make sure the money they saved for my college education,
and yours too, would be enough!”
Sonya looked thoughtful and replied: “I
guess they can have said that sort of a thing!” Richard agreed, but
looked thoughtful and added:
“But then what shall we expect of
ourselves once we're there?! Do they expect us to be able to cope
with higher-class class mates who seem to have it we are into
actually being beneath them?”
“I don't know what they feel we
should say to ourselves about that. But perhaps we aught to just
leave it be until we're there, apart from simply sticking together
about not becoming bad just because we live in a bad neighbourhood!”
His two younger siblings seemed to
agree.''
“Then why don't we all,” Patrick
added, “fancy ourselves as seemingly that wise and smart, so that
our rotten neighbourhood doesn't get at us very much?!”
“Obviously we shall!” his younger
siblings answered.
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