Juggling Dust

Day 2,840.

Plaiting fog, knitting gravy, juggling dust – just some titles of tricky little human irritants (caused by other actual human irritants) that make the roadmap of life far from easy.

They drop their spectral fingers on the anti-gravity button, causing everything we hold dear to rise up, fade and disappear. One minute everything is there within huggable distance: money, joy, employment, love, friendship, ripped abs (insert your cherished-whatever, here). The next: 3,2,1 up, up, and away they all go! Everything has gone. Everything but us, the emptiness, frustration and anger. Invisible ankle weights bear down keeping us fixed to the earth as we gaze up through glazed eyes, watching everything we had, shrink to a dot. Just when we least expect, it strikes like a prehistoric predator acting as prophet – Veloci-Rapture. All gone. Poof!

Of course, it doesn’t all happen at once. We don’t get it all over with in one agonising lump, then start afresh. No; like our breath in Winter, it evaporates in increments. Days, weeks, months, and years meld and blur behind us. A thief in the night\day\dawn – take your pick.

I don’t actually know where I’m going with this post. Really, I don’t! I may have written myself an over-wordy sinkhole. Well, you’re this far in with me. You may as well get the popcorn.

From screaming our tiny lungs dry on our first day of birth, to screaming back at the empathy-hoover of an automated voice on the end of a phone. We get though life by juggling dust. Unfortunately, it’s obligatory and non-negotiable whether we like it (we don’t) or not. We are not told about such things at our very beginning as we wet our pants, dribble and throw our food at parents. But it soon creeps up as we grow, as life kicks us in our financial, mental, and spiritual backsides. Them’s the unwritten rules. We are the jugglers of dust. Poof!

All life on earth could paved with such an endless abundance of love, joy and sustenance for all – if only it weren’t for one clutch of nasty little elements – humans. Or more accurately, the excremental (not a typo), labyrinthine undercurrents of human nature.

Add a heap of wealth to a nice human. Now sprinkle in some success. Stir in some hype, and add dollops of ego. Let it all cook slowly in government buildings, tv and film studios, organised religious churches and the like. Decorate with the lies and deception of the high-earning, low living accumulation of digitised, online Influencer detritus who throw their pixilated barbs into us for, follows, likes and cash.  

Let it all simmer until you end up with charming a looking dish – totally inedible due to the rotten ingredients that steam and writhe within. I’d advise being in running distance of a toilet after gorging on all that.

Sounds bad? That’s us!

You still here? My apologies, and thanks.

It breaks my heart to see once-perfectly naturally beautiful girls and women, whose faces and bodies have been influenced, co-opted, branded and self-altered, become clones of one another. Lips are swollen into permanent pouts. Botox infused foreheads refuse natural expression, and (perfect?) eyebrows: waxed, tweezed, threaded, pencilled, tattooed and micro bladed within an inch of their once wild little lives.

Then we have the hollowed-out cheeks and the skull-like gauntness that haunt tabloids thanks to Ozempic or other dodgy alternatives. It was good at the start, they thought. Then . . .

The influencers make sure that natural beauty is never enough. A little fix here and there to begin with is never enough. Nothing is ever enough. We can all look never enough together until we all look exactly the same. Then comes thrill of the chase. More, more, more!

Addiction is its own savage and repulsive animal. But if it is fed daily by the greed and antipathy of the scum at the top of the mortality chain – it breeds and runs feral to the vulnerable who have already been emptied of the promises life once gave them. Its victims once the highest of intelligence and the most radiant of beauties, the strongest and most impenetrable of bodies and wills. But each will be stripped and ripped by the teeth of addiction into the most vulnerable and broken of souls. The animal is kept fed by the hand of the obsidian darkness, the bleakest of human nature. Fed by money, greed, desire; domination over every thing and every one. Nobody gets out with their dignity, beauty, finances, or souls intact. Nobody gets out alive.

As a child I used to believe in God. I was a cherubic little catholic; a choirboy and altar boy at my local church. I attended mass every Sunday. Now I don’t believe. Life saw to that. Nothing in particular happened. Life happened. But what sane god would allow the state of this once beautiful planet and its occupants to self-implode and burn like this? All tv and online news media are like scenes from Hellraiser and American Psycho. I’ve seen firsthand what organised religion can do to vulnerable, trusting people who become lost. All in the name of a loving god. They unwittingly lose their soul via their bank accounts and dignity. There are many, many genuinely good people of faith out there. There are. But devils walk among them dressed as angels and acolytes.

But god is not for me. I’ve never met a god that practices what he/she preaches. I’ve never met a god. Have you?

I’m not a vegetarian or a vegan. I’m an out-and-out carnivore. It’s in my (our) nature. I’m more than well aware, as we all are (or should be) of the sickening and horrific practices inflicted on innocent animals to get their meat to our oversized plates and mouths. I do feel that constant, distant rumble of guilt in my conscience as I chew on other-species flesh. But unfortunately, the meat still goes down. We carnivores shouldn’t be able to easily sleep at night. Our minds should be riddled constantly with deafening nightmares of the torture and depravity, perpetrated on our fellow, other-species earth dwellers. But sleep, we do. One day I will cut out meat altogether. I think it’s the right thing to do. They say ‘meat is murder.’ If you care about such things, I suppose technically, it is. I think about these things. I have a conscience. We all have a conscience!

But the slaying doesn’t stop at other-species.

And boy do we murder ourselves on a barbaric and disgustingly grand scale that would make Satan and his sick little minions wince a little as he hammers up the sign on Hell’s basement which says ‘No More Vacancies.’

Femicide, infanticide, genocide, suicide – pick a cide – but whatever cide you pick – it’s always the same cide of a bad cide of a bad lot. The inhuman side of human nature.

As children, we have the get-out clause written as the bliss of ignorance and innocence. As sane adults, we can’t use that same article. We’re willingly and gratefully ill-informed. We should know better, do better, be better. But we don’t.

If the human race were an actual greyhound race, we’d all starve to death in our wide-open traps, as the hare runs in endless circles.  

You sill here? Wow! Help!

But all that stuff, the jet-black stuff, that’s all human nature gone wrong, stuff. The dark underbelly of a superb bit of still-evolving biological super-engineering, given as a gift from the universe to a spinning rock called earth. We schlepped out of the sea one day, many years ago and Bingo! You and me.

Humans. The average Joe. Joe Bloggs – just getting though life the best we can.

Always double-checking we are wearing pants before we walk out our front door, bleary-eyed in the morning. We fill our cars with trusting humans on the school run or work, and try not to hit and maim other biological familiars in similar, speedy tin-can transport. We start work and finish the day in the hopes of not trepanning our co-workers with a long, thick shard of coffee mug when they infuriate us. We bank on them giving us the same courtesy.

Most humans are fantastic ambassadors for upright, intelligent, and chatty biology. We do try our best on a daily basis. We really do. Although we only use a tiny fraction of our brain capacity, the miniscule part that we do benefit from is mostly put to good use. Mostly. We invented the wheel, some time ago, all by ourselves! We can pretty much take the credit for miracles of medical science. All the arts? Yep, all that was us. We also invented Love Island and TikTok, but we all make mistakes. We’re only human.

This post was supposed to be quite short. A rant and ramble about how life could be so wonderful if it were not for the hearts of darkness inside the small percentage of humans belching out smoke in front of distorted mirrors. The inflicting of so much pain on the rest of humankind, animal-kind, and ecological-kind. How recovery from addiction is made so much harder by the greed and soul-filth of others trying to drag us off our wagons and under the wheels. Why we are constantly influenced to be absolutely anything and everything, but ourselves. I could have just said that. But I didn’t.

If you made it this far, you’re a trooper and a star. Unfortunately, I can’t give you your time back. But I can give you thanks.

Thanks.

Take care everyone xx

Dusty

 

 

Xeno’s Paradox

Another great great novel for you. I’ve been reading the books of Bill Bailey (the writer not the comedian) for many years now. A prolific, talented, and engaging storyteller that should definitely have a bigger audience. His non fiction is also worth your time, also. Anyway, here’s Xeno’s Paradox.


University lecturers, Luca and Max are brother and sister. Although they are genetic twins they don’t come from the same parents. They don’t understand it either, but they will. They are unsure that they are even human, but that is the very least of their problems.

We are in London, 800 years in the future. The only progress making great strides is greed, corruption, and surveillance. Innovation in technology, along with hope for humanity, ground to a halt many years ago and nobody knows why. Nobody questions the huge population drop. If fact nobody questions anything. The Re-ed process makes sure of that. Max and Luca suspect that history has been tampered with by their corrupt government.

Their plan to break into The Mint, an impenetrable government complex that houses the data they need, is put to the test by the deadliest of security. They need to retrieve the information they suspect has been compromised, to see how much of humanity’s past has been stolen from their lives. It’s never been attempted before, because it’s impossible. But something is pushing and urging them on, to take the chance – to risk everything. In an explosive, lethal, and otherworldly battle, they achieve their goal and discover much more than data – they are being helped by an unseen force.

This is only the beginning.

In Xeno’s Paradox, Bill Bailey has written a mind-weaving novel that reveals many levels and layers within its pages. You could be forgiven for reading it as a bullet-paced, sci-fi, and political thriller, but it’s so much more than that.

The book takes on philosophies of consciousness, the self, the universe, love, and how ‘good’ affects and works in tandem with its rotten twin, ‘evil’ (and vice-versa). It explores what is really pulling the invisible strings behind the too-big-to-fail corporations and governments, and offers some possible answers of hope along the way. It’s a literary MRI on the human condition.

The book is impeccably written by a talented author in charge of devastating wit, political awareness, and philosophical thought. He’s the architect of characters that live and breathe with us in our world and others. He skewers realism with the mind-blowing paradoxes we live with on a daily basis.

If you like the metaphysical intertwining’s of The Matrix, you’ll adore this book. If you like past-faced sci-fi thriller action, this book has you covered. It has everything you need, and more.

Highly recommended.


Also by the author:

THE HAUG QUINTET:

Taping Whores, Split Infinities, Oceans Apart, Comedians of Violence, Times Two.

Is Alice?

Stone the Crows

Xeno’s Paradox

The Ouroboros Ate the Tale

NON FICTION:

The  Ghost Society

Tap cover to take you to the novel’s Amazon page

That Lonely Spell, by Frances Park

Day 1,636.

Below is my little review of a dazzling memoir by the wonderful writer, Frances Park. Highly recommended! I’ve put a link to her (and her sister’s) site at the bottom of the page. Click on the book. She’s amazing!

*        *        *

I Don’t know Frances and she doesn’t know me. We’ve never met. She lives in the USA and I’m in the UK.

But now I’ve read this precious book, I now have the slight upper hand. I ‘feel’ like I know her.

For the past week, her words have been telling me some of the stories of her amazing life. She writes with such a wonderfully original and passionate voice that she could have been sitting next to me and reading aloud.

The main artery running through this book, were all the warm blood flows and pumps, is the early death of her dear father. A man I feel I know, but don’t. I wish I had. A Korean scholar; a peaceful, proud, and philosophical man who adored his family. He died at fifty-six years old. I’ve just turned that age – and I’m a dad. That’s a sobering thought.

Although the whole book reads like a love letter from daughter to her dad, it’s so much more. We get to meet many people in these pages: friends, family, colleagues and even a beloved dog. But with every story, you get to meet Frances.

As if through a movie camera lens, you’ll watch every version of her: the daughter, the sister, the lover, the friend, the teenager (who apparently she’d happily slap now), the wife, the writer, the sweet shop owner, the business woman and the dreamer of big dreams – to name but a few. But there’s only one Frances. The Frances that makes life better.

There is a lot of personal loss in the book, but these aren’t depressing or maudlin stories. We learn from them and they give us hope. Dream big, live your life, make your mark and above all, have fun with the time you have. Because you never know when it will be over.

I tried to read this book as slowly as I could so I could savour every page and take them in. But it’s hard when the writing and the voice is so good and blazingly engaging. I was gutted when finally it was over.

But Frances isn’t over. She’s  dazzlingly alive and so are her words. I know there are more glorious stories to come. So I wait.

Tap the book to take you to more books by Frances. Oh, and chocolate. 🍫

Sophie’s World

Day 295

A brief interlude whilst I write my next recovery blog. Here’s a little book review. I’m no reviewer so don’t get over-excited (not that you were).

‘The history of philosophy that thinks it’s a novel.’

I read this book when it was first published in the UK in 1995. Before this ‘novel’ I neither knew nor cared about philosophy. I’ve  read, and self-studied philosophy ever since, purely for the joy and wonder of it.

Sophie Amundsen is coming close to her fifteenth birthday when she receives an anonymous note in her mailbox, with two questions on it, ‘who are you?’ and ‘where are you from?’ From there on in, she begins to learn the history of philosophy; from Socrates, right up to present day thinkers, via her mysterious tutor.

This is written as a kind of Alice in Wonderland tale, threaded throughout ancient and modern philosophical thought. Sophie and her tutor also try to solve the mystery of why Sophie is receiving birthday messages to a girl called Hilde, who is also almost 15 years old. Who is The Major? Does God exist? Why is Alice from Wonderland knocking on her door?

There are many twists, rabbit holes, fairy tales, and philosophising; real and maybe real in this novel. Clever, engrossing and educating in equal measures. For me it was life-changing in many ways.

I met Jostein Gaarder a few years later when he was promoting his new novel, Maya. He’s a lovely person. He signed a book for me, and another book for a girl I’d just met. He said “good luck, Paul.” I posted his signed book to her house, 250 miles away. She became my wife. 5 years later, she wasn’t. But I had a son! He’s amazing and fills me with pride every day. Things happen for a reason.

I was about 28 years old when I first read this book. A lot has happened since – good, and not so good. 28 years old seems a lifetime ago. Maybe it was. Maybe it was someone else’s life. Maybe I’m still walking to that bookshop and about to find a new, life-changing joy of a book called Sophie’s World.

I hope I am, because that was/is/will be, a very good day. I really need a day, a lifetime, a joy like that again. Because things aren’t so good right now. But to do it all over again? The pleasure and the pain? I wouldn’t change a thing . . .

. . . maybe.

Enough words. Now go and read the damn book!

Take care all xx

We too are stardust