radfrac_archive: (dichotomy)
...remarkable that they exist at all, is what I'm saying. As opposed to remarkable in themselves. The main thing is that I wrote something using this method, not that I wrote something that was good.

Anyway. I'll just give you the highlights.


The top drawer contained only a stack of clean handkerchiefs and a new concept in personal comfort.

We all laughed out loud, more from a deep drain in the centre of the floor, a musty odour and curl of smoke rose of sharon. Seeing that it wouldn't hurt, but once I heard the stutter of the tattoo gun, I knew my chest, knocking her backwards. She seemed almost to hop in a question I could not formulate even for myself. "If this is it," I said, "Then rather than stars and colder than night: it all collapses."


This process works better with more than one person, clearly. Then, it juxtaposes different habits of thought, contrasting syntactic reflexes. Much of what I left out I omitted for being too coherent, rather than the opposite, which seems weird (even uncomfortable) in itself. Maybe this is a bit like brushing the dust off what might be the foundation stones of the story always running in my mind. Or maybe it's February.

{rf}
radfrac_archive: (dichotomy)
I've been struggling to write this winter. Eventually I broke down and started creating little apparatus* to generate writing independently of my shivering ego.

On the kitchen counter, I have a pile of yellow notepaper with the top folded over and cellotaped into an increasingly tight and sticky roll. In the morning (when I remember) I write a line on each of four sheets, finishing with the first word of the next line, which is always the same word, so that I have four more or less identical sheets. Then I scramble them and try (usually with success, I am faintly alarmed to admit) to forget what I wrote. The next day I take up with a line of something completely different, ending on a new word.

I had no conscious sense of creating continuity -- tried actively to disrupt the possibility of picking up the same story from line to line on the same sheet. Still, order manifests, or my preoccupations do.

I thought it might be time to open one. The tape gave me some trouble, but here is a vaguely gothic fragment from January:

The young man rolled his ghostly eyes and blew out an intricate latticework of smoke. Should I tremble feverishly as he opened the envelope -- so badly that the paper slipped from the government. I turned it over in my hands. I knew I should open it, but someow doing that I mean what I say -- or else what is left for me?" He struck himself violently in the chest bound in brass sitting in the middle of the floor. Its lock was shaped like a crescent moon. A sudden panic gripped the dog -- some sort of wordless existential horror. He barked, but rather than enough time to discover what you feel. What is your answer? My God, what is it you want?"

But he was silent.


{rf}

*I wanted to put apparati, but apparently that is bad Latin and the plural of apparatus is apparatus, or apparatuses.

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