Sunday 21 June 2009

A new story and a new challege

A conversation with Lee and Dean today inspired me to write my first proper work of fiction. Although I love sci-fi, I had pretty much decided against trying to write any as I don’t have enough of a scientific background to do it properly, but this idea seemed basic enough for me to have a go. It’s just shy of 2000 words, which is the longest I’ve written so far, and I’m fairly happy with how it’s come out. I’ll no doubt do some editing over the next few days, but here’s the first draft anyway.

Survival

The worst thing about the job was the realisation that we'd never know whether it worked. If nothing happened it might mean we'd succeeded, or it could equally mean we were wrong, and the changes we made - the little atrocities we daily committed - were as unnecessary as they were inhumane. The thing was, if we were right, if we really were preventing catastrophe, the only way to prove it would be to stop, and then we'd...well, that line of thinking never got us anywhere. Even if it failed and the very effects we were striving to prevent were too far in motion to be stopped, we'd never see the realisation within our lifetime. Quite a conscience tester though, doing a thankless, controversial job; hated by near everyone whether religious or not and never knowing whether you were a hero or a terrorist.

Getting the equipment was easy enough, I worked with it every day. Sometimes your round would leave you closer to home than to the recharge bay, and you just went straight home and recharged the pod in your own garage. The company paid for the power anyway so it didn't matter to you, just saved you a trip. It was one of the perks of the job that all energy consumption bills were covered by the state, I guess as an incentive to take the job. With fuel prices so high people would do pretty much anything if you gave them it for free. So yeah, the equipment was no problem. Getting it in the house without her knowing, and using it in secret was going to be the tricky part. I'd told her she'd passed. She didn't have to have the procedure. She didn't have to bear the shame of being unfit for purpose. The knowledge would crush her. The damage done by the buffer serum would pale in comparison to the psychological damage of knowing she wasn't good enough, that there was something wrong with her that couldn't be fixed. They called it a buffer to make it sound like a kind of protection, and I suppose in perverse way it was. But to me, buffer had only ever really meant one thing - end of the line.

"Bad day?" she asked
"No", I smiled, realising how sullen I must have looked as I came in, "today I was a hero"
"You always are to me"

The glint of love in her eye was as a sliver of lead through my stomach as the guilt hit me. She meant it, there was no irony yet if she only knew the macabre task that lay ahead of me she'd understand why I didn't feel a hero tonight. Some days you felt the shame of a murderer, other days you realised how essential you were to every man, woman and child the world over. Today had been a good day: I'd seen it all for the best. "I am making a brighter future with each candle I snuff out" I would tell myself, "The prophylactic nature of my job is just and honourable", just like I'd been trained, and today I believed it. Right up until I got back to the office and picked up her results. They usually sent them out by post, but because the lab was in the same building as my department, I'd arranged to pick them up myself. It was still a relatively new procedure at this point, so the protocols and processes weren't yet so rigid that everything had to be done by the book. It wasn't yet so hated that everything had to be done to the letter for fear of the consequences, so it hadn't been seen as untoward, that I was picking up my wife's results rather than have her receive them at home, on her own, while I was out performing the very service she feared she would soon be the unwilling customer of.

I already had a faked success report, in preparation for the worst - whatever the outcome, she had to always believe that she passed. I'd seen and delivered enough of the damn forms to undeserving, arrogant pricks, to have had chance to scan and amend one. The facsimile was good, convincing. It wouldn't convince anyone working in the department, or a judge, but it would be enough for her. It looked completely different to the form I pulled out of the envelope though. The simple, plain form - so plain it almost mocked the cruelty of the news it delivered. she had failed the test. Mentally she was fine; aptitude tests quite a mark above average. She was no Olympian but was in sufficient physical shape to be allowed to carry. The problem was a single dormant gene. She was a carrier of some pretty much unheard-of degenerative disease. She might contract the affliction herself at any time, but had just been lucky so far. So much has happened since I read it I don't even remember what the disease was, now I wish I'd paid more attention - it plagues me every night, trying to remember what it was. Back then it didn't seem important what she had, the only important thing was that she would never be allowed children, and that not only would I be the one to have to tell her, but that I would be the one to perform the procedure.

Some years ago the governments of the world realised that simply being greener wasn't enough. cleaner, more sustainable fuel sources did not change the fact that there were simply too many people. We were not affecting the climate just by our actions or inactions anymore, we were affecting it by our very presence. Scientists had known for years that this was the case and had eventually pressured the governments into encouraging vegetarianism and self sufficiency, hoping against hope that they could reduce the number of other animals, to prevent having to reduce the numbers of the animals causing the most damage. Humans. For a time things looked positive: with fewer livestock everywhere, with food being grown locally and delivered to people's houses to save them all having individual transport, a visible change had taken place, things were improving. But it wasn't long before the governments realised the change was too slow. We had only postponed, not prevented our fate. Action needed to be taken, drastic action, but without causing a panic. A delicately balanced amount of information was systematically introduced into the public domain, pressure applied to the press and the broadcasters to encourage more careful family planning and make smaller families more desirable, more socially acceptable. It was subtly done - TV shows started having fewer people in each family. In children's programming protagonists were rarely shown to have more than one sibling, and often they would antagonise and make the idea of a brother or sister almost repulsive. Planting the seed to prepare people for the next phase. Giving them the subconscious feeling that large families are bad and wasteful. The one real benefit that reducing the animals had had was showing that reducing numbers could have a positive effect. However bitter the pill would be to swallow, it would be difficult to deny that it was probably going to work and as long as the majority of the speculation held hope for a favourable outcome, that should be enough to carry the legislation through with little public resistance.

The end result was that by the time they introduced means-tested sterilisation, a large proportion of the populace was relatively easily convinced that it was for the best and some even volunteered for the procedure before being tested. Debates had raged for months between parliaments to determine how the selection process would be decided. Some had suggested a lottery, arguing that means testing, though more beneficial for the species as a whole, was in itself a genetic lottery - someone who was intelligent, healthy and strong would be more likely to provide intelligent, healthy offspring, but how did that make them more worthy or deserving than someone who had contributed to society's greater good for years, yet carried a dormant defective gene? Others had said that each nation should have to sterilise a percentage of their population and they would each be responsible for making the decision themselves how best to choose. Inevitably different faiths argued different standpoints, according to their own specific dogma, and what was acceptable according to their teachings, but they were eventually shouted down by the scientific community who argued that enough of their rules were already being regularly broken as to render meaningless any opposition to the process on religious grounds. Eventually the squabbling had gone on long enough and the tests were decided upon. As the whole point of the exercise was the survival of the species, it seemed most logical to the majority of debaters, that the process should be a kind of orchestrated natural selection - survival of the potentially fittest. If someone was up to certain standard against a list of desirable criteria, they were allowed to reproduce, if they failed any one of the tests, they would be the end of their line. Knowing how difficult it would be to police and control such a decision, the buffer serum was developed, to painlessly render the subject infertile and unable to reproduce. At least, in terms of the physical it was painless.

As long as we had known each other there had been no question of us growing old without bringing new lives into the world. Unswerved by the negative light society now shone on large families, we still had dreams of nurseries and playrooms, and small voices filling the air with laughter. We both wanted children, lots of them, but had slowly resigned ourselves to the idea that one or two would be all we were allowed. Not being able to have any would be too heartbreaking to bear, and I knew that the guilt of having been the one to prevent it could prove be too much for either one of us to bear. Despite this, I knew that telling her would seem like an accusation, an open declaration of failure, it would be too big a thing for us to have between us, so quite simply, she could never know. I could never tell her the truth. I would tell her she had passed the test. The only flaw in my plan was that just telling her was not enough, she had to believe she was ok, and in the clear, yet never conceive a child, lest the company find out that I had failed in my duty. She still had to undergo the procedure or our offspring would end up orphaned, as both parents spent the rest of their days incarcerated for violating the mandatory sterilisation act. I knew what I had to do, and the night I gave her the results I brought the pod home to charge. We celebrated and although heavy with the weight of the lie, my heart soared to see her so happy and relieved. She was tired before me, as always happens when she drinks, so I tucked her into bed, content and at peace with the world. As I sat in the garage some minutes later, administering the buffer serum to myself, the smile on her face ran through my head and made me glad it was me making the sacrifice instead of her.

Saturday 20 June 2009

Norden Carnival

You can see all the photos from the carnival over on flickr

Heroes

I remember being mesmerised by the guy on the bike. There was a long tarmac road down the back of our terrace and all the kids used to play there. It had a slight incline so was perfect for sitting on skateboards and racing to the bottom, and also interlocked with a ginnel that lead to the main road so there was enough room to cycle too. This was before we ever did either though - I was five and I, along with all the other kids, were watching an older boy on on a motorbike. He was doing tricks up against walls and up and down the tarmac road, which to a bunch of four- to seven-year-olds was like being able to watch Evel Knieval, for free, just outside your back garden. We were all entranced, but having always had the fear of danger, I was perhaps more engrossed than the others and was paying far more attention to what the amazing stunt guy was doing, than I was to what i was doing. Anyone noticing this group of young kids watching a slick teenager showing off on a petrol-powered killing machine would doubtless have been expecting an accident at any moment - he was jumping and pulling off insane wheelies and driving up walls - he was bound to come a cropper at some point, so it was to everyone's surprise, mine most of all, when the inevitable accident befell not the daring motorcyclist, but the awestruck boy of five who, oblivious to all but the spectacle before him, had tripped and fallen face-first onto the tarmac.

I remember a sudden flash of pain, more than anything I'd ever felt before, then a bewildered numbness. Too stunned to move, I was jolted back to awareness by the crash of the bike hitting tarmac. First guilt hit - my stupidity had distracted the motorcyclist and he'd fallen off, no doubt sustaining injuries far worse than mine -then a glorious warm glow of relief as I felt myself being picked up and carried, very very carefully, but quickly, back to my house and the realisation hit that the older boy had been aware of us the whole time and at the merest sign of trouble had simply thrown his bike to the ground and was now getting me safely home. I suppose the next bit is patchy as my brain has either forgotten or blocked out all but the most pertinent details. Mum's horror at realising I was badly injured enough to have to be carried, wondering what new stupidity I'd discovered, then relief as it dawned that I was just too stunned to move, finally settling on ad hoc efficiency as she realised that amount of blood was going to mean a hospital trip.

How we got to hospital I have no idea - I don't know if I've simply forgotten, or if the surrealism of the event, made up entirely of feelings and thoughts I had never experienced was just too much and I just shut it all out - but I still remember the sudden, horrific petrifaction upon being told I was going to have to be stitched. I had learned how to sew at school, with one of those square bits of cloth with the holes pre-cut for small, clumsy hands, and the thick thread that went through them, making great big crosses. To my still very naive mind, this was what I understood as stitching and the idea of this being done to my face was quite simply too much to take. Everything after that is missing. To this day I don't know if I passed out, if they anaesthetised me, or if I've simply blocked it out, but whichever it was, I have no memory of actually being stitched. Something I can only be grateful for. What I do remember is being told afterwards that I had had three stitches and being confused when looking at my chin that I couldn't see them, just a big cut with a few lines across.

Some weeks later I went to have the stitches out and was very pleased and proud when I was told I could take the stitches home with me. The nurse very carefully cut them out (this surely must have hurt like hell, but I don't remember it, so I suppose either it didn't or it's just something else to add to the list of things I chose not to remember), and stuck them between two bits of sticky tape. Three long, wavy bits of purple thread. I took them home and proudly showed all my friends, and even more proudly showed the whole school, when I was allowed to take them in for showing assembly, where they were met with genuine awe as the teacher played up my bravery and the mere mortals beheld and revered my coolness at having been stitched up and survived. I was a battle-scarred hero and the stitches were my spoils of war.

But I wasn't the hero. The hero was the motorcyclist, who had been watching all along, waiting for one of us to do something stupid like jump in front of the bike, or fall off a wall only a few inches high. The crash of the bike and the miniscule amount of time that passed between that and me arriving home lead me to think he must have just thrown the bike down, engine still running, and picked me up in one swift move - no thought to his own possessions, my safety paramount. The scar is still there, at the front of my chin - my first real war wound - and each time I see it I am reminded of the lesson he taught me: sometimes you can help someone at your own expense and whether you know it or not, you can change someone's entire outlook on life and to  that one person you can be a hero. Unrecognised, unknown, unthanked, but a hero.

 

 

This is story number six. For more stories, click here.

Friday 12 June 2009

New online stuff

You’ll be forgiven for TLDR’ing this entry cause it’s quite long.

Took the day off work today to chill out a bit and have been very glad of it. This morning D3-3Nasked on twitter: “what is this tumblr.com stuff???”. I’d been wondering about that myself so, seeing as I have the day free, decided to investigate. With this kind of thing I tend to find that reading about the service seldom actually helps me understand what it’s supposed to do, or more importantly what I can do with it, and it’s generally easier to just sign up and dick about with the settings till you find out what it can and can’t do. Off I went to tumblr to sign up, but was aghast to discover someone had already registered mogfather.tumblr.com. Arses.

Then it occurred to me – maybe I registered it and forgot about it. The password reset page asks for an email address, not many it can be, so within a few minutes I discover it was me that registered it, and never used it, and we are now logged in and good to go. So I have a play around with the settings and find it’s really just a blog, but with an interesting interface. One thing it does have though is facility to park a domain on it, so you can register your domain then park in on tumblr and effectively have your tumblr page as your website.

blogger offers a similar setup, but it’s rather more complicated – firstly you can’t par a domain on blogger – only a subdomain. Presumably blogger don’t want you to have your blog as your main site. It does allow you to use the www. subdomain, but this means that if someone just enters the domain without the www then the site won’t display, unless you set up some kind of domain forwarding, which is an unnecessary pain in the arse. Also the DNS for blogger is a bit fail in that you have to point the cname at ghs.google.com, whereas tumblr allows you to actually set the A-record to point to tumblr, so if you go to the site either with or without the www it will display fine.

Tumblr also allows you to upload mp3 files (though only one a day, bizarrely) and then it puts a little player on the blog entry. Interesting idea, not sure how much use it will be, but a nice idea for maybe posting your song of the day, which people can then subscribe to. There are various other media types you can upload, some of which (quote and chat) I’m not yet sure of the point of as surely text would do the same. I guess I’ll find out next time I want to quote something. The upload options look like this:

image

On the video section you can either use a URL for a video that’s already hosted elsewhere (a similar setting on audio allows you to bypass the one mp3 a day rule, provided it’s hosted elsewhere), or you can upload a video, though it does require signing up to a new service to do that – tumblr don’t host the video themselves, but rather they’re hosted on Vimeo so you have to log into Vimeo to post it. Not too much of a problem, but it strikes me that if you have a Vimeo account you’d have uploaded the video there anyway and so would just use the URL of that upload on Vimeo, thus rendering the upload option a bit pointless as far as I can see.

One nice feature is the RSS option. I’m a sucker for RSS because I personally think it’s the future and can’t understand why hardly anyone uses it, so anything which uses feeds in a new or interesting way instantly has my attention. I’ve been quite pleased with the twitterfeed setup which allows you to setup a bot to automatically check specified RSS feeds and update your twitter status when a new entry is published. I’ve used it for tweeting when I have a new blog entry (though not this one as I have a new toy to try for that – see further down), but there really isn’t any limit to what you could use it for as you don’t actually have to own the RSS feed in order to tweet it.

Anyway, back to the point, tumblr allows you to do a similar thing to twitter feed in that you give the details of up to 5 RSS feeds and it will update your tumblr each time the relevant feeds are updated, so I could for examle use it as an amalgamator of my various blogs – I have several different ones for different subjects, but it could be useful to have a central point where all the updates can been seen in one place. Add to this the fact that there are various tumblr plug-ins which allow you to embed a tumblr feed on a webpage, so you could even use tumblr as a conduit to collect and collate various information and then post it on your actual website, without viewers ever having to visit your tumblr page.

All this is for the most part redundant and pointless, but I love the fact that it’s possible, and for anyone wanting to promote themselves on the internet could save themselves a lot of troublesome duplication by using services like these. While retarded geeks like me sign up for pretty much any- and everything going, the vast majority of people only sign up for at most 3 or 4 inline services or social notworking sites, so how do you get your product/artist seen by everyone? Well this kind of setup could be just the thing, so you just update one blog or site, and have numerous feeds readers ready to automatically re-broadcast it to countless other services so it gets seen by all the world and his dog. One step closer to, as Dirk Gently (nĂ© Svlad Cjelli) called it “the fundamental interconnectedness of all things”, which would I think, make Douglas Adams very happy. I was recently pleased to see that I’m not the only person who wishes DNA had survived long enough to be the best twitterer ever – more here.

So I guess the conclusion is that tumblr looks like it might be quite cool, given more time to work out what everything does. This blog also signifies two tests – firstly I’m trying a new twtter updater in windows live writer, which should automatically update my twitter feed when I post this, and also the RSS feed on tumblr, which should also update after I post. Have a look here if you want to see whether it worked.

Tuesday 9 June 2009

Comments fixed

Right, I’ve been having a play around with the wordpress settings today, and I think I’ve now fixed it so that comments can now be left without you having to sign up (apologies to those of you who have already signed up). I think I still have to moderate them so your comment won’t appear straight away, but you can leave one without having to provide four pieces of identification, proof of address and a blood sample. If you have any problems posting a comment, please email me and let me know where you got stuck, along with any error messages or specifics. Cheers.

I’ve also been uploading loads of new pictures over at flickr this week.

Sunday 7 June 2009

11 seconds

Just unearthed this piece, that I wrote on 2nd May 2007 then forgot about. It's called 11 Seconds and I wrote it while bored at work.

11 Seconds

11:41:13

it's like a dim, warm glow around the head, not tired as such but drowsy and a little achy - like the first day of recovery after the flu - not quite ill, but still not quite on the same frequency as the world around me. the less there is to do, the less motivated I feel to do anything, as though the longer I sit still, the thicker and heavier grow the layers of inaction like a covering of dust ever increasing my isolation from my environment.

11:41:14

The background noise of the room, ordinarily filtered out by concentration on a given task, swells, the mind registering snippets of mundane office oratory, none of it making sense as the conversational white noise builds, too much to take in and growing almost as if building towards a final burst that never comes, an orchestra growing more frantic and frenzied, increasing in pitch and volume towards the finale then right on the cusp, putting down their instruments as though suddenly waking from their reverie and feeling rather foolish. Willing the crescendo to come, I register its lack with frustration as the noise once again ebbs to almost comprehensible snatches then begins to swell again, the cycle once again repeats.

11:41:15

I look at my hands and am taken aback by the level of detail, the clarity, as if my whole consciousness is focused on one line, almost a psychotropic reaction - zooming in until I see the cracks in the skin, the result of 29 years of bending and retracting, expanding like the banks of a new stream as my focus becomes more acute and the magnification greater. I can almost feel the retinas contract as they strain to see beyond normal scale of vision, drawn in towards a solitary hair, closer now, so I can see the textured surface like a snake, scaled and patterned in ways incomprehensible on something so minute and ordinary, so insignificant.

11:41:16

Looking down I become aware of the blood cells just below the skin rushing back and forth like commuters in some perverse biological representation of rush hour traffic, each performing its given task without question, carrying oxygen round the veins, each cell minute, ordinary and insignificant.

11:41:17

My gaze wanders, pupils expand and dilate to focus on something just on the edge of vision, something which seems almost in harmony with the red cell so recently occupying all my conscious thought. the insect, tiny and red crawling along the top of the screen, pausing now and then, returning down its well-trod path, resting and then setting out again: a vespoideal Sisyphus ever carrying its burden back and forth; its work futile, never completed. Unquestioning, it continues oblivious to all but its task and unaware of being observed in its minute, ordinary, insignificant labour.

11:41:18

Deaths unknown, unnamed, unconnected, unregistered. Headlines flash before my drowsy eyes, none taking hold, only the overwhelming sense of death and the underwhelming sense of the synapses indifferent to these losses. I have no connection to these people. Without their deaths I would never have been aware of them, the only significant act in their minute and ordinary existence being the brutal and untimely exit from their mortal coil. But like dead skin cells, they fall away, forgotten in seconds, replaced by new ones and the world turns.

11:41:19

Dust in sunlight: motes appear and disappear as though passing briefly into existence from another reality, briefly basking in the light and heat of a burning ball of gas light years away, briefly connected and in focus, then slipping away. Their insignificant entry in the annals of time minute and ordinary, witnessed by just one sentient mind and then instantly forgotten. The dead skin cells of countless individuals, having served their mundane purpose and been cast aside, unnoticed by their host.

11:41:20

Determined clicking from the computer; the unrecognised sentience of a being able to think, but only within clearly marked boundaries and parameters. incapable of expression it clicks poignantly as power courses through its conduits like electrical pulses along excited synapses, it tries desperately to justify its existence, ever aware that it is obsolete from the day of creation, unable to adapt, to learn: a relic, counting its days, wondering as it powers down each day whether it will be for the last time, whether it will be discarded and replaced by another minute, ordinary, insignificant and ultimately disposable successor.

11:41:21

A sip of water sets atoms of oxygen, each carrying two atoms of hydrogen like unwanted luggage, colliding into each other in a frenzied ballet of excitement as the liquid is heated inside the recipient. each willing the temperature to increase enough for them to break free of their liquid incarceration and be carried on currents of air to new possibilities, new elements, towards the chance encounter with another substance, another type of baggage, the chance to be part of something more significant than simply a substance so ordinary that it covers two thirds of this minute rock.

11:41:22

Oblivious to the impact the action will have, a sentient biped nonchalantly clicks send on a document he deems to be minute, ordinary, insignificant, blissfully unaware of the chain of events he is setting in motion by that single click. unaware of the reaction it will trigger in another insignificant being halfway round the world, who will realise the potential significance of the words on the screen, and will share them with other insignificant beings, who in turn will pass on the words, each iteration gaining in power.

11:41:23

The tiniest spark of hope appears like a new life, like a real-world miracle and the realisation dawns that maybe, just maybe, insignificance is relative.