Tag Archives: Story

The No-Brainer by Umi Keezing

By Umi Keezing

            I stare blankly at the white room. White walls, white sheets. The surgeon in the white uniform sits beside my bed, watching me with an expression of—of what? I’m blanking out.

______“Are you awake?” says the surgeon.

______I’m too tired to think about hard questions. I also feel kind of sick. “I don’t know,” I say.

______“Are you pleased not to know?” says the surgeon. His voice sounds like it’s far away.

______“What?” I say.

______“Never mind.” The surgeon sighs. “Looks like the operation was a success, at any rate.”

______I sit up. It makes my head hurt, so I lie down again. There’s a piece of paper with black writing on my pillow. “What’s that?” I say.

______“A letter you wrote to yourself,” says the surgeon.

______I look at the black writing. It makes my head hurt even more. Still, I feel like it’s—how do I say it? Oh yeah, like it’s important. I kind of remember writing it, but not what it says.

______I start to read it. It says “M-Y, space, D-E-A-R.”

______“What does ‘dare’ mean?” I say.

______The surgeon’s eyes make a funny circle. He picks up the paper and says, “Let me just read it aloud to you.”

______“Okay,” I say. The white light makes my head hurt a lot. I put my pillow on my face. That feels better.

______“‘My dear post-surgical self,’” the surgeon reads. “‘How have you fared during your convalescence?’”

______“What does ‘convalescence’ mean?” I say under my pillow.

______“Save your questions for later,” says the surgeon. He reads, “‘Congratulations on your acquisition of dimwittedness. The removal of your superfluous neurons will serve you well.

______“‘Paradoxically, your simplicity of thought will ameliorate your ability to express yourself. Due to their lack of intricacy, your emotions will require little effort to articulate. They will range from grief to joy, bypassing solipsism, and nihilism, and other tiresome “ism”s. You will discuss them with others, who will…’”

______I open my eyes. The surgeon is looking at me. He doesn’t look happy.

______“What?” I say.

______“As draining as the surgery may have been,” says the surgeon, “I thought you’d have the decency to stay awake while I’m doing you a favor.”

______I look at the paper in his hand. “Oh yeah,” I say. “What does it say next?”

______The surgeon reads, “Due to their lack of intricacy, your emotions will require little effort to articulate. They will range from grief to joy, bypassing solipsism, and nihilism, and other tiresome “ism”s. You will discuss them with others, who will understand you.

______“‘You will derive genuine pleasure from your everyday activities. Your classes will stimulate your brain enough to hold your interest, motivating you to complete homework assignments and secure a successful future for yourself. Your trips to the mall with your friends will be intellectually bearable, even the hours of comparing nearly identical shades of nail polish. At the school cafeteria, you will never hear the voices around you fade to meaningless babble as you tire of their predictability. Neither friends nor family will accuse you of indifference when you decline to pose questions whose answers you already know.

______“‘You will never flee to a mountain, the valleys too crowded to accommodate your surplus of thoughts. You will never inch closer to the edge of a cliff, gazing longingly at the abyss beneath you, until you catch sight of a hospital building and recall a newly legalized brain surgery. Most importantly, you will never probe too deeply into the contents of this letter. You will no longer concern yourself with introspection, which will automatically erase your internal strife.

______“‘Please do not blame me for your mental debilitation. Between you and your brain, I chose to kill your brain. Sincerely, your pre-surgical self.’

______“And that’s that,” says the surgeon. “You’ll never be able to reply to her, since she doesn’t exist anymore. I hate that I played a role in her self-destruction.”

______“That’s sad,” I say. “Did she die?” I don’t really care, since she sounded kind of full of herself. Nothing she said made any sense. She did say something about nail polish and the mall, though. I want to go to the mall.

Motivation by Anonymous

Motivation
By Anonymous

600 meters. Time to go. Breathe in. Out. Breathe in. Out. Stride. Stride. Stride. Arms bent at ninety degrees, pulling an invisible rope. The cheers fade. I guess I’m on my own now. Tennis courts empty on my left. Field hockey game on my right that’s too preoccupied to notice that I’m in desperate need of some cheering on. Turn the corner, giving a slight glance to my two pursuers. Stride. Stride. Stride. It’s all downhill from here. Breathe in. Out. 400 meters. Into the woods. It’s downhill here. You know it. They don’t. Hips forward. Go, go, go. Out in front. You can win. You got this. This is your only chance to win a race. You know every root and rock. 200 meters. Dart out of the woods. I heard my coach yelling, “Let’s go. Honor Roll! You’re so tough!”
I wanted to shout back, “No I’m not, Ms. Talbot! Make it stop!” But I didn’t.

I saw the crowd. I didn’t care how they thought I ran this race. They don’t understand. It happened one day when I was riding my bike in sixth grade. I wanted to do another lap around the block. In the coming days, weeks, months, and years, I started riding farther and farther. I bought a road bike. I rode every day after school. I got up at six in the morning in the summer to ride. I started racing. I was obsessed. My friend told me I should try cross-country when I got to high school. I did. I ran as hard as I rode my bike. Somehow, society placed more worth on how fast I ran than rode my bike. But that wasn’t my motivation to go faster.

I never got that hooked on running. Nobody does. Quite frankly, it sucks. It hurts. Everywhere. Toes, feet, shins, knees, hips, back, you get it and we haven’t even gotten to all the muscles yet. My first year I got lucky—no problems. Second year I got mono two weeks into the season. Junior year gave me a new school, a new team, new coaches. There was a plan every day. I was put into the machine. That’s when I started pushing myself even harder. Everyone wanted to get faster. Everybody was having a good time.

Then it was summer again. Alone. Working. Anywhere from forty-four hours a week when they were desperate for labor to twenty-five when work was slow. I again got up at 6 am. Drove to my local park. Ran it alone. Did distance workouts. Alone. Hill repeats. Alone. Speed. Alone. Abs. Alone. No one would have cared if I slept in. No one would have cared if I let myself finish a workout early. Everyone would have still cheered for me that fall. That’s why the crowd doesn’t keep me motivated. They don’t understand.

When Ms. Talbot yelled to me and said the words “Honor Roll” that’s when I knew it was go time. 100 meters left. Two Avon kids nipping at my heels for first place. Downhill. Flat. Neck and neck. 10 meters. Half a stride back. Full stride back. 0 meters. 17:34 3.1 mile course. I had done it, but none of the spectators knew—they saw me get passed. But I was running a race they didn’t see. We were getting cake. Because of me.

Cake is why we run cross-country. Cake is what every runner at Williston strives for. Ms. Talbot makes great cake. I’m all about her yellow cake with vanilla frosting. To be able to get the team cake at practice the following week, one must be ranked one of the top fifteen runners by personal record or PR since 2003. It’s an elite club. It’s full of the people who understand what running is. What it means. Who it makes you.
Sure everyone who gets a normal PR gets a lollipop at the practice after the race. And I guess that’s why they run. They run for lollipops. I run for cake.

Untitled by Anonymous

Untitled by Anonymous

                The sound of feet hitting pavement permeates the air. Lines and lines of people marching together in unison fill the streets. A cool autumn breeze dances around the lines of people. Pirouetting through the orderly mass and finding its way to a young man. He marches like everyone else around him. Foot by foot. Step by step. Following the age-old tradition just like the others in the lines of people marching. A familiar sound fills his ears, as a horn is blown somewhere in the distance. All at once, the streaks of people walking, stop, and so does he. Standing completely still. No one dares to make any slight movement. He looks forward to see the usual field of people all in gray. In front of him standing perfectly still is a girl. She wears the same gray dress, as all of the other girls do, that skims her ankles when she walks. Her golden hair is cut exactly where it meets her shoulders. No more no less. Day after day he sees this girl in front of him, yet he has never seen her face. Nonetheless he has fallen completely in love with her. The pep in her step that makes him go insane. The way the beams of light bounce on her golden and luscious hair and the way they fall gracefully to the ground. He loves everything about her. He follows her and she follows the next person, never looking back. Never questioning tradition. The smell of wet leaves and fresh crisp air fills his nostrils as he breathes in. Swiftly an unaccustomed hum fills the open air. It is lovely and sweet. To the young man’s shock it is coming from right in front of him. What started as a soft hum abruptly gallops into a belting song. Heads sharply turn to see what the source of this monstrosity of a sound is. The words that she sings kiss her lips as they escape her mouth and fly away into the fall air. Scowls and disgusted faces whip around as if trying to swat the music away. Then in a sudden whirlwind, the young girl rips her gray dress off revealing her naked body painted with vibrant colors. The darkest purples fade into the brightest of yellows. Covering every inch of her body, the dyes scream and shout, wanting to be seen. The young man can only stand there, watching this unfold in astonishment. She then takes a small but very distinct step to her left. She is now out of line. As she throws her hands up trying to touch the heavens, she screams, “You cannot oppress me! This will not sta-” and before she can finish her thought, the piecing sound of a gun being fired resonates through the air. Her body sinks to the ground and everyone is silent. She lies motionless on the floor. The young man looks down and sees the hole where the blood is coming from. It is perfectly placed in the middle of her two eyes. The stream of blood flows down and across her face, to where a pool of deep red is already starting to form. He sees her face in all of its beauty and glory. He feels as if he can get lost in the azure lakes which are her eyes. They pierce him as she lifelessly stares into the sky. The corners of her light pink lips curl up and form a smile. Then comes the second beckoning tone of a horn. One by one the lines shift forward. People break their stare at the girl and look forward once more. The young man steps over her and fills the gap in front of him. Once again the sound of feet hitting the pavement, in unison, fills his ears. Foot by foot. Step by step he marches with everyone else, leaving her body behind.