In September of 2004, my papa had worked for the private submarine company
for more than two years, and he had not taken any vacation. His boss, who
was his friend, was worried about him, so he asked him to take the time off,
or he would lose it. But papa didn’t like to just sit around, doing nothing.
He wanted to be accomplishing something. One of the hobbies that he picked
up was bicycling. Whenever he had the time, he liked to ride his bike from
his house to his sister’s place, which was about 20 miles away. It took him
a couple of hours, and it was a workout, and he really enjoyed it. He
decided to take his longest ride yet. Instead of just going a few towns
over, he wanted to go a few states over. He plotted a route that went
all the way from Chicago to Kansas City. What a lot of people don’t know is
that there are two Kansas Cities. One is in Missouri and the other is in
Kansas, of course. They’re right next to each other, and the one in Missouri
is actually larger. He had already been to Missouri, because of his friends
who lived in Independence, which is considered part of the whole Kansas City
area. The distance from where he started was over 630 miles, and it took him
two weeks to ride the entire way! He rode about 45 miles per day, which is
pretty impressive, I must say. He couldn’t really explain to me why he chose
to go there. He just wanted to. Once he made it to Kansas City, Kansas, he
spent one night there. He donated his bicycle to a charity for kids. Then he
took a plane back home. I think this was a pretty cool thing that he did,
and I’m so proud of him. Maybe one day, I’ll do something like it, but
probably not to Kansas City, since it’s 1,700 miles from here!
-
Current Schedule
- Sundays
- The Advancement of Mateo MaticTeam Matic prepares for a war by seeking clever and diplomatic ways to end their enemy's terror over his own territory, and his threat to others.
- The Advancement of Mateo Matic
- Weekdays
- PositionsThe staff and associated individuals for a healing foundation explain the work that they do, and/or how they are involved in the charitable organization.
- Positions
- Saturdays
- Extremus: Volume 5As Waldemar's rise to power looms, Tinaya grapples with her new—mostly symbolic—role. This is the fifth of nine volumes in the Extremus multiseries.
- Extremus: Volume 5
- Sundays
Wednesday, November 22, 2023
Tuesday, November 21, 2023
Microstory 2022: Illinois
After he was done with the Navy, papa needed a place to live. He thought
about just staying in Arkansas, or even going all the way over to Montana.
He said it would have been a full circle, since that’s where he first grew
up. He narrowed his decision down to two choices, which was to move back
closer to his parents in Idaho, or to Indiana, where his sister lived with
her family. The two of them had grown even closer over the last few years,
and he loved his nephews. They had just had their second son, so he decided
to choose Indiana. He needed a job, though. Most people who need jobs have
to go out and look for them. These days, they will go on the internet, and
search for anyone who is hiring, but this was back in 2002, so people
weren’t doing that very much yet. And anyway, my papa didn’t need to look
himself. Companies were actually calling him to offer him a job. He
had a really good education, and his time in the military made bosses know
that he would be loyal and trustworthy. He ended up reconnecting with a guy
who he knew who once worked for the Coast Guard. They also work on the
water, but have different jobs. This former Coast Guard Lieutenant Commander
had started his own business that wanted to build new kinds of submarines,
and he would be testing them in Lake Michigan. My papa was perfect for the
job, because that’s exactly what he learned in school, and in the Navy. He
ended up living in Chicago on the Illinois side of the border, but he was
still less than a half hour away from my Aunt Cooper. We’re still a Chicago
family. I’ve gone there myself many times, even though I live in
Massachusetts.
Monday, November 20, 2023
Microstory 2021: Tennessee
Papa was only an active member of the Navy for four years. He thought about
staying in, but ended up not. It’s all because of something he did as his
required time was ending. He was still in the reserves after this, but he
wasn’t working on the sub anymore. While he was trying to make a decision,
friends of his from college called him up, and asked him if he wanted to
work with them on a mission trip in Tennessee. They were Mormons, and they
were doing it for their church, but that wasn’t going to be what the trip
was about. There was an old folks home in a small town outside of Memphis.
He was in Arkansas at the time, so he wasn’t very far away. That’s probably
why they called him. He took a bus to the home, and got to work. The people
who owned it didn’t have very much money, and they were having trouble
keeping their residents comfortable. Don’t worry, they all always had their
medicine and stuff, but there were other issues. They couldn’t afford
plants, or nice paintings for the walls. The biggest issue was the
courtyard, which is a space that is outside, but it has walls around it.
Residents can go and sit down and enjoy being outside, but it wasn’t very
pretty at this place. I don’t think my papa spent much time on that, though.
He basically became a volunteer handyman. While the others were planting
trees, he fixed things around the building, because he was an engineer. What
he said was that this was an eye-opening experience. He wanted to spend more
time doing things like that. Of course he was helping people when he was
serving this country, but he decided that there were things that he should
do outside of it. That’s what led him to leaving the Navy, as an active
officer at least.
Sunday, November 19, 2023
The Advancement of Mateo Matic: May 1, 2422
![]() |
Generated by Google Workspace Labs text-to-image Duet AI software |
It always seemed like a lie that the reason Venus Opsocor wanted the team
to go to Worlon was because it was the safest place to be during this time
period. Perhaps what was happening now was what it was really all about,
and the team being here was all part of some grander plan. They spent all
day last year getting to now the Krekel, and understanding how they were
different from the Ochivari. Something happened in their past, which
transformed them from a race of regretful polluters bent on stopping
anyone from making the same mistakes they did, at all costs, to one of
compassionate and patient guides with ethical boundaries who only wanted
to help people. Unfortunately, the Ochivari were bulk travelers. Once they
left their home universe, they separated themselves from all of reality,
meaning that while the timeline could be altered, they would remain in
existence. Nothing could stop them from going on their crusade against
other intelligent races by sterilizing entire populations. The Ochivari
were not fighting their war in a traditional sense, with guns and bombs,
except when it came to the Krekel. That was a real war. And right
now, Team Matic was in the center of it.
The next day, when they returned to the timestream, they were invited to
breakfast again. The first time they did it, they were up on the
mothership in orbit. Now that a year had passed, the new capital of Worlon
was well underway, including the Capitol Building, which was where the
second breakfast banquet was taking place. Ellie Underhill wasn’t here
this time. This was to become a yearly thing apparently. The team’s
unexpected arrival was only a part of this new holiday. It was the part
that dictated when specifically it would be held. Worlon had a different
daily rotation, and a different solar revolution than Earth, but the
team’s pattern was tied to midnight central of the Earthan Standard
Calendar. This meant that Cadatora would be celebrated on a different day
each year on Worlon, kind of like Easter. That was where the humans’
contribution ended. The Krekel had their own reasons to celebrate their
peace and harmony, and these reasons were threatened by the sudden arrival
of a fleet of Ochivari ships a couple of months ago.
The Ochivari were violent by nature, but it was not an arbitrary
development. A long time ago, they realized that they were all
biologically capable of traveling the bulk. They didn’t need a machine.
They didn’t need an amazing technicolor dreamcoat. It was just something
that they could do. It came at a great cost. The whole process involved a
battle of chemicals, pheromones, and possibly psychic fortitude. That last
thing lived within an area of research that scientists were not completely
sure about. It also resulted in sacrifice. As these opposing forces
reached critical mass, they would literally explode, and the consequence
of this fight would be the sudden and fleeting opening of a portal to the
outer bulk in which all universes were suspended. If two Ochivari were
bulkbattling, one of them would die from this. The other would survive,
and usually be sucked into the portal, and transported to another world.
This was where the possible psychic energy came into play, because if they
did it right, the survivor went to the right world, instead of some random
planet, or the middle of empty space. They had to be fast, though, because
if they didn’t jump in right away, the portal would collapse before them,
and the whole thing would be a waste of time. The thing was, though, that
the greater the sacrifice, the larger the portal, and the longer it
lasted.
If three Ochvari came together to bulkbattle, two of them
would survive while one died. If five came together,
three would survive while two died. The total number of
attempters, number of sacrificers, and number of survivors each went up
exponentially according to the Fibonacci sequence. It was the most clear
evidence that this sequence was more than a series of numbers, but a
tangible physical phenomenon with real-world consequences. One of these
consequences was that Ochivari ships were incredibly rare. The size and
stability of the portal wasn’t actually based on the number of Ochivari
involved, but total mass. The higher the mass, the more voluminous the
pheromones and chemicals, the more stuff that could be used to fuel
transportation.
A battleship was a profoundly massive object, so the sacrifices required
to move it from one universe to another were equally profound. They
numbered in the tens of millions of people, but even then, there was a
catch, because the ship was a giant weapon flying through space, and that
would kill anyone upon impact. So even the survivors of the bulkbattle
generally ended up dying soon thereafter, because a ship would immediately
come barreling towards them in order to make it through the just opened
portal in time. It could last longer than smaller portals, but still not
indefinitely, and it
was possible for it to collapse while you were still trying to pass
through it.
Over 70 million should be an unacceptable loss by
anyone’s standards, especially since the reason they were fighting
was because the Krekel figured out how to do it without incurring
any loss. Instead of hating them for it, they should learn from
them. As it turned out, these sacrifices didn’t need to happen at all. The
winginsing that the orchestra of Nexus guards performed for them last year
wasn’t just a beautiful symphony of nature. When done in the right way,
using the right melody, and other mathematical precisions, it too could
open a bulk portal. Krekel portals were not any more stable than Ochivari
ones, but no one had to die to open them, even for those large enough to
accommodate ships.
The Krekel were at a huge advantage because of their alternate technique.
It made them nicer, peaceful, and more harmonious amongst each other. But
their
disadvantage...was that they were nicer and more peaceful than the
Ochivari, so when war came for them, they mostly lost. Until recently. In
response to the unprovoked attacks, the Krekel started building out their
own armies, training them with the lessons they had learned from those
early losses, and really fighting back. Their return to Worlon was not
just because they were homesick. This was a staging planet now, and the
Ochivari didn’t like that. That was why the fleet came here, and why they
were even angrier than usual, because the sacrifices made to transport
them had to total nearly a billion people. This was crazy. After all, that
was the first rule of warfare, always outnumber your enemy.
The Battle Over Worlon lasted for only days, and in the end, the Krekel
won with their home field advantage, and their ability to recruit
reinforcements from a planet called Folia, in a universe called
Moderaverse. That didn’t mean it was over, though. Krekel and Ochivari
looked exactly the same, just as British and German people did because
they were both humans. The only distinction possible was clothing, which
could always be changed. The Krekel won the war, but that didn’t mean
there weren’t survivors. Some of them escaped through sacrificial bulk
portals, but others were believed to have blended in with the locals, and
assimilated into society. Maybe some of them were indoctrinated into the
new way of life, which included a lot less death, but others held firm.
They became sleepers. Today on Cadatora, they attacked for the first time
since the end of that fateful battle months ago.
Olimpia was the first to see the knife. She wasn’t sure if she should be
nervous at first. Maybe it was some kind of ceremonial gesture, and wasn’t
intended to be used as a weapon. But the supposed Krekel’s body language
seemed to indicate that he had ill intentions towards the Domina. While
the timeline that the Krekels came from was different, there were still
some similarities. Their respective cultures were both ruled by diarchies.
The Domino and the Domina were like King and Queen, except they were not
in a relationship with each other. In fact, the more they liked each
other, the harder it was for them to maintain power. While all systems of
government that relied on non-elected leaders were at least a little
tyrannical, in this case, it was pretty easy to overthrow a Dominé that
began to act outside the interests of the people, and in the Krekel’s
case, it could be done nonviolently. The Domini were well-loved,
particularly the Domina. That was why the Ochivar infiltrator was
attempting to assassinate her.
Everyone on the team picked up on Olimpia’s unease, and Leona acted
quickly. She pulled out her weapon, and once she saw where the danger was
lurking, she took her shot. She could have set her gun to incapacitate the
attacker, but she didn’t. The would-be assassin was killed instantly,
placing everyone in an awkward position. The only way they even knew that
he was Ochivar, and probably was trying to kill the Domina,
was because they could not identify him, so he wasn’t a known citizen of
Worlon. He was certainly not approved to be in the Royal Court during the
Royal Cadatoran Breakfast. So Leona almost definitely saved the Domina’s
life, and who knows how many others, but that didn’t make it okay.
Weapons were not allowed in the Royal Court. All armed guardsmen kept
their posts outside its walls. The guards inside had to check their
weapons in, and if a problem occurred, would only be allowed to use their
fists and feet and wings. The attacker broke the law by sneaking one in,
but Leona shouldn’t have used hers either. They made an exception by
allowing her to bring it in in the first place, but they were humoring her
as their honored guest. They didn’t think that she would actually use it,
and now that she had, they were all in big trouble.
“You have two options,” their state-appointed advocate explained to them.
“If you risk going to trial, there is no telling what the arbitration
panel will decide. You could be put to death, placed in prison, assigned
to a work camp, forced into the military, exiled in universe, or expelled
to the bulk. Or, I guess you could be found innocent. The first six are
equally likely, but that last one is remote. These consequences could be
suffered by you alone, or shared by the whole group, or each of you could
conceivably be handed different sentences. Like I said, it’s a risk.”
Leona lifted her hand, and started counting herself and her friends, as if
she didn’t know that there were six. “Death, prison, work, military,
exile, expulsion. Six people for six punishments. Sounds like a long
arc...except for one of them,” she mused, referencing execution. “You said
there were two options. Was all that one option?”
“You could volunteer for one of them, but you would have to do it
together, and obviously you can’t choose freedom.”
“Well...obviously we should choose exile, right?” Angela figured. “We
didn’t really want to be here anyway.”
“That comes with a caveat. There are pros and cons to all of them. Death
would be swift and painless. Prison would be comfortable. The work would
be easy. Military service would be relatively safe. Expulsion would be to
the universe of your choosing.”
“You skipped one,” Olimpia pointed out, “the one that we’re actually
suggesting.”
“If you don’t leave by the end of the week, which for you would only be a
few hours, you will experience all other punishments, and none of the
advantages will apply. You’ll be put to work doing hard labor in an
uncomfortable prison, and then sent to the frontlines of the war once the
appropriate opportunity arises. If you somehow survive that, you’ll be
expelled to a universe not of your choosing, and while I’m not
privy to which universe that would be, my guess is that it would be an
extremely hostile environment, especially since they were clear
that you would have to go through all five other punishments, and death
would necessarily be the last on the list.”
“Who came up with this, a science fiction writer?” Leona questioned.
“Probably. It’s not in the law books. That’s why it took me all day to get
back to you while you were in jail, because the court had to explain it to
me and the adherent first. He didn’t know what they were talking about
either, and he’s more upset than I.”
“Okay, this doesn’t make any sense. Why is there a time limit on
self-exile? We’ll just go through the Nexus, and it’ll be done,” Angela
presumed.
“That’s the thing,” the advocate went on. “You can’t use the Nexus. And no
one who lives here is allowed to help you. I told you there was a caveat.”
Leona sighed, annoyed at yet another round of games. This was reminding
her of The Cleanser’s Tribulations, Arcadia’s Expiations, and all the
other needlessly convoluted missions that people have sent them on over
the centuries. “So it’s our responsibility to punish ourselves, and if we
fail to do that, they’ll punish us, and it will be five times worse.”
“How would we get off this planet without help?” Marie asks.
“I don’t know how you could,” he said, “but I’m just an attorney. You’re the
legendary adventurers. Isn’t escape sort of your thing?”
“Emphasis on the sort of part,” Ramses clarified.
Leona looked at Mateo. “You’ve been quiet. I noticed you put your thinking face
on.”
Mateo turned his neck to face different parts of the room as if members of
a crowd in the middle distance were taking turns expressing their
thoughts, and he was listening politely. He settled on the door. “I’ve
already solved this problem.”
“How do you figure?” Leona pressed.
Mateo kept staring at the door. “I just feel it. Help is coming. Senona
Riggur lives outside of time. They can see the future as easily as anyone
can see the present. Venus is no different.”
“What do those so-called gods have to do with anything?” Angela asked.
“Five..four..three..two...” Mateo lifted his hand, and pointed at the door
just as he finished the countdown. The door opened to reveal Maqsud
Al-Amin, a.k.a. The Trotter.
Maqsud was one of the few people in histories who were capable of
transporting themselves from one planet to another, at seemingly infinite
distances. He helped return Leona and her then-team from Dardius to Earth
a long time ago. None of the others had ever met him, but they all knew
who he was. He dressed very uniquely. “Does someone here need a ride?” he
guessed. “I did not come to this planet on purpose.”
“We’ll take exile,” all six of them volunteered simultaneously.
Saturday, November 18, 2023
Extremus: Year 66
![]() |
Generated by Google Workspace Labs text-to-image Duet AI software |
Arqut wanted to pretend like he never professed his love to her last year,
and Tinaya decided to respect that. They could revisit their respective
feelings at a later date if he ever felt comfortable enough for it. In the
meantime, it’s not like she’s going to entertain other suitors. If she were
ever going to settle down with anyone, it would be with someone like him.
She already knows him, and they have a rapport. She’s the First Chair, and
doesn’t have time to hunt around, looking for love. Yeah, it sounds very
impersonal, but again, that’s not what she’s looking for. If it finds her,
then fine, but she can’t let it distract from her responsibilities. Though,
if Cleader is to be believed, a relationship wouldn’t be the worst thing in
the world right now. It is an election year, and her tenure is up for
renewal. She needs all the help she can get, because incumbency comes at a
price. She’s not allowed to campaign for reëlection. The way the founders
thought of it, a civil servant’s duty is to serve their office, not to
concern themselves with retaining that office. All sorts of problems
throughout the history of politics might have been solved or subverted if
elected officials did their goddamn jobs, instead of spending all their time
trying to keep them.
So it’s been a stressful time, because Cleader continues to push Tinaya
towards making herself look her best for the electorate, and while that
doesn’t qualify as campaigning, just the strategy meetings she’s had to
endure with him have become tedious and annoying. As predicted, her approval
rating has dropped in recent months. She’s still slated to win at the end of
the year, but it’s going to be tighter than she would like. But if she
loses, it will be okay. She will not crawl back into the hole she lived in
after she failed to get into college. She’ll do everything she can to make
this ship, and the journey they’re all on together, safe, enjoyable, and
productive.
There is no exception to the rule that prevents Tinaya from campaigning for
herself, but there is nothing to stop others from doing it for her. Any
private citizen has the right to free speech, and that speech may include
their political affiliations, and the candidates who they support. Everyone
has their fanbase, and Tinaya has a particularly vocal one. The thing is,
though, she’s not allowed to meet any of these people, at least not within
the context of their campaign efforts on her behalf. It is reasonable for
the First Chair to meet her constituents, to discuss their needs or
whathaveyou, but only as long as it doesn’t raise any suspicion that she’s
involved in her own reëlection endeavors. Her doorbell chimes, and she
answers it.
“Miss Kurosawa, this is highly irregular.” She’s the spearhead for Tinaya’s
campaign. She’s not supposed to be anywhere near this office.
Avril nods. “Well, it’s unusual, but I have a good reason. If I promise that
this does not break any policies or laws, can I come in for a chat?”
Tinaya thinks about what to do. She lifts her watch to her lips. “Call Hozan
Peck.”
“Hozan Peck here,” the voice comes in from her watch.
“Could you please teleport to my office?”
“Right away, sir.” He appears.
“Mr. Peck, would you please sit in on our meeting?”
As Head of Ethics, he’s just as surprised to see Avril Kurosawa here, but he
knows that both of them know the rules, so if this meeting is happening,
calling him was the right thing to do. He doesn’t feel the need to argue
that this shouldn’t happen at all, because there must be a decent reason.
“Certainly.”
Tinaya goes back to behind her desk while the other two sit opposite her.
“Miss Kurosawa, could you tell me what this is about?”
“I am here to tell you that I can no longer lead your civilian campaign.”
“Now, it’s not mine,” Tinaya argues. “Mr. Peck, the two of us have never
spoken to each other before today. I want to assure you that—”
“Yes, yes, yes, I believe you. Go on, Miss Kurosawa.”
“It’s not that I don’t believe in you anymore,” Avril continues. “I just
feel that I can do better. I have been studying your career since it began,
and it has prepared me for civil service in surprising ways. I’m confident
that I can be an even better First Chair than you. You have been focused in
recent years in maintaining the status quo, and I think we should begin to
focus on improvement. As your former campaign leader, I was unable to voice
my concerns to you directly, which is a sacrifice I willingly made at the
time, but what my partner has helped me realize is that my ideas should not
be silenced, and the best way for me to see them through is to become the
one who can enact them. I am here as a courtesy before my public
announcement to inform you first that I will be running for your seat this
year.”
Normally, Avril’s decision would be considered a bit late. This is not in
any legal sense, of course. She could submit her name to the ballot on the
day before the vote if she wanted to. It’s just that most people need time
to get their name into the public consciousness. In this case, however, she
might be okay, because her shift in loyalty will likely cause a stir, and
expedite the process. It’s not impossible that this was her intention all
along; stepping up to become Tinaya’s biggest fan just so she can popularize
herself without getting lost in a sea of other candidates. There is no limit
to the number of people who can be on the ballot. One year in history, there
were thirty-one names in total, which caused a division, and ultimately made
it difficult for the winner to feel like he earned it, but there was nothing
he could have done to stop it.
Avril has a point, that Tinaya did more for the ship before becoming First
Chair than she has in the last two and a half years in this position. Now
she kind of wishes that she could say something to the people—to make them
promises about what she’ll do for them in the future. But it’s too late for
that now. It would be construed as campaigning, or actually be rightfully
considered campaigning, and she’s always agreed with that policy on
principle, even before she worked for the government. The people have the
right to trust that their leaders care more about the happiness and
stability of the state than their own self-interest. She still believes
that, but at least a campaign would give her something to do. This period of
peace barely stumbled even when Tamm was ousted. Maybe that’s what she’s
worried most about; that people will elect her opponent only because they’re
bored.
But now she has a new opponent, with a different take on how things should
be done. It is logical to presume that there are others who feel as Avril
does. In fact, Avril probably wouldn’t be here today if she didn’t put out
feelers to see what others were thinking. She knows the voters well. She’s
built her career upon. She would do a good job if elected. No, Tinaya has
nothing to worry about. A win for either one of them would be a win for
Extremus. She can’t say the same thing about the other four candidates
currently on the ballot, but this one is good people. And right now, it’s
time for civility, and most importantly, brevity. There is no need to drag
this conversation out. She stands up, and offers her hand. “Thank you for
informing me. Good luck on your future endeavors.”
Avril stands up, and shakes Tinaya’s hand. She appears to want to breathe a
sigh of relief that Tinaya didn’t jump over the desk, and start ripping
Avril’s hair out, and start chewing on it, but she’s worried that this is a
trick.
“Really, it’s fine, Miss Kurosawa. Never let anyone feel that you’ve made
the wrong decision. I look forward to hearing your ideas, because—forgive me
for being blunt—no matter who wins, any good ideas will see the light of
day.”
Now Avril’s even more scared, as is Hozan Peck. “Careful, Chairwoman...”
Tinaya needs to backpedal a little. “Don’t worry, either of you. I’m not
going to tell the populace that anything you can do, I can do better. That’s
just what I’m telling you. I mean, not better, just also. They’ll vote for
who they want to vote for, but if I end up winning again, I’m not going to
ignore a good idea just because it came from someone else. That would
be...unfair to the people. I should stop talking.”
“You were on the line,” Hozan warns, standing up as well, “but you didn’t
cross it.” He turns to face Avril to reiterate, “she didn’t cross it.” Now
it’s going to be harder for Avril to use this interaction against Tinaya in
the future. Thank you, Hozan Peck.
Avril closes her eyes, and nods. “Good luck to you too.” She taps on her
watch, and disappears.
Tinaya scratches at the back of her neck. “I do need to be more careful.”
Hozan pulls a portable drive out of his bag, and hands it to her. “It’s a VR
simulation filled with ethically questionable scenarios.”
“I’ve done these all before.” It’s required in school, and as a condition
for her role as First Chair. Virtual reality is a great way to teach people
concepts in literally any conceivable environment without going through the
trouble of actually building that environment. It’s especially helpful on
ships, where resources are limited, and space is at a premium.
“They’re new programs, created by the next generation of programmers and
designers. You apparently need a refresher anyway. They’re what the other
candidates will be experiencing in the coming months.”
“Thanks. There’s always more to learn.”
He nods. “Goodbye, Chairwoman Leithe.” Most people don’t call the First
Chair Chairwoman or Chairman, but some prefer the sharpness of
morphologically shorter language. He teleports away.
That night, Avril does as she warned, and announces her intentions, shocking
many. As the broadcast is running, Tinaya’s doorbell chimes again, but she’s
in her stateroom now. She finds Arqut on the other side of the door. “I just
heard, I’m sorry.”
“I’m fine,” she replies sincerely. “If I lose, I would be glad it was her.”
“You won’t lose, not once we institute the plan.”
“What’s the plan,” Tinaya asks, emphasizing the words just like him, as if
there’s something special about this particular plan, whatever it is.
“I wasn’t joking last year; I do love you, and I think you don’t absolutely
detest my company either. If you would be willing, we could boost your
polling with news of a new relationship. They’ll forget all about the other
candidates within a week. Now, I know you don’t feel as strongly about me,
but I think that we have to do something to respark people’s interest in
your. Is that even a word, respark? Anyway, as I was say—
She pulls him into a hug “Let’s do it. But not just as part of some kind of
plan. I’m sick of being alone, and I’m sick if you avoiding me.”
Labels:
announcement
,
campaign
,
election
,
ethics
,
first chair
,
government
,
law
,
leader
,
love
,
meeting
,
office
,
partner
,
policy
,
relationships
,
responsibility
,
secrets
,
spaceship
,
training
,
virtual reality
,
voting
Friday, November 17, 2023
Microstory 2020: Indiana
My Aunt Cooper has three children, who are all boys, and they’re my cousins.
Her first was born in the year 2000. She was 29 years old, and she lived
with her new husband in a city called Gary, Indiana. Even though it’s
located in Indiana, it’s really close to the border with Illinois, so it’s
considered part of Chicago, which is a really big city next to Lake
Michigan. While my papa was in the Navy, he was busy with his work most of
the time, but he didn’t have to spend all the time working. Officers get to
take time off just like regular people, except unlike them who get
vacations, people in the military take something called leave. Specifically,
since he was in the Navy, he was on shore leave. He decided to fly up to
Gary to spend some time with his sister, and their new baby. My cousin is 12
years older than me, but we’re really close. After my papa was done with his
required service, he retired and moved to Chicago to be closer to his
sister. And years later, when he decided to move to Massachusetts, they all
did the same thing he did, and moved with him. They lived in separate
houses, though. But I’m getting ahead of myself, because none of that has
happened in the story yet. My cousin’s name is Nash Ruskin. His father’s
name is Currian Ruskin, and I love him too. My other cousins’ names are
Osmond and Thatcher, but they haven’t been born yet. My papa was only
allowed to spend five days there, since two of them were spent traveling to
and from Indiana, but he enjoyed it, and he got to go back a few times
before moving closer anyway.
Thursday, November 16, 2023
Microstory 2019: Arkansas
It makes sense that papa lived in Texas, because it’s next to the ocean. He
worked on a submarine, so Corpus Christi was the perfect location. That’s
why it’s so weird that he was later moved by the Navy to Arkansas. Arkansas
is what’s called a landlocked state, because it doesn’t border the ocean.
Most of the states in the United States are like this. But that doesn’t mean
there’s no water, of course. It has lakes, and the really long Mississippi
River, which is between it and Mississippi. We don’t have much information,
because like I said, the military has to be really secretive, but after papa
died, my dad and I were looking through his things when we found something
interesting. It was a photo of him and some of his Navy buddies when they
were young. They were smiling in front of the river, and what looked like a
boat behind them. Except that the boat wasn’t above the water very much. It
actually looked like a submarine! The Mississippi River is pretty deep, but
not really deep enough for a normal sub. Again, no one can tell us anything,
so shh, be quiet, but we think that he was testing special technology. They
might have come up with a submarine that can move in shallower waters. It
would be interesting to know if they could get something like that to work.
*winky face*
Wednesday, November 15, 2023
Microstory 2018: Texas
After my papa was finished with his education at the Naval academy, he
didn’t go back home. He was stationed in Corpus Christi, Texas. He couldn’t
tell me exactly what he did while he was there, because the military keeps
all of that secret, so this is going to be another really short slide. He
was able to say that he lived there for only a year before he was
moved somewhere else, which he said was unusual in the Navy. I don’t think
that he was always on a submarine. I think that maybe he spent a lot of time
carrying out missions on dry land. I even think they sometimes sent him out
of the country, but he hadn’t met his husband yet, so he didn’t have to lie
to anyone about it, since his parents still lived in Idaho anyway.
Subscribe to:
Posts
(
Atom
)