On a brisk February morning Jason
hurries to the Faculty Session at the School. For the first time
since being accepted by the Faculty last fall Jason truly feels the
weight of responsibility on his shoulders, to a small degree this is
an issue of the honor he felt upon acceptance losing its novelty, but
mostly it is because he bares the weight of a dangerous issue to the
meeting hall.
Rounding the corner of Hawberry Street
near the School he sees an armed man, in the morning light still as
an owl, and Jason has the distinctive feeling that he might seem like
a field moue to the watchful Freedom Man. But after a brief glance
the Freedom Man continues scanning the horizon. Though Jason was
never enthusiastic about the Natural Freedom Party, or their Civic
Liberties Act, this morning is the first time he has made note of the
uncomfortable sensation of evil eyes on the back of his neck while
walking up the drive to the School's old cinder block building.
Generally confident, a successful and upstanding citizen who gives
generously to his community, it hadn't occurred to him that he could
one day face review under the Civic Liberties Act's until his
apprentice threatened him with such a review for religious
intolerance.
“What a spoiled brat.” Jason thinks
to himself as he descends a short concrete stair case to a thick
wooden door only recently installed on the building. He knocks once
and waits, a moment latter a reply knock comes from inside the door,
then Jason knocks twice. A voice comes from inside “Teach by
learning.” and Jason replies “Learn by doing.”
The door opens to show the Troll, Tony.
“Well hey guy, I am glad to see you. We are starting a couple
minutes late, Jane is still a little bit out, her bike tire is flat
so she had to jog to Maggie and Mark's first thing when curfew lifted
to borrow their ride.”
Closing the door behind Jason as he
puts his coat in the entry way Tony, his eyes a bit wide leans close.
“I cleaned the room very throughly for this session... figuring we
haven't really cleaned all the nooks recently, lots of dust, but I am
glad to say their's no trace of vermin in this whole place,
even the artifacts all checked out.” turning to the main room “The
windows are all insulated too, Casey said he 'wouldn't mind the fuel
savings, if you do the work' when I asked him if he minded the place
being a little more shadowy during this session.”
Jason, trying the appreciate Tony's
well intended if concerning gesture, embraces Tony and then walks
into the main room of the basement, immaculately clean, and decorated
with School projects, prototypes, failed experiments, and design
schematics. hung on the walls or resting on urbanite podiums. “Tony,
is anyone else here yet?” Jason calls back.
“Yeah, Casey is up stairs attending
to some mold he found in the green house, and Katie is, you know,
making compost.” Tony replies from his stool by the door.
Jason walks to the middle of the
basement's inner wall, where a tea pot sets on a masonry stove.
Opposite this wall is Casey's laboratory and sleeping chamber. Just
then Katie steps out of the bucket room and comes over to get tea as
well. Jason's heart flutters as she approaches, yet maybe he still
manages to seem relaxed as he holds up the tea pot and pours tea into
the clay mug she holds out at his gesture. Speaking softly Katie says
“Its good to see you, I heard about the confrontation between you
and Casandra about the class she proposed.” pausing as if to gather
courage “Will she truly invoke the CLA against the School?”
Jason knew Katie had been active in
supporting the Global Green Party during her early teen years, and
was more than a little nervous about a confrontation with the N.F.P.
of the current administration. Her deep brown eyes were wrapped with
the fear that her youthful political idealism would one day be used
against her should she even be accused of impeding on civil
liberties. Jason was completely tongue tied, fear, bravado,
affection, and any number of nameless emotions wrestled for control
of his heart, but before a favorite was clear another knock at the
door expanded the focus beyond Katie's beautiful eyes. “I don't
know.” he said glancing at the door.
Tony whispered “Teach by Learning”
his good ear pressed to the mail slot, and satisfied with what he
heard opened the door to Session Master Jane, who had Mark and Maggie
in tow.
“Hellooo everybody! Looks like we are
about at a quorum, Angus and Holly are just behind us.” Jane called
out waving to Katie and Jason, as behind them Casey walked down the
interior stair case, silently bolting the door behind himself.
Katie walked over to hug Jane, Mark,
and Maggie as they put up their coats and then followed her back to
the still steaming tea pot. Jason chided himself for not doing more
to comfort Katie's fears, and then pulls away from that emotional
abyss by casually inspecting the old School projects Casey keeps
displayed around the room. Jason smiles at one of his early projects,
a sterling engine he made from the remains of scrap butane
containers, a pump, and a lawn mower. Though it wasn't judged sturdy
enough for practical work, it was impressive enough to get him
advanced to apprentice after only a year of volunteering for the
School.
Casey walks up behind him “Laughed my
butt off the first time that thing turned over, never though you
would be able to maintain a seal in it, but I was sure proud to be
wrong about that one.” Casey was the founder of the School, ten or
maybe fifteen years ago, depending on what you count as a starting
point. These days he was the live in custodian and defacto guard in
the former post office turned former church where the School hosts
gatherings and keeps their more important projects. Though he didn't
hold an official roll in the School this term, it didn't mean he
wasn't about the most influential janitor in the county, which maybe
saying a lot.
Jason smiled, he was proud of his
craft, it takes a truly creative mind to turn the limitless diversity
of junk from the industrializing era into usable tools and equipment.
There is no mass production when your building materials are whatever
Angus hauls over in his big wheel cart, begged, bartered, or bought
from the slums. But there is no higher feeling than turning that
select junk into a tool that will make an ecology better for life
just by working beautifully. It ain't bad at keeping staples in the
pantry too, though faculty members don't get to keep much earnings. A
big cut of the gleanings from any work they do with School skills,
tools, or support is thrown back to the School in dues and fees. Of
course compared to about any other work out there its good, only a
few jobs do much better and they certainly aren't taking
applications, and the majority of people are effectively unemployed
or worse, if they have any convictions, assigned to a government
crew.
Maybe there is one higher feeling than
composting junk, seeing your own student come up with something you
never thought could work, seeing the opportunity of know how opening
up in another. Casey yawned and moseyed over to his seat in the
circle, patting Jason on the shoulder as he turned to walk on.
Casting his eyes over this room of
artifacts, crafted by students of the School, Jason took in the room
before the meeting would start, knowing he would need all the courage
he could find. First some framed plans for tools not present: the
notes where Casey designed his first analogue solar heat pump
controller, Katie's original plan for a Fibonacci spiral quilt,
colored in and mounted on a wall with the theorem the design
demonstrated writ over head; sheet music to Holly's first funk opera
from when she was still 13 years old. Remains from tools which are
retired: Mark's first kiln fired masonry stove tiles, that stove was
destroyed when the building it was in collapsed, but Casey was quick
to save the tiles for the collection; then the 3 foot high wheel of
Angus' first cart, on display because since he became full grown he's
pulled a 4 foot diameter wheel, and is saving his first mono-wheel
for an orphan apprentice when he meets one which he finds worthy;
Rita's silk loom which Tony retired when she died on a Wild-land
Reclamation Crew in '27. And then tools which are still used in place
like Jane's still which makes the alcohol for her tinctures; and
Maggie's hand made ham radio, she even made one of the vacuum tubes
herself. Beyond these most sentimental pieces were dozens more. How
could the Natural Freedom Party object to a school that produces such
wonders of artisanship, and works so hard to better what's little
still functions in this community? Is a review even a danger for such
an upstanding organization?
Catching an impatient glance from Jane,
Jason double steps to his seat in the circle just before she plays
the three notes that start the session on the Session Master's
wheel-hub lyre. Session Master Jane announces “Fellow Students of
Life, the work of coordinating the School is before us. Let us start
this secession. Door Troll, lock the entry.”
Door Troll Tony turns a metal latch
down and calls back in a falsely deep tone “This discussion room is
closed milady.” returning to the circle and plopping down in his
chair.
Session Master Jane plays a five note
series and continues. “Let's all give our name and roll in this
group. My name is Jane Hill, and I play the roll of Session Master,
the first to speak in ordering each phase of the session, I lead us
through the agenda, and serve the group in making sure all voices are
heard fairly.” hitting the low note on the Master lyre she looks to
her left at Maggie.
Dawning her character's hand made dream
catcher sunglasses “I am Maggie Dean, I play the Session Sage, I
assist the Session Master in arranging each meeting. I consult
references, arrange contests, hold elections, and cast divinations to
settle disputes according to their nature. And I fill in as Session
Master if needed.”
“My name is Mark Curtis, I play the
Historian, I write down happenings that affect the school, firstly
these meetings.” Jason catches a smiled shared between Mark and
Tony. The records of this meeting may be incomplete on the
Historian's wax tablet, and thereby the clay record tile molded by
it.
“Katie Vasquez, I am playing the
Squirrel, I cache, protect, and account for the School's things and
stuff.” she seemed withdrawn, not acting out the Squirrel's
characteristic jitteriness and excitability the way she usually does.
“Holly Miyazaki, singer, I lead
meditations, chants, and songs.” Holly sits in her perfect
composure, she truly loves performance, which shows in every roll the
20 year old takes on.
“I'm Angus, I am a guardian, I work
to make these meetings secure.” maybe younger than Holly, but newer
to the School Angus has resisted taking and official roll. Raised in
a NFP youth program he would rather be defending Northern Mexico from
the Brazilians, but even the army don't want to bother with a one
handed soldier that can't hold a rifle. So he pulls his cart and
hones his eye for good junk. Well armed with an old revolver, a
N.F.P. bandanna, respect from the streets, and a sharp piece of metal
where you would expect a hand Angus serves a martial function of his
own creation home side.
“Casey Duncan, I play a custodian.”
He sits enraptured, adoring the performances of his friends, as the
introductions go round.
“Name's Jason Sorenson, I play a
Librarian. I maintain, preserve, and copy the archives of our
research and references.” Jason's nerves begin to relax holding the
Library Catalogue close he feels patient, calm, and collected like
the way he imagines all librarians must have been before the screens
got to them.
“Tony Emmons, Door Troll. I control
the door, who enters, and who don't.”
Jane plucks another chord on her lyre.
“Holly, lead us in the opening meditation.”
Holly stands up, followed by the rest
of the group, and leads an opening meditation of the Faculty Session.
“We need all the help we can get!
That we can store up the knowing that's
ol'
and rework it for new time until its
fit.
Help following beauty so we are never
lost
and saying with right timing 'I don't
know'
May we push ourselves, but mind the
cost.
Help in bettering our tragic ecologies.
Even in wretched slums may beauty grow
and orphans find wondrous philosophies.
Help us just surviving, close to the
root
That the gems of knowing can lay low.
No matter the danger, know how bares
fruit!”
A minute of silence follows the
meditation, and Jane ends the silence with her stringed hubcap.
Having been told last night of Jason's situation with his apprentice,
Jane is eager to get to his report on the matter, but to the
consternation of Tony and Mark she is unwilling to skip over the
reading of the minutes, communications, tending to costs, and
maintenance of the school's community works. Jane is not one to let
some political nerves prevent a productive morning.
Jason keeps stealing glances at Katie,
as she sits there though the various business accounts, breathing
deeply, eyes closed. A cocked brow and a knowing look from Holly
makes him suddenly self aware and he tried to focus back on Tony
rushing through his requisition for study sessions in the School
Nursery to restart the mulberry trees, and experiment with a new
hardy chestnut tree.
Its Jason's turn to speak, his mouth
goes dry, and the courage he has gathered threatens to leave him, but
finally he opens his mouth “Last fall when you accepted me as a
teacher I took an apprentice to help me set up my work shop,
Casandra. Now she has been a good worker, and has helped me assemble
a fine shop, more than earning her keep. But on Friday she asked for
me to accredit a public program she wanted to lead on her experiences
in Lomism, politely as I could I turned down the request. She took to
the opinion I was discriminating against her religion, and threatened
to charge the school with obstructing religious freedom. I told her
that was ridiculous, but she fired back that if she didn't get to
teach the class she would file for review under the Civil Liberties
Act the start of March.”
The feelings around the circle were
varied, but in unison everyone sat silently for a moment trying to
weigh the consequences. Katie was the first to speak, receiving the
nod from Jane, “I don't think we have any choice, I'm not the only
one here with a GGP history.” eyes shift between Maggie, Mark, and
Tony. “If you think she is serious we have to give her the class
charter. Too many of my friends from the old movement are gone, and
Tony can tell you about the Wild-land Restoration Crews.”
Tony takes the nod from Katie and says
“Well, it was very unpleasant, that's for sure. In '25 with the
Civil Liberties Act passage Rita and I were called before the very
same review board. We had both been GGP members in our early
Thirties, but she held an county office in '21. So we were charged
with conspiring to obstruct civil liberties.
“The 'review' was horrid, they pulled
up every stupid thing we had ever said, and painted it up so we
looked like complete traitors against Freedom to the The Eurasian
Federation, by proxy of their GGP offices. That insidious review made
me feel guilty. I still feel guilty for working under that foreign
corporate entity. They made me regret what I had done, helping
the GGP strip mine our Country, I will give them that. So, I was
convicted of obstructing Freedom of Assembly, because I was in a
black block in '21, sentenced to 6 months on a Wildland Restoration
Crew; Rita got charged with Advertising contrary to Freedom of Speech
and aiding a Corporate Conspiracy, sentenced to 2 years.
“The WRC was back breaking work
digging swales to battle the drought in California. The guards herded
us around to projects, some of them working us straight through the
midday heat. I was lucky, to get a 6 month sentence. '26, when I
served, was a good harvest year and I made it through losing only 33
pounds, hah the first 8 pounds were probably good for me.” Jason
tried not to wince at the pain in the callous of a joke Tony had used
so often before. “While I was there Rita faired better that I did,
but she had a 2 year sentence and the following summer, after I was
back home and I got a letter which was 'sorry to inform me' that she
died in the heat wave of '27, along with about a third of the Fresno
program participants from what I gather.” Tony blinks back some
tears “I took a lot of the pain from that, I've tried to turn it
into strength, but it's hard. I don't care what your politics are,
the fact is you don't want to face a review. The review haunts my
nightmares more than any day on the crews. They will air things you
didn't even know you said. Often the acquitted are worse off, the
audience have beat some people into an early grave or a hospital
debt, as they walk off stage, on the reckoning the judge was too
soft.”
Jason got the nod again “That was '25
things were more desperate then, having lost the Brazilian War. It's
different now, we've done good business with some of the board
members, they know us. Jane had review duty last fall for crying out
loud. Look at the work we do here, how could the review board judge
against the School? We haven't impeded on her freedom of religion, or
censored her free speech.”
Angus, NFP bandanna still in place,
lifted his iron claw and got the nod. “Jason, Casandra's Mom is a
board investigator. We're doing good work, but we are also in the way
of a lot of powerful people who don't like the competition, its
complicated. And the Brazilian's, with their Eurasian allies, are not
done yet, if North Mexico falls, things could get more desperate than
'25 was.
“Never anybody forget, I'm a proud
party member, but with loving respect to my friends in this circle
who have their own Freedom of opinion about the NFP and CLA, I say
that it's a fight we don't want to pick. Tony's charge was the
product of a dishonest board member with some ax to grind - against
party regulations I add - but we are facing a local board still as
crooked as that one was. We have to give her the class.”
Tony's eyes lit up, and he took the nod
back from Angus “What, no way! We can't bend to fear like that. We
cannot go before a review, but we also cannot be bullied around into
legitimizing Lomism by some spoiled Freedom brat. Making her sermon
on it an accredited part of our public programs. Have you heard her
spiel? Preaching like Lomists are all lights of spiritual perfection
in a dark world. Their 'ascension' is a fracked well, as though
they're all on a path to being more spiritually evolved than all
esle.”
“Yeah I have heard it old man, and it
occurs to me that some people are more ascendant than others! And get
right, the Lomist ascension is about spiritual development not
evolution. We don't conflate the eternal and temporal like the GGP's
Holons...” Angus' blistering response was cut off by a dissonant
chord from Session Master Jane's lyre.
“Speak with respect Angus! This is
not the time for a metaphysics lecture.” Jane spoke trying to hold
her anger at the young fellow party member's comments in check.
“Before they were stopped by the Freedom Men the GGP was supported
by preachers just as subtle, and when the masses got hold of the
teachings, same as always, they just heard 'We are more progressed',
just like the crowds that are now gathering around Lomism.”
Jaw clenched Angus considers a reply,
but Holly intervenes for him “But what if Angus or I wanted to
teach a program about Lomism? We go to Lomist programs, and I can say
for both of us that we have grown a lot from their practices. Would
that 'legitimize Lomism'?”
Jane weighed her words carefully
“Historically we have refrained from any classes about particular
named Spiritual Movements. That applies to my own Shinto
practice in the exact same way it applies to your Lomist practice.
Our President's recent interest in Lomism should not break that
equilibrium. Our curriculum is very carefully balanced to avoid
involvement in such matters. We are to focus on the maintenance of
the Great Conversation, not squabbles on crowd religion.”
Holly asked “Doesn't Lomism have a
place in that conversation? Isn't the work of spiritual developmen
and refinment at the very heart of your 'Great Conversation'?”
Before anyone could reply to Holly's
question an red cheeked Angus interjected “Don't get me wrong, I
love you guys, and that comes first... and you guys know I don't
suffer a snitch right?” a fearful expression on Tony's brow softens
“I respect what Tony and all the elders have been through. I am
just saying... I should have said... that a religion class could be a
good thing, I mean that its a valid path of study, handled well.”
“It pertains to a different sphere
than is our proper domain for public programs.” Maggie says to
clarify the precedent on such matters. “I know old people seem
hopelessly more tied to the sins of our heritage, but you have to
understand what we have seen in our days done by people preaching
spiritual ascension. Lomism respects that spiritual ascension cannot
escape the limits of the material plane, unlike some of the GGP's
blue propaganda, but it still places people on ideologically
differentiated levels of worth. How do you think the treatment of
Tony and Rita was justified? Because they were less ascended. The
School must hold on this.” Pausing before adding another wrinkle in
the issue “In fact, by the School's Source Book she should be
expelled for truing to coerce the School, but I would say we have let
our hands be tied on that one, for the time being.”
Looking at his wife Mark replies to her
“Yeah, she should be expelled, but no chance of avoiding a review
under that situation! I must admit to having problems with Lomism
too, especially the way some folks let it affect their political
loyalties. Truth be told that fact about me wouldn't look good under
a review. Though I think the issue of separate spheres of religion
and education is important to maintain, we may be in the corner on
this one. Maybe that makes us complicit in all the stupidity this
country seems unwilling to let go of, but our higher priority is to
preserve these crafts we practice and develop together, and we cannot
do that suffering heat stroke in a desert reclamation project on some
crew.”
The lyre sounds again as Jane tries to
put a little more order into the conversation. “This is a hot
issue, before we draw any more battle lines in our own family of
educators I want to hear Jason's appraisal of Casandra's teaching
credentials. But lets drop the talk of expulsion for the time being,
let's at least leave one sleeping dog to lie for now.” the last
remark is punctuated with a dissonant chord on the lyre.
Jason gulped. “Well, she is
intelligent, highly literate, and remarkably skillful in deduction.
But she tends to talk past people and she is still too vain to
effectively lead a class. Personally I would support Holly or Angus
teaching a Lomist class if my opinion were asked, even if I
personally am uncomfortable with some of its popular expressions,
because I know you guys are more subtle in your understandings of its
teachings... unless you're mad.” Jason looks at Angus to show him
respect after the little jab. “Casandra is more of an ideologue
though, if it weren't for the sword she has over us I wouldn't
consider recommending her teach any class in under a year.”
Katie wanted to say something, and
seeing this Jason nodded to her “Jason, I wouldn't have a problem
with the school expanding to include religious perspectives either.
But even granting how unprepared Casandra is to teach a class I don't
think we can risk losing everything because her family is well
connected with the party.”
After a brief pause the nod passed back
to Jane, she took a deep breath before speaking, “I think that this
worry about the Civic Liberties Act is over blown. It's function is
to protect our rights, not impose on them, while our country
struggles with the harsh realities of unindustrializing. Also, with
respect to Tony, Mark, Maggie, and Katie and all our friends who have
known the severity of the laws implementation, the severity is not
from malice, but necessity. Truly we are over populated, and the
government cannot be expected to ignore that in criminal matters.
Those projects have saved countless mile of agricultural land from
the expanding dunes...” Jane hesitated, painful feelings show
through her eyes. “I hate that this young girl's religious fever
has brought politics into this precious gathering place, and if I
felt the votes were there I would throw it out and invite the Civil
Liberties Act review to show the party what we have achieved in this
community, because I believe our work is second in quality and value
to none!”
As Jane finished her comment the room
filled with a suffocating silence. The hesitation in Jane's voice
killed any courage remaining in her audience to face a review and
stand up to Casandra's threat. As the silence dragged on the nod was
open for anyone to speak.
“Would Angus want to teach a Lomist
class?” Casey wondered out loud.
The feeling in the room transformed in
a blink, as everyone looked to him, and then followed his gaze back
to Angus, who sat there coming to terms with the possibility. “Me
teach a religion class? I mean I like some of the Loma in Old Town.
Truth be told I may someday want to be a Loma, to beget a spirit
which can live on in new incarnations after this body is wore out
like they are. But wouldn't me teaching still irk Casandra?”
Jane said with pained effort “It
would be a major concession to adjust our public programs thus.”
Casey shrugged “When Ian - who lies
under our fields - Mark, and I were writing some of the original
guide lines we were afraid of provoking the spiritual unrest of these
times, and the original idea was to check our own power more than
anything. I don't know if this is a concession at all, but that's
just based on my original intentions, of course this School means
differ things to each of us. I just really think Angus would lead a
whiz-bang program, and if Casandra were your assistant for the class
her vanity would be satisfied. Oh, Holly dear, I only said Angus over
you because he is more intimidating, and a party member, both of
which are useful.”
Jason had seen Holly's jaw clench at
the mention of Casandra working with Angus, and then relax nearly
into a smile as Casey said 'intimidating'.
Tony stewed at the idea of Lomism, so
popular with the high and mighty guards that ran those projects like
sacrifices to the vengeful Earth, but seeing the fear lighten on
Katie's face he swallowed his rage without choking. “Angus, I think
you could teach a fine class, even if I don't like some of the
teaching of Lomism I would rather its fans be hearing from a good
hearted young man whose known life working up from the hard streets
to being a successful, generous, working man. But don't let your
temper into your lessons”
With the unexpected addition of Tony's
support everyone in the room knew that a motion to accredit Angus'
class needed only the young man's acceptance. Angus shifted in he
chair and laughed “You guys all know Casandra might just end up
running the class, because I don't have so much to say about that
stuff as she seems to. But I like the idea of watching her get a
chance to act the fool.” eye's shrink wrapped in loving tears “The
only people that have been better to me than the NFP programs that
got me off the streets is you guys. If it helps protect the School I
will teach a class on anything .”
Maggie visibly uncomfortable at the
idea of Lomism being taught in the school asked “How would you...
compose the class?”
Angus had the answer to that “Probably
just walking together getting scraps from the slum, talking about
what we have learned as a class. Pretty much like all my programs.
Mostly how to be a good scrapper, but a few pow wows added in on
anybodies spiritual experiences.”
Jane rang the Lyre again to call for a
vote, after passing the ballot box Maggie tallied the beads, and
announced that the accreditation of 'Angus' Lomism Discussion Group'
passed 7 to 2. Jane announced “Well, its a class. But I am not
certain it solves our problem, and having shown that we respond to
threats of review, I think we have invited more pressure onto
ourselves, and perhaps even suspicion. I just fear our own distrust
will sow more danger than anything tangible.” she rang the lyre to
close the topic.
The cloud of the conversation broke
over the already tired group of educators, but not completely. Each
person in the room shared an ineffable feeling that this was only the
beginning. Their work meant more to most of them than their very
lives. The older member especially who had seen so much change since
the two party system they grew up berating finally died of a million
failures, and endured the chaos and violence of insurgencies,
crushing poverty, and threat of internment by the unfeeling policies
of an over populated country's revolutionary government.
Jane rang the notes of closing “Let
us join to close this meeting.”
Standing together the group, holding
hands with deep gratitude for each other they began their closing
meditation.
“Compost Failure to fertilize Wisdom,
Pain to fertilize Strength, Loss to fertilize Freedom. Grow wisdom to
displace cynicism, grow strength to displace hate, grow freedom to
displace resentment. Question not the measure in which the World
gives us these things to labor on, simply preserver to KEEP UP THE
GOOD WORK, IT WORKS!”
In only a few minutes more than a dozen
apprentices, students, and volunteer candidates would start showing
up. Today there were seeds to start, metal to clean and sort, a
public meal to cook, scrap to gather, and bottles to clean and
relabel and many more tasks and chores for the schools many programs
small and large. The group disbanded quickly, leaving the tea cups to
Casey for washing, and rushing to work.
Jason walked outside, to see Angus
pitching the class idea to his elated new assistant, and pondering
Holly's frustration as she huffed away to tend to the School's trout
tanks. “Casandra is well-meaning, she's just been denied any chance
to learn from failure. If she tries to push Angus around I bet she
could learn a lot.” Jason thinks to himself with a smile.
Jason was surprised by a hand on him
shoulder “Jason, can we talk.” it was Casey “These kind of
threats have come up before since the CLA was passed, but we have
generally managed to sort it out privately. Jason, you're a good
teacher, but you need to get savvy, this should have never come this
far. We live in dangerous times, and you saw the tension in this
meeting, well it breaks my heart. If we are not always diligent and
mindful these times can destroy this school without one of us ever
being brought before a review.” Casey hugged Jason “But its hard,
so we all do the best we can.”
Jason looked back at Casey, still
worried about something. “Casey? What if she tries to become a
faculty member?”
Casey played with his beard “That's
why the compost piles are Faculty only. As long as Faculty dues
include 20 hours of shoveling, hauling, and turning shit I think we
need not fear that prospect from the well connected.”
Walking away Casey looked back at
Justin was still mourning his little reprimand. “Speaking of which,
maybe you should get those hours in now... I am sure Kate could use
the company.”
Nice! I particularly like the way you've ritualized the very prosaic "faculty meeting" with the hubcap harp (curious to know what the strings are made from) and the formal chants that have such common cliches built into them (e.g. KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK!) Wish they did that at real meetings.
ReplyDeleteI see from your personal blurb at the top that you are an academic. You must have chuckled when you wrote about the "Faculty Only" compost heap. :-)
You mentioned on my site (the Ragnar story) that you were looking for feedback. Anything in particular?
Knowing what ones looking for is the trickiest part, largely I am trying to encourage a little more cross talk with these different stories. Figuring it will improve the writing for everybody.
ReplyDeleteThis story was kinda me trying to deal with a pretty brutal topic of governance in a crazy time, and even close friends being across each other on an increasingly dangerious political line. But I didn't want to do a "alas the future is bleak story" hence it being set among a group that is relatively well off, though depending on how cards are drawn could get thrown under the compost heap. An image of how a person might hope to be more well off come the mid 30's, in a time line where a dark government is just starting to real turn sour.
Ray, thank you for your good opinion of my story. As to your request for 'blistering critique', I feel unqualified to accept rapid promotion to the status of Literary Critic, and disinclined to cauterize anyone's efforts!
ReplyDeleteHowever, unless you are making a subtle point about declining literacy and the corruption of language, I suggest that you should check the spelling more thoroughly. For instance in a couple of places 'bares' should be 'bears'; 'roll' should be 'role', 'secession' should be 'session', 'dawning' should be 'donning', 'faired' should be 'fared','esle' should be 'else','truing' should be 'trying', 'differ' should be 'different' .' Defacto' might be better as 'de facto', 'know how' as 'know-how', 'which he finds worthy' as 'whom he finds worthy'. I understand there is such a thing as a 'Stirling engine'. 'Sterling engine' suggests either a bank or a machine for forging British currency!
Your somewhat Orwellian society may indeed give 'political correctness' priority over efficiency, even (for a while) if they are obviously short of resources, but I wonder about the psychology displayed and how long it could last. I'm not well acquainted with inventors, engineers and competent mechanics, but I get the impression they have to be a lot harder and more tough-minded than that. When the chips are down, and practical results are all that matter, one suspects that all the currently fashionable attitudes, niceness, sensitivity and effeminacy will be amongst the first things into the furnace to be re-cycled.
Thank you very much for cataloging the typos, between your work and the recommendations I got from a good friend of mine refinement of those flaws will be much easier. I am a living point about the decline of literacy and the mutation of language, but I do what I can with my still underdeveloped faculties.
ReplyDeleteIn terms of the Orwellian society, and the survival of different psychologies, I think of the question as very unsettled. The School is very upper class and well to do, it pays the bills by technical work which is quite profitable. The standard of living the Faculty members manage to maintain is similar to people I know who practice a life one today would call voluntary poverty, which with a few vents need not be hard nosed pragmatism. Those who are well to do have strong motives to be agreeable and compassionate, lest they earn the ire of those who are not as well off. Maybe I am exploring a variation on Steampunk, Catabolis posh.
Dear Ray,
ReplyDeleteThis is a funny note to write, firstly because I'm not quite sure I'm putting it in an appropriate place but mostly because I don't know how you'll receive it at all since I don't know you. However, reading your posts on ADR and your personal narrative you shared on my blog, I feel very strongly that we are peers, and as such have a certain type of relationship that may be of significance to the both of us.
Let me explain: my own narrative is rather convoluted, turned inward, ornate and arabesque. A recent chapter involves starting a homestead with a partner 15 years my senior in Middle Tennessee. An even more recent chapter sees us breaking up, me returning to my home state of Massachusetts. Of course there were hard feelings, but recently we've been talking on the phone every few months. Last time we spoke she spoke of how she has identified a need in her life for peership, for other people who've walked a similar path as her. She's been homesteading since she was 25 (the age at which I met her), and is now 40. She doesn't meet a lot of people with a shared foundational experience, and when she does its deeply rejuvenating for her.
Likewise, I've been walking my path for the length of my life, always simultaneously fiercly focused and equally dispersing, and find very few peers. When I do, I'll happily bike 20 miles both ways to spend a few days a week working on their herbs farm, say.
So in that spirit I wish to extend a certain type of support and mutual aid. While we don't know each other, we can share our narratives, compare notes on living on the margins. Help us affirm to one another that we are not alone.
What I'm suggesting Ray, is that we be pen pals! Of course we're both very busy with our lives, but I think this would be something worth the time of reading a letter, of thoughtfully composing a response, and maybe stuffing a handful of herbs into the envelope. At least for me.
If this interests you please respond by email: I can be reached at muggwort@netzero.com
Best wishes,
Violet