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ENNUI
AND MEANING |
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The anthill outside his door was just becoming visible in the blue light of dawn. The anthill was unexceptional. It wasn't particularly large and it had no special features that he was aware of. It was just an anthill. The ants were a small black variety, and had probably been making this type of hill since before mammals were even on the planet. He sat there on the plastic chair, drinking his cup of coffee, and watching the ants. He did this every morning before leaving his house to go to work. The coffee was just the store variety of instant. Just ordinary working class stuff. He had once tried one of those fancy coffees at ![]() |
After a while, he got up
,went back into the bedroom and got dressed in his uniform, and then left
his house to go to the little auto body and paint shop that he owned and
operated. It wasn't much of a business, but it was his. As he ![]() |
He got kind of a Zen pleasure
in just mindlessly sanding cars to prep them for ![]() |
II
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It was the 10th of October. He got up, watched the ants and drank his coffee as usual, but something was different. Something had changed. He felt different. The world somehow felt different. The sky looked about the same as always, just kind of a bland gray but it was somehow more...meaningful.. Somehow, he had been touched while sleeping. Touched, but he didn't know by what. It was as though he had previously been looking out at the world from behind a gauzy curtain, and now the curtain was drawn and he could really see...not just the world...but all of existence. Somehow everything made sense to him. The chaos and non-meaning of everything now had patterns. It wasn’t as though the world was now meaningful in human terms, but it had meaning for those who could see as he could see. The meaning in human terms was still chaos and absurdity, but in his now...post human being, he fit in. He was now a conscious part of existence. “Maybe,” I'm the first post human, human,” he thought to himself. |
“Was this what Enlightenment was about?” he wondered. “Maybe this was a higher consciousness.” Hell, he had never been religious or spiritual. He had always been a human ant as were most people on the planet. He probably would have believed, if he had ever thought about it before, which he hadn't, that he had free will and that he had determined his own fate through his free will. He knew that he hadn't had free will before. Now he did. Now he felt the Universe had big things planned for him. He was going to be one with all that exists. He just felt it. Maybe he was to become the superman. |
He walked out and stepped on the ants. He ground his foot into their ant hill and he stepped on any that escaped. They would die in a short time anyway, so he just speeded up the process. He took no pleasure in this, in fact he was indifferent to it. What lives, dies. |
He got in his car and drove
to his shop. He opened the door and walked in. There on the floor were
his two illegal alien employees lying dead with bullet holes in their
chests. He calmly looked at both of them as though he was looking at slabs
of meat. “Ahh, shit. Now there's friggin’ blood on the floor,” he said
to himself. Then he called 911. “Hello, this is James Webb at Webb's Auto
Body. Yes, on Main. Right. I just opened my shop and my two employees
are lying dead on the floor. No. I don't know what happened. They were
like this when I ![]() |
“You the guy who called?”
asked the Sgt, who looked like he was Mexican. |
The cop then had
James go outside where he was frisked by the cop with the ![]() |
“Got me. I’m just a calm
person I guess,” said James. “Yeah, well I don’t get it. I mean just about anyone would be upset or grieving or panic stricken, but you’re as calm as though you just saw some squashed bugs.” “Hmmm,” said James, “squashed bugs. Good analogy. Look, I've got better things to do with my time. Will you just get those stiffs out of my shop and I'll go about my business.” "The Sgt. told me that you don't like Mexicans," said the black cop. "Nah. He got it wrong. I said I don't like blacks," said James. The detective walked back to the white detective. “There's something wrong with that guy. I've never seen anyone act cooler.” “You think he did it?” “Nah. He's too cool. I think he's insane, but I don't think he did this. He probably could have, had it occurred to him, but maybe someone beat him to it. He told me he doesn't like blacks.” “I thought it was Mexicans he didn't like. Let me ask him a couple of questions." "Mr. Webb. You're not making things better for yourself. My partner said you don't like blacks. Is that right?" "Nah. I don't like whites." "Do you like anyone Mr. Webb?" "I never thought about it too much. I don't like, nor not like anyone. I just ![]() After a little more questioning, the detectives figured they didn't have any evidence to hold James and they left. |
Once the the bodies were
removed, James went back to sanding the cars, as he had been doing for
years. “Ah, screw it," he suddenly said for no particular reason. He put
on his coat and walked out the back door of the shop. He got in his car
and drove the 40 or so miles to Skid Row where he parked his car, left
the keys in the ignition, and just walked away from it. That day turned into night and then it was day again. Then it was night, and then day. The days turned into weeks and the weeks into months. Some days it rained. Some days it didn't. It didn't matter. |
As
he wandered the streets, James became like all the others. His gait had
automatically changed from a bounding walk to the standard shuffle of
everyone else around him. These were people who had no place to go, but
who were constantly going to that no place. He shuffled his way to a line
of homeless ![]() ![]() |
James got in the free food line. There were a lot of vacant and hollow expressions in this line and everyone seemed to mind their own business. Everyone just mindlessly followed the person in front as the line moved ant like into the building where the food was, and then out the exit door back to the streets. James imagined a giant boot coming down from heaven and squashing some of those in the line and he was sure that those behind the ones squashed would just walk over their bodies as though nothing had happened. Individuals didn't matter, death didn't matter, life didn't matter. What mattered was the doing of whatever it was that was being done at the moment, because the doing was the purpose even if there were no other purpose but the doing. It was a mindless doing that was being done. He felt part of all of those around him. He was one with them and they were one with him, and none of them meant anything. They were just like the other people who were getting up and going to work each day in the high rise office buildings just a few blocks from Skid Row. The only difference was that these pieces of the cosmic dung heap didn't have the conceit to think that they were something else. |
James then smiled a little
smile to himself, as he shuffled on, because he knew that he had found
the meaning of life. He liked having the consciousness of the universal
dung pile. He liked the fact that he existed without effort. He liked
the fact that he was what was when no effort was expended to be anything
else. His existence was natural. The existence of the clean ants was
unnatural and they had to expend much energy to exist as they did. James
felt like the original darkness before there was light. He was, when
nothing else was. Let others try to be the light in human form. Let
them burn themselves out as though it mattered. |