Monday, July 21, 2014

Sewer Rat ... The beginning of some brain smatter side story of my Animal World.

It is really a symphony of sounds and smells. The scream of electrified metal clashing against metal melds with the melodious canned voices that fail to rise above the static of the obsolete sound system. The din of millions of footsteps trying to get somewhere, or away from somewhere churns up the aroma that belongs to this place alone.

Caught up in the sounds and smells that is the music of the New York City Subway, I almost missed her. The sewer Rat scurries by me in a rainbow of ratty florescent green curls and a faded torn I "Heart" NY shirt she probably bought from one of those knock off stores in Chinatown. She grabs the pole and swings back around. The metallic doors close and she peers out the window as the train begins to move. She sways. Her shorts are stained with finger swipes of spray paint over a pair ripped purple tights. The earbuds that keep her ass moving in small undulating waves are studded with green rhinestones.

Her satchel is a mess. Dirty tees and jeans poke out of every available hole. Shit had been stuffed into that hand sewn piece of rag. This girl must have been in a rush to get somewhere. 

Or ... away from someone.

A book slips out of her bag, bounces off her boots and drops on to the black rubber floor below. It flips open in front of me. A detailed pencil sketch of a Lion stares up at me. 

Interesting.

Still not noticing me, she scoops it up in a flash of punk pink painted nails and stuffs it back into her rag of a bag. She gnaws on her pinky nail. Most of the paint looks to have been bitten away. As she works on the rest of the toxic pink paint, she stares out the window of this A train that we have both found ourselves on.

I look back down. She is definitely not a sewer Rat. Her boots give her away. She could have stole them, true, but these babies fit her like they were tailored. These were made from the finest skins I'd ever seen. This ratty mess was no more sewer Rat than I was. I can't imagine why or what would make this lovely girl pretend to be other than she is.

And she is special. A Snake. My special Snake.

The train slows as it approaches 14th Street. She backs up, visibly disturbed. The train stops and her head snaps down and she is absolutely still.

I glance up as the doors open. Two cops stand right outside. One cop looks in and straight at me. With all the shit that's been going down, I'm not surprised they are on high alert.

I arch my brow and smile invitingly. The cop looks deep into my multifaceted eyes and turns beet red. He bows his head in acknowledgement. Unless necessary, Law-enforcement types rarely seek to tangle with my kind. He backs out of the train as the doors close. 

With a lurch we begin our forward momentum once again.

I look up at my target. She has finally noticed me. Does she know who I am? Her now unpainted pinky is back in her mouth and her malachite green eyes are piercing. 

No, she doesn't know who I am. Maybe it is better this way.

Or...

I smile my inviting smile and she looks away, startled and terrified. She looks to the humans on the train. They are all oblivious to her. She backs up against the train car exit doors. She reaches for the handle as if to pull it open to exit to the next car.

I give my head the slightest shake and she obeys immediately. Tears stream down her face.

Good girl. Now she knows who I am. What I am. There is no escape for her.

And now I know who she is. I've been searching for her and after all these fruitless years she happens to stumble onto the same train car.

God I love this city.

...to be continued...




Tuesday, October 8, 2013

"The Lost Spark" By JT Krul. A review.























"The Lost Spark"
By: JT Krul

I could go on about how amazing this book is. I could say how much I wish I could disappear into its paperbacked cover. I could... but I am not. The book speaks for itself. Instead I am going to write down a remembrance of a spark I thought I had lost.

My spark is a pink bear with a rainbow on his belly called Bubbaly Pubbaly. He was a cheap Care Bears knock off from the 80ʻs that my Mom bought for me because we couldnʻt afford a "real" Care Bear. Bubbaly Pubbaly was more real to me - more powerful for me than any Care Bear "Stare". My Bubbaly Pubbaly had a sister named Boohbaly Poohbaly, a smaller pink bear with no rainbow that was won for me out of one of those crane machines that never ever work. Except it worked because Bubbaly Pubbaly wanted to rescue his sister. He also had a best friend named Marcie Darcie who was not a bear but a rather boxy-looking florescent-pink fox. Marcie Darcie was found in a woman and childrenʻs shelter that my Mom worked at. Iʻm not sure if Marcie Darcie was Male or Female. I donʻt think that mattered to Bubbaly Pubbaly, his sister, or I.

Every night, my Mom would send me on great adventures with my friends. She would tell me to make sure I was back in bed in time to wake up in the morning. I would crawl in to the caverns of Blanket Town and go into the wilds of Dreamville.

I wonder - When did that stop? When did I put away my friends? I am not sure what happened to them. I am hoping that they live somewhere nice. I am hoping they are someplace safe until I can find them again.

Until then, they live in my head. With them I climb through the caverns of adulthood and disbelief and emerge on the other side to create worlds on paper with symbols Iʻd only begun to understand as a child.

Thank you to my Mom for finding me my lifetime writing partners. Thank you to Bubbaly Pubbaly. I hope to see you and your friends again one day. And to you JT Krul ... Thank you for helping me to remember my spark. Sometimes just a memory is enough to spark something amazing.

If you are adventurous enough to pick it up and delve into "The Lost Spark" and its well painted world then go HERE to buy this sparkling book. For a direct link to JT Krulʻs sparky Blog and more of his work go HERE.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Cold Shoulder Mornings. A short story by Pili Nathaniel.


Cold Shoulder Mornings
By Pili Nathaniel

Mary had to get out of bed. She needed to get to her computer. She wanted to write. She pushed the covers off slowly and crawled out into the cold morning. 

“Where are you going?”

Mary felt the blossoming bud of hope. She looked warily at him. “You’re talking to me now?”

He turned his head and shut his eyes, effectively shutting her out. 

He came home last night from work, his eyes averted from hers. Didn’t want to talk, didn’t even want to look at her. Last night, Mary’s heart felt like it sat stewing in the acid of her rumbling stomach.

Mary tried to cuddle with him during the night but he just lay there like stone. She tried wrapping her smooth naked arm around his waist only to get shoved away. At one point he positioned himself just to make it uncomfortable for her to hold him.

He did not try to touch Mary once.

Today, her heart felt like it was being stuffed and squeezed into her small intestines. What was wrong with him? “What did I do? Did I do something?” Today, Mary refused to ask. She’d asked twice last night.

“Nothing,” he looked briefly at her, his flat brown eyes were empty. 

This morning was much of the same. She got out of bed and left the icy bedroom, it’s frigidness had nothing to do with the dry California winter air. All hope that Mary felt was eaten away by the worms of self-doubt. “What did I do?” She made his coffee, made herself some black tea and went outside to water the garden.  

The grass was wet with early morning dew. Mary’s bare feet were soon slathered in grass-sweat as she traipsed through it toward the garden lugging the bright green hose. She lost herself in her little garden. The lettuces were still very small and susceptible to the weather. “I think that we have a little furry creature taking it’s fill,” she mused. About a quarter of the tender greens were decimated or simply gone. “What a lucky little mouse.” she thought. “For now.” 

Mary turned a jet of fresh cold water onto the corn, about a dozen in all. One or two hadn’t survived through the transition of transplanting. She had loved starting the seeds in the house while the weather was still frigid. The corn had been one of the first babies to poke its head out of the fresh earth and into the warmth of her home. 

She let the water spray lazily over the remainder of the garden. The sun hadn’t come up over the fence just yet and she didn’t want to stun the little sugar snap pea shoots or bruise the cilantro. She would have to replant some tomorrow. The four or five delicious plants were already becoming tall in the slow warmth that was creeping up as winter turned to spring. The older romaine lettuces would soon follow suit, bolting as if to extend their lush green arms into the spring sun.

Mary wiped her wet brown feet on the welcome mat outside the kitchen. Her home was not quite as welcoming as her garden and the approaching sunrise. Instead of a warm, “Good Morning!” She was greeted by a stoic man making coffee.

“I already made you coffee.” She whispered.

“It was cold.” He grunted.

Mary grabbed the still warm cup of coffee from the counter and tossed its remains in the sink. Her head hurt with the need to release. Her hands itched for the safety of her computer. Instead, she got ready for yoga and read a half chapter of a ‘spiritual guidance’ book a friend in NYC had suggested. She dove into the book. Interesting, but not enough to restore her heart to its proper place.

She asked him something unimportant with the hope of maybe getting him to talk with her. No response. She made a cute comment about his stinky yoga mat, which he obviously didn’t find funny because she got the same averted eyes and no reply.  

She didn’t say anything then. Her lungs felt too small for the breaths she was trying to take. Mary couldn’t get a full breath. She didn’t say anything as she put veggie-oil into her converted 1978 diesel Mercedes. She didn’t say anything when she came back into the cold house to wash the oil off her hands. She didn’t say anything when she started the car to warm it up or when he slammed the door after sitting in the passenger seat. Mary didn’t say anything.

She almost got into a couple of accidents on the way to yoga. Mary said something then. The first word was at a four way stop sign as a Prius decided to take his turn a little early.  

“Fucker.” Mary said.

Then at the next green light she took a left turn. It was near completion when a grey Tacoma swerved from behind a large black SUV to come rushing straight at her car.  Mary screamed then.

“Fuck you!” Mary stuck her longest finger out of her window as to make sure the other driver knew what a dick he was.

He said something then. “You knew that was going to happen.”

Mary spat out something in reply to him. Something of no consequence. Mary knew then that he would only speak of his own accord if he had to relate something that she had done wrong. She had spent the last ten or so hours in suspense of the dreadful thing she must have done to deserve this cold-shoulder treatment from him. 

Mary pulled into the parking lot as safely as she could. God forbid he’d say anything about her driving skills. She just wanted to get out of her stinky old car and get up to yoga.

Not a very auspicious way to begin a spiritual yoga practice.

Practice wasn’t any better. He made it a point to practice on the other side of the room, even when there was a huge space next to her. That put Mary into the realm of the stinky lesbian chick (she really is stinky) and the “Ho-hum” woman (she hummed and grunted throughout her entire practice), both of which they’d tried their best to practice very far away from. On a good day he and Mary would have complained about and teased these women. Now, Mary was the woman that he didn’t want to practice next to.

She pushed through her yoga practice. Mary let the sweat drown her confused sorrow-anger.  

After closing postures, she got up and got dressed when her body was willing.  She said a small goodbye to the instructor. She could tell the instructor knew something was going on. Her instructor was wrong. There was nothing going on. Nothing.  

Mary didn’t say anything as she waited in her stinky car for him. She didn’t say anything when the door opened to announce his arrival and when it shut to let her know that she could start the car and drive home. She didn’t say anything when he stuffed the earbuds of her little grey iPod into his already deaf ears. Mary didn’t say anything when he tipped his hat down in effort to drown out the world and her presence.  

Not a word was spoken as she drove home. No almost-accidents. No swearing. Nothing except the tinny sound of music coming from an old set of Apple earbuds.

She pulled into the driveway. He was out of the car before she put it into park. Mary turned the car off and sat there for a while. The wrought iron door squeaked open then slammed closed. 

“What was happening here? What did I do?” Mary sat on the faded and torn leather seats of her old Mercedes and let some errant tears go. 

“Stop. Just stop.” She shook herself, grabbed her stinky yoga stuff and left her car. Mary let her free hand scrap along the rough whitewashed exterior of her small adobe-style house as she made her way to the clothesline. She hung out her ripped, sweat-wet yoga mat and took a cleansing breath. She looked to the garden. What looked so inviting in the early morning light now looked pale and dead in the afternoon gloom. She hadn’t noticed this morning but the kale had been ravaged by worms. Mary salvaged what she could, pulled the entire plant from the garden and threw the remains in the compost pile. It lay there. Worm infested and unwanted. 

Mary took another breath. She would try to make this right. Whatever this was. She set out for the kitchen to make them some smoothies. He was taking a shower. 

Mary was already half done with her kale/mango/strawberry/coconut smoothie when he came out, dressed. She tried again. “There’s a smoothie with your name on it in the kitchen.” She could hear the false cheerfulness drone out of her voice.

“I don’t want any.” He continued into the kitchen, avoiding her disappointed stare. He came into the living room with some apple-peach juice.  

Shutdown again. She turned back to her computer screen and decided to tune him out.

He tinkered on his computer on one side of the living room while Mary checked the news at her computer on the opposite side. She read about people who’s lives were decidedly worst off then hers.  

She decided to try one more time. She pouted, “So you’re gonna make me drink the entire smoothie by myself?” Mary tried for puppy-dog eyes, but it really didn’t matter what she did because he didn’t look up from his computer. He just shrugged a negative.  

She washed the glass out and put the remains of the smoothie into the refrigerator next to the bottle of apple-peach juice. She sat back at her computer and let herself numb over.  Mary made her heart return to its proper place and made her lungs function correctly.  She turned her entire being back to her keyboard and screen. She created a new document and let her fingers speak. At least here she was wanted. At least here Mary could release her thoughts without the nuisance of expecting a feeling reply. She knew this conglomeration of wires and plastic wasn’t alive. This machine could not give human contact and for that she was glad.  

The human man she was currently in contact with was behaving like a slow computer and she couldn’t log on because the password had been changed.  Mary didn’t know how to get in.

He changed into his nicest work blacks, turned off his computer and said a terse, “Bye.”  He was already halfway out the door. At least he said something. 

Mary said nothing.
  
He slammed the wrought-iron kitchen door.

“Here I am,” Mary typed as tears trickled down her cheeks on to her fingers; wet like dew-drenched grass on a cold morning, “writing about it. I’m writing about nothing.”

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Rest in Eternal Music, Lina.

A few days ago a great inspiration passed away. Thank you Mrs. Lina Doo for your support, vivacity, creativity and love. Thank you for your inspiration. Thank you for your SONG.

For you Mrs Lina Doo,

I sing a song of beauty,
Of kindness and of love.
You sing the songs of Angels
In that great Theatre above.

Where everyone has perfect pitch,
and follows your direction.
Where your students learn their music,
With FOCUS and Intention.

You taught a song of learning,
Of passion and of strength.
You taught me how to sing MY song,
At least you tried to at great length.

All the many lives you touched
Will sing your song anew
We sing full of love and heart
For you, Mrs Lina Doo.

By Pili Nathaniel

TAG LINE FOR "The Change"!!!!!

Hi all...

I have been told by my writing/artist/screenwriting/writing/friends that you need to be able to get into an elevator and give a description of your project to those standing there before the doors open again...

NOW I CAN!!!!!!!!!!!

I have my TAGLINE!!! I have my explanation!!! I can get into an elevator with you and tell you what "The Change" is about from the first floor to the second floor!!! Hopefully you'll stay until at least the tenth floor so I can tell you more!!!

THE CHANGE:

"After the loss of her Mother, young Julia's life spirals further out of control when she discovers her innate ability to Change into an Animal."

-Pili

PS... Sorry I've been a bit MIA... I'm furiously rewriting, editing and proofing "The Change." My head space has been taken up by Julia's world...

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Plotting...

Hi all,

So as I have mentioned... or maybe I haven't mentioned but I have thought about it and further thought I mentioned it but never did because I have these conversations with myself in my head that I think I write down but never actually do and when I look for the written words from my head I find that they never existed.

Except for maybe in my head.

So I have decided to PLOT. I have formally mentioned somewhere on some blog, if not my own, that I am a FREEWRITER. I writeandwriteandwriteandwrite to just let the ideas and plotlines flow as they might. It has worked so far... until recently. I feel so stopped up with Ideas that the Ideas are begining to mesh into this weird beefstew in my head. By PLOTTING I feel I might get a grasp on the freewheeling crazyfacing hotsteamingmessofconsciousness in my brain.

An UPDATE on "The Change": Two AWESOME friends, a College Lit Professor and a Writer/Production Madam of Disney and such, have both read a full draft of "The Change"!!! I will be speaking with them this coming week and hopefully begin the next phase of "The Change" in which I begin to really hone the book into a solid piece.

I am also thinking about PLOTTING out "The Change". That way I can make sure the characters, plots, actions, timeline, though line... ALL MAKE SENSE (to someone other than myself).

Thank you once again to Mike Wolfson whose BLOG, http://www.musingsfromplanetwolfson.com/a-writers-blog.html, I read semi-religiously. His latest blog features a chart done by JK Rowling and the Lester Dent Pulp Paper Master Fiction Plot. Please go check his blog.

-Pili

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

I have been NAMED.

A reply to a blog post by fellow (awesome) writer Mike Wolfson. Click on his name to read his blog! In his latest entry he gives me a name and this was my response.

Is that what I am?

Am I what that is?

FreeWriter

WriterFree

Wow. Mind blown. You have just given me a name Mister Wolfson. Thank you. 

I am very rarely named.

My stories usually flow out of the characters that jump out of my head. The only reference I have is Athena jumping out of her fathers head. Its kinda like that but without the godly Greek powers. 

Stories form around these characters as they come to life in words. Some of them come from the part of my heart that is broken. Some come from the mean bitch in my head. One character resembled my foot if my foot had been stepped on many times by a Kentucky Derby horse named George.

The blood flows into my keyboard when I start introducing these characters. Some of them get along rather well while others are so put off by the other that they demand to be in another story entirely. 

And so a world is created by the characters that live in it. 

And isn't that what the world is anyway? It is what it is because I perceive it to be what it is.

I am Pili Freewriter Nathaniel. 

Thank you again for my new name.

Pili