
Category: Death
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For every star in heaven
There’s a sad soul here today.
– Queen, Long Away.
…
The end is here at last.
I know it’s the end because I don’t care anymore.
I don’t care who my actions will hurt. After all, they don’t care about me.
I heard it and knew it the other day “fuck her.” I’m an epileptic. He meant he didn’t want anyone to come home and look after me.
He meant if I fell and broke my neck, he didn’t care.
He didn’t care if I died.
Mother just sat there quietly, as always.
Sister. She lit the flame. She never said sorry.
I’m sorry to the online friends I have. The people I loved who never knew me. Rami. Michael. Chris. I hope we meet some day.
But this sad soul is joining the stars. My only friend. The end.
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I ran until my legs could barely hold me up.
I ran until I could feel nothing but jelly anymore,
If that makes sense.
I ran unti I had could no more longer breathe.
I ran until I tripped and could run no longer.
The chase was over.
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When is an Impossible Dream a Dead Dream
I spent a good portion of this evening typing up my entry for the Impossible Dream collaboration. I will eventually post it, if only because I made the effort to write it up on Cheetah Corona (my Corona electric typewriter), to I feel I shouldn’t waste it. A lot of ideas of mine get abandoned and wasted, which brings me to what inspired me to write this.
While it is nice to vent my feelings on all that seems impossible to achieve in my life as an artist and as a person, I also found myself excavating some unpleasant thoughts that I try to ignore a lot of the time.
It was not a pleasant excavation.
The biggest discovery? As a creator (writer, artist,delusional buffoon, whatever you would like to call me), I feel my window of opportunity is, at best, nothing but a tiny crack lit by sunlight on occasion. I’m nearing 40, I have little money, no connections to open any doors in life, and my struggles with mental illness and – more recently – epilepsy mean even finishing a project is difficult. Depression tells me I can’t do it, that no one will like it, why bother because I am useless. Anxiety is the sane tune played in Paralysing Fear of Mockery. Epilepsy is often triggered by stress, which all of the above bring on.
The best I can often manage are a few mediocre drawings of people I admire and abstract vent pieces. Writing happens in dribs and drabs. Most of it remains hidden.
I create so little of value, and I feel my dreams are dying along with whatever skill I may have posessed once. But I have nothing to move on to. I already know ordinary jobs are like being trapped in a cage to me, a cage that drives me slowly mad. No matter how good my coworkers and boss are, it feels the same.
I’m stuck here in a hole I dug for myself. I often ask what will happen to my work after I die. And the truth, save the few that are better than average, is they’ll be heading to a landfill one day. And that will be when I am truly dead. -

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I rarely cry. I learned quickly as a child that crying resulted in one of two things: being yelled at for crying, or being bullied worse for crying.
I cried today for a good five minutes. Nobody came to see if I was okay. There it is. My pain is just background noise. Family is a mere concept to me, I have no experience with what it is supposed to be about. The connections everyone else has in life are absent from mine. I will never have them. Even friends are thin on the ground, and growing less and less every day.
Eventually my only friend will be, as the rock poet Jim Morrison sang, The End.
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I would be lying if I said my original decision to drop out of work was altruistic. It was for three reasons: my anxiety and depression went into overdrive, and I decided I was safer and happier in my flat doing drugs.
Unsurprisingly, I had to leave the flat due to none payment of rent (my parents bailed my out there), but I clung to those childish little hopes we all have: maybe tomorrow the antidepressants will work, maybe tomorrow I can find the money to buy my stuff and stave off withdrawal, maybe tomorrow I’ll win the goddamn lottery (or mum or my sister will).
Of course, none of these things happened because they are the childish daydreams of an adolescent stuck in an adult’s body. I’ve never found a way to change that mind set. Maybe it is just how I am, but it makes me chronically unsuitable for the modern world.
Reading Liz Truss’s comments about how the workers here should be more like the Chinese workforce (you know, the country that has to put nets around their buildings because of all the suicides from their cruelly overworked workforce), I realised something as dark and sad as I have ever known since the nightmare of secondary school: this world doesn’t give a shit. About any of us. We are here to feed capitalism, and then die.
“Well, what took you so long to realise that?” It’s a good question, and the answer is Elphis. The Goddess of hope. The thing I have clung to for so long, that brief feeling during Jeremy Corbyn’s tenure that maybe things really were changing.
But the Capitalist machine saw off the threat. And now it’s gearing up to grind our bones to make their bread. Before they fuck off into space and leave us all to starve to death. Interstellar was way ahead of its time there.
Well, I’m no cog in a machine. If it comes to it, I’ll make damn sure I’m dead before that happens. I’ll do my drugs because they make life bearable. They will kill me. I’m okay with that. It is, in the end, my choice to do this, and not some asshole bathing in millions I can only dream of.

