I'm thinking about how life changes after something seismic happens. Something that takes us outside of our way of living. Outside of how we thought it was. I’m
wondering if it’s a bit like coming back from the moon. I wonder if we don’t
come back with a different point of view. Coming back to Earth
from the moon is written about very well here lazenby's moon.
It’s funny to think that already within the
space of a fortnight we have a delineating sentiment. Already we’re starting to
talk about before the virus in the same way people used to talk about before the war. And
now we have a life during the wartime delineation.
During the lockdown. And there shall
be a hereafter where it will be after the
lockdown even if not after the virus.
The lockdown is an unimaginable difference to some. An existence outside of
hyperreality. It’s been described as surreal, but really is it anymore so than
the way were living? Something I’ll be interested in seeing is the immediate
fallout of after the lockdown.
I’ve a funny idea. Not amusing. Just funny. There’s a book that Kurt Vonnegut wrote when he was an old man who’d earned his wrinkles in both thought and biography. It’s called Timequake. I looked up the term timequake in the OED and it lacks a definition. I’ll try..
I’ve a funny idea. Not amusing. Just funny. There’s a book that Kurt Vonnegut wrote when he was an old man who’d earned his wrinkles in both thought and biography. It’s called Timequake. I looked up the term timequake in the OED and it lacks a definition. I’ll try..
Timequake. noun
A timequake is a fracture
in the space time continuum where all existence is put in a timewarp where they
have to relive the last ten years of lives their as an observer, as in the great
timequake of 2003 and when everyone was transported back to 1993 and had to
relive the same thwarted flirtations, the same bad hairstyles, the same
culinary mistakes, the same corny jokes, and the same deaths of those they held
dear over the last ten years again. Hardly a barrel of laughs.
After the timequake ends, at the precise second where people can continue their lives rather than relive
them, everybody just freezes. A kind of apathy petrifies humanity in the same
way Ice9 froze the ocean in Vonnegut’s earlier novel Cat’s Cradle and brings an end
to man’s existence. A question of free will has inadvertently, inevitably so,
has been planted in the everyone’s heads. They are depressed at what they’ve
been through. We have to grapple with the idea of determinism. There's a stark ennui revolving around the painful acceptance that the lives
we’re living are not necessarily the ones we’d choose. This is true for all
(see The Prince and the Pauper for
example), but it is most noticeable in the realm of the quotidian, i.e.
teachers complaining about marking, nurses complaining about being overworked,
waitresses complaining about sleazeballs, prostitutes complaining about cops,
cops complaining about being called pigs, students complaining about homework
etc &c. Vonnegut illustrates this in the scene where the novel’s hero,
Kilgore Trout, the only person not affected by this apathy, and thus not frozen
to the spot, looks at the motionless city and tries to wake up the citizens. He
runs around and around, wake
up, you’ve got free will! he shouts declaringly at the human statues. He spends a long
time doing this with no results. Finally he runs into the foyer of a hotel and
shouts at the single figure in it wake
up, you’ve got free will! Slowly the person in the distance starts to move. They gradually pick
up motion. Back and forth they start to move. Free will says the stranger. Why,
free will’s a crock of shit says the black janitor as he gets back to
mopping the floor. After this Trout amends his message. To revive the people he
begins to say You were sick, but now you’re
well, and there’s work to do.
Of course, the implication isn’t that the sickness wasn’t necessarily the timequake.
I can’t fully remember what follows. However, I do remember that it contains a very tender scene afterwards. Kilgore Trout’s swansong. Before he dies there is a ceremony organised to send Vonnegut’s much loved character off. Naturally Kurt is there himself. It would be rude if he weren’t. There’s a lot of love going round. Trout himself is at his most charming. At one point he puts out the idea thatStonehenge
was built in a time when the Earth’s gravitational pull was much less and that
the ancients could throw around these giant rocks like pillows. I suppose
that’s what happens afterwards is that people reconnect. Or, simply, they connect. They've good reason to. they've good reason to do it meaningfully. They develop a human feeling. One which may have been not have been
all that there beforehand. Or one that had been lost.
Of course, the implication isn’t that the sickness wasn’t necessarily the timequake.
I can’t fully remember what follows. However, I do remember that it contains a very tender scene afterwards. Kilgore Trout’s swansong. Before he dies there is a ceremony organised to send Vonnegut’s much loved character off. Naturally Kurt is there himself. It would be rude if he weren’t. There’s a lot of love going round. Trout himself is at his most charming. At one point he puts out the idea that
part of an ongoing series..