The dancing

Grey scale photo of a couple dancing
Photo by Serhii Kindrat

The heady talk of Freshman pretension swirls amidst the stench of pot smoke and beer in the crowded basement common room. Event horizons, postmodernism, chaos theory, minds blown. The only thing blowing Joel’s mind is the vortex of galactic tuition fees that admission to this selective, flaky college has thrust him into—a singularity of devouring debt. 

Even Freshman Writing offered no relief. What should have been a refuge of reassuring practicality on how to avoid a sentence splice and ensure tense consistency descended into a pseudo-philosophical discussion on the instability of metalanguage.

‘Any idiot can verb a noun,’ Joel had muttered in an unusual display of petulance, mortifyingly witnessed by the one classmate he would have preferred to impress, whose name (and everything else about her) remained a mystery. Chastened for his churlishness by a pitying glance from her dramatically lined eyes, he was smitten with a sudden certainty that she could see straight through his pathetic armor of contempt. 

‘Let me guess,’ he hears her say now, her breath a warm whisper on his defenseless neck. ‘You’re the kind of guy whose world is made of nouns.’

Whatever this means, it might once have been true. But now only the solidity of her palms on his shoulders keeps him on the ground, and her thumb on the base of his newly soft skull tethers him upward like a balloon in the moment before its release.

She does not say ‘Let’s dance,’ but ‘Let’s do the dancing,’ in honor of his former dependence on nouns. But now it’s the verb that brings him the stability he once yearned for. They dance, they’re dancing, they’ve never stopped dancing, nor will they ever, he hopes. May we dance forever is his silent prayer, or at least, he pleads, until the singular moment when the matter of his being is formed in the flux of their spiraling embrace.

Mood? Tense

Photo of a mountain climber scaling a rock face
Photo by Petr Slováček

My deepest desire?

To feel the rock beneath my feet. To allow the magnificent depth of the mountain to infuse my body, like last winter’s snow, pushing deep into the soil to gently soak the thirsty roots of ancient fir, water rising like sap, released into air, cooling the breeze.

The mountain, a repository of mysteries, its vaults of mineral histories, its secret rivers, the network of fine organic strands through the soil through which information flows generously.

If I could feel the rock beneath my feet, if I could allow such wisdom to resonate in the tightly sprung fibres of hamstring and thigh, if I could relax the hands that daily grip the rock face so intently they remain tensed, even in sleep… maybe then…

Always, I am climbing. Always, I am pushing ahead. Always I am stretching, ever higher, never resting. In sleep I dream of summits yet to be conquered. 

Maybe one day I will stop on the edge of this patient mountain, and in standing still I will be heir to its life-giving wisdom.

Finite

Silhouette of people standing on a rock at sunset, their hands in the air
Photo by Natalie Pedigo

Sentences losing binding power.

Verbs shaking loose from subjects.

Clauses dropping phrasal components.

Words falling away, like pearls untethered from strings.

The mass extinction eventually happened, yes, but it was not human lives that were lost. It was human language. It had occurred to no one that syntax was a non-renewable resource.

Humans populated the planet as widely as before, but now they remained speechless. Textless.

A collective human silence rose to the starry heavens, bearing strange melodies on its wings, songs that may have always existed, but that no one before ever could hear.

The planet was at peace. Its people were finally happy.

The stores of language replenished, very gradually at first. 

Once every decade or so a child would be born who was notably different from the others. 

Agitated, problem children, they seethed with an inner, unexpressed flare of fury. Their families feared them.

These were the children to whom language had returned.


Would you like to know more about this story? I discuss it in Episode 72 of Structured Visions and in my behind-the-scenes post on Patreon.