Preview: Morning Routine

Yeah, it was right after the promotion that I decided to start waking up earlier. My work hours hadn’t changed. At least, not on paper. Not that any of my duties were written down. I didn’t get to my level by filling out a checklist. I drove solutions. I moved the world. Seriously. If I had to grab the whole damn earth and shove it two feet to the left because that’s what my client needs, that’s what I did. And it didn’t matter if it was lunch time, dinner time, or “boss just got out of the club in Tokyo and the deal needs to close while everyone is nice and slippery” time. Out-late, up-early wasn’t new, but after the promotion I developed a routine. I started optimizing.

I had help at first. Maddy, this one girl I was seeing, was super into getting up and doing morning hikes so that she could get these perfect photos at the top of a scenic spot with that sunrise light, you know? She was twenty-six and her feed was full of those “going out/going outside” type of posts. Like, the perfect fit on Saturday night next to the perfect view on Sunday morning. Good content, but cheated: she would actually take the morning photo days earlier and just post it from bed on Sunday. I would do hike-hookups with her on, like, a Thursday when I had been working late the night before. She got to have her beauty sleep or whatever, then tell me to wake up at five a.m. and look as hot as her. 

Well, I was fucking nailing it. Stealing the show even with my shirt on. So I figure, if I can wake up before dawn, flex on her, go back to my penthouse, shower, hit it, shower, have breakfast, and take my first call of the day while most guys are jerking off… maybe I can crush the early morning every day.

I read that to change my wake-up time I should do it in fifteen minute chunks, get used to it for a few days, adjust and repeat. But I had already done some of those five a.m. days, which was like a two hour jump, so I knew I could slam one-hour shifts to see bigger gains. I started waking up at six and immediately I felt great. 

I was like: Yes! This makes so much sense! From my balcony I can see construction workers are already climbing big-ass cranes.  Men are out there working! What had I been doing at that time every day? Being dead, pretty much.

It also felt good to finally use all the self-improvement stuff I had lying around, like this ultraviolet teeth-whitening thing. I hated to use it at night because a weird aluminum taste would stick on my gums while I was trying to fall asleep, so I put it in a drawer and forgot about it. But with a morning routine I could pop it in after brushing and let it sit while I wrote my goals for the day in the wood-bound Spirit Journal that had also been totally neglected. The UV flavor absolutely ruined my single-origin drip coffee the first few days I tried it, but I had been planning to cut caffeine anyway because of a blog I read.


This was a preview of my story Morning Routine. Contact me for inquiries.
– Sebastian Sangervasi

Mileage

In 2036 the State of California granted an incentive to drivers of electric trucks. This was just one act in a decades-long attempt to remove low-efficiency, high-emission vehicles from the roads, but because the situation was increasingly dire, the grant was unprecedented in its generosity. A confluence of political promises and lobbying efforts, the Clean Miles Rebate Project (CMRP) came to include two key terms:

  1. Rebates would be issued for the cost of charging zero-emission commercial trucks, adjusted for Provable Miles Driven (PMD).
  2. Light-duty trucks would be eligible for these rebates.

The requirement that mileage be provable was intended to prevent obvious abuses of the system. Hypothetically, a truck owner could use its vast battery as an electrical reservoir, let the vehicle sit in the driveway undriven, run their home from its charge, and be reimbursed by the state. This behavior was portrayed as a form of fraud, even though Pacific Gas and Electric was in open support of it as a method of reducing load on the state’s power grid. Still, a measure targeting vehicles was not meant to pay for energy infrastructure, so when auto manufacturers championed PMD-tracking technology they were commended for voluntarily cooperating with regulators.

In reality, proving mileage in commercial vehicles was a long-solved problem. Telematic devices sent robust engine diagnostics with sub-second update frequency. Odometer readings collated with GPS tracking, cell tower pings, and local network scanning provided an irrefutable log of every inch of vehicle motion. For commercial fleets, PMD reporting was trivial. It was mandatory. That market was saturated.

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The Readers

Three women sit in repose: Yerjena, Lorin, and Fig. They are in a breathy library full of supple leather loungers, which is also a courtyard shaded by a grand marble statue garnished by wandering ivy, which is also a polished aluminum bunker that is vacuum-sealed against the corrosive future. They do not move often. When they do, it is a stimulating motion that reminds the viewer that these women, effortlessly focused though they are, have living muscles that need a tender adjustment every few beats of eternity (roughly ten minutes, we gauge). The sky casts shadows on Lorin’s legs; she tucks them under a glass blanket and lets the flames lick her toes.

“Everything he fears is mundane,” she declares.

Yerjena and Fig await her insight. They are aware of Lorin’s activity. They are always aware. There is a spiritual unity between creatures which is facilitated by a delicate screen that floats in the microlayer between the conjunctiva and the sclera, though when their eyes are open they may see the blinking marquee which is always erupting around each woman’s head to remind the viewer of what she is thinking and how her face may deceive. 

Lorin slides down the bannister of the spiral staircase to meet her colleagues on the upper floor of the library.

“I have been reading the story in word-order,” she explains. “The Commentaries say this ancient work evoked dread.”

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Regarding the Orbital Terminal Incident

On the day in question, most of my energy was spent traveling. It must have been around five o’clock, West Africa Time, when the lights in the railcar flickered, dimmed, then went dark entirely.

My colleague Bernard stiffened beside me. I felt him groping at the seats in front of us as if the train were going to rearrange itself in the darkness. Subvocal utterances revealed his disquietude. I determined he was unaware of his own animal noises and so, surely, he was unaware of the electrical whine of the magnetic brakes engaging beneath us. I was not especially worried by the change; the tunnel had slowed our transport to barely a trot prior to the loss of power. However, I did find myself wondering what it would sound like if the machine had to deploy its kinetic pads to bring us to a halt. Would we hear the metallic scream of an ancient locomotive echoing through this ultramodern coach? Such a thing would only occur if the rail lines lost power completely, of course. The absence of this emergency measure was proof enough that there was no cause for concern. I began to phrase this for Bernard, but he spoke first.

“Aha, observe: the station has already restored its connection.”

His intonation suggested he was trying to reassure me, but it was not I who was craning my neck to take in every inch of the conveyance. Still, I took a gander to humor him

There was enough luminance leaking through the slim slipglass portals to give shapes a some definition. The curved edges of urethane seats repeated themselves down the aisle a dozen meters to the front of the car. The domed window there allowed me to observe dots of light in the ceiling of the tunnel outside. They ran over us, then crept, then came to a halt. I could only observe a few of these lamps before they faded into obscurity in the tunnel’s depths. This amber glow was enough, though, to reveal the falsehood of Bernard’s claim: the power for these lights was quite obviously sourced from battery failsafes. The crisp iridescent bulbs of the platform were left inert, dumbly indicating their disconnection.

For this I was grateful. The ambiance soothed my weary eyes. Sunset red – the lowest end of the visible spectrum – was appropriate for the moments after a blackout. It was appropriate, as well, for the end of a long journey underground. I took to the aisle, spirit renewed, startling Bernard with my confidence. I surmised that he was peering through the slipglass in hope of spotting an attendant coming to aid us. I had already dismissed this as a false hope, and I told him so: though our arrival was scheduled, a remote docking station had no hands to spare for civilian travel. Flatbed freight lines ran on rails parallel to ours, but with tonnes of Earth separating the tunnels. I described how operators were at that moment scurrying to manage the loss of power and still meet their deadlines with the facility above. This was a routine inconvenience for them and only a mild disturbance for us.

He conceded the truth of my words and aided me in dislodging our baggage from their holds. He made a comment about guiding my weak eyes in the dark, which I found rather condescending. Bernard knew of my corrective surgery and, as a scientist, should understand how impeccable the treatment had been. I let the slight pass by without comment. I understood in the moment that he needed to glamorize his youthfulness to combat his childish fear of the dark.

The platform was vast and lonely. The farthest train car doors were far beyond my range of vision in the dim red glow of the station. I could hear them all shut in a chorus: a sound that was never meant to dominate this space. Voices, shouts, the shuffle of footsteps; this was once a bustling place. We ascended the escalators and I let Bernard take the heaviest baggage, one step at a time as we climbed the inert transport mechanism. It occurred to me then that Bernard had never seen this place when it was in its prime. This would be his first ascent into orbital space. Perhaps it was misguided of me to think he had been scared of the dark, rather than the climb into orbit that was in our immediate future.

The silence was broken when we crossed the threshold of the sky bridge. Mercifully, the automatic doors had maintained power. When we entered that glass-enclosed tube we felt the vibrations of the trucks crossing down below. Just as I described, the cargo carriers were operating at full, almost frantic, capacity. I observed them, briefly wondering whether they were behind schedule or if this was their usual frenzy of action before an ascent. The sunset to the west had a glow no stronger than the running lights guiding us across the bridge. The horizon ended over the Gulf of Guinea, I knew, but all that could be seen was a blackening mass of clouds. The storms were rising to consume the night.

I began to comment on the oncoming weather, but I reconsidered it when I remembered Bernard’s first-flight nerves. It was then I discovered he had stopped in the middle of the bridge, several paces behind me. He stood at the apex of the arched structure, staring eastwards and upwards. Even before I followed his gaze into the night sky I knew what he beheld.

“This is not my first time spotting it.”

He seemed to anticipate my question.

“I wrote most of my doctorate in Sri Lanka. In the southern region it was possible to look towards the equator and see it on a clear day. A column of steel. A needle scratching across the grooves of the Earth, playing the music of space.”

I approached the window to stand beside him, leaving the baggage so I would not have to haul it twice. We watched the thing approach us: the International Space Elevator. It was only a line of lights. An innocuous warning for an unstoppable force. The boundary of its airspace was impossible to define, and the lights made no effort to do so, but those points of color climbing into the sky were a marvel of their own. I let Bernard have his flight of fancy, ignoring his erroneous description of the thing as steel. Very little of the structure was metal, or any solid material at all; only beams of magnetism were strong and light enough to maintain such a miraculous formation. And it might as well be a miracle to scientists such as ourselves: archeologists, not engineers or physicists. So I let him have his poetic pronouncement, trying to remember if I had any words as apt when I was his age.

“Come,” I said to him when the marvel had grown stale. “It will be upon us within the hour.”

Bernard broke away with a nod. He took up the bags I had left down the bridge with a renewed spirit of chivalry or excitement. As I struggled to catch up to him I was struck with the thought that this was how my mother must have seen me when I raced ahead to that first ascent, so many years ago. How different was this terminal then: she would have had to watch me through the shifting crowd, all of us pushing forward into the compartments that would carry us through the atmosphere. How different was I, as well: not eager, not hurried by curiosity. Only an old academic’s commitment to research drew me forward and upward. Only an old skeptic’s questions propelled me towards dread.


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Reflection of the Five

The monster is a reflection. A scattering of light bent back on itself. Set to no purpose of its own, it takes the form of our own dumbstruck faces. We stand in the dark, caught wondering if it suggests an intruder lurking around the next corner. But it is just a reflection.

Because I am recalling this fact, we can be certain that I have survived with my fingers intact. Whether there is a mind attached to the nerve endings of those digits is an inference you will have to draw. If I have no facility to press these words into text, then I have already forced one mind or machine to hear my monologue. Through the editorial filter of dictation, at least, we may have some confidence that an ending can be reached with some reason still guiding the tale. But it is just a reflection.

***

Three hours south-east of San Jose I spied a well-paved road which had no corresponding entry in my navigation sheaves. I made a note of the branch, but I did not slow my vehicle by much. The remains of Interstate Five in that area were remarkably untouched by time and I was enjoying the pleasant drone of my genuine rubber tires across pavement from the era for which they were intended. I rolled down the windows (with a crank, no less!) just to hear them better. The dry, dusty wind of the Central Valley stung my eyes, but that only enhanced the experience. The discomfort helped distract me from calculations of how few miles I had left to extract from the antique parts of the car, especially if I insisted on subjecting it to the desolation of abandoned country roads.

Besides, the unlisted exit was almost certainly a service road for a Bullet Tunnel substation. The desicated carcasses of Stockton, Fresno, and Bakersfield were disused save the access they provided to underground facilities. The swaths of wasteland in between these lonely places were fortunate to even serve that purpose. And so I assumed the little road was listed in some corporate filing that had yet to find its way to the forums from which I had pulled my renderings of the region. Though I look back on it regretfully now, would anyone consider this minor disjunction between knowledge and observation worthy of scrutiny?

My second discovery, however, was impossible to ignore. Speeding down the straight track, I had let my thoughts wander away from the driver’s seat. There is a certain kind of daydream that can only be dreamt from behind the wheel. This place is where I let Linda and our daughter visit me now. I refuse to say they are the only reason I devoted so much of my time and income to this obsolete hobby, for it provides many points of interest. But the serenity of their voices on the wind is as important as it is fleeting. They, as well as the smooth sound of the wheels, were blown out of existence by a grating, thumping noise that made me panic for the health of the roadster as if it were my own body. I applied the brakes too forcefully and was equal parts devastated and thrilled by the squeal of the suffering rubber; how many miles had I burned away in one stroke! The thought lingered with me as I sat, static and alone, in a minefield of potholes somewhere on the Five.

The exact location was easy to determine from the guidance system built into each navigation sheave. Yet this did not restore my confidence. The projection which imposed itself on the highway before me matched the curvature (straight) and incline (flat) of the landscape surrounding my vehicle, but the state of the road bore no resemblance. But I did not need technology to tell me this. I had studied the interstate thoroughly in preparation for my sprint to Los Angeles and I knew the points of danger. This was not one of them. Stepping out of the car only made the interruption more mysterious. The pavement was not split by desert weeds (the tenacious fools) nor the scoring of overweight freighters. What I saw before me had only one analogue: flood damage, an impossibility in the parched valley.

Well, impossible or no, my hopes for completing the journey were dashed. I had been toying with cutting the day short after wasting most of the morning just to get through the favelas in the Sacramento hills. But my energy had been restored when I steered through the last of the metal wreckage that blocked the onramp. The open interstate was like an outstretched hand after the urban bubble that lay behind me. Now it had closed to a fist.

I was only welcome on the path I had come by, so I counted my blessings (one for each tire, mercifully un-popped) and began planning my reverse. I scanned the region into a fresh navigation log, satisfied at least I had some novel analysis to share with my fellow enthusiasts. Had I considered at that moment to upload the data I may have noticed the weakness of the signal. Would that have been enough to change my next decision? Perhaps not, for I was confident with my ability to survive in solitude. I dutifully checked the solar throughput before restarting the adaptive engine. I even made a little tap on the high-voltage booster battery which rested below the passenger seat, away from litigious eyes. It answered with a charming fzzt that told me it was ready to push me through twenty thousand leagues yet!

I swung the roadster around to face the wrong direction for highway driving. No patrol car stopped me. In a few bumpy moments I was back to smooth sailing, but my mind did not return to daydreams. I began to piece together an alternative route to salvage my failed expedition. A fresh review of the maps had put the idea in my head that the mystery road could be a shortcut to the ruins of Fresno. Built for an access tunnel, certainly, in which case it may come to a dull end, but the possibility of a destination was too tempting to disregard. In any case, I had more than enough time and energy to make the return trip. Before I could come up with a single mark against the plan, I had already navigated the wrong-way exit and found myself on the single lane into the barren valley.

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The Pale Pink Dot

From the archives of Carl Sagan

“From this masculine vantage point, the vulva might not seem of any particular interest. But for women, it’s different. Consider again that clit. That’s sensitive. That’s pleasure. And from the vagina everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, was birthed into life. The aggregate of our joy and suffering; thousands of sexually repressed religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines; every hunter and forager; every hero and coward; every creator and consumer of porn; every drag queen and king; every young couple in love; every mother- and father-fucker, horny teen, sub and dom; every teacher of oral; every scandalous politician; every “pornstar”; every “sexpert”; every saint and sinner in the history of our species came from there — a small orifice in a frail mammal.

“The vulva is a very small stage in a vast cosmic arena. Think of the rivers of cum spilled by all those generals and emperors so that in glory and triumph they could have a moment of intimacy with hardly any attention to the clit. Think of the endless cruelties visited by the children of one these organs on the scarcely distinguishable children of some other organ. How frequent their misunderstandings, how eager they are to kill one another, how fervent their hatreds. Our posturings, our imagined self-importance, the delusion that large genitals have some privileged position in the universe, are challenged by this fold of soft flesh. Our dicks are lonely shadows in the great enveloping vaginal light. In our flaccidness — against all this voluptuousness — there is no hint that we could reproduce by ejaculating into other orifices.

“The uterus is the only method known, so far, for humans to create life. There is nothing else, at least in the near future, with which our species could reproduce. Orgasm: yes. Gestate: not yet. Like it or not, for the moment the uterus is how we make our babies. It has been said that biology is a humbling and character-building experience. There is perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits than our treatment of this little organ. To me, it underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with our sisters and lovers, and to preserve and cherish the pale pink dot, the only mother we’ve ever known.”

“That’s great, Carl, but you still have to wear a condom.”

“Shit.”

Scenes from the Virus: Two

There is a joke going around the internet. Perhaps you have heard it. It goes a little something like this:

Everyone is so worried about social distancing, but I’ve been doing it my whole life!

This sentiment has been repeated in various iterations. I believe my first encounter with it was XKCD #2276 which I found novel at the time. I found it humorous. Many people have found it humorous enough that it has been repeated.

And repeated.

And repeated.

Though, I think it is not a case of mere repetition. I am certain many people crafted these words, or their equivalent, independently. I dare not hazard a guess as to how many copies are originals versus copies. I, as a lower bound, would propose ten.

In any case, this convergent evolution intrigues me. If so many minds (nearly eleven!) have been drawn to this common conceit, there must be some conceptual content that craves creation. Is it a chemical process programmed into our very DNA? Could it be a specter haunting our society, channeling its curse into our shared psyche? Or perhaps it is not a curse, but the boon of a mischievous meme god. Whatever the case may be, it warrants further investigation, deconstruction, and reiteration.

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Scenes from the Virus: One

The grocery store pumps Party in the USA into our ear-holes as we browse the last of the russet potatoes.

All of the yams are gone.

I settle on pair of peppers instead. The poblanos are untouched. It’s that kind of store. More for me, uninfected, then.

The roll of produces bags is thick; it must have just been replaced. Wary of coating this public resource in my finger funk, I struggle to find the edge of a bag until a finger hovers into frame to point out the place of purchase.

I seize hold of the squirrelly edge, then follow the friendly finger to its source.

“Ah, you got it,” says the voice of a particle mask. The yellow-banded mask looks like a survivor from the fire months. It is attached to a cracked face.

I say nothing, but I nod my head like “yeah.”

I back away from him, moving my hips like “yeah.”

I know it’s going to be okay.

It’s a party in the USA.

Didn’t You Never Know? Special! “December 32nd” Edition

The holiday season is coming to a close. While many of us are still cleaning our kitchens and storing the more intact pieces of wrapping paper for future use, some are already looking ahead to the coming week. Well, before you go making plans, be sure your not stumbling into the week blindly unaware of this oft-overlooked fact: there is no December 32nd!

“What?!” I hear you shouting at your Microsoft Surface Go, 128 GB, that you got from your favorite loved one last week. Well before you go tapping on its easy-to-use interface to open up iCalendar and dig into the math yourself, why not read this quick-and-to-the-point breakdown of December, the year that has passed, and that ever-elusive month: January?

That’s right: January. It’s coming, people. Actually, depending on where you live, it might already be upon you! Several readers have already emailed me explaining how their schedules were all messed up by this shifty block of time. Most of them had already sorted out the difficulty, but they all begged for a Didn’t You Never Know? deep-dive on what happened, why, and how to prepare for it in the future. So, let’s get to it already! Continue reading