Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Fifth Wheel in the Sky?

I bought a new keyboard, the cheapest one they had at a popular electronics retail store that shall remain nameless (let’s just say their staff may or may not include a squad of geeks). I suppose I should have spent a little more. The keystrokes are loud enough to wake the dead. This is the kind of thing that gets to be unbearable at three in the morning after a fourteen hour work day.

I just recently started working a second job, and the combined hours are keeping me fairly busy, but the money? Entirely worth it. If I can keep this pace, I may reach the specific goal I've yet to share.

Anyone can push a pen around, but so far as I know, I’m the only one who can push a pen around. Now that you understand the distinction, I can tell you that I’ve begun to exercise.

It’s mostly little things. I take small objects –quarters, thumb tacks, you name it – and move them around. I’ve found that it’s much easier to cause a quick burst of force than it is to sustain even a small weight.

In other words, I can push or pull a paper clip around all day, but I can’t lift a coffee mug and hold it up; when I tried, it just popped up and crashed back down (hence the new keyboard; should have tried it empty first…live and learn). Anything more than a couple pounds is too heavy to move at all.

Just like the kind of exercise any other person might do, it can be exhausting. Sometimes I’ll develop a mild headache. If I exert myself too much, I get what I call brain yawns. Imagine your whole head is shivering, just like it feels when you yawn, except your mouth is closed and your eyes sort of wobble in their sockets.

I keep these exercise operations clandestine, using the semi-reliable laundry basket method I’ve discussed previously. So far, not one of my four roommates has caught me at it.

You read that right, four roommates. Two couples and I...the fifth wheel-ness of the situation can be a bit isolating at times, but it isn’t nearly as bad as you’re probably imagining.

Yet, with four other people living in the house, it’s only a matter of time before they see something move when it shouldn’t, maybe too often to ignore. Questions will be asked.

What will I say then?

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Seriously, don't try this at home

I caught a Star Wars movie on TV the other day. Not one of the originals, but one of the abominations that slimed out of George Lucas’ money-lined uterus. If you’ve struggled as hard as I have to forget this particular movie existed, you may not remember a scene where a Jedi is able to jump onto a ledge far above his head. This got me wondering if I could do the same thing.

The short answer is no, I cannot. I hope to be off the crutches in the next few days. In the meantime, I’ll be content pushing paper clips around my desk while no one is looking. And yes, I’ve been keeping it a secret. Occasionally I’ll forget to use my hands to pick up a small object, but you’d be amazed at the ability people seem to have to ignore what happens right in front of them.

My worst slip so far was at work. My co-workers and I were clustered around the front door, waiting for opening time, when the manager dropped his pen. Being a good little go-getter, I pulled that pen off the ground and handed it to him, right in front of no less than sixteen people. Only one of them so much as glanced at me, and she didn’t seem the least bit startled.

I’m not sure why I haven’t told anyone. I’m not afraid of becoming some sort of government guinea pig or anything like that. Once this hits the media, my life is going to become a goddamn circus, and that’s just not something I’m ready for. There’s no way to get the lid back on this particular can of worms.

I’ve also considered that this whole thing may be a very convincing hallucination, and that spreading the news would be a one-way ticket to the loony bin. Even if it is real, there will be press conferences, interviews, emails. People will want me to explain it, to teach it…I don’t think that’s possible.

It’s also the only remarkable thing I have going for me. The only remarkable thing that’s ever happened to me. It feels like sharing it with the world would diminish it, somehow. The knowledge of it makes me feel more confident; a concealed weapon, the perfect come-back, the best damn joke you ever heard. I know something and if I told you what it was, it would deflower your world and not even call it the next day.

One more thing I should mention before I sign off. I’m not able to leap thirty feet into the air, or lift boulders the size of station wagons. But the more I push paper clips and pens around, the easier it gets.

This power, gift, whatever you want to call it…it’s getting stronger.

-Allan

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Looks like I'm not crazy, after all...

So, for starters, I've always hated the word "blog."

I'm Allan. Being a somewhat normal guy in his mid-twenties, I've never had the desire to chronicle my life before. But something big is happening. I'll get to that later; for now, I want to talk about that God-awful word.

"Blog" might be the most horrible word to come from the internet. It somehow manages to sound equal parts pretentious and what a swamp monster might say before it rips the head off the ethnic character in a Sci-Fi Channel movie starring Lorenzo Lamas.

Or maybe it's not so bad, and I'm just putting off the inevitable, the whole reason I started this thing. You ready for this?

As it turns out, I can move things. Without touching them. You know, with my mind.

I've spent a lot of time researching this and let me assure you, I do not belong on the fringe of society were these conspiracy theorists and general nutjobs reside. Up until last week, you might say I was fairly unremarkable - just another young guy working two jobs, chasing girls and wasting his life away in bars. I never believed in ghosts, aliens, snake people or telekinesis (or I wouldn't have, had I given any of these things a moment's thought).

It started out simply enough. Life, as it turns out, isn't like the movies, where these revelations come at times of great stress, usually with explosions and whatnot. I was laying on the couch watching TV when my cell phone rang. I had left it on the coffee table, well out of reach. A brief internal battle, laziness versus curiosity, ensued. Curiosity won, so I answered the call.

The conversation was nothing special (I can't even remember who it was), and it was several minutes before I realized that I hadn't gotten up to get the phone. The damn thing had come to me.

At first, I thought something was seriously wrong with me. Had I simply forgotten that I had stood up, walked the few feet to the table, and grabbed the phone? And just imagined the part where it flew, of its own accord, over to me? If it really happened, had it happened before without me noticing? Had I completely lost it?

It was a long time before I could gather the courage to find out. The next evening, I sat at my desk after securing the door as well as I could (a full laundry basket shoved in front of it), and placed a pen down in front of me. It felt ridiculous, but I sat there and stared at that pen for a full minute, willing it to move. Nothing happened. I was just about to give up when a different approach occurred to me - I focused on what the pen would feel like, were it in my hand. Suddenly I could feel it, even though I was sitting on my hands. I tried picking it up but it felt like it weighed a thousand pounds. I gave it a little push and it rolled a few inches across the desk.

That's when it became real to me. The phone hadn't flew to me of its own accord; objects don't have an accord. It moved because I moved it.

Looks like I'm late for work again. More later.

-Allan