Friday, May 30, 2008

Witchenbye: Hotel

This is Room 100.  It’s bare except or the television screaming in white.  It never goes off, just gets bigger and smaller.

You may get the Tower Room.  It’s exceeding long with high ceiling.  Children make their noise en masse outside in the schoolyard.  It comes with a fever.  Not many choose it or can find it.  It may no longer be there.

Room 612 has a view of the parking lot.  It’s very reassuring.

On the fourth floor, all the rooms are one.  Desks and beds are laid out for efficient work and rest.Please keep the lavatories clean.  Or else.

Some choose to stay in the elevator.  Saves choosing.  They’re pleasant!  And they work.

The north staircase is the most used.  It doesn’t clean easily and still carries the smells of smokers past.  Cockroaches can occasionally be seen.   Some food trays may not have been cleared.  It can get hot.

Room 202 has vast curtained windows.  All the furniture is large.  The carpet is thick.  There’s a table for the Board of Directors.  They’re not here; they rarely come.  It’s very clean.  You feel someone might walk in at any moment.  With a request for you, or to take your request, or maybe with an order.  Whatever it is you know you’ll accept it or maybe they’ll accept it.  Whatever it is, it will be acceptable.

The central landing on the fourth floor is simply appointed with a couple of desks, chairs and framed pictures from old magazines.  The window ledges are rather high.  You have to stand almost on tiptoe and lean over to see the busy students and professors hurrying in the courtyard below.  It’s a perfect place to consider suicide.  Never been done, though.

The terrace is a good place to meet and talk.  There’s a flow of people and there are spaces for little groups to form and dissolve naturally.  Most people are happiest here, in between where they’re coming from and where they’re going to.

Here’s the first floor reception area.  Remember: waiting is not the same as striving.

The men and women who work at the reception desk see you as an object to be processed by screening.  Just do what they say.  Don’t be affronted if they appear to regard you with curiosity or without curiosity, with or without interest, in a friendly or unfriendly way.  They don’t care about you at all.  You’re just passing through.  Do so quietly.

In Room 100, you’re trying to figure out what the TV’s screaming about.  Actually, it’s you screaming.

The power plant is very impressive.  Nobody works there, they just oversee it.  It works by itself, making power and moving it, heating and cooling.  Always turned on and pumping--for your benefit and mine 

You can get there by train.  Who are all those people, heads nodding?  Are they waking or falling asleep?  Some are fresh and some are wilted.  They all seem to have been riding for a long time.

“Which room is mine?”  Which would you like?  Choose one you can have and make it your own.

Room 617 has a small kitchen and dining room.  A couple of plants here and there could make it quite cheery.  Put a home entertainment system with cameras, speakers, phones and screens.  Watch yourself or allow someone else to watch you.  It’s like picking at a scab or eating potato chips though; you can’t always stop when you want to. 

Some prefer the dormitories.  They make it easy to be oneself by resembling someone else.  Deserted throughout the day, by night they’re saturated with the warm, heavy smell of communal somnolence.  What a thrill to escape from the severe rows of identical cots and lockers into wild, turbulent dreams.  And how satisfactory the relief at returning, your departure not noticed or remarked upon.

Sometimes you don’t get enough privacy.  The sound of someone else shitting, or trying to come, or sobbing may disturb or arouse you.  Pretend you’re not aware.

5 comments:

JimPreston said...

Nice work!

In reflection upon the previous thread, I am reminded that I have often accused the Minerva family of living "the life of the mind". Sometimes it seems that once they have fully conceptualized something, such as a Thanksgiving dinner, they see no point in actually realizing, or eating it. As usual, the things that one finds annoying in others are almost always present in large quantities in oneself. The exploding meat puppet, for example;I can hardly bear the thought of the humiliations, complications, computations, trials, errors, and everything else that would spring forth from any attempt to implement this pure and powerful artistic concept. Life can be frustrating when you don't have your band together.

Have any of you read the "Series of Unfortunate Events" children's books? I found them pretty brilliant. The movie was terrible. Missed the point completely.

On the subject of missing the point, I would like to recommend the movie "The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou", which explored the issues of self-deception as part of self-realization in a manner that did not resonate with the critics or the general public. Also worthwhile for the soundtrack of David Bowie songs, sung in Portugese with a slack-key guitar instrumentation. True.

Bud said...

Right about life being frustrating without a band. Jai's starting seriously to strum and croon, looking to start playing in some kind of band next year.
I too really enjoyed Major Tom in Portugese and the movie as a whole.

JimPreston said...

There are a lot of bands, but only one of them was our band. I wish we could have done more. But the work continues, in spite of geography, and I greatly appreciate the time we spend together here.

J Blood said...

Failure & frustration are part of the Fast Fun werke for me: "why won't it happen one day", "feeling empty like my beer"; also frequently channelled into aggression, e.g. put the guests in a rollerball and make them screaming run.

But of course that was, and will be, our success as well.

From 7 Rooms You Never Imagined In Your House (if I can post that I will): "One by one your friends awake and drag themselves out from under the furniture. They look much better than you feel but still pretty bad."

JimPreston said...

While it is important to embrace the failures and frustrations of one's experience, the stench can be somewhat overwhelming if inhaled in (temporarily) dark and confined spaces.

And be careful!! I think you're supposed to put those guests ON the rollerball!!