One Moment

It’s hard to say when exactly the system failed. It was probably a few years ago. But just as the powers at be continue to prop up our perished economic system and society a-la Weekend at Bernie’s, society at large goes on as if things are alive and well.

There was one particular moment when it was all unmistakably clear, though.

One sunny summer day in Australia, I went to have lunch with some classmates in celebration of completing our first semester of law school.

Carrie, one of my Chinese friends, asked, “Where have you been the happiest? Do you like it here better than in the US? What about compared to Japan?”

I didn’t really need to think about this one. “Definitely here. Things aren’t perfect, but it feels pretty good here. I know my wife’s MBA program was a bit of scam, but I think she’ll find a job here and we’ll be happy. I don’t really even think I’ll be visiting home anytime soon,” I said.

Concurrently, my wife was reacquainting herself with a Hindu goddess she had once worshiped.

I came home from lunch, and my wife and I were sprawled out on the most comfortable couch I have ever owned. It was a pale green cloud for the two of us.

My phone suggested I read a news story about how the migration policy of Australia had changed, and it was almost like a targeted attack. By the time I finished law school, I would be exactly too old to be allowed to use my new degree to get a job in Australia.

Within weeks, we found ourselves crammed into my wife’s childhood bedroom in a small town in Oklahoma, our lives in Sydney feeling completely unreal. The world we had spent our lives in no longer seemed to be there anymore.

When my wife got hurt a few weeks later and no one cared to stop and see if we were ok, I felt in the pit of my stomach that the world had ended.

Nothing was ever the same again after that moment. In that moment, it became unbearably obvious that we were seeking help from a corpse. That all of us were living inside the belly of a long-dead beast.

And once that veil was lifted, it never came back.

The Strangest Music I’ve Ever Made – The Oiloid Syrup Double Gem Story

It was winter.

I was living at my mom’s house in those days, out in the cornfields of Ohio. My bedroom was positioned so that rain would often beat directly against my window.

It was raining.

The rain was making such a pleasant sound, I decided I’d set my little voice recorder that I record music with next to the window.

But immediately after this, it felt like I should play some music. I had been very interested in lowercase music at the time, and I thought the rain and the sounds of me walking around and flipping switches would be interesting to hear. But as the moments passed, I was inspired to actually turn on an amp and play some guitar.

After a bit of playing around with pedals and my guitar, I kept the recording running while I did some cleaning up and sitting around.

This result was a little strange, but included vast swaths of very quiet, subtle sounds.

This is when things got weird.

In my editing software, I kept amplifying the quiet parts until what had been near silence was now quite loud. And all sorts of strange sounds emerged. Like the ghosts of robotic goblins or something. I was transfixed by this strangeness.

For song titles and the album name, I opened up a text-editor and just started randomly hitting keys. I looked for things which resembled words in the mess, and the final result was Oiloid Syrup Double Gem.

Part eight of Nine Months of Non-Fiction.